Compare commits
50 Commits
a2e900983a
...
master
Author | SHA1 | Date | |
---|---|---|---|
fab7e072f9 | |||
aabba72bbb | |||
e0a787846e | |||
13c35c58bb | |||
700842afbc | |||
d6742d4c5b | |||
29ea1977f7 | |||
262982a704 | |||
4c44a62bee | |||
83ff3564dd | |||
2a4e2f1576 | |||
8a84798154 | |||
ac1a07dd5f | |||
fe79ee7882 | |||
a561e06bf9 | |||
67f7de99a1 | |||
416ab3dd5a | |||
89fb0ec407 | |||
6e8c77107f | |||
8abf550b4f | |||
2e7f521ac1 | |||
8337d2b216 | |||
fd97cd2d6f | |||
e61f3a9e42 | |||
38004b5e8d | |||
059799b3a8 | |||
0e1803aebe | |||
59a7413883 | |||
aead8fea41 | |||
63de11330c | |||
3fa1a3038a | |||
d2f0048c5b | |||
32310c3786 | |||
15bd37484a | |||
828eb6d3d5 | |||
06281e3e21 | |||
5fff2a8fd2 | |||
3f1c213e85 | |||
5a5dcb797e | |||
7fb785bc35 | |||
38a38ce27a | |||
9a74c69db9 | |||
ad4a79334c | |||
403a69a6fc | |||
dda67c282b | |||
e9433e938c | |||
72c6466b76 | |||
ccbcef7662 | |||
9ad0f8069b | |||
5e6206a92f |
17
All4.tex
Executable file → Normal file
17
All4.tex
Executable file → Normal file
@ -56,23 +56,6 @@
|
||||
\newpage % Make sure the following content is on a new page
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
%----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||||
% INTRODUCTION SECTION
|
||||
%----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||||
\chapter*{Preface} % Introduction chapter suppressed from the table of contents
|
||||
|
||||
\begin{quote}
|
||||
“‘I wish it need not have happened in my time,’ said Frodo.\newline
|
||||
‘So do I,’ said Gandalf, ‘and so do all who live to see such times.
|
||||
But that is not for them to decide.
|
||||
All we have to decide is what to do with the time that is given us.’”\\
|
||||
\end{quote}
|
||||
|
||||
\footnotesize{I started this project because I really like the book series and wanted it to exist in English for others to enjoy.
|
||||
I started it in my 2nd year of High School (2013) because I was bored in class, finishing it after I took a break to finish college, get a job, and get married to the love of my life, Alissa.}
|
||||
|
||||
\newpage % Make sure the following content is on a new page
|
||||
|
||||
%----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||||
% TABLE OF CONTENTS
|
||||
%----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||||
|
@ -9,6 +9,8 @@ reading over it too much. I’ll make sure the sentence makes
|
||||
some sense, but it isn’t gonna be perfect. I’ll need to go over it
|
||||
multiple times later anyway.
|
||||
|
||||
You can find all the PDFs [here](https://files.daviddaily.dev/Anders/), that's updated automagically
|
||||
|
||||
---
|
||||
|
||||
## Book 1: The Dead City
|
||||
|
698
book-1/10.tex
Executable file → Normal file
698
book-1/10.tex
Executable file → Normal file
@ -1,4 +1,700 @@
|
||||
\chapter{10}
|
||||
|
||||
There was no way he could tell how long he had slept,
|
||||
but there was one thing that was definitely different:
|
||||
The unconsciousness that he had fallen into had given way to a normal sleep after a while,
|
||||
even though it wasn't particularly long or restorative in any form.
|
||||
Even as Andrew's consciousness glid over the border between sleep and being awake like a dead-tired swimmer,
|
||||
he could feel that there was real relief on the other side.
|
||||
Not too much had changed.
|
||||
He still had a headache and he was still a little queasy;
|
||||
at the very best the two weren't as bad as before.
|
||||
And his knee had stopped hurting.
|
||||
At least something.
|
||||
It was surprising how undemanding you get when you're feeling bad enough.
|
||||
|
||||
test
|
||||
He opened his eyes and at first he felt like he was still on the other side of the river in the burnt city,
|
||||
because he was still surrounded by grey twilight that removed all color and blurred the outlines of things as if he were inside of a blurred black-and-white picture.
|
||||
On second glance he realized that the explanation was much simpler.
|
||||
It had gotten dark outside and the holey curtains that hung in front of the windows in the surprisingly large room he was in blocked out even more of the murky light.
|
||||
If he recalled the few short moments before his senses had faded it was early afternoon.
|
||||
Apparently he had slept a little longer than he had thought.
|
||||
|
||||
That memory let a different,
|
||||
more alarming picture rise to the top of Andrew's conciousness that he hastily dismissed.
|
||||
He already felt miserable enough without the tasteless jokes that his overstimulated imagination kept handy.
|
||||
|
||||
He blinked a couple more times to get out his stupor,
|
||||
propped himself up on his elbows and carefully sat up.
|
||||
Something glid off his chest with a rustle and as Andrew looked down he discovered two things:
|
||||
He was completely naked and someone had covered him with a shoddy sheet that was bristling with dirt and smelled as bad as the bed he was laying on.
|
||||
|
||||
Lightly disgusted, but also at least just as embarrassed,
|
||||
he sat up completely and swung his legs off the edge of the squeaking folding cot that he had woken up on and slung the grubby sheet around his hips.
|
||||
The floor that he set his naked feet on was warm.
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew slowly turned his head to look around the room with more attention.
|
||||
The pale twilight was making it hard to discern details,
|
||||
but nevertheless he saw that the room was very big and furnished with a surprising amount of furniture,
|
||||
although they were all very old and in not too good of condition.
|
||||
Anything near enough to discern details seemed to be made exclusively out of metal and had burn marks on it;
|
||||
apparently anything flammable hadn't survived the catastrophe on this side of the river either.
|
||||
|
||||
He heard a sound and turned towards the door that, like the windows, only had a sheet hung in front of it.
|
||||
The scrap was pushed to the side and Katt stepped in.
|
||||
Andrew could only recognize her silhouette,
|
||||
but he could tell that she had stopped abruptly in the middle of taking another step as she saw him sitting on the edge of the bed.
|
||||
|
||||
``You're awake?''
|
||||
|
||||
``As you can see.''
|
||||
Andrew started to cough and had to swallow a few times since his voice wanted to fail him.
|
||||
|
||||
``Wait'', said Katt. ``I'll get you water.''
|
||||
|
||||
Before Andrew could stop her, she turned on her heel and out of the room.
|
||||
Andrew stared after her befuddled, but he actually was thirsty;
|
||||
either way she had left so quickly that she would surely be back soon.
|
||||
|
||||
He stood up, slung the cloth closer around his hips,
|
||||
and clumsily felt around the room for his clothes.
|
||||
He of course knew who had unclothed him
|
||||
--- even though he wasn't entirely sure why ---,
|
||||
but he thought it would be more embarrassing to get \textit{dressed} in front of her.
|
||||
|
||||
He just barely made it.
|
||||
As the sheet was pushed to the side in front of the doorway again he was busy tying his shoes and only regarded Katt out of the corner of his eye.
|
||||
She hadn't come alone.
|
||||
Behind her a second,
|
||||
smaller shadow
|
||||
--- probably her sister ---
|
||||
stepped into the room,
|
||||
but stood at the doorway.
|
||||
Katt carried something in her hands and as she got closer Andrew heard a quiet gurgle that escalated his thirst to an almost unbearable burning in his throat.
|
||||
Without tying his shoe completely he turned around towards Katt and downright ripped the metal container from her hands.
|
||||
|
||||
The water was warm and tasted a bit stale,
|
||||
but he still gulped it down with large, greedy swallows,
|
||||
and even though he emptied the whole cup he almost had more thirst afterwards than he had before.
|
||||
So as not to waste even the last drop he licked his lips and just now noticed how rough and chapped his lips were.
|
||||
The fever must have impacted him more than he had thought.
|
||||
|
||||
``Thank you'', he said and held the cup out to Katt.
|
||||
``Can I have some more?''
|
||||
|
||||
``Later'', answered Katt.
|
||||
``I don't think that you should drink too much at once.
|
||||
How do you feel?''
|
||||
|
||||
The question was tinged with an unmistakeable astonishment to see him not only awake, but also standing and fully clothed.
|
||||
She herself had also recuperated quite well.
|
||||
She didn't necessarily look in the pink
|
||||
--- she was too lean and the traces of lifelong hardship were dug too deep in her face ---,
|
||||
but she seemed to have taken the previous day much better than he had,
|
||||
which Andrew registered with a slight stab of envy.
|
||||
|
||||
``How you feel after a day like yesterday'', he said.
|
||||
``Where are we?''
|
||||
|
||||
``Yessterday?'', asked Ratt from the door.
|
||||
Andrew took a quick look in her direction and a strange feeling washed over him.
|
||||
The picture from his memory wanted to push itself forward again, but Andrew hastily dismissed it again.
|
||||
Ratt had an odd way to speak,
|
||||
maybe even a speech impediment --- so?
|
||||
|
||||
``In my house'', answered Katt.
|
||||
``Ratt and I brought you here.''
|
||||
She made a gesture as he wanted to say something and continued.
|
||||
``I would like it if you would sit down.
|
||||
We know how strong and tough you are,
|
||||
but that won't matter if you just collapse again.''
|
||||
|
||||
That was too much, even with all the thankfulness Andrew still felt.
|
||||
Eventually she would have to stop getting on his nerves about her carrying him.
|
||||
|
||||
Twice, to be exact.
|
||||
|
||||
``Listen'', he started.
|
||||
``I think that\dots''
|
||||
|
||||
The shadow at the door moved.
|
||||
Ratt got closer and stepped into the grey light that streamed through the holes in the tattered sheet that covered the window,
|
||||
and Andrew stopped mid sentence.
|
||||
His jaw dropped.
|
||||
The cup slipped out of his hand and fell rattling to the ground, but he didn't hear it.
|
||||
|
||||
He stared at Katt's sister with an incredulous look.
|
||||
|
||||
His memory hadn't been tricking him.
|
||||
|
||||
And it wasn't a nightmare.
|
||||
|
||||
In front of him a one and a half meter tall rat stood on its hind legs.
|
||||
|
||||
``But \dots that's \dots impossible!'', he grunted.
|
||||
|
||||
``Yeah, I'm happy too meet you too\footnote{This needs some work. Book pg. 149}'', hissed Ratt.
|
||||
``And if it makesss you fffeel any better, I don't think you're handsssome either.''
|
||||
|
||||
``I must be dreaming'', mumbled Andrew.
|
||||
Man-sized rats that walked on their hind legs and lisped sassy answers didn't exist.
|
||||
|
||||
``Please sit down, Andrew'', Katt asked.
|
||||
``I think we need to explain something to you.''
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew actually let himself sink obediently to the edge of the bed
|
||||
--- even if it was just because his knees suddenly felt like they were filled with pudding,
|
||||
and couldn't support the weight of his body any more.
|
||||
Katt watched him very carefully,
|
||||
and he didn't overlook that she was standing in a somewhat tense position so that she could jump in if he suddenly went limp again.
|
||||
This time Andrew didn't take her unmistakeable concern for granted.
|
||||
He really felt as if he could collapse at any moment.
|
||||
Everything was spinning around him,
|
||||
but this time it wasn't due to anything physical.
|
||||
He barely heard what Katt was saying.
|
||||
He could only stare at the unkempt shape next to her,
|
||||
who was now also a head taller than him as he sat there.
|
||||
She sneered down at him with her black eyes like a demon from a fever dream.
|
||||
|
||||
But it wasn't a dream. In front of him stood a rat.\footnote{Oh shit! Its a rat!}
|
||||
|
||||
\textit{Good God, there was a man-sized, speaking rat standing in front of him!}
|
||||
|
||||
``Pull yourssselfff together'', hissed Ratt. ``Have you never seen a girl?''
|
||||
|
||||
\textit{Not one like that,} thought Andrew.
|
||||
He wasn't able to pronounce the words,
|
||||
it was if his throat had been sown shut.
|
||||
Girl?
|
||||
\textit{Girl\textinterrobang}
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
``I told you'', said Katt,
|
||||
facing her sister but without looking away from Andrew's face.
|
||||
She looked as if she was awaiting a specific reaction from him.
|
||||
No.
|
||||
As if she was \textit{afraid} of it.
|
||||
|
||||
``Bullshit'', hissed Ratt.
|
||||
Her whiskers quivered like small nervous antennae as she shook her head intensely.
|
||||
``He'sss playing usss!''
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew was far from overcoming his shock,
|
||||
but he was at least able to look at the rat girl more closely.
|
||||
Katt's sister wasn't really a rat,
|
||||
at least not completely.
|
||||
She was naked,
|
||||
so he could see that she was nearly completely covered with thick brown fur.
|
||||
Her build was more of a girl than a rodent:
|
||||
She had hands,
|
||||
her hind legs had turned into feet that were way too small on which she balanced with remarkable skill,
|
||||
and she even had a long naked whip tail that was nervously twitching back and forth.
|
||||
Her head was also a mixture of that of a human girl and that of a rat,
|
||||
but the result was utterly astounding:
|
||||
She was in no way ugly or even repulsive,
|
||||
in the contrary she was cute in a way that was hard to explain.
|
||||
|
||||
``Yeah, whatever you mean'',
|
||||
said Katt and pulled a face that made any further explanation unnecessary.
|
||||
|
||||
``Why don't you go and get something to eat for Andrew?
|
||||
He must be dying of starvation.
|
||||
And don't tell the others yet.
|
||||
I want to talk to him first.''
|
||||
|
||||
Ratt nodded, but didn't move from where she was standing,
|
||||
instead flashing a more malicious look at Andrew with her little black button-eyes.
|
||||
Then she bared her teeth ---
|
||||
just that they weren't rat teeth,
|
||||
they were regular human pearly whites.
|
||||
|
||||
``That's enough'', said Andrew. ``Now its enough.''
|
||||
|
||||
Katt just looked at him questioningly,
|
||||
but Ratt puckered up disparagingly ---
|
||||
at least that's how Andrew interpreted it.
|
||||
He hadn't exactly had much experience reading the facial expressions of a rat.
|
||||
|
||||
``You can stop with the theater now'', he continued.
|
||||
``I mean: you've had your fun, but I'm good now.
|
||||
You can take off your mask Ratt ---
|
||||
or whatever your name actually is.''
|
||||
|
||||
Ratt stared at him with a murderous gaze and hissed threateningly ---
|
||||
but Andrew had the feeling that none of it was real and that behind the staged anger in her eyes in actuality was only tediously ill-concealed mockery.
|
||||
|
||||
``The soup'', reminded Katt. ``and put a good amount of meat in it, he has a lot to catch up on.''
|
||||
|
||||
Of course Ratt didn't leave without giving Andrew another angry look ---
|
||||
but she left.
|
||||
Andrew looked after her until the curtain had closed behind her,
|
||||
and even then he stared at the direction she had disappeared in for a considerable time.
|
||||
|
||||
``Everything okay?'', asked Katt.
|
||||
|
||||
``Of course'', mumbled Andrew.
|
||||
``I just had a conversation with a rat, but I'm fine \dots I think.''
|
||||
|
||||
He tore his gaze from the door with some effort and looked at the girl.
|
||||
Katt's uncomprehending look made it clear to him that the irony in his voice hadn't been understood at all.
|
||||
He nodded again and this time in a serious tone
|
||||
``Yeah. I was just \dots caught off guard. I didn't figure something like this would happen.''
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Katt remained silent for a moment, then sat down on the edge of the bed with him
|
||||
and laid her hand on his thigh with a strangely familiar gesture.
|
||||
Her touch wasn't uncomfortable for Andrew,
|
||||
in fact it was the opposite.
|
||||
Even so he just barely could reign in his reaction to swat her hand away.
|
||||
He was frightened and for the most part more confused than he had ever been before in his life.
|
||||
|
||||
``You're really from outside, right?'', she asked.
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew kept quiet.
|
||||
He wasn't capable of thinking a clear thought,
|
||||
much less \textit{answer} anything.
|
||||
|
||||
``Ratt still doesn't really believe it,
|
||||
but I know that its the truth.
|
||||
You were talking in your sleep.''
|
||||
|
||||
``And?'', asked Andrew.
|
||||
`` What did I say?''
|
||||
|
||||
``To be honest I didn't understand most of it'', Katt admitted.
|
||||
She laughed unsurely,
|
||||
as if confessing it were embarrassing.
|
||||
She raised her shoulders.
|
||||
``But maybe it was just pointless mumbling.
|
||||
You had a pretty high fever.
|
||||
For a time I wasn't sure if you were going to survive it.''
|
||||
|
||||
``If I was talking in my fever,
|
||||
how would you know that it wasn't all just nonsense anyway?'', asked Andrew.
|
||||
|
||||
``Was it?''
|
||||
|
||||
``How should I know?
|
||||
I would have to remember what I had said.''
|
||||
He regretted his rough tone before he was even done speaking them.
|
||||
``Sorry.
|
||||
But I really can't remember.''
|
||||
He searched through his memory but the result was just a more confusing mess.
|
||||
He wasn't even sure which parts of what he remembered were real
|
||||
and which parts were a nightmare that was following him after he woke.
|
||||
|
||||
``I'm not surprised'', said Katt.
|
||||
``You almost died.
|
||||
You're the first one that got the sickness and didn't die.''
|
||||
|
||||
``What sickness?''
|
||||
``\textit{The Sickness}'', answered Katt.
|
||||
``Anybody that isn't from here gets it.
|
||||
Anybody from outside.''
|
||||
|
||||
``Like the men in the black suits?''
|
||||
Suddenly at least one of the terrible memories that he had made sense,
|
||||
even though it was terrible through and through.
|
||||
``Is that why they killed their own comrade?''
|
||||
|
||||
``They don't take anyone with them if their suit was damaged'', said Katt.
|
||||
That wasn't necessarily an answer to his question,
|
||||
but Andrew was still too confused to pay attention to that amount of detail.
|
||||
``Some of them kill themselves.
|
||||
The others die from the sickness.''
|
||||
|
||||
``All of them?''
|
||||
|
||||
``I don't know'', said Katt with a shrug.
|
||||
``It is said two of them were brought here,
|
||||
but they already had the sickness and died without waking up again.''
|
||||
|
||||
``It is said?''
|
||||
|
||||
``I wasn't here then'', answered Katt.
|
||||
``It was a long time ago.
|
||||
Maybe it isn't actually true.
|
||||
Its a really long time ago you know?
|
||||
Even all the old ones didn't see it themselves,
|
||||
they just heard it from their parents.
|
||||
That's why a lot of them don't believe that you're from outside.
|
||||
But I knew it.''
|
||||
|
||||
The words were spoken with the utmost earnest,
|
||||
but something about them didn't feel right to Andrew.
|
||||
She believed him so it wasn't that.
|
||||
But the way in which she believed him and had taken him under her wing against the others
|
||||
(whoever that might be)
|
||||
filled him with unease.
|
||||
Little by little the feeling that Katt considered him to be one of her belongings crept over him.
|
||||
Something that she had found and didn't want to give back.
|
||||
|
||||
``Your sister'', he asked. ``Ratt, is she \dots''
|
||||
He nervously flicked his tongue across his lips and had to start over.
|
||||
`` Is she really your sister?''
|
||||
|
||||
``Of course'', answered Katt.
|
||||
``Don't you have siblings?''
|
||||
|
||||
``Nope'', answered Andrew.
|
||||
``And if I had any they wouldn't look like that.''
|
||||
|
||||
``Not like \textit{what}?'' Katt said sharply.
|
||||
|
||||
``Not like you'', explained Andrew carefully.
|
||||
``Not so \dots different.''
|
||||
|
||||
He had done something wrong.
|
||||
Katt was silent for quite a while before she continued,
|
||||
and her voice was noticeably colder but definitely more inquisitive than before.
|
||||
``Does everyone where you're from look like you?''
|
||||
|
||||
``Like me?''
|
||||
\textit{No hybrids between girls and rats?
|
||||
Nope, definitely not.}
|
||||
|
||||
Katt looked at him expectingly,
|
||||
but pulled her had off his leg and scooted a little bit further away.
|
||||
``You don't want to talk about it'', she stated.
|
||||
|
||||
``No, that's not it'', said Andrew hastily.
|
||||
He started to reach out to her,
|
||||
but didn't dare touch her.
|
||||
Odd, when they were running for their lives she had seemed like a pretty good friend.
|
||||
Now that they were alone and in relative safety it felt like they had just met.
|
||||
|
||||
``What is it then?'', asked Katt.
|
||||
|
||||
``I don't know.'', answered Andrew distressed.
|
||||
``I \dots''
|
||||
He shook his head helplessly.
|
||||
Everything was spinning around him.
|
||||
This could only \textit{be} a nightmare!
|
||||
He stood up with a start,
|
||||
stepped forward and almost fell over because he forgot to tie his right shoe,
|
||||
promptly stepping on one of the shoelaces.
|
||||
He hastily bent over,
|
||||
tied his shoe and wanted to turn towards the door,
|
||||
but Katt held him back with a quick motion.
|
||||
|
||||
``Don't'', she said.
|
||||
She almost sounded frightened.
|
||||
|
||||
``Why?'', asked Andrew.
|
||||
|
||||
``I would rather if you \dots''
|
||||
Katt raised her shoulders.
|
||||
|
||||
``If I don't go out there?'', he asked with an accompanying gesture towards the door.
|
||||
Katt nodded and Andrew pursed his lips, arriving at the door with two faster steps.
|
||||
With a determined yank he pulled the hanging to the side and stepped out.
|
||||
But in spite of everything he was still level-headed enough to stop after one step out of the door to look around.
|
||||
And in the next moment he was very glad he had done that.
|
||||
|
||||
In front of him was a long,
|
||||
asymmetrical square that seemed to have been rectangular at one point.
|
||||
Now the entire row of houses on the other side had collapsed
|
||||
and made an enormous pile of rubble that shoved long fingers of stone and concrete into the square.
|
||||
The rest of the buildings were more or less heavily damaged and altogether leaning in the same direction,
|
||||
just like he had seen before.
|
||||
Red or yellow fire light shone from behind several windows and on the square two or three large fires,
|
||||
around whom a number of figures sat.
|
||||
In the darkness he could only identify them as stout shadows.
|
||||
|
||||
And even that was enough for him to tell that they weren't all \textit{human}\dots
|
||||
|
||||
Some of the outlines were too shaggy as if they had fur,
|
||||
had long pointy ears,
|
||||
or seemed to be humpbacked.
|
||||
Andrew saw more than one figure that had a tail trailing them,
|
||||
or some that seemed to walk on all fours.
|
||||
Even the sounds that he heard reminded him of the grunting of an entire zoo more than sounds humans would make.
|
||||
|
||||
``Come back inside'', Katt said behind him.
|
||||
After a moment she added. ``Please.''
|
||||
|
||||
Even though it was too dark to see the expressions on the faces of the assembled nightmare figures,
|
||||
Andrew could still feel their gaze resting on him,
|
||||
and the feeling was so uncomfortable that he withdrew only a moment later.
|
||||
Katt was still sitting on the edge of the bed,
|
||||
but Andrew didn't go back to her,
|
||||
instead steering towards one of the ancient chairs and carefully sat down on it;
|
||||
a camping chair made of metal that only had the wire frame left.
|
||||
|
||||
``They're all like Ratt?'', he mumbled.
|
||||
Katt didn't react to the question and Andrew struggled to continue.
|
||||
Why was it suddenly so difficult for him to find the right words?
|
||||
He usually didn't have any problems with that.
|
||||
Eventually he got over himself and asked the question that he \textit{actually} wanted to ask.
|
||||
|
||||
``But you're \dots?''
|
||||
|
||||
``What?'', Katt interrupted. ``Normal?''
|
||||
|
||||
Of course she wasn't.
|
||||
\textit{Katt}.
|
||||
At least after he had seen her sister
|
||||
--- Ratt ---,
|
||||
it should have been clear to him.
|
||||
She had heard things a while before \textit{he} had.
|
||||
Her oddly elegant gliding way to move about and her alarming strength.
|
||||
And it was almost as if she could see in the dark.\footnote{Thanks for the catgirls Elon}
|
||||
|
||||
``No'', she said after a few seconds.
|
||||
Her voice sounded rough.
|
||||
``I'm a monster just like the everyone else here.''
|
||||
|
||||
``I didn't mean that'', he said hastily.
|
||||
|
||||
``Yes, that's exactly what you meant!''
|
||||
Katt stood up with a jolt.
|
||||
The mattress springs squeaked loudly.
|
||||
``Do you want to see?
|
||||
Here!
|
||||
Look very closely!''
|
||||
She stepped towards him and started to rip her clothes off with angry movements
|
||||
--- which didn't take long.
|
||||
She only had a shirt and pants with nothing underneath,
|
||||
and no shoes.
|
||||
|
||||
In the pale light that filled the room like dully glowing haze,
|
||||
he could only see her body as a silhouette even though she was only two steps away.
|
||||
Just far enough away that he couldn't see any details
|
||||
--- or touch her if he had stuck out his arm quickly.
|
||||
|
||||
At least at first glance her body seemed to be completely human,
|
||||
even though it was very lean and emaciated.
|
||||
Just looking at it gave him a sharp pang of guilt.
|
||||
Under normal circumstances he would have been embarrassed
|
||||
that a girl had gotten undressed in front of him just like that,
|
||||
but in that moment he didn't feel anything other than sympathy;
|
||||
and a gradual increase of anger for a fate that forced a kid to grow up in such squalor.
|
||||
Katt's gaunt body was just like her face:
|
||||
You couldn't ignore how pretty she \textit{could have been},
|
||||
if she would have had the chance.
|
||||
|
||||
Then she turned around and he saw what she was actually trying to show him:
|
||||
Between her bony shoulder blades a striped strip of fluffy fur
|
||||
that followed her spine and ended right above her butt cheeks;
|
||||
as if it were supposed to end in a tail that to his relief wasn't there.
|
||||
|
||||
Katt stood there motionless for a few seconds,
|
||||
then turned her head and looked at him through blinking eyes.
|
||||
Was he going crazy or did her pupils suddenly look small and shaped like those of a cat?
|
||||
|
||||
``And?'', she asked pointedly.
|
||||
``Satisfied?
|
||||
Is it what you wanted to know or am I not monstrous enough?"
|
||||
|
||||
After some hesitation Andrew stuck out his hand.
|
||||
he had to stand up to get to her,
|
||||
and even the he hesitated again before touching her.
|
||||
|
||||
When he finally did it,
|
||||
it was the strangest feeling he had ever had.
|
||||
It felt like regular cat hair,
|
||||
but it was on the back of a \textit{human girl},
|
||||
and that felt more uncanny and\textit{wrong} than he couldn't have imagined a second ago.
|
||||
|
||||
Katt recoiled slightly and shuddered from his touch,
|
||||
but Andrew had the feeling that it was for a completely different reason.
|
||||
|
||||
He quickly chased away that thought and pulled his hand back.
|
||||
Katt turned around to him and laid her head into her neck to look up at him,
|
||||
and for a moment they were very close to each other.
|
||||
Her eyes weren't slits like cat ears any more,
|
||||
instead being large and round and seemed to be endlessly deep.
|
||||
Her look was so vulnerable and shy that it reminded Andrew of a scared deer.
|
||||
He raised his hand again,
|
||||
and the curtain behind them was pushed to the side and a hissing voice asked ``Am I disssssturbing you?''
