Read Dmitry Glukhovsky - Metro 2034 English fan translation (v1.0) (docx) Online
Authors: Dmitry Glukhovsky
In some isolated cases during the last years, unaware bandits tried to break through the outer guard posts, but the war machine of the
Sev
asto
polskay
a
, lead by former generals destroyed them without problems.
The recon team on the railcar had gotten clear orders:
If they were to encounter any threats they were to avoid any confrontations and return immediately.
Of course there was also the
Nagornay
a
on the route – not a place as terrible as
Tschertanov
skay
a
but still dangerous and fatal. And then the
Nachim
ov
ski prospect
which doors to the surface couldn’t be closed and had been overran by monsters from the surface. To blow up the entrance was no option for the
Sev
astopolskay
a
because the stalkers were using the surface access of the
Nachimovski
p
rospect
for their expeditions. Nobody dared passing through the station on their own but until now every railcar was able to deal with the creatures that occasionally lurked there.
Even though nobody had even thought about powering down the electricity: The lighting was set to maximum. It wasn’t the station, but the hearts of the people that had gotten darker and even mercury lamps couldn’t help against that.
The telephone line to the
Serpuchov
skay
a
was still dead. That took a feeling away from the colonel that was rare for the rest of the metro: The feeling of being close to other humans. As long as the communication was functioning, as long as caravans came and went regularly, as long as the journey to Hanza wouldn’t take more than one day, all residents were free to come and go whenever they wanted.
Arctic scientist probably felt the same when they agreed – out of scientific interest or because of the high wages – to endure the fight against the cold and loneliness for months. They were thousands of miles away from the mainland, but the radio remained at their sides at all times and once a month they could hear the sound of an airplane dropping off canned meat.
The ice floe, on which the
Se
v
astopolsk
ay
a
was, had broken loose and every hour drove it further, into an icy storm, a dark ocean, into emptiness and uncertainty.
The wait went on and the colonels concerns turned into dark certainty: He would never see the three men from the recon team that he had sent to
the
Serpuchov
skay
a
ever again.
To pull off another three fighters from the outer guard post and expose them to the same uncertain dangers was impossible. He couldn’t afford their certain death, which wouldn’t give them a way out either. He thought that is was still too early to close the southern tunnels, open the hermetic doors and form a big strike team. Why did he have to make this decision? A decision that was wrong either way.
“Do you have a cigarette for me? For the last time, next time don’t give me one, no matter how hard I plead.
And don’t tell anyone”
When Nadia brought the pot with meat and vegetables the guards became alive again. Potatoes, cucumbers and tomatoes were considered as delicatessen and except for some Kabas (
means markets
) at the
Sev
astopolskay
a
, the ring line and in polis nobody offered them anymore. That wasn’t just because of the complex hydro cultures, the cultivation of the seeds and the high amount of electricity that was needed to spice up the menu of the soldiers but almost nobody in the metro had enough electricity to do so.
Even the leaders of the station didn’t get vegetables except for the holidays, because it was mostly grown for children. Istomin had to argue heavily with the cooks and convince them to add a few grams of potatoes and tomatoes – to improve the moral.
An older man in a wool jacket with a small metro emblem on it stirred around the potatoes in his bowl and said smiling: “Today I had to think about the
Komsomolskay
a
for the whole entire day. I would really like to see it again. Those mosaics! The most beautiful station in all of Moscow, I think”
“Oh stop it Homer.” Said an unshaven, fat man with a wool hat.
“You lived there and it is obvious that you still like it.
But what about the stained glass at the
Nov
oslobodskay
a
? And the wonderful pillars and the ceiling fresco at the
May
akowskay
a
?”
“I always liked the
Ploschtschad Revoly
uzii
.
” Admitted a shy but no longer young man appointed as a sniper. “I know it is stupid, but I liked those dark sailors and the pilots, the border patrols with their dogs … Even when I was a child.”
“I don’t think it is stupid at all.” Agreed Nadya while she collected the scraps of the stew. “Especially some of the
The tall, broad-shouldered fighter who sat alone, approached with leisurely steps the campfire, took his ration and returned to his place – if possible close to the tunnel and if possible as far away from the people as possible.
The fat man pointed his head at the broad back of the man who had just returned into the darkness and whispered:
“Does he ever go to the station?”
“No, he has been sitting here for over a week.”
Answered the sharpshooter as silent as the other man.
“He sleeps in a sleeping bag … Maybe he needs it.
Three days ago, when the creatures almost devoured Rinat, he killed every last of them. With his own hands. For fifteen minutes.
