Company Wars 01 – Downbelow Station

anything with him or the rest of them. He squeezed Elene’s hand, drew away, and

shouldered his way past the armored troops, tried to avoid stepping in a dark

pool of blood as he carded open the lock.

The door opened, closed behind him, started its cycle automatically. He reached

for the human breathing gear which always hung on the right of entry of such

chambers, slipped it on before the effects became severe. His breath took on the

suck and hiss he associated subconsciously with Downer presence, loud in the

metal chamber. He opened the inner door and the echo came back out of far

depths. He had a dim blue light where he was, but he paused to unlock the

compartment by the door and take out a lamp. The powerful beam cut through the

dark into a web of steel.

“Downers!” he called, his voice echoing hollowly down and down. He felt the cold

as he walked through the door and let it seal, stood on the joining platform

from which the ladders ran in all directions. “Downers! It’s Damon Konstantin!

Do you hear me? Call out if you hear me.”

The echoes died very slowly, depth upon depth.

“Downers?”

A moan drifted up out of the dark, an echoing keening which stirred the hairs at

his nape. Anger?

He went further, gripping the light with one hand, the thin rail with the other,

stopped and listened. “Downers?”

Something moved in the dark depths. Soft footfalls rang very softly on metal far

below. “Konstantin?” an alien voice lisped. “Konstantin-man?”

“It’s Damon Konstantin,” he called again. “Please come up. No guns. It’s safe.”

He stayed still, feeling the slight tremor in the scaffolding as feet trod it

far down in the dark. He heard breathing, and his eyes caught the light far

below, shimmer like illusion. There was an impression of fur, and another

glimmer of eyes, ascending by stages. He stayed very still, one man, and fragile

in these dark places. They were not dangerous… but no one had attacked them with

guns before.

They came, more distinct in his hand-held light, bedraggled and struggling up

the last stage, panting, the one hurt and the other wide-eyed with terror.

“Konstantin-man,” that one said with a quavering lisp. “Help, help, help.”

They held out hands, pleading. He set the lamp down on the grating on which he

stood and accepted them as children, touched the male very carefully, for the

poor fellow was bleeding all down his arm and drew back his lips in a fretful

snarl.

“All right,” he assured them. “You’re safe, you’re safe now. I’ll get you out.”

“Scared, Konstantin-man.” The female stroked her mate’s shoulder and looked from

one to the other of them with round, shadowed eyes. “All hide gone find no

path.”

“I don’t understand you.”

“More, more, more we, dead hungry, dead ’fraid. Please help we.”

“Call them.”

She touched the male, a gesture eloquent of worry. The male chattered something

to her, pushed at her, and she reached and touched at Damon.

“I’ll wait,” Damon assured her. “I wait here. All safe.”

“Love you,” she said in a breath, and scrambled back down with a ringing of the

metal steps, lost at once in the dark. In a moment more, shrieks and trills

sounded out into the depths until the echoes redoubled; voices woke out of other

places, male and female, deep and high, until all the depths and dark went mad.

A shriek erupted by him: the male shouted something down.

They came in the silence which followed, ringings of steps on the metal deep

below, callings occasionally echoing sharply and moanings rising which stirred

the scalp. The female came running back to stroke her mate’s shoulder and to

touch his hands. “I Satin, I call. Make he all right, Konstantin-man.”

“They have to come through the lock few at a time, you understand, careful of

the lock.”

“I know lock,” she said. “I careful. Go, go, I bring they.” She was already

hastening down again. Damon put his arm about the male and brought him into the

lock, dragged his mask up for him, for the fellow was muzzy with shock, snarling

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