helped. That was pretty close, I guess! I don’t even remember getting the injector out of the case.”
He looked back up at the looming bow of the Antares, unbeautiful enough but prosaically devoid of menace and mystery now, though the pulsing beat still came from there. A mechanical obstacle and nothing else. “I’m going on in now.”
From the darkness within the lock came the smell of stagnant water, of old decay. The mold that proliferated over the ramp did not extend into the wreck. But other things grew inside, pale and oily tendrils festooning the walls. Dasinger removed his night glasses, brought out a pencil light, let the beam fan out, and moved through the lock.
The crash which had crumpled the ship’s lower shell had thrust up the flooring of the lock compartment, turned it into what was nearly level footing now. On the right, a twenty-foot black gap showed between the ragged edge of the deck and the far bulkhead from which it had been torn. The oily plant life spread over the edges of the flooring and on down into the flooded lower sections of the Antares. The pulse of Hovig’s generator came from above and the left where a passage slanted steeply up into the ship’s nose. Dasinger turned towards the passage, began clambering up.
There was no guesswork involved in determining which of the doors along the passage hid the machine in what, if Graylock’s story was correct, had been Hovig’s personal stateroom. As Dasinger approached that