Episode 72






Angelo was the first to come to, pulled back from his pit of dreams by a beautiful melody threading through the sands and caressing him back to consciousness. He sat bolt upright. ‘Rose,’ he thought. It had to be Rose. Pushing himself painfully to his feet he stood unsteadily and took in his surroundings. There wasn’t much to see. The sand dunes blocked his view.  He tested himself to see if there were any bones broken but apart from a few bruises he was okay. Then he began the slippery crawl up the side of the nearest dune. It was two steps up and one step back as he clawed at the shifting sands that threatened to bury him if he lost his grip. Breathing heavily he finally made it to the top and gazed upon a scene of devastation. The wreckage from the Tartarus was scattered for thousands of yards across the dunes and scrubland of the desert. The main fuselage had broken into three pieces, spreading the shattered nacelle and engine parts far and wide. How it hadn’t caught fire was a miracle. From what he could see he was a good half mile from the impact point. He’d been thrown clear when the ship had broken up, and he wondered if the others had been so lucky. He couldn’t see any bodies lying around.
“HALLOOO!” he shouted as loud as he could. He was almost immediately answered by the rasping caw of a giant Batasaur circling overhead. His blood ran cold as the bird’s shadow flitted over him. ‘Not a good sign,’ he thought. If they were anything like vultures it wouldn’t be long before the whole lot of them would be here. He slid quickly down the dune and made his way towards the epicentre of the crash.

He found Sam lying face down in the sand and turned him over, half hoping he hadn’t made it. But no such luck. His heart and breathing were fine and he had no obvious injuries. He was just unconscious. Then he heard a groan from some wreckage nearby and made his way over to a mangled fuselage casing.
“Hi,” said Belle with a little wave of her hand. She was sitting up with her back against a buckled steel plate. “I think I’ve broken my ankle. It looks awfully swollen.”
Angelo stooped down beside her and put his first-aid training to the test. He held the ankle firmly and twisted it one way and then the other, listening for the rasping sound of bone on bone.
“Wiggle your toes.”
“Ouch,” she said, but managed to twirl them around a bit.
“Seems okay. Far as I can make out it’s just a sprain. I’ll try and find something to bind it with, but you’ll have to keep your weight off it.” She also had a few scrapes and bruises but nothing serious. “The lizard lady is missing,” said Angelo.
“Gennetta.”
“Yes.” How come women always remember the small details?
Then Sam began to cough and splutter.
“Of course there’ll be nothing wrong with him,” Angelo said uncharitably.
“I don’t understand,” were Sam’s first words.
“You crashed us. What else is there to understand?”
Sam shook his head to get rid of the grogginess and sat up, looking about himself in dismay
“Tartarus never crash,” he said. “Would give warning anyway. Something strange this place. Something interfere with ship. Not possible.”
“Well never mind that now. We need to find some water and we need to find Gennetta.”
“Lizard lady?” said Sam getting heavily to his feet. He also wasn’t very used to normal gravity. “I hate walk. I hate this planet. Now we f….”
“…we’re in a lot of trouble if we don’t find water. I suggest you go that way, I’ll go this way. And keep a look out for the lizard lady.”
“You got lots bossy attitude. What you, Alpha-male all of a suddink?”
“You got any better ideas?”
“No.”
“Well?”
“Okay. Buggerrit. Lousy planet. Stupid desert kill my plane.”

Gennetta was barely breathing when Officer Angelo found her a few hundred yards away hidden behind some wreckage. He didn’t know what was wrong with her and he didn’t know how to treat her. The reptile constitution was a mystery to him, and he didn’t want to make things worse. Of course she was also one and a half times his size so there was no chance of moving her anywhere. Angelo scouted round till he found some insulation sheets from the plane and built a shelter over her to keep out the sun. Batasaurs were beginning to gather in great numbers now, riding the thermals that rose from the hot desert sands. Angelo’s main thought was getting them out of there but with two of the party unable to walk they were seriously hampered. Then he found part of the launch tube for the torpedoes that would work perfectly as a sled. He could probably drag Belle quite comfortably on this, the idea being to bring her back here and get everyone together in one place. A bit more scrounging around and he came up with a decent length of con-fibre rope and tied it to the sled.
The sun was starting to burn the back of his neck as he headed back to Belle, dragging the empty sled behind him.

