While ‘the boys’ scattered, some heading down, others
disappearing into the distance, Ma looked up to the sky, keeping the
gun pointed at Marcus’ head at all times. When Marcus got up, her
head snapped back to him and she hissed, “Easy there, boy. I’ll
have you know that, when you’re in my line of work, you grow a
second pair of eyes in your back of your head.”
Marcus
shuddered at the mental image of an additional pair of eyes suddenly
opening and looking at him from the woman’s backside, but he
quickly shook it. Obviously it was just a figure of speech.
“I...just
want to make myself a little more comfortable, that’s all.”
“...you
may.”
Marcus nodded thankfully, got up, walked over to one of
the more decent rocks for sitting and sat down on it, about two
meters away from the old woman now. The gun trailed his every
movement, but Ma seemingly relaxed a little, as Marcus distanced
himself from her.
After
Marcus had sat down, Ma waved her gun slightly and repeated her
question from before, “So, now that the pleasantries are done
with...what is your business with Ede?”
“I am...his guest,
he says.”
“So you’ve been in the dampening chamber then,
huh?”
“...dampening chamber? Is that what his room is
called?”
“Ah, so he hasn’t told you everything then, huh?
That’s just like him. So? What did he want you to do? Did he also
tell you that tale about the weather machines and how And how they
need to be ‘fixed or at least shut down’?”
“Wait, you
say ‘also’…”
“What, you think you were the first one
he tried to enlist? No. As far as I know, he’s been trying time and
again with every hapless idiot that stumbled into his chamber. Myself
included.”
“So...you were down there yourself?”
“That’s
what I’ve been saying, ya git! Care to listen a bit!”
“I-I
am sorry,” Marcus was quick to apologize.
About a
minute passed with Ma staring off into the distance, but Marcus knew
better than to try to assault her or to run away. The bullet would
pierce his skull before he could even get up properly. Eventually she
sighed again, seemingly lost in thought about something.
“What’s
wrong?” Marcus asked, startled by the sudden sound.
“Eh,
this all just feels so very...familiar. I was once a lot like you.
Naive and lost in this cruel world. Joined the scavengers when I was
young. Back then, there was only one ‘Ma’ in these parts who
coordinated her kids, so scavenging was all the more difficult. One
day, we got caught up in an ambush and all my comrades got killed.
Mowed down, their bodies piling over me. I stiffened and pretended to
be dead myself. They took everything we had on us, but they did not
spare another bullet for me. Didn’t even bother to check for my
pulse. Either way, after that, bereft of all sense of direction,
confused and lost, I found this here place. Stonehenge. And in its
depths, I found Ede. He took me in, gave me direction and purpose
again. Helped me survive until I was strong enough again. See that
wheat over there? I planted that from some seeds he had in storage.
Stuff grew like I had never seen before. Eventually, he told me about
those weather machines and how they were responsible for the
terrifying weather we were having. He asked me to take some of the
seeds return to my settlement and ask for help there, because ‘the
undertaking was far too great for a little girl to handle’. Those
words got etched into my mind. Damn bigot. But I sure showed him what
‘a little girl’ can do.”
Ma chuckled at the memory and
Marcus figured that he must have been itching to tell this story to
someone for a long time. But why not tell it to her children? Why
tell them about ‘ghosts’ haunting this place? There were only two
likely explanations. The first one being, that she wanted to keep Ede
for herself and not share him. The second one, that she was scared of
Ede and what he could do to her children. Marcus opted for the latter
for now, because if it had been the first, she likely wouldn’t be
telling him this story, but much rather shoot him for ‘knowing too
much already’.
“I did what he told me, you know? Sneaked my way through the ruins of the city, the pouch with the seeds that would change everything for the settlement tied firmly to my belt. ‘With this’, I told myself, ‘they will have to listen to me’. But little did I know.”
Ma
pulled out a flask with water, popped it open with one hand, took a
sip, closed it again with the same hand and then threw it over to
Marcus, “Drink. You must be parched.”
“Ac—“ Marcus
started, but Ma interrupted him, “I said, ‘Drink’, didn’t
I?!”
Marcus picked up the flask, careful to not give off the
impression of trying something funny. He took a gulp, almost spitting
out all of it again. The liquid burnt like fire in his mouth, throat
and stomach, but quickly dissolved into a comfortable sense of
warmth.
“W-what is that?!”
“Just a bit of liquor made
from rotting fruits. Makes dealing with this world a whole lot
easier. Can’t have too much of it though. I take it, you only drank
water up to now?”
Marcus nodded, still trying to figure out
the taste in his mouth.
“Yeah, I get that. Drinking that stuff
tends to make the head go fuzzy. Really good for treating wounds too.
Either way, now that we’re buddies, you asked about the secret of
the settlement, yeah?”
“Yes…?” Marcus replied, still
unsure what to make of this. He had once read, that most humans are
actually terrible at keeping secrets bottled up. He guessed that Ma
was one of those ‘most’.
“Yeah well, I’ll get to that in
a moment, but look. My boys are back with the material.”
Marcus
looked up and indeed many of the boys, which were indeed hardly older
than Marcus himself had returned, carrying ropes and some other tools
he had not seen before.
Ma noticed his looks and asked, “Never
seen a pulley before either, have you?”
“I...don’t think
so. What are they for?”
