juice on her white shirt. Opening her Evian bottle she splashed water over her left hand and shirt.
To her astonishment, the plant reacted like an air fern to her touch, folding all its leaflike appendages against its stalk. Then it retracted underground, an action that required internal muscles— mechanisms that plants did not have.
Surprised, she was about to call the others when she saw what looked like a trail of white ants moving along the base of the cliff.
She leaned forward and watched the large, evenly spaced creatures hurl down a groove in the sand, toward a crab carcass. They moved faster than any bug she had ever seen.
5:52 P.M.
“Copey must have gone up into the canyon,” Jesse yelled.
“Copey!” Dawn called.
“Maybe that’s where the survivors went,” Glyn suggested. “I mean, if there are any.”
“Someone stripped this vessel, dude,” Jesse shouted, shaking his head and banging his fist against the hull. “And somebody turned that beacon on.”
Cynthea seized the moment, switching to Glyn’s channel. “Go, Glyn, go! We have seven minutes left on the satellite feed!”
“Let’s go!” Glyn said.
Cynthea tapped camera two’s screen with her pencil.
“Yeah!” Jesse howled, and he raised his fist to lead the charge.
The three cameramen covered the four scientists and five crew members as they climbed the natural ramp of broken rock up into the crevasse.
5:53 P.M.
Nell picked up a sun-bleached Budweiser can that had somehow made it to the shore, and she used it to block the path of the speeding bugs.
One of the creatures fell on its side.
An inch-wide waxy white disk lay motionless on the sand.
She threw the Bud can aside and looked closer. Centipede-like legs emerged from the edge of the white disk. The legs flailed and the bug spun like a Frisbee over the sand in an evasive maneuver.
More of the white bugs arrived, massing in front of her. They were
rolling
on their edges, like unicycle motocrossers, down the groove. Within seconds, dozens had gathered. Suddenly, they tilted in different directions—preparing to attack?
Astonished, Nell stood up and took a few quick steps back. Such animals could not exist, she thought.
She looked around for the others in the landing party; they were gone.
She ran toward the crevasse, yelling, “Stop! Stop! Stop!”
5:54 P.M.
From the control room Cynthea watched the search party as they entered the canyon, whose curving walls were obscured by mists above. The late-afternoon sun etched beams and shadows through the heights of the crack as water streamed and dripped over them.
Struggling over large boulders and climbing natural stairways of smaller rocks, Glyn boosted Dawn over a ledge, admiring the tattoo peeking from the back of her low-slung jeans.
“Hey, look, everybody!” shouted Jesse. “The crack of Dawn!”
Peach switched cameras at Cynthea’s pointing pencil. “This is great stuff, boss!”
“We just saved
SeaLife
, Peach,” she told him.
8:55 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time
On his wafer-thin wall-mounted 55-inch Hitachi screen in his midtown Manhattan office, Jack Nevins watched Glyn give Dawn a two-handed tush-push over a boulder.
“This is great, Fred,” Jack said into his cell phone.
Fred Huxley watched his own drop-down TV in the adjacent office, his own cell phone to his ear as he lit up a Cohiba: “This is GOLD, Jack!”
“I think that magnificent bitch just saved our asses, pal.”
“I could kiss her!”
“I could fuck her.”
“The old gal’s got a hell of a survival instinct.”
“Next week’s numbers are gonna rocket, Baby Fred!”
“Next week’s numbers are going to KILL, Brother Jack.”
5:57 P.M.
The search party fanned out on a ledge where the crevasse widened. Lush vegetation clung to the walls: a strange purple mat of growth squished underfoot.
The vegetation along the walls arched and wove together to form a cornucopia-like tunnel that stretched up into the twilit distance, speared