The Hunt

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The Hunt Page 16

by Andrew Fukuda


  The song ends and there is a short discussion about what next to sing. At least five suggestions – they must have dozens in their repertoire – are quickly made before they settle on a song titled “Up High”. It begins slowly. At first, it’s only Sissy’s voice, undulating with the peaks and troughs of the melody.

  The ground beneath your feet

  hums with the heat of the day’s sun

  all alone, the heat trapped within your heartbeat

  until the night falls and the sun is done.

  The other voices join in the chorus, harmonising perfectly. They’re so fluid and flawless, it’s evident they’ve sung this song hundreds of times before. Imprisoned by glass and distance, they probably have nothing else to do to while away the endless days but sing. Singing gives them what they most need: an illusion of hope, a transportation to other places.

  Sailing through the bluest sky

  above the hawks that sigh

  above the clouds that cry.

  The song, though haunting in places, has an undeniable catchiness about it. At first, I just mouth the words. Then, almost unwittingly, I find myself pushing air through my larynx, formulating sounds. But it’s not easy. It’s all croaks coming out of my mouth.

  Then something happens: it’s as if a giant ball of phlegm in my throat is dislodged. For one verse, I hit the notes. For just those few moments, I’m completely lost in the rhythm of the song. I ride it, a kite flung in the air, catching the sweetest of winds.

  The song ends, and there is laughter coming from inside. They burst out seconds later, Ben leading.

  “I thought I heard an asthmatic dog wheezing to death out here,” Jacob says, friendly laughter dancing in his eyes.

  “Dog, whatever,” David says, smiling. “That was more like an elephant.”

  “More like a herd of elephants,” Ben says, so beside himself, he’s hopping from one foot to the next. They’re all laughing now, the sun playing off their hair, adding dots of light to their eyes. Sunshine glimmers off the hairs on their arms, little puffs of dust kick up at their feet, their carefree voices ring into the bright air.

  “C’mon, it’s funny, you have to admit it,” Sissy says to me. Her face is all abandon and nakedness as she looks at me. There is a smile in her eyes, her nose, her mouth, her cheekbones, her forehead, all of it spilling so infectiously outward to me, past me, filling the world like the sun. She busts out with sweet laughter, her eyes closing in sheer delight.

  And just like that, something trickles out of me I thought was long ago irretrievably lost. A laugh shakes out, guttural and coarse through disuse, bursting through my constricted vocal cords. And my face – there’s no other way to describe this – rips apart like a cracked hard-boiled eggshell. A smile crinkles across my mouth, spreading along my face. I feel pieces of the mask falling off, like crusts of dried paint flaking off a wall. I laugh louder.

  “What the heck was that?” Jacob says. “Did a gorilla just fart through its mouth?”

  And they crack up even more, their laughter lifting into the air, joined only moments later by the sound of my own laughter, guttural and coarse, free and thoughtless.

  I leave the Dome not because I want to but because I have to. Not that the Dome will be closing anytime soon – after yesterday’s close call, I’m not taking any chances and I have at least fifteen minutes to spare. I have to get back for some serious shut-eye. All two hours of what’s left of the day, anyway. I’ve been running on fumes the last few nights, and there’s a real danger, not so much of dozing off during tonight’s Gala, but of getting careless in front of all the guests and cameras: a yawn, a frown, an unsuppressed cough. I can’t get sloppy at such a crucial time. Just a couple more nights to hang on; then, as long as I can pull off my broken-leg stunt, I’ll be home free.

  With food and water in me, the walk back to the library seems so much shorter. What before was a significant hike is now nothing more than a short stroll. Even with the added weight of three full bottles of water, I’m halfway there before—

  Hello, what’s this?

  In the distance, a dot, moving. Directly in front of the Institute building – no, not a dot, but a dark smear running. Towards me.

  I freeze. There’s nowhere to hide. Not a boulder to crouch behind, not even a depression in the ground into which to slink. It’s got to be an animal lost out in the Vast. But then again, it’s rare to see wildlife out here; most animals have learned not to stray too close.

