Annihilation

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Authors: Jeff Vandermeer

 

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For Ann

 

CONTENTS

Title Page

Copyright Notice

Dedication

01: Initiation

02: Integration

03: Immolation

04: Immersion

05: Dissolution

Acknowledgments

Also by Jeff Vandermeer

Copyright

 

01: INITIATION

The tower, which was not supposed to be there, plunges into the earth in a place just
before the black pine forest begins to give way to swamp and then the reeds and wind-gnarled
trees of the marsh flats. Beyond the marsh flats and the natural canals lies the ocean
and, a little farther down the coast, a derelict lighthouse. All of this part of the
country had been abandoned for decades, for reasons that are not easy to relate. Our
expedition was the first to enter Area X for more than two years, and much of our
predecessors’ equipment had rusted, their tents and sheds little more than husks.
Looking out over that untroubled landscape, I do not believe any of us could yet see
the threat.

There were four of us: a biologist, an anthropologist, a surveyor, and a psychologist.
I was the biologist. All of us were women this time, chosen as part of the complex
set of variables that governed sending the expeditions. The psychologist, who was
older than the rest of us, served as the expedition’s leader. She had put us all under
hypnosis to cross the border, to make sure we remained calm. It took four days of
hard hiking after crossing the border to reach the coast.

Our mission was simple: to continue the government’s investigation into the mysteries
of Area X, slowly working our way out from base camp.

The expedition could last days, months, or even years, depending on various stimuli
and conditions. We had supplies with us for six months, and another two years’ worth
of supplies had already been stored at the base camp. We had also been assured that
it was safe to live off the land if necessary. All of our foodstuffs were smoked or
canned or in packets. Our most outlandish equipment consisted of a measuring device
that had been issued to each of us, which hung from a strap on our belts: a small
rectangle of black metal with a glass-covered hole in the middle. If the hole glowed
red, we had thirty minutes to remove ourselves to “a safe place.” We were not told
what the device measured or why we should be afraid should it glow red. After the
first few hours, I had grown so used to it that I hadn’t looked at it again. We had
been forbidden watches and compasses.

When we reached the camp, we set about replacing obsolete or damaged equipment with
what we had brought and putting up our own tents. We would rebuild the sheds later,
once we were sure that Area X had not affected us. The members of the last expedition
had eventually drifted off, one by one. Over time, they had returned to their families,
so strictly speaking they did not vanish. They simply disappeared from Area X and,
by unknown means, reappeared back in the world beyond the border. They could not relate
the specifics of that journey. This
transference
had taken place across a period of eighteen months, and it was not something that
had been experienced by prior expeditions. But other phenomena could also result in
“premature dissolution of expeditions,” as our superiors put it, so we needed to test
our stamina for that place.

We also needed to acclimate ourselves to the environment. In the forest near base
camp one might encounter black bears or coyotes. You might hear a sudden croak and
watch a night heron startle from a tree branch and, distracted, step on a poisonous
snake, of which there were at least six varieties. Bogs and streams hid huge aquatic
reptiles, and so we were careful not to wade too deep to collect our water samples.
Still, these aspects of the ecosystem did not really concern any of us. Other elements
had the ability to unsettle, however. Long ago, towns had existed here, and we encountered
eerie signs of human habitation: rotting cabins with sunken, red-tinged roofs, rusted
wagon-wheel spokes half-buried in the dirt, and the barely seen outlines of what used
to be enclosures for livestock, now mere ornament for layers of pine-needle loam.

Far worse, though, was a low, powerful moaning at dusk. The wind off the sea and the
odd interior stillness dulled our ability to gauge direction, so that the sound seemed
to infiltrate the black water that soaked the cypress trees. This water was so dark
we could see our faces in it, and it never stirred, set like glass, reflecting the
beards of gray moss that smothered the cypress trees. If you looked out through these
areas, toward the ocean, all you saw was the black water, the gray of the cypress
trunks, and the constant, motionless rain of moss flowing down. All you heard was
the low moaning. The effect of this cannot be understood without being there. The
beauty of it cannot be understood, either, and when you see beauty in desolation it
changes something inside you. Desolation tries to colonize you.

As noted, we found the tower in a place just before the forest became waterlogged
and then turned to salt marsh. This occurred on our fourth day after reaching base
camp, by which time we had almost gotten our bearings. We did not expect to find anything
there, based on both the maps that we brought with us and the water-stained, pine-dust-smeared
documents our predecessors had left behind. But there it was, surrounded by a fringe
of scrub grass, half-hidden by fallen moss off to the left of the trail: a circular
block of some grayish stone seeming to mix cement and ground-up seashells. It measured
roughly sixty feet in diameter, this circular block, and was raised from ground level
by about eight inches. Nothing had been etched into or written on its surface that
could in any way reveal its purpose or the identity of its makers. Starting at due
north, a rectangular opening set into the surface of the block revealed stairs spiraling
down into darkness. The entrance was obscured by the webs of banana spiders and debris
from storms, but a cool draft came from below.

