Kronbelt |
A mysterious death in a quarantined town plagued by constant sandstorms triggers a series of unexpected events.
The story of these events is posted at iRez in four parts, starting today, and here for archive purposes.
Do drop by iRez for other posts about Identity, Virtuality and Culture, among many varied topics!
Enjoy.
*
Part II...
Do drop by iRez for other posts about Identity, Virtuality and Culture, among many varied topics!
Enjoy.
*
Sarah
perched up on the rooftop.
Night time
was the perfect cover. Her eyes wandered the horizon, all the way up to her
small half-hidden cabin on the hillside slope, way past the lighthouse where
the wreck of a ship danced to the rhythm of an incoming tide.
She had
never liked this town with its people as narrow-minded as the town’s main and
only street. After her mother died, she pretty much kept to herself.
This had
been a prosperous town once. A successful company found an unusual substance
while mining for titanium. In contact with the air, it produced a particularly
high amount of energy with a low level of toxicity. This drew many people in,
those who believed they were contributing to a better world and those whose
greed made them think of profit only.
A strong
scent of food brought Sarah back to the present. The cook had opened the
kitchen of the café. She could smell the garlic and butter in the sizzling pan.
He loved garlic. A man of few words and an excessive love for butchering knives,
Carver was in charge of preparing the meals for all the town residents every
day. He knew exactly how many. Six.
Sarah jumped
from the rooftop to the floor and walked towards the restaurant. Part of the
street had collapsed and now there was a step fit for giants where before the
street ran smoothly. The usual suspects were
gathered in the café.
“Oh, look
who decided to join us today,” said Faulkner. “This is quite the honor! Don’t
you think guys?”
The others
frowned and mumbled. No one really liked the former helicopter pilot. He was overconfident,
arrogant and he considered himself quite the ladies type.
“Have a
seat,” he said while pulling the chair next to him.
She walked
past Faulkner and sat on one of the stools by the counter, her back against the
window. Palmer, the gravedigger, snickered; his mouth half open showing the gap
of a missing tooth, an obscene tongue dangling through his lips while he
touched that ring of his.
She tried
to stay away from these guys as much as possible, but she had decided never to
be caught off-guard again, so she would now and then drop by for their meals to
check on any developments.
“Sarah, you
should come over one of these days. I have a new book for you to read.” Andrews,
the theater manager, seemed like a good guy. He was pleasant, always respectful
and, of course, hated by all the others. He had a knack for finding books.
Where, Sarah didn’t know, although she suspected he raided abandoned homes and
stole their books favoring the most bizarre topics. The others stole the guns
first, then the food, then pretty much anything else.
The town
had been in quarantine for a long time. Products were scarce. It was impossible
to grow or graze anything. The ground was dead. The water took a strange tone
of gray and no one dared fish anything for decades. The authorities would
provide them with food and water every three months; a crate per person was
dropped by an airplane. They had all decided to keep the canned stuff in a
warehouse by the café and Carver made sure it lasted for three months.
All, but
Sarah. She kept her crate tucked away in a secret crevice in the floor of her
hut. She cooked her own meals too. What she received was more than enough for
her to eat well and still have something to trade with the rest of them, when
needed.
“Thank you,
Mr. Andrews, I’ll drop by the theater one of these days,” said Sarah, although
she didn’t have the slightest intention of doing so.
“Ok, let’s
eat!” Faulkner banged his fork and knife on the table, displaying a huge smile.
“Let’s eat!”
Carver
grabbed the pot from the stove and placed it on a rack next to the counter. He
looked around and covered the pot with a lid.
“Hey, hey,
we are hungry, Carver,” protested Palmer. He was always hungry. His work didn’t
seem to interfere with his joy of eating well and profusely.
“Someone go
get Adams,” grumbled Carver. “It’s always the same thing. I’m sick of him. You
know the rule. We eat when we are all present. No exceptions. And a rule is a
rule. Why would we decide to have this rule and then break it all the time?
Then, everyone complains that the food is not enough and this one ate too much
and that one too little and that is annoying.”
“Wow, what
a speech! He probably overslept. Calm down,” replied Beck.
Carver slowly
walked towards the former bus driver. He got so close that for a second Beck
thought the cook was going to hit him.
“Beck, shut
up and go get Adams.”
“I’m not
one of the apprentices you used to terrorize with your silences and scary looks
and flying knives and…” The bus driver shook his hands in the air hysterically.
“I’m not afraid of you. I am afraid of the stuff in the road...”
Sarah
perked up her ears.
“What stuff
in the road?” asked Andrews.
“Faulkner
has seen it too,” he replied hastily, pointing to the pilot. Everyone looked at
the back corner of the room where he was sitting.
“I have
seen nothing. Let’s eat.”
“You told
me you saw it too…” Beck stood up. “Oh, never mind. No one ever believes me
anyway.”
“Probably,
because you hit hard on the liquor, Beck. You should take it easy. The Baron is
gone and his stock isn’t going to last forever, you know,” joked Andrews.
Beck shrugged,
annoyed, adjusting the belt where his gun and his axe hung from.
“Ok, I’ll
go get Adams then,” volunteered Andrews. “The food is getting cold and we
wouldn’t want to lose the unique opportunity for tasting this exquisite
delicacy made with the expertise of our finest chef.” The sarcasm earned him a murderous grin from Carver.
Sarah
shifted slightly on the stool.
Adams was
the local mechanic, a talkative, fix-it-all type of guy, with a tendency to
overcharge for his services. His constant fiddling with a lighter had earned
him a reputation. When a few unexplained fires destroyed the warehouse where
they gathered newspapers, old magazines, and odd documents, no one doubted it was
him. This apparently criminal profile somehow contrasted sharply with the fact
that he meditated daily and had a flair for a certain sense of esthetics,
especially oriental. When the quarantine was enforced and people left town
hastily, he went from house to house gathering any artwork he could find, a
task that proved to be unsuccessful, only because people in this town were rather
inartistic.
Suddenly,
Andrews appeared at the doorstep of the café, visibly shocked.
“He’s
dead,” he gasped.
Everyone
jumped from their seats.
“What?”
Faulkner and Beck exchanged a look that didn’t go unnoticed by Carver.
“He’s dead.
He’s dead. Can’t you people understand a simple sentence? He… is… dead.”
Andrews’s
hands were shaking while he tried to hold on to the table and sit down.
This could
be a problem, thought Sarah.
“Let’s go
check it out,” she commanded, followed by all except Andrews, who was still
recovering from the shock.
“Yes, let’s
all follow Sarah,” whispered Palmer.
Part II...
your imagination knows no bounds!! Great stuff Lizzie! ( as always)
ReplyDeleteThank you, Cybele! This was my very first attempt at writing something longer than flash fiction. I think it worked. :)
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