When he returned, his boots and rifle were full of blood. And he looked very satisfied doing it.”
“That’s not a human, but a machine.” Said the thin machine-gunner. “I wouldn’t like to sleep near him. Did you see what happened to his face?”
The old man, who was called Homer, shrugged his shoulders and said: “Strange, I really only feel safe when he is around. What do you want from him? The guy is alright, he
Nov
oslobodskay
a
is the tip of a mountain of bad taste. And I can’t even watch those stained windows when I am sober … Stained windows, laughable!”
“And a Kolcho-mosaic over half the ceiling is no bad taste?”
“Please tell me where you saw a Kolcho-mosaic at the
Komsomolskay
a
?”
Now the fat man got going. “The whole damned soviet art has only one theme: The life on a Kolchose and our heroic pilots!”
“Seryoscha, let the pilots out of it.” Warned the sniper the fat man.
Suddenly a hollow, deep voice said: “The
Komsomolskay
a
is shit and the
Nov
oslobodskay
a
as well”
The fat man was so surprised that he wasn’t able to say a single word and he starred at the brigadier who was still sitting in the dark. The others stopped talking as well. The stranger did almost never participate in any conversations.
Even when someone asked him something, he answered, if at all with one word.
He still had his back turned at them, continuously looking into the mouth of the tunnel. “At the
Komsomolskaya
Nov
oslobodskay
a
all of the walls have cracks, it doesn’t matter how often they’ve repaired them. You can destroy the entire station with one grenade.
And the stained windows are already broken. Way to brittle”
You could have argued with this kind of criticism very good, but nobody dared to raise their voice. The brigadier was silent for a while then he said casually: “I am going to the station. Come with me Homer. Shift change in one hour.
Arthur you are in command”
The sharpshooter stood up hastily and nodded his head, even thought the brigadier couldn’t see him. Even the old man stood up and gathered his possessions, even though he hadn’t finished eating. When the fighter returned to the campfire he was already in full gear and carrying his enormous bag.
While the unlike men – the colossal brigadier and the thin Homer – gradually entered the lit part of the tunnel, the sniper followed them with his eyes. Then he rubbed his cold hands together and realized he was shaking.
On their way the brigadier didn’t speak a single word.
He only asked if Homer really once had been working in the metro and been driving a train. The old man looked at him with a distrusting look at first, but then he nodded his head.
At the
Sev
astopolskay
a
he always said he had been driving trains, but he never mentioned that he used to maintain tracks before that, he was a little bit embarrassed about that.
The brigadier greeted the guards with a military salute.
Those stepped out of his way and he entered the office of the head of the station without knocking. Istomin and the colonel stood up surprised from their chairs and walked into his direction. Both looked tousled somehow, tired and lost.
While Homer remained shyly at the entrance, stepping from one leg onto the other, the brigadier took off his helmet, put it right on top of Istomin’s papers and scratched his clean-shaven head. You could see once again how badly distorted
“I will go to the ring line myself.” Said the brigadier.
He hadn’t even greeted any of them. Deep silence followed. Homer already knew that the man was an extraordinary fighter, what had earned him a special reputation with the leaders of the station. But it took him until now to realize that compared to other inhabitants of the
Sev
astopolskay
a
the brigadier didn’t follow orders. He wasn’t waiting for a permission of the two old and exhausted men; it almost seemed like he was giving them orders and expected them to follow them. And again – how many times now? – Homer asked himself: Who was this man?
The colonel looked at Istomin. His face darkened as if he wanted to argue, but he didn’t. “Whatever you want, Hunter.” He said. “Nobody can talk you out of it anyway.”
Homer listened. Hunter. He had never heard that name at the
Sev
astopolskaya
before. It sounded like a nickname – like his own, of course he wasn’t called Homer, but Nikolai Ivanovitsch. They named him after the creator of the Greek epics because he loved stories and rumors of all kind.
“Your new brigadier.” Had said the colonel to the guards in the southern tunnel two months ago. They looked at the broad-shouldered man in Kevlar armor and the heavy helmet with distrust and curiosity. He just looked at them indifferent and returned to the fortifications like if he cared more for them but the men he commanded. He shook the hands of those who came to introduce themselves but didn’t speak a word. He nodded his head silently, remembered their names and puffed blue smoke in their faces like he wanted to keep them at distance. His lifeless eye shimmered in the shadow of his folded up visor. Nor then or later the guards dared to ask for his name and so he remained “the brigadier”.