  A horse, I think to myself, it’s got to be a horse, escaped out of the stable. Then I remember what my escort previously told me: there are no horses at the Institute out of fear the hepers might use them to escape. On rare occasions, like tonight’s Gala event, when guests arrive by horseback and carriages, the horses are kept under tight lock in the stable.

  It runs closer, and I realise what it is. Not wildlife, not a horse. This is a person.

  I don’t think I’ve been spotted. Yet. I quickly prostrate myself, my chin jutting into the crusty desert soil.

  It’s one of the hunters, it has to be, testing out one of the accessories. Donning the SunCloak or the SunBlock Lotion. Judging from the bulbous hooded shape around the head, probably the Sun-Cloak.

  And then I realise its intent.

  The hepers. It’s making a break for the hepers, trying to get at them before the protective Dome emerges. And now, just minutes from the Dome’s closing and with the sun rays less potent, is its chance.

  Just then, a door on the ground floor of the Institute building swings open. And something – someone – shoots out like a racing horse out of the blocks. It moves with wicked speed, a blur. Moving straight towards the heper village. Or me. I’m lying in a direct line.

  The cloaked figure is at a full sprint now -I can see arms pumping hard, legs pounding the ground. But it’s the second figure that’s just emerged that is far quicker. Already, it’s covered half the distance between them. Within no more than ten seconds, both are close enough for me to recognise.

  The cloaked figure is Ashley June, her pointed chin unmistakable under the hood. There’s something off about her. But my attention is quickly diverted to the sprinting figure almost caught up to her now – Beefy. His appearance is bizarre and frightening. He’s smeared over completely with the SunBlock Lotion, the rich yellow white cream lathered thickly over his torso like icing on cake. He’s completely naked (for speed?) except for a pair of black goggles pulled tight over his eyes.

  I leap up, dropping the bottles of water, and sprint. Not to the library – it’s too far away. But to the Dome. I’ll pretend to be joining the Hunt, make them think I’m running with the pack. That’s the only way I can explain being outside. True, I have neither Sun-Cloak nor SunBlock Lotion, but I’m hoping that detail will be forgotten in the excitement.

  It works. Ashley June runs past me, labouring – the SunCloak is not working, the sunlight is getting to her. Seconds later, Beefy flashes by, the smell of the lotion overpowering. Nobody says anything: we’re competition to one another; it’s survival of the fittest, not friendliest.

  Just then, the sun emerges from behind a cloud. Shafts of light blaze across the Vast, bringing a hazy quality to the air. But it’s not haze to Ashley June and Beefy. It’s a shower of concentrated acid. Ashley June falls to her knees, crumpling in a pile of clothes. Beefy seizes up, stumbling. In the dusk light, the cream on his body glows with an eerie yellow luminescence, jaundice on radiation steroids. Still he pushes on.

  I give chase. I smell something else, the raw burn of flesh. The SunBlock Lotion is useless; the sun is penetrating right through it. Beefy’s energy flags, I’m catching up, he’s not going to make it. I glance back: Ashley June is nothing but a pile of clothes, the Sun-Cloak useless.

  Another cloud drifts across the sun. Ahead of me, Beefy regains his form. Ashley June remains behind, a discarded and motionless pile of clothes.

  In the heper village, nothing moves. I’m close enough to see that all
windows and doors have been shut closed. Then Sissy springs out, her hands quickly tying the dagger strap around her thin waist. Arms and hands from inside the mud hut reach out for her, trying to draw her back in, but she slaps them away. She races towards Beefy and me, her face a mixture of determination and fear, the flashing daggers in her hands pulsating rapidly like the hammering of her heart.

  Her appearance rejuvenates Beefy. He picks up even more speed, starts racing towards the village. Even in his debilitated state, he must know. That he is fast approaching the point of no return. Even now, he can still turn around, make it back to the safety of the Institute, if not in one piece, then at least alive. But if he presses on towards the heper village, there’s no going back anymore.

  With kamikaze intent, Beefy’s head snaps back, his legs pound the crusty ground, and he emits a snarled hiss from between fanged teeth. He is going for the hepers. Come what may, he is going to them. No matter the sun: he will bound into the village, tear down doors and windows, rip the hepers to shreds, sink his teeth into the soft give of their necks, even as the sun burns into his skin and melts it into wax, even as his eyeballs explode and ooze vitreous juice down his sliding face, nose, cheeks. None of it matters even as he succumbs to the rays, even as he dissolves into a puddle of pus, so long as he dies with hepers in his arms and heper juice in his system. What a way to go, not so gently into the night.

