Ruin (The Ruin Saga Book 1) (38 page)

BOOK: Ruin (The Ruin Saga Book 1)
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Charlie crawled. His leg dragged behind him as he scaled the hill on his stomach, tearing at the soil. The wind ripped at his clothes, drying the tears on his cheek as he inched closer to the tree line.

The streets of that cursed city were behind him, but he still felt eyes upon him, watching.

He’d counted each of those thousand steps he’d taken away from the barrel of that revolver, expecting a bullet to find its way into his back at any moment. But no shot had come.

Instead, he’d been left to the elements. No quick death, no mercy. Instead, condemnation to a long, savage decline. A boiling hatred rose in his gut at the thought of the grey-haired monster. His fingers curled into the mud, and a gurgling snarl rose in his throat as he hauled his broken body skyward.

By the time he reached the shadows of the forest canopy, the wind had kicked up, icy and vicious. Shivering, he pushed on into the cool, wet mud beyond the tree line, whimpering, ashamed, lost.

There was nowhere to go. Nobody would find him, nor help him. There was no food, no water, and no shelter—nothing.

There was nothing for him out here but death.

He stopped, propped himself against a tree, and wept.

When he finally stopped, the wind was alive with the sound of footsteps. Charlie opened his eyes and tried to stifle his sniffling, turning this way and that, searching for the source of the noise. With a grunt of fright he fixated on a shadow as it emerged from the depths of the forest.

The figure drew closer and resolved into focus. Charlie had time to take in the sight of long, tattered clothes, eyes of searing intent, and a face obscured by a dark balaclava.

“What do you want?” Charlie breathed.

The figure grew closer still. Emerald eyes stared down at him, piercing, hypnotising. Charlie pressed himself against the trunk at his back as the figure crouched down beside him and reached out a hand invitingly.

SECOND INTERLUDE

 

James looked out over the London skyline in awe. In the midday sun the city was ablaze with light, glass glittering and steel shining.

The waters of the Thames had risen since the End. The city’s great Barrier, broken and useless, sat unused and drowned downriver, helpless to impede the progress of the floodwaters. The banks had long since burst, and so now waves lapped against the edges of street curbs, traffic lights, and skyscrapers.

These new shores rendered the great bridges useless, having flooded the low-lying roads that fed them. They were now only so many vast and ungainly islands, jutting from green tidal waters, stretching for land that could never be reached.

“I don’t see it,” James said, squinting.

They were high up upon the rooftop of a crumbling block of flats—so high that buildings he knew to be enormous appeared tiny.

Alex pointed into the sea of concrete and steel, drawing out an area far away, low and antiquated. James followed his finger, past the wreckage of the Great Wheel, and laid eyes on a series of oblongs, pillars and a grand central dome, centred in a swathe of glass.

“I see it!” James said. “It looks big.”

“It is.”

“There must be a lot inside.”

“There is.”

James frowned. “How do we save it all?”

Alex laughed. “We can’t. Even if we could, there would be nowhere to put it. It’s safest to just leave it all there for the time being.”

“Won’t it all rot?”

“It’s been stored better than we could manage.”

James nodded. His legs began to quiver with excitement as he drank in the enormity, and grandiosity, of the great city. He thought of all of the pictures he’d seen of the treasures that lay waiting in that distant dome, of all the things that waited to be seen, the wonders that waited to be rediscovered.

“Can we go inside?” he said.

Alex smiled. “That’s why we’re here.”

They descended to the streets and walked in silence, too sensitive to the echo of their own voices to strike up conversation. The capital’s streets had a habit of amplifying even idle chitchat to a ghoulish, disembodied rumble.

Instead, they were content to merely let the scenery pass by, fascinated by the monstrous scale of it all and the desolate stillness.

To most, it was disturbing. For all the land’s emptiness, the countryside at least carried on unhindered; grass and branches danced in the wind, birds flocked in the sky, and great herds of sheep trampled the land. In the country, there was life.

London, however, had been stone dead since the End. It almost appeared vacuum-sealed, wrapped in protective sheeting and stored away for a distant future. All debris had been swept away by the wind and waves, and the food waste had been consumed by giant bird flocks and swarms of vermin in the Early Years. Perfectly sanitised and lifeless, the streets sat dormant, waiting to be traversed by bustling crowds that would never come.

Underfoot, clothing still smothered the pavement. James weaved around blouses, work shirts, square-shouldered black jackets and denim jeans, stepped over necklaces, rucksacks, and briefcases emblazoned with strange words: ‘
Prada
’, ‘
Levi’s
’, ‘
Armani
’ and ‘
Louis Vuitton
’. He wondered for the millionth time whether the stories the others told were really true: that these things had once belonged to people—real, breathing people. Millions of them.

It was almost too absurd. It boggled his mind.

Though the great city had to have come from somewhere, James was sure that it could only have been crafted by departed gods. The perfect geometric shapes and gargantuan heights could only have been forged by creatures of unimaginable power.

The people he knew, as great and kind as they had been to him, were not omnipotent, and they were certainly not gods. And yet, supposedly, they were descended from those who had built every crevice that he saw before him.

He looked to Alex, frowning. “Did people
really
build all this?” His voice boomed back at him a hundred times in echo, filling every alley and room for hundreds of metres. But he ignored the racket. His eyes were fixed on Alex.