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew recoiled so quickly and abruptly that he tripped over the chair that he had just been sitting on.
|
||||
For half a second he stood there in an almost grotesque stance,
|
||||
waving his hands in the air to try and regain his balance before he fell over.
|
||||
|
||||
For once he didn't hurt himself,
|
||||
but he still lay there for two,
|
||||
three seconds before struggling to his feet.
|
||||
Ratt stood in the door and held a metal bowl with steaming contents in her dainty hands.
|
||||
She grinned shamelessly as her gaze wandered between Andrew and Katt.
|
||||
|
||||
Katt had taken a step back as well.
|
||||
All of a sudden it seemed that she was embarrassed to be in front of Andrew like that,
|
||||
because she folded her arms in front of her chest for a moment before bending over to collect her clothes and slip into them.
|
||||
|
||||
``No'', she belatedly answered Ratt's question while attempting to skewer Andrew with her glances.
|
||||
``Andrew just wanted to see how far my deformations reached.''
|
||||
|
||||
``I never said that!'', protested Andrew.
|
||||
Of course he had said that.
|
||||
At least \textit{meant} it.
|
||||
Katt left it at another scornful look and stuffed her shirt into her pants with angry movements.
|
||||
Andrew could see in her eyes that she was getting more and more embarrassed that she had gotten undressed in front of him with every second.
|
||||
|
||||
Ratt grinned even wider and got closer.
|
||||
Her tail was waving amusedly while she held out the bowl.
|
||||
Andrew automatically grabbed for it and just barely didn't drop it.
|
||||
The metal was as hot as its contents seemed to be.
|
||||
He quickly took a step back and set the bowl on the table.
|
||||
Ratt's grin didn't change a bit the whole time,
|
||||
but he was pretty sure she had done it on purpose.
|
||||
Her hands looked as vulnerable as baby fingers,
|
||||
but apparently she could withstand significantly more heat than he could.
|
||||
Or she had just kept her cool very well.
|
||||
|
||||
So as not to make the situation even more uncomfortable,
|
||||
he hastily set the stool that he had just tripped over upright and fished the rusty spoon out of the bowl.
|
||||
Of course it had slipped in,
|
||||
so he had to burn his fingers even more while he was fishing it out of the hot soup,
|
||||
but he would do anything to keep Ratt's grin from growing any larger.
|
||||
Without making a face he wiped the spoon handle,
|
||||
then his hands on his pants and started eating.
|
||||
The sou was so hot that he burnt his tongue immediately,
|
||||
and his fever-torn lips weren't exactly happy about it either.
|
||||
|
||||
But maybe it was a good thing that the soup was that hot.
|
||||
It looked like slightly colored water,
|
||||
and probably tasted like it too if he would have been able to taste it.
|
||||
Andrew remembered that Katt had asked her sister to add plenty of meat to the soup,
|
||||
but she must have missed hearing that or their definitions of \textit{plenty} were completely different.
|
||||
Only a few stringy pieces of meat of an unidentifiable color swam in the almost colorless clear soup.
|
||||
And the spoon looked like it had been places a spoon definitely didn't belong.
|
||||
|
||||
Nevertheless,
|
||||
Andrew spooned his soup into his mouth until there was none left and devoured every last shred of the tough meat.
|
||||
He only realized after he was done eating how hungry he actually was,
|
||||
and the thin water soup seemed to not only not have stilled his hunger,
|
||||
but had actually made it worse.
|
||||
But after all the last meal he had had was breakfast yesterday morning and he had barely touched it,
|
||||
since he was expecting to be able to eat on his father's Yacht by noon.
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew almost regretted having thought that.
|
||||
Remembering the boarding school and his plans from yesterday showed him with brutal clarity how much his life had changed in the past twenty-four hours.
|
||||
Just yesterday at this time he was the son of a rich industrialist,
|
||||
living well looked after and far from any dangers,
|
||||
who's brightest outlook was going on a two week long Mediterranean cruise with a man who was his father,
|
||||
but that he barely knew.
|
||||
Since then he had been kidnapped and their plane had been shot down.
|
||||
Someone had shot at him with laser guns.
|
||||
His best friend was dead, shot in front of his eyes,
|
||||
equally meaning- and causeless.
|
||||
He had only avoided being eaten by ravenous killer insects by a hair,
|
||||
and now he was in a city that had been hit by an atom bomb a long time ago.
|
||||
|
||||
Had he forgotten anything?
|
||||
Oh yeah, his food had been brought to him by a upright walking rat with a speech impediment.
|
||||
|
||||
``Wassss it good?''
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew almost let a full second pass before he realized the question was for him,
|
||||
and that Ratt had meant the soup with that;
|
||||
and then it took him another second to decide how he should answer.
|
||||
If she was being sincere and he gave her his honest opinion he would probably snub her,
|
||||
and he didn't want that.
|
||||
But he wouldn't put it past the pair of sisters to play a mean prank on him and would be laughing later,
|
||||
that he had gulped down their old dishwater out of politeness and the afterward had even acted as if it were tasty.
|
||||
He answered with a head movement that was intentionally so vague that Ratt could decide its meaning herself.
|
||||
It was just absurd that he was still hungry enough that he had to control himself not to ask the rat girl for another portion.
|
||||
|
||||
``And now tell us!'',
|
||||
Ratt asked him.
|
||||
Her tail whipped around nervously and tapped a beat to an imaginary beat on the floor.
|
||||
|
||||
``Tell you?''
|
||||
Andrew turned to Katt with a questioning look,
|
||||
not to her her sister.
|
||||
``What?''
|
||||
|
||||
``Of outsssside'', answered Ratt in Katt's place.
|
||||
``If you're really from outsssside, you should know what it'ssss like out there.''
|
||||
|
||||
``Let him catch his breath first'', Katt came to his defence.
|
||||
``He isn't even all the way awake!''
|
||||
|
||||
``I think he slept long enough'', answered Ratt.
|
||||
|
||||
She bent forwards and sniffed Andrew's face,
|
||||
but he wasn't sure if she was just following her nature or taking the joke as far as she could.
|
||||
``I don't think he smells like someone from outside.'', she hissed.
|
||||
``Nope, not at all.
|
||||
He smells more like a dirty spy.''
|
||||
|
||||
``Ratt, stop it'', sighed Katt.
|
||||
``I am just as curious as you,
|
||||
but we should give Andrew a chance to fully wake up.''
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew gave her a quick thankful look,
|
||||
but he was also somewhat puzzled.
|
||||
Katt's skittishness confused him more and more.
|
||||
It made the girl even more unpredictable,
|
||||
and if it weren't more confusing already Katt added:
|
||||
``I can imagine that he has a lot of his own questions.''
|
||||
|
||||
``Then you should hurry up and ansssswer them'', hissed Ratt.
|
||||
``A couple of the otherssss are already on their way here and they might not be assss patient assss me.''
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew payed attention to that.
|
||||
``What do you mean?''
|
||||
|
||||
``People like you aren't exactly loved around here,
|
||||
that'ssss how I mean it.'', answered Ratt
|
||||
--- and this time Andrew knew exactly what those words meant.
|
||||
|
||||
``Ratt exaggerates'', Katt intruded.
|
||||
With an angry look in Ratt's direction she added:
|
||||
``As per usual.''
|
||||
|
||||
Ratt reacted by sticking her tongue out at her sister,
|
||||
shamelessly grinning the whole time.
|
||||
|
||||
``Go away and take care of Bat'', said Katt.
|
||||
``And keep the others away from us for a minute.
|
||||
Please.'',
|
||||
she added after a moment and with audible hesitation.
|
||||
|
||||
Ratt stared at her sister for another heartbeat with her provocative eyes,
|
||||
but then she threw her head in her neck and strutted out the door insulted to a level that little sisters of all time and of all people
|
||||
(and as Andrew was beginning to suspect, species) were capable of.
|
||||
|
||||
He waited until right after Ratt had left the room,
|
||||
then turned around to Katt with a worried look.
|
||||
``What did she mean with that?''
|
||||
|
||||
``Ratt loves exaggerating'', answered Katt,
|
||||
but Andrew felt that it wasn't the truth.
|
||||
Katt was suddenly noticeably more nervous than before her sister had come in.
|
||||
She stepped back and forth in place uneasily for a moment and then continued without looking him in the eyes.
|
||||
|
||||
``It can't hurt to be a little careful, you know?
|
||||
A couple of the others \dots weren't happy that I brought you with me.
|
||||
And one of two \dots''
|
||||
|
||||
``\dots think I'm a spy,
|
||||
I know.'', Andrew finished her sentence when Katt didn't.
|
||||
``Maybe it would be good if I knew who's side I was apparently spying for?''
|
||||
|
||||
Katt hemmed and hawed for a moment and Andrew could see that she was straining
|
||||
to find a good excuse or some pretence so she wouldn't have to answer him.
|
||||
|
||||
She didn't need either of them.
|
||||
The curtain was pulled to the side and three so completely different figures stepped in,
|
||||
that Andrew had to reign himself in with all his might not to cough from the appalling view,
|
||||
even though he somewhat knew what to expect.
|
||||
|
||||
At least he believed he had known.
|
||||
|
||||
The first one was about as big as him,
|
||||
just as emaciated and haggard as Katt and looked like a normal human at first look,
|
||||
but had something unmistakeably dog-like to him that expressed itself more in his behavior than physically.
|
||||
Directly behind him a figure stepped into the house who's gender Andrew couldn't have possibly guessed.
|
||||
In contrast he could very easily identify the species who's DNA had snaked its way into its human ancestors.
|
||||
Sleek reptilian scales spanned over a flat,
|
||||
nearly expressionless face,
|
||||
and just like on a snake his long split tongue moved mistrustful in his direction,
|
||||
seeming to take in as much information as the yellow reptilian eyes that stared at him coldly.
|
||||
Their eyelids were even thinner than Katt and the Dog-man's and trembled with every movement as if they had no bones or a couple dozen additional joints.
|
||||
|
||||
The third creature was so big that it had to bend down to get through the door to step inside,
|
||||
and when it stood back up Andrew couldn't hold down an unbelieving cough.
|
||||
|
||||
It was a living, breathing, minotaur.
|
||||
|
321
book-1/11.tex
Normal file
321
book-1/11.tex
Normal file
@ -0,0 +1,321 @@
|
||||
\chapter{11}
|
||||
|
||||
The Minotaur was colossal.
|
||||
Even without the mighty horns that bent forwards he was at least two meters tall.
|
||||
His naked torso had the form and dimensions of a large wine barrel,
|
||||
and even though hunger and other deprivations had left an irreversible mark on him,
|
||||
his muscles looked like they would break railroad ties just for fun some times.
|
||||
The face was one hundred percent that of a bull,
|
||||
but from his neck down he seemed to be a normal person:
|
||||
if you ignored the nearly monstrous musculature.
|
||||
|
||||
``So it is true'', the dog man growled.
|
||||
``He's finally awake\footnote{You were trying to cross the border, right?}''
|
||||
He actually \textit{growled},
|
||||
even though it was clearly modulated and had a surprisingly pleasant sound.
|
||||
All the same every word he said seemed to be accompanied by a threatening growling.
|
||||
The reptilian being didn't add anything,
|
||||
but its tongue flicked in Andrew's direction more nervously than it had been.
|
||||
|
||||
``Then maybe we can talk to him now'', the minotaur added.
|
||||
His voice was just as resonant and deep as Andrew had imagined,
|
||||
but he spoke very slowly and added an audible pause after every word as if it were difficult for him to speak.
|
||||
Maybe his vocal cords were more that of a bull than those of a human,
|
||||
Andrew thought.
|
||||
The brain behind that massive forehead was definitely human,
|
||||
which he could tell from one look into his large unmistakeably intelligence-filled eyes.
|
||||
Andrew made a mental note not to underestimate the minotaur.
|
||||
This creature was not only strong,
|
||||
but also smart.
|
||||
|
||||
He raised his shoulders.
|
||||
``No objections.''
|
||||
|
||||
Katt gave him an almost imploring look.
|
||||
``This is Andrew'', she said hastily,
|
||||
then just as quickly she pointed to the dog man,
|
||||
the snake, and the minotaur.
|
||||
``Rex, Liz, and Bull, the oldest in the tribe.''
|
||||
|
||||
Short names seemed to be very beloved here,
|
||||
Andrew thought amused,
|
||||
and just as \textit{unimaginative}.
|
||||
As to their authenticity he only had more doubts.
|
||||
He wouldn't dare guessing the age of the snake person,
|
||||
much less the minotaur,
|
||||
but there was no way Rex was older than Katt.
|
||||
|
||||
``You can't expect too much from him'',
|
||||
Katt continued to the three \textit{elders} in an abrupt tone and distinctly louder than it needed to be.
|
||||
Andrew had the feeling that she was just talking so that \textit{he} wouldn't say anything.
|
||||
``He's still somewhat flustered and his fever isn't all the way gone!''
|
||||
|
||||
She made a circular motion near her temple,
|
||||
which apparently meant the same thing across cultures and species.
|
||||
When she turned around to Andrew she gave him the same imploring look she had given him earlier.
|
||||
It was impossible to overlook the immense respect she had for the three figures.
|
||||
|
||||
``Why don't you let us decide that, Katt?'', asked Bull.
|
||||
The words confirmed Andrew's suspicion.
|
||||
The minotaur was the leader of the three.
|
||||
|
||||
``Sure'', Katt said nervously.
|
||||
|
||||
``Why don't you wait outside?'', the minotaur suggested.
|
||||
``You can help Ratt with Bat. I don't think she is doing too well.''
|
||||
|
||||
Katt hesitated and Andrew smiled at her and said cheerily:
|
||||
``Go ahead.
|
||||
If they are your friends,
|
||||
then they're friends of mine too.''
|
||||
He turned directly towards Bull.
|
||||
``I will answer all of your questions.
|
||||
As much as I can, that is.''
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew regretted the last restriction almost as soon as he said it.
|
||||
He could tell that the eyes of a bull were able to exude a feeling of mistrust,
|
||||
but he didn't break eye contact.
|
||||
After a moment Katt reluctantly turned around and left.
|
||||
Rex followed her to the door.
|
||||
He didn't didn't hide the fact that he was doing it to make sure she actually left and didn't just stand right outside the door to listen in.
|
||||
|
||||
``Katt said you helped her'',
|
||||
Bull began after the dog man had come back and had nodded to him.
|
||||
``Is this true?''
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew was a little surprised.
|
||||
He had expected that the minotaur would have asked where he was from.
|
||||
He simply nodded.
|
||||
|
||||
``Why?'', asked Rex.
|
||||
|
||||
``Why?'' Andrew didn't understand the question.
|
||||
|
||||
``Why'', confirmed the dog man.
|
||||
``Nobody helps anyone if they don't get something out of it.''
|
||||
|
||||
``Where I'm from they do'', answered Andrew automatically.
|
||||
|
||||
``Not here'', said Bull.
|
||||
He didn't even take the out Andrew had given him.
|
||||
``So, why did you help her?''
|
||||
|
||||
It was at the forefront of his mind to just tell the truth.
|
||||
\textit{Because I owed her.
|
||||
She had saved my life before that and risked her own life for it.}
|
||||
But for something told him that that wouldn't have been smart.
|
||||
Apparently the values here were different than where he was from.
|
||||
|
||||
``Without her I wouldn't have made it'', he said
|
||||
--- which was the truth.
|
||||
``She knew the way.
|
||||
I didn't.''
|
||||
|
||||
\textit{This} answer seemed to satisfy the minotaur.
|
||||
``Katt also told us that the dragons had chased after you'', he said.
|
||||
``Is that true?''
|
||||
|
||||
\textit{Dragons?}
|
||||
At first Andrew wasn't sure what Bull was talking about,
|
||||
but then he understood:
|
||||
Frightening flying monster that spewed fire.
|
||||
Dragons.
|
||||
Of course.
|
||||
``Yes''
|
||||
|
||||
``Why?'', Rex growled.
|
||||
|
||||
``That I do not know'', answered Andrew.
|
||||
|
||||
``You're from outside and you don't know why the dragons were chasing you?'', asked Bull.
|
||||
``Why would I believe that?''
|
||||
His drawn-out way of speaking gave the words a heft that warned Andrew to be especially careful.
|
||||
He had just been wondering why the minotaur hadn't immediately asked him where he was from,
|
||||
but now it was clear to him that they weren't talking about anything else this whole time.
|
||||
|
||||
``Because that is the truth'', he said.
|
||||
``I don't know who these \dots \textit{dragons} are.
|
||||
And I don't know why they killed my friend or wanted to kill me.
|
||||
Before I came here I didn't know that they existed.''
|
||||
|
||||
``Even though you claim to be from outside?'', Rex asked.
|
||||
``The dragons come from outside.
|
||||
Who would believe that?''
|
||||
|
||||
``Not from where I'm from'', answered Andrew.
|
||||
In a lightly snotty tone he added:
|
||||
``There's quite a few places, you know?''
|
||||
|
||||
Rex's eyes flashed with anger and Andrew had the feeling that he had said something that wasn't quite so smart.
|
||||
Regardless he not only forced himself to calmly maintain eye contact,
|
||||
but also smiled a little.
|
||||
He himself had never had a dog,
|
||||
but he knew that you could never show weakness towards them.
|
||||
|
||||
Liz hissed and Bull said slowly:
|
||||
``That's enough.''
|
||||
Andrew noticed that the snake had always hissed before the minotaur had said anything.
|
||||
Was it possible that he had been wrong and that Bull was just the translator for the snake person?
|
||||
|
||||
``I'm sorry'', he said.
|
||||
``But that is the truth.
|
||||
The world I am from is very large.
|
||||
I have never seen anything like these dragons before or ever heard of them,
|
||||
you have to believe me.
|
||||
I also don't know why they are trying to kill me.''
|
||||
|
||||
``Then why are you here?'', asked Bull.
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew almost laughed out loud.
|
||||
``Definitely not on purpose'', he answered.
|
||||
``Nick and I crashed in our airplane.
|
||||
At least that's what I thought at first.''
|
||||
He instinctively decided to leave off the whole prologue and not to say anything about Scarhand and his companions either.
|
||||
It was already complicated enough.
|
||||
``But now I think one of your dragons shot us down.''
|
||||
|
||||
``An airplane?''
|
||||
Rex sniffed his shoulder as if he could tell if Andrew was lying by doing that.
|
||||
``What is that supposed to be?''
|
||||
|
||||
``A machine'', answered Andrew.
|
||||
``A contraption that flies.''
|
||||
|
||||
Mistake number \dots oh whatever.
|
||||
A huge mistake since not only Rex took a quick step backwards.
|
||||
Liz hissed agitatedly and Bills eyes were saturated with mistrust.
|
||||
|
||||
``Like the dragons?'', barked Rex.
|
||||
|
||||
``No'', answered Andrew quickly.
|
||||
``Well yes, but \dots''
|
||||
He shook his head confusedly.
|
||||
Something told him that a lot of things
|
||||
---his life for example ---
|
||||
were depending on his next words,
|
||||
but it was getting more and more difficult to find the right words.
|
||||
|
||||
``But?'', asked Bull/
|
||||
|
||||
``An airplane isn't anything special where I'm from.'', he said carefully.
|
||||
``But they aren't dangerous.
|
||||
You just use them to get from one place to the next.
|
||||
Not to kill people.''
|
||||
|
||||
``You fly from one place to another one with it?'', barked Rex.
|
||||
Maybe it was a mocking laugh.
|
||||
``What would that be good for?''
|
||||
|
||||
``Because its fast'', answered Andrew.
|
||||
``You can go the same distance in a few hours that it would usually take weeks or even months to travel.''
|
||||
|
||||
Bull and the dog man looked at each other with a knowing look,
|
||||
but Andrew couldn't tell if they didn't understand his question or if they just didn't believe anything he said.
|
||||
Or both.
|
||||
|
||||
``Then its bigger outside than here?'', asked Bull.
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew didn't know how big \textit{here} was,
|
||||
but he nodded nonetheless.
|
||||
``I think so.''
|
||||
|
||||
``And they're all like you?''
|
||||
|
||||
``Like me?''
|
||||
Andrew asked, but he already felt that the answer was a little too rash.
|
||||
From Bull's and Rex's point of view all the other people were \textit{like him}.
|
||||
``More or less'', he constrained.
|
||||
|
||||
``I don't believe him'', barked Rex.
|
||||
Liz hissed and Bull shook his head.
|
||||
|
||||
``We will see'', said Bull.
|
||||
``For now he should stay here.
|
||||
We'll decide what will happen to him after the hunt.
|
||||
In the mean time he can stay here with Katt.
|
||||
But in my eyes you are responsible for him.''
|
||||
He had said the last sentence louder than the rest.
|
||||
He laughed and continued after a quick pause:
|
||||
```You understand me, Katt?
|
||||
Come on in and answer.
|
||||
I know that you're standing outside eavesdropping.''
|
||||
|
||||
For a moment nothing happened,
|
||||
but then the cloth in front of the door was pulled to the side and Katt sheepishly stepped in;
|
||||
followed closely from a somewhat smaller shadow with pointy ears.
|
||||
|
||||
``As if I needed to'', Katt mumbled sulkily.
|
||||
|
||||
The minotaur laughed good-naturedly.
|
||||
``I know how sharp your hearing is.
|
||||
But the same doesn't go for your sister.
|
||||
Instead she is much more curious.
|
||||
You heard what we said?''
|
||||
|
||||
Katt nodded.
|
||||
|
||||
``Then remember it'', Bull continued.
|
||||
``And pay good attention to your friend.
|
||||
If he does something that hurts the tribe,
|
||||
you'll be responsible for it.''
