Driving into the old industrial part of Liverpool that had grown up around
the one thriving docklands was like entering another place and time. It
needed only a little imagination to think of it as a post-apocalyptic
landscape. The huge, smoke and grime-blackened brick buildings that towered
over the road like man-made cliffs had broken windows or bricked up voids
where windows should be. The names of the one time traders were faded
or missing parts of their lettering. It was a place that progress had
forgotten.
The Stanley Dock was a particularly grim example with a deep rectangular
pool of dark water overshadowed on either side by derelict buildings,
one of them, the former Liverpool Tobacco Warehouse, listed as the biggest
single warehouse in the world. Sunlight rarely hit the cold dock water
with such an edifice casting a shadow over it.
But the three men who climbed out of the Toyota and viewed the scene had
all been in darker, colder places. They weren’t unnerved by mere
scenery. Jack Harkness opened the boot of the car and unlocked the specially
fitted compartment inside. Li and Kristoph admitted to each other, telepathically,
that they were impressed. The Torchwood Captain had a selection of weapons
made at the notorious Villengarde factory. Kristoph picked up a fearsome
looking bastic machine gun. It was surprisingly light. It was made of
fiftieth century steel alloy that had its molecular density manipulated
to make it strong without being heavy.
Li chose a similar weapon. The Captain opted for a short-barrelled semi-automatic
rifle descended from the 20th century P-90. All three men filled their
pockets with spare ammunition clips. Kristoph was surprised that Jack
Harkness also loaded his old-fashioned Webley revolver that first went
into production ninety years before this time.
“It’s kinda grown on me over the years,” he admitted.
“It feels like an extension of my hand.”
“It only takes six bullets,” Li reminded him.
“Yes, but that’s six bad guys left when I’m done,”
Harkness responded. It might have come across as bragging, but neither
of the two Time Lord assassins actually doubted him.
“Where do you think the nest is?” Kristoph asked. He hoped
it wasn’t the Tobacco Warehouse. There were thirteen floors above
ground and probably cellars, too. They could search in there for a week
and not flush out every one of the deadly creatures.
The possibility of a building that size fully infested didn’t bear
thinking about.
Jack Harkness tapped the miniature keys on the Time Agency wristlet on
his left arm. A hologram of the dock and surrounding buildings appeared
in the air above it. One building pulsated a sinister red. The three men
looked across the pool of water to the tall concrete block that was the
former White, Tomkins and Courage Grain Silo.
“That’s the nest,” Jack said. “It’s perfect
for them. Dark, grotty, isolated. Probably knee deep in pigeon droppings,
but they smell worse, so they won’t mind that.”
It felt like a long walk along the side of the derelict Jesse Hartley
warehouse to the east end of the dock. It was time for apprehensions to
set in. Again Kristoph wondered if he had been too long away from this
kind of work. He didn’t doubt his own courage. He wouldn’t
falter in the face of the enemy. But did he still have the stamina for
a long fight?
“Self-doubt has never been a Gallifreyan trait.” He felt Li’s
telepathic touch on his mind “Still less The Executioner, the Celestial
Intervention Agency’s greatest assassin.”
“I haven’t been The Executioner for a long time. I meant to
leave that epithet behind. I’ve been The Peacemaker for a lifetime,
instead.”
“And you still are. We’ll be bringing peace to the people
of this world by ridding it of an alien infestation.”
Kristoph conceded the point. Besides, whether he felt ready or not they
were there. Jack examined the hologram on his wristlet again. The grain
silo image pulsated an even angrier red. All three men checked their weapons
and got ready to fight.
They entered the silo through a ground floor doorway that had been secured
with a strong steel door before vandals or scrap metal collectors had
broken it off its hinges. The corridor within smelt strongly of rust and
pigeon droppings.
“Old droppings,” Kristoph observed looking at the grey mess
beneath his feet. “There are no live pigeons here.”
“Not surprising,” Li noted. “When the silo is infested
with insects that can snap their heads off with one pincer no bird is
going to stay here. Well, Captain, this is your mission. Do you want to
start at the top or the bottom?”
There was no question of splitting up and doing both. When they found
the nest it would take all three of them to destroy the creatures.
“Let’s try the basement, first,” Jack suggested. “It’s
more likely to be secure. This place has had its share of winos and druggies
sheltering in it.”
He kicked a plastic bottle that had once held three litres of cheap white
cider, definitely not a relic of mass grain storage. He brought a strong
torch from his pocket and turned it on before they picked their way deeper
into the noisome building and found the way down to the lower floor.
“No,” Kristoph said as soon as they got down into the pitch
dark basement. “The Gebellian queen wouldn’t nest down here.
You can feel the damp. There must be seepage from the dock somewhere.”
“Up, then,” Jack decided. They retraced their steps and then
began to climb the metal stairwell. In places the metal was twisted and
damaged. It was a dangerous climb. But they made their way steadily.
“We’re on the right track,” Li noted. “You can
hear them.”
“Yes,” Jack agreed. “Like metallic paper rustling. That’s
the part-organic-part-metal exo-skeleton. Given time to really nest in
here they’d eat their way through all of this steel, converting
it into their own built in body armour. The village Torchwood dealt with
in the fifties, there was a storage depot for rail sleepers on the outskirts.
The Gebellians ate the lot before they swarmed.”
“This was a perfect nesting site for them,” Kristoph agreed.
“If Torchwood hadn’t spotted them coming down here they would
have got a real foothold.”
“Torchwood didn’t spot their landing pod,” Jack Harkness
admitted. “I lied about that. Li Tuo observed the craft. He contacted
me. That’s why I had no back up. I wouldn’t tell Alex who
my source was and so he wouldn’t accept that it was a genuine threat.”
