The Shield of Kuromori. Jason Rohan

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу The Shield of Kuromori - Jason Rohan страница 3

The Shield of Kuromori - Jason Rohan The Kuromori Series

Скачать книгу

that a cloud? Underground? Inside a room?’ she said, standing alongside Kenny.

      Stretching out before them was an enormous concrete-walled water tank, as long and as wide as Westminster Abbey and as tall as Buckingham Palace. Immense concrete supports thrust upwards, like columns in a vast cathedral. Water lapped the pillars and vapour swirled in ghostly wreaths.

      ‘Looks like it,’ Kenny said, continuing downwards. ‘This place is big enough to have its own climate.’ He shivered in the damp. ‘Where are the others?’

      ‘If your Japanese was better, you’d have heard Papa explain. There are five other water tanks, connected by over six kilometres of pipe, each eleven metres wide. We’re putting two guys in each tank and the rest are checking the tunnels. We’ve all got motion trackers, locator beacons and radios. The plan is to find the thing, summon help and get out fast.’

      Kenny pondered this and his eyes grew wide. ‘Whoa. You mean we’re on our own?’ His voice echoed back, sounding no less worried.

      ‘What? Are you scared? You’re the one with the sword.’

      ‘Yeah, it’s just . . . You’ve seen The Lord of the Rings, right? This place is just like the dwarven halls, when all the goblins come creeping down from the ceiling.’ Kenny squinted up into the darkness, scanning for any sign of movement.

      ‘Thanks. Like this isn’t creepy enough already?’ Kiyomi shuddered. ‘I hate being underground.’ She dug out a torch and thumbed the switch, sending a powerful beam into the haze.

      Kenny splashed down into the chilled, waist-deep water. ‘Ugh. Wrong day for trainers,’ he groaned.

      Powerful spotlights shone down from above, each trained on a giant pillar. The reflections off the pale, rounded stone made it seem like stalactites of light were piercing the low mists.

      ‘This is all your fault,’ Kiyomi grumbled as they waded into the chamber.

      ‘What have I done now?’ Kenny said, his teeth clenched to keep them from chattering.

      ‘If you hadn’t sent Papa’s men down here, looking for Namazu, then they wouldn’t have found the . . . you know? Leftovers.’

      ‘How does that make it my fault?’ Kenny protested. ‘It’s not like I knew this was here.’ Annoyed, he changed the subject. ‘What’s the point of this place, anyway? It’s just a drain.’

      ‘What do you mean, “just a drain”? Do you have any idea how important this facility is?’

      Kenny switched on the hand-held motion tracker, which resembled a satnav. ‘Uh, actually, no.’

      ‘You know what a typhoon is? A hurricane with wind speeds of at least a hundred and twenty kilometres an hour and up to a metre of rain in a day. Tokyo used to flood regularly and thousands drowned, so this was built. The five giant cans take the extra water out of five rivers, like a massive storm drain. This tank we’re in now is the final overflow. From here, the floodwater gets pumped into the Edo River. Without it, parts of Tokyo are underwater, so it does matter.’

      ‘Fine, OK, I get it,’ Kenny said, stooping to sniff the shimmering surface. ‘So this is basically just rainwater, right? No sewage or floating poo to worry about?’

      ‘No, not unless you get so scared – YAAAAAHH!

      Kenny jumped so hard, he nearly dropped the motion tracker. Kiyomi’s torch picked out a furry lump disappearing back into the fog.

      ‘What the heck was that about?’ Kenny gasped.

      ‘A rat,’ Kiyomi said, shivering in disgust. ‘Ugh. A big one too.’

      ‘So why didn’t it show up on this thing?’ Kenny held up the tracker. ‘Is it broken?’

      ‘No, it’s calibrated for large objects only, otherwise every rat and roach would set it off.’

      ‘Big things? What, like this blue blob here?’

      ‘Let me see that.’ Kiyomi snatched the tracker from Kenny’s grasp. ‘You’ve got to be kidding! Kenny, we’re out in the open. Get back – fast!’

      ‘Why? What is it?’

      From out of the mist, a shallow surge rippled forward. Behind it came the frantic squeaking of hundreds of rats.

      ‘Oh my God.’ Kiyomi threw herself into the water and was gone.

      Kenny spun on his heel, ducked down and felt tiny feet and claws scramble over his back, shoulders and head as the wave of screeching rodents broke over him. Still cradling the motion tracker, he opened one eye and squinted at it while the rats dispersed and swam away in all directions, leaving a large blue blob closing in on him from behind.

      Kenny whirled round as the water exploded before him. With a thunderous roar, a huge white shape launched itself out of the mist, its cavernous jaws edged with long jutting teeth.

      Time froze as Kenny’s brain recognised what he was seeing, but simultaneously refused to accept it. The effect was paralysing and the shadow of a giant albino crocodile slid over him as its jaws snapped at his chest.

      Leaping from the water, Kiyomi flung herself at Kenny, barging him aside. The shock of cold water snapped Kenny back into the moment. He kicked out frantically and swept his arms in long strokes to put distance between himself and the monster reptile, stopping only when he reached the nearest pillar.

      ‘Kiyomi!’ he yelled into the void.

      ‘Over here,’ she responded, flashing her torch from behind another support.

      ‘What do we do?’ Kenny shivered in the cold, eyes searching the dark waters. ‘Where is it?’

      ‘Probably circling for another att– Look out!’

      Kenny reacted without thinking. Leaping backwards, like an Olympic gymnast, he launched himself six metres into the air. The giant reptile thrashed beneath, pushing out a great bow wave, and vanished again.

      With an ungainly splash, Kenny sprawled in the water. His mind’s eye had captured a snapshot of the monster, white as bone, with dead eyes and rows of tiny ivory pyramids along its back.

      ‘A plan would be good right about now,’ Kenny said, summoning forth Kusanagi, the sacred sword. The blade felt good in his hands.

      ‘OK. You keep it busy. I’ll do the rest.’ Kiyomi flicked off the torch, vanishing into the gloom.

      ‘What kind of plan is that?’ Kenny yelled. ‘Why don’t you keep it busy while I . . .?’ He waved the sword in front of him. ‘Kiyomi? Oh, great.’ He peered into the darkness, scanning for telltale bubbles or ripples. ‘Here, fishy fishy. Come to Kenny. I’ve got a surprise for you.’

      The hairs on the back of his neck

Скачать книгу