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew tried to imagine what it would be like to hold a really long conversation with the bull-headed giant,
|
||||
much less an argument.
|
||||
It probably made people go insane waiting on someone who took fifteen minutes for each sentence.
|
||||
|
||||
``We'll be back this evening and will speak to your friend'', he continued.
|
||||
``Make sure that he is rested up until then,
|
||||
because we have a lot of questions for him.
|
||||
And find something for him to do.
|
||||
He needs to work if he wants to eat.''
|
||||
|
||||
With that he left.
|
||||
Liz followed him and lastly Rex too,
|
||||
but not without a final menacing growl in Andrew's direction.
|
||||
Katt gave him and angry look and Ratt stuck her tongue out at the dog man
|
||||
--- however only after they had left and the curtain had closed so she could be sure he didn't see her.
|
||||
|
||||
``So those are your leaders?'', asked Andrew.
|
||||
|
||||
``Leaders?''
|
||||
|
||||
``Your eldest'', Andrew corrected himself.
|
||||
``Those who have the say around here.''
|
||||
|
||||
Katt needed a couple ticks to understand what he meant.
|
||||
Then much to Andrew's surprise she shook her head.
|
||||
``We don't have any leaders'', she said.
|
||||
|
||||
``It didn't sound like that just now''
|
||||
|
||||
``Bull and the others are the oldest'', Katt said completely uncomprehendingly.
|
||||
``Bull is very smart.
|
||||
He tells us what the best for all of is,
|
||||
but he would never order us to do anything.''
|
||||
|
||||
``You all do what he tells you because you know that its the best thing for you'', Andrew assured himself.
|
||||
|
||||
``Yes'', answered Katt.
|
||||
``Anything else would be dumb, right?''
|
||||
|
||||
``Sure'', sighed Andrew.
|
||||
He suddenly didn't have any motivation to continue \textit{this} conversation.
|
||||
Somehow it demoralized him.
|
||||
Instead he made a movement towards the door with his head.
|
||||
|
||||
``Can I leave the house or am I under house arrest?''
|
||||
|
||||
``You can do what you want'', answered Katt.
|
||||
But Andrew hadn't forgotten what the Minotaur had said.
|
||||
Of course he wouldn't do anything that would get Katt into trouble.
|
||||
|
||||
``Can you show me around?'', he requested.
|
||||
``I just don't want to get lost.''
|
||||
|
||||
Katt gave him a quick thankful look.
|
||||
She had understood.
|
||||
Nevertheless she hesitated and only nodded after a considerable while.
|
||||
Andrew had the feeling that he had done something wrong again,
|
||||
but for the life of him he couldn't figure out what.
|
||||
Katt didn't make any efforts to explain anything.
|
||||
Without a word she turned around and left the building.
|
324
book-1/12.tex
Normal file
324
book-1/12.tex
Normal file
@ -0,0 +1,324 @@
|
||||
\chapter{12}
|
||||
|
||||
Even if it wasn't by much,
|
||||
the part of the city that Katt and her tribe lived in was different than the part where he had met the cat girl and ran for his life.
|
||||
There was one important difference:
|
||||
The night sky that spread out above the crumbling roofs of the ill-treated city wasn't a light-swallowing darkness,
|
||||
but a completely normal sky with a small sickle moon and countless twinkling stars.
|
||||
|
||||
And they had only left the house for a couple of minutes when it got bright.
|
||||
The sky in the east started to turn grey and started to brighten almost unnaturally quickly,
|
||||
but Andrew kept his thoughts in check even though they wanted to go on absurd wanderings.
|
||||
They were high in the mountains,
|
||||
which was known for how quickly it got bright,
|
||||
but also dark in the evening.
|
||||
Even if he didn't have a shred of proof for it,
|
||||
by now he was completely sure that he was on a different planet in the future or in another dimension.
|
||||
And he was also (pretty) sure that he wasn't having a nightmare or was hallucinating the whole thing.
|
||||
He was in the time he belonged in,
|
||||
and he was actually experiencing all of it.
|
||||
He just did not have a single idea as to why.
|
||||
|
||||
Katt had accompanied him out of the house obediently,
|
||||
but had stood still,
|
||||
keeping just as silent as before and Andrew had left it at that for a while.
|
||||
What he was seeing was enough to keep his thoughts busy for a while.
|
||||
|
||||
Bull, Liz and Rex weren't the only uncanny mixtures between human and animal that he saw that morning,
|
||||
and not even the most bizarre.
|
||||
Andrew chose not to focus too much on a lot of the figures to keep them from following him into his nightmares,
|
||||
but he did see that not \textit{all} of the members of the tribe were as mutated as Bull or Ratt.
|
||||
A lot of the figures that sat,
|
||||
ate breakfast,
|
||||
or were just taking in the sunrise at the extinguished fire looked completely normal.
|
||||
If they even had any mutations they were either hidden under their clothes or were so little that they weren't noticeable.
|
||||
|
||||
After they had silently strolled across the Plaza for a while the silence got so uncomfortable that he couldn't stand it any more.
|
||||
He stood still,
|
||||
turned around to her and tried to catch her eyes,
|
||||
but he didn't manage it.
|
||||
Just to say anything
|
||||
(and to not talk about Bull and the rest;
|
||||
he wasn't motivated to do that)
|
||||
he asked: ``How is Bat doing?''
|
||||
|
||||
Katt threw a quick glance in the direction that they had come from before she answered.
|
||||
Fires burnt in most but not all of the buildings that surrounded the Plaza.
|
||||
One of them was lit up enough that it was bright as day inside, with fires even going on the roof of the three-storied building.
|
||||
|
||||
``She's getting better.'', she said.
|
||||
``She's having a baby.
|
||||
But it doesn't look good.''
|
||||
|
||||
``I'm sorry'', answered Andrew.
|
||||
``Hopefully it isn't anything too bad?''
|
||||
|
||||
Katt shrugged.
|
||||
``It will only take two or three more days.
|
||||
Then we'll see.''
|
||||
|
||||
``Is she your friend?''
|
||||
|
||||
Katt looked at the well-lit building again before she answered.
|
||||
``She's having a baby'', she said as if that were enough of an answer.
|
||||
It could be that that was enough of one for her.
|
||||
Andrew didn't ask her to elaborate any more.
|
||||
He didn't really want to talk about Bat.
|
||||
It was just about breaking the increasingly awkward silence to him,
|
||||
and he had finally succeeded.
|
||||
|
||||
``So this is your \dots''
|
||||
He searched for the right word for a moment.
|
||||
``camp'', he settled on.
|
||||
Katt just nodded.
|
||||
|
||||
``How big is your tribe?'', asked Andrew.
|
||||
|
||||
``Very big'', answered Katt.
|
||||
A trace of pride was interlaced with her voice.
|
||||
``We're almost a hundred strong.
|
||||
The biggest tribe of all.''
|
||||
|
||||
``There are other tribes?'', asked Andrew surprised.
|
||||
|
||||
``Five others'', answered Katt.
|
||||
``But none of them are as big as ours.
|
||||
And we have the most successful hunters.
|
||||
Last winter nobody starved to death!''
|
||||
|
||||
``And even that is a success, huh?''
|
||||
Katt's answer made him mad since he could feel that the whim of fate wasn't the only thing responsible for the miserable life Katt and all these pitiful creatures had to live.
|
||||
|
||||
``That is more than some other tribes can say'', Katt reciprocated in a lightly wounded tone.
|
||||
``Is it not like that where you're from?''
|
||||
She apparently did not understand his anger.
|
||||
|
||||
``Of course not!'', he answered furiously.
|
||||
``Most people where I'm from don't even know what hunger is!''
|
||||
|
||||
``Then you are from a very happy place'', said Katt.
|
||||
She sounded sad.
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew was going to give an even more furious answer,
|
||||
but left it at a wordless shake of his head,
|
||||
adding:
|
||||
``Sorry.''
|
||||
|
||||
``What for?''
|
||||
|
||||
``Nothing'', said Andrew.
|
||||
``Well, tell me about your people.
|
||||
How do you live here?
|
||||
What do you do?
|
||||
What do you live on?''
|
||||
|
||||
Katt looked at him for a long time and in a way that sent a shudder down Andrew's back.
|
||||
``I would much rather hear something about you'', she admitted.
|
||||
``About the outside.''
|
||||
|
||||
``You don't know anything about it, do you?''
|
||||
Andrew's gaze left Katt's face for a moment and glid to the mountains that surrounded the ruined city on all sides but one.
|
||||
Only the north was empty of mountain peaks,
|
||||
with only hazy distance to be seen.
|
||||
``Have you all always lived in this valley?''
|
||||
|
||||
``Nobody knows'', answered Katt.
|
||||
She shrugged and for a moment her gaze glid in the same direction Andrew's did.
|
||||
A peculiar look appeared in her eyes that Andrew couldn't identify.
|
||||
But it wasn't pleasant.
|
||||
He wasn't sure he actually wanted to know the story that was behind that look.
|
||||
|
||||
``I was born here and so was my mother'', she continued after a small eternity,
|
||||
unprompted and very shyly.
|
||||
``Nobody knows what was before.''
|
||||
|
||||
``What do you mean, nobody?'', assured Andrew.
|
||||
``There must be people who remember.
|
||||
Your parents!
|
||||
Or the old ones!
|
||||
I don't mean Bull and the supposed old ones,
|
||||
but the \textit{actually} old ones!''
|
||||
|
||||
Katt looked at him unintelligibly.
|
||||
``Nobody gets older than Bull or Liz.'', she said.
|
||||
``Bull has almost survived twenty winters.
|
||||
Nobody before him has lived that long before him,
|
||||
and the only reason he made it so far is because he is so strong.
|
||||
But he might not survive the next hunt or the one after that.
|
||||
|
||||
``And that doesn't bother him?''
|
||||
|
||||
``That's how life is'', said Katt apathetically.
|
||||
``Bull knows that.
|
||||
Is it different where you're from?
|
||||
Do you never die?''
|
||||
|
||||
``We do'', answered Andrew.
|
||||
``But not like that!
|
||||
At twenty?
|
||||
Life is just starting at that point!''
|
||||
|
||||
Katt looked at him with a look that he didn't understand at first.
|
||||
Then as he understood her look he recoiled and felt bad about what he had said.
|
||||
If what Katt had said was true,
|
||||
then she already had most of her life behind her;
|
||||
In fact it was the \textit{biggest} part of her life.
|
||||
His words must be pure scorn.
|
||||
|
||||
``Sorry'', he said again.
|
||||
``But I \dots I just don't understand!
|
||||
What happened here?
|
||||
Why won't anyone help you\textinterrobang''
|
||||
|
||||
``Help?'', repeated Katt uncomprehending.
|
||||
``But who and why?''
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew ignored the question about \textit{who}.
|
||||
The only contact that these pitiful creatures had had with people from the outside were clearly just the men from the black fighter helicopters,
|
||||
which these people aptly named \textit{Dragons} and that had already demonstrated what their \textit{help} looked like.
|
||||
But why?
|
||||
|
||||
``Why did you help me?'', he asked.
|
||||
|
||||
``Because you had saved my life before that'', answered Katt.
|
||||
``I repay my debts.''
|
||||
|
||||
``That isn't true'', Andrew insisted.
|
||||
``You started it.
|
||||
I would have been dead if you hadn't pulled me off that roof.
|
||||
And now don't you tell me it wasn't dangerous!
|
||||
They would have shot you just like they would have done to me!''
|
||||
|
||||
``Maybe I was just being dumb'', Katt answered spitefully.
|
||||
``Or maybe I didn't want them to win.''
|
||||
|
||||
Her change in tone didn't elude Andrew.
|
||||
Apparently it wasn't common for people to help strangers out here,
|
||||
and Katt seemed to be embarrassed to have broken that rule.
|
||||
He left it at that,
|
||||
at least for the moment.
|
||||
|
||||
``So, what happened here?'' he asked again.
|
||||
He made a wide gesture.
|
||||
``Who did this to you?''
|
||||
|
||||
``Did this to us?''
|
||||
|
||||
``Somebody destroyed this city'', Andrew persevered.
|
||||
``You must know who or why.
|
||||
There \dots must be some kind of stories!''
|
||||
|
||||
``I don't know what you mean'', said Katt.
|
||||
It sounded honest.
|
||||
|
||||
``Nobody here has any memories of the past?'', asked Andrew doubtfully.
|
||||
``No lore?
|
||||
Not even legends of a big fire that fell from the skies,
|
||||
of as far as I'm concerned the wrath of the gods,
|
||||
or maybe a dragon that had burnt your world?''
|
||||
|
||||
``That's nonsense'', answered Katt.
|
||||
``It has always been like this.''
|
||||
|
||||
``No, god damn it, it was not!'', contradicted Andrew.
|
||||
``And it isn't even that long ago!''
|
||||
|
||||
``How would you know?'', asked Katt.
|
||||
Suddenly her mistrust was back, stronger than before.
|
||||
``Until now you have been acting like you don't know anything about us.''
|
||||
|
||||
``That is true'', answered Andrew.
|
||||
``But you know,
|
||||
we have cities like this too.
|
||||
Just that they are very different.''
|
||||
|
||||
``And how?'', Katt wanted to know.
|
||||
|
||||
``Not destroyed'', answered Andrew.
|
||||
``Not burnt like this one.
|
||||
The houses there have roofs and windows and doors.''
|
||||
He shook his head.
|
||||
``Have you never wondered who built all of this?''
|
||||
|
||||
``Nobody builds anything'', answered Katt offhandedly.
|
||||
``It's not allowed.''
|
||||
|
||||
``Nonsense'', said Andrew vehemently.
|
||||
``Something isn't right here Katt.
|
||||
Something happened here.
|
||||
Something terrible.
|
||||
And apparently none of you want to know what it was.''
|
||||
|
||||
``Knowing is dangerous'', answered Katt.
|
||||
It came as quickly as a lifelong memorized reflex,
|
||||
a litany that she automatically recited without thinking about it for a fraction of a second.
|
||||
``And useless.
|
||||
What do you get from knowing what happened before?''
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew started to formulate a sharply-worded answer,
|
||||
but he let it go.
|
||||
It didn't make sense to argue with Katt.
|
||||
He kept silent.
|
||||
|
||||
``Maybe Rex and the others are right'', said Katt.
|
||||
|
||||
``Right?
|
||||
About what?''
|
||||
|
||||
``They say that you're dangerous to us.''
|
||||
|
||||
``Yeah, maybe'', Andrew said with a shrug.
|
||||
``But you don't have to worry.
|
||||
I won't be here long enough to actually be dangerous for you.''
|
||||
|
||||
Katt wrinkled her brow.
|
||||
``What do you mean?''
|
||||
|
||||
``Just like I said'', answered Andrew.
|
||||
``I'm definitely not staying here.''
|
||||
|
||||
``Nonsense'', Katt rebutted.
|
||||
``Nobody leaves from here.''
|
||||
|
||||
``Has anyone ever tried it?''
|
||||
|
||||
``A couple'', answered Katt.
|
||||
``They all died.
|
||||
Nobody gets over the mountains.''
|
||||
|
||||
``I can'', Andrew insisted.
|
||||
Katt wanted to talk back again,
|
||||
but this time Andrew's quick and slightly louder tone cut her off
|
||||
--- even though he felt like he shouldn't say it.
|
||||
``I'm not just anyone, you know?
|
||||
I mean:
|
||||
I'm neither extraordinarily important nor famous or irreplaceable.
|
||||
But my father is a very influential man and is also filthy rich.
|
||||
He noticed a long time ago that our plane hasn't arrived like it was planned,
|
||||
and he will move heaven and earth to find me.''
|
||||
With a snide noise he motioned towards the black mountains that loomed over the roofs of the city
|
||||
like gigantic stone prison guards.
|
||||
``Those mountains would have to reach all the way to the moon.
|
||||
I'll bet it won't even take three days before he finds me.''
|
||||
|
||||
``Are you sure?', asked Katt.
|
||||
|
||||
Something in the way that she asked that irritated Andrew.
|
||||
Maybe it would have scared him if he would have let her.
|
||||
He still nodded.
|
||||
|
||||
``You had the sickness,
|
||||
Andrew.'', Katt said after a couple seconds.
|
||||
It was still in the same empathetic tone that was making him more and more uncomfortable.
|
||||
|
||||
``And?''
|
||||
|
||||
``You had a heavy fever'', Katt continued.
|
||||
``We all thought that you would die,
|
||||
but you made it.''
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew stared at her.
|
||||
His heart started beating.
|
||||
``How long \dots did I sleep?'', he asked hesitantly.
|
||||
|
||||
``Ten days'', answered Katt.
|
213
book-1/13.tex
Normal file
213
book-1/13.tex
Normal file
@ -0,0 +1,213 @@
|
||||
\chapter{13}
|
||||
|
||||
Almost half of the day was spent in a state of shock between speechless horror,
|
||||
bewildered disbelief,
|
||||
and anger.
|
||||
Ten days?
|
||||
Apparently he laid there in a fever for \textit{ten days} without noticing it?
|
||||
Other than that it was hard for him to believe it,
|
||||
he just didn't \textit{want} to.
|
||||
The consequences would have been too frightening.
|
||||
|
||||
Just like before,
|
||||
Andrew was convinced that his father would try anything to find him.
|
||||
Surely he had already started the largest manhunt the country had ever seen,
|
||||
and he wouldn't rest until his people had overturned every stone,
|
||||
searched every lake,
|
||||
looked in every well,
|
||||
and grilled every applicable previously arrested wannabe-criminal for any information.
|
||||
|
||||
But ten days was an unbelievably long time.
|
||||
Of course Andrew had never been the subject of a manhunt,
|
||||
but he wasn't the first person to disappear,
|
||||
and he had followed other manhunts on the news:
|
||||
Hundreds of policemen and thousands of volunteers that searched woods and marshes,
|
||||
supported by airplanes,
|
||||
helicopters,
|
||||
and sometimes even fighter jets that would scan the ground below them with thermal cameras and all sorts of other technical equipment.
|
||||
Regrettably, he also knew that the longer the undertaking took,
|
||||
the less likely it was that they would be successful.
|
||||
Missing people were mostly found quickly
|
||||
--- or not at all.
|
||||
Most of the missing people that weren't found within the first couple of hours or days would only be found after weeks or sometimes months;
|
||||
Buried in the woods and found by people walking by or in a plastic bag that got caught in the dam of a sewage treatment plant.
|
||||
|
||||
It took some effort for Andrew to reign in his rampaging fantasy.
|
||||
In the end he was still alive,
|
||||
and with some luck it could stay that way.
|
||||
But not here.
|
||||
He just couldn't imagine that his father would give up before he hadn't found him
|
||||
--- or held the definitive proof that he was dead in his hands.
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew didn't want it,
|
||||
but the thought created a reality in his head that he would have loved to deny:
|
||||
The men in the black outfits that had collected the wreckage of the Cessna and loaded it into the helicopters that had landed on the plaza.
|
||||
Maybe they \textit{had} convinced his father of his death a long time ago,
|
||||
and instead of a search party he was standing in front of an open grave with an empty coffin in it,
|
||||
just like they did in some symbolic burials.
|
||||
Maybe he was already dead and this was hell,
|
||||
or at least the purgatory where he would spend the next six hundred thousand years or at least until Judgement Day.
|
||||
|
||||
Just that as far as he knew he had not done anything bad enough to deserve this.
|
||||
|
||||
The sound of naked feet on a hard stone floor tore him out of his sullen contemplations.
|
||||
He looked up and noticed that Katt had come in and was slowly approaching him with an almost shy smile.
|
||||
He returned it,
|
||||
even though it was more out of relief that it wasn't her sister,
|
||||
but not \textit{just} for that reason.
|
||||
Ratt had come in two or three times and he was happy when she left every time.
|
||||
He didn't have anything against the rat-girl;
|
||||
It was quite the opposite.
|
||||
Once you got used to the way she looked she was kinda cute in her own way.
|
||||
But she was also a complete pain in the neck:
|
||||
Her character had inherited a healthy amount of the non-human parts of her heritage.
|
||||
|
||||
``How are you doing?", asked Katt.
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew shrugged.
|
||||
Katt wasn't just making conversation, he knew that much.
|
||||
She was actually worried about him.
|
||||
``How am I supposed to be doing?''
|
||||
|
||||
Katt slowly got closer and stood still two steps away from him.
|
||||
Andrew could see how hard she was debating what to say.
|
||||
Eventually she shrugged her shoulders and made an awkward hand movement behind her,
|
||||
towards the exit.
|
||||
|
||||
``I have water duty'', she said hesitantly.
|
||||
``Do you want to come with?''
|
||||
|
||||
What ever \textit{water duty} was.
|
||||
Andrew shrugged,
|
||||
letting the motion seamlessly transform into a nod and standing up.
|
||||
He had sat here half a day and felt bad for himself;
|
||||
maybe it would be good if he got some fresh air and let the bleak thoughts blow away with the wind.
|
||||
``Why not?''
|
||||
|
||||
Katt looked at him questioning for another moment,
|
||||
but then she nodded and went outside,
|
||||
Andrew following close behind her.
|
||||
|
||||
The sun was shining down so brightly from the cloudless sky that he was forced to close his eyes and raised his hand over his face.
|
||||
It was very warm, almost hot,
|
||||
and there was not even the slightest breeze.
|
||||
Andrew let a moment pass for his eyes to adjust to the change in light conditions,
|
||||
then motioned to Katt with a nod that she should keep going.
|
||||
She motioned to the left,
|
||||
but went in the opposite direction out of the same movement.
|
||||
Two steps away from the door an unorganized row of old metal canisters,
|
||||
rusty and big enough to hold at least twenty liters each.
|
||||
They were similar to the containers that held the \textit{firewater}
|
||||
that Katt used to protect the safe place.
|
||||
|
||||
She took two of the containers that were apparently empty and Andrew followed her and did the same.
|
||||
Katt doubtfully furrowed her brow.
|
||||
|
||||
``Are you sure?'', she asked.
|
||||
|
||||
``What?''
|
||||
|
||||
``The canisters get pretty heavy when they're full''
|
||||
, answered Katt.
|
||||
|
||||
``Doy you think you've recovered enough to be able to do that?''
|
||||
|
||||
``I guess we'll see'', Andrew answered.
|
||||
Even though he knew that Katt only meant well,
|
||||
they bothered him again.
|
||||
Mostly because she was probably right.
|
||||
He felt everything but refreshed and as a matter of fact he already felt the weight of the two \textit{empty} canisters.
|
||||
But of course he was too proud to accept Katt's almost unnoticeable offer and only to only entertain himself with one canister.
|
||||
Instead he added in an obviously spiteful tone:
|
||||
``Bull said I need to work if I want to eat.''
|
||||
|
||||
``He didn't say that you have to overexert yourself'', answered Katt,
|
||||
but left it at a shrug and turned around.
|
||||
Andrew was finally smart enough not to continue the senseless discussion,
|
||||
but to shut up instead.
|
||||
|
||||
In the bright daylight the ruined city made a maybe not friendly,
|
||||
but at least less creepy impression.
|
||||
The ruins were the same as they were before,
|
||||
immense black skeletons that looked like they had never housed anyone.
|
||||
The left side of the plaza was blocked by piles of rubble that nobody had seemed to put in the effort to move,
|
||||
and even though Katt had said there were at least one hundred members in the tribe,
|
||||
most of the buildings seemed to be empty.
|
||||
Only a hand full of the doors had the grey rags that Katt and her sister used as curtains.
|
||||
Almost nobody from the tribe was currently able to be seen,
|
||||
which Andrew wasn't too sad about.
|
||||
On the other side of the large plaza some kids were playing,
|
||||
but Andrew decided he didn't want to look at them too closely.
|
||||
Even if he had gotten a taste of the tribe through Ratt, Liz, and the others,
|
||||
he felt it would be better to get to know the rest of the menagerie in homeopathic doses.
|
||||
|
||||
Shortly before they left the plaza,
|
||||
Andrew stopped and looked around him.
|
||||
On the roof of the house next to where Katt and her sister lived a fire was still burning.
|
||||
It was too bright to really see the flames,
|
||||
but Andrew could see the column of oily black smoke that went almost completely vertical in the unmoving air,
|
||||
before it dissolved into the air thirty or forty meters up.
|
||||
He blinked questioningly.
|
||||
|
||||
``She'll have her child today'', answered Katt,
|
||||
who had noticed his facial expression.
|
||||
``At the latest tomorrow.''
|
||||
|
||||
``You always light a bonfire when one of you expects a child?''
|
||||
|
||||
``Is it not like that where you're from?'', asked Katt blankly.
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew laughed.
|
||||
``No.
|
||||
Our tribes are \dots a little bigger than yours.''
|
||||
|
||||
``That much bigger?''
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew nodded.
|
||||
|
||||
``How many?'', asked Katt.
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew thought about it for a moment,
|
||||
then he made a sweeping motion around himself with the empty canister.
|
||||
``Imagine this whole city were full of humans.
|
||||
A whole family would live in each room.''
|
||||
|
||||
Katt's eyes widened.
|
||||
``I don't believe you.''
|
||||
|
||||
``And then imagine it was a hundred times as big'', Andrew continued.
|
||||
``And there were a hundred of those cities.''
|
||||
|
||||
Katt stared at him further in bewilderment and in her eyes a fear appeared that Andrew didn't understand at first.
|
||||
She laughed, but it sounded nervous and not real.
|
||||
``You're pulling my leg'', she said.
|
||||
``No tribe can get that big.
|
||||
What would they all eat?''