Kristoph got ready to respond to that, but above a steel fire door crashed
open and a creature almost indescribably gruesome looking, foul smelling,
and ferociously angry charged at them. There was a vaguely humanoid shape
in that it had two long, strong back legs on which it reared up, and there
was a head at the opposite end of the trunk. But it also had four pairs
of feelers with thick hair on them that was as sharp as thorns and coated
with a paralysing venom. In addition to those was a fearsome pair of pincers.
These, along with the legs, head and trunk had the metallic-organic grey-green
coloured exo-skeleton that all three men knew about from past experience.
Kristoph fired first, hitting the creature in the chest and head. The
bastic machine gun rounds went straight through the natural body armour.
Green ichor poured from the wounds as the creature slumped over the stairwell
railing and fell all the way to the concrete floor below. A cloud of powdered
pigeon droppings settled around it, but the three men didn’t see
that. They were getting ready to fire on the four more soldier caste Gebellians
that squeezed through the door and launched themselves at the intruders.
The sound of the guns firing and the screeches of the creatures as they
attacked were deafening within the concrete and steel stairwell as more
and more of them kept coming.
“Behind you,” Jack Harkness yelled. Kristoph spun around.
The creatures were coming up the stairs to box them in. He fired constantly
at the deadly menace. Li fired straight up at the Gebellian who swarmed
across the ceiling, clinging to the steel beams exposed beneath the old
plaster.
“Don’t let them touch you with those feelers,” Jack
called out above the din. His warning wasn’t necessary. Li and Kristoph
both tried to keep their distance from them. Even dead, they were dangerous.
The venom was still fresh in those barbs.
The flow of soldier caste Gebellians into the stairwell slowed at last
after nearly half an hour of close quarter fighting. Jack Harkness gained
a foothold at the firedoor. He sprayed the area beyond with automatic
fire. Li and Kristoph brought up the rear, firing at everything that moved.
“Sweet Mother of Chaos!” Li swore as their eyes adjusted to
the gloom. “This is a charnel house.” He tried not to step
into the decomposing body of a homeless man that he came across first.
The floor was covered with the skeletons of birds, rats, and even dogs
and cats, as well as at least two more Humans who had been unfortunate
enough to stumble into the place. “I thought you only observed the
pod two days ago. Can they really cause this much devastation in such
a short time?”
“I wasn’t expecting this,” Jack Harkness admitted. “I
thought the nest would be only partially established. This much meat consumed
can only mean….”
It occurred to all three men at once that this upper floor space was darker
than it ought to be. From the outside a distinctive feature of the building
was the huge round window, like the rose window of a church or a porthole
in a ship just under the apogee of the tiled roof. The partially glassless
window should shed a little light into the room.
Something huge was blocking the light, and they knew just what it had
to be. Five hearts lurched as they got ready to fight the inner core of
soldiers who were between them and the ‘queen’ Gebellian.
They were standing on the floor, clinging to the walls, hanging from the
roof beams, waiting for the three men to move further into the hatchery
so that their escape back onto the stairwell could be blocked.
Again, the sound of the fight was deafening. The two machine guns sent
out death in a staccato rhythm counterpointed by the sound of the rifle
in fully automatic mode. The creatures screeched as they attacked and
screamed as their heads were blown away. The guns gave the three an advantage
over creatures whose weapons were their pincers and feelers. As long as
they kept them at arm’s reach they couldn’t fight them. But
there were so many of them it seemed impossible that they would get out
again alive.
“No,” Li whispered. “I will live to see my Lily again.
“I won’t die in this foul place.”
“Marion,” Kristoph echoed. “I am going home to Marion
when this is done.”
Captain Jack Harkness murmured a name as he renewed his advance upon the
queen, cutting down the creatures that stood between him and it. If the
two Time Lords heard what that name was, the person he wanted to live
for, they would never embarrass him by repeating it afterwards.
“The sire!” Jack called out. A creature that was at least
a foot taller and wider than the others but with no pincers, rose up in
front of him. A rapid burst of rifle fire cut it down. Behind him Li and
Kristoph finished off the soldiers. But even though the guns fell silent
there was still a sinister sound in the room – an angry chittering
rising to a screech that penetrated the brain like a dagger. It acted
as a barrier as impenetrable as a brick wall. Li and Kristoph suffered
worse than their Human companion. The sound echoed in their telepathic
nerves and overwhelmed them. It was all they could do to stand on their
own two feet. Their guns felt heavy in their hands and they didn’t
have enough co-ordination to pull the trigger.
“Jack!” Kristoph called out as he saw his Human friend move
forward towards the creature. He tried to fire the rifle but it was out
of bullets. He dropped it and pulled his Webley from the holster, emptying
it into the head and body of the six foot tall, five foot wide Gebellian
queen.
“No!” Kristoph called out urgently. “Jack, keep away
from those feelers. They’re full of venom.”
Jack must have heard both of them, but he didn’t react. He stepped
closer to the creature, reloading his Webley with rounds from his pocket.
The long, poisonous feelers whipped out and caught him around the shoulders
and neck. He yelped in pain, but his gun was loaded again. He fired rapidly,
stepping closer and closer to the queen. The paralysing venom was affecting
him. His steps were slower and harder, but he pressed forwards until he
could actually touch the queen.
“Die, @*#%$,” he screamed over her screeching cries and pushed
with all his strength. The remaining glass and framework in the round
window shattered as the queen fell back through it, her cry of desperation
melding with Jack’s as they both plunged to the ground far below.
|