“You’ll see in a moment. Set it
up, boys!” Ma shouted.
The boys scurried around like one unit
and within three minutes, they had set up a man-sized metal tripod
with a pulley attached to its top. They fastened the surprisingly
long rope at the pulley and lowered the whole thing down into the
hole. Two minutes later, something tugged at the line and the boys
started pulling the rope back up. No two minutes later, Sis appeared
from the hole, her eyes still wide and empty. They got her out of the
noose fastened around her chest and carried her over to the edge of
the stone circle and lowered the rope again.
“That’s
amazing…” Marcus remarked, but then struck him as strange,
“...how do you even have this stuff?”
Ma chuckled lightly
and said, “You don’t spend some 50 years in Ede’s neighborhood
without preparing for a few eventualities. Either way, the boys will
be busy for a while longer. I’m already curious what funny ideas he
implanted the kids with this time.”
“How to run a
garden...is what he said. Wait, this happened before too?!”
“History
tends to repeat itself, didn’t you know that? And yeah, it did. The
raiders at the time of course spotted the growing wheat, found the
entrance and...well, you know what happened then. Ede only allows
those ‘pure of heart’ in his chamber to leave again.”
“But...but
he said I was the first visitor in multiple centuries…”
“Guess
he lied to you then. What, you think just because he’s a computer
he can’t lie? You can too, so why shouldn’t he be able to?”
It
was hard for Marcus to argue with that, so he kept silent.
“Either
way, get up. I was not done with my stories and the boys don’t need
to hear this.”
“Why not, anyway? Why tell this to me and not
them?”
“Ya think I want to pull this crap every third blue
Monday, because they think ‘they have what it takes’? No, Ede is
best left alone. I really should have destroyed the entrance, but
it’s dang hard to get your hands on explosives these days.”
The two
of them moved away from the working boys and none of them questioned
what was happening. They just kept working in silence.
After
sitting back down, Marcus asked, “Why...do you hate him so much? I
mean, he saved your life, right?”
“That he did, yes. Right
before ruined it. If not for him and his tall tales of ‘saving the
world’, I would now be living a nice and comfy life in the
settlement instead of being forced to take care of those imbeciles
over there.”
“But—“ Marcus started, but Ma raised her
hand and said, “Let me finish my story, k? Maybe then you’ll
understand. Besides, the boys won’t be busy forever and once they
are, you will need to make a decision. Be one of my boys or continue
to be Ede’s little toy.”
“You...would let me go? Just like
that?”
“I am called ‘Ma’ for a reason. I don’t kill
kids if I don’t have to. The world tends to take care of that for
me after all. Either way, to get back to my story…”
Ma put the gun into her lap, but still kept her fingers wrapped around it. Apparently she thought that Marcus was not going to be an immediate threat to her at this point, however Marcus knew better than to try his chances. Just like when the raiders had followed him into Ede’s resting place, he would not get very far if he tried to run. Regardless of that, he was curious to hear Ma’s story.
“So I
weaseled my way back to the settlement, where they received me like
some kind of hero, after the scavenging party had not come back. I
was even summoned before the council. Old man Markus questioned me
about where I had been and when I told them all about Ede and the
seeds and all that stuff, they gave me that funny look. It was at
that point when I knew I had screwed up. Like big time. They summoned
the guardsmen and locked me up into isolation, so I could not speak
to anyone else. Funnily enough, it was your father who helped me out
of there.”
“My father?! Wait...how do you know who my father
is?”
Ma chuckled again, “Could be because you’re his
spitting image, that’s how. The family resemblance runs really
strong in your family. If I didn’t know better, I’d think your
family keeps cloning itself to keep the bloodline alive.”
“Clo—“
Marcus started but then started to giggle.
“Yeah, fat chance,
am I right? The last thing they’d need is more mouths to feed,
honestly. Anyway, we hid in the bowels of the place, deeper down than
I had ever been to. Unfortunately, your father got caught trying to
stall for me. I don’t know what happened to him after that, but
being small and nimble at the time, I slipped through the cracks the
adults wouldn’t fit through.”
‘Sounds familiar…’
Marcus thought to himself, but didn’t say anything.
“Well,
when he broke me out, Marc said that he had overheard the grown ups
discussing what they intended to do with me and that I needed to
‘disappear’. I think we both know what that means, am I right?
Either way, Marc somehow knew that there was a way to the outside
world through those ancient tunnels, some ventilation shaft whose
grate had rusted through. However on my way there, I got lost and
suddenly found myself in front of a really heavy door. You know, one
of those ‘Authorized personnel only’ kind of doors?”
“You
can read the signs?”
“I can read a little. The beforetimers
were really big on that whole ‘writing’ stuff, so to understand
what stuff does or how to use it, ‘reading’ is an essential skill
to have out here. But you try telling that to the boys. But back
then? Nah, I just knew the sign from other doors further up. Either
way, when I was hiding in the ventilation shaft, I heard the grown
ups talk. Now...once I tell you this, you can never go back to your
blissful little ignorant life. If, by some off chance, you manage to
return to the settlement and they learn that you know, they will be
out to get you.”
“What, did they talk about the clone vats
or something?!”
“...no. They talked about how I likely
escaped through the vents and that the head of maintenance was about
to summon a sandstorm to finish me off.”
Comments (0)
See all