Kent Kelly - The Cage

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The Cage: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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On April 4th, 2014, 6 billion and 783 million people died in the blinding white fireballs of the Pan-Global Nuclear Holocaust. Sophie Saint-Germain, wife and scientist and mother of one, was not among them.
She lived for a time, and so her words endure.
The reclamation of her terrifying story is a miracle in itself. Uncovered during the Shoshone Geyser Basin archaeological excavations of 2316, Sophie’s unearthed diary reveals the most secret confessions of the only known female survivor of the Holocaust in central Colorado. Her diary reveals the truths behind our legends of the High Shelter, the White Fire, the Great Dying, the Coming of the One, and the Gray Rain Exodus, her horrifying journey into the wasteland made with the sole conviction that her daughter, Lacie, was still alive.
For these are the first of words, chosen by the Woman of the Black Hawk:
From the Plague Land, from the Fire. This is the book of the woman who was, this is the codex of our ancestors’ revelation.
An episodic narrative, FROM THE FIRE, EPISODE II: THE CAGE is the second installment of a serialized novel by Kent David Kelly. This unforgettable novella comprises 16,600 words, 65 printed pages, and is preceded by the #1 bestselling action/adventure e-book EPISODE I: END OF DAYS (ASIN B0082SJY0O,
). It is followed by EPISODE III: THE HOLLOW MEN, also available from Wonderland Imprints (release date June 2012). FROM THE FIRE
GIVE ME SHELTER
THAT I MIGHT ENDURE THE STORM,
GIVE ME THE STRENGTH
TO PRAY MY DAUGHTER WILL PREVAIL. ~

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“No. Not yet.”

This is vital!

“I can’t face that yet. Not all of it at once. Not now.”

No reason to talk, you know. You don’t even need your own name any longer. Be nothing, be no one.

As she warred with herself she kept cleaning, straightening, measuring.

As her actions threatened to flow from exacting precision into obsession, she cleaned up the shattered light fixture with a broom and utility scoop she had discovered beneath the table. She did not yet trust herself to attempt a righting of the collapsed utility shelves, but she did pull a pair of bolt cutters out from the wreckage. With sudden resolve, she paced toward the center of the room.

Dropping her soaking blanket for balance, standing nude, she pushed the wet linen under the dangling light fixture and cinched the lights’ frayed cable between the chrome-vanadium pincers of the cutters. Closing her eyes, she powered the quick-snap on the battery-powered cutters and almost cried out in surprise when the cable cut loose on the first try. The light cage thumped down onto the floor and rolled off the blanket with a clang. The bulbs remained unfractured, glass-embraced spider threads of enmeshed argon and phosphor. Sophie pushed the light cage away with her foot, toward the hose socket, where it would be out of the way.

There was still much to learn about the great room, a tiny labyrinth made of choice. A bank of freezers stood between the shower stall and the one still-upright bank of shelves, and a medicine cabinet was bolted near to the transparent seal which led into the deeper rooms behind her.

She steeled herself, turning and taking a step toward the seal. She fully intended to press her way through into the pressurized chamber just beyond —

(Someone else is in here, spider, don’t turn your back on the shower ever, no don’t go, crawling, crawling on the ceiling, don’t you dare go in there)

— But she could not yet will herself to go into the back and see the utmost edge of her tiny world. What would she do? If she were to go back there and stare at another newfound wall; if the claustrophobic panic that was already gnawing at her fraying self-control was unleashed back there, blossoming out of her like a bloody flower from the flesh, forcing her to confront the horrid truth of just how limited her existence had become?

While the pressure seal was still untouched, the back of the shelter was a place of hope, a horizon of possibility. But once she went in and saw just how small it was, that would be the edge of the world, perhaps the edge of the entire world forever.

The world in spiral,

ever circling in.

In on itself, forever,

ever tighter, spider-web,

crawling,

who is huntress who the hunted,

I and I,

feeding from myself I’m in,

I’m in

the Cage.

“Stop it.”

