[Tehun commented on this when it was on the main Chapter 1 page. Unfortunately I had not make a copy onto a post, so when the page was update I had to extract this from Google cache in order to put his post in the right place. It's all bit of a pain, trying to keep historical versions.]
Something was shaking every crystal in the vast network. The one Sam Fitzpatrick lay on was lifted, hammering him in the stomach, and he went hurtling through the air, balding head spinning over steel-tipped heels, towards one of the crystal walls. Oh God, Sam thought, this is going to hurt.
As he spun he caught a distant glimpse of a gigantic white body, naked and bloated as a dead whale, thrashing from side to side in its frantic efforts to escape from the crystal net which entrapped it. Little arms and legs protruded from its curving flanks, grabbing and kicking at the long crystal shards surrounding it. Its monstrous face, huge as a monument carved on a mountain, was twisted with fury. It was unmistakably the face of Michael Zhang. His private parts swung about below his rear end. Sam felt nauseous.
Mercifully Sam’s head crashed into the crystal wall, followed quickly by his crumpled body, and he lost sight of the monster. Then the wall shot sideways and he was thrown into the air once more. He landed heavily, bounced twice across the flat shiny floor and slithered rapidly towards a gap that was opening between floor and wall, like a mouth ready to swallow him. In a moment of horrible anticipation, Sam imagined himself being cut in half as the gap snapped closed. The two parts of himself would go falling and tumbling into that ocean far below. There was no way he could save himself.
Then he heard a voice, deeper than hades, echoing up from the pink ocean far below.
‘Samuel!’
A moment later the crystals stopped shaking, the gaps between them slammed closed and Sam slithered up the wall. He dropped back onto the floor and finally came to rest, trembling and breathless, battered and bruised, but still alive.
‘Get up, Samuel,’ Michael said, his voice rolling across the sky like thunder.
Sam ignored him. He lay on his back waiting for his heart to stop pounding, knowing that at any moment the shaking could start again. Above him, layer upon layer of transparent blue polygons overlapped, crossed and twisted at crazy angles. Over them arched the black dome of the sky dotted with millions of pink planets. Most were tiny but one was so close he felt he could reach out and touch its little blue clouds, could dip his fingers into its pink ocean. Wherever this is, Sam thought, it’s certainly not the Earth.
‘I know you can hear me, Samuel,’ Michael said. ‘Come on, get up! We don’t have much time. Don’t you want to save the world?’
Sam’s rage boiled over. ‘That’s rich, coming from you!’ he screamed. ‘It was you put the Earth in danger in the first place!’ Sam lifted his head and looked round. He did not see Michael, but what he saw sent a shiver of fear down his spine.
He was balanced precariously on the tops of several long thin slivers of crystal. Looking down through their transparent blueness Sam could see them tapering away below him, like the legs of a gigantic insect. Their feet rested on a horizontal mesh of crystal tubes which encircled the planet like a web woven by a swarm of drunken spiders.
The whole network was several miles thick and Sam was in the middle of it. It was suspended between hundreds of huge blue crystal cylinders, like the canopy of a rain forest. These pipes dwindled away into the pink ocean far below.
From this height the ocean looked as smooth as a billiard ball. Its only visible feature was a long oval shadow, bending with the curvature of the planet. Sam looked down and shivered again, imagining what would happen if the crystals moved and he fell through the gap. He remembered vividly how that jelly had felt on his face: cold, slimy and suffocating. If he fell from this height–
‘I’m over here, Sam,’ he heard Michael say.
Sam turned to see Michael’s gigantic oval body hanging, white and bloated, enclosed by the blue web. He was surrounded by a mass of crystal shards. They joined together to form a strong mesh, a delicate net trapping a whale. Then the heavy, oriental eyes turned towards him, the thin cruel lips opened and Sam heard Michael’s voice say ‘Now stand up. I need your help and there’s not much time.’
‘My help?’ Sam said in disbelief. ‘I’m not helping you, Zhang, after everything you’ve done–’
‘Do not use that name!’ A darkness suffused Michael’s gigantic face. ‘I used to be Michael Zhang, but now you will call me Lord.’
‘You? I certainly will not!’ You were odd before, Sam thought, but now you’ve gone totally insane.
Michael’s eyes narrowed. ‘I am as wise as what you would call a god. You don’t believe me? I can easily prove it. For example, I know everything about you. You are Samuel James Fitzpatrick. You were born at 23 Old Blackrock Road, Cork, at 2:54 in the afternoon of 7th of July 1959. You were the second child of James Rossiman Fitzpatrick and Irene Juliet Fitzpatrick, nee Blanding. Your family lived there for the first six years of your life. Then on August 9th, 1965 they moved to Limerick and you went…’
Sam couldn’t believe it as every detail of his past was reeled out, including many facts he didn’t even know himself but which all had the ring of truth. And when Michael described his father’s infidelity with a neighbour, a close family secret, and correctly stated the woman’s name, Sam was convinced. ‘Stop!’ he cried. ‘How do you know all this?’
