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The gla.s.s air-lock door opened and people tumbled and shoved through. On the other side was another room surrounded by gla.s.s. They lined up against the gla.s.s walls like moths against a lighted windowpane, looking out.
"Why do we have to wait so long?" It was a wail, a crying sound like an ambulance siren in the night. The group muttered agreement and nodded at the woman who clutched her hands against the gla.s.s as though trying to touch the scene outside.
"I'm not worried about the bends," said a portly older man. "They adjust the waiting time for people with bad sinus and ear drum infections. Does anyone here have a sinus, or eardrum infection?"
"We don't need to wait, then," said the same man, louder when there was no reply. "Does anyone here know how to make the door open? We can go out right now."
"My son has a screwdriver," suggested a woman, pus.h.i.+ng the teen-age young man toward the door. Ahmed moved to protest and the woman glared at him and opened her mouth to argue.
An old woman was tugging at the door. It opened suddenly and they forgot quarreling and went out through the door to the open docks and the cold salt wind, and the sound of cold choppy waves splas.h.i.+ng against the cement pillars.
An air-beating heavy whirring sound hovered above the docks. Ahmed looked up. A ladder fell down and dangled before them. Ahmed grabbed the rope rungs and pulled. They sagged lower. He fitted his foot into a rung and climbed.
George stood, breathing deeply of an air that smelled sweet and right and tingled in his lungs like life and energy. The clouds of panic and resignation faded from his mind and he heard the seagulls screaming raucous delight, following the small boats and swooping at sandwiches. The people cl.u.s.tered at the edge of the docks, beginning to talk in normal tones.
The ladder dangled before him, bobbing up and down. The rope rungs brushed against his head and he brushed them aside. What had been happening? What was the doom he had just escaped from? He tried to remember the trapped moments and tried to understand what they had been.
"Come on, George," a voice called from above.
He reached up, gripped and climbed, looking into a sky of scudding gray and silver clouds. A white and blue police helicopter bounced above him, its rotating blades shoving damp cool air against him in a kind of pressure that he enjoyed fighting. At the top the ladder stiffened into a metal stair with rails, and opened
into the carpeted gla.s.s-walled platform of a big observation helicopter.
Ahmed sat cross-legged on the floor, twitching with hurry and impatience, holding his wrist radio to his lips. "Okay, George, tune to it. What will blow the observation building? Who, what, where? Coast Guard is waiting for information."
Still with his memory gripped onto the strange depression he had felt inside the observation building, in the air of Jersey Dome, George looked down and tuned to it and knew how the people still inside felt, and what they wanted.
In the four-step glittering observation building, each gla.s.s room was full of people waiting at the doors. He saw the central elevator arrive and open its door and let out another crowd of people to wait and push and pull at the first door at the top. Desperation. A need to get out.
With a feeling of great sorrow, George knew who the saboteurs were. All the kids with screwdrivers, all the helpful people with technical skill who speed elevators, all the helpful people without mechanical understanding who would prop open dime-operated toilet doors for the stranger in need. They were going to be helpful, they were going to go through the air-lock doors and leave the doors jammed open behind them. No resistance behind them to hold back sixty-five pounds per square inch air pressure forcing up from below in the compressed city, pus.h.i.+ng upward behind the rising elevator.
He had been pretending to believe it was a mad bomber. How could he tell the police and Coast Guard that it was just the residents of the city, mindless with the need to gel out, destroying their own air-lock system?
George held his head, the vision of death strong and blinding. "They are jamming the air-lock system open in the observation building, Ahmed. Tell someone to stop them. They can't do that. It will blow!" The panic need to escape blanked his mind again.
"Lift," George said, making nervous faces at the view below. "Lift this d.a.m.ned copter."
"Is he all right?" the pilot asked Ahmed.
Ahmed was talking intensely into the wrist radio, repeating and relaying George's message. He made a chopping gesture to shut up.
The copter pilot gave them both a glance of doubt for their sanity and set the copter to lift, very slowly.
Beating the air, the copter rose, tilting, and lifted away from the dwindling platform of glinting gla.s.s in the middle of the gray ocean.
George gripped the observation rail and watched, ashamed that his hands were shaking.
