Читать книгу Skydark Spawn - James Axler - Страница 12
Chapter Five
ОглавлениеWhen the outlanders were almost out of sight, Baron Fox came down from his office and strolled out to the main gate to meet with Grundwold.
The sec chief had ordered the others in his team to continue trailing the outlanders while he made his report to the baron. He would catch up to them later.
The baron arrived at the gate wearing his familiar silk bathrobe, but now had a heavy pair of black leather boots on his feet. He took a pipe from a pocket in his bathrobe, filled it with some of the tobacco grown on the farm and lit it with a shiny chrome Zippo lighter, which had cost him a breeder. As always, Norman Bauer was several paces behind the baron, his ledger tucked neatly up under his right arm.
“The one-eyed man’s their leader,” Grundwold stated.
Fox chugged a few times on his pipe. When it was lit, he clenched it between his teeth and said, “Yes, he seemed to do all the talking for the group.”
“He’s good with a blaster, too,” Grundwold said.
“As they all are, no doubt.”
“It would make it hard for me to take them without losing a lot of my men.”
Fox grew angry with the sec chief. The redheaded one was exotic, and her hair was the most beautiful he’d ever seen. Even if she never got heavy, he knew a rich baron or two living outside the eastern villes who’d pay big jack to make a wig or weave out of hair like that. And the dark woman had the best set of breeding hips he’d seen in months. “Sec men I can get anywhere,” Fox spit. “I need breeders.”
“Yes, sir,” Grundwold barked. “What do you want me to do, then?”
“I want you to bring them here,” Fox said, blowing a plume of gray smoke just under Grundwold’s nose. “Bring me the women…whatever it takes.”
Grundwold nodded and looked down the road toward the falls. “What did you give them?” he asked.
“Three bags of fruit in exchange for some trinkets.”
“Ripe?”
“Most of the fruit is laced with sedatives. We didn’t have time to prepare the fruit in all three bags, but there’s a good mix. Should be enough to put a few of them off guard,” Grundwold stated. “That’s all the advantage we’ll need.”
“I’ll send the wag to the tower after dark.”
Normally the sec chief would have a wag at his disposal, but a slave had recently stolen one in an escape and they hadn’t been able to trade for a replacement yet. That made the second wag even more valuable, and the baron only wanted to let it outside the complex long enough to collect the new breeders and bring them back to the farm.
The sec chief nodded and said, “We’ll bring them back.” He started down the road at double-time to catch up with the rest of his men.
“Of course you will,” Baron Fox said. “Of course you will.”
“IT MAKES SENSE NOW,” Mildred said as the friends walked along the road toward the ville that was now less than a mile away. “The region around Niagara Falls was all farmland. Apple orchards, pears, plums, peaches and plenty of grapes for making some really good wine.”
“No more,” Jak stated.
“Not after the blast. The whole area was wiped out, except for that one farm.”
“In my day,” Doc offered, “Niagara Falls was the site of some of the most exciting theoretical discussion about the possibilities of electricity. Not to mention the incredible feat of engineering that would be required to make it possible.”
“Electricity would sure give the baron or whoever owns the farm one hell of an advantage,” J.B. commented.
“Like fuel,” Jak said.
“Better than fuel,” J.B. replied. “It’s harder to steal. No one can blow it up. And it doesn’t have to be refined. It could give them lights, even the power to pump fresh water.”
“So why hasn’t the rest of the area prospered?” Ryan asked. “If there’s power here, why is the ville empty?”
“After two hundred years the power station can’t be producing all that much electricity,” Krysty reasoned.
“He probably takes everything the station produces,” J.B. stated. “Or destroyed all the power lines, except for those running to his farm.”
“I must say the people working on the farm looked healthy enough,” Doc suggested. “They must all be doing well for themselves.”
“And for other traders,” Jak said, lifting the bag of fruit.
Ryan had to admit that the farm looked like a well-run operation. But there was still something about it that bothered him. The electrified fence was a logical defense system considering the type of muties that lurked in the area and the amount of electricity that was available. Still, it seemed to be run a little too smoothly for it to be just a farm, and he’d never seen a farm that was so well armed.
“You know,” Mildred said, “there’s another thing that Niagara Falls was known for in predark times.”
“What’s that?” J.B. asked.
“It was the honeymoon capital of North America.”
“What’s that mean?” Dean asked.
“It means that after people got married, they’d come here to, uh, celebrate by spending a lot of time in bed together.”
“Oh.”
“So that’s why the sec man said there were plenty of places to spend the night here,” Krysty said.
J.B. smiled. “Good. I could use a good night’s rest.”
“Not up to a little honeymoon, John?” Mildred chided.
“Oh, I’ll be up for it,” J.B. responded dryly.
At that moment they crested a rise in the road and suddenly Falls ville and the lake beyond it stretched out before them. There were dozens of buildings around the ville that had been destroyed by the shock waves from the initial nuke blasts, or the aftershocks that followed. But despite the damage, there were still several structures intact, such as the one that looked like a saucer set upon a knife that overlooked the water, and a cluster of buildings huddled together in the center of the ville.
The lake to the south was as big as an ocean, but was spotted by sandbars and dry patches along the shore. Water flowed over a horseshoe-shaped ridge, but it flowed only over two sections in the center of the horseshoe. The rest of the curve was dry and home to several large water birds.
“The falls have almost run dry,” Mildred said. “In predark times you’d be able to hear the water roaring from here. Millions of gallons of fresh water every minute, day and night, 365 days a year.”
“Now falls like rain,” Jak commented.
“Producing enough electricity to operate one farm, but not enough for an entire ville,” J.B. said.
“There’s something else I just realized,” Mildred said.
“What is it?” Ryan asked.
“If that’s Niagara Falls,” she said, taking a look at the geography around her, “then we’re on the Canadian side of what used to be the border.”