okay, i'm breaking my own rules here, but i'm making an exception, as i'm sure you would have posted if the forums hadn't been down
coming soon, Chapter 17, which i may well have overrated... just wait and see...
CHAPTER 15
Silence has always been my keeper. My friend. When I have nothing else, I will still have silence. There is something about the way that silence enhances the slightest sound that captivates me. If I could choose one sound that I could take with me always, it would be the sound of silence. That sounds lonely, but I’m sure you understand. Varik will understand what I mean, ask him. As long as there are other sounds to fill the silence, I mean. I wouldn’t want it to be silent all the time, but if I had a little box full of silence, that I could take out whenever I wanted to, and when I opened it, silence would blossom out of it, that would be bliss.
Anyway, Vint and me walked in silence [oh, sweet silence]. It was a long way to the bows, but we had time. We wouldn’t want to rush in, without thinking first. I thought about showing Vint the weapons crate, and getting better weapons, but that would only bring back memories of the day before, of the Killer.
“Ulven?” Vint’s whisper echoed through the darkness, louder than any shout.
“Yes?”
“Whereabouts do you think we would find a map?”
I swallowed. “I was hoping you’d know.”
We walked on, the silence between us entombing our sounds forever, and the sounds of the ship. It was technically not silent, but the little creaking and groaning sounds of the living ship only served to outline the silence in the same way a dim glow can make a room appear darker. I was full of the thrill of anticipation. I was actually looking forward to danger, after only three days of relative safety. I don’t think the mind does usually work like that, I think it’s just me. I’m weird. That creature I call the Madness is here all the time, at the back of my mind, pulling strings. It isn’t always in control, but it always has influence, and it fears Boredom above all else.
We reached the bulkhead without saying another word between us. I don’t know what Vint was thinking, but he was probably planning how we could find a map. Vint is responsible, not like me. I think frivolous thoughts, which have no practical use, like how does my mind work. I tried to focus, to think of how we could get through the bulkhead. There was a door, but it was high up the wall, passable only from the walkway that led over the Hold from the Command Deck to the Engines.
Vint nudged me. “What about that door up there?” he whispered, pointing to our right, where a ladder led up the Hull to a hatchway.
“That only leads to the Deck of the ship.”
“There’ll probably be a way into the Command Deck from out there.” He strode silently towards the ladder, his footfalls swallowed up by the silence, while his body was swallowed by the darkness. I realised that it was probably night outside again. For those we’d left behind, it would be their fourth night spent on board. For us, no sleep. If things go wrong, no sleep ever again. Or forever.
I hurried after Vint, before the darkness swallowed his figure. He was halfway up the ladder when I reached the bottom, so I mounted the metal rungs hastily. When I reached the balcony at the top, Vint was struggling to turn the wheel on the hatchway. I added my strength, and the wheel began to turn, shattering the silence with its screech. The noise echoed through the Hold, which would at least make it harder for the crew to trace where we were. My heart was pounding; I was convinced that the crew would hear us and spray us with machine gun fire. When the door opened, I heaved a sigh of relief, and we hurried through onto the top deck of the ship.
CHAPTER 16
We had only briefly been onto the deck, and that was when we had first rushed on board, so we hadn’t had time to properly enjoy it. Of course, we didn’t really have much time now, but I couldn’t help admiring the beauty of the ship, stretching seemingly to infinity behind us, with the brightly lit Command Deck before us, and the green and red lights down the sides of the hull. I don’t know if any of you would have appreciated it, but I was suddenly struck by an admiration of whatever Glukkon designers had thought up this design. Of course, having mudokon and slig slaves to do all the actual work must have helped. That thought brought me down to reality, and reminded me that the Glukkons were the slave drivers. It’s weird how I can go from admiration to disgust in a matter of seconds. I guess that’s the mind at work again.
Vint touched my arm, and I remembered that we were here for a reason. I turned, to face the Command Deck. It no longer looked beautiful with its lights, but the lights served only to enhance the threatening darkness between them. I was scared. Not terrified, the way I had been when I looked upon the Killer, but a dull fear. We could get a map from somewhere else, I thought, Why do we need a map anyway? We know we have to get off at Carthag…
I looked at Vint, who was already looking up and down the wall for an entrance, and I felt ashamed or these feelings. I strode up to the wall and drove my elbow through a window. The sound was lost in the whistling air around us, but Vint heard, and helped me to clear the glass from the frame. I had chosen a small washroom with only one window, and we could barely fit in when we climbed inside. Fortunately, the room was not locked, so we were able to exit onto a corridor. The glare of the bright lights in the corridor blinded me after three days in the dim light and darkness of the Hold, but it’s surprising how fast we recover.
I looked both ways down the corridor, but there was no one around. Vint was already scanning a ship plan he’d found in the office. He nudged me, and pointed to the part of the ship labelled ‘Navigation Room’, located at the top of the Command Decks. I nodded, and led us down the corridor, in search of some kind of lift.
After a couple of turns, we were faced with a spiral staircase, leading up. We mounted the stairs, but hadn’t gone further than a few steps, when we hear sharp footsteps echoing down the stairwell. Vint was thinking more clearly than me, and pulled me back down, and under the stairs. I had to be told when the footsteps had died away, because I could hear nothing over my own pounding heart. Vint tapped my arm, and led the way back up the steps.
The plan we had found said that the Navigation Room was four floors above where we had been, but the staircase only led up two floors, so we braved the corridors once more. The plan didn’t show stairs, so we chose a direction at random to walk in. I took the lead, despite having no better idea of where we were going than Vint did.
“Hey!”
I winced at the seeming loudness of Vint’s whisper, and turned back to him. “What?”
He pointed up at the sign on a door I had walked past. ‘Captain’s Office’. Vint tried the handle, probably hoping that there would be a map inside. To my astonishment, and I think to some extent Vint’s, the door opened.
It was dark inside, but Vint found a light-switch. I wouldn’t have expected him to know what would happen. I didn’t anticipate it myself, although if I’d thought for a little longer, I would have. When there is a window, with light on one side and darkness on the other, those on the light side cannot see through the glass well, but see instead their own reflections.
The Killer flickered into existence opposite me, in the window. He was passive, not killing at the moment, but I knew it would only be a matter of time. We stood, sizing each other up. His bloodstained hands, my fevered shivering.
“Vint.” That was more than a whisper, barely. There was a hint of terror in my voice, which must have caught his attention, because he turned from his searching of the drawers, to stare at me.
“What?” He followed my eyes, and seemed puzzled when I seemed to be staring at nothing but my own reflection.
“Let’s go. Out of this room.”
Vint seemed about to say something, but shrugged and walked out. When I didn’t follow, he grabbed my arm, and gently pulled me away. I remained tense, until he switched off the light, then I collapsed to the floor.
“Ulven? Are you alright?”
“Just…” I paused to catch my breath. “Just don’t switch any lights on in rooms with windows again, okay?”
“Well, okay, but why not?”
I swallowed. “He’ll return.”
“Your reflection?” Vint wasn’t unsympathetic. After all, he knew that I was a little mad. “He won’t hurt you.”
“Maybe not me…”
Vint helped me up. “Here.” He handed me a torch. “Found it in one of the drawers. No more lights.”
And we resumed our search for the Navigation Room. We didn’t speak of it again.
[ June 03, 2001: Message edited by: Rettick ]