He saw something indefinable and peculiar begin to happen to the shape of the gla.s.s building. "There it goes," he muttered, and abruptly sat down on the floor and put his hands over his face. "Hang on to the controls. Here we go. Ahmed, you look. Take pictures or something."
There was a crash, and a boom like a cannon. Something that looked like a crushed elevator full of people shot upward at them, pa.s.sed them slowly, and then fell, tumbling over and over downward.
A roaring uprush of air grabbed the copter and carried it into - the sky upside down, falling in a rain of small objects that looked like briefcases and fis.h.i.+ng rods and small broken pieces that could not be recognized. George hung on to a railing. Suddenly the copter turned right side up, beating its heavy spinning blades in a straining pull upward away from the rising tornado.
With a tearing roar Jersey Dome spat its contents upward through the air shaft, squeezing buildings and foam blocks and people and furniture into the shaft and upward in a hose of air,
;upward to the surface and higher in a fountain of debris, mangled by decompression.
For long moments the fountain of air was a mushroom-shaped cloud, then it subsided, raining down bits. The copter circled, its occupants deafened and awed.
With one arm and one leg still hooked around the rail, Ahmed
listened intently to his radio, hands cupped over his ears to make the speaker plugs in his ears louder. lie spoke.
"The city manager is alive down there and broadcasting. He says the canopy of the done did not break, it just lowered. The air shaft sucked in everything near it and is now plugged shut with foam blocks from buildings but the blocks are slowly compressing into it, and they can hear an air hiss. Survivors are putting on scuba air equipment and finding places to survive another hurricane if the tube blows free again, but he's afraid of water leaks coming in and drowning them out from underneath because the pressure is going down. He wants the air shaft plugged from the top. Suggests bombing it at the top to prevent more air escaping."
Ahmed listened, tilting his head to the sounds in his ears.
"People in the water," George said. "Bombs make concussion.
Let's get the people out."
"Affirmative," said the police pilot. "Look for people."
The helicopter swept low and cruised over the water, and they
looked down at the close pa.s.sing waves for a human swimmer needing help.
"There." Ahmed pointed at a pink s.h.i.+ny arm, a dark head. They
circled back and hovered, let down the ladder, and the two Rescue Squad men climbed down and maneuvered a web mesh sling around a limp young unconscious naked woman. Her head bobbed under and came up as they slid the sling under her. The
waves washed up against their knees as they leaned out from the rope ladder.
"NOW HEAR THIS, NOW HEAR THIS," proclaimed a giant amplified voice. "ALL BOATS IN THE AREA CIRCLE IN THE DISASTER AREA AND TAKE IN SURVIVORS. IN FIVE MINUTES, AT THE NEXT SIGNAL, ALL BOATS MUST WITHDRAW FROM THE AIR-SHAFT CENTER TO A DISTANCE OF.
FIVE HUNDRED YARDS TO PERMIT BOMBING. AWAIT SIGNAL. REPEAT. YOU HAVE FIVE MINUTES TO SEARCH FOR AND TAKE IN SURVIVORS.".
Ahmed and George shouted up to the pilot, "Ready." And the hoist drew the mesh sling with the young woman in it upward and into the copter through a cargo door in the bottom. The door hatch closed. They climbed back inside, dripping, and spread the unconscious and pretty body out on the floor for artificial respiration. She was cold, pulseless and bleeding from ears, nose and closed eyes. There were no bruises or breaks visible on the smooth skin. George tried gentle hand pressure on the rib cage to start her breathing again, and some blood came from her mouth with a sigh. He pushed again. Blood came from her eyes like tears,
Ahmed said wearily, "Give it up, George, she's dead."
George stood up and retreated from the body, backing away. "What do we do, throw her back?"
"No, we have to take bodies to the hospital. Regulations," muttered the pilot.
They circled the copter around over the choppy gray seas, wipers going on the winds.h.i.+eld. The body lay on the floor between them, touching their feet.
They saw an arm bobbing on the waves.
"Should we haul it in?" George asked.
"No, we don't have to take pieces," said the pilot, tone level.
They circled on, pa.s.sing the little electric boats of the people 'who had been fis.h.i.+ng when the dome blew. The faces were pale
as they looked up at the pa.s.sing helicopter.
The corpse lay on the floor between them, the body smooth and perfect. The plane tilted and the body rolled. The arms and legs moved.