“Found her,” he said, collapsing in a heap next to Belle. “She’s still alive but unconscious.”
Belle didn’t have much to say in reply.
“Where’s Sam?” asked Angelo.
“Haven’t seen him. Thank god.” She shrugged her shoulders.
“Anyway, I think I should try and get you to Gennetta,” he said, pointing at the sled arrangement. “Keep us all together.” He tried to stay upbeat and positive but he couldn’t stop thinking about what would happen when night came – when the ice came. They, Sam and Belle, had no idea what horror’s awaited them when the sun went down. He shivered and shook off the thought. ‘Just stay in the present. Something might turn up’, he said to himself.
Unfortunately it was Sam that turned up just then.
“Look what I got,” he said, shrugging an alloy container off his back.
“Water. Not nice taste. Only half recycle. Taste like piss actually, but still good.”
Belle looked at him in horror. This was a long way from sipping martinis at Jo’s. She was beginning to think she’d have been better off as an escort.
“I’d rather die,” she said simply, and Angelo’s face echoed her sentiment exactly.
“Suits yourself. I don’t mind. I survive.”
Angelo turned his back on him and began tearing strips off his gown for bandages.
“So what we do Mr Boss-man?”
“I found the lizard lady but she’s unconscious. I’m taking Belle across to her. See if we can help her.”
“I had pet lizard once,” said Sam. “Also nearly die. But I fix.”
“How?” asked Angelo, despite his repugnance for this man and his ideas.
“Water,” said Sam, holding up the can.

With every drop they poured into Gennetta’s mouth Angelo thought he was going to be sick. He had no idea he was so squeamish. Sam noticed this and took an extra big swig from the can just to taunt him. Belle just refused to watch any of this.
“And don’t put lizard lady in shade,” said Sam. “Lizard like heat – get energy from sun.” And he began dismantling the shelter Angelo had constructed around Gennetta.
Then there was nothing to do but wait…and hope, the Batasaurs circling above…waiting for them to die.

Angelo nearly jumped out of his skin when he first heard the noise. They had been dozing under whatever bits of wreckage afforded any shade when the sound snuck into Angelo’s dream and woke him up with a near heart attack. ‘The ice is coming’ was his first thought, but he managed to calm down somewhat when he realized it was still midday. But the noise persisted. A sliding, slithering sort of sound – much like listening to the sand running through the neck of an egg-timer.
“It’s the snake,” said Gennetta, getting delicately to her feet. She was obviously in pain, but very much conscious now. Everyone paled in the light of her revelation. Sam and Belle had also woken up and sat listening to the sound in trepidation. Slowly they all stood up and began walking to the top of the nearest dune.
There it was. On the far south-eastern horizon a cloud of dust spiralled into the sky, growing larger by the second. Angelo had escaped the worm once, but he knew his chances of surviving a second time were virtually nil. He was tempted to hope that somehow it would not find them, but he knew it already had. It was just a matter of time.
“That one big snake,” said Sam, shading his eyes to get a better look. By now they could see the great moving hump of sand travelling towards them, like a giant gopher tunnelling just under the surface –moving at tremendous speed.
“That one big bugger and no laser,” he said, patting his hip. “Not do nothing without laser. We dead.”
“What is it?” asked Belle, still not quite getting the whole horror story.
“It’s a worm,” said Angelo. “A large sandworm. I think it’s got the sniff of us.”
“Is it going to eat us?”
“I am afraid so.”
“Perhaps I find torpedo,” said Sam, and started running around, looking under bits of wreckage.
And then it was there; a towering dune of sand slowing to a majestic stop not fifty yards away. Belle screamed and fainted as the sand cascaded down and fell away to reveal the head of the giant snake, looking with half blind eyes upon the little huddle on the hill. A forked tongue flickered from between its thin flat lips, tasting the air in anticipation. Angelo and the snake stood calmly staring at each other.
“Wery ugly worm,” said Sam.