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew mentally warned himself to be careful.
|
||||
It might not matter to him if Katt believed him or not,
|
||||
but maybe the danger was that she \textit{would} believe him.
|
||||
Maybe he wasn't the only one that needed the truth in homeopathic doses.
|
||||
|
||||
``Yeah, you are probably right'', he said ambiguously and made motions to continue walking.
|
||||
She looked at him for a moment longer with such hopelessness and bewilderment that Andrew almost regretted his own words.
|
||||
As they kept walking Andrew mentally warned himself again to be much more careful with what he said.
|
||||
He really should be thinking about every word he says very carefully.
|
||||
|
||||
They left the plaza and stepped on to a street that was mostly blocked by rubble and other debris.
|
||||
It continued straight for a good one and a half or two kilometers.
|
||||
The houses,
|
||||
even though they were destroyed,
|
||||
were still so tall that they held most of the sunlight back;
|
||||
At the floor of the brick ravine it was not only darker,
|
||||
but also noticeably cooler than on the big plaza where the tribe lived.
|
||||
only a small stripe on the left lay in the sun,
|
||||
but Katt avoided walking there,
|
||||
instead opting to march along the other side even though they were constantly forced to climb over frequent boulders and other rubble.
|
||||
Andrew was wondering why she was doing that,
|
||||
but he figured that Katt would know what she was doing and followed her without complaints.
|
||||
He also passed on asking how far they had to go.
|
||||
With two full water canisters the way back would be torture.
|
||||
|
||||
While he was closely following Katt he took the time to really look around himself.
|
||||
|
598
book-1/7.tex
Executable file → Normal file
598
book-1/7.tex
Executable file → Normal file
@ -1,201 +1,607 @@
|
||||
\chapter{7}
|
||||
|
||||
It couldn't have been long, maybe a few moments and at most a couple minutes. He woke up with the same unpleasant feeling that he had gone under with --- nausea and a terrible headache ---, but something else had been added to the mix: He was shivering from the cold. He didn't have to raise his hand to his head to verify that he had a fever. He opened his eyes and realized with quiet surprise that they weren't in the hallway where he had gone unconscious. This corridor was much wider and there seemed to be a marble floor hidden under the layers of dust on which he was laying. Moaning he turned on his back and looked at Katts face. She seemed to have gotten more pale and her breath came in hard, short breaths. Her skin was glistening from sweat.
|
||||
It couldn't have been long,
|
||||
maybe a few moments and at most a couple minutes.
|
||||
He woke up with the same unpleasant feeling that he had gone under with --- nausea and a terrible headache ---,
|
||||
but something else had been added to the mix: He was shivering from the cold.
|
||||
He didn't have to raise his hand to his head to verify that he had a fever.
|
||||
He opened his eyes and realized with quiet surprise that they weren't in the hallway where he had gone unconscious.
|
||||
This corridor was much wider and there seemed to be a marble floor hidden under the layers of dust on which he was laying.
|
||||
Moaning he turned on his back and looked at Katts face.
|
||||
She seemed to have gotten more pale and her breath came in hard,
|
||||
short breaths.
|
||||
Her skin was glistening from sweat.
|
||||
|
||||
``What \dots?'', mumbled Andrew.
|
||||
``What \dots?'',
|
||||
mumbled Andrew.
|
||||
|
||||
Katt silenced him with a rash gesture. ``Don't worry about it'', she said. ``We're safe, at least for right now.''
|
||||
Katt silenced him with a rash gesture.
|
||||
``Don't worry about it'',
|
||||
she said.
|
||||
``We're safe,
|
||||
at least for right now.''
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew struggled to understand her. She was breathing so heavily that she could hardly speak. Andrew saw that she was shaking.
|
||||
Andrew struggled to understand her.
|
||||
She was breathing so heavily that she could hardly speak.
|
||||
Andrew saw that she was shaking.
|
||||
|
||||
``Where \dots Where are we?'', he dazedly mumbled.
|
||||
``Where \dots Where are we?'',
|
||||
he dazedly mumbled.
|
||||
|
||||
``Almost at the safe place'',she answered. ``It isn't far any more.''
|
||||
``Almost at the safe place'',she answered.
|
||||
``It isn't far any more.''
|
||||
|
||||
``And how did we get here?'', asked Andrew.
|
||||
``And how did we get here?'',
|
||||
asked Andrew.
|
||||
|
||||
Katt raised her shoulders. ``I carried you.''
|
||||
Katt raised her shoulders.
|
||||
``I carried you.''
|
||||
|
||||
``Carried\textinterrobang'', ached Andrew. ``But I weigh twice as much as you!''
|
||||
``Carried\textinterrobang'',
|
||||
ached Andrew.
|
||||
``But I weigh twice as much as you!''
|
||||
|
||||
``Oh really, I didn't notice'', answered Katt. The ironic laugh that she tried to underline her words with turned into a grimace due to the exhaustion. ``But I didn't have a choice. Everything was suddenly on fire and I was scared that the whole building was going to collapse. I haven't ever experienced anything like that! I don't know what happened.''
|
||||
``Oh really,
|
||||
I didn't notice'',
|
||||
answered Katt.
|
||||
The ironic laugh that she tried to underline her words with turned into a grimace due to the exhaustion.
|
||||
``But I didn't have a choice.
|
||||
Everything was suddenly on fire and I was scared that the whole building was going to collapse.
|
||||
I haven't ever experienced anything like that! I don't know what happened.''
|
||||
|
||||
With those last words she looked at him quizzically, but Andrew ignored her gaze and acted as if he hadn't even heard her question. He had a \textit{pretty solid} explanation for what had happened. It had something to do with flying sharks that cut the air with buzzing sword blades and spit hell fire --- but how was he supposed to explain that to someone who didn't even know what a car was?
|
||||
With those last words she looked at him quizzically,
|
||||
but Andrew ignored her gaze and acted as if he hadn't even heard her question.
|
||||
He had a \textit{pretty solid} explanation for what had happened.
|
||||
It had something to do with flying sharks that cut the air with buzzing sword blades and spit hell fire --- but how was he supposed to explain that to someone who didn't even know what a car was?
|
||||
|
||||
``If it really isn't far, we should keep going'', he suggested.
|
||||
``If it really isn't far,
|
||||
we should keep going'',
|
||||
he suggested.
|
||||
|
||||
``Are you able to?'', asked Katt.
|
||||
``Are you able to?'',
|
||||
asked Katt.
|
||||
|
||||
``Its not that bad'' Andrew claimed. Ridiculous. In spite of that he continued: ``I don't know what's going on with me. Normally I don't get worn out so quickly. I guess I'm not in shape.''
|
||||
``Its not that bad'' Andrew claimed.
|
||||
Ridiculous.
|
||||
In spite of that he continued: ``I don't know what's going on with me.
|
||||
Normally I don't get worn out so quickly.
|
||||
I guess I'm not in shape.''
|
||||
|
||||
To prove his claim (mostly to himself), he tried standing up, which he was only successful at with Katts help. Everything that was further than ten or fifteen steps away didn't disappear into total darkness, but seemed to dissolve into grey streaks. He blinked a few times and took a clumsy step, fighting for his balance the whole time. And then the same thing happened as he had experienced before: As suddenly as if someone had flipped a switch inside of him, the nausea, vertigo, and pain disappeared and the only remnant was a faint dazed feeling; and a feeling of weakness that was going to increase very soon.
|
||||
To prove his claim (mostly to himself),
|
||||
he tried standing up,
|
||||
which he was only successful at with Katts help.
|
||||
Everything that was further than ten or fifteen steps away didn't disappear into total darkness,
|
||||
but seemed to dissolve into grey streaks.
|
||||
He blinked a few times and took a clumsy step,
|
||||
fighting for his balance the whole time.
|
||||
And then the same thing happened as he had experienced before: As suddenly as if someone had flipped a switch inside of him,
|
||||
the nausea,
|
||||
vertigo,
|
||||
and pain disappeared and the only remnant was a faint dazed feeling;
|
||||
and a feeling of weakness that was going to increase very soon.
|
||||
|
||||
``I think I'm okay'', he said.
|
||||
``I think I'm okay'',
|
||||
he said.
|
||||
|
||||
Katt nodded seriously. ``That's from the exertion. If you're careful we'll make it for sure.'' She smiled at him cheerily in a way that almost made him angry and in utter excess also stuck out her arm for him as if he were some frail old man. Andrew only granted her an insulted look, took a prideful step past her and requested that she show the way with a gesture. Katt inspected him again in the same dismissive but worried look, but turned around with a shrug and walked of, \textit{not} accidentally slightly faster than Andrew could effortlessly keep up with her.
|
||||
Katt nodded seriously.
|
||||
``That's from the exertion.
|
||||
If you're careful we'll make it for sure.'' She smiled at him cheerily in a way that almost made him angry and in utter excess also stuck out her arm for him as if he were some frail old man.
|
||||
Andrew only granted her an insulted look,
|
||||
took a prideful step past her and requested that she show the way with a gesture.
|
||||
Katt inspected him again in the same dismissive but worried look,
|
||||
but turned around with a shrug and walked of,
|
||||
\textit{not} accidentally slightly faster than Andrew could effortlessly keep up with her.
|
||||
|
||||
Even with her visible exhaustion she was moving so elegantly that Andrew felt a pang of jealousy when he looked at her. Her movements had lost most of their speed and effortlessness, but they still seemed just as sleek as those of a cat. Andrew would hadn't believed for a second that Katt was her given name --- but now he thought he knew why that was what she was called. That girl had something in common with cats. She was at least just as touchy.
|
||||
Even with her visible exhaustion she was moving so elegantly that Andrew felt a pang of jealousy when he looked at her.
|
||||
Her movements had lost most of their speed and effortlessness,
|
||||
but they still seemed just as sleek as those of a cat.
|
||||
Andrew would hadn't believed for a second that Katt was her given name --- but now he thought he knew why that was what she was called.
|
||||
That girl had something in common with cats.
|
||||
She was at least just as touchy.
|
||||
|
||||
After a few minutes Andrew lost his orientation, even though he was trying (for some reason) to remember the way that Katt was leading him through this maze that seemed to be mostly under ground. The crossed through multiple huge rooms and a myriad of hallways and corridors lined with doors that seemed to all be unique but sharing the same eerie quality: They were just as empty and lacking of life as the underground tunnels and canals that they had come through before.
|
||||
After a few minutes Andrew lost his orientation,
|
||||
even though he was trying (for some reason) to remember the way that Katt was leading him through this maze that seemed to be mostly under ground.
|
||||
The crossed through multiple huge rooms and a myriad of hallways and corridors lined with doors that seemed to all be unique but sharing the same eerie quality: They were just as empty and lacking of life as the underground tunnels and canals that they had come through before.
|
||||
|
||||
Eventually Katt stopped and motioned towards a narrow metal door. ``Up that way, then we're there. Can you make it?''
|
||||
Eventually Katt stopped and motioned towards a narrow metal door.
|
||||
``Up that way,
|
||||
then we're there.
|
||||
Can you make it?''
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew just looked at her quizzically. Why wouldn't he be able to finish the last bit of the trip? He didn't exactly feel good, but after what he had just gone through it wasn't a surprise. He didn't even dignify the girl with an answer, instead reluctantly motioning at her to open the door. Without saying a word Katt shrugged her shoulders and continued onwards. Behind the door was a narrow staircase in which there were about a dozen concrete steps that led up to a door outlined in dim twilight. She glanced at him with a last, almost cold look and jogged up the stairs with a pep in her step.
|
||||
Andrew just looked at her quizzically.
|
||||
Why wouldn't he be able to finish the last bit of the trip? He didn't exactly feel good,
|
||||
but after what he had just gone through it wasn't a surprise.
|
||||
He didn't even dignify the girl with an answer,
|
||||
instead reluctantly motioning at her to open the door.
|
||||
Without saying a word Katt shrugged her shoulders and continued onwards.
|
||||
Behind the door was a narrow staircase in which there were about a dozen concrete steps that led up to a door outlined in dim twilight.
|
||||
She glanced at him with a last,
|
||||
almost cold look and jogged up the stairs with a pep in her step.
|
||||
|
||||
Naturally it was clear to Andrew that he was behaving childishly. It just went against his ego that this unassuming girl was stronger and tougher than him --- and that his brain was showing him this fact with luxurious clarity right in front of him didn't change anything. Apparently the psychological strain wasn't enough to overwhelm his Ego.
|
||||
Naturally it was clear to Andrew that he was behaving childishly.
|
||||
It just went against his ego that this unassuming girl was stronger and tougher than him --- and that his brain was showing him this fact with luxurious clarity right in front of him didn't change anything.
|
||||
Apparently the psychological strain wasn't enough to overwhelm his Ego.
|
||||
|
||||
He followed Katt. As he had ascended half of the steps he heard a sound and stopped moving. Nothing. He must have been imagining things. The only odd thing was that Katt had stopped too and tilted her head to pay attention. Andrew closed his eyes and concentrated, but there was only his own breathing and the beating of his heart. But then, right when he was going to keep going, he heard the same sound again: A scratching like fingernails on hard stone or glass. And to dispel even the last of his doubts, Katt recoiled lightly.
|
||||
He followed Katt.
|
||||
As he had ascended half of the steps he heard a sound and stopped moving.
|
||||
Nothing.
|
||||
He must have been imagining things.
|
||||
The only odd thing was that Katt had stopped too and tilted her head to pay attention.
|
||||
Andrew closed his eyes and concentrated,
|
||||
but there was only his own breathing and the beating of his heart.
|
||||
But then,
|
||||
right when he was going to keep going,
|
||||
he heard the same sound again: A scratching like fingernails on hard stone or glass.
|
||||
And to dispel even the last of his doubts,
|
||||
Katt recoiled lightly.
|
||||
|
||||
``What \dots?'', he started.
|
||||
``What \dots?'',
|
||||
he started.
|
||||
|
||||
Katt silenced him with a distinctively frightened gesture. He could see that she was concentrating even more on listening. The sound didn't repeat itself and she was still extremely alarmed as she turned around half way and nervously motioned for him to keep going. She stepped through the door but only took a single step before freezing up. Andrew could see from her shadow that something wasn't right. With two, three elongated leaps with which he stepped over multiple steps at a time he was next to her in moments and stood still as well.
|
||||
Katt silenced him with a distinctively frightened gesture.
|
||||
He could see that she was concentrating even more on listening.
|
||||
The sound didn't repeat itself and she was still extremely alarmed as she turned around half way and nervously motioned for him to keep going.
|
||||
She stepped through the door but only took a single step before freezing up.
|
||||
Andrew could see from her shadow that something wasn't right.
|
||||
With two,
|
||||
three elongated leaps with which he stepped over multiple steps at a time he was next to her in moments and stood still as well.
|
||||
|
||||
In the next moment he incredulously looked from the floor in front of Katt's feet to her face. She had lost every last bit of color from her face. Her lips were slightly open and trembled and blank horror was in her eyes.
|
||||
In the next moment he incredulously looked from the floor in front of Katt's feet to her face.
|
||||
She had lost every last bit of color from her face.
|
||||
Her lips were slightly open and trembled and blank horror was in her eyes.
|
||||
|
||||
It really wasn't a pretty sight. Just a hand width in front of her naked feet was the most repulsive creature that Andrew had ever seen: At first he thought it was a cockroach, then he thought it was a spider, until he realized that he was dealing with something equally impossible as grotesque mix of the two. The creature definitely had the eight legs that looked like bent metal and body made of two unequal spheres like a spider, but they also had a bluish black iridescent chitin\footnote{Primary component of cell walls in fungi, the exoskeletons of arthropods, such as crustaceans and insects, the radulae of molluscs, cephalopod beaks, and the scales of fish and lissamphibians} shell and oversized long bobbing feelers that swung side to side like small antennae, sweeping the air for the smell of its prey. A half dozen tiny beady eyes peeked out from underneath the carapace with a guileful intelligence that a being like this just shouldn't have, and the small pincers made the impression that they could bite down quite hard, especially if you were barefoot like Katt. But why was he wearing stable shoes with thick leather soles for?
|
||||
It really wasn't a pretty sight.
|
||||
Just a hand width in front of her naked feet was the most repulsive creature that Andrew had ever seen: At first he thought it was a cockroach,
|
||||
then he thought it was a spider,
|
||||
until he realized that he was dealing with something equally impossible as grotesque mix of the two.
|
||||
The creature definitely had the eight legs that looked like bent metal and body made of two unequal spheres like a spider,
|
||||
but they also had a bluish black iridescent chitin\footnote{Primary component of cell walls in fungi,
|
||||
the exoskeletons of arthropods,
|
||||
such as crustaceans and insects,
|
||||
the radulae of molluscs,
|
||||
cephalopod beaks,
|
||||
and the scales of fish and lissamphibians} shell and oversized long bobbing feelers that swung side to side like small antennae,
|
||||
sweeping the air for the smell of its prey.
|
||||
A half dozen tiny beady eyes peeked out from underneath the carapace with a guileful intelligence that a being like this just shouldn't have,
|
||||
and the small pincers made the impression that they could bite down quite hard,
|
||||
especially if you were barefoot like Katt.
|
||||
But why was he wearing stable shoes with thick leather soles for?
|
||||
|
||||
``Don't worry'', he said. ``That creature won't hurt you.'' And with that he raised his foot and stomped on the miniature monster, turning it into a slimy spot on the ground.
|
||||
``Don't worry'',
|
||||
he said.
|
||||
``That creature won't hurt you.'' And with that he raised his foot and stomped on the miniature monster,
|
||||
turning it into a slimy spot on the ground.
|
||||
|
||||
Katt screamed and tried pulling him back, but it was too late. Andrew fought for his balance for a few moments with windmilling arms, looked at her bewilderedly and scraped his boot over the doorstep to get the disgusting remains of the spider-cockroach off his shoe sole. He had squished the bug; but even though he had used considerable force, he was unable to break the chitin armor.
|
||||
Katt screamed and tried pulling him back,
|
||||
but it was too late.
|
||||
Andrew fought for his balance for a few moments with windmilling arms,
|
||||
looked at her bewilderedly and scraped his boot over the doorstep to get the disgusting remains of the spider-cockroach off his shoe sole.
|
||||
He had squished the bug;
|
||||
but even though he had used considerable force,
|
||||
he was unable to break the chitin armor.
|
||||
|
||||
``Oh no, what did you do?'', whispered Katt. ``Andrew!''
|
||||
``Oh no,
|
||||
what did you do?'',
|
||||
whispered Katt.
|
||||
``Andrew!''
|
||||
|
||||
``Don't worry'', answered Andrew. ``That beast can be as poisonous as it wants, these shoes are very sturdy. They have steel toes, you know?''
|
||||
``Don't worry'',
|
||||
answered Andrew.
|
||||
``That beast can be as poisonous as it wants,
|
||||
these shoes are very sturdy.
|
||||
They have steel toes,
|
||||
you know?''
|
||||
|
||||
``But don't you understand?'', puffed Katt while staring at him with wide eyes. ``That was a scout!''
|
||||
``But don't you understand?'',
|
||||
puffed Katt while staring at him with wide eyes.
|
||||
``That was a scout!''
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew blinked blankly. A strange feeling started to spread out in him. ``A \dots scout?'', he repeated her. ``You mean there \dots there are more of \dots of those things?''
|
||||
Andrew blinked blankly.
|
||||
A strange feeling started to spread out in him.
|
||||
``A \dots scout?'',
|
||||
he repeated her.
|
||||
``You mean there \dots there are more of \dots of those things?''
|
||||
|
||||
Katt nodded and Andrew's inner eye replayed the scene of the garage entrance that seemed to have suddenly transformed into shimmering, eerie life. An ice cold shiver ran down his back that reminded him of countless spider legs running across his body.
|
||||
Katt nodded and Andrew's inner eye replayed the scene of the garage entrance that seemed to have suddenly transformed into shimmering,
|
||||
eerie life.
|
||||
An ice cold shiver ran down his back that reminded him of countless spider legs running across his body.
|
||||
|
||||
``And this thing was their scout?'', he confirmed. ``Well then everything should be fine. I mean it's dead. You don't need to be scared that it can alarm its friends.''
|
||||
``And this thing was their scout?'',
|
||||
he confirmed.
|
||||
``Well then everything should be fine.
|
||||
I mean it's dead.
|
||||
You don't need to be scared that it can alarm its friends.''
|
||||
|
||||
``But don't you understand, Andrew?'', ached Katt. ``If you kill the scout, at the moment it dies it alarms the rest of them!'' She hurriedly looked around. ``We can only hope that the are still far enough away!''
|
||||
``But don't you understand,
|
||||
Andrew?'',
|
||||
ached Katt.
|
||||
``If you kill the scout,
|
||||
at the moment it dies it alarms the rest of them!'' She hurriedly looked around.
|
||||
``We can only hope that the are still far enough away!''
|
||||
|
||||
``Nonsense!'', answered Andrew. ``Are you trying to tell me that these critters are telepathic or something?''
|
||||
``Nonsense!'',
|
||||
answered Andrew.
|
||||
``Are you trying to tell me that these critters are telepathic or something?''
|
||||
|
||||
``I don't know what that word means, but it is like that, believe me.'', said Katt. ``You don't know anything! I'm gradually starting to believe that you just fell out of the sky!''
|
||||
``I don't know what that word means,
|
||||
but it is like that,
|
||||
believe me.'',
|
||||
said Katt.
|
||||
``You don't know anything! I'm gradually starting to believe that you just fell out of the sky!''
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew started to answer, but Katt cut him off with an angry gesture. Despite everything she had just said she didn't make any effort to run away, instead closing her eyes and listening intently with her eyes closed. After a moment of listening with utter concentration, she nodded grimly. ``They're coming.''
|
||||
Andrew started to answer,
|
||||
but Katt cut him off with an angry gesture.
|
||||
Despite everything she had just said she didn't make any effort to run away,
|
||||
instead closing her eyes and listening intently with her eyes closed.
|
||||
After a moment of listening with utter concentration,
|
||||
she nodded grimly.
|
||||
``They're coming.''
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew also listened for a moment, but he couldn't hear a single thing. Apparently Katt didn't just have better eyes, but she also had better ears. She motioned to the right. ``We can still make it. It isn't far to the safe space.''
|
||||
Andrew also listened for a moment,
|
||||
but he couldn't hear a single thing.
|
||||
Apparently Katt didn't just have better eyes,
|
||||
but she also had better ears.
|
||||
She motioned to the right.
|
||||
``We can still make it.
|
||||
It isn't far to the safe space.''
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew wanted to turn around, but Katt just shook her head again and took a step in the opposite direction. ``This way. Come on.''
|
||||
Andrew wanted to turn around,
|
||||
but Katt just shook her head again and took a step in the opposite direction.
|
||||
``This way.
|
||||
Come on.''