He needed to know.

A strange expression crossed Alex’s face as he met James’s gaze. “What?”

“People?”

“Yes.”

“And there was nothing here before them?”

“Just the land, like where we live.”

“And they built it all from nothing?”

“Of course they did. Who else could have built it all?”

“Others.”

Alex’s face contorted into a confused smile. They walked for a while as he mused, tilting his head. “You don’t think that people can build these things?”

“How could they?”

“Builders built, architects designed, electricians wired. People spent their entire lives mastering a single thing.”

“And where are they all now?”

“Gone.”

“I don’t think that’s it,” James said. “I don't think that people can do those things anymore.”

“Books can teach you anything.”

James shook his head. “A book can’t teach you how to ride a bike,” he said.

Alex stopped and looked down at James. His frown had grown deep and his eyes forlorn, troubled.

“I read that in a book,” James said. He felt that he might have said the wrong thing, but wasn’t about to apologise. In their classes, Alex had always said it was more important than anything to speak his own mind.

Alex started walking again, but this time he looked away, across the river, and didn’t speak for some time. James trudged alongside, staring at the floor, waiting for his reticence to wane.

They passed a set of black gates and arrived at the steps of the great building they had seen from the rooftop. James took in the sight of its marble pillars and the entrance beyond, and any thoughts of his indiscretion were forgotten in an instant. The two of them exchanged a glance. Alexander’s eyes were alight, and reflected in them James could see his own giddy smile.

They hurried up past the pillars and took their first hesitant steps inside. Within, it was cool, dusty, and dark. They walked past the unattended reception and stepped into a cavernous space. There, they both stopped, agape.

The court of the British Museum lay before them, bathed in amber light that struck down through a roof of tessellated glass panels. Portland Stone surfaces sat gleaming, untouched by time’s hand. To James’s eyes, Olympus itself would have paled in comparison.

“You were right,” Alex said. In the vast space his voice was rendered an endless echo, louder than cannon fire. “We can’t do this anymore.”

James saw something grow hollow in his gaze.

But the sadness was brief. Within moments it had passed, and an infectious smile played upon his lips. The two of them dashed into the building’s depths, feverish with excitement, marvelling at passing wonders, unwilling to leave any individual piece for fear of neglecting it, making countless oaths to return to ornate ancient statues, tablets, tombs and sarcophagi. Dashing from exhibit to exhibit, and from room to room, they spent the rest of the day hopelessly wrapped up in their own thoughts, often on opposite sides of the museum. On several occasions they lost each other completely and were forced to make their way back to the entrance to rendezvous.

James’s mind had all but ground to a halt at the sight of such richness. He did his best to absorb all he could, but knew that he could only take in a thimble’s worth—at least on this visit—and hoped to high heaven that the day would never end.

Eventually, they made their way into a large room close to the great court. They looked at the unusual objects in the same manner as they had looked at everything over the past hours: with a burning desire to allocate a week to each exhibit.

Their fascination, however, was nothing compared to what they felt when they laid eyes on the isolated glass capsule and the broken tablet that sat within.

They approached slowly, unspeaking, unflinching, lured inexorably forwards. In the glass’s reflection their eyes were round as saucers, bulging from their heads. Side by side, they spent the longest time looking at the stone, and the three passages of mysterious, unintelligible writings inscribed upon it.

The top was smeared with the most striking of the three, the letters in fact tiny drawings of birds, eyes, staffs and ankhs; the middle scrawled in strange, complicated glyphs; and the bottom a more geometric, aesthetic script.

James had seen all three passages before in his reading, just as he had seen the stone. He and Alex had studied it for many weeks. “Is this it?” he said.

“This is it.”

James grinned, wide enough to make his cheeks ache. “It’s beautiful.”

Alex smiled along with him. “It is.”

“We’re going to save this?”

“One day.”

Alex gestured towards it with a grand sweep of his arm. His eyes were alive, his body in constant motion. “This is the key,” he said, hushed. “All of these things are. These are the things we have to rescue, the things that are going to teach us the future.”

James leaned forward, instinctively reaching out to balance himself by pressing against the glass. Before he could complete his ascent onto tiptoes, Alex had caught his wrist in an iron grip and squeezed hard.

“Don’t touch it!” he hissed.

James gasped and collapsed back, catching a fleeting and sudden fury in Alex’s eyes. He backed away, seeing for the first time a monster, born of obsession, lurking under his brother’s skin.

The look was gone before James could blink. Now Alex’s eyes were wide, and his mouth was ajar. “I’m sorry,” he said, blinking.

James cradled his crushed wrist, taking a step back.

“Did I hurt you?”

James swallowed and stopped. The pain in his arm dulled at the sight of such sincere shock. “I’m fine,” he said.

Alex rushed forwards and took him into a crushing embrace. James stood uncomfortably between his arms. Alex was shaking his head. “I shouldn’t have done that,” he said. “I shouldn’t have.” He pulled James to arm’s length and sighed. “You know I’d never hurt you.”

James nodded. “I know.”

“It was instinct. These things are just too old and delicate for us to be putting our fingers all over them. They’re too important.” Alex’s face took on that odd glaze yet again. His voice grew hazy, distant. “They’re too important, even more important than you or me.”

XIV

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