Dan Carver - Ruin Nation

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Ruin Nation: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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“Can Hugo Jupiter save his country from an even scarier future? If you like Terry Pratchett or Will Self you’ll love this.”
Ann Abrams “Dystopia gets a facial in this brilliant story of hero Hugo Jupiter’s meteoric rise to power.”
Chris Child (author of ‘Heckle’) “A wildly funny adventure in the dark reaches of an all too possible future. Dan Carver is a great new talent.”
Greg Reacher
England is cut off and has entered a dark post-apocalyptic future. Evil politicians, who will stop at nothing, battle for control over the helpless population who are terrorized by marauding leopards. Enter former army surgeon Hugo Jupiter, who gets caught up in the course of history. He fights to overthrow the corrupt regime and establish his own. Will he succeed or will his very flawed character lead to an even worse future?

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“Debase us, Knifeman Hugo!” bawls an orgiastic Novice Peter. “Vomit upon us! Defile us so that we may be humble before God!”

I clamp my hand over my mouth. It doesn’t stop the retching, just redirects it sideways.

“Cut my head off and throw up down the stump!” pleads Under Elder Eve.

Now I’m not used to being taken so literally. So when they ask me to kill them, I tell them no, if they really want to die and, I mean really , then they’re going to have to do it themselves… Well, you can say I’m surprised when they take me at face value. Suddenly I’m standing in a pool of guts.

I’m in the street. I’ve escaped. Crowds again. Everywhere. I guess the human race must’ve reached the top of the evolutionary arc and slid down the other side. I mean, how many thousands of years have we been in existence and we still haven’t worked out how to walk round each other? But I tell you one thing: everyone moves out the way for the man in the Jesus Christ underpants.

“I thought you’d defected,” Calamari growls.

“We lost ’im on the bridge, Sir,” Elton interrupts.

“You lost him on the bridge? How can you lose someone on a bridge? A bridge is three parts: a beginning, a middle and an end, and each one of those parts is clearly visible from any two of the others.”

“An’ then there’s the bits that go upwards, Sir: the supports. Well, these bits that go up… ’e went up ’em. We don’t understand what ’appened next. We fink…”

“I don’t care what you think. I suspect you don’t think at all. I’ll find out myself. You , Jupiter, standing there in your blasphemous knickers! What happened to you?”

“I fell, Sir. Then I was held captive by religious maniacs. They disembowelled themselves and I escaped.”

“At least somebody’s showing some bloody initiative!” Calamari snaps.

We’re behind schedule. There isn’t time for full recriminations so he herds us straight onto the bus. I risk his wrath and ask a question.

“Mr Calamari?”

“Oh, for fuck’s sake! What?!”

“How did you find me, Sir?”

“I’ve had unpleasant devices implanted under your skin. Whilst you slept.”

We offload Elton. The next stop is Cobleigh On The Wold and a grand, gala fundraising ball. Funds for what, I don’t know.

So, how best to describe Cobleigh? Well, half’s a beautiful, bucolic paradise of gently rolling hills, wildflower meadows and tiny, tucked away cottages you can barely see from the road. Then there’s Hangman’s Wood, which is every bit as horrible as it sounds. And then there’s Battencross Manor. Which is worse.

I don’t know what it is with rich lunatics and architecture. Imagine the Houses of Parliament eaten and then passed out as a stool by some colossal camel. Add turrets and Alzheimer’s for the full effect. When dusk falls, its crooked spires cast brutal, serrated shadows the breadth of the village. Mention its name and the locals go white and mutter about full moons and missing children. They speak of a beast. They speak of many things, but little makes sense.

If the Stemset Building is the entrance to Hell then Battencross Manor is its exit.

But it’s not the architecture that bothers me, or the coterie of freaks that stalk its hallways. It’s the memory of what we did there that haunts me to this day.