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew obeyed, but made an unsure look in the direction she had just pointed. ``Isn't the safe place over there?''
|
||||
Andrew obeyed,
|
||||
but made an unsure look in the direction she had just pointed.
|
||||
``Isn't the safe place over there?''
|
||||
|
||||
``Yeah'', answered Katt. ``But we can't go that way. Hurry up. And be quiet!''
|
||||
``Yeah'',
|
||||
answered Katt.
|
||||
``But we can't go that way.
|
||||
Hurry up.
|
||||
And be quiet!''
|
||||
|
||||
In contrast to her own words she wasn't moving especially fast. She wasn't strolling along, but she wasn't going as fast as she could, let alone run. They crossed the room and stepped into a narrow burnt out corridor who's ceiling seemed to be more below their feet than above their heads. Katt didn't berate him until she had stopped to listen with her eyes closed.
|
||||
In contrast to her own words she wasn't moving especially fast.
|
||||
She wasn't strolling along,
|
||||
but she wasn't going as fast as she could,
|
||||
let alone run.
|
||||
They crossed the room and stepped into a narrow burnt out corridor who's ceiling seemed to be more below their feet than above their heads.
|
||||
Katt didn't berate him until she had stopped to listen with her eyes closed.
|
||||
|
||||
``They're getting closer'', she murmured. ``This will be close.''
|
||||
``They're getting closer'',
|
||||
she murmured.
|
||||
``This will be close.''
|
||||
|
||||
``If we're in such a hurry'', asked Andrew, while he tried stepping over a meter-high concrete chunk \textit{without} injuring himself on the rusty spikes of metal that were poking out of it, ``why aren't we going faster?''
|
||||
``If we're in such a hurry'',
|
||||
asked Andrew,
|
||||
while he tried stepping over a meter-high concrete chunk \textit{without} injuring himself on the rusty spikes of metal that were poking out of it,
|
||||
``why aren't we going faster?''
|
||||
|
||||
``Because you might collapse again'', said Katt. ``And I don't have enough strength to carry you.``
|
||||
``Because you might collapse again'',
|
||||
said Katt.
|
||||
``And I don't have enough strength to carry you.``
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew gave her a toxic look and swallowed any comment that he had. The little one was gradually getting on his nerves, even with the thankfulness that he was feeling. He had run out of steam once and he wasn't sure if he could have done for her what she had done for him, but that wasn't a good reason to ride his back about it all the time! As soon as they were out of here, they would need to have a clarifying conversation about it.
|
||||
Andrew gave her a toxic look and swallowed any comment that he had.
|
||||
The little one was gradually getting on his nerves,
|
||||
even with the thankfulness that he was feeling.
|
||||
He had run out of steam once and he wasn't sure if he could have done for her what she had done for him,
|
||||
but that wasn't a good reason to ride his back about it all the time! As soon as they were out of here,
|
||||
they would need to have a clarifying conversation about it.
|
||||
|
||||
At the end of the corridor it went to the left, then right, then left again. Katt was truly leading him through a labyrinth, and even though after a few minutes he had not only lost his orientation, but gradually the meaning of the word, he still had the feeling that they were more or less moving in a circle. What if Katt knew where they were just as little as him and was stumbling around the dark blind?
|
||||
At the end of the corridor it went to the left,
|
||||
then right,
|
||||
then left again.
|
||||
Katt was truly leading him through a labyrinth,
|
||||
and even though after a few minutes he had not only lost his orientation,
|
||||
but gradually the meaning of the word,
|
||||
he still had the feeling that they were more or less moving in a circle.
|
||||
What if Katt knew where they were just as little as him and was stumbling around the dark blind?
|
||||
|
||||
No, he didn't want to think these thoughts.
|
||||
No,
|
||||
he didn't want to think these thoughts.
|
||||
|
||||
Besides, he was wrong. They passed two or three more junctions that definitively killed any orientation he had, and stepped into a long hallway that disappeared into blue twilight in both directions. The fork to the right was completely empty, in the other direction Andrew saw a blurry outline that reminded him of something, but he wasn't quite sure what.
|
||||
Besides,
|
||||
he was wrong.
|
||||
They passed two or three more junctions that definitively killed any orientation he had,
|
||||
and stepped into a long hallway that disappeared into blue twilight in both directions.
|
||||
The fork to the right was completely empty,
|
||||
in the other direction Andrew saw a blurry outline that reminded him of something,
|
||||
but he wasn't quite sure what.
|
||||
|
||||
Katt sighed with relief. ``Looks like we've had luck'', she said and pointed towards the shadow. ``Do you think you can make it?''
|
||||
Katt sighed with relief.
|
||||
``Looks like we've had luck'',
|
||||
she said and pointed towards the shadow.
|
||||
``Do you think you can make it?''
|
||||
|
||||
``That's enough'', answered Andrew in a huff. ``I am very thankful, but \dots''
|
||||
``That's enough'',
|
||||
answered Andrew in a huff.
|
||||
``I am very thankful,
|
||||
but \dots''
|
||||
|
||||
He stopped as Katt sucked in air between her teeth and stared to the right with wide eyes. He hastily turned his head and audibly gasped. Whoever was pulling the strings in this story had a deceitful sense of humor.
|
||||
He stopped as Katt sucked in air between her teeth and stared to the right with wide eyes.
|
||||
He hastily turned his head and audibly gasped.
|
||||
Whoever was pulling the strings in this story had a deceitful sense of humor.
|
||||
|
||||
Out of the gray on gray blurry distance at the end of the hallway appeared three figures in shiny black rubber suits.
|
||||
|
||||
Katt screamed and whirled around and Andrew followed her as quickly as he could. Now they had to run, whether they wanted to or not.
|
||||
Katt screamed and whirled around and Andrew followed her as quickly as he could.
|
||||
Now they had to run,
|
||||
whether they wanted to or not.
|
||||
|
||||
Behind them a blue lightning bolt lit up. The shot missed them by so much that it couldn't have been an accident, making a piece of the ceiling rain down in front of them. Katt made a quick hook to avoid the hail of debris and dust and Andrew followed her movements as well as he could to cover her with his body. This time it was a concious decision. The warning shot had made it clear that the men were specifically \textit{not} aiming at him and were probably wouldn't either. For whatever reason they had apparently decided to take him alive. Maybe they were taking the death of their squad mate worse than he had thought and had something special planned for him.
|
||||
Behind them a blue lightning bolt lit up.
|
||||
The shot missed them by so much that it couldn't have been an accident,
|
||||
making a piece of the ceiling rain down in front of them.
|
||||
Katt made a quick hook to avoid the hail of debris and dust and Andrew followed her movements as well as he could to cover her with his body.
|
||||
This time it was a concious decision.
|
||||
The warning shot had made it clear that the men were specifically \textit{not} aiming at him and were probably wouldn't either.
|
||||
For whatever reason they had apparently decided to take him alive.
|
||||
Maybe they were taking the death of their squad mate worse than he had thought and had something special planned for him.
|
||||
|
||||
Unfortunately they weren't dumb. His little trick to use his unexplainable untouchability to protect Katt worked, but the men had learned: A salvo of three shots missed them both by a wide margin and hammered into the ceiling halfway between them and the safe place.
|
||||
Unfortunately they weren't dumb.
|
||||
His little trick to use his unexplainable untouchability to protect Katt worked,
|
||||
but the men had learned: A salvo of three shots missed them both by a wide margin and hammered into the ceiling halfway between them and the safe place.
|
||||
|
||||
This time it came down in almost the entire width, and while tonnes of dust and burning pieces of ceiling were raining down, a second salvo hammered into the sidewall of the hallway and made it collapse as well. Kicked up dust and flames filled the air to the point that they could hardly see any more, and even though they were twenty or twenty-five meters away from it Andrew could feel the deadly heat that was emanating from the glowing rocks. The men had laid a fire barrier through the hallway that they couldn't cross. Just two or three more of those and they would be trapped! If only Nick were here! He would have known how they could get out of here.
|
||||
This time it came down in almost the entire width,
|
||||
and while tonnes of dust and burning pieces of ceiling were raining down,
|
||||
a second salvo hammered into the sidewall of the hallway and made it collapse as well.
|
||||
Kicked up dust and flames filled the air to the point that they could hardly see any more,
|
||||
and even though they were twenty or twenty-five meters away from it Andrew could feel the deadly heat that was emanating from the glowing rocks.
|
||||
The men had laid a fire barrier through the hallway that they couldn't cross.
|
||||
Just two or three more of those and they would be trapped! If only Nick were here! He would have known how they could get out of here.
|
||||
|
||||
But Nick wasn't here and the next salvo of dazzling blue light bolts destroyed the other side of the hallway as well, increasing the barricade of dust and glowing debris.
|
||||
But Nick wasn't here and the next salvo of dazzling blue light bolts destroyed the other side of the hallway as well,
|
||||
increasing the barricade of dust and glowing debris.
|
||||
|
||||
The fourth salvo didn't come.
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew took four, five, six steps before he turned his head.
|
||||
Andrew took four,
|
||||
five,
|
||||
six steps before he turned his head.
|
||||
|
||||
He thought the it couldn't have gotten any worse, but of course he was wrong. It was worse. The men had stopped firing because they were suddenly focused on something more important: Running.
|
||||
He thought the it couldn't have gotten any worse,
|
||||
but of course he was wrong.
|
||||
It was worse.
|
||||
The men had stopped firing because they were suddenly focused on something more important: Running.
|
||||
|
||||
The ground behind them had awoken with glittering life.
|
||||
|
||||
It was like a faithful reproduction of the scene in the parking garage, just that he was a lot closer this time: There must have been millions of tiny armored, clicking and snapping spider-cockroaches that had appeared behind the men like a living carpet, getting closer and closer. They weren't particularly fast, maybe about as fast a running man, but their numbers seemed to be infinite and the living carpet didn't just cover the floor, it also sloshed up the sides of the walls and a not insignificant number of them crawled upside down on the ceiling without losing any of their speed.
|
||||
It was like a faithful reproduction of the scene in the parking garage,
|
||||
just that he was a lot closer this time: There must have been millions of tiny armored,
|
||||
clicking and snapping spider-cockroaches that had appeared behind the men like a living carpet,
|
||||
getting closer and closer.
|
||||
They weren't particularly fast,
|
||||
maybe about as fast a running man,
|
||||
but their numbers seemed to be infinite and the living carpet didn't just cover the floor,
|
||||
it also sloshed up the sides of the walls and a not insignificant number of them crawled upside down on the ceiling without losing any of their speed.
|
||||
|
||||
And this time there wouldn't be an attack helicopter\footnote{Send me something saying ``I sexually identify as an attack helicopter'' if you get this far.} outfitted with laser cannons to blast the living flood away at the last moment.
|
||||
|
||||
The men appeared to see it the same way since they didn't waste time shooting at the quickly approaching mass of insects, instead focusing on running away as quickly as possible. The distance between themselves and the monstrosities was melting away. Slowly, but relentlessly.
|
||||
The men appeared to see it the same way since they didn't waste time shooting at the quickly approaching mass of insects,
|
||||
instead focusing on running away as quickly as possible.
|
||||
The distance between themselves and the monstrosities was melting away.
|
||||
Slowly,
|
||||
but relentlessly.
|
||||
|
||||
They had arrived at the pile of rubble. Katt tore her arms in front of her face and jumped into the wall of smoke and fire without hesitation. Andrew took a deep breath, closed his eyes, and followed her.
|
||||
They had arrived at the pile of rubble.
|
||||
Katt tore her arms in front of her face and jumped into the wall of smoke and fire without hesitation.
|
||||
Andrew took a deep breath,
|
||||
closed his eyes,
|
||||
and followed her.
|
||||
|
||||
Something seemed to brush across his face and singed his hair and eyebrows. He stumbled, found his footing with a clumsy step and wheezed for air. Heat and thick smoke forced tears into his eyes, but he saw that they had almost arrived at the safe place. And now he knew why its outline seemed so eerily familiar: he had seen something like it before. It was the same type of construction that looked like a table with way too long of legs that Nick and him had seen before in the burnt-out factory. Even the legs and the home made ladder that led up to the platform stood in metal barrels that had been cut in half. One of them was spewing flames. Apparently the heat from one of the shots that missed had ignited the flammable liquid.
|
||||
Something seemed to brush across his face and singed his hair and eyebrows.
|
||||
He stumbled,
|
||||
found his footing with a clumsy step and wheezed for air.
|
||||
Heat and thick smoke forced tears into his eyes,
|
||||
but he saw that they had almost arrived at the safe place.
|
||||
And now he knew why its outline seemed so eerily familiar: he had seen something like it before.
|
||||
It was the same type of construction that looked like a table with way too long of legs that Nick and him had seen before in the burnt-out factory.
|
||||
Even the legs and the home made ladder that led up to the platform stood in metal barrels that had been cut in half.
|
||||
One of them was spewing flames.
|
||||
Apparently the heat from one of the shots that missed had ignited the flammable liquid.
|
||||
|
||||
``\textit{Up!}'', roared Katt. She hectically gesticulated towards the ladder and Andrew, who had finally gotten over the part where he was trusting his life to this curious girl, didn't hesitate to reach for the shaky steps and climb up them. He counted on Katt following him right away, but instead she reached underneath her shirt and pulled out what looked like a ball of tightly wound thread. While she was unwrapping a meter long piece with nimble fingers, she ran to the burning barrel, dropped to one knee, and held the end of it in the flames. She had to turn her face away from the flames so that she wouldn't singe her face. When she pulled it back out the tip was glowing red hot like a lit fuse. She hastily stood up and was at the next support in a bound and set the liquid in the barrel that it was sitting in on fire with her improvised fuse.
|
||||
``\textit{Up!}'',
|
||||
roared Katt.
|
||||
She hectically gesticulated towards the ladder and Andrew,
|
||||
who had finally gotten over the part where he was trusting his life to this curious girl,
|
||||
didn't hesitate to reach for the shaky steps and climb up them.
|
||||
He counted on Katt following him right away,
|
||||
but instead she reached underneath her shirt and pulled out what looked like a ball of tightly wound thread.
|
||||
While she was unwrapping a meter long piece with nimble fingers,
|
||||
she ran to the burning barrel,
|
||||
dropped to one knee,
|
||||
and held the end of it in the flames.
|
||||
She had to turn her face away from the flames so that she wouldn't singe her face.
|
||||
When she pulled it back out the tip was glowing red hot like a lit fuse.
|
||||
She hastily stood up and was at the next support in a bound and set the liquid in the barrel that it was sitting in on fire with her improvised fuse.
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew believed he had finally realized what she was planning and what the construction was for. Just the thought of it made his hair stand on end --- but as Nick had said so often: Drastic situations require drastic measures.
|
||||
Andrew believed he had finally realized what she was planning and what the construction was for.
|
||||
Just the thought of it made his hair stand on end --- but as Nick had said so often: Drastic situations require drastic measures.
|
||||
|
||||
While Katt was rushing to the next barrel, he raised his eyes and looked in the direction they came from. The hallway was closed off behind a wall of flame and boiling black smoke that reached almost all the way to the ceiling. So far none of the tiny monstrosities had been able to break through the barrier, but he also couldn't see any trace of the men in black HAZMAT suits. The flames were burning brighter and higher as a minute ago when Katt and he had jumped through the obstacle, and Andrew could feel how much hotter the flames had gotten. Without the slightest feeling of malice or satisfaction he realized that the men had fallen into their own trap.
|
||||
While Katt was rushing to the next barrel,
|
||||
he raised his eyes and looked in the direction they came from.
|
||||
The hallway was closed off behind a wall of flame and boiling black smoke that reached almost all the way to the ceiling.
|
||||
So far none of the tiny monstrosities had been able to break through the barrier,
|
||||
but he also couldn't see any trace of the men in black HAZMAT suits.
|
||||
The flames were burning brighter and higher as a minute ago when Katt and he had jumped through the obstacle,
|
||||
and Andrew could feel how much hotter the flames had gotten.
|
||||
Without the slightest feeling of malice or satisfaction he realized that the men had fallen into their own trap.
|
||||
|
||||
In the mean time the fourth barrel had caught on fire as well and Katt started to hastily climb the ladder. She still held the burning fuse and Andrew saw that it actually was some sort of ignition cord because it wasn't really burning, it was glowing very brightly and apparently was very hot.
|
||||
In the mean time the fourth barrel had caught on fire as well and Katt started to hastily climb the ladder.
|
||||
She still held the burning fuse and Andrew saw that it actually was some sort of ignition cord because it wasn't really burning,
|
||||
it was glowing very brightly and apparently was very hot.
|
||||
|
||||
When she had barely reached the top she tore off the glowing end of the cord and tossed it below her, throwing herself to the side as the contents of the barrel the ladder was standing in went up in flames with an audible \textit{whoosh}. A jet of flame shot up to the edge of the platform and extinguished before it could get dangerous.
|
||||
When she had barely reached the top she tore off the glowing end of the cord and tossed it below her,
|
||||
throwing herself to the side as the contents of the barrel the ladder was standing in went up in flames with an audible \textit{whoosh}.
|
||||
A jet of flame shot up to the edge of the platform and extinguished before it could get dangerous.
|
||||
|
||||
The first spider-cockroaches appeared at the ceiling above the barrier of fire and quite a few of the small beasts tried to use the wall to get past the obstacle, but were mostly engulfed by the flames and fell down to the grounds, charred. A lot of them started to glow and popped with the sound of popping popcorn, but Andrew didn't lie to himself: Even this wall of fire wouldn't hold up the incredible mass of killer insects.
|
||||
The first spider-cockroaches appeared at the ceiling above the barrier of fire and quite a few of the small beasts tried to use the wall to get past the obstacle,
|
||||
but were mostly engulfed by the flames and fell down to the grounds,
|
||||
charred.
|
||||
A lot of them started to glow and popped with the sound of popping popcorn,
|
||||
but Andrew didn't lie to himself: Even this wall of fire wouldn't hold up the incredible mass of killer insects.
|
||||
|
||||
``That was close'', panted Katt. She righted herself with difficulty, wiped soot and sweat out of her face with the back of her hand and turned towards Andrew with a concerned look. ``Are you still good?''
|
||||
``That was close'',
|
||||
panted Katt.
|
||||
She righted herself with difficulty,
|
||||
wiped soot and sweat out of her face with the back of her hand and turned towards Andrew with a concerned look.
|
||||
``Are you still good?''
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew didn't quite understand the question. He was a little queasy and his heart was racing, but that was understandable after what they had just done. Actually it should have been \textit{him} that was asking how \textit{she} was doing.
|
||||
Andrew didn't quite understand the question.
|
||||
He was a little queasy and his heart was racing,
|
||||
but that was understandable after what they had just done.
|
||||
Actually it should have been \textit{him} that was asking how \textit{she} was doing.
|
||||
|
||||
Behind the barrier of fire there was blue lightning. Suddenly they heard a screaming yell, and a piece of the pile of rubble collapsed in on itself throwing sparks everywhere, taking a heap of burning popcorn with it. Nevertheless more and more of the tiny monstrosities appeared and a mass of a thousand legs streamed through the gap. After that a man in a black rubber suit stumbled out of the fire, directly followed by second one. Behind them the hallway lit up with another two lightning bolts and again there was a screaming yell that was cut off with alarming abruptness. And then all of a sudden there were innumerable shiny, black, snapping monstrosities there, that were just flooding over the flames and suffocated them with their sheer mass. Thousands of them burned up or exploded in tiny yellow and red showers of sparks, but a disproportionate amount more stormed on behind them and raced over the carbonized remains of their brothers and sisters.
|
||||
Behind the barrier of fire there was blue lightning.
|
||||
Suddenly they heard a screaming yell,
|
||||
and a piece of the pile of rubble collapsed in on itself throwing sparks everywhere,
|
||||
taking a heap of burning popcorn with it.
|
||||
Nevertheless more and more of the tiny monstrosities appeared and a mass of a thousand legs streamed through the gap.
|
||||
After that a man in a black rubber suit stumbled out of the fire,
|
||||
directly followed by second one.
|
||||
Behind them the hallway lit up with another two lightning bolts and again there was a screaming yell that was cut off with alarming abruptness.
|
||||
And then all of a sudden there were innumerable shiny,
|
||||
black,
|
||||
snapping monstrosities there,
|
||||
that were just flooding over the flames and suffocated them with their sheer mass.
|
||||
Thousands of them burned up or exploded in tiny yellow and red showers of sparks,
|
||||
but a disproportionate amount more stormed on behind them and raced over the carbonized remains of their brothers and sisters.
|
||||
|
||||
The two men ran for their life. One of them ran past them with long-reaching steps and the fear of death lent him the speed to actually increase the distance between himself and the abominable pursuers.
|
||||
The two men ran for their life.
|
||||
One of them ran past them with long-reaching steps and the fear of death lent him the speed to actually increase the distance between himself and the abominable pursuers.
|
||||
|
||||
The other one made a fatal error. Instead of seeking rescue in escape, he swung around and headed towards the safe place. The spider-cockroaches caught up with him before he had even gotten through half of the eight to ten steps it was to the safe place. Countless little monsters exploded beneath his heavy boots, but Andrew also saw how dozens, if not hundreds of the tiny eight-legged fiends started to crawl up his legs, run across his suit, or tried to sink their tiny teeth into the tough material of his HAZMAT suit. While he was racing towards the safe place he desperately tried to wipe off the monstrosities. He was successful, but for each one that he squished or hurled away, three or four new ones appeared. And their numbers were only increasing. When he reached the ladder he was already wading through an ankle-deep layer of shimmering chitin and snatching pincers.
|
||||
The other one made a fatal error.
|
||||
Instead of seeking rescue in escape,
|
||||
he swung around and headed towards the safe place.
|
||||
The spider-cockroaches caught up with him before he had even gotten through half of the eight to ten steps it was to the safe place.
|
||||
Countless little monsters exploded beneath his heavy boots,
|
||||
but Andrew also saw how dozens,
|
||||
if not hundreds of the tiny eight-legged fiends started to crawl up his legs,
|
||||
run across his suit,
|
||||
or tried to sink their tiny teeth into the tough material of his HAZMAT suit.
|
||||
While he was racing towards the safe place he desperately tried to wipe off the monstrosities.
|
||||
He was successful,
|
||||
but for each one that he squished or hurled away,
|
||||
three or four new ones appeared.
|
||||
And their numbers were only increasing.
|
||||
When he reached the ladder he was already wading through an ankle-deep layer of shimmering chitin and snatching pincers.
|
||||
|
||||
With a desperate motion he jumped forwards and closed his hands around the ladder rungs. The whole construction ached and swayed so much from his impact that Andrew was scared that the whole thing would collapse in on itself, and the man started to hurriedly climb upwards.
|
||||
With a desperate motion he jumped forwards and closed his hands around the ladder rungs.
|
||||
The whole construction ached and swayed so much from his impact that Andrew was scared that the whole thing would collapse in on itself,
|
||||
and the man started to hurriedly climb upwards.
|
||||
|
||||
He didn't make it. Just as his hand had almost reached the edge of the platform, he froze. A mixture of a scream and an agonized moan came out of his helmet and he slid downwards. Andrew threw himself forwards and grabbed at his outstretched arm with both hands. He was torn forward a little bit and was almost torn off the platform before he found a foothold somewhere.
|
||||
He didn't make it.
|
||||
Just as his hand had almost reached the edge of the platform,
|
||||
he froze.
|
||||
A mixture of a scream and an agonized moan came out of his helmet and he slid downwards.
|
||||
Andrew threw himself forwards and grabbed at his outstretched arm with both hands.
|
||||
He was torn forward a little bit and was almost torn off the platform before he found a foothold somewhere.
|
||||
|
||||
And at the same time, he saw what had happened: The primitive defensive construction that the legs of the platform were sticking out of were performing their purpose with surprising efficiency. The burning liquid --- possibly more the heat that the metal of the glowing barrels was giving off --- kept the killer insects at a safe distance. The teeming stream parted in front of each of them only to close a few centimeters after it. The tiny spider-cockroaches that were dumb enough to try it anyway carbonized with a hiss as soon as they touched the hot metal.
|
||||
And at the same time,
|
||||
he saw what had happened: The primitive defensive construction that the legs of the platform were sticking out of were performing their purpose with surprising efficiency.
|
||||
The burning liquid --- possibly more the heat that the metal of the glowing barrels was giving off --- kept the killer insects at a safe distance.
|
||||
The teeming stream parted in front of each of them only to close a few centimeters after it.
|
||||
The tiny spider-cockroaches that were dumb enough to try it anyway carbonized with a hiss as soon as they touched the hot metal.
|
||||
|
||||
The man in the HAZMAT suit must have knocked over the barrel that the ladder was standing in. The flames had gone out and hundreds and thousands of tiny monsters crawled over the hot remains, crawled along his suit, or started to climb the ladder with frightening dexterity. Not only was the stranger in danger, Andrew realized with horror, but their own stronghold that had seemed so impenetrable a moment ago was in danger of being overrun!
|
||||
The man in the HAZMAT suit must have knocked over the barrel that the ladder was standing in.
|
||||
The flames had gone out and hundreds and thousands of tiny monsters crawled over the hot remains,
|
||||
crawled along his suit,
|
||||
or started to climb the ladder with frightening dexterity.
|
||||
Not only was the stranger in danger,
|
||||
Andrew realized with horror,
|
||||
but their own stronghold that had seemed so impenetrable a moment ago was in danger of being overrun!
|
||||
|
||||
Nevertheless he held on to the arm of the man with all his strength and tried to pull him up. But he was just too heavy. Slowly the man, who in the mean time had almost stopped moving entirely, slid back into the bubbling black depths and ultimately Andrews strength failed. He let go of his hand. The man tipped backward and just \textit{disappeared} underneath the swarming shimmering mass.
|
||||
Nevertheless he held on to the arm of the man with all his strength and tried to pull him up.
|
||||
But he was just too heavy.
|
||||
Slowly the man,
|
||||
who in the mean time had almost stopped moving entirely,
|
||||
slid back into the bubbling black depths and ultimately Andrews strength failed.
|
||||
He let go of his hand.
|
||||
The man tipped backward and just \textit{disappeared} underneath the swarming shimmering mass.
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew sunk back with a sob, but he didn't even have enough time to process what had taken place in front of his very eyes. Katt tore him to the side with such force that he rolled over half of the platform and instinctively grabbed on to the grate, otherwise he might have fallen into the depths himself. Nevertheless he saw that the first spider-cockroaches had made their way over the edge of the platform and were tasting the air for pre with their greedily trembling feelers. Katt ignored them though. She suddenly held rusty wire cutters in her hands with which she hastily cut the wires that were holding the ladder to the edge of the platform . With a powerful push she pushed it back and made sure that it actually fell over instead of tipping back towards them, only then did she turn around and beat the remaining insect monsters that had made it up on the platform to death with the rusty wire cutters.
|
||||
Andrew sunk back with a sob,
|
||||
but he didn't even have enough time to process what had taken place in front of his very eyes.
|
||||
Katt tore him to the side with such force that he rolled over half of the platform and instinctively grabbed on to the grate,
|
||||
otherwise he might have fallen into the depths himself.
|
||||
Nevertheless he saw that the first spider-cockroaches had made their way over the edge of the platform and were tasting the air for pre with their greedily trembling feelers.
|
||||
Katt ignored them though.
|
||||
She suddenly held rusty wire cutters in her hands with which she hastily cut the wires that were holding the ladder to the edge of the platform .
|
||||
With a powerful push she pushed it back and made sure that it actually fell over instead of tipping back towards them,
|
||||
only then did she turn around and beat the remaining insect monsters that had made it up on the platform to death with the rusty wire cutters.
