The thought of just spilling the truth, to ask for actual support in
trying to understand what exactly it is he found and what it might
mean for them all crossed Markus’ mind, but he was quick to dismiss
it. They wouldn’t understand. No, even worse, they would fear Ede.
Fear has always been the first reaction of the council whenever
something ‘new’ knocked at their door. And more often than not,
this fear lead to a violent reaction. He could picture the scavengers
to set out to find this bunker he had found just fine...equipped with
explosive charges to seal it for good. To bury Ede for all of
eternity. And him? They’d probably lock him up for making contact
with Ede. Especially if he told them about what Ede can do. About
this ‘second voice’ that appeared in his head.
‘No,’ he
thought to himself, ‘I cannot tell them about Ede.’
“Well?”
Mark inquired again, while the other four members of the council
fixated on him.
Marcus sighed and replied, “I found another
bunker. But it was abandoned and empty. Has been for a long
time.”
“So you did not find this ‘Garden of Eden’ you
set out to find?” Mark kept probing, but Marcus shook his head,
replying, “No, I did not. I fear it might not exist after all. And
if it ever did, it probably was destroyed a long time ago.”
Mark
leaned back in his chair again, resting his hand against his forehead
and sighed.
Marcy took the word and said, “Of course you
understand that your actions will need to have consequences, right?
By your recklessness, you not only endangered yourself, but all those
brave people who ventured out to go find you. And, by extension, the
entire settlement.”
Marcus lowered his head in defeat. The
urge to tell them what he really found, even if only to save himself
from the punishment, even if it meant the ultimate end of his
conversations with Ede pushed itself back to the front of his mind,
but he pushed it back forcibly.
Mark returned back into the
round and said, “Well, if that is all you have to say for
yourself...I believe two weeks worth of surface labor should suffice.
Everyone in agreement?”
The rightmost council member, a sly
man called Rufus, in charge of bunker maintenance, rose to his feet
and said, “In fact, I do not agree. Two weeks of surface labor?
That’s hardly more than a slap on the wrist, Chief. Let us not
forget whom we are talking about here.”
“Cut him some slack,
he’s just a kid,” Mark argued, but Rufus would have none of it,
“He is your son, Mark! You cannot afford to be lenient with him.
Especially not now! Not after you spearheaded the search for him
yourself! I have been hearing the murmurs, you know? About how you’ve
left many of our children and brothers to die, because it was ‘too
dangerous’ to send out a search party? But for your son? You didn’t
even hesitate for a single second! As soon as you got so much as a
hint where to look, you assembled a search party and ventured into
the outside world, leaving us without our most capable defenders!
What if the raiders had attacked us, huh? How many were you willing
to sacrifice for one young man, who doesn’t care for our rules at
all?!”
Marcus’ eyes darted back and forth between Rufus and
his father and it took him a moment to realize what he had gotten in
the midst of. Rufus was putting his father on the spot. Either he
would demonstrate strength and dish out a draconian punishment
against his own son...or he would be perceived as ‘playing
favorites’. An absolute no-go for the leader of the settlement, who
needed to treat everyone equally, no matter who they were. Who needed
to act in the best interest of the settlement, no matter the
circumstance. His father had made a grave mistake when he set out to
look for him. And Rufus was intending to make use of it. He had heard
the rumors, of course. That Rufus’ family had always been ‘in the
shadow’ of Marcus’ family. The engineers. The lifeblood of the
bunker, who kept everything running. Who kept everyone alive. But
they always had to listen to what Mark and his ancestors had said.
And now, Marcus had become the lever to topple the chief. And Rufus
intended to pull it by forcing him to make an impossible decision.
He
took a deep breath, shook his head again and muttered, “Only one
way out…”
He raised his head and addressed the council, “If I may, I am also
not in agreement with the punishment. For...for what I have done, for
the dangers I have put the settlement into, I demand a harsher
punishment.”
Rufus stared at Marcus’ completely dumbfounded,
while the facial expressions of both Mark and Marcy became alarmed.
“As I said earlier, I only found an empty and derelict bunker.
Hardly a ‘Garden of Eden’. But it has breathable air and is
hidden well. I believe, a month of Exile would do me well to set me
back straight. I just ask for some basic supplies to tide me over. No
more than I can carry by myself.”
“Unthink—“ Mark
yelled, jumping from his chair, but Marcy quickly silenced him by
tugging on his arm, motioning him to let her do the talking.
“Exile,
even temporary exile is the harshest punishment we are capable of
administering. It is a hostile world out there. That you have
survived the past days is nothing short of a miracle already. Chances
are, that you will not be able to return to the settlement. You will
also not be able to return here for further supplies. You understand
that, correct?”
Marcus nodded, whilst Mark shouted, “What,
are you actually supporting this madness?!”
“I am supporting
the settlement, Mark. As I should. As all of us should. Every mouth
we have to feed is a strain on the settlement. And if he comes back,
he’ll no longer be a boy we need to drag along. He will be a man
who can, and will, support the settlement, even if only to not have
to live in the outside world any longer. He will make his rescue
worth the effort. The danger.”