She laid the bolt cutters down and smoothed the blonde hairs rising upon her forearms. Returning to the wall farthest from the entryway — the north wall, perhaps, if the concept of “north” meant anything at all any longer — she moved away a plastic tarp that was pinned up against the concrete there. Behind it, baling hooks of some kind were hung in a rack, like pool cues. She pulled one out. It was surprisingly light, flexible and plastic. She pressed a button and a little levered hook popped out of the farther end with a click . She turned the baling hook to hold it by its molded foam grip, and in doing so discovered a label on the chromium tube: Macy’s.

It was a retail garment hook, a tool of the ended world.

And then she remembered what it was for. Tom had showed her this, several years ago. She looked up, saw the stuffed duffel bags racked up against the ceiling in their swathes of heavy nylon mesh. Lifting the hook, gasping in pain, she maneuvered one of the bags by hooking one of its rugged handles. She pulled it down and it fell in front of her with an unceremonious whumph . The dust in the air whirled, adrift in the unpleasant and intermingled odors of laundry detergent and mothballs. Slotting the hook back into its rack, Sophie hefted the bag by its end-handle and spilled its contents onto the floor.

She recognized some of the clothes. Tom had brought hundreds of sweats and shirts back from a trip to NSA headquarters in Fort Meade. At the time, she had chided him: “Recruiting an army, love? They’re not going to be very fashionable now, are they?” And his answer with that sly and boyish grin, “Ha. An army, instead of me? Hopefully you won’t need one.”

Jeans, flannels, T-shirts, hoodies, underwear. And some of Tom’s old favorites as well, things she had told him to get out of the house. Out!

She smiled, a slight quirk of the lips, and the tears were near again. He had followed the letter of her law, if not the spirit. Out of the house, and here all they were. She could not bear to go through Tom’s old clothes yet, looking at the bundled flannels and leather jackets and black jeans with the holes in the cuff or knee. They would only remind her of him.

Ignoring the burning of exhausted muscles deep in her back and shoulders, she sifted through the unisex clothes and pulled out boxers, bundled tube socks, over-large sweats and a baggy green hooded shirt that read “GO ARLINGTON! ~ Barcroft Fitness ~ Amateur Indoor Soccer League.”

“Oh, Tom.” Another half-formed smile.

Closing her eyes, going by feel alone and forcing herself into the tedium of slow motions and measured breaths, Sophie dressed herself. A precarious scab on her index finger fell off as she pushed her right hand up through the sleeve, and a bead of deep crimson blood streaked down the cusp-line of her fingernail. Bringing the finger up to her lips to lick off the blood, she stopped short as she happened to gaze down into the palm of her hand. Her entire hand was pink and finely pulped with the texture of raw meat, and blisters were rising where the heel of her hand had surged against the concrete floor, back when she had awakened from the nuclear blast and shoved the shelves off of her body.

The pain there was new and terrible, born only as she beheld it.

Wincing, she opened her other palm. The same. Her hands were crisscrossed with trembling gashes, pruned pink where the shower-water had been running in. Bubbles of flesh were turning white where the moisture of her body was rising up in fragile beads beneath the skin. Surprisingly, there was very little blood.

Crossing back over to the wire wall-rack mounted to the left of the shower stall, she found a roll of gauze bandage. Safety scissors, tape. Antiseptic. A gray towel. Her hands knew just where to go.

( He arranged this, Sophie, her mind was whirring, purling, he arranged this all exactly the way you keep your bathroom cabinet at home, all but the mirror that you hate, all perfectly set out, he knew you so well he loved you so much, he took you in here and you laughed at him, you, you …)

She wrapped and taped her skinned hands, one after the other. As she finished dressing, the panic threatened to overwhelm her. She hummed it away off-tune, as she always did.

Live for Lacie. So much more needed to be done. Keep control. She looked around.

The wall to her right, past the shower stall, had four huge freezers lined up against it side by side. She brushed up against one, it was warm, the metal still radiating the incredible heat of the nuclear blasts outside. Stone dust sifted down onto Sophie’s left forearm as she leaned over the first freezer. She looked up past a bank of wall sockets, and saw that one of the largest wall cracks was there, in the seam between two concrete slabs. Each slab was stenciled, “/// WATER TANK /// ACCESS PANEL ///.” The crack ran up through the entire length of concrete and up into the ceiling, and so on higher, ever higher, into the mountain.

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