  Sissy, too, has picked up her speed as she sprints towards us. No one is backing off from anyone. Without breaking pace, she flings a dagger to my left, a ferocious sidearm thrust. The dagger shoots out, twirling as it sails across the plains, blinking with reflected sunlight. Again, it looks as though she’s missed the mark by a mile; but again, the dagger swings around in a wide arc, boomeranging towards us. With that dagger in midflight, Sissy, still charging towards us, flings another dagger, this time in the opposite direction to my right. My head tries to follow it. But within seconds, I’ve lost it. And not just that one. I’ve lost track of the other dagger as well. They’ve disappeared in the plains. But I can hear them: a gyrating whirr, growing louder, zeroing in on Beefy from both sides.

  A second later, the flying daggers collide midair right in front of me. There’s a metallic clink as blade hits blade, then a brief spray of sparks. Sissy has thrown the daggers with amazing accuracy, their joint flight trajectories forming a perfect circle. But not amazing enough. She’s missed Beefy’s head, her intended target; instead of striking the temples of his head, the daggers have clashed into each other and fallen to the ground three yards behind Beefy. She underestimated his speed, his desire.

  If Beefy notices, he doesn’t slow down. Instead, he strides harder, faster. But the sunlight is doing a number on him. His breathing is more laboured, and despite his greater effort, he’s slowed down some. I’m catching up with him.

  Then I hear another whirring sound. Sissy’s thrown another dagger. But I have no idea from which direction it’s coming, the left or the right. Panicked, I swing my head from side to side, a desperate effort to detect a flash of light. But I can’t locate it, can only hear it, the whirr slicing through the air louder and louder.

  The dagger hits Beefy smack in the thigh. Sissy threw this one straight as an arrow at Beefy, head-on. But if anything, the impact, instead of slowing him down, seems to give him strength. He picks up speed and, though limping, is now leaping towards the village. He’ll be there within ten seconds.

  But Sissy’s not done. Still running at us, she takes out her last dagger, gripping it in hand by the blunt side of the blade. In one fluid motion, her arm shoots out from her waist, then up diagonally across her chest, hand facing downward, her wrist flicking upward with the rapid snap of a card dealer. It’s a perfect underhanded throw, a reverse sidearm flick that propels the dagger with speed and aim. Right at us. I duck down.

  Needlessly. The knife catches Beefy in front of me, impaling him square in the chest. Because of the liquefying effect of the sun on him, his body offers little resistance; the dagger disappears into it like a spoon into soup. For only the briefest of moments, he slows; but then he gives an ear-piercing scream and races towards Sissy with renewed vigour, the dagger lost somewhere in his body.

  A glimmering halo suddenly forms around the village. The glass wall of the Dome. It’s emerging. But too late. Beefy will easily clear the wall in a single leap. Once inside the Dome, he will have at it with the hepers, be given free rein. The Dome will become a sunny globe of death, a prison of violence for the hepers trapped inside and, soon after, for him. But he is beyond caring.

  Beefy suddenly slows, screaming, a gurgling, swollen sound. The sun’s getting to him. The gap between us closes. Just as he’s collecting his legs under him to jump over the rising Dome wall, I leap at him. I sideswipe both his legs out from under him; my arm comes away sticky. He spills, crashing into the dirt in a heap.

  His face, when he shoots me a look, is horrific. Pus oozes out from open sores in his skin, milky yellow emulsions that coagulate with the creamy SunBlock Lotion. His upper lip, melted away and detached on one side, hangs on one end, flapping against his cheek. Without the upper lip, his upper teeth are bared now in a perpetual snarl. He wastes little time on me. To him, I am just competition, another hunter to outrace and outeat. He smacks me with the backside of his hand, and I go flying backward. He is already on his feet, running to the closing Dome.

  I’m collapsed on the ground, my head spinning, unable to find my legs.

