The images of the sandstorm hitting just about right after Gary had returned to the settlement appeared before Marcus mental eye and how he just barely managed to survive by hiding inside the vent. If not for the delay with the raider, he would have been out in the open field at that time, with no cover to hide behind.
“A-are
you saying that not only the weather machines actually exist, but the
settlement has it?!” Marcus exclaimed, far louder than he had
originally intended, however Ma doesn’t even twitch.
“That’s
the way it looks like, doesn’t it?” she instead replies in a
matter of fact voice.
“B-but why didn’t Ede tell me about
that?”
“Because that old bucket of bolts doesn’t know.
Besides, would you even have believed him if he had told you?”
Marcus already wanted to say ‘Of course’, but stopped himself. Would he have really? Because believing this would mean believing that his own father had tried to kill him. But that made no sense. For one, his father put himself in danger to come find him when he had run away the first time. And Gary also stepped out to protect him from the raiders. Why would they do any of that if they had wanted him dead?
“I
can see the cogs in your little head turning, boy. What’s on your
mind?”
“I...don’t think my father knows about the weather
machine. I don’t think anyone does.”
Ma pulls out the flask
again and takes a sip, wiping off her mouth with the sleeve of her
ragged cloak and then says, “Keep going, boy.”
“But my
father is the chief of the settlement. If he doesn’t know...then
who…?”
“It wasn’t your grandpa I heard talking back then
either. I don’t know their name either. I just knew that they were
from maintenance from the yellow suits those guys were
wearing.”
“Main—,” Marcus muttered, remembering his own
questioning. Rufus. The man who tried to usurp his father. If the
council knew about the weather machine, wouldn’t they use it to
improve the crops? Yet there are almost regular weather hazards like
sandstorms, which make ‘leaving the settlement’ a dangerous
affair, reserved for only the brave.
As
Marcus pondered all that, Ma kept watching her boys pulling out one
after another. After a whole while, one of them waved over to Ma,
indicating that they were done with the extraction.
She got up
and shouted, “Well, get ye brothers back home already! And where’s
that no-good daughter of mine?!”
Marcus startled from his
thoughts and realized that the raiders were about to leave.
“One
moment please, Miss...Baker?”
Ma turned around and said, “I’ma
not ‘Miss’ Anything, ye twat! I’m Ma! Ye coming or ye
staying?”
“Will...it really be alright if I came with you?”
Marcus asked, unsure how to feel right now.
“Told ya once,
tell ya twice, Imma not called ‘Ma’ cause I’m leaving kids out
ta die! But ya come with us, ye gotta be one of us. Ye good with
that?!”
A raider’s lifestyle. Hiding in the ruins of a lost city, scavenging and killing for the bare necessities to live. But what else was there? The settlement. His banishment was only temporary, so he could still go back there. But knowing that they had actively tried to kill him, that they were hiding such a terrifying secret didn’t make it easier. But then again, if he went with Ma now, they would never allow him back in. And if the raiders, if Ma ever learned that he lied about ‘having nowhere to go’, what would they do to him? And would the others even accept him after what happened?
Marcus
sighed and said, “No, I think I’d rather stay with ‘him’ for
a while longer.”
“Eh, suit yerself then. But don’t you
dare come crying if he becomes fed up with ye and turns ye into a
living doll, ya hear?!”
“As if I even could!”
Ma
raised her hand in farewell and kept berating her boys as they
disappeared towards the horizon. Marcus could not help but shake his
head and smile at this unlikely ‘family’ he had never known
about. It was a good feeling to know that he was not entirely alone
out here. Nevertheless, his wish to ever see them again was not very
strong. After all, he had seen what they are capable of. And who’s
to say they won’t be as friendly the next time they meet?
After climbing back into the bunker, Marcus quickly realized that the boys had made quite a mess of the place during their extraction, but also left quite a few tools and supplies behind in their hurry. Most notably they had left the stash of food and water the first group had brought with them. It was remarkably little considering how many people had been in the first group, but it would certainly tide him over for at least a week. He sat down and quenched his immediate hunger and thirst before his new ‘friends’ remembered the resources they had left down here and came back to fetch them.
He then
picked up one of the flashlights and walked over to the main chamber
and lingered on the threshold for what felt like an eternity. The
lights were still off and the room felt eerily empty. The whole
compound now felt like a grave now more than ever before.
Marcus
sighed, turned off the flashlight and walked into the darkness,
shouting, “I have returned, Ede! Please talk to me.”
At
first nothing happened and after multiple, unnerving minutes of
waiting, the lights came back on, painting the room into the colors
of a waking alien God. Moments later, Marcus found himself back in
the library, where Ede was standing. He had a worried look on his
face.
“I did not think you would return, to be honest,” he
stated.
Marcus shrugged, took a seat and replied, “I have
nowhere else to go, really. Besides, I have interesting news for
you.”
“Interesting news you say?” Ede replies and takes a
seat himself.
“Yes. You see, the raiders came down here and
pulled the drones out.”
“Yes, I have noticed. That is hardly
‘interesting news’ though. That’s what happens when raiders
stumbled down here. So...I take it you met Chris?”
