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The Tank

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by Nicola Lombardi




  The Tank

  Nicola Lombardi

  Translated by Daniele Anselmo

  “The Tank”

  Written By Nicola Lombardi

  Copyright © 2015 Nicola Lombardi

  All rights reserved

  Distributed by Babelcube, Inc.

  www.babelcube.com

  Translated by Daniele Anselmo

  “Babelcube Books” and “Babelcube” are trademarks of Babelcube Inc.

  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright Page

  1 - The Arrival

  2 - Seven Days Earlier

  3 - Oath and Assignment

  4 - Inspection

  5 - First Deliveries

  6 - Nocturnal Accidents

  7 - An Unexpected Encounter

  8 - Cleansing Day

  9 - The White Triangle

  10 - A Dangerous Delivery

  11 - A Visit

  12 - The Voice of Damnation

  13 - The Diary Issue

  14 - Four Words

  15 - Thunders

  16 - The Interview

  17 - Inside the Shutter

  18 - Questions Without Answers

  19 - Confessions

  20 - Before the Storm

  21 - Fires of Death

  22 - After the Storm

  23 - The Day After

  24 - Questions, More Questions

  25 - Death, Probably

  26 - Islands

  27 - The Shadow of the Tank

  Epilogue

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  1 - The Arrival

  The Tank looked huge, a dark grey cylinder that sternly contrasted with the dawn’s pale colors and filled the heart. Giovanni Corte could not help but hold his breath when the huge silo of steel and concrete appeared beyond the mist. He felt a chill run through his body.

  The early morning air got into his sleeves and under his collar while he was steadily approaching the structure with two NMO officers at his sides.

  While they walked in utter silence tufts of grass and gravel crackled unpleasantly under their boots. Giovanni felt like he was walking on an expanse of brittle bones, trampling them underfoot.

  The soldier at his right chocked a sneeze with his gloved fist. He was quite slender, which was pretty clear even under the large black coat, and the vaporous ghost that came out of his mouth quickly vanished in the chill of that newborn January. The other officer, thicker in build, rapidly glared at his comrade as to reprimand him for the sudden, albeit trivial, lack of self-control. The small four-pointed stars they both wore on their shoulders and berets weren’t shining as usual, always polished like golden jewels; the cold, dull light hovering on the whole Camp 9 made them look dull, almost opaque.

  Giovanni wanted to answer humorously, or even with just a simple “Bless you!”, to lift that shroud of rigor, but all that came out of his mouth was a faint cough. He himself didn’t understand if he was full of hope, fear, or what else. A new adventure was expecting him, all things considered. A stimulating experience, however demanding and hard, that would leave a permanent mark on him. And a considerable sum in his bank account. He walked with obvious confidence, but he was aware of the sharp blade in his side, which however couldn’t completely dissipate the euphoria, the excitement that upset with levity the flow of his thoughts.

  Clinging to one side of the cylindrical structure, a thick architectural body broke its circularity for a short segment. It was the slim, pointy elevator shaft that led all the way to the top, where the Keeper’s billet was easily recognizable: a light grey bulky block of bricks and concrete which extended a few meters over the edge, detached from the protruding belt that crowned the Tank’s summit. Basing on the maps he studied, Giovanni recognized the Ring that outlined the whole perimeter. Moreover, he knew about an external ladder on the opposite side, perfectly vertical, which led to an alternative entry - or exit, in case of elevator issues.

  While walking he lowered his gaze to examine the wicket gate set on the Tank, at a short distance from the pavement. It was a circular cover about half a meter in diameter, shut by a handle similar to those once used to seal submarines. The Gate of Cleansing, undoubtedly.

  When they were about five or six steps away from the Tank’s entrance the soldiers stopped, and Giovanni - who kept on walking lost in thought - had to move backwards to go back between them.

  Without speaking they all looked up.

  Elven meters in diameter. Nineteen in hight. Six of foundations. Concrete on the outside, embracing a steel upholstery for total thickness of fifty-four centimeters.

  It would be impossible to hear the screams from the outside.

  2 - Seven Days Earlier

  When the door of the big, half-empty office closed, leaving him alone with General Aurelio Stevanich, Giovanni felt his heart sink.

  The high officer stood with his back towards him, motionless and rigid in front of the room’s only window. He kept his hands joined behind his back and looked like he was devising who knows what strategy to deploy and move his troops on the plain to defeat imaginary enemies. Giovanni had greeted him while going in and the general had greeted him back politely, but hadn’t turned around. Now, the seconds that passed before they established any sort of civil relationship seemed to multiply, piling on, until Stevanich finally turned and pointed at the small black chair in front of his desk.

  “Sit down, Corte. Or would you rather stand?”

  Giovanni quickly examined him, trying not to show his nervousness too plainly. The role for which he applied and for which he was chosen required a resolve he felt abandoning him through his pores, but that he needed to fake.

  Stevanich was one of the higher-ups of the New Moral Order, maybe the most important one; a man around which many rumors had spread, consequence of the fear the regime had so accurately stoked. Giovanni had read a biography of Vlad Tepes, the legendary Dracula, and in that moment the goriest episodes and anecdotes about unlucky protagonists who were called before the bloodthirsty prince and then invariably suffered bitter ends crept out of his mind. That wasn’t the case, of course; but he could see the similarities.

