Cut by A. Wendeberg

Cut by A. Wendeberg

Author:A. Wendeberg [Wendeberg, Annelie]
Language: eng
Format: epub
ISBN: 978-1-311-41641-4
Publisher: A. Wendeberg


Train

‘What’s this?’ I ask, pointing at two shiny metal things that stretch through the valley. ‘And who would brush off the snow…all the way?’

‘Train tracks. We wait here.’

‘What? What are rainracks? And why—’

‘Train tracks. Trains have been around since the nineteenth century. They transport people. Some railroads are more than two thousand kilometres long.’ He takes a thin rectangle from a side pocket of his backpack and flicks his index finger across it.

‘User login,’ a female voice says.

I jump. Runner arches an eyebrow at me. ‘Runner,’ he says to the small machine and she answers, ‘Runner. Logged in.’

He runs his fingers across the smooth surface again and I hear a bleeping. ‘We are in position. Sending coordinates. Please acknowledge,’ he says.

Tat tat tat.

‘Acknowledged,’ a male voice says. ‘The toy you requested is on board.’

‘Thank you.’ Runner swipes three fingers across the thing when I step closer. The screen goes blank. I’m not sure, but I think there was the face of a bearded man on it. ‘What is this?’

‘A SatPad. I use it to communicate with others, to receive the weather forecast, and to see where we are, among other things. Tonight, I’ll show you how to work it.’ He steps forward and puts his ear on the tracks. ‘They are close.’

Soon, I hear a buzz coming from the tracks. Runner nods south, towards a long silver bullet that’s approaching fast. The thing has so much speed my legs take several wobbly steps back. He remains rooted to the spot, right between the two metal ribs. The man must be insane. In a few moments, he’ll be mush. ‘Runner?!’ I cry, unsure if my voice can drown the hollering of my heart.

A screeching sounds when the bullet slows down. The thing is very fast and he’s still not moving. ‘Runner!’

He grins at me while the massive train screams to a halt a mere two metres from him. A hatch bangs open at its front.

‘Fuck, dude! Every. Single. Time.’ A man with a grey ponytail and a gap in his front teeth spits in the snow.

‘Hey, Aristotle, how’s the wife?’

‘Don’t you Aristotle me, dude! Who’s that?’ He just his furry chin at me.

‘This is Micka. She’s an outsider,’ Runner answers.

The man eyes me, spits again, then slams the hatch shut.

Runner stomps through the snow to the door closest to us. He presses his palm against it. It bleeps and hisses before it permits us.

‘We don’t have much time,’ he says once we climb in. He strips himself of his backpack, his coat, and mittens. ‘Drop your stuff right here and follow me.’ Then he shoulders his air rifle and I wonder what the heck he’s planning to shoot.

The train begins to move and we walk in the opposite direction, along a corridor, through doors and small compartments that connect wagons — as Runner calls them. Everything is made of metal, shiny and polished with diamond patterns hammered into it. No dirt anywhere. I’m inside a huge machine and I’m loving it, the scent of metal, the quiet grinding noises, and the hum of power.



Download



Copyright Disclaimer:
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.