So picture the scene: black night; our great whale of a tour bus winding along a narrow, twisted road – little more than a dirt track gouged through a Brothers-Grimm forest of gnarled, acid-bitten trees. There’s no light save for our dim headlamps and the flickers of marsh gas. We’ve bogland to our left and collapsing rockface to our right. We dodge quicksand, falling rocks and something large and fast-moving that I’m sure should be extinct. It leaves its claw-marks along the length of the bus.

“Battencross Manor survived the Civil War,” a big goon tells me, ashen-faced, “because no one dared go near it.” And I shiver.

We exit the woods past the cemetery, where flame-torches up-light ungodly stone angels and Death watches us with empty eye sockets from his perch above the gatehouse. And I swear he moves. Just a little.

The Manor rises up to meet us, a dark arachnid abortion wreathed in fog. The floodlights would guide our way up the winding gravel driveway, but the floodlights appear to be exploding. A smartly attired man with a waxed moustache and smoking jacket is smashing them with a log. He salutes as we pass.

An upstairs window flashes cyan blue as an unknown individual attempts to reanimate pig carcasses with an electric generator. I can’t help thinking he’d have more success with animals that still have heads. Furious-faced, he hefts their lifeless, decapitated torsos to the window and launches them into thin air. He adopts a joyless smile as they hurtle downward, exploding on impact with the patio furniture on the Italian terrace. An old woman shields herself with an umbrella. She has meat in her hair. I look left and see a man beating his wife with a stuffed dog. This is not as weird as it gets by any stretch of the imagination. There’s more. There’s always more.

We approach the great front entrance. The family crest shows two goats copulating. The male has three testicles. And when a female visitor points this out to her immaculately dressed gentleman companion, he drops his trousers to reveal a similar arrangement. I don’t get to see what lies beneath her turquoise ballgown, but the man does and points at it with furious enthusiasm.

It’s unusual to see Calamari stuck for words. His rugged jaw line thrusts its way into my field of vision.

“During the conflicts, because of the Republicans and the danger in the cities and all that sort of thing, the Battencross clan chose to isolate themselves. They became self-sufficient in, er, all sorts of ways. Ways you or I might find a little… over-familiar .”

“Small genepool stuff?” I suggest euphemistically.

“Erm? You could put it that way. So… so don’t be surprised if you encounter people you might consider a little, er… special .”

“Inbred?”

“Special,” says Calamari coldly.

“I’m sure they’re all very nice people,” says I. I don’t condemn folk till after I’ve met them. Speaking of which…

I’ve been observing the goons over the course of the journey. They’ve got a hierarchy and a leader in the form of a huge, cauliflower-eared brute called Spencer. I doubt we’re ever going have a conversation about Art or classical music, but as far as belching and leering at women go, we get along fine. They follow Calamari’s directions to some loose degree, but there’s clearly no love lost between the factions.

“We usually take our orders from Mr Durham,” Spencer tells me. “Old Beetle Bollocks.”

“What kind of orders?” I ask.

“Oh, dishin’ out a few right-handers on an as-and-when basis,” he says, rearranging his knuckles. “Guess you could call us freelance troublemakers.”

“Oh,” I say. But I’m wandering off the point. Let’s backtrack a little:

“Inbred?” I say.

“Special,” says Calamari.

“I’m sure they’re all very nice people, Sir,” I say.

“Are you ‘special’, Sir?” asks Spencer, insolence etched all over his face. “You look ‘special’, Sir.”

Now Calamari may be intelligent and deeply political but let’s not forget that he’s also a man-mountain prone to violent rages and bouts of impromptu teeth-extraction. I’m expecting a violent reprisal, maybe something testicular loosened with a blunt penknife. Maybe the rules have changed, or the insane monster’s switched to a more effective medication, because he just laughs his horrid laugh and claps Spencer on the back. Spencer seems confused. Calamari just smiles. Spencer looks wary. Calamari adopts the tour guide position at the front of the bus. We’re all waiting for something nasty to happen. But it doesn’t. Not yet.

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