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wt.theyearofthequietsun-第48章

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  But the station had a resident…not a visitor; not a raider from beyond the fence who plundered the stores in the wintertime; but a permanent resident。 A resident devil who had repaired the fence and hung out the talismen to keep the survivors away; a resident christian who had dug a grave and erected a cross above it。
  Chaney stood in the middle of the parking lot。
  Before him: the impenetrable walls of the laboratory stood out like a great gray temple in a field of weeds。 Before him: a mound of yellow clay heaped beside the Nabataean cistern stood out like an anachronistic thumb; with a single grave hard by。 Before him: a two…wheeled cart made of reclaimed lumber and borrowed wheels。
  Somewhere behind him: a pair of eyes watching。
  
  
  SIXTEEN
  
  Brian Chaney took the keys from his pocket and unlocked the operations door。 Two lanterns rested on the top step; but no bells rang below as the door swung。 A rush of clammy air fell through the doorway to be lost in the crisp; cleaner air outside。 The sun rode high…near the zenith…but the day stayed chilly with little promise of being warmer。 Chaney was thankful for the heavy coat he wore。
  Quiet sun; clean sky; unseasonably cold weather: he could report that to Gilbert Seabrookc。
  He propped the heavy door open by shoving the cart against it; and then went below for the first armload of rations。 The rifle was left beside the cart; all but forgotten。 Carton after carton of foodstuffs was hauled up the stairs and piled in the cart; until his arms were weary of carrying and his legs of climbing; but medicines and matches were forgotten and he made another trip。 A few tools for himself were included as a tardy afterthought。 Chaney very nearly overestimated himself: the cart was so heavily loaded after the last trip that he had difficulty moving it from the doorway; and so a few of the heavier boxes had to be left behind。
  He left the parking lot; pushing the cart。
  It cost him more than three hours and most of his determination to reach the northwest corner of the fence the second time that day。 The load moved fairly well as long as paved streets served him but when he left the end of the street and struck off through the high grass on his own back trail; progress was miserable。 The cart was only slightly easier to pull than push。 Chaney didn't remember seeing a machete in the stores; but he wished for a dozen of them…and a dozen bearers to work in front of him hacking a trail through the weedy jungle。 The load was back…breaking。
  When at last he reached the fence he fell down and gasped for breath。 The sun was long past noon。
  The fence was assaulted with a crowbar。 The task seemed easier where the fencing had been patched over the remains of the truck; it was not as stout there; not as resistant to the bar as the undamaged sections; and he concentrated on that place。 He ripped away the barbed wire and pulled it free of the truck shell; then pried out the ends of the original fencing and rolled it back out of the way。 When it was done his hands were bleeding again from many cuts and scratches; but he had forced an opening large enough to roll the cart through beside the truck。 The wall was breached。
  The heavy cart got away from him on the downward slope。
  He ran with it; struggling to halt the plunge down the hillside and shouting at it with an exhausted temper but the cart ignored his imprecations and shot down through tall grass that was no barrier at all…now…until at last it reached the plain below and flipped end for end; spilling its load in the weeds。 Chaney roared his anger: the Aramaic term so well liked by Arthur Saltus; and then another phrase reserved for asses and tax collectors。 The cart…like the ass; but unlike the collector… did not respond。
  Laboriously he righted the cart; gathered up the spill; and trudged across the field to the railroad。
  The dropped walking stick was a marker。
  His small treasure was left there for finding; laid out along the railroad right…of…way for the frightened family or any other traveler who might pass that way。 He put the matches and the medicines atop the largest carton and then covered them with his overcoat to protect them from the weather。 Chaney spent only a little while scanning the distances along the tracks for sight of a man…he was certain his shouting and his cursing would have frightened away anyone in the area。 As before; he was alone in an empty world。 From somewhere in the timber he heard a bird calling; and he would have to be content with that。
  In the late afternoon hours when the thin heat of the sun was beginning to fade he pulled the empty cart up the hill and through the gaping hole in the fence for a last time; stopping only to retrieve the crowbar。 Chaney didn't dare look back。 He was afraid of what he might find…or not find。 To suddenly turn and look; to discover someone already at the boxes would be his undoing…he knew he would behave as before and again frighten the man away。 But to turn and see the same untenanted world again would only deepen his depression。 He would not look back。
  Chaney followed his own trail through the verdant grass; seeking the beginning of the paved road。 Some small animal darted away at his approach。
  
  
  He stood at the edge of the parking lot; looking at the abandoned garden and thinking of Kathryn van Hise。 But for her; he would be loafing on the beach and thinking of going back to work in the tank…but only thinking of it; perhaps in another week or so he'd get up off his duff and look up train schedules and connections to Indianapolis; if they still existed in an age of dying rails。 The only weight on his mind would be the reviewers who read books too hastily and leaped to fantastic conclusions。 But for her; he would have never heard of Seabrooke; Moresby; Saltus…unless their names happened to be on a document ing into the tank。 He wouldn't have jumped into Joliet two years ahead of his time and found a wall; he wouldn't have jumped into this dismal future; whatever year this might be; and found a catastrophe。 He would have plodded along in his own slow; myopic way until the hard future slammed into him…or he into it。
  He thought he was done here: done with the aborted survey and done with the very quiet and nearly deserted world of 2000…something。 He could do no more than tell Katrina; tell Seabrooke; and perhaps listen while they relayed the word to Washington。 The next move would be up to the politicians and the bureaucrats…let them change the future if they could; if they possessed the power。
  His role was pleted。 He could tape a report and label it Eschatos。
  The mound of yellow clay claimed his attention and he followed the gutter through the grass to the cistern; wanting to photograph it。 He still marveled at finding a Nabataean artifact thrust forward into the twenty…first century; and he suspected Arthur Saltus was responsible: it had been copied from the book he'd lent Saltus; from the pages of Pax Abrahamitica。 With luck; it would trap and hold water for another century or so; and if he could measure the capacity he would probably find the volume to be near ten cor。
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