Читать книгу City of Time - Eoin McNamee, Eoin McNamee - Страница 8
CHAPTER FIVE
ОглавлениеDr Diamond came back as Owen and Cati were helping themselves to cake. “Not enough time,” he muttered to himself. “What did he mean? Is it too late? Is that why the Resisters won’t wake?”
“What is a tempod?” Cati asked, thinking about the final odd word of her father’s message.
“A tempod is a strange thing, not much understood,” Dr Diamond said. “It looks like a hollow rock, by all accounts, but it is capable of storing a large quantity of time.”
“Speaking of time, what time is it?” Owen said.
“That is an interesting question,” Dr Diamond said, turning to look at him.
“No,” Owen groaned, “I meant is it morning or the middle of the night? I can’t tell down here.”
“Oh,” Dr Diamond said. “About eleven o’clock, I think.” A thought struck him and he strode to his blackboard. He swiftly wrote out a long sum with lots of fractions, looked at it, then seized the duster and wiped it out.
“No good.” He sat down, looking glum. “I can’t figure out why he left that message in particular. Not enough time. What does it mean?”
“What about…” Owen said slowly, almost afraid to be laughed at. “What if he just meant that there wasn’t enough time?”
“That is precisely what it does mean,” the doctor cried. “But not enough time for what?”
“No,” Owen said, sure now that Dr Diamond would laugh out loud. “What if it meant that there really wasn’t enough time. I mean not enough to go around. Say the world or universe, or whatever, is filled with time, but that it has run short or something, so that there just isn’t enough of it…” He ground lamely to a halt. Dr Diamond was staring at him. “It’s just a theory,” Owen said. “Probably pretty stupid.”
“A theory?” Dr Diamond said, finding his voice. “You’ve hit the nail on the head, Owen! That was exactly what the message meant. It makes sense now. That is why the clocks are all slowing down. That was why your friend’s face changed in the playground, although fortunately the change wasn’t permanent. The geese turned to dust. There isn’t enough time. And that’s why he told us about the City.”
“What is this City of Time?” Cati asked.
“It is called Hadima in the old books,” Dr Diamond said. “Years ago there was a lot of coming and going between the Workhouse and Hadima. There used to be an entrance…”
Cati noticed a strange expression on Dr Diamond’s face. His eyes fell on Owen and stayed there, as if lost in a dream.
“The City of Time, Dr Diamond,” Owen reminded him gently.
“Oh yes. Well, to cut it short, it is a trading city, you might say; a city with its roots stretching back in the past and far into the future.”
“What does it trade?”
“Time,” Dr Diamond said. “It trades time itself.”
“That’s why my father is telling us to go there,” Cati said excitedly. “To get some time. There isn’t enough time so we have to get some.”
“Is that right, Dr Diamond?” Owen said. Time, after all, wasn’t something you went out to a shop and bought.
“Yes,” Dr Diamond said slowly, “I think Cati may be right.”
“So, that’s easy then,” Owen said. “Cati’s dad is telling us to go to Hadima and get a tempod containing time, and… and…”
“…and release the time here.” Cati completed his sentence.
“But you cannot,” Dr Diamond said.
“Why?” Owen demanded.
“The entrance is sealed. The Resisters sat in Convoke – you remember the Convoke, Owen? Where we all gather together and decide things? And at this Convoke a long time ago, we decided that the entrance should be sealed permanently.”
“But why?” Cati said.
“We were afraid that the Harsh might use it to travel from the City to here. There were rumours…”
“But the Harsh got here anyway!” Owen said. “When they attacked last year!”
“I know, Owen,” the doctor said, looking troubled, “but there was another reason. Your father was travelling between here and Hadima. The Convoke thought that he was bringing trouble with him. That he was meddling in things he did not understand.”
“But now… now we need it,” Cati said. “We need to get to Hadima!”
“I’m sorry,” Dr Diamond said, “but I cannot repeal the decision of the Convoke.”
They heard a faint rumble beneath their feet. The Skyward swayed gently for a moment and then was still.
“What was that?” Cati said, alarmed.
Dr Diamond stood up and walked over to an instrument in the corner which had started to spout out rolls of paper. He examined it. “Earth tremor,” he said. “Two point three on the Richter scale. Caused by the moon, I would say.”
Cati and Owen looked at each other. Cati opened her mouth to speak, but before she could Dr Diamond said sternly, “The decision of the Convoke is final. The entrance to Hadima has been sealed with the sign of the fleur-de-lis, and will not be reopened!”
Next morning they ate breakfast at Dr Diamond’s workbench. The scientist fried bacon and sausages, and they had them with fried potato cakes and crusty bread, all washed down with mugs of tea.
“Now,” said the doctor when they had finished, “we need a plan. But first, what about your mother, Owen? Will she not wonder where you are?”
“She’ll think I’ve gone to school already. She doesn’t really notice much.”