“...and what if he doesn’t
return?” Mark asked, slowly sitting back down.
Marcy looked at
Marcus and asked, “Do you not intend to return?”
“I do
intend to return. As I intended to return when the search party found
me.”
Marcy clapped her hands and said, “Well, I believe that
settles it then. All in favor of Marcus’ punishment raise their
hands now.”
In the end, it was a 3 to 2 decision in favor of Marcus’
suggestion, both Mark and Rufus being opposed to it, albeit for
vastly different reasons. Whilst Mark feared for the safety of his
son, Rufus saw his prime opportunity for toppling Mark just walking
away.
Marcy nodded and said, “Well, that’s a majority in
favor. As it is customary, you have the last word, ‘Chief’. Any
objections?”
Mark sat back down, and muttered, “...no
objections, no.”
“Splendid. I suggest your people get to
preparing right away, so he can leave at dawn.”
Boris rose to
his feed, “Very well. I shall have my people prepare some supplies
for him. A week’s worth of food and water will have to do
though.”
“I appreciate your trouble,” Marcus thanked him.
After the meeting was adjourned, Marcy escorted him back to his room,
a sorrowful expression on her face. Only after the door was closed
after them, she dropped the facade and herself to the sole chair
within the room and asked, “Seriously? Exile? You couldn’t have
picked something even remotely less dangerous?”
“...why’d
you support me if the idea was so terrible.”
“You know what
Rufus was aiming for, don’t you? He wanted to expose your father as
weak. The settlement cannot afford a weak leader. After you dropped
that suggestion in front of the council of your own volition, I had
to support you, otherwise Rufus would have seen to it, that we both
get removed from the council, so he and his cronies could take over.
I shudder to think what would happen, if Rufus was put into charge of
security and social affairs. So now...what did you really find? What
is so damn important that you would risk your life to get back to
it?”
“Why do you think—”
Marcy smiled benign and
explained, “I would be a very bad head of social affairs if I
couldn’t even tell when my own nephew is trying to hide something.
No, that’s wrong. I’d be a terrible aunt if I couldn’t even
tell that much. That said, I promise that whatever it is will not
leave this room. You cannot shoulder the weight of the world alone.
Nobody can. So let me help you carry. Help me understand. What did
you find?”
Marcus sighed and said, “I...I’m sorry. I cannot tell. Not even
you.”
“...that’s a shame. But it am relieved to now know
that there is something out there you consider important enough to
keep it a secret. I won’t press you any further. Just...promise me
you’ll be careful out there, okay? Your dad’s a little stuck up
at times, but he cares for you. As do I. Regardless of what happened
back in the council room, you still have a lot of friends here. And
if times ever get too rough, do come home.”
Marcus smiled
faintly and replied, “That wouldn’t be very good for your
reputation if you let me back in before I served my time though,
would it?”
Marcy laughed, “No, it wouldn’t be. But when
all is said and done, you’re still one of us. And always will be.
Just...try to last longer than two days, okay? Anything after that
I’ll sort out somehow. Just leave it to your
aunt.”
“...thanks.”
“Oh and, I suggest you at least
say Goodbye to Claire this time. I really don’t want to clean up
that mess again.”
“Why, what happened with Claire?”
Marcy
smiled knowingly and replied, “Let me put it this way...she was not
very happy when you suddenly disappeared without much of a trace.”
Marcy got up and left the room again, leaving Marcus alone with his
thoughts.
He laid himself on his bed, looking up to the ceiling
and muttered, “Claire, huh? I really wish they would stop trying to
hook us up…”
“And just what’s wrong with hooking up with
her? From what I can tell, she’s kind and caring. That she’s
quite a looker doesn’t hurt either.’
“Ah...you’re back,
huh? I really could have used your help back there, you know?”
“Eh,
I think you did fine. Didn’t need me at all.”
“Yeah...I
managed to get myself exiled just fine, that’s right.”
“And
that’s a bad thing...how exactly? A month is great. That gives you
ample of time to interface with Ede, figure out what he’s all about
and probably get me sorted out along the way.”
“Yeah, and if
all goes well, it’ll be him coming back in my stead…”
“I
don’t think he wants that.”
“Of course you would say
that.”
“No, really, I’m serious. I mean, remember what he
told us? That it took the original Ede no more than 5 minutes to
change those soldiers into mindless drones? You’ve been talking
with him for hours. No, if he really wanted that, he would have done
it straight away during the first encounter.”
“...I hate it
when you make sense.”
“Look, I’m not telling you to trust
Ede blindly. I’m just asking you to give him a chance. And after
that month...you might want to give Claire a chance too.”
“That
again?! What is it with you people, honestly?!”
“Hey, gotta
work with what you have. And what, you think anyone better than her
will just pop into existence? Or are you, by chance...you know,
that’d be okay too. There’s anything wrong with not liking
girls.”
“What are you—. Know, what? Forget it. I’m going
to sleep.”
“Sure thing...get yourself rested. You’ve got a
long way to go in the morning.”
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