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew had to fight with his sickness and pain again. It had chosen this moment to gang up on him, but this time he didn't lose conciousness, instead laying there for a couple seconds with his eyes closed and waited until the excruciating hammering in his head stopped and his stomach stopped trying to crawl out of his neck some how. When he opened his eyes, Katt seemed to have successfully eliminated the last members of the eight legged boarding party, since she was kneeling next to him with a mix of anger and relief on her face, which he didn't understand.
|
||||
Andrew had to fight with his sickness and pain again.
|
||||
It had chosen this moment to gang up on him,
|
||||
but this time he didn't lose conciousness,
|
||||
instead laying there for a couple seconds with his eyes closed and waited until the excruciating hammering in his head stopped and his stomach stopped trying to crawl out of his neck some how.
|
||||
When he opened his eyes,
|
||||
Katt seemed to have successfully eliminated the last members of the eight legged boarding party,
|
||||
since she was kneeling next to him with a mix of anger and relief on her face,
|
||||
which he didn't understand.
|
||||
|
||||
``Have you gone completely crazy?'', she asked.
|
||||
``Have you gone completely crazy?'',
|
||||
she asked.
|
||||
|
||||
``Yes, thanks'', murmured Andrew. ``I'm doing better. But I'm glad that you're worrying about me so much.''
|
||||
``Yes,
|
||||
thanks'',
|
||||
murmured Andrew.
|
||||
``I'm doing better.
|
||||
But I'm glad that you're worrying about me so much.''
|
||||
|
||||
``We could have both been dead!'', Katt continued unimpressed and with a sharper tone. ``Why did you do that? He would have killed us without hesitation and you risked your life to save him!''
|
||||
``We could have both been dead!'',
|
||||
Katt continued unimpressed and with a sharper tone.
|
||||
``Why did you do that? He would have killed us without hesitation and you risked your life to save him!''
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew painstakingly righted himself and crawled over to where the ladder had been attached before he answered. ``No human deserves that kind of death.'', he said with a shudder.
|
||||
Andrew painstakingly righted himself and crawled over to where the ladder had been attached before he answered.
|
||||
``No human deserves that kind of death.'',
|
||||
he said with a shudder.
|
||||
|
||||
The ladder had disappeared, just like the man in the black HAZMAT suit. Below them was nothing but a seething, teeming mass that made a sound like a hundred thousand castanets that were clicking together. And not just in the depths below them. The walls were completely covered in the virtually endless stream of spider cockroaches. They were in the middle of a living tunnel, that stretched out in both directions as far as the eye could see. It could also be described a different way: They were in the middle of a digestion apparatus that was only waiting on them to follow their destiny.
|
||||
The ladder had disappeared,
|
||||
just like the man in the black HAZMAT suit.
|
||||
Below them was nothing but a seething,
|
||||
teeming mass that made a sound like a hundred thousand castanets that were clicking together.
|
||||
And not just in the depths below them.
|
||||
The walls were completely covered in the virtually endless stream of spider cockroaches.
|
||||
They were in the middle of a living tunnel,
|
||||
that stretched out in both directions as far as the eye could see.
|
||||
It could also be described a different way: They were in the middle of a digestion apparatus that was only waiting on them to follow their destiny.
|
||||
|
||||
There was only one single interruption in the living, swarming, mass. As Andrew looked up, instead of a sweeping ceiling of spider cockroaches there was an enormous jagged hole that wasn't just in the ceiling of this hallway, but also in the one above it, and the one above that. He couldn't tell if it had been on purpose or if the safe place had been built underneath it. But at least it did its job and prevented the eight-legged attackers from dropping down on them from above. For now they were safe.
|
||||
There was only one single interruption in the living,
|
||||
swarming,
|
||||
mass.
|
||||
As Andrew looked up,
|
||||
instead of a sweeping ceiling of spider cockroaches there was an enormous jagged hole that wasn't just in the ceiling of this hallway,
|
||||
but also in the one above it,
|
||||
and the one above that.
|
||||
He couldn't tell if it had been on purpose or if the safe place had been built underneath it.
|
||||
But at least it did its job and prevented the eight-legged attackers from dropping down on them from above.
|
||||
For now they were safe.
|
||||
|
||||
The questions was, for how long.
|
||||
The questions was,
|
||||
for how long.
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew looked around the platform with a shudder. It wasn't empty, but had next to a number of tattered blankets two metal gas cans that each held about twenty liters, as well as a metal basket with tools, which is where Katt must have gotten the rusty wire cutters. Even if the construction wasn't particularly ingenious, its builder had definitely prepared for everything.
|
||||
Andrew looked around the platform with a shudder.
|
||||
It wasn't empty,
|
||||
but had next to a number of tattered blankets two metal gas cans that each held about twenty liters,
|
||||
as well as a metal basket with tools,
|
||||
which is where Katt must have gotten the rusty wire cutters.
|
||||
Even if the construction wasn't particularly ingenious,
|
||||
its builder had definitely prepared for everything.
|
||||
|
||||
He glanced through the mesh floor at the burning oil barrels. Other than the part where the whole raised table was getting uncomfortably warm, something else was making him nervous: If he remembered the other safe place that he and Nick had examined correctly, then there wasn't much of the flammable liquid left in the containers.
|
||||
He glanced through the mesh floor at the burning oil barrels.
|
||||
Other than the part where the whole raised table was getting uncomfortably warm,
|
||||
something else was making him nervous: If he remembered the other safe place that he and Nick had examined correctly,
|
||||
then there wasn't much of the flammable liquid left in the containers.
|
||||
|
||||
He looked back up at the living carpet that the inside of the corridor was lined with. ``How long will this last?'', he asked.
|
||||
He looked back up at the living carpet that the inside of the corridor was lined with.
|
||||
``How long will this last?'',
|
||||
he asked.
|
||||
|
||||
Katt shrugged. ``As long as it takes. There are lots of them.''
|
||||
Katt shrugged.
|
||||
``As long as it takes.
|
||||
There are lots of them.''
|
||||
|
||||
``But that\dots'' Andrew hesitated a moment and started again, all though he was noticeably more nervous this time. ``But the fire will last long enough, right?''
|
||||
``But that\dots'' Andrew hesitated a moment and started again,
|
||||
all though he was noticeably more nervous this time.
|
||||
``But the fire will last long enough,
|
||||
right?''
|
||||
|
||||
Katt just shrugged again. She remained silent.
|
||||
Katt just shrugged again.
|
||||
She remained silent.
|
343
book-1/8.tex
Executable file → Normal file
343
book-1/8.tex
Executable file → Normal file
@ -1,148 +1,357 @@
|
||||
\chapter{8}
|
||||
|
||||
It had only been about three or four minutes in between the first spider-cockroach breaking the barrier and when the living stream gradually subsided and then finally completely stopped, but even such a short time could feel like an eternity depending on the circumstances --- and these were \textit{definitely} the right circumstances for it. Even though all his senses were tense enough that they were about to tear Andrew had the feeling that he was waking up from a nightmare as the last stragglers of the insect army finally passed them and it was quiet again.
|
||||
It had only been about three or four minutes in between the first spider-cockroach breaking the barrier and when the living stream gradually subsided and then finally completely stopped,
|
||||
but even such a short time could feel like an eternity depending on the circumstances --- and these were \textit{definitely} the right circumstances for it.
|
||||
Even though all his senses were tense enough that they were about to tear Andrew had the feeling that he was waking up from a nightmare as the last stragglers of the insect army finally passed them and it was quiet again.
|
||||
|
||||
He had counted on Katt waiting for a certain time just in case. Instead she impatiently gestured for him to climb off the platform as the last of the spider-cockroaches had barely disappeared into the twilight and Andrew obeyed silently. However he quickly gave up the attempt to climb down one of the metal legs. In the mean time the whole platform had gotten uncomfortably warm, but the iron support seemed to be downright glowing, even though the fire below it had gone out; only a few seconds after the last insect had disappeared.
|
||||
He had counted on Katt waiting for a certain time just in case.
|
||||
Instead she impatiently gestured for him to climb off the platform as the last of the spider-cockroaches had barely disappeared into the twilight and Andrew obeyed silently.
|
||||
However he quickly gave up the attempt to climb down one of the metal legs.
|
||||
In the mean time the whole platform had gotten uncomfortably warm,
|
||||
but the iron support seemed to be downright glowing,
|
||||
even though the fire below it had gone out;
|
||||
only a few seconds after the last insect had disappeared.
|
||||
|
||||
He jumped the almost two meters and landed much to his own surprise safely on both feet. Even his bruised knee took the beating without complaining and Andrew quickly bent over to pick up the ladder so that Katt could get to the floor with greater ease. As he was leaning the ladder against the edge of the platform he looked around for the man in the black rubber suit.
|
||||
He jumped the almost two meters and landed much to his own surprise safely on both feet.
|
||||
Even his bruised knee took the beating without complaining and Andrew quickly bent over to pick up the ladder so that Katt could get to the floor with greater ease.
|
||||
As he was leaning the ladder against the edge of the platform he looked around for the man in the black rubber suit.
|
||||
|
||||
He was astonished. Andrew didn't expect to find him alive or even somewhat whole. But he was just not there at all.
|
||||
He was astonished.
|
||||
Andrew didn't expect to find him alive or even somewhat whole.
|
||||
But he was just not there at all.
|
||||
|
||||
At first he thought the living flood had just torn him along, and in a certain sense that was true. His strange firearm was on the other side of the safe place, a good three or four meters away and what was left of his black satchel created a trail of pieces that lead further down the hallway. Maybe ten or twelve meters away he found a hand-sized shard of glass that was mirrored on one side. It took him a couple seconds to recognize that it was what was left of the visor of the helmet. Right next to it was a watch that was missing its leather strap, just like the rubber seal of the window. Andrew was reminded of the skeletonized leftovers in the parking garage and shuddered inwards. He suddenly didn't want to see anything else, even though the trail of macabre kept going quite a bit. He turned on his heel and went back to Katt who in the meantime had climbed down the ladder as well.
|
||||
At first he thought the living flood had just torn him along,
|
||||
and in a certain sense that was true.
|
||||
His strange firearm was on the other side of the safe place,
|
||||
a good three or four meters away and what was left of his black satchel created a trail of pieces that lead further down the hallway.
|
||||
Maybe ten or twelve meters away he found a hand-sized shard of glass that was mirrored on one side.
|
||||
It took him a couple seconds to recognize that it was what was left of the visor of the helmet.
|
||||
Right next to it was a watch that was missing its leather strap,
|
||||
just like the rubber seal of the window.
|
||||
Andrew was reminded of the skeletonized leftovers in the parking garage and shuddered inwards.
|
||||
He suddenly didn't want to see anything else,
|
||||
even though the trail of macabre kept going quite a bit.
|
||||
He turned on his heel and went back to Katt who in the meantime had climbed down the ladder as well.
|
||||
|
||||
She hadn't come with empty hands nor had she been idle while he was following the gruesome scavenger hunt. She had hauled one of the rusty diesel canisters down and was just finishing filling the last of the four oil barrels with two fingers of the nose-burning liquid.
|
||||
She hadn't come with empty hands nor had she been idle while he was following the gruesome scavenger hunt.
|
||||
She had hauled one of the rusty diesel canisters down and was just finishing filling the last of the four oil barrels with two fingers of the nose-burning liquid.
|
||||
|
||||
``Are you scared that they'll come back?'', asked Andrew.
|
||||
``Are you scared that they'll come back?'',
|
||||
asked Andrew.
|
||||
|
||||
``They never come back'', answered Katt. She didn't look at him, but instead was inspecting her work critically and filled one of the barrels with a couple more gulps of the liquid. ``But the next person to come here might not have time for it. Whoever uses the safe place refills the fire water.''
|
||||
``They never come back'',
|
||||
answered Katt.
|
||||
She didn't look at him,
|
||||
but instead was inspecting her work critically and filled one of the barrels with a couple more gulps of the liquid.
|
||||
``But the next person to come here might not have time for it.
|
||||
Whoever uses the safe place refills the fire water.''
|
||||
|
||||
That seemed only logical to Andrew but as Katt was about to fill up the last container that was for the ladder he stopped her with a questioning motion. ``Why don't you just pull the ladder up?''
|
||||
That seemed only logical to Andrew but as Katt was about to fill up the last container that was for the ladder he stopped her with a questioning motion.
|
||||
``Why don't you just pull the ladder up?''
|
||||
|
||||
``Because then you can't get to it from below any more.''
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew didn't give up so easily. It had only taken him a few glances to know what the weakness of the whole structure was. ``This ladder is just a danger'', he said. ``Why don't you put steps on the legs?`` If he had constructed this peculiar structure, it would have only had one support that would have been a lot easier to defend than four.
|
||||
Andrew didn't give up so easily.
|
||||
It had only taken him a few glances to know what the weakness of the whole structure was.
|
||||
``This ladder is just a danger'',
|
||||
he said.
|
||||
``Why don't you put steps on the legs?`` If he had constructed this peculiar structure,
|
||||
it would have only had one support that would have been a lot easier to defend than four.
|
||||
|
||||
Katt considered him with and almost pitiful look and licked her fingertips, with which she touched one of the legs for a short moment. It audibly hissed. ``Because nobody wants to wait half an hour for it to cool down, smart ass.''
|
||||
Katt considered him with and almost pitiful look and licked her fingertips,
|
||||
with which she touched one of the legs for a short moment.
|
||||
It audibly hissed.
|
||||
``Because nobody wants to wait half an hour for it to cool down,
|
||||
smart ass.''
|
||||
|
||||
``I had the feeling that we were being grilled anyway if we had waited any longer'', said Andrew. That wasn't an exaggeration. They had spent the last few minutes laying on the blankets that seemed to be up there for that specific reason, but the heat had been nigh unbearable at the end.``The steps would need to be made of some kind of metal that doesn't transfer heat quite as well``, he said in a slight lecturing tone. ``Just like the whole platform or at least a majority of it.''
|
||||
``I had the feeling that we were being grilled anyway if we had waited any longer'',
|
||||
said Andrew.
|
||||
That wasn't an exaggeration.
|
||||
They had spent the last few minutes laying on the blankets that seemed to be up there for that specific reason,
|
||||
but the heat had been nigh unbearable at the end.``The steps would need to be made of some kind of metal that doesn't transfer heat quite as well``,
|
||||
he said in a slight lecturing tone.
|
||||
``Just like the whole platform or at least a majority of it.''
|
||||
|
||||
``Oh?'', Katt asked snappishly. ``And how would you know which metal didn't transfer the heat as well?''
|
||||
``Oh?'',
|
||||
Katt asked snappishly.
|
||||
``And how would you know which metal didn't transfer the heat as well?''
|
||||
|
||||
``For example you could try it out'', Andrew suggested.
|
||||
``For example you could try it out'',
|
||||
Andrew suggested.
|
||||
|
||||
Katt prepared for another just as unquestionable question, but she let it go with a peculiar look and a contemplative wrinkling of her forehead. ``You are a strange person, huh?''
|
||||
Katt prepared for another just as unquestionable question,
|
||||
but she let it go with a peculiar look and a contemplative wrinkling of her forehead.
|
||||
``You are a strange person,
|
||||
huh?''
|
||||
|
||||
``No'', answered Andrew. ``Where I'm from they call that logic.''
|
||||
``No'',
|
||||
answered Andrew.
|
||||
``Where I'm from they call that logic.''
|
||||
|
||||
``Where you're from'', repeated Katt thoughtfully. ``Where is that?''
|
||||
``Where you're from'',
|
||||
repeated Katt thoughtfully.
|
||||
``Where is that?''
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew had almost answered openly --- and why not? After all he didn't have anything to hide! ---, but a voice in his head reminded him to be wary. ``Why don't you finally tell me where I am?'', he asked hesitantly.
|
||||
Andrew had almost answered openly --- and why not? After all he didn't have anything to hide! ---,
|
||||
but a voice in his head reminded him to be wary.
|
||||
``Why don't you finally tell me where I am?'',
|
||||
he asked hesitantly.
|
||||
|
||||
``In the dark land'', answered Katt. Aching and without even asking him for help she set the ladder back upright in its spot and filled the container up two fingers deep with the flammable liquid. The canister was as good as empty, but she carefully closed it and carried it up the ladder. Before she climbed back down to Andrew she carefully bound the top rung to the edge of the platform with wire.
|
||||
``In the dark land'',
|
||||
answered Katt.
|
||||
Aching and without even asking him for help she set the ladder back upright in its spot and filled the container up two fingers deep with the flammable liquid.
|
||||
The canister was as good as empty,
|
||||
but she carefully closed it and carried it up the ladder.
|
||||
Before she climbed back down to Andrew she carefully bound the top rung to the edge of the platform with wire.
|
||||
|
||||
``Who fills the canisters with the \textit{fire water} when they're empty?'', asked Andrew.
|
||||
``Who fills the canisters with the \textit{fire water} when they're empty?'',
|
||||
asked Andrew.
|
||||
|
||||
For some reason the question seemed to be uncomfortable for Katt since she didn't answer for a couple seconds and didn't look at him when she answered. ``Whoever comes by'', she said with a shrug. ``Sometimes its iron hunters.''
|
||||
For some reason the question seemed to be uncomfortable for Katt since she didn't answer for a couple seconds and didn't look at him when she answered.
|
||||
``Whoever comes by'',
|
||||
she said with a shrug.
|
||||
``Sometimes its iron hunters.''
|
||||
|
||||
``Iron hunters?''
|
||||
|
||||
``They look for iron'', explained Katt. ``Do you really not know anything?''
|
||||
``They look for iron'',
|
||||
explained Katt.
|
||||
``Do you really not know anything?''
|
||||
|
||||
\textit{Iron hunters} \dots something about that bothered Andrew, but he couldn't tell what it was immediately. It sounded highly precise --- once you knew what it meant. But now that Andrew had picked up the right trail in his head it didn't take long for him to realize what had bothered him about the term: It fell in the same category as \textit{safe place}. There wasn't anything wrong with it, but it sounded like a kid had made them up.
|
||||
\textit{Iron hunters} \dots something about that bothered Andrew,
|
||||
but he couldn't tell what it was immediately.
|
||||
It sounded highly precise --- once you knew what it meant.
|
||||
But now that Andrew had picked up the right trail in his head it didn't take long for him to realize what had bothered him about the term: It fell in the same category as \textit{safe place}.
|
||||
There wasn't anything wrong with it,
|
||||
but it sounded like a kid had made them up.
|
||||
|
||||
``These little beasts'', he asked. ``what do you call them?''
|
||||
``These little beasts'',
|
||||
he asked.
|
||||
``what do you call them?''
|
||||
|
||||
``Gobblers'', answered Katt. ``What else?''
|
||||
``Gobblers'',
|
||||
answered Katt.
|
||||
``What else?''
|
||||
|
||||
Yeah, that fit. The word sounded just like \textit{safe place} and \textit{iron hunter}. He didn't say anything, instead going over to where the man had let his weapon go and squatted down in front of it. Even though he had immense respect for the equally frightening and bizarre weapon, he had a little bit of hope that it would still work and that he could figure out how it worked so that he could give their pursuers an unpleasant surprise when they saw them again.
|
||||
Yeah,
|
||||
that fit.
|
||||
The word sounded just like \textit{safe place} and \textit{iron hunter}.
|
||||
He didn't say anything,
|
||||
instead going over to where the man had let his weapon go and squatted down in front of it.
|
||||
Even though he had immense respect for the equally frightening and bizarre weapon,
|
||||
he had a little bit of hope that it would still work and that he could figure out how it worked so that he could give their pursuers an unpleasant surprise when they saw them again.
|
||||
|
||||
The gun was only a skeleton now. Everything that wasn't made of resistant metal or glass was gone --- including the barrel and the sights that had apparently been made out of plastic. On the side there was a rectangular opening that looked like it had multiple printed circuits in it, but the gobblers hadn't stopped at the microprocessor.
|
||||
The gun was only a skeleton now.
|
||||
Everything that wasn't made of resistant metal or glass was gone --- including the barrel and the sights that had apparently been made out of plastic.
|
||||
On the side there was a rectangular opening that looked like it had multiple printed circuits in it,
|
||||
but the gobblers hadn't stopped at the microprocessor.
|
||||
|
||||
Disappointedly he let the weapon sink back to the ground; At the same time a little relieved. He wasn't sure if he would have had the guts to point that weapon at humans. And he was glad that he didn't have to make that choice.
|
||||
Disappointedly he let the weapon sink back to the ground;
|
||||
At the same time a little relieved.
|
||||
He wasn't sure if he would have had the guts to point that weapon at humans.
|
||||
And he was glad that he didn't have to make that choice.
|
||||
|
||||
Katt had fastened the ladder behind her and climbed down to him. ``They don't leave anything other than stone or metal behind'', she said as if reading his mind. ``You can leave that there. The Iron is too hard to melt down and that means we can't do anything with it.''
|
||||
Katt had fastened the ladder behind her and climbed down to him.
|
||||
``They don't leave anything other than stone or metal behind'',
|
||||
she said as if reading his mind.
|
||||
``You can leave that there.
|
||||
The Iron is too hard to melt down and that means we can't do anything with it.''