“Chris?
I...don’t think so?”
Ede chuckled and replied, “Crystal.
Used to insist on calling her ‘Chris’ though and goes by the name
of ‘Ma’ these days.”
“Oh! Oh, yes. She...told me a few
things. Say, why didn’t you tell me about her? You said you didn’t
have any visitors since the before times!”
“No, I said that
it has been ‘far too long’ since I’ve had any guests. How is
the old gal? She must be ancient by now.”
“She’s doing
fine, I guess. Running a somewhat tight regiment with her
boys.”
“You’ve got to be strict if you want to make it out
there.”
“Yeah, I guess. Though she’s been...strangely
friendly to me.”
“Well, she isn’t called ‘Ma’ because
she goes around killing kids.”
“Funny, that’s what she’s
been saying too!”
“I can imagine. Because that’s the task
I’ve given her.”
“...wait, what?! Could you run that by me
again?!”
Ede
sighed and explained, “Chris was a bright young lady when I met her
some 50 years ago. But she was also a troublemaker. Got separated
from her scavenger group by a sudden storm, which left her wandering
for a good while without any sense of direction or way to get back.
When the Ma of the time found her, she was more dead than alive. Her
Ma told her about me and how it was her sacred duty to watch over the
lost children of this world.”
“You...have been doing this
for a whole while, haven’t you?”
“Since the end of the
before times. The first ‘Ma’ was called Maria, a stray child, who
had lost her parents in the war and who believed that the mystic
powers of Stonehenge would give her closure. In reality she was just
looking for a place to die, but that’s besides the point. Ever
since then, every Ma would appoint a successor and bring her before
me, so I would give her my ‘blessing’.”
“But...but why
have them live as raiders then? Why not as farmers?”
“I give
them a purpose and the means to survive. What they do with that, I do
not decide. They started out as ‘the lost children’, much like in
the story of Peter Pan, but as things continued to worsen, they
slowly became raiders, who would do anything to survive. Back then, I
got a lot of visitors, children who wanted to know about the past or
‘how to do something’. Before I knew it, I had become the
‘father’ of the lost children. However after about a century or
something, they stopped coming. I do not know what happened, but ever
since then, my existence has been kept a secret from the children.
Only Ma and her successor kept coming. It’s kinda become a
customary, if not even religious practice. As such, you are the first
male guest I’ve been having in a long time.”
“So...I guess
‘Sis’ will become the next ‘Ma’ then?”
“I don’t
know. I think she was aiming for that, but after the recent disaster,
I think Chris will rather choose someone else instead. As I said, I’m
not exactly in the loop of things. But enough about that. You
mentioned ‘interesting news’. What is that all about?”
Marcus’
thoughts ground to an abrupt halt and it took him a moment to sort
them, before he got all excited, “Ah yes! Imagine that, Ma —
Chris — whatever, she told me that my settlement has one of the
weather machines you told me about! And that it’s actually
working!”
Ede
raised an eyebrow, got up, walked around for a moment, went to one of
the bookshelves and pulled out one of the books from there. He
browsed through the pages for a few moments, nodded and then returned
to the table, laying the book in front of Marcus.
“What is
that?” Marcus asked, after glancing over the contents. It did not
seem like the stories he knew and in all honesty, he did not really
understand a single word.
“A beginners course. I have less
than a month to teach you everything you need to know.”
“Wait!
I...have not agreed to help you shut it down.”
“Oh? Why
would that be? Can’t you see that the machine is a danger to the
entire world?”
“Yes, but...I have a question first. So they
have this machine that can actually make the weather, however that
works. What I don’t get is...why do we still have all these storms
that make living outside of the settlement so very hard? By
controlling the weather, they could turn this whole area into a
Garden Eden, right?”
Ede smiled faintly and replied, “It’s
not quite so easy, I’m afraid. ‘Weather’ is a highly
complicated system and if you change one of the variables, you
inevitably also cause changes that are way beyond human
comprehension. If it was easy and straigthforward, we wouldn’t have
needed Ede to do it in the first place, you see?”
“But...even
if they can’t save the entire world with it, they could at least
save this area?”
“That is a good point, really. There are
really only three explanations that make sense.”
“Which
are?”
“Well, the first one is: They simply have no idea what
they are doing and the ‘weather machine’ that is the planet is
not responding the way they are expecting it to.”
Marcus
remembered the sudden sandstorm and shook his head. If that thing was
really ‘summoned’, they knew exactly what they were doing.
“The
second one is, there are multiple weather machines ‘fighting’
with each other. You cannot just ‘change the weather of an area’.
It’s a huge closed system, with countless things influencing each
other. If the machines are not in sync with each other, unpredictable
things can happen. Droughts, storms, floods, you name it, we’ve got
it.”
“...and the third one?” Marcus asked, almost afraid
of the answer.
Ede closed his eyes briefly and then said, “Well,
there’s also the option of ‘doing it on purpose’.”
“But
why would anyone in their right mind do that?!”
Ede
looked up to the ceiling as if trying to remember something.
When he
looked back down, he simply said a single word: “Power.”
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