  He never met the general before, but he knew his fame and thought extremely highly of him because of his well-known inflexibility and the utter intolerance towards anyone who disregarded directives, orders and regulations. The expression iron fist in a velvet glove was only partially fitting to Stevanich’s character, for whom the variant iron fist in an iron glove was coined. Apparently he had a subordinate put under arrest for six months just because he didn’t greet him with due respect and some recruits seriously risked ending up in a Tank for being caught telling dirty jokes during a drill. Now, Giovanni didn’t technically belong to the military; he was a civilian that, like many others, applied for the annual Tank Keeper position in Camp 9 and had been lucky enough to get the job. A job that, however, made him subject to martial law to a certain degree, so the feeling of being on the gridiron wasn’t completely unjustified.

  Filled with pride and apprehension, he thanked and sat. With slow steps the general reached his seat and did the same. He was a tall, lean man. The short, white hair made him look around sixty, but the almost complete absence of wrinkles on his forehead and the black mustache starkly contradicted that impression. His looks were impeccable, the grey uniform full of coloured degrees and tabs, while the golden four-pointed start just above the heart seemed to release a warmth that helped temper the chill of his leaden eyes.

  Now sitting, Stevanich was perfectly in front of the large tetragram, the NMO symbol hung on the wall at his back, so that three of the big black star’s slender points - a symbol referring to the four cardinal points - seemed to sprawl from the top of his head and the sides of his
neck. All in all, it was quite the evocative sight.

  Opening the folder that was specifically placed on his desk, the general spoke without raising his gaze on his interlocutor: “I see you brilliantly passed every test, distinguishing yourself among eighty-seven candidates.”

  Giovanni coughed while settling on the chair. To that moment he had uncomfortably sat on the edge, so he slid backwards a bit until he felt the backrest.

  “So, let’s see...Giovanni Corte. Twenty-five. Orphan of both parents. Currently not in a relationship. Degree in political history. Hobbies: movies and literature. Many awards in athletics. No legal precedent, no smoke, no alcohol, no drugs...” The general closed the folder e tapped it with the palm of his hand. “Impressive, Corte. Very impressive.”

  Giovanni felt a clump of pride in his throat. “Thanks, general.”

  Stevanich fixed his eyes on him, eyes that looked like they had been carved in dirty ice. “Let it be clear that I’m completely satisfied with how you passed our selection process. However...” A three second pause that seemed like three minutes to Giovanni. “The regulations say that the Keeper position for the upcoming year is yours. I read your psychometric profile. Our commissars are experts of extreme and proven competence and I blindly trust their judgement. Nevertheless, I would like to make sure you are one hundred per cent motivated, without reserve. And I think you are.”

  Giovanni sighed, trying to find the right words to reassure him, but the general went on. “As you know, the position of Keeper is the sum of several roles: you will be a superintendent, an administrator, but first of all an executor.” Another pause, to let the last word hover in the cool of the office, swirl to show all its sides. “I assume you are completely aware of the responsibility you take the moment you step into the Tank. Now, I want to ask you one last question. Just one.”

  “Please ask away, general.”

  “Aren’t you afraid?”

  On the wave of tension, Giovanni felt he could answer immediately, with ardor. But a sudden wavering took on him, slowing down his reactions; he let a handful of seconds pass, then said:

  “Absolutely not, General.”

  Stevanich stared at him in silence and Giovanni wondered if by any chance he had made a mistake. Could it have been a trick question? The figure of Vlad the Impaler sitting on his throne came back once again, together with the deadly consequences to which a wrong answer led without fail. He found himself evaluating other answers, maybe more appropriate than the one he had chosen. For example, he could have asked what he had to be afraid of; on the other hand he could have given the impression of being a little too bold...

  When Stevanich nodded Giovanni realized with relief that his trepidation was unjustified. He felt the sweat chilling on his back.

  “All right, Corte. You didn’t answer with too much haste. You hesitated and that gives you honor. I appreciate people like you. The selecting committee did a good job.” He stood up and Giovanni hastily did the same. “Get ready then. Thoroughly study the manual that will be given to you at the administrative office and be at Camp 9’s gate, where the Operating Center’s office is, on January 1st at exactly 7:30. I expect you prove yourself worthy.”

  “I won’t disappoint you, general.”

  The handshake was short, but vigorous.

  “And Corte, one more thing...”

  The man remained impassive, but he felt his throat dry down. “Yes, general?”

  “It goes without saying that I don’t want any problem on your side. Anything that happens, every obstacle you might meet, solve it before it comes to my attention. We are clear on this, right?”

  “All clear, General.”

  Crystal.

  “Good. Then for now...have a good Christmas.”

  “Thank you, General. You too.”

  While reaching the exit, Giovanni could almost physically feel Stevanich’s eyes on the back of his head; the absurd idea that the general got rid of the curt but fatherly expression with which he dismissed him, transforming it in an unsettling mask. Not evil, but lacking humanity.

