4 | Trashvalanche

40 16 1
                                    

Pepper stormed out of the Millennium Kestrel. Tears glistened in her eyes. Where had all Fisk's hate and rage come from? He'd always been grumpy and off-hand, but the words he just spewed filled her with a coarse, empty sadness.

She lifted the tent flap and emerged in the twilit streets of Hope's Ruin.

Anger boiled in her veins. A mirror of the clouds above.

With the hulking frame of The Spear cast into shadow, she walked through the curious mix of hotchpotch homes and camps, each different to the next. Many people nodded as she passed. Others ignored her, far too concerned with their own problems.

Outposts traded scrap and tech. Kitchens sold stringy-looking meats presented on metal skewers for outrageous prices. Pepper hated to think what it was. Other groups sat around campfires singing quietly and telling stories.

Beyond the limits of the residential districts, a high wall circled the entire township. It was constructed from scrap and salvage that nobody had any use for or was broken beyond repair. Pepper ran her fingers over sheets of metal and burst tyres, a splintered ship's wheel, broken office furniture, chunks of masonry, and rusted iron girders. The stuff went on and on, wrapping its way around the township. A belt of mangled, unwanted waste.

At the southernmost point was a gate constructed of two enormous hammered-metal doors, barred with a single brace. Ladders fed a look-out point where two shadowy figures sat in shoddy deckchairs, snoring loudly.

Pepper collapsed, crossed-legged, on the sloping piles of trash that cascaded down from the top of the interior wall.

Her eyes found the sky.

A thick web of clouds spun across the horizon. To Pepper it seemed as though they grew and expanded every day. As if all the water that had once clogged the earth had evaporated and waited in the heavens. And through the clouds, a legion of stars blinked in and out of existence, dancing merrily across the night. Pepper's eyes bounced from one to the next, joining them with invisible lines, making shapes of faces, flowers, monsters.

Her thoughts returned to her brother's spiteful words. To The Spear and what might be going on inside under the gaze of Governor Sawyer and the Doctor. She shifted position, her fingers instinctively worming through the rubbish—as all good Hope's Ruiners did—on the off-chance that she'd discover something incredibly useful, or valuable, or rare. But all she found was more crumbling cement, chipboard, stretched rubber, and broken glass.

Maybe Fisk was right—not about reanimates—but about returning to Ashewood City and building a new life. A better life. One free from the fearful grip that choked Hope's Ruin. But it was such a long way. A journey filled with danger. But the promise of true freedom.

She wondered if freedom was really what she craved.

Was such a thing even possible in this strange new world?

Pepper liked the order of Hope's Ruin. The regimented structure, no matter how barbaric it seemed sometimes. Without it, chaos would consume everything. She had a home, food, her brother, and all the time in the world to fix and trade tech. And work on Flake 99.

She pushed off the ground and kicked a dented oil can towards the wall. It clattered into a stack of metal poles that shook for a moment before collapsing in on themselves. A small avalanche of trash swept towards her.

Pepper jumped. Landed softly.

The waste rolled to a dusty halt.

The sound raised a few voices. Several pairs of feet came to see what had happened. But Pepper's eyes were glued to a dirt-smeared plastic cuboid that had materialised beneath the shifting rubbish.

Hope's RuinWhere stories live. Discover now