At first, only I saw it as a tower. I don’t know why the word
tower
came to me, given that it tunneled into the ground. I could as easily have considered
it a bunker or a submerged building. Yet as soon as I saw the staircase, I remembered
the lighthouse on the coast and had a sudden vision of the last expedition drifting
off, one by one, and sometime thereafter the ground shifting in a uniform and preplanned
way to leave the lighthouse standing where it had always been but depositing this
underground part of it inland. I saw this in vast and intricate detail as we all stood
there, and, looking back, I mark it as the first irrational thought I had once we
had reached our destination.

“This is impossible,” said the surveyor, staring at her maps. The solid shade of late
afternoon cast her in cool darkness and lent the words more urgency than they would
have had otherwise. The sun was telling us that soon we’d have to use our flashlights
to interrogate the impossible, although I’d have been perfectly happy doing it in
the dark.

“And yet there it is,” I said. “Unless we are having a mass hallucination.”

“The architectural model is hard to identify,” the anthropologist said. “The materials
are ambiguous, indicating local origin but not necessarily local construction. Without
going inside, we will not know if it is primitive or modern, or something in between.
I’m not sure I would want to guess at how old it is, either.”

We had no way to inform our superiors about this discovery. One rule for an expedition
into Area X was that we were to attempt no outside contact, for fear of some irrevocable
contamination. We also took little with us that matched our current level of technology.
We had no cell or satellite phones, no computers, no camcorders, no complex measuring
instruments except for those strange black boxes hanging from our belts. Our cameras
required a makeshift darkroom. The absence of cell phones in particular made the real
world seem very far away to the others, but I had always preferred to live without
them. For weapons, we had knives, a locked container of antique handguns, and one
assault rifle, this last a reluctant concession to current security standards.

It was expected simply that we would keep a record, like this one, in a journal, like
this one: lightweight but nearly indestructible, with waterproof paper, a flexible
black-and-white cover, and the blue horizontal lines for writing and the red line
to the left to mark the margin. These journals would either return with us or be recovered
by the next expedition. We had been cautioned to provide maximum context, so that
anyone ignorant of Area X could understand our accounts. We had also been ordered
not to share our journal entries with one another. Too much shared information could
skew our observations, our superiors believed. But I knew from experience how hopeless
this pursuit, this attempt to weed out bias, was. Nothing that lived and breathed
was truly objective—even in a vacuum, even if all that possessed the brain was a self-immolating
desire for the truth.

“I’m excited by this discovery,” the psychologist interjected before we had discussed
the tower much further. “Are you excited, too?” She had not asked us that particular
question before. During training, she had tended to ask questions more like “How calm
do you think you might be in an emergency?” Back then, I had felt as if she were a
bad actor, playing a role. Now it seemed even more apparent, as if being our leader
somehow made her nervous.

“It is definitely exciting … and unexpected,” I said, trying not to mock her and failing,
a little. I was surprised to feel a sense of growing unease, mostly because in my
imagination, my dreams, this discovery would have been among the more banal. In my
head, before we had crossed the border, I had seen so many things: vast cities, peculiar
animals, and, once, during a period of illness, an enormous monster that rose from
the waves to bear down on our camp.

The surveyor, meanwhile, just shrugged and would not answer the psychologist’s question.
The anthropologist nodded as if she agreed with me. The entrance to the tower leading
down exerted a kind of presence, a blank surface that let us write so many things
upon it. This presence manifested like a low-grade fever, pressing down on all of
us.

I would tell you the names of the other three, if it mattered, but only the surveyor
would last more than the next day or two. Besides, we were always strongly discouraged
from using names: We were meant to be focused on our purpose, and “anything personal
should be left behind.” Names belonged to where we had come from, not to who we were
while embedded in Area X.

*   *   *

Originally our expedition had numbered five and included a linguist. To reach the
border, we each had to enter a separate bright white room with a door at the far end
and a single metal chair in the corner. The chair had holes along the sides for straps;
the implications of this raised a prickle of alarm, but by then I was set in my determination
to reach Area X. The facility that housed these rooms was under the control of the
Southern Reach, the clandestine government agency that dealt with all matters connected
to Area X.

There we waited while innumerable readings were taken and various blasts of air, some
cool, some hot, pressed down on us from vents in the ceiling. At some point, the psychologist
visited each of us, although I do not remember what was said. Then we exited through
the far door into a central staging area, with double doors at the end of a long hallway.
The psychologist greeted us there, but the linguist never reappeared.

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