  3 - Oath and Assignment

  The maws of the elevator opened without making the slightest noise. When Giovanni and his silent escort got inside the cabin- which could contain up to five or six people - their boots produced a sinister noise on the pavement, a plate of knurled metal.

  Before one of the two soldier, the thicker one, could insert his ID card in a slot and press the black button on which an upward arrow was engraved, Giovanni turned around to look outside one last time. The greyness of the first morning of the year was haunting the whole landscape as if everything was covered by a thick layer of off-white ash. And when the double sliding doors closed their vertical mandibles an incomprehensible knot of discomfort formed in his guts.

  Now it’s really too late to go back, he thought. But why would I?

  Steadily looking straight ahead of him he let pride flow into his heart, washing away the layer of apprehension that was trying to envelop him like wet gauze.

  As soon as the elevator started moving the two soldiers turned their backs to the entrance. Giovanni did the same, sensing that once at the top other doors would open. After a few seconds, with a quiet clank that echoed down the vertical shaft, the hidden engine stopped and after new maws opened the three were in the Ring.

  Stepping out, his escort one step ahead of him, Giovanni quickly looked left and right, where the wide turn of the corridor they were in disappeared both ways into the snow white walls following the building’s shape. Short neon cylinders, placed on the ceiling each a couple of meters away from the following, emitted a pale light that reflected on the linoleum floor’s half-faded green.

  They headed right.

  A few steps away from the elevator, on the same side, there was an extremely solid-looking metal door with faux wood painting. Reinforced, no doubt. He had accurately studied the simple layout of the building. It was the access to the Keeper’s flat.

  They came to a halt. While the leaner soldier was fussing with a set of keys Giovanni started looking around.

  A bit further from where they were, on the outer side of the circular corridor, another door with thick dark glass panels drew his attention. A faint glimpse of golden light flickered from a small metal plaque beside the massive steel jamb. A casual observer could mistake it for a second elevator, ma Giovanni knew perfectly well it wasn’t. On the manual it was named access door to the isolation and elimination chamber, a tiny room better know as the Shutter.

  Two forceful turns and the lock sprang with a loud noise.

  The soldier that had opened the door looked at his comrade, who nodded in return; he then took a finely printed card out of his pocket and turning to face Giovanni he cleared his throat before starting to read. It was time for the assignment speech and the consequent oath.

  “In the name of the New Moral Order I assign to you, Giovanni Corte, pro-tempore Keeper, the keys to Camp 9’s Tank...” Giovanni felt like even his heart has stopped to listen. “...so that you may guard it’s whole content until the last day of your mandate. Do you swear to loyally serve the Order and to prove yourself worthy of the task you’ve been called to undertake?”

  A peremptory whisper from the other soldier lashed out as quick as a toad’s tongue: “Hand on your heart.”

  Giovanni promptly obeyed and solemnly pronounced the first of the three: “I do.”

  “Do you swear to take responsibility for every action you may make while doing your job?”

  “I do.”

  “And finally: do you swear in no way you will divulge any information you may learn while operating inside the tank?”

  “I do.”

  “Are you aware of the legal consequences that come by breaking an oath to the Order?”

  “Yes, I am.” His voice cracked a little and he felt ashamed.

  “If that’s so you, Giovanni Corte, from this moment on you officially take on the role of Tank Keeper for the duration
of the current solar year.” The soldier handed him the small set of keys and Giovanni grabbed it with a decisiveness.

  The soldiers clicked their heels in unison and the sound got lost in the Ring’s curves.

  A few moments of uncomfortable silence followed. Giovanni couldn’t remember whether he was supposed to say something or if the short ceremony was actually over. He allowed himself to say a quick: “Thank you.”

  The two soldiers exchanged an unintelligible glance, then looked back at Giovanni. Had there been a faint grin in that split second, or was it just the neon light on their faces? Giovanni couldn’t say and he wasn’t all that interested.

  The most authoritative looking soldiers - even if judging from the stars on their uniforms the two seemed to be both sergeants - spoke with a neutral voice: “As you know, there are no deliveries on January 1st, so you have all the time you need to get used to the place. Anything you may need, you know the communication procedure.”

  “Of course...”

  “Good luck with your work, Keeper.”

  “Thank you.”

  The two soldiers headed toward the elevator, unmoved, and Giovanni stood and watched them disappear behind the sliding doors. The dark buzz of the descending cabin vibrated in his ears, steadily growing quieter, until a thud informed him that his escort had reached its destination.

  From that moment on he was the only one left in the Tank. And of course the guests, as the manual named them. Giovanni could never understand whether that term was only accidentally ironic or the person who chose it wanted to mock - yet always respecting the limits imposed by the ever-present martial formalism - the condition in which all those inside the Tank passed their last days.

  ***

  There were five keys in the set. The one that opened the reinforced door of the flat was long, similar to a two-headed axe. Three others were smaller and they were for the rooms of the flat itself, while the last one, recognizable by the green plaque, had to be for the security exit, also called, with very little technicality - Escape. The keys were attached to a ring with a metal four-pointed star hanging from it. It didn’t look all too comfortable to keep in a pocket. A tad of masochism would be needed to appreciate it.

 

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