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew didn't show it, but Katt had just given him valuable information --- namely that she or the people she belonged to had handled one of these weapons or at least their remains before.
|
||||
Andrew didn't show it,
|
||||
but Katt had just given him valuable information --- namely that she or the people she belonged to had handled one of these weapons or at least their remains before.
|
||||
|
||||
He stood up completely, took a few steps and bent over again to pick something up. It was a slim silver nail with a peculiar head and ribbed shaft, half as long as his little finger and almost weightless.
|
||||
He stood up completely,
|
||||
took a few steps and bent over again to pick something up.
|
||||
It was a slim silver nail with a peculiar head and ribbed shaft,
|
||||
half as long as his little finger and almost weightless.
|
||||
|
||||
``What is that?'', asked Katt.
|
||||
``What is that?'',
|
||||
asked Katt.
|
||||
|
||||
``I'm not entirely sure'', answered Andrew, ``but I think its a surgical nail''
|
||||
``I'm not entirely sure'',
|
||||
answered Andrew,
|
||||
``but I think its a surgical nail''
|
||||
|
||||
``A what?''
|
||||
|
||||
``You need one of these to nail bones so they heal together'', answered Andrew. He closed his hand around his find and stuck it in his pocket. ``At least I know for sure that there are people in those suits now and not aliens.''
|
||||
``You need one of these to nail bones so they heal together'',
|
||||
answered Andrew.
|
||||
He closed his hand around his find and stuck it in his pocket.
|
||||
``At least I know for sure that there are people in those suits now and not aliens.''
|
||||
|
||||
Katt's uncomprehending expression made it clear that she didn't know where to start with some of those expressions. ``Shouldn't we keep going?'', she proposed. ``We aren't far, but its almost dark.''
|
||||
Katt's uncomprehending expression made it clear that she didn't know where to start with some of those expressions.
|
||||
``Shouldn't we keep going?'',
|
||||
she proposed.
|
||||
``We aren't far,
|
||||
but its almost dark.''
|
||||
|
||||
``And the gobblers?'', asked Andrew.
|
||||
``And the gobblers?'',
|
||||
asked Andrew.
|
||||
|
||||
``No problem'', Katt said pretentiously. ``We just need to stay on their trail until we're close enough to the river. They never take the same route twice. They wouldn't find anything to eat.''
|
||||
``No problem'',
|
||||
Katt said pretentiously.
|
||||
``We just need to stay on their trail until we're close enough to the river.
|
||||
They never take the same route twice.
|
||||
They wouldn't find anything to eat.''
|
||||
|
||||
After what Andrew had just seen that sounded like a convincing explanation. ``I'm asking myself what they eat either way'', he said. ``There doesn't seem to be too much here.''
|
||||
After what Andrew had just seen that sounded like a convincing explanation.
|
||||
``I'm asking myself what they eat either way'',
|
||||
he said.
|
||||
``There doesn't seem to be too much here.''
|
||||
|
||||
``Oh this and that'', answered Katt. ``Sometimes idiots who get lost here. Or a small animal. And in the end themselves.''
|
||||
``Oh this and that'',
|
||||
answered Katt.
|
||||
``Sometimes idiots who get lost here.
|
||||
Or a small animal.
|
||||
And in the end themselves.''
|
||||
|
||||
As a precaution, Andrew didn't think about the last sentence. The knot in his head was big enough as is. He insisted that she kept walking with a gesture and followed her after she started walking.
|
||||
As a precaution,
|
||||
Andrew didn't think about the last sentence.
|
||||
The knot in his head was big enough as is.
|
||||
He insisted that she kept walking with a gesture and followed her after she started walking.
|
||||
|
||||
For the first while it was going well, but his bruised knee made itself noticed again and the nausea and racing headaches came back. Not as bad as they were before that he had to stop, but they were bad enough that he was slowly falling behind. His leader didn't seem to miss any of it, glancing back at him with worried looks. She didn't make any comments and altered her speed to match his sinking tempo without complaint.
|
||||
For the first while it was going well,
|
||||
but his bruised knee made itself noticed again and the nausea and racing headaches came back.
|
||||
Not as bad as they were before that he had to stop,
|
||||
but they were bad enough that he was slowly falling behind.
|
||||
His leader didn't seem to miss any of it,
|
||||
glancing back at him with worried looks.
|
||||
She didn't make any comments and altered her speed to match his sinking tempo without complaint.
|
||||
|
||||
He was getting worse, not better. Andrew had been hoping that he would recover after a while like he had in the past when weakness and pain had overcome him, but the headaches were getting worse and the nausea and fever didn't let up either. He had a disgusting taste in his mouth. Bitter saliva was quickly collecting under his tongue and the fever seemed to be raising and not easing up.
|
||||
He was getting worse,
|
||||
not better.
|
||||
Andrew had been hoping that he would recover after a while like he had in the past when weakness and pain had overcome him,
|
||||
but the headaches were getting worse and the nausea and fever didn't let up either.
|
||||
He had a disgusting taste in his mouth.
|
||||
Bitter saliva was quickly collecting under his tongue and the fever seemed to be raising and not easing up.
|
||||
|
||||
Finally Katt stopped and motioned towards the last of about ten thousand doors that they had gone through in the last hour. Fresh air rushed towards them and behind that there wasn't another corridor, stairwell, hallway or hall, but the open sky. Relieved, Andrew took a deep breath and wanted to pass her, but Katt held him back with a swift movement and motioned for him to be quiet with her other hand. Carefully he stepped behind her into the open and almost immediately ducked behind a hill of rubble that was a couple steps from the door.
|
||||
Finally Katt stopped and motioned towards the last of about ten thousand doors that they had gone through in the last hour.
|
||||
Fresh air rushed towards them and behind that there wasn't another corridor,
|
||||
stairwell,
|
||||
hallway or hall,
|
||||
but the open sky.
|
||||
Relieved,
|
||||
Andrew took a deep breath and wanted to pass her,
|
||||
but Katt held him back with a swift movement and motioned for him to be quiet with her other hand.
|
||||
Carefully he stepped behind her into the open and almost immediately ducked behind a hill of rubble that was a couple steps from the door.
|
||||
|
||||
In hindsight he was glad that Katt had warned him. Bit for the most part he was busy questioning what he was seeing.
|
||||
In hindsight he was glad that Katt had warned him.
|
||||
Bit for the most part he was busy questioning what he was seeing.
|
||||
|
||||
The factory building hadn't collapsed like he had expected, but it was noticeably more slanted than it was before, sticking out from the other misshapen ruins due to its odd deformations. The fire was nearly out. He only saw sparks fly up here and there.
|
||||
The factory building hadn't collapsed like he had expected,
|
||||
but it was noticeably more slanted than it was before,
|
||||
sticking out from the other misshapen ruins due to its odd deformations.
|
||||
The fire was nearly out.
|
||||
He only saw sparks fly up here and there.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
``We were \dots running in a circle\textinterrobang'', he wheezed. ``The whole time?''
|
||||
``We were \dots running in a circle\textinterrobang'',
|
||||
he wheezed.
|
||||
``The whole time?''
|
||||
|
||||
``Complain to the gobblers``, said Katt laconically. ``Either way we need to get to the river, and the bridge is behind this blockade.''
|
||||
``Complain to the gobblers``,
|
||||
said Katt laconically.
|
||||
``Either way we need to get to the river,
|
||||
and the bridge is behind this blockade.''
|
||||
|
||||
``Then we'll find a different way!''
|
||||
|
||||
``Too dangerous'', answered Katt. ``If we run in to the gobblers again, we might not escape from them again. It won't take too long any more. We need to wait. They haven't ever stayed that long.''
|
||||
``Too dangerous'',
|
||||
answered Katt.
|
||||
``If we run in to the gobblers again,
|
||||
we might not escape from them again.
|
||||
It won't take too long any more.
|
||||
We need to wait.
|
||||
They haven't ever stayed that long.''
|
||||
|
||||
That last remark was about the good dozen figures that were clothed in the color of the night that were lingering on the other end of the plaza. Quite a few of them were busy collecting the remains of the Cessna and loading them into the two shark helicopters that had landed next to each other in front of the building where their frantic escape had started. Most of the men were just standing around.
|
||||
That last remark was about the good dozen figures that were clothed in the color of the night that were lingering on the other end of the plaza.
|
||||
Quite a few of them were busy collecting the remains of the Cessna and loading them into the two shark helicopters that had landed next to each other in front of the building where their frantic escape had started.
|
||||
Most of the men were just standing around.
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew laid his head in his neck and looked up. In the mean time the electrical storm had completely subsided, but it still was dark out. Above the ruined city there were neither stars nor the moon, just continuous, absolute, contour less black. And even though it felt like it had been forever since he and Nick had crashed into the plaza, more than a few hours couldn't have passed since then.
|
||||
Andrew laid his head in his neck and looked up.
|
||||
In the mean time the electrical storm had completely subsided,
|
||||
but it still was dark out.
|
||||
Above the ruined city there were neither stars nor the moon,
|
||||
just continuous,
|
||||
absolute,
|
||||
contour less black.
|
||||
And even though it felt like it had been forever since he and Nick had crashed into the plaza,
|
||||
more than a few hours couldn't have passed since then.
|
||||
|
||||
``Didn't you just say something about \textit{day}?'', he turned to Katt.
|
||||
``Didn't you just say something about \textit{day}?'',
|
||||
he turned to Katt.
|
||||
|
||||
``On the other shore, yeah.'' The girl made a head movement in the direction of the burning building. Andrew strained to look in that direction, but the sky looked completely black behind the building.
|
||||
``On the other shore,
|
||||
yeah.'' The girl made a head movement in the direction of the burning building.
|
||||
Andrew strained to look in that direction,
|
||||
but the sky looked completely black behind the building.
|
||||
|
||||
``I understand'', he mumbled with a heavy tongue. His fever had gotten worse and his thoughts started to slowly get more and more confused. He had actually just imagined that she had told him it was daytime on the other side of the river.
|
||||
``I understand'',
|
||||
he mumbled with a heavy tongue.
|
||||
His fever had gotten worse and his thoughts started to slowly get more and more confused.
|
||||
He had actually just imagined that she had told him it was daytime on the other side of the river.
|
||||
|
||||
``Can you answer one more question for me?'', he mumbled.
|
||||
``Can you answer one more question for me?'',
|
||||
he mumbled.
|
||||
|
||||
``Gladly''
|
||||
|
||||
``When are the visiting hours here?''
|
||||
|
||||
Katt looked at him blankly. ``What hours?''
|
||||
Katt looked at him blankly.
|
||||
``What hours?''
|
||||
|
||||
``Visiting hours'', answered Andrew. ``Come on! We're living in the twenty-first century! You can have your family visit you every once in a while, even in the closed off wards.''
|
||||
``Visiting hours'',
|
||||
answered Andrew.
|
||||
``Come on! We're living in the twenty-first century! You can have your family visit you every once in a while,
|
||||
even in the closed off wards.''
|
||||
|
||||
Katt's looks were just getting more and more confused. She was getting ready to answer, but then sharply inhaled and looked toward the landed helicopters and their crews.
|
||||
Katt's looks were just getting more and more confused.
|
||||
She was getting ready to answer,
|
||||
but then sharply inhaled and looked toward the landed helicopters and their crews.
|
||||
|
||||
The men had stopped whatever they were doing and were running towards the helicopters from all directions. Andrew heard a fine humming as the turbines started, then the oddly bent blades started spinning faster and faster, becoming nearly invisible after a few seconds.
|
||||
The men had stopped whatever they were doing and were running towards the helicopters from all directions.
|
||||
Andrew heard a fine humming as the turbines started,
|
||||
then the oddly bent blades started spinning faster and faster,
|
||||
becoming nearly invisible after a few seconds.
|
||||
|
||||
A few of the men fired, but most of them were rushing toward the open doors of the helicopters with long steps, jumping in before they turned around to give their comrades outside covering fire. Andrew couldn't tell what they were shooting at, but where their blazing blue bolts impacted burning popcorn seemed to be flung into the air.
|
||||
A few of the men fired,
|
||||
but most of them were rushing toward the open doors of the helicopters with long steps,
|
||||
jumping in before they turned around to give their comrades outside covering fire.
|
||||
Andrew couldn't tell what they were shooting at,
|
||||
but where their blazing blue bolts impacted burning popcorn seemed to be flung into the air.
|
||||
|
||||
Even the combined fire power of a dozen of their odd weapons wasn't enough to repel or even keep back the millions of gobblers. The entire back third of the plaza had already awakened and was glitteringly, silently pushing towards them. Even before all the men were on board one of the helicopters took off, swiveled around a few meters off the ground, and used its unequally overpowered armaments to provide cover to the last few men.
|
||||
Even the combined fire power of a dozen of their odd weapons wasn't enough to repel or even keep back the millions of gobblers.
|
||||
The entire back third of the plaza had already awakened and was glitteringly,
|
||||
silently pushing towards them.
|
||||
Even before all the men were on board one of the helicopters took off,
|
||||
swiveled around a few meters off the ground,
|
||||
and used its unequally overpowered armaments to provide cover to the last few men.
|
||||
|
||||
It was still close. Only one of them didn't make it to the rescue helicopter. That one unfortunate soul grasped for the cabin door and missed it. But Andrew could see from this far away that his suit had caught on the landing skids and had ripped open on almost its entire length.
|
||||
It was still close.
|
||||
Only one of them didn't make it to the rescue helicopter.
|
||||
That one unfortunate soul grasped for the cabin door and missed it.
|
||||
But Andrew could see from this far away that his suit had caught on the landing skids and had ripped open on almost its entire length.
|
||||
|
||||
The helicopter took off before the man could even stand up, and two of his comrades bent over the side and shot him.
|
||||
The helicopter took off before the man could even stand up,
|
||||
and two of his comrades bent over the side and shot him.
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew cried out in disbelief. ``Good god! But \dots but why did they do that\textinterrobang''
|
||||
Andrew cried out in disbelief.
|
||||
``Good god! But \dots but why did they do that\textinterrobang''
|
||||
|
||||
``His suit was ripped'', said Katt.
|
||||
``His suit was ripped'',
|
||||
said Katt.
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew had nothing more to say. Other than the horror that had closed off his throat, he was awfully nauseous and had to suddenly fully concentrate on controlling himself so that he wouldn't vomit. Bewildered and lamed from dread he watched the two helicopters quickly gained height and then disappeared with such an acceleration that a fighter jet would have been jealous.
|
||||
Andrew had nothing more to say.
|
||||
Other than the horror that had closed off his throat,
|
||||
he was awfully nauseous and had to suddenly fully concentrate on controlling himself so that he wouldn't vomit.
|
||||
Bewildered and lamed from dread he watched the two helicopters quickly gained height and then disappeared with such an acceleration that a fighter jet would have been jealous.
|
||||
|
||||
``We should wait a moment'', said Katt. ``The gobblers will move on quickly, but it seems to be a pretty large swarm.''
|
||||
``We should wait a moment'',
|
||||
said Katt.
|
||||
``The gobblers will move on quickly,
|
||||
but it seems to be a pretty large swarm.''
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew was barely listening. He was still refusing to believe what he had just seen with his own eyes. The men had shot their own comrade just because his suit had ripped? All of a sudden he wasn't sure if those were actually humans in those HAZMAT suits.
|
||||
Andrew was barely listening.
|
||||
He was still refusing to believe what he had just seen with his own eyes.
|
||||
The men had shot their own comrade just because his suit had ripped? All of a sudden he wasn't sure if those were actually humans in those HAZMAT suits.
|
||||
|
334
book-1/9.tex
Executable file → Normal file
334
book-1/9.tex
Executable file → Normal file
@ -1,125 +1,339 @@
|
||||
\chapter{9}
|
||||
|
||||
The nausea and pain let up for a moment, but in return Andrew felt like a newborn child. He visibly collapsed in on himself and had to fight to keep his eyes open.
|
||||
The nausea and pain let up for a moment,
|
||||
but in return Andrew felt like a newborn child.
|
||||
He visibly collapsed in on himself and had to fight to keep his eyes open.
|
||||
|
||||
``Are you okay?'', asked Katt.
|
||||
``Are you okay?'',
|
||||
asked Katt.
|
||||
|
||||
``I don't know'', answered Andrew truthfully. Even speaking was hard for him now. The fever that was causing him increasing discomfort was probably the reason for this whole absurd story: He was laying in a hospital bed somewhere, had a twenty seven degree\footnote{Celsius} fever, and was hallucinating all of this nonsense.
|
||||
``I don't know'',
|
||||
answered Andrew truthfully.
|
||||
Even speaking was hard for him now.
|
||||
The fever that was causing him increasing discomfort was probably the reason for this whole absurd story: He was laying in a hospital bed somewhere,
|
||||
had a twenty seven degree\footnote{Celsius} fever,
|
||||
and was hallucinating all of this nonsense.
|
||||
|
||||
``I think they're gone'', said Katt.
|
||||
``I think they're gone'',
|
||||
said Katt.
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew couldn't remember if any measurable time had passed since the last time she had spoken, but it must have been because when he --- with Katt's help --- stood up and looked over the edge of his cover the plaza was completely empty. The girl gave him another doubtful look, but didn't say anything else, instead continuing on at a pace that he could barely keep up with. After she had taken a couple of steps, it got remarkably better. The fresh air felt good and the careful movements brought his circulation back in swing. In addition whatever he had seemed to come in waves and apparently the time between them seemed to be decreasing.
|
||||
Andrew couldn't remember if any measurable time had passed since the last time she had spoken,
|
||||
but it must have been because when he --- with Katt's help --- stood up and looked over the edge of his cover the plaza was completely empty.
|
||||
The girl gave him another doubtful look,
|
||||
but didn't say anything else,
|
||||
instead continuing on at a pace that he could barely keep up with.
|
||||
After she had taken a couple of steps,
|
||||
it got remarkably better.
|
||||
The fresh air felt good and the careful movements brought his circulation back in swing.
|
||||
In addition whatever he had seemed to come in waves and apparently the time between them seemed to be decreasing.
|
||||
|
||||
``How far do we still have?'', he asked.
|
||||
``How far do we still have?'',
|
||||
he asked.
|
||||
|
||||
``Two blocks'', answered Katt. She corrected herself. ``Three. But the gobblers moved in a different direction. I haven't ever seen them turn around.''
|
||||
``Two blocks'',
|
||||
answered Katt.
|
||||
She corrected herself.
|
||||
``Three.
|
||||
But the gobblers moved in a different direction.
|
||||
I haven't ever seen them turn around.''
|
||||
|
||||
``And other than that there aren't any people-eating monsters here?'', asked Andrew.
|
||||
``And other than that there aren't any people-eating monsters here?'',
|
||||
asked Andrew.
|
||||
|
||||
He almost counted on a \textit{yeah} as the answer, but Katt just gave him a slanting glance and shook her head. ``Nothing that the gobblers have overlooked.'', she explained. She didn't say anything for a moment, then: ``You're from outside, am I right?''
|
||||
He almost counted on a \textit{yeah} as the answer,
|
||||
but Katt just gave him a slanting glance and shook her head.
|
||||
``Nothing that the gobblers have overlooked.'',
|
||||
she explained.
|
||||
She didn't say anything for a moment,
|
||||
then: ``You're from outside,
|
||||
am I right?''
|
||||
|
||||
Why should he still lie? In any case Andrew was sure that he wouldn't survive the next hour. Either some bizarre twelve-armed and three-headed beast that Katt had forgotten to mention would eat him, or he would collapse after a few steps --- or finally wake up from this insane nightmare. And he still hesitated to answer.
|
||||
Why should he still lie? In any case Andrew was sure that he wouldn't survive the next hour.
|
||||
Either some bizarre twelve-armed and three-headed beast that Katt had forgotten to mention would eat him,
|
||||
or he would collapse after a few steps --- or finally wake up from this insane nightmare.
|
||||
And he still hesitated to answer.
|
||||
|
||||
``I'm not sure if we're talking about the same \textit{outside}'', he said.
|
||||
``I'm not sure if we're talking about the same \textit{outside}'',
|
||||
he said.
|
||||
|
||||
Katt looked at him unsettled. ``Is there more than one?''
|
||||
Katt looked at him unsettled.
|
||||
``Is there more than one?''
|
||||
|
||||
``If you mean the world that \textit{Men in Black} with their flying kitchen mixers are from, I'll have to disappoint you'', he replied. ``I haven't ever heard of these types before. And of their Science-Fiction-Helicopters and Star-Trek-Weapons definitely not.''
|
||||
``If you mean the world that \textit{Men in Black} with their flying kitchen mixers are from,
|
||||
I'll have to disappoint you'',
|
||||
he replied.
|
||||
``I haven't ever heard of these types before.
|
||||
And of their Science-Fiction-Helicopters and Star-Trek-Weapons definitely not.''
|
||||
|
||||
``Aha'', said Katt.
|
||||
``Aha'',
|
||||
said Katt.
|
||||
|
||||
``We don't have any of that'', insisted Andrew. ``Other than that \dots'' He shrugged and looked back at the sky, that was still completely black and starless. A crazy thought crossed his mind: Could it be, that he had jumped through time from some unknown phenomenon? Had he ended up in a bleak and fear-inducing future or in some kind of terrible parallel universe? He thought about that possibility in earnest for a moment, but arrived at the conclusion that the combination of accident victim/brain damage/nuthouse was much more realistic.
|
||||
``We don't have any of that'',
|
||||
insisted Andrew.
|
||||
``Other than that \dots'' He shrugged and looked back at the sky,
|
||||
that was still completely black and starless.
|
||||
A crazy thought crossed his mind: Could it be,
|
||||
that he had jumped through time from some unknown phenomenon? Had he ended up in a bleak and fear-inducing future or in some kind of terrible parallel universe? He thought about that possibility in earnest for a moment,
|
||||
but arrived at the conclusion that the combination of accident victim/brain damage/nuthouse was much more realistic.
|
||||
|
||||
``I think so.'', he said in the end.
|
||||
``I think so.'',
|
||||
he said in the end.
|
||||
|
||||
Again Katt looked at him for quite a while in a way that he didn't want to interpret --- even if it seemed to him that she wasn't especially happy about his answer. ``And how is it \dots there?'', she asked with hesitation.
|
||||
Again Katt looked at him for quite a while in a way that he didn't want to interpret --- even if it seemed to him that she wasn't especially happy about his answer.
|
||||
``And how is it \dots there?'',
|
||||
she asked with hesitation.
|
||||
|
||||
``Its kinda like here'', answered Andrew. ``But completely different.''
|
||||
``Its kinda like here'',
|
||||
answered Andrew.
|
||||
``But completely different.''
|
||||
|
||||
Katt seemed to be somewhat insulted, but she didn't say anything but walked a little faster so that he had to use what little strength he had left to keep up with her.
|
||||
Katt seemed to be somewhat insulted,
|
||||
but she didn't say anything but walked a little faster so that he had to use what little strength he had left to keep up with her.
|
||||
|
||||
In some regards Andrew was right. He needed some time to clear his thoughts, and Katt would just ask him more questions that he wouldn't or couldn't really answer. There were enough questions bouncing around his head that he didn't have any answers to. He was stranded in a place that shouldn't exist, was followed by men that fired at him for no reason with weapons that have even less reasons to exist and flew in helicopters out of the next century, and had almost been eaten by monstrosities that looked like they had been created by Roland Emmerich.
|
||||
In some regards Andrew was right.
|
||||
He needed some time to clear his thoughts,
|
||||
and Katt would just ask him more questions that he wouldn't or couldn't really answer.
|
||||
There were enough questions bouncing around his head that he didn't have any answers to.
|
||||
He was stranded in a place that shouldn't exist,
|
||||
was followed by men that fired at him for no reason with weapons that have even less reasons to exist and flew in helicopters out of the next century,
|
||||
and had almost been eaten by monstrosities that looked like they had been created by Roland Emmerich.
|
||||
|
||||
Oh yeah, and just as an aside: Nick was dead.
|
||||
Oh yeah,
|
||||
and just as an aside: Nick was dead.
|
||||
|
||||
A deep sorrow overcame Andrew as he thought of his friend --- Nick hadn't been anything else. His friend. Maybe the only real friend he had ever had. He felt as if he had betrayed him, yes, as if he was at fault for what had happened to Nick, and in a certain sense it was true. If he hadn't convinced Nick to let him drive, then maybe the kidnappers wouldn't have been able to outrun them and hide in the Cessna \dots
|
||||
A deep sorrow overcame Andrew as he thought of his friend --- Nick hadn't been anything else.
|
||||
His friend.
|
||||
Maybe the only real friend he had ever had.
|
||||
He felt as if he had betrayed him,
|
||||
yes,
|
||||
as if he was at fault for what had happened to Nick,
|
||||
and in a certain sense it was true.
|
||||
If he hadn't convinced Nick to let him drive,
|
||||
then maybe the kidnappers wouldn't have been able to outrun them and hide in the Cessna \dots
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew stopped that thought short. What-if thoughts wouldn't help him further. He didn't have any choice other than to keep going and to wait and see what happened.
|
||||
Andrew stopped that thought short.
|
||||
What-if thoughts wouldn't help him further.
|
||||
He didn't have any choice other than to keep going and to wait and see what happened.
|
||||
|
||||
While he was walking two steps next to and a step behind Katt, he stealthily looked at her probably for the first time since they had met with actual attention. He had to think of the nightmarish face that he believed he had seen in the factory hall. So far he had automatically assumed that it was Katt, but now he realized how bitterly unjust that was to her. He corrected his estimate of her age down by at least one year, maybe two. And he noticed something else that so far he hadn't thought was possible, but also confused him a lot: He suddenly saw how pretty Katt was. Even hunger and lifelong hardships that emaciated her to the point of almost being a caricature, her natural elegance and grace hadn't been affected.
|
||||
While he was walking two steps next to and a step behind Katt,
|
||||
he stealthily looked at her probably for the first time since they had met with actual attention.
|
||||
He had to think of the nightmarish face that he believed he had seen in the factory hall.
|
||||
So far he had automatically assumed that it was Katt,
|
||||
but now he realized how bitterly unjust that was to her.
|
||||
He corrected his estimate of her age down by at least one year,
|
||||
maybe two.
|
||||
And he noticed something else that so far he hadn't thought was possible,
|
||||
but also confused him a lot: He suddenly saw how pretty Katt was.
|
||||
Even hunger and lifelong hardships that emaciated her to the point of almost being a caricature,
|
||||
her natural elegance and grace hadn't been affected.
|
||||
|
||||
``We're almost there.''
|
||||
|
||||
Katt raised her hand, and as Andrew followed her gesture, he saw that they had passed the burning building a long time ago. In front of them was another block of ruins and behind that he recognized an unswerving line of darkness that divided the city in two halves. The river, that Katt had been talking about? He tried to discern what was on the other side, but he couldn't work it out. The ruined city seemed to continue there, but he couldn't really see anything other than more shadows. There were no signs of the \textit{day} that it seemed to be on the other side as far as he could see.
|
||||
Katt raised her hand,
|
||||
and as Andrew followed her gesture,
|
||||
he saw that they had passed the burning building a long time ago.
|
||||
In front of them was another block of ruins and behind that he recognized an unswerving line of darkness that divided the city in two halves.
|
||||
The river,
|
||||
that Katt had been talking about? He tried to discern what was on the other side,
|
||||
but he couldn't work it out.
|
||||
The ruined city seemed to continue there,
|
||||
but he couldn't really see anything other than more shadows.
|
||||
There were no signs of the \textit{day} that it seemed to be on the other side as far as he could see.
|
||||
|
||||
A sharp pain shot through the back of his head. At the last moment Andrew suppressed a yelp of pain, breathed in deeply and held on to the mad hope that it was just happenstance and that it would go away soon. Instead of that it slowly spread out like a spiderweb of white-hot threads, and after a few seconds his old friends nausea and dizziness added themselves to the mix. He didn't have much time.
|
||||
A sharp pain shot through the back of his head.
|
||||
At the last moment Andrew suppressed a yelp of pain,
|
||||
breathed in deeply and held on to the mad hope that it was just happenstance and that it would go away soon.
|
||||
Instead of that it slowly spread out like a spiderweb of white-hot threads,
|
||||
and after a few seconds his old friends nausea and dizziness added themselves to the mix.
|
||||
He didn't have much time.
|
||||
|
||||
Katt seemed to feel how he was doing because she quickened her pace, and Andrew trotted after her until they had reached the line of solid blackness that separated the city of ruins. By now he was in such a state that he would have stumbled right into the abyss had Katt not held him back at the last moment.
|
||||
Katt seemed to feel how he was doing because she quickened her pace,
|
||||
and Andrew trotted after her until they had reached the line of solid blackness that separated the city of ruins.
|
||||
By now he was in such a state that he would have stumbled right into the abyss had Katt not held him back at the last moment.
|
||||
|
||||
``What\dots?'', he mumbled dazedly. He wasn't sure if his voice was still understandable. Or if he was speaking at all or if he had just imagined it.
|
||||
``What\dots?'',
|
||||
he mumbled dazedly.
|
||||
He wasn't sure if his voice was still understandable.
|
||||
Or if he was speaking at all or if he had just imagined it.
|
||||
|
||||
Katt just considered him with a pitiful glance. Her voice suddenly took on the tone that you only use with very young children (or very old people) and still weren't sure that they understood. ``Just stay right here and don't move, okay?''
|
||||
Katt just considered him with a pitiful glance.
|
||||
Her voice suddenly took on the tone that you only use with very young children (or very old people) and still weren't sure that they understood.
|
||||
``Just stay right here and don't move,
|
||||
okay?''
