Page 85
Story: Daughter of the Deep
‘We’re trying to!’ Cooper Dunne says from the bridge. ‘I don’t get it. We didn’t even –’
The connection breaks into a garble of static and voices yelling at once.
‘Contact on LOCUS!’ Cooper yells.
Hairs rise on the back of my neck. ‘Where? A ship?’
‘No, too big – Ana, Gem, you need to –’ Cooper’s voice becomes a shriek. ‘Below!’
I look down and see a gargantuan shadow rising from the depths, unfolding like the wings of death.
Gem tackles me and jets me out of the way, but the creature isn’t interested in us.
Eight tentacles the size of bridge cables wrap themselves around theNautilus.
The submarine tilts aft. My helmet’s comm fills with the crew’s screams. As the monster’s head emerges from the dark – I’m not going to lie – the interior of my nice, warm nemonium dive suit gets wet for the first time as I pee myself in terror.
I have been in the water with great white sharks and killer whales. I’ve seen big, dangerous sea animals up close, and I’ve never panicked. But the thing in front of us should not exist. It’s a giant Pacific octopus, or closely related to one, except ten times larger than the biggest specimen I’ve ever heard of. Its full tentacle span must be fifty metres, half the length of theNautilus. It must weigh close to a ton.
I am paralysed by the thought of what those powerful arms could do to our ship. At the same time, I am awestruck by the octopus’s beauty.
Its bulbous head makes it look like a supervillain with an overdeveloped brain. Its dark eyes are alert and curious. When it breathes, the siphons on the sides of its face plume to the sizeof jumbo jet engines. Each tentacle ripples with white-ringed suckers. Its skin is perfectly textured for blending into rocks and coral, though I can’t imagine any coral reef big enough to hide this leviathan. In the dark water, it appears a muddy brown, but, where the ship’s searchlights hit it, the octopus’s hue turns a brilliant red. It appears to be mottling, too, as if trying to camouflage itself with the multicoloured glow of theNautilus.
At last, my brain unfreezes. ‘Nautilus, status!’
‘Octopus!’ Cooper’s voice crackles through the static. ‘On the ship!’
If we live through this experience, I will have to rename him Acting Captain Obvious.
Nelinha breaks in. ‘It’s squeezing us. Hull integrity … I don’t know if –’
‘Electricity!’ Gem yells. ‘That story about the giant squid!’
I know the one he means. In20,000 Leagues, theNautilusgave a cranky squid some shock therapy to get it off the ship. Something about that account always seemed off to me, but before I can say anything Cooper gives the order: ‘Electrify the hull!’
The sub’s grand-opening lights go dark. A moment later, green tendrils of lightning flash through the deep. They dance across the octopus’s skin, illuminating its membranes and backlighting its eyes. I expect the creature to loosen its grip. Thathadto hurt. Instead, it wraps its arms even tighter around theNautilus. I can’t see its beak, but I imagine it snapping, looking for purchase on the side of the hull.
‘Gah!’ Nelinha shouts. ‘Get off us, you creep!’
‘Cooper, try another charge!’ Gem says. ‘More power –!’
‘No, wait!’ My mental gears start to spin. ‘Cooper, belay that order!’
Gem’s face is ghostly purple in his gumball-machine helmet. ‘You have a better idea?’
His tone isn’t sarcastic. He genuinelywantsa better idea.
‘It likes the electricity,’ I say, silently cursing my own stupidity.
‘SHE’S RIGHT,’ Ester joins the conversation at maximum volume. ‘Octopuses communicate with electrical currents. That probably feltgoodto it. Tohim.’
Him?
Oh … right. Now I see that one of the octopus’s arms doesn’t have suckers all the way to the tip. Instead, it’s tapered with flat, dark circular designs – the creature’s reproductive arm.
‘He’s not attacking,’ I realize. ‘He’s being affectionate.’
‘EEEEWWWW!’ someone shrieks on board.
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