The Mountain and The City: A Post-Apocalyptic Tale (5 page)

BOOK: The Mountain and The City: A Post-Apocalyptic Tale
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The Light Gun has failed me, and I've failed the small one.

But the Death doesn't come.

After six seconds my Eyes open and see the Munie's head pulled back, howling, but not the victory howl that comes when they hunt Supplies and bring the Death. This is a rare howl, the pain howl. The Munie lets go and I fall to the Ground, my Legs under me and my Back against the Wall. I'm surprised to see the small one's face when I land, not just in front of me but biting the New Largest Munie, her small, sharp teeth stuck in its leg. Her tiny face is scared but ferocious, like when she faced the Hunter Beast by the Steep.

I hear someone laugh and realize it's me, glad to have her with me.

The New Largest Munie pries her loose and tosses her away. She folds to the Ground with its filthy, black blood on her lips. The others, still at the far Wall where the Water disappears, have heard the howl and are croaking their way over with dirty fingers stretched. I look all around for the Light Gun as the New Largest finds the small one, grabs her and picks her up, and she squirms in its hands but it shakes her and then, listening to the dark, throws her into the rushing Water.

It turns back to me, proud of what it's done the way the teeth show. I shouldn't think of Munies as having emotions but sometimes it seems like they do. Behind it the small one is being carried away, her small hands reaching out for help, her eyes full of Water-terror.

The Light Gun is in front of you.

I see it half in puddle and reach forward and grab it, aim it at the Munie's croaking head. To my right the others are coming. The only reason they haven't reached me is their blindness, otherwise I would be covered in them. The New Largest can't see me either but it can smell danger the way Munies can.

Make the Munie regret what it did to her.

I pull the trigger. My need for revenge is is strong I forget to close my Eyes and become blinded by the burning Light. I can't see but I hear the Light Bullet hit the Munie, and it screams, louder and more terrible than when the small one bit it.

You don't have much Time.

I stand blind and go forward, tripping over the Munie thrashing and shouting on the Ground, and I can hear the Water somewhere in front of me. My sight starts to come back in blobs and flashes, shadows on shadow. I see the Stairs to my left, the Munies to my right, and the rushing Water at my Feet.

This is it. Time to choose.

The Water is cold like winter and just as strong when I hit. The Night Eyes die on my face, but they show me one last thing before they go: Munie hands. They reach for me hungry and needing. The World goes black as I rush away and under the Wall.

 

 

**

 

 

The Water is strong and I fight to-

 

 

**

 

 

Can't breathe.

 

 

**

 

Rushing. Gurgling. Dragging along the Rocks. I feel the Suit rip and can only imagine what the small one is feeling.

 

 

**

 

 

A second of Air, a flash of Light.

 

 

**

 

 

I swallow Water. So cold, it's so-

 

 

**

 

 

Come up for Air. There isn't much room for you. Breathe hard, take as much Air as you can but go under before you hit-

 

 

**

 

 

Can't fight my way up. Fire in my Lungs.

 

 

**

 

 

Colder.

 

 

**

 

 

Slower.

 

 

**

 

 

The Water slows and I know I have one more try left. One more try is all I have.

 

 

**

 

 

I come up again and it's dark. I shout and the sound goes up so the Ceiling must be high. I search for the side and find it but can't climb so I keep my Hands on the Rock waiting for a place to grab, a place for Fingers, and it takes three or four minutes but I find a hold and pull myself up.

Water has filled the Suit, which makes it heavy, hard to climb. I'm not sure if I can hold on, but I feel the Water coming from the holes so I wait. It hurts me to think of the Suit with holes. I've spent so many Days inside it, taking care of it, protecting it more than anything else, more than even the Trailer. Strange that it doesn't matter now.

When I'm lighter I come up and onto the Ground, lay on it and breathe in the dark with only the hollow rushing of Water in the Air. I can't even hear my own breath but I know I'm breathing the way my Chest moves and my Lungs burn.

You can't rest now. Find her first, if she's alive she needs help.

Careful not to fall into the Water, I stand and call out to her. Whatever Cavern this is it's deep in the Mountain, so tall my Voice doesn't echo. I slip a few times but get back up and keep calling to her.

When I took the Mask off, I brought the Death to myself. Bastard Air brings either the Death or the Change and I knew that. I took the Mask off to calm the small one, to help her like my Mother helped me. To remember my Mother. I feel a loss of hope in this dark Cavern, but I keep going because nothing has changed. The Death is still coming and the small one still needs me, because that's what life is.

Under the shout of the Water I hear a sound so small it isn't there, an echo in the quiet. I stop moving. Ignore the Cavern and the Water and the shaking Legs inside the Suit and I listen for the sound, only the sound, tiny and hidden and lost.

Then I hear it again.

Coughing.

 

 

**

 

 

On my Knees, my Hands follow the edge of the rushing Water toward the coughing. They come to a place where the Ground goes lower, closer to the Water, and I feel the Water on my Knees but it's calmer, not rushing, a pocket where the Water rests before it goes further into the Mountain.

My Hands find the small one. She floats in the Water and struggles when I grab her but I calm her like the Water, put my Hand on her head and calm her.

