Rifters 2 - Maelstrom

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Book: Rifters 2 - Maelstrom by Peter Watts Read Free Book Online
Authors: Peter Watts
Tags: Fiction, General, Science-Fiction, Tsunamis, Revenge
when the wildlife tries to eat you."
    She thumbed the safety on the billy, jammed the rod point-down into the sand.
    With a crack like the inside of a thunderclap, the beach exploded.
     
    * * *
     
    The universe rang like a tuning fork. She lay where the blast had thrown her. Her face stung as though sandblasted.
    Her eyelids were clenched. It seemed like a very long time before she could open them again.
    A crater yawned across three meters of sand, filling with groundwater.
    She climbed to her feet. The Strip had leapt awake in an instant, fled outward, turned back and congealed into a ring of shocked and frightened faces.
    Amazingly, she was still holding the billy.
    She eyed the device with numb incredulity. She'd used it more times than she could count. Whenever one of Channer Vent's monsters had tried to take her apart she'd parried, jammed the billy home, watched as one more predator bloated and burst at her touch. It had been lethal enough to the fish, but it had never exploded with this kind of force before. Not down on the…
    Oh, shit. On the Rift.
    It had been calibrated to deliver a lethal charge at the bottom of the ocean, where five thousand PSI was a gentle burp. Down there it had been a reasonably effective weapon.
    At sea level, without all those atmospheres pushing back, it was a bomb.
    "I didn't mean—I thought…" Clarke looked around. An endless line of faces looked back.
    Amitav lay sprawled on the opposite side of the crater. He moaned, brought one hand to his face.
    There was no sign of the boy.
     
    Stickman
     
    A thunderclap at midnight. Something exploded near a Calvin cycler just south of Gray's Harbor. A botfly had been coming around the headland to the south; it wasn't line-of-sight at detonation but it had ears. It sent an alert to home base and turboed over to investigate.
    Sou-Hon Perreault was on duty. She'd swapped over to the graveyard shift the day she'd learned that mermaids came out at night. (Her husband, having recently learned about the special needs of vPTS victims, had accepted the change without complaint.) Now she slipped into the botfly's perceptual sphere and took stock.
    A shallow crater yawned across the intertidal substrate. Tracking outward: chaotic tangles of heat and bioelectricity, restless as spooked cattle. Perreault narrowed the EM to amped visible; the heat lightning resolved into a milling mass of dull gray humanity.
    The Strip had its own districts, its own self-generating ghettos within ghettos. The people here hailed mainly from the Indian subcon: Perreault set her primary filters to Punjabi, Bengali, and Urdu. She began asking questions.
    An explosion, yes. Nobody really knew for certain what had led up to it. There had been raised voices, some said. Man, woman, child. Accusations of theft. And then, suddenly, bang .
    Everyone awake after that, everyone in retreat. The woman waving some kind of shockprod like a club. The masses, keeping their distance. One man in the circle with her, blood on his face. Angry. Facing the woman, indifferent to the weapon in her hand. The child had vanished by this time, all agreed. Nobody knew who the child might have been.
    Everyone remembered the adults, though. Amitav and the mermaid.
    " Where did they go? " Perreault said; the botfly translated her words with toneless dispassion.
    To the ocean. The mermaid always goes to the ocean.
    "What about the other one? This Amitav ?"
    After her. With her. To the ocean.
    Ten minutes past, perhaps.
    Perreault pulled the botfly into a steep climb, panned along the Strip from fifty meters up. The refugees dissolved into a Brownian horde; waves of motion passed through the crowd far faster than any one person could make way. There: barely discernible, a fading line of turbulence connecting the crater to the surf. Milling particles, recently disrupted by the passage of something aimed.
    She swooped down toward the waterline. Upturned faces everywhere, gray and luminous in the botfly's

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