Mytro

By johndbiggs

8.9K 620 40

Imagine if, right now, clattering underneath your feet was a secret train system that could take you anywhere... More

Chapter 1: The Door In The Rock
Chapter 2: Locker Room
Chapter 3: Cierra La Puerta
Chapter 4: The Exchange Student
Chapter 5: Rattling in the Dark
Chapter 6: The Subway
Chapter 7: Silencio
Chapter 8: The Hill Of Winds
Chapter 9: The Llorentes
Chapter 10: Run
Chapter 11: The Voice Of The Rails
Chapter 12: The Map
Chapter 13: Chase
Chapter 14: The Phone Call
Chapter 16: Theatergoers
Chapter 17: Barcelona
Chapter 18: The Keys
Chapter 19: La Rambla
Chapter 20: Protection
Chapter 21: The Leaning Door
Chapter 22: Ascent
Chapter 23: Time To Get Away
Chapter 24: The Cold Dark
Chapter 25: Map
Chapter 26: Buscar Aqui
Chapter 27: Lay Your Cards Out
Chapter 28: Echoes
Chapter 29: Na KarlovÄ› MostÄ›
Chapter 30: The Conductor's Key
Chapter 31: Mr. Partridge
Chapter 32: The Breach
Chapter 33: Stuck in the Dark
Chapter 34: The Blue City
Chapter 35: Building 35
Chapter 36: Goal
Chapter 38: Vulpine
Chapter 39: The Mytratti Map
Chapter 40: Oubliette Italiano
Chapter 41: Moonlight in the Alley
Chapter 42: The Hangar
Chapter 43: Voice In The Fire
Chapter 44: To the Breach
Chapter 45: Out of the Dark
Chapter 46: Earth Station
Chapter 47: Dragon Clouds
Chapter 48: The Door In The Wall
Chapter 49: Paella
Acknowledgements

Chapter 37: Tent Station

69 9 0
By johndbiggs

The tall man lost his grip on Turtle as he twisted away and ran down the stairs to where a group of guards stood. They called out after him, but he squeaked between them. He began to sprint at full speed, running through prime numbers in his head with each breath, just as he did in track practice. He outran them all.

He saw Mr. Partridge, legs outspread, his arms against the wall. One of the guards was searching him. "Go, Turtle," cried Mr. Partridge.

Ehioze's "address"—sector 6, row 10—was booming in his head. He looked up at the poles at the end of each row, counting down each one as he ran. He passed row 9 and then came upon row 10. He was at a wide-open crossroads.

By now, more and more refugees noticed Turtle's flight from the central building into the packed dirt rows and aisles of the tent city. Most ignored him—after all, they saw Italians come through regularly—but a few began to call after him. By the time he reached sector 6, he had caused quite a stir.

Ehioze was outside his tent when Turtle arrived, breathless. "Is all OK?" he asked, ushering Turtle into his tent.

"I don't know. I need your help."

"Do you need directions again?"

Turtle dropped his backpack on the table and rummaged through it, looking for the Key. Maybe it held something that could help them. Maybe it could do something.

"Can you lead me out of this place?" asked Turtle.

"There are ways out, yes, but I can't be found outside. I could be deported. We are waiting for transit visas so we can continue on."

"So maybe we need to find a way out here."

Turtle looked at the key closely. Most of the protrusions were decorative, but one tiny knob clicked softly as he turned it. Doing so seemed to wake something up inside it, causing the key to hum gently.

He remembered the Nayzun said the key listened to song. But what kind of song? A Nayzun song? Human? The key wasn't a key—it was a music box playing a strange, soft tune. Didn't the Nayzun say that the Mytro sang things into existence?

Turtle sang along. Ehioze sang as well, smiling.

"That's an old Nigerian song," he said, marveling at the key. Turtle was stumped. He stared at the key in his hand, humming

along.

And, like a magician's trick, out of the shadow, assembling itself

out of empty space, was the faint outline of a station.

The tracks appeared. Ehioze nearly fell backwards, his eyes

wide.

The train came, ghostly in the LED light.

How all this fit into a tent five feet wide and ten feet long,

Ehioze and Turtle couldn't tell. The tent had expanded or they had contracted. Only one train pulled up in front of them, and then only the middle section, the front and back of the car hidden by the walls of the tent, but somehow the entire station fit into the space. The front flap of the tent moved slightly in the wind, and the station flickered. The tent, for a moment, was back and the station gone. The flap stopped moving, and the Mytro reappeared.

"Is this magic?" asked Ehioze.

"No, it's something else. Thank you for all your help," said Turtle.

Turtle heard scuffling and shouts outside. Someone yelled. "They're looking for us," said Ehioze. "That's one of the guards." "Then come with me," said Turtle.

"Where are we going?" asked Ehioze.

"We're going to Barcelona. But we'll be back—unless you don't

want to come back."

The train doors dinged open.

"We are leaving the camp?"

Turtle thought for a minute. The map. He didn't have a copy.

He'd need to find one if he was going to do anything in the Mytro. "Yes, for a little while. We have to get something and then find

someone."

"Is he on this train?"

"I'm not sure he's even on this planet. We have to hunt for him." The boy nodded gravely. They boarded the train, and the doors

dinged again, closing on a cushion of air. The key in Turtle's hand stopped humming, dead as he held it.

Barcelona. Agata's house. The portable door. He whispered the address under his breath.

Turtle sang again but this time the train knew where to go. Their pursuers barged into the tent behind him, but all they found was an empty tent lit by an LED lamp. The faint smell of train oil hung in the gloom.

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