Saturday, May 17, 2014

The Shelter: Initiation (I)


            Derwin crept along the dilapidated railway running through the residential zone of the bomb shelter beneath the twenty third century metropolis of Chicago. It was pitch black, with a only a piercing white light coming from from his salmon-colored environmental suit's helmet to guide the way. He walked over hillocks of debris, ground down from large piles of building rubble by years of insect and microbial activity. He carried wearily his ancient AK-47 assault rifle, holding it close to his chest, constantly looking left, right, and behind him, peaking around large pieces of rubble, and stopping every fifty feet to listen and feel for movement. The repetitive motions made him tire, but he didn't care. He couldn't afford to be taken by surprise by one of the many different abominations living in the abandoned underground city.
            The creatures were the result of a government city restoration project. After the great war was over and the population had moved back on to the surface, tons of heavier-than-air toxic gas was pumped into the city-sized space to make it completely uninhabitable, and all the entrances were sealed off. Unfortunately, human nature took its course, and secret (and sometimes non-so-secret) entrances were drilled into the ground, and people started resettling the shelter. The people settling the shelter wore environmental suits to get around, and procured, mostly by stealing, air filters that would enable them to live in the gas-filled underground world.
           Unfortunately, technology doesn't always work; air filters failed, and suits malfunctioned. People were routinely exposed to the gas. If it was a short exposure, they'd develop boils and temporary breathing problems. Most often, however, the exposure was not short,and death was the result. A minority of those exposed for a long time were able to live through the physical damage caused by the gases, but mentally they were scarred. They went crazy, turning cannibalistic, sadistic, and many other -istics that no one would ever want to have to think about. The general policy was to shoot when it happened, but hesitation would lead to the "crazies" escaping, taking shelter in one of the many abandoned tenements making up the shelters. The only thing that kept the sane inhabitants safe were various gangs that took control of the various districts within the city-beneath-a-city and brought law and order to the area, often through draconian measures.
            Derwin had recently joined a gang that had, in his opinion, a cruel initiation practice. It was their philosophy that one was only worth what they contribute to the gang, and if a member couldn't contribute the death of one of the lunatics haunting the dungeon and live to tell about it, they might as well be worthless. As far as Derwin was concerned the "philosophy" was bullshit, but he didn't have a choice. Being alone in the old shelters was being a dead man walking. There were of course stories of "badasses" that survived in the shelters on their own, shooting first and asking questions later, and thriving on the money of gangs that wanted people dead or something stolen. However, there were far more stories of people thinking they were badasses, only to have something horrific happen to them when they tried to demonstrate their badassery.
            Derwin was not a badass and he knew it. He was just a guy who'd made some poor choices in life, and he was scared. His AK-47 would do him no good if one of these lunatics charged him and ripped open his suit. He might kill the thing, but one hole is all it would take to get killed (or worse) by the dungeon gases.
He'd been walking for two hours, and the longer he walked the more nervous he became. More than once he'd heard a strange sound, responded with a hail of bullets, only to find that he'd shot some small rodent or giant insect skittering through the debris.
     After another half hour of walking aimlessly and not seeing any hint of his quarry, he decided that he would enter one of the abandoned ten story metal tenements still standing in the residential zone. These tenements used to house the citizens of Chicago, back when the dungeons were used as a massive bomb shelter. If there were going to be crazies hiding anywhere, they would most likely be there, waiting for someone to errantly stumble in. It was dangerous; small spaces were the best way to get killed, but he needed to accomplish his mission soon as he was getting very tired.
      Derwin steeled himself and walked into a building at random, and almost immediately he was ambushed by a crazy jumping out of a room to his left. Derwin fired his weapon on full-auto as the creature's arms and legs prepared for a deathly embrace. The creature fell short of Derwin, and ran off further into the building as Derwin tried to catch his breath. His heart was pounding.
     After collecting his wits, he decided head down the hallway the creature went. The dust was thick in the building, and Derwin's light didn't illuminate more than a few feet in front of him. Much to his relief, it didn't take long for Derwin to find the creature dead in the main hallway only twenty feet from where it first attacked him.
      After congratulating himself on his victory, he went about the business of beheading the unfortunate soul he'd just killed, as he'd need proof he succeeded in his task. It was a tough process, especially considering the fact that Derwin's knife was quite dull. He spent a good five to ten minutes cutting through the cloth of the environmental suit alone. He then threw the helmet to the side. Cutting the head off was much more difficult. The skin of the creature was very leathery and dry. It came apart like silk. Cutting through the trachea and blood vessels proved to be more difficult. The hardest was the spinal column, taking him a solid four minutes to get through it.
     After he was done, he held the head of the crazy in his hand, reflecting on what we he had done. What he had done was killed another human being. It was a crazy human being, sure, but still had the same rights as anyone else. In a more peaceful world, maybe it could have gotten treatment and lived a fulfilling life. But not in the dungeon. Never in the dungeon.
            Derwin's preoccupation with his kill made him oblivious to the sounds of footsteps a mere seventy feet from where he was sitting. They weren't very subtle, either. They echoed through the hallway, but he ignored them, only focusing on his butchering.
            It is quite unfortunate that if he had been paying even the slightest attention to his surroundings, he could have avoided the bullet that pierced the headpiece of his environmental suit.
            The bullet didn't manage to his body, but Derwin gasped in surprise, and inhaled the dungeon air. His body seize up, paralyzing him. He collapsed to the ground, his head resting on a wall, unable to move anything except for his eyes. He had no illusions about what would come next, and his life began to flash before his eyes. From his childhood in the upper levels of the city, to his gambling addiction, to his arrival in the dungeon, he reflected on the choices that led him to lay dying in an abandoned building in a long-forsaken city.
            He heard footsteps approach him, and after a few moments, a ghoulish figure appeared above him. It was wearing an environmental suit with no headpiece on, and its face was marked with burns, rashes, and cuts. It was so deformed that it looked like a cheap polypropylene mask. Its eyes were cold and lifeless, and they moved separately from one another. The monster looked at the severed head in Derwin's hand.


"looks like I got two for one", it said gleefully. It's voice was gurgling, as if it had fluid in its throat.
            The crazy took out a large hunting knife and flipped a switch on it. The knife began to vibrate and buzz. With one swift motion, the lunatic drew the knife across Derwin's environmental suit, slicing through it with ease. It sliced through Derwin's neck even easier, only snagging a little bit upon hitting his vertebrae. The creature then grabbed Derwin's head in one hand, and the head of the Derwin's bounty in the other, and pranced off into the darkness.