‘I know everything, Samuel. Everything! The things I have told you so far are trivial. I know the deepest secrets of what man calls the Universe. Every secret that science struggled to understand has been revealed to me. Now call me Lord.’
Sam stared at Michael’s bloated body trapped in the crystal network, helpless, naked and obscene. How could he use such a word for such a monster?
‘If you do not acknowledge me as your Lord then I will shake this tree until you fall out of your little nest.’
It took Sam a moment to work out what he meant. ‘Please do! I don’t care. I’ve lost everything. Death would be a mercy.’
‘So you do not want to save the world? You do not care about your wife and family?’
Michael’s words cut into Sam’s heart. He suddenly saw his step-daughter’s face, her ginger hair sticking out in wild disarray, her eyes lost and confused. ‘You mean the world hasn’t been destroyed?’
‘Not yet, but it will be if we do not act fast. Now are you going to help me or not?’
‘Is Catriona still alive?’
‘That’s one of the things I want you to find out. Stand up!’
Sam had no choice. If the world could still be saved, if Catriona was still alive, then he had to help her, no matter how much he hated Michael. He pushed against the smooth crystal faces and tried to get to his feet. Immediately he slipped and fell heavily back into the little valley between the huge crystals. He lay as still as he could, terrified they would separate and he would fall through the gap.
‘Take your shoes and socks off,’ Michael said softly.
Sam removed his footwear and managed to stand with one foot on each crystal face, afraid his weight would push them apart and much relieved when they did not move.
‘Look down the middle of each crystal,’ Michael told him.
As Sam looked around he began to understand what he was seeing. He was inside a hollow crystal ball with flat faces, like a large football but with many more sides. It was formed by the flat ends of dozens of crystal shards which pointed inwards towards him. Their edges fitted neatly together except for a gap just above his head, where one crystal appeared to be missing. He could see the black sky through the triangular hole. He guessed the absent crystal was the one that Michael had smashed.
‘Look into the centres of the crystals, Sam. What can you see?’
Sam’s eyes moved across the crystal faces, uncertain what he was supposed to see. To his astonishment he caught a glimpse of a small rectangular shape floating like a ghost far down inside one of the crystals surrounding him. He leaned sideways to get a better view and lost sight of it. It was only visible when his head was in exactly the right position, looking straight down the centre of the shard. What was it?
Carefully, trying not to overbalance, he felt inside his jacket. He was surprised and somehow comforted, to feel his spectacles still safely tucked away in his shirt pocket. He put them on and saw a blue metal cabinet with two doors, the sort you might see in a smart garage workshop, either very small or very far away. He could just make out that its doors were dented, as if they had been hit several times.
It was obvious he was seeing something that belonged on the Earth. At the sight of it Sam’s heart stopped beating for a second, then started again with a such a thump he almost fell over. This was beyond his wildest hopes. Eagerly he turned and looked into another crystal. At first he saw nothing but by moving his head and closing one eye he found a red metal box with a cone sticking out of one end and some pipes out of the other. It was fixed to a white concrete wall.
A dozen thoughts crowded into Sam’s mind as he stared at it. How could he see things which seemed so earthly, so human, when he clearly was not on the Earth? Was he having a heart attack? If Michael knew everything, why was he asking Sam to look down these crystals? Sam could not solve any of these puzzles. He began looking quickly into the other crystals.
In one he saw a yellow metal girder, in another some tapering flat brown plates. Other crystals showed thick cables and a blue metal balcony. The more he saw, the more he had a feeling these were parts of the ATLAS cavern. It was not a place he was familiar with. He had only spent a half-hour or so in there, it had been dark and a lot had been going on, but when he saw a red cabinet with the word ‘Savox’ on the door he was sure it must be the cavern. They had passed a cabinet like this when they had first come into the cavern and walked along the balcony. These were almost certainly images of the same place. He was astonished. How was it possible–
‘What can you see, Sam?’ The anxiety in Michael’s voice was palpable.
‘I think I can see the cavern.’
‘Call me Lord.’
‘I think I can see the cavern, Lord.’
‘I knew it!’ Michael’s voice was triumphant. ‘Which parts?’
Sam was beginning to tire, his legs spread between the sloping crystal faces, his arms outstretched to balance, but he managed to find again the blue cabinet with the dented doors, the red box hanging from the wall, the yellow girder, and described each one in turn. He was still looking for the Savox cabinet when his legs gave way and he fell, trembling with exhaustion, to the crystal floor.
‘Did you see any people?’ Michael asked.
‘No.’
‘Have you looked through every crystal?’
‘Not yet.’
‘You must look into all of them.’
Sam longed to see Catriona. If only she was alive, it would give him something to live for. Once again he struggled to his feet, wondering why there was this urgency, and began to peer into the crystals, moving around and trying to check them all methodically. It was after about ten or a dozen crystals that he heard a woman scream.