“Everything is safe. Munies won't follow us, they're scared of the Water, remember? They hate the Water more than anything.”

I realize what I'm saying and pull her up, bring her to the high Ground away from the Water.

“Dark,” she croaks.

“The Mountain is always dark, but don't worry. I have the Night Eyes and I can see everything. I can see you and the Walls and the Water and the Ceiling.”

The small one doesn't know what Water does to the Night Eyes. She doesn't have to.

She grabs tight to my Leg and I can feel her shaking.

“Have you been in Water before today?”

“No.”

“Water makes wet and wet makes cold. If you wait enough minutes you'll be back to your nice, Munie warmth.”

I try to joke, or think I do, but I feel her head shake.

“No Munie.”

“I mean warm like the Munies.”

“No Munie,” she insists.

“Okay. No Munie. Come, I'll find us a way out of the Mountain.”

We stay away from the Water and continue through the New Cavern. I pretend to be sure of my steps, pretend to see my Feet to keep the small one calm. When I stumble over Rocks or bump into waxy Spikes I do my best to hide it. We walk until the rushing Water is a whisper behind us, then nothing.

In pure dark every direction is the same. It might be a mistake to leave the Water but I could hear it stronger further on and I don't want to risk falling in. The Ground was too slippery there, like stepping on Slime Beasts, and a bad step is a very bad step in a place like this.

We take a passage. It collides with another and we take that. It collides with another and we take that.

The Ground gets lower under our feet and I hope that's good. At least I know we're not where we've been already, a risk when you can't use Eyes. The Air is so quiet it hurts my Ears. The small one's hand pulls on mine.

“Is something wrong?”

“What call,” she asks.

I don't know what she's saying. She moves my hand to her face, still wet but not as bad.

She says it again. “What call?”

“What did I call you? In the Yellow Room, you mean.”

“And Water.”

I remember calling for her in the New Cavern. I was using the word again but not realizing it.

“Child,” I say. “I didn't know what to call you, Munies-” I stop the word. “You don't have a name, do you?”

She doesn't answer.

“I'll call you Child if you want.”

She says it a few times, then: “Want.”

“Then until you don't, Child is your name.”

She moves our hands to the Suit, pressing it into my Stomach. “What call?”

I haven't had a name since the Real Times. It isn't that I don't remember it, but no one has said it since then, and like the other words it died when it wasn't used. Even my own Lips haven't said it since the early Days. To use it is to bring it back from the Death. To make it come up after the fall, like the Munies.

“Light,” I say.

“Call Light?”

“No, look.”

A room far ahead is filled with strange color. It falls from a Ceiling we can't see to cover the Ground we can, and Child becomes excited and says the word over and over as we go, our feet more sure with each step because we can start to see them, see each other and the Rock around us.

We come into the room and find the Stars above us. We blink at them with our Mouths open. They're brighter than they've been before, maybe because I missed them. It takes sixteen or seventeen seconds to understand we're not looking at the Stars.

Small Spikes hang from the Ceiling, not waxy Spikes, clear lines of connected rounds like my Mother wore around her neck. Too many to count. Around them thousands, thousands of Lights, some bright some not, showing us the lines.

“What call?”

“I think they're Cavern Beasts, Smaller Winged Beasts. Some use Light to find Supplies. They won't hurt us.”

We look up at them with our Necks bent.

“Beautiful,” Child says.

I bend down. “What did you say?”

“Beautiful.”

“You know that word? You know what it means?”

She nods and tries to explain it but doesn't have the words. I'm surprised she knows any. Her face is wrinkled, eyes moving. Then she just points to the Lights and says the word again.

I stand up straight and look. “I think I understand.”

I've never met the God, but I know it didn't make this place. It's too far from the Sky for the God to see.

 

 

**

 

 

Even away from the Light Beasts, this part of the New Cavern has Light. It leaks through holes in the Rock, just enough to see the shapes of the Walls. Twenty or twenty-five minutes later we find a room where the Air is hot and wet and smells like Beasts.

Voices fall from the Ceiling that I recognize, voices of Leatherwings. It's Night and they're awake. When it's dark Out they hunt for Supplies, then come back and hang by their feet. Other than the feet we've always been the same. The Leatherwings don't bother me and I don't bother them, but tonight they might help me.

“This is good. The Leatherwings will show us the way Out, you'll see.”

Child doesn't want to come into the room but I pull her along, telling her to watch where her feet go. The Leatherwings make a mess on the Ground where they hang, which brings Small Winged Beasts, which brings other Small Winged Beasts. That's why there are so many small eyes and legs in here, why I pick up Child and move her through.

The Ceiling above moves with Leatherwings, watching us, opening their mouths and showing us their tiny teeth. The Small Winged Beasts walk up the Suit with their thin legs, exploring with the feelers on their shiny heads. They get into the holes in the Suit and I feel them on my Legs but can't stop.

At the other side I put Child down and slap at my Legs to kill the Beasts inside. I keep the sound of the Leatherwings over our Heads and follow the mess on the Floor. We walk a long passage that after some minutes brings us to a mouth.

We step Out from the mouth and into the Air, into the Wood and the Night. The Night is still alive, but not for long.

BOOK: The Mountain and The City: A Post-Apocalyptic Tale
5.45Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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