Sergey Brezhnev

Andromedum


Скачать книгу

      

      Andromedum

      by

      Sergey Brezhnev

      Copyright 2015 Sergey Brezhnev,

      All rights reserved.

      Published in eBook format by eBookIt.com

       http://www.eBookIt.com

      ISBN-13: 978-1-4566-2560-3

      This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.

      No part of this book shall be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted by any means – electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise – without written permission from the author.

      Contact: [email protected]

      Chapter 1

      "I’ll make it,” Jack told himself, the way he’d said it a hundred times now. “If I keep going, I will make it through"

      He needed to believe that, even if there was a good chance it wasn’t the truth. Even if he couldn’t remember why it was so important anymore. The long run across the vast swathes of the fields around him was about more than just endurance. It was about tricking himself, chopping the distance into smaller pieces. About making it to the end of the row of wheat, then to the fence, then to the next. It was a trick he’d learned…

      But no, there were some things he couldn’t trick his way around, and the vast empty spaces of his memory were one of them. They sat, as huge and open as the fields around him, hints of the past peeking through now and again like the ruined buildings that had dotted the way ever since the capital city. Memories retreated like waves when he reached for them though, impossible to grasp, impossible to even keep up with, too much hidden in their depths.

      There were so few things that Jack knew. He knew that he had to run. He knew that hunters would be following, the same way they had been following ever since he had woken up in a cave full of bodies, back in the city. Jack had crawled out of that, clutching the short, stabbing sword he now held like a talisman.

      “And it might not even be mine,” Jack said to the air around him. The sword was standard enough. A leaf shaped blade, as long as a man’s forearm, with a leather-wrapped hilt. Military issue, according to one of the corners of his mind that refused to give more when Jack turned his attention to it. The scabbard was more elaborate. It was red stained leather, worked with spiral patterns in what looked like silver.

      Jack had clutched it to him as he’d risen from the grave they’d tried to put him in. He’d kept it with him even though it was probably the thing that most marked him as different. He’d treated it like it was special. His. But what if it wasn’t? What if it was really the property of some other poor soul from the cave? There had been plenty enough of those, after all. What if he was clutching some other man’s favorite weapon? Some fragment of another man’s past that had nothing to do with him? Jack laughed a cracked, broken laugh at that, before realizing that he needed the breath to run instead.

      “Keep going,” Jack repeated once again. “Don’t stop until you reach the border. It will be safer across the border.”

      The words were a certainty, made from stone as they sat at the heart of him. He probably sounded insane, talking to himself as he ran through an empty field. Perhaps he was insane, but there was no one else there to use for encouragement. There had been people here once. The burnt out buildings stood in testament to that. Some of them hadn’t even been finished before they’d been destroyed. Now though, there was just Jack, and the farmland, and the surrounding mountains.

      Even the birds were silent today, the absence of their calls tuning the day to a tight stillness. Jack had vague memories of birdcalls. Something about seagulls cawing as they circled around a ship. No, below a ship, and that made no sense at all. What was the point of memories when he couldn’t trust them? When they betrayed him as surely as anyone else he met out there would.

      “A horse would make this a lot easier,” Jack said, as much to break the silence as because the thought made sense. Where was he likely to get a horse?

      Jack shivered slightly as he ran. The sweat from his running was cooling quicker now, and one glance at the sun said that night would be coming soon enough. He needed to find shelter before then. Real shelter, not just some burnt out husk of a place, where he’d be as likely to be crushed by falling timbers as sleep well. If he could make it to one of the mountains, there might be caves, but Jack knew that mountains had a habit of being further than they looked. Again, it was impossible to know how he knew it. Maybe it was simply something everyone knew?

      There were things he did know. All the things that normal people needed to live in the world were still there, laid out as neatly as books upon a shelf. It was just that some things, like the reasons why it was amusing to think about whole shelves of books, eluded him, retreating into the dark corners of his brain. He knew enough to know the world he ran through, its coins and its people. He’d known enough to run every time he’d seen guards in royal colors, red and black compared to the dull grey of the peasant clothes he’d stolen from a line somewhere back in the city.

      Jack ran on, past one of the old iron monsters sticking up from the fields. There were places, he’d heard, where these stood all in a row, wires connecting one to another like prisoners chained together. This one stood solitary, and Jack stared up at the metal framework stretching so far into the sky. No, he couldn’t believe that was true. The royalty of his own time ordered their monuments built out of stone, not caring how many people died building them. How powerful must the kings and queens of the old times have been to raise this thing of iron and steel? A whole string of them, forming lines across the land for no reason Jack could see, was too much to contemplate. The old civilization of the ancients might have done some strange things, but that would just have been insane.

      “Not as insane as still being outside at night,” Jack muttered, and kept running. He needed shelter. He was still at least a week away from the border. He knew that with a certainty that he didn’t know anything about himself. That meant more nights out in the wilds, just himself, with little in the way of supplies. He had no water left in his water skin. He had the sword of course, and so far that had been enough to keep away predators of both the animal and human varieties, but the rest of what he owned was ragged now.

      Jack smiled grimly at that. “At least I fit in.”

      That was true. Away from the capital, the folk who worked the land were as ragged as he was, grubby with work and usually suspicious of strangers. It was a world where those in charge took what they wanted from the ones who worked the land. At least once on his run, groups of villagers had driven him off with shouts and thrown stones. Some nagging part of Jack said that they ought to be running from him, not the other way around. Yet from a distance, Jack looked like one of them. Only the sword, the sword that might not even be his sword, gave him away, and half of those he met assumed he had stolen it anyway. He hadn’t tried to explain what had really happened. It would have only have invited trouble for him, and when had the truth ever made a difference in this world anyway?

      Jack stopped, resting on his hands and knees for a moment. The sun was closer to the horizon now and darkness would soon be following in its wake. Hunger gnawed at Jack, but he ignored it. He was stronger than that. Not much stronger, but stronger nonetheless. There wasn’t anything to hunt here, and he still hadn’t covered enough ground. He wouldn’t have covered enough until he finally made it across the border a week from now. It wasn’t safety, but it was as close as he was going to get with everything that was following him.

      Jack rose to press on, but then stopped as he saw one thing that he hadn’t been expecting: an intact farm. Where the others were burnt out, this stood complete and untouched. It was a little ramshackle, with one shutter hanging off its