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew nodded obediently --- he probably would have also nodded if she had told him the lottery numbers from last week ---, and Katt made a funnel in front of her mouth with her hands and expelled an especially warbling scream; it wasn't especially loud, but it was so piercing that it must have been audible\footnote{\href{https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GHMjD0Lp5DY}{this book sponsored by Audible\texttrademark, use code ANDERS or text ANDERS to 500 500 to learn more} \textsuperscript{/s}} throughout the whole city.
|
||||
Andrew nodded obediently --- he probably would have also nodded if she had told him the lottery numbers from last week ---,
|
||||
and Katt made a funnel in front of her mouth with her hands and expelled an especially warbling scream;
|
||||
it wasn't especially loud,
|
||||
but it was so piercing that it must have been audible\footnote{\href{https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GHMjD0Lp5DY}{this book sponsored by Audible\texttrademark,
|
||||
use code ANDERS or text ANDERS to 500 500 to learn more} \textsuperscript{/s}} throughout the whole city.
|
||||
|
||||
``My sister is waiting on the other side'', she said. ``She'll let the bridge down, don't worry.''
|
||||
``My sister is waiting on the other side'',
|
||||
she said.
|
||||
``She'll let the bridge down,
|
||||
don't worry.''
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew wasn't worried. He also couldn't remember if he had asked a corresponding question, but just in case he nodded anyway; Very carefully, as even that small movement made the headache he had explode.
|
||||
Andrew wasn't worried.
|
||||
He also couldn't remember if he had asked a corresponding question,
|
||||
but just in case he nodded anyway;
|
||||
Very carefully,
|
||||
as even that small movement made the headache he had explode.
|
||||
|
||||
Katt raised her hands again and repeated the warbling sound, then stomped the ground madly and yelled. ``Ratt god damn it! Where are you?''
|
||||
Katt raised her hands again and repeated the warbling sound,
|
||||
then stomped the ground madly and yelled.
|
||||
``Ratt god damn it! Where are you?''
|
||||
|
||||
``Ratt?'', asked Andrew. Did she have to yell like that? His head would explode if she kept yelling around like that.
|
||||
``Ratt?'',
|
||||
asked Andrew.
|
||||
Did she have to yell like that? His head would explode if she kept yelling around like that.
|
||||
|
||||
``My sister'', explained Katt.
|
||||
``My sister'',
|
||||
explained Katt.
|
||||
|
||||
``Katt and Ratt'', giggled Andrew. ``How peculiar.''
|
||||
``Katt and Ratt'',
|
||||
giggled Andrew.
|
||||
``How peculiar.''
|
||||
|
||||
``Does something about that bother you?'', asked Katt sharply. She glared at him defiantly for a moment and roared for her sister louder than before.
|
||||
``Does something about that bother you?'',
|
||||
asked Katt sharply.
|
||||
She glared at him defiantly for a moment and roared for her sister louder than before.
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew distorted his face demonstratively and took a step away from her; however not a very big one and not without getting within two steps of the \textit{river}.
|
||||
Andrew distorted his face demonstratively and took a step away from her;
|
||||
however not a very big one and not without getting within two steps of the \textit{river}.
|
||||
|
||||
It wasn't a river. Apparently they were speaking the same language that used the same words, but meant different things. What lay in front of him had no similarities with a body of water. It was a good five meter wide canal of weather-beaten gray concrete that went down an indeterminate distance. Andrew precariously bent over and immediately righted himself. He had only had a short glimpse into the depths, but he didn't see anything that reminded him of water.
|
||||
It wasn't a river.
|
||||
Apparently they were speaking the same language that used the same words,
|
||||
but meant different things.
|
||||
What lay in front of him had no similarities with a body of water.
|
||||
It was a good five meter wide canal of weather-beaten gray concrete that went down an indeterminate distance.
|
||||
Andrew precariously bent over and immediately righted himself.
|
||||
He had only had a short glimpse into the depths,
|
||||
but he didn't see anything that reminded him of water.
|
||||
|
||||
``What's down there?'', he asked.
|
||||
``What's down there?'',
|
||||
he asked.
|
||||
|
||||
Katt shrugged. ``The gobblers don't cross'', she said. ``Isn't that enough?'' She didn't wait for Andrews answer, instead regarding him with an almost hostile look and roared as loud as she possibly could for her sister. This time she used a whole litany of insults and curses that would have made Andrew blush in any other circumstance.
|
||||
Katt shrugged.
|
||||
``The gobblers don't cross'',
|
||||
she said.
|
||||
``Isn't that enough?'' She didn't wait for Andrews answer,
|
||||
instead regarding him with an almost hostile look and roared as loud as she possibly could for her sister.
|
||||
This time she used a whole litany of insults and curses that would have made Andrew blush in any other circumstance.
|
||||
|
||||
It worked. This time it was just a moment before he heard a bright squeaking voice and a long spindly shadow appeared from the silhouette of the city ruins on the other side of the river. Andrew tried focusing on it with wide eyes for a few seconds, but he couldn't concentrate on one thing that long. His thoughts were increasingly revolving around himself. It was impossible to focus his thoughts on a single thing for more than a moment. He was more nauseous than he had ever been before in his whole life.
|
||||
It worked.
|
||||
This time it was just a moment before he heard a bright squeaking voice and a long spindly shadow appeared from the silhouette of the city ruins on the other side of the river.
|
||||
Andrew tried focusing on it with wide eyes for a few seconds,
|
||||
but he couldn't concentrate on one thing that long.
|
||||
His thoughts were increasingly revolving around himself.
|
||||
It was impossible to focus his thoughts on a single thing for more than a moment.
|
||||
He was more nauseous than he had ever been before in his whole life.
|
||||
|
||||
``We've almost made it'', said Katt. ``I knew that I could rely on Ratt. Just one more moment. Can you keep it up that long?''
|
||||
``We've almost made it'',
|
||||
said Katt.
|
||||
``I knew that I could rely on Ratt.
|
||||
Just one more moment.
|
||||
Can you keep it up that long?''
|
||||
|
||||
Of course not. He nodded. ``Yes.''
|
||||
Of course not.
|
||||
He nodded.
|
||||
``Yes.''
|
||||
|
||||
Katt's facial expression explained very clearly what she thought of that answer. But she was diplomatic enough to not say anything, instead concentrating on the delicate shadow hat was slowly lowering over the river with a shrill screeching. Andrew followed her lead --- at least he tried.
|
||||
Katt's facial expression explained very clearly what she thought of that answer.
|
||||
But she was diplomatic enough to not say anything,
|
||||
instead concentrating on the delicate shadow hat was slowly lowering over the river with a shrill screeching.
|
||||
Andrew followed her lead --- at least he tried.
|
||||
|
||||
His thoughts were getting more and more confused. He was unimaginably nauseous. He had the worst headache on this side of the Andromeda galaxy and his fever had a good chance to break the Guinness world record; actually his blood had surpassed the boiling point and must have been steaming out of his ears like an overheated pressure cooker.
|
||||
His thoughts were getting more and more confused.
|
||||
He was unimaginably nauseous.
|
||||
He had the worst headache on this side of the Andromeda galaxy and his fever had a good chance to break the Guinness world record;
|
||||
actually his blood had surpassed the boiling point and must have been steaming out of his ears like an overheated pressure cooker.
|
||||
|
||||
For some reason he thought the whole thing exceptionally strange.
|
||||
|
||||
Squeaking and aching the spider-web-like outline lowered itself more before it impacted their side of the \textit{river} with a long echoing bang and Katt was suddenly very lively. ``Can you keep on going?'', she asked.
|
||||
Squeaking and aching the spider-web-like outline lowered itself more before it impacted their side of the \textit{river} with a long echoing bang and Katt was suddenly very lively.
|
||||
``Can you keep on going?'',
|
||||
she asked.
|
||||
|
||||
``Sure'', answered Andrew and sunk to his knees. Katt caught him and did the most embarrassing thing to him that had ever happened: She bounced a bit in her knees and threw him over her shoulders with no hesitation. He could feel her sway under his weight for a moment, then found her balance again with a quick motion. She turned around and ran off with almost provocatively light steps.
|
||||
``Sure'',
|
||||
answered Andrew and sunk to his knees.
|
||||
Katt caught him and did the most embarrassing thing to him that had ever happened: She bounced a bit in her knees and threw him over her shoulders with no hesitation.
|
||||
He could feel her sway under his weight for a moment,
|
||||
then found her balance again with a quick motion.
|
||||
She turned around and ran off with almost provocatively light steps.
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew was almost glad that he wasn't currently understanding all that was going on around and especially \textit{to} him. If what he could recognize of the \textit{bridge} that Katt was prancing over with mischievous ease was real, then it was definitely a pure nightmare: a breakable structure of \textit{tied (!)} together rungs and struts that was aching under each of her steps, as if it wanted to collapse at any moment.
|
||||
Andrew was almost glad that he wasn't currently understanding all that was going on around and especially \textit{to} him.
|
||||
If what he could recognize of the \textit{bridge} that Katt was prancing over with mischievous ease was real,
|
||||
then it was definitely a pure nightmare: a breakable structure of \textit{tied (!)} together rungs and struts that was aching under each of her steps,
|
||||
as if it wanted to collapse at any moment.
|
||||
|
||||
Andrew looked into the deep, but he regretted that almost immediately. There was \textit{something} below them, but he couldn't say what. Whatever it was, it scared him to imagine what it was based on what he had seen so far.
|
||||
Andrew looked into the deep,
|
||||
but he regretted that almost immediately.
|
||||
There was \textit{something} below them,
|
||||
but he couldn't say what.
|
||||
Whatever it was,
|
||||
it scared him to imagine what it was based on what he had seen so far.
|
||||
|
||||
After what seemed like an eternity they arrived at the other bank. Katt stumbled two more steps on terra firma before she collapsed to her knees with an exhausted groan and let Andrew glide off her shoulders like a wet sack. He fell, which hurt less than he expected and rolled two, three times across the ground before he stopped, laying on his back. Underneath him was soft grass and earth, not hard stone. Through his closed eyelids he saw bright sunlight. But Katt had told him that the day wasn't over on that side of the river --- whatever that meant.
|
||||
After what seemed like an eternity they arrived at the other bank.
|
||||
Katt stumbled two more steps on terra firma before she collapsed to her knees with an exhausted groan and let Andrew glide off her shoulders like a wet sack.
|
||||
He fell,
|
||||
which hurt less than he expected and rolled two,
|
||||
three times across the ground before he stopped,
|
||||
laying on his back.
|
||||
Underneath him was soft grass and earth,
|
||||
not hard stone.
|
||||
Through his closed eyelids he saw bright sunlight.
|
||||
But Katt had told him that the day wasn't over on that side of the river --- whatever that meant.
|
||||
|
||||
He wanted to open his eyes, but he was only successful after his third try. Something really was wrong with him. Something was incredibly wrong with him.
|
||||
He wanted to open his eyes,
|
||||
but he was only successful after his third try.
|
||||
Something really was wrong with him.
|
||||
Something was incredibly wrong with him.
|
||||
|
||||
It looked like the effort was worth it. Above him a cloudless and almost obscenely radiant blue midsummer sky stretched out over the facades. Their slightly shifted to the left lines weren't any different than the ones on the other side. They were the same burnt-out soot-stained ruins like on the other side. It seemed that the destroyed city continued on this side of the river as well.
|
||||
It looked like the effort was worth it.
|
||||
Above him a cloudless and almost obscenely radiant blue midsummer sky stretched out over the facades.
|
||||
Their slightly shifted to the left lines weren't any different than the ones on the other side.
|
||||
They were the same burnt-out soot-stained ruins like on the other side.
|
||||
It seemed that the destroyed city continued on this side of the river as well.
|
||||
|
||||
As if from a great distance he heard Katt's voice, but it wasn't talking to him; even though he was too dazed to comprehend any of the words that were being spoken, he could feel it. A different, more bright and somehow hissing sounding voice answered, then light steps that were hardly audible on the grass approached.
|
||||
As if from a great distance he heard Katt's voice,
|
||||
but it wasn't talking to him;
|
||||
even though he was too dazed to comprehend any of the words that were being spoken,
|
||||
he could feel it.
|
||||
A different,
|
||||
more bright and somehow hissing sounding voice answered,
|
||||
then light steps that were hardly audible on the grass approached.
|
||||
|
||||
Katt appeared above him. She looked sweaty and so exhausted as if she had just done such extreme bodily exertion that hadn't just pushed her to her limit of what she was capable of, but possibly a little over it. And the concern in her gaze had grown so much that Andrew, in spite of his dazed state, asked himself if it weren't advisable for him to seriously worry as well.
|
||||
Katt appeared above him.
|
||||
She looked sweaty and so exhausted as if she had just done such extreme bodily exertion that hadn't just pushed her to her limit of what she was capable of,
|
||||
but possibly a little over it.
|
||||
And the concern in her gaze had grown so much that Andrew,
|
||||
in spite of his dazed state,
|
||||
asked himself if it weren't advisable for him to seriously worry as well.
|
||||
|
||||
``This is Ratt, my sister.'' She made a hand movement towards a shadow that was just outside of Andrew's field of view, making him use quite a bit of what energy he had left to turn his head and blink up at the figure that was approaching him from the other side. Katt's sister seemed to be somewhat smaller than her, and he had the crazy feeling that she had a type of shaggy fur coat, even though the sun on this side of the river was burning down so hot that it was almost uncomfortable. He couldn't really identify Ratt as the sun was directly above her, so that the glaring light actually drove tears into his eyes.
|
||||
``This is Ratt,
|
||||
my sister.'' She made a hand movement towards a shadow that was just outside of Andrew's field of view,
|
||||
making him use quite a bit of what energy he had left to turn his head and blink up at the figure that was approaching him from the other side.
|
||||
Katt's sister seemed to be somewhat smaller than her,
|
||||
and he had the crazy feeling that she had a type of shaggy fur coat,
|
||||
even though the sun on this side of the river was burning down so hot that it was almost uncomfortable.
|
||||
He couldn't really identify Ratt as the sun was directly above her,
|
||||
so that the glaring light actually drove tears into his eyes.
|
||||
|
||||
``This is Andrew, who I was talking to you about'', Katt continued, obviously turned toward her sister.
|
||||
``This is Andrew,
|
||||
who I was talking to you about'',
|
||||
Katt continued,
|
||||
obviously turned toward her sister.
|
||||
|
||||
Ratt came closer and bent over curiously. Andrew still couldn't really identify her, but something wasn't right about her head either. In spite of the head she seemed to be wearing not just a fur coat, but also a fur hat.
|
||||
Ratt came closer and bent over curiously.
|
||||
Andrew still couldn't really identify her,
|
||||
but something wasn't right about her head either.
|
||||
In spite of the head she seemed to be wearing not just a fur coat,
|
||||
but also a fur hat.
|
||||
|
||||
``He says he's from outside'', Katt continued. ``I don't know if that's true, but he has the sickness\footnote{he got down with it}.''
|
||||
``He says he's from outside'',
|
||||
Katt continued.
|
||||
``I don't know if that's true,
|
||||
but he has the sickness\footnote{he got down with it}.''
|
||||
|
||||
Ratt bent down even further, and Andrew, who had just wanted to start to be frightened about Katt's last remark thought better of it and fainted.
|
||||
Ratt bent down even further,
|
||||
and Andrew,
|
||||
who had just wanted to start to be frightened about Katt's last remark thought better of it and fainted.
|
||||
|
@ -61,13 +61,13 @@
|
||||
% INTRODUCTION SECTION
|
||||
%----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||||
\chapter*{Hey, Listen!} % Introduction chapter suppressed from the table of contents
|
||||
{\Huge This is a work in progress.
|
||||
{\Huge This is a work in progress.}
|
||||
|
||||
\large Current stage: First draft.
|
||||
{\large Current stage: First draft.}
|
||||
|
||||
\normalsize I'm just going through and translating it as best I can without reading over it too much.
|
||||
I'm just going through and translating it as best I can without reading over it too much.
|
||||
I'll make sure the sentence makes some sense, but it isn't gonna be perfect.
|
||||
I'll need to go over it multiple times later anyway.}
|
||||
I'll need to go over it multiple times later anyway.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
\newpage % Make sure the following content is on a new page
|
||||
@ -91,6 +91,9 @@ I'll need to go over it multiple times later anyway.}
|
||||
\input{8}
|
||||
\input{9}
|
||||
\input{10}
|
||||
\input{11}
|
||||
\input{12}
|
||||
\input{13}
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
%===========================================================================================================================================
|
||||
\end{document}
|
||||
|
0
book-1/Synopsis.md
Executable file → Normal file
0
book-1/Synopsis.md
Executable file → Normal file
8
book-1/all.tex
Executable file → Normal file
8
book-1/all.tex
Executable file → Normal file
@ -1,12 +1,20 @@
|
||||
\part{The Dead City}
|
||||
|
||||
\input{book-1/1}
|
||||
\addtocontents{toc}{\protect\setcounter{tocdepth}{-1}}
|
||||
\input{book-1/2}
|
||||
\input{book-1/3}
|
||||
\input{book-1/4}
|
||||
\addtocontents{toc}{\protect\setcounter{tocdepth}{3}}
|
||||
\input{book-1/5}
|
||||
\addtocontents{toc}{\protect\setcounter{tocdepth}{-1}}
|
||||
\input{book-1/6}
|
||||
\input{book-1/7}
|
||||
\input{book-1/8}
|
||||
\input{book-1/9}
|
||||
\addtocontents{toc}{\protect\setcounter{tocdepth}{3}}
|
||||
\input{book-1/10}
|
||||
\addtocontents{toc}{\protect\setcounter{tocdepth}{-1}}
|
||||
\input{book-1/11}
|
||||
\input{book-1/12}
|
||||
\input{book-1/13}
|
||||
|
0
book-1/background.jpg
Executable file → Normal file
0
book-1/background.jpg
Executable file → Normal file
Before Width: | Height: | Size: 492 KiB After Width: | Height: | Size: 492 KiB |
0
book-1/structure.tex
Executable file → Normal file
0
book-1/structure.tex
Executable file → Normal file
0
book-2/1.tex
Executable file → Normal file
0
book-2/1.tex
Executable file → Normal file
0
book-2/Main.tex
Executable file → Normal file
0
book-2/Main.tex
Executable file → Normal file
1
book-2/all.tex
Executable file → Normal file
1
book-2/all.tex
Executable file → Normal file
@ -1,3 +1,4 @@
|
||||
\part{The Dark Land}
|
||||
|
||||
\input{book-2/1}
|
||||
\addtocontents{toc}{\protect\setcounter{tocdepth}{-1}}
|
||||
|
0
book-2/background.jpg
Executable file → Normal file
0
book-2/background.jpg
Executable file → Normal file
Before Width: | Height: | Size: 492 KiB After Width: | Height: | Size: 492 KiB |
0
book-2/structure.tex
Executable file → Normal file
0
book-2/structure.tex
Executable file → Normal file
0
book-3/1.tex
Executable file → Normal file
0
book-3/1.tex
Executable file → Normal file
0
book-3/Main.tex
Executable file → Normal file
0
book-3/Main.tex
Executable file → Normal file
1
book-3/all.tex
Executable file → Normal file
1
book-3/all.tex
Executable file → Normal file
@ -1,3 +1,4 @@
|
||||
\part{Title of book 3}
|
||||
|
||||
\input{book-3/1}
|
||||
\addtocontents{toc}{\protect\setcounter{tocdepth}{-1}}
|
||||
|
0
book-3/structure.tex
Executable file → Normal file
0
book-3/structure.tex
Executable file → Normal file
0
book-4/1.tex
Executable file → Normal file
0
book-4/1.tex
Executable file → Normal file
0
book-4/Main.tex
Executable file → Normal file
0
book-4/Main.tex
Executable file → Normal file
1
book-4/all.tex
Executable file → Normal file
1
book-4/all.tex
Executable file → Normal file
@ -1,3 +1,4 @@
|
||||
\part{Title of book 4}
|
||||
|
||||
\input{book-4/1}
|
||||
\addtocontents{toc}{\protect\setcounter{tocdepth}{-1}}
|
||||
|
0
book-4/structure.tex
Executable file → Normal file
0
book-4/structure.tex
Executable file → Normal file
30
dictcc.sh
Normal file
30
dictcc.sh
Normal file
@ -0,0 +1,30 @@
|
||||
#!/bin/sh
|
||||
# dictcc.sh - simple cli interface to dict.cc
|
||||
# Usage: dictcc.sh TERM [LANG1] [LANG2] [NUM] defaults to de->en with 10 results
|
||||
if [ -z "$2" ]; then
|
||||
lf=de
|
||||
else
|
||||
lf=$2
|
||||
fi
|
||||
|
||||
if [ -z "$3" ]; then
|
||||
lt=en
|
||||
else
|
||||
lt=$3
|
||||
fi
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
if [ -n "$4" ]; then
|
||||
num=$4
|
||||
else
|
||||
num=10
|
||||
fi
|
||||
|
||||
echo ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||||
|
||||
curl -s -X GET -G "https://$lf$lt.dict.cc/" --data-urlencode "s=$1" | \
|
||||
grep -E "(c1Arr|c2Arr)" | \
|
||||
sed -e "s/var \(c1Arr\|c2Arr\) = new Array(\"\",//" -e "s/);//" \
|
||||
-e "s/\"//g" | awk 'NR == 1{split($0,lang1,",");} NR == 2{split($0,lang2,",");}
|
||||
END{for(i in lang1) print lang1[i] , "\t" , lang2[i]}' | head -n $num
|
||||
echo ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
34
render.sh
34
render.sh
@ -1,34 +0,0 @@
|
||||
#!/bin/bash
|
||||
|
||||
cd "$(dirname "$0")"
|
||||
|
||||
git pull
|
||||
|
||||
/usr/bin/pdflatex -file-line-error -interaction nonstopmode -jobname=All4 All4.tex
|
||||
/usr/bin/pdflatex -file-line-error -interaction nonstopmode -jobname=All4 All4.tex
|
||||
rm All4.aux All4.out All4.toc
|
||||
cp All4.pdf /home/david/fileshare/Anders/
|
||||
|
||||
cd book-1
|
||||
/usr/bin/pdflatex -file-line-error -interaction nonstopmode -jobname=Book1 "Main.tex"
|
||||
/usr/bin/pdflatex -file-line-error -interaction nonstopmode -jobname=Book1 "Main.tex"
|
||||
rm Book1.aux Book1.out Book1.toc
|
||||
cp Book1.pdf /home/david/fileshare/Anders/
|
||||
|
||||
cd ../book-2
|
||||
/usr/bin/pdflatex -file-line-error -interaction nonstopmode -jobname=Book2 "Main.tex"
|
||||
/usr/bin/pdflatex -file-line-error -interaction nonstopmode -jobname=Book2 "Main.tex"
|
||||
rm Book2.aux Book2.out Book2.toc
|
||||
cp Book2.pdf /home/david/fileshare/Anders/
|
||||
|
||||
cd ../book-3
|
||||
/usr/bin/pdflatex -file-line-error -interaction nonstopmode -jobname=Book3 "Main.tex"
|
||||
/usr/bin/pdflatex -file-line-error -interaction nonstopmode -jobname=Book3 "Main.tex"
|
||||
rm Book3.aux Book3.out Book3.toc
|
||||
cp Book3.pdf /home/david/fileshare/Anders/
|
||||
|
||||
cd ../book-4
|
||||
/usr/bin/pdflatex -file-line-error -interaction nonstopmode -jobname=Book4 "Main.tex"
|
||||
/usr/bin/pdflatex -file-line-error -interaction nonstopmode -jobname=Book4 "Main.tex"
|
||||
rm Book4.aux Book4.out Book4.toc
|
||||
cp Book4.pdf /home/david/fileshare/Anders/
|
0
structure.tex
Executable file → Normal file
0
structure.tex
Executable file → Normal file
Reference in New Issue
Block a user