“Don’t be too hard on her,” Dr Diamond said. “We never really know what is going on in someone’s head.”
“What shall we do first?” asked Cati.
“I think we need to wake some of the others,” the doctor said. “Do you think you can try, Owen? I know it’s dangerous, but we need more help. How about Rutgar and Pieta? They both have strong minds and should be able to reach out to you as you wake them.”
Rutgar was the head of the Workhouse guard, solid and dependable. Pieta was the subtle and dangerous warrior who had followed Owen to the north when he had been taken by Johnston’s henchmen. Owen still remembered the magno whip she wielded with deadly force.
Owen took a deep breath. He remembered what had happened when he had woken Dr Diamond and he wasn’t eager to experience it again. But he found himself saying, “Yes, of course I will.”
“Start with Rutgar,” Dr Diamond said.
“Maybe I should wake Wesley,” Owen said. “The Raggies are younger. They might be easier to wake.”
Cati’s heart lifted at the thought of seeing Wesley and the Raggies again. The Raggies were Resisters too, but slept in their own Starry in warehouses near the harbour. They were children who had been abandoned in time by the captain of a ship who had been paid to look after them. The older children, like Wesley, took care of the younger ones. They dressed in rags and never wore shoes, but they were proud and resourceful, and were experts on anything to do with the sea.
Dr Diamond frowned. “That is the problem,” he said. “They are young. Rutgar is an experienced fighter.”
“It has to be Wesley,” Owen said stubbornly, “or I won’t do it.” Cati looked at him. It wasn’t like Owen to behave so childishly.
“All right,” Dr Diamond said quietly. “If you fear to risk waking Rutgar, then Wesley it is.”
There was another rumble beneath their feet and the Starry swayed again. The doctor leaped up and examined the machine in the corner. “Two point four on the Richter scale!” he exclaimed. “We must hurry! Go and wake Wesley if you can. I must think.”
“We need a magno gun,” Owen said.
“Then take one,” Dr Diamond said, “but hurry!”
Fifteen minutes later, Cati and Owen found themselves walking down along the river, Owen carrying a magno gun under his arm. He glanced at the tiny glowing blue chip which was fixed in the middle of the gun and wondered for the hundredth time how the Resisters had harnessed the power of magnetism, using it the way ordinary people used electricity.
It had rained during the night and the river was in full spate, tumbling over the rocks. The leaves of the overhanging trees had turned red and brown and had started to fall so that the path was covered in them.
“Why do you want to wake Wesley so badly?” Cati asked.
“I don’t,” Owen said. “I just wanted to get down here.”
“I don’t understand. And you never asked for a gun before. What are you up to?” Cati asked suspiciously.
“I think Dr Diamond gave it away.”
“Gave what away?”
“The location of the entrance to Hadima.”
“But he didn’t say anything. And it doesn’t matter because the entrance is sealed.”
“Maybe I can unseal it,” Owen said, patting the barrel of the magno gun.
“You can’t do that… it’s dangerous.”
“It wasn’t dangerous for my father.”
“But the Convoke! The Resisters will turn against you if—”
“There won’t be any Resisters if we don’t do something,” Owen said angrily. “And your own father sent us the message to go there. So are you with me or against me?”
Cati took a deep breath. “I’m with you,” she said at last. “So how did Dr Diamond give it away?”
“He said it was sealed with the sign of the fleur-de-lis.”
“So?”
“Look!” Owen said, pointing to the gable of a building which backed on to the river. On the wall there was a blue neon sign. “Look at it,” he said. “The shape is a fleur-de-lis!”
Cati looked. The sign did indeed seem to be a fleur-de-lis if she closed her eyes and squinted. “Come on, Owen,” she said. “That’s just a bit of old advertising. For a shop or something.”
“There is no shop around here. Nothing else either,” Owen said quietly. “Look more closely.”
“I can’t see anything.”
“Concentrate.”
Cati stared until her eyes hurt, but could still see nothing but the glowing neon tubes of an advertising sign. Then suddenly, “The sign is made from magno,” she breathed.
“Yes,” Owen said, “and look at the wall. The stonework is newer than the rest. It has to be the entrance to Hadima.”
“What are you going to do?”
“I’m going to try and blast it open.”
“Are you sure that’s a good idea?” Cati gulped.
“No,” Owen said cheerfully, “I’m not sure at all. Take cover!”
Cati had barely time to dive behind a rock as Owen raised the gun and fired. A glass bulb filled with magno shot from the end of the gun and arced towards the wall just below the sign, where it burst with a crash and a gout of blue flame. Cati peeped out. The wall was blackened, but otherwise there seemed to be little damage. Owen pulled another glass bulb from his belt.
“How many of those do you have?” Cati asked.
“Three.” He fired again. This time the mortar binding the wall cracked a little. He fired the third projectile and the cracks deepened.
