The Golden City

The Golden City by John Twelve Hawks Read Free Book Online Page B

Book: The Golden City by John Twelve Hawks Read Free Book Online
Authors: John Twelve Hawks
Tags: Science Fiction/Fantasy
map might show us how to find the tunnel entrance.”
    Maya’s fingers tapped nervously on the sword handle. Her passageway back to the Fourth Realm was in the middle of the river. On two occasions, she swam out and attempted to find it, but the current was too strong and she barely had enough strength to return to the shore. She had no idea what existed in the shadow lands on the other side of the water, but she couldn’t remain on the island. As time passed, her body grew weaker. Eventually, the wolves would hunt her down.
    “So why haven’t you taken this map and escaped?” she asked.
    “I need your help.” Pickering looked down at his ragged pants and mismatched shoes. “It’s not easy to get into the room.”
    One part of his story was true: there was a library in the city. Maya had walked past the ruins several times, but had never gone inside. As she wandered around the island, she kept finding little bits of reality in the rubble; if shopping lists and school report cards had survived, then there might be a map that showed a way out.
    This sudden feeling of hope was so powerful, so unexpected, that she was unable to speak or move. It was like finding a red ember in acold fireplace, a speck of warmth and light that could grow and fill a room.
    “All right, Pickering. Let’s go to the library.”
    “I’d be happy to guide you there. And if we find the right kind of map—”
    “Then we’ll leave the island together.”
    “I hoped you would say that.” The little man grinned. “No one else on this island will keep a promise, except you.”
    Maya shoved the desk back against the wall and followed Pickering out of the office. They climbed down the building’s circular staircase and stepped onto a street littered with rubble and the blackened shells of torched cars. Pickering’s head jerked back and forth. He was like a small animal that had just left its burrow.
    “Now what?”
    “Stay close and follow me.”
    A thicket of dead trees and thorn bushes was a one end of the island, but it was dominated by a ruined city. Maya had given names to the different locations: there was the insurance building, the schoolyard and the theatre district. She tried to imagine what the city had looked like before the fighting started. Were there ever leaves on the trees? Did the trolley actually roll down the central boulevard and did a conductor ever ring its little brass bell?
    Pickering had a different vision of Hell. He ignored the few remaining sign posts, but appeared to know the location of every gas flare that roared fire and smoke from a broken pipe. His city was comprised of different intensities of darkness and light. For most of their journey, he remained in a shadow land, avoiding the flares as well as the black tunnels where someone might be hiding. “This way … This way …” he hissed, and Maya had to run to keep up with him.
    They entered a looted department store filled with smashed displaycases and a pile of dress mannequins. The mannequins were smiling as if pleased by the destruction. When Pickering reached the store entrance, he looked out at the library across the street. The library was designed in the same neo-classical style as the other public buildings in the city. It looked like a Greek temple that had been attacked in a bombing raid. Some of the marble columns had been reduced to rubble while others leaned against each other like dead trees in an overgrown forest. A large statue had once stood guard at the base of the outer staircase, but all that remained were sandaled feet and the hem of a stone toga.
    “We have to cross the street,” Pickering explained. “They may see us.”
    “Keep moving. I’ll handle any problems.”
    Pickering took three quick breaths like a man about to dive underwater, and then dashed across the street. Maya followed him, walking slowly and deliberately to show that she wasn’t afraid.
    She found Pickering hiding behind one of the columns, and they

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