  He’s much slower. The sun is melting away not only his flesh, but his muscles. His legs have become squishy bags of pus now, his calf and thigh muscles quickly disintegrating. With a cry, he leaps up at the closing glass wall.

  He doesn’t come close. His body slams against the glass no farther than halfway up. When he slides down the wall, his flesh sticks to the glass like melted pizza. Yellow, cheesy, fleshy. He picks himself up, delirious with desire at the sight of Sissy, delirious with anguish at her unreachability. “I can smell you!” he hisses, and takes a few steps back and charges at the wall again. Then he is sliding down again. He slaps his open palms on the glass, hoists his body along the glass. The sticky melt of skin gives him unexpected traction on the glass, and he is crawling up with surprising effect.

  He’s going to make it. The hole at the top of the Dome is closing too slowly. Once he drops down on the inside, he won’t have a lot of time before the sun disintegrates him completely. But the sight and feel and taste of the hepers will give him an adrenaline boost that will let him get to at least a couple of them, if not all of them.

  Sissy sees what’s happening. She barks an order at the others, who scamper into the mud huts. Then she’s spinning around, trying to find a weapon. But there is none, not that one would have helped at this point. But her shoulders don’t slump; her arms tighten, readying for the fight she knows is coming. But her eyes: even from where I lie, I can see fear flood them. Her eyes find mine. For a moment, through the glass of the Dome, our eyes lock. I remember the first time I saw her, through the glass of my deskscreen. It’s the same look. Defiant yet afraid.

  Ben comes flying out of a hut, tears in his eyes, gripping an axe. Sissy takes the axe, barks him back inside. He stays, fists clenched.

  Beefy is halfway up the closing Dome. He’s going to make it, the Dome—

  There’s no time to think or reflect. I just react. I leap to my feet, run to the Dome in seconds. Only one way to catch up to him. I plant my hands and feet in the sticky patches of his skin left on the Dome. Rungs of a ladder made the texture of melted cheese. I scramble up, using the sticky goo for traction.

  Above, at the cusp of the circular opening, he slips down a few yards. He regains his footing. Starts climbing again. My last chance. I leap up, stretching out with my right arm as far as I can. My hand lands on his shin. Quickly, I fasten my fingers into a vice around his ankle. I pull him down a few yards. Then my fingers squeeze through his ankle as if they’re going through warm butter. And then I’m sli
ding down on the glass, a screeching sound that follows me all the way down.

  My grab isn’t enough to drag him down, but it slows him. Just. He scrambles up with a scream filled with lunacy and desperation, towards the closing hole, now no wider than the diameter of a street manhole. He gets one leg into it, is about to swing his body down through the hole, when—

  He doesn’t fit. He squirms his body, torquing it, trying to twist it into the closing hole, but it’s no use. He’s too big. And it closes in on him swiftly like a no-nonsense vice, entrapping him. There’s nowhere to go. He sits atop the Dome, one leg dangling down into the interior, awash in the rays of sunlight.

  The Dome closes completely, slicing off his spongy leg. The leg falls into the interior, exploding on the ground in a yellow spray. His screaming is horrible; silence arrives only after his vocal cords disintegrate into a viscous liquid. And then he is no more. All that remains are yolky streaks of liquid running down the Dome on all sides, like an egg dropped on a bald head.

  I pick myself up. Need to get away. Running on unsteady legs, I suddenly collapse to my knees. I’m doubled over like a beggar doing penance. My insides heave. Then I’m vomiting, all the food and liquids I’d taken in with the hepers gushing out. I get to my feet even as I’m dry heaving. My feet zig and zag against each other, wobbling. One last look at the Dome: Sissy is hurrying into a mud hut, one arm draped across Ben’s back.

  Minutes later, walking to the library, I’m better. I pick up the bottles of water I’d discarded earlier, wash out the sticky grime from my hands. Splash water on my face.

  Capping the bottle, I see the pile of clothes where Ashley June fell. She’d gambled, foolishly, coming out so early. The protective gear was meant for late dusk, not now when the sun still had two hours of life in it. I remember what my escort had told me days ago, how the sight and smells of hepers had driven some staffers to charge out at the Dome in the middle of the day. I’d found it hard to believe back then, but no more.

 

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