Dark Eden

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Authors: Chris Beckett

BOOK: Dark Eden
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DARK EDEN

 

CHRIS BECKETT is a university lecturer living in Cambridge. He has written over 20 short stories, many of them originally published in
Interzone
and
Asimov’s
. In 2009 he won the Edge Hill Short Story competition for his collection of stories,

The Turing Test
.

 

ALSO BY

Chris Beckett

THE HOLY MACHINE

 

‘Beckett examines the interface betwen human and machine, rationalism and religious impulse with the sparse prose and acute social commentary of a latter-day Orwell’
GUARDIAN

‘Incredible’

INTERZONE

 

‘Beckett can stand shoulder to shoulder
with Orwell and Burgess. A triumph’

ASIMOV’S SCIENCE FICTION

 

Published in eBook and hardback
in Great Britain in 2012 by Corvus, an imprint of Atlantic Books Ltd.

Copyright © Chris Beckett, 2012

The moral right of Chris Beckett to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act of 1988.

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior permission of both the copyright owner and the above publisher of this book.

This is a work of fiction. All characters, organizations, and events portrayed in this novel are either products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.

1 3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2

A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.

Hardback ISBN: 978-1-84887-463-3
eBook ISBN: 978-0-85789-671-1

Printed in Great Britain.

Corvus
An imprint of Atlantic Books Ltd
Ormond House
26-27 Boswell Street
London WC1N 3JZ

www.corvus-books.co.uk

 

For
my
family
– Maggie, Poppy, Dom and Nancy –
with much love

DARK EDEN
 
Contents
 

1 John Redlantern

2 Tina Spiketree

3 John Redlantern

4 Mitch London

5 John Redlantern

6 Tina Spiketree

7 John Redlantern

8 Tina Spiketree

9 John Redlantern

10 Gerry Redlantern

11 John Redlantern

12 Tina Spiketree

13 John Redlantern

14 Caroline Brooklyn

15 John Redlantern

16 Tina Spiketree

17 Sue Redlantern

18 John Redlantern

19 Tina Spiketree

20 John Redlantern

21 Tina Spiketree

22 John Redlantern

23 Tina Spiketree

24 John Redlantern

25 Tina Spiketree

26 John Redlantern

27 Tina Spiketree

28 John Redlantern

29 Tina Spiketree

30 John Redlantern

31 Tina Spiketree

32 Jeff Redlantern

33 Gerry Redlantern

34 John Redlantern

35 Tina Spiketree

36 John Redlantern

37 Gela Brooklyn

38 John Redlantern

39 Tina Spiketree

40 Sue Redlantern

41 John Redlantern

42 Tina Spiketree

43 John Redlantern

44 Tina Spiketree

45 Sue Redlantern

46 John Redlantern

1

 
John Redlantern
 

Thud, thud, thud
. Old Roger was banging a stick on our group log to get us up and out of our shelters.

‘Wake up, you lazy newhairs. If you don’t hurry up, the dip will be over before we even get there, and all the bucks will have gone back up Dark!’

Hmmph, hmmph, hmmph
, went the trees all around us, pumping and pumping hot sap from under ground.
Hmmmmmmm
, went forest. And from over Peckhamway came the sound of axes from Batwing group. They were starting their wakings a couple of hours ahead of us, and they were already busy cutting down a tree.


What?
’ grumbled my cousin Gerry, who slept in the same shelter as me. ‘I’ve only just got to sleep!’

His little brother Jeff propped himself up on one elbow. He didn’t say anything, but watched with his big interested eyes as Gerry and I threw off our sleep skins, tied on our waistwraps, and grabbed our shoulder wraps and our spears.

‘Get your arses out here, you lazy lot!’ came David’s angry spluttery voice. ‘Get your arses out fast fast before I come in and get you.’

Gerry and me crawled out of our shelter. Sky was glass-black, Starry Swirl was above us, clear as a whitelantern in front of your face, and the air was cool cool as it is in a dip when there’s no cloud between us and stars. Most of the grownups in the hunting party were gathered together already with spears and arrows and bows: David, Met, Old Roger, Lucy Lu … A bitter smell was wafting all around our clearing, and the smoke was lit up by the fire and the shining lanterntrees. Our group leader Bella and Gerry’s mum, my kind ugly aunt Sue, were roasting bats for breakfast. They weren’t coming with us, but they’d got up early to make sure we had everything we needed.

‘Here you are, my dears,’ said Sue, giving me and Gerry half a bat each: one wing, one leg, one tiny little wizened hand.

Ugh! Bat! Gerry and me pulled faces as we chewed the gristly meat. It was bitter bitter, even though Sue had sweetened it with toasted stumpcandy. But that was what the hunting party was all about. We were having bat for breakfast because our group hadn’t managed to find better meat in forest round Family, so now we were going to try our luck further away, over in Peckham Hills, where woollybucks came down during dips from up on Snowy Dark.

‘We won’t walk up Cold Path to meet them,’ said Roger, ‘we’ll go up round the side of it, up Monkey Path, and then meet Cold Path at the top of the trees.’

Whack!
David hit me across the bum with the butt of his big heavy spear and laughed.

‘Wakey, wakey, Johnny boy!’

I looked into his ugly batface – it was one of the worst batfaces in Family: it looked like he had a whole extra jagged mouth where his nose should be – but I couldn’t think of anything to say. There was no fun in the man. He’d hit you hard for no reason, and then laugh like he’d made a joke.

But just then a bunch of Spiketree newhairs arrived in our clearing with their spears and bows, walking along the trampled path that linked our group to theirs on its way to Greatpool.

‘Hey there, Redlanterns!’ they called out. ‘Aren’t you ready yet?’

Bella had agreed with their group leader Liz that some of them could come along with us and take a share of the kill. They were the group next to us Redlanterns in Family and, for the present, they were keeping the same wakings and sleepings as us, which made it easy for us to do things together with them (easier than with, say, London group, who were having their dinner when we were just waking up).

I noticed Tina was among them: Tina Spiketree, who cut her hair with an oyster shell to make it stick up in little spikes.

‘Everyone ready then?’ Bella called. ‘Everyone got spears? Everyone got a warm shoulder wrap? Good. Off you go then. Go and get us some bucks, and leave us in peace to get on with things back here.’

 

We went out by a path that led through a big clump of flickering starflowers and then into Batwing. A whole bunch of Batwing grownups and newhairs were in their clearing banging away at a giant redlantern tree with their blackglass axes, working in the pink light of its flowers. We walked round the edge of their clearing to Family Fence, dragged away the branches at the opening, and went out into open forest. No more shelters and campfires ahead of us now: nothing but shining trees.

Hmmmph, hmmmph, hmmmph
, went the trees.
Hmmmmmm
, went forest.

We walked for a waking under the light of the treelanterns, slashing down whatever birds and bats and fruit we could get as we went along, and finally stopped to rest at the big lump of rock called Lava Blob. Old Roger handed us out a gritty little seedcake each, made of ground-up starflower seeds, so we could have something in our bellies, and then we settled down with our backs against the rock, so we didn’t have to worry about leopards sneaking up behind us. There were lots of yellowlantern trees round there, which we didn’t get so much back in Family, and also yellow animals called hoppers that came bouncing out of forest on their back legs and wrung their four hands together while they looked at us with their big flat eyes and went
Peep peep peep
. But hoppers were no good to eat and their skins were no use either, so we just chucked stones at them to make them go away and let us sleep in peace.

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