Unity Elly Bangs (life changing books to read .TXT) đ
- Author: Elly Bangs
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âCursed,â I heard myself say. âIt doesnât make sense. Itâs weird. Very weird.â
Standard was utterly stoic, as ever.
âThe Keepers, you mean?â Naoto asked. âWhat do you think happened to them?â
âSailors always used to be the worldâs most superstitious people,â I said.
He squinted. âI donât understand what that has to do withââ
âThe sea used to be the great unknown!â I explained, impatiently. It was so frustrating he couldnât simply hear my thoughts. One more of a million things that would have been infinitely easier now, if only I were whole.
âOkay,â Naoto said.
âShips would sail off and never return,â I continued. âNo one would ever learn why. Probably just sunk by storms, but it was left to the imagination, so inevitably it was all attributed to sea monsters and angels and whatnot. Now itâs all reversed: the oceans are all lit up with nodes and cities and cable and sonar, and dry land is the great unknown. Communication is spotty and whole encampments get wiped off the map without warning every storm season. Ergo, wastelanders have become the worldâs most superstitious people. They have the madness of looking for a reason in everything.â
Naoto scratched his head. âSo youâre saying . . . it doesnât necessarily mean anything, that the locals say the Keeper mission is cursed.â
I chewed on my fingers in thought. âThat doesnât sound right either, does it.â
A feeling of uncomfortable cold fire tingled in my lips, fingers, and toes. I was still conscious of all the things that should have been tearing me apartâthe trauma of escaping Bloom; the atrocity Iâd committed by invading Serenaâs mind; my concern for Naotoâs safety; my fear of the Keepers and the Medusas and whoever else was hunting meâbut the drug drowned them all in an unfocused, bubbling euphoria. I was incapable of fear or regret and rendered perversely in love with everything around me: the blowing dust, the murderous sunlight, the ragged and blistered wastelanders surviving despite it all. This was a drug for young new recruits into atrocity-prone armies and brutal gangs; any teenager could ride this milky, sky-blue high through all the natural horror of a first kill, effortlessly bypassing that most basic instinct to never take a life.
I loved Naoto. I reached for that love in myself and focused hard on it; it was the only thing I knew Iâd still feel once the drug wore off. I watched him stumble along in his ill-fitting second-hand clothes, increasingly frizzy braids swinging on the sandy wind, wincing hard and filling his lungs with air he must have found so shockingly thin and dry. I stopped him to ask:
âAre you really going to be okay out here?â
He pursed his lips. âIâll have to be.â
âBut just look at all this shit,â I slurred. I motioned around at things in sight: the enormous sky; a three-legged dog; a distant outhouse; a tall man in a ridiculous hat made of 150-year-old milk jugs, who frowned at us and hid his face under the wide, floppy brim.
âCome on,â Naoto said, pulling me onward again. âWe just need to talk to the truck depot chief and get you a ride to Phoenix.â
âWith what?â I asked. âI donât have anything left to barter.â
He stiffened a little. âIâll take care of it.â
âThereâs something not right about the way you said that.â
He didnât respond. I quickly lost my train of thought again.
Something strange happened as we passed through the center of the encampment. There were a lot of refugees here from the farther hinterlands: sick, wounded, dying, malnourished, swaddled in whatever random materials they could pluck from the wind. Iâd expected themâbut not the dozen-odd men in black and white uniforms that had gathered there with them, conspicuously silent. At the front of the group, a little girl stood and sang.
This time it was Standard who stopped to stare.
âWho are they?â he muttered, weirdly distant.
âDeserters,â Naoto said. âFrom the Confederacy.â
âI didnât know there were any,â I said. âThey really fled all this way rather than participate in the genocides?â
Naoto nodded. âI overheard something about them. They refused their orders. Now theyâre as much fugitives as all their would-be victims.â
The deserters were joined by women and children I surmised were their families. Their heads were lowered as if in prayer, or shame. They still wore their uniforms, but the shoulders were all frayed where theyâd sawed the patches and insignia off.
âSheâs . . .â Standard trailed off. He was staring at the singing girl. He looked hypnotized. He muttered almost too quietly to hear, âWhat is that song?â
âYou donât know it?â I smiled. âYouâve really never heard âAmazing Graceâ before?â
He shook his head slowly.
âItâs about repentance, redemption, that kind of thing,â I said. âA slave ship captain wrote it after he had a divine experience that filled him with remorse, in the middle of a storm he thought would sink him. It didnât used to be sung in a minor key, though. Thatâs recent. It used to sound happy.â
I snorted a mean laugh to myself and resisted a drug-addled urge to blurt out what I was thinking: there was no such thing as redemption. Not really. What Iâd said was true, except that the ship captain had gone on trading in enslaved human beings for years after he wrote it. Heâd been repenting his use of swear words, not his direct participation in one of the most heinous crimes in all human history. On my better days, I could think a song transcends its authorâs intent, that it belongs to the generations that sing it after himâbut today I was running for my life in the first hours of a new world war, and even high as I was, I couldnât spare the energy.
. . . But these deserters. I kept staring at them: at the blisters on their lips; the gray dust worn deep into the black of
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