The Seventh Scroll - Smith Wilbur - Страница 63
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In the end he expelled the contents of his lungs completely, squeezing
out the last breath until his chest ached with the effort, and then he
sucked in again, filling his lungs to their capacity with fresh air.
Finally, with his chest fully expanded, he duck-dived, standing on his
head with his legs high out of the water and letting their weight drive
him under.
Sliding head-first down the submerged wall, he reached down, groping for
the next niche below the surface. He found it, and used it to accelerate
his dive, pulling himself on downwards.
He found the second niche below that, and pulled himself on downwards.
The niches were about six feet apart - a nautical fathom. Using them as
a measure, he was able to calculate his progress accurately.
Swimming on downwards, he found another niche, then another. Four rows
of niches, twenty-four feet below the surface. His ears were popping and
squeaking as the pressure squeezed the air out of his Eustachian tubes.
He kept on downwards and found the fifth row of niches. Now the air in
his lungs was compressing to almost half its surface volume, and as his
buoyancy decreased so his descent became easier and more rapid.
His eyes were wide open, but the waters below him were dark and turbid.
He could make out only the surface of the wall directly in front of his
face. He saw the sixth niche appear ahead of him and he grasped it, then
hesitated.
"Thirty-six feet of depth already, and no sign yet of bottom he
thought. There had been a time, when he was spearfishing competitively
with the army team, that he could free-dive to sixty feet and stay at
that depth for a full minute. But he had been younger then and in peak
physical condition.
"Just one more niche," he promised himself, "and then back up to the
surface." His chest was beginning to throb and burn with the need to
breathe, but he pulled hard on his handhold and shot down. He saw the
vague shape of the seventh niche appear out of the murk below him'
"They go right to the bottom," he realized with amazeMent. "How on'earth
did Taita do it? They had no diving equipment." He grasped the niche and
hovered there for a moment, undecided if he should risk going further.
He knew he was almost at his physical limit. Already he was hunting for
air, his chest beginning to convulse involuntarily.
"What about one more for the hell of it!" He was beginning to feel
light-headed, and a strange glow of euphoria came over him. He
recognized the danger signs, and looked down at his own body. Through
the murk he saw that his skin was wrinkled and folded by the pressure of
water. There were over two atmospheres'weight bearing down upon him,
crushing in his chest. His brain was becoming starved of oxygen, and he
felt reckless and invulnerable.
"Once more into the breach, dear friends," he thought drunkenly, and
went on down.
"Number eight, and the doctor's at the gate." He felt the eighth niche
under his fingers. He was thinking in gibberish now: "Number eight, and
I'll have her on a plate." He turned to go up again, and his feet
touched bottom. -Fifty feet deep," he realized even through his fuddled
state.
"I have left it too late. Got to get back. Got to breathe." He was
bracing himself to push off from the bottom when something grabbed his
legs and dragged him hard against the rock wall.
ctopus!" he thought, remembering the line from Taita's stele, "Her
vagina is an octopus that has swallowed up a king."
He tried to kick out, but his legs were bound as if by the arms of a sea
monster; some cold, insidious embrace held him captive. "Taita's
octopus. My oath! He meant it literally. It's got me."
He was pinned against the wall, crushed, helpless.
Terror seized him, and the rush of it through his blood flushed away the
hallucinations of his oxygen-impoverished brain. He realized what had
happened to him.
"No octopus. This is water pressure." He had experienced the same
phenomenon once before. On an army training exercise, while diving near
the inlet to the turbines of the generators in Loch Arran, his buddy
diver who was roped to him had drifted into their terrible suction. His
companion had been sucked against the grille of the intake and his body
had been crushed so that the splinters of his ribs had been driven
through the flesh of his chest and had come out through the black
neoprene rubber of his suit like daggers.
Nicholas had narrowly escaped the same fate. The fact that he was a few
feet to one side of his buddy had meant that he escaped the full brunt
of the rush of water into the turbine intake. Nevertheless, one of his
legs was broken, and it had taken the strength of two other army divers
to prise him out of the grip of the current.
This time he was at the limit of his air, and there was no other diver
to assist him. He was being sucked into a narrow opening in the rock,
the mouth of an underwater tunnel, a subaqueous shaft that bored into
the rock wall.
His upper body was free of the baleful influence of the rushing flood,
but his legs were being drawn inexorably into it. He was aware that the
surrounds of the opening were sharply demarcated, as straight and as
square as a lintel hewn by a mason. He was being dragged over and around
this lintel. Spreading out his arms, he resisted with all his strength,
but his hooked fingers slid over the polished, slimy surface of the
rock.
"This is the big one," he thought. "This is the one punch that you can't
duck." He hooked his fingers, and felt his nails tear and break as they
rasped against the rock.
Then suddenly they locked into the last niche in the wall above the
sink-hole which was sucking him under.
Now at least he had an anchor point. With both hands he clung to the
niche, and fought the pull of the water. He fought it with all his
remaining strength and all his heart, but he was near the end of his
store of both. He strained until he felt the muscles in both arms
popping, until the sinews in his neck stood out in steely cords and he
felt something in his head must burst. But he had halted the insidious
slide of his body into the sink-hole.
"One more," he thought. "Just one more try." And he knew that was all he
had left within him. His air was all used up, and so were his courage
and his resolve. His mind swirled, and dark shapes clouded his vision.
From somewhere deep inside himself he drew out the last reserves, and
pulled until the darkness in his head exploded in sheets of bright
colours, shooting stars and Catherine wheels that dazzled him. But he
kept on pulling.
He felt his legs coming out of it, the grip of the waters weakening, and
he pulled once more with strength that he had never realized he
possessed.
Then suddenly he was free and shooting towards the surface, but it was
too late. The darkness filled his head and in his ears was a sound like
the roaring of the waterfall in the abyss. He was drowning. He was all
used up. He had no knowledge of where he was, how much further he had to
go to the surface, but he knew only that he was not going to make it. He
was finished.
When he came out through the surface, he did not know that he had done
so, and he did not have enough strength left to lift his face out of the
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