“One left,” he said. This time he moved much closer before firing. He recoiled from the heat of the blue flame which flicked back and almost enveloped him. As it died down, he ran forward. The wall was severely cracked and stones had fallen out in places, but there was no sign of it having been breached.
Owen sighed with disappointment. “We’ll never get through it. Even with a hundred shots.” He turned away, and as he did so, there was a low rumble and the ground below his feet moved.
“Earthquake!” Cati shouted.
Before Owen had a chance to move, the whole world shook. He grabbed at the wall, then looked up in horror. Great pieces of masonry were falling all around him. He tried to move, but the ground was shaking too violently. Another earth tremor, much stronger this time! In the nearby town he could hear the sound of car alarms going off. He glanced up again. The whole wall was about to fall on him!
Owen felt a strange sensation around his feet. The path he stood on was covered with water up to knee height. Water was pouring up the river, topped with dirty yellow foam. A geography lesson about underwater earthquakes causing a tsunami came into his head.
“Owen!” Cati shouted above the roar of the water. Then a wall of water hit him. In seconds, he was tumbling, being driven upstream, bouncing along the riverbed. Once again he heard Cati call his name and thought he felt her hand grip his, but he could not hold on. Her fingertips glanced against his and then she was gone. With one great shuddering breath he filled his lungs and the water claimed him.
Owen couldn’t say how long he was underwater. His lungs burned and his body ached from being hit by stones and boulders. He knew that he could no longer hold his breath, that he had to exhale. He felt consciousness starting to slip away, and as it did so a distant memory formed in his mind. How as a baby he had been with his father when his car crashed into the harbour. How his father had rescued him. He could almost feel two strong hands closing around his waist…
Then, with a bone-shuddering impact, the water threw him against the stone sides of the river, pushing him higher and higher. Weakly, Owen reached out, seeking any purchase. Just as his strength was fading, he found something to grip. Scrambling with both hands, he tried to lift himself to safety.
Not until a fresh wave of water caught him did he manage to get his hands and then his elbows on to the edge of what was the opening to a tunnel. He drew one gasping breath after another. But even so he might have fallen back had not a great surge lifted and propelled him into the tunnel itself. The water followed him in and rose to the level of his neck. He forced himself further into the tunnel on his hands and knees, scrambling upwards, until finally he was beyond the water’s reach.
Panting, Owen heaved himself upright and lay back against the wall. There was a faint light coming from up ahead and he could see that the tunnel was big enough to stand in. He got to his feet, his clothes soaking. The water surged towards him again, so he turned and ran as fast as he could in the opposite direction.
The tunnel walls were slimy and the stones underfoot were slippery, but there was enough light and the going got easier as the tunnel widened. Owen could feel fresh air on his face. The tunnel suddenly curved to the left and opened out. Owen stepped out of it, feeling the autumn sunshine on his face.
He looked around and saw he was in a small courtyard. It was enclosed by small shops and outbuildings, but it was obvious that no one had been there for many years. Doors sagged off their hinges and the windows were opaque with dust and cobwebs. Several old cars lay abandoned in the centre of the courtyard, cars which were perhaps thirty or forty years old. Beside them was an old lorry with canvas sides. Both of its doors were open, as though it had been abandoned in a hurry. There was a stillness to the place. Owen had the feeling that no one had disturbed the silence there for many years.
He walked cautiously around the courtyard. There was a shop selling old-fashioned mountaineering gear, the ropes now mouldy and useless. Another sold camping gear, a rotted tent erected in the window. Next door the shop advertised auto spares, puncture repair kits and things that you might need on a long journey. A small shop whose front had collapsed had stocked tinned food. Cans had spilled out over the courtyard. This was a place where people stocked up for a long journey, Owen realised. And he had a good idea where that journey might lead.
The final shop seemed older than the others. The big window was completely obscured with dirt. Owen wiped it with his sleeve to peer inside and revealed a big gold G printed on the glass. He wiped again, revealing other letters. They looked familiar. He held his breath as he wiped the rest of the glass, revealing a name. J M Gobillard et Fils. The same name that was on the mysterious chest in his bedroom!
Owen stepped back to get a better look at the shop. There didn’t appear to be any door and when he looked through the glass he saw only darkness. Then he realised there were wooden doors beside it, double doors large enough for a car to get through.
He hesitated before taking hold of the big rusted bolt which held the doors closed. It screeched loudly as he forced it open and Owen glanced nervously around the courtyard, feeling an air of disapproval in a place which had lain undisturbed for so long.
With one final effort the bolt slid back. Owen swung the doors open and found himself looking into an opening. The ground was battered and rutted, the walls were scarred and scraped. Graffiti in strange languages covered the notched plasterwork of the walls, and huge broken lamps hung from the ceiling. A battered wooden sign pointed into the tunnel. Owen traced the letters with his finger. Hadima.
This was the entrance to a road, one which led down into the darkness. As Owen stood at the gateway, a cold, vigorous wind blew from the depths, carrying with it the smell of mountains and of snow.