Elysium. - Elysium. Part 10
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Elysium. Part 10

Antoine didn't answer. Adrian mumbled something incoherent as they hurried through a swirling mist that gathered around their feet that turned and moved almost as if it were alive. They ran to Antoine's truck parked on the other side of the street. A miasma rose in the distance and the smell was danker. Antoine opened the passenger side door and together he and Hector put Adrian into the back seat. Antoine took a moment to examine Hector. He was about to shove this weird guy to the ground, but then he remembered the loving way Hector had touched his brother in that dark room. Antoine moved to let Hector climb into the passenger seat while he went to the driver's side.

"Where we goin'?" Hector asked once they were on their way.

"Somewhere that's not here."

Ahead of them, a dense cloud was rising. Antoine depended on his memory of the road to drive. Hector mumbled to himself. Every so often Antoine heard him utter words that sounded like "Heh-zeuz," "Chris-toh," and "De-ohs."

"Helen?" Adrian said in a dreamy voice from the back seat.

"Yes, Papi," Hector called back.

"I dreamt I saw my brother again."

"Go back to sleep, okay, honey."

"You'll be here when I wake up?"

"Don't worry, Helen's here, Papi. We be alright," Hector calmly said as he crossed himself.

The sky was streaked with pink as the orange sun dipped into the breast of the earth. A green speck shimmered near the horizon. As they drove they saw more and more cars speeding past them, all going in the other direction. The cloud. The mist. The nothing was spreading. It ate everything it encountered. And yet they were driving right into it.

"Shouldn't we be going the other way?" Hector begged.

"No, it's safer to go into the center."

"Wha, you crazy?"

"Don't distract me right now," Antoine said through gritted teeth. It had been a long day, and there was no end in sight. Adrian was all that mattered, and he was lying in the back seat. Antoine had to take him someplace safe. He wasn't quite sure where that place was.

Antoine pulled over into the breakdown lane and parked. He covered his face with his shirt again and got out of the truck. He stood outside the driver's side door, staring beyond the sparse trees along the highway, into a clear view of a skyline of tall skyscrapers. The squawks of birds echoed overhead as they flew to escape to places unknown. Antoine slammed the truck door shut and went into the trees to relieve himself. Mist descended into the foliage around him. He felt as if he had entered a dream world. He finished and zipped his pants. Antoine turned around to see an elk among the trees. They stared at each other for a long moment, then the elk wandered into the mist and disappeared.

He returned to the truck and found Hector talking over the seat to a more awake Adrian.

"See, I told you he was here," Hector said.

"Antoine?" Adrian said. Then his eyes rolled back into his head, and he leaned sideways. Hector struggled to make sure he landed safely on the seat cushion.

"I don't think he's ready to see you yet," Hector said. "Where you been anyway? This poor kid thought you were dead."

"I nearly was -"

Out of the blue, blue sky a ship flew. It was too fast to be a plane. Then there were more of them. They raced as though piloted by madmen. Their exhaust lines streaked the air in their wake like sheet music. Silver and shiny and soundless, the ships soared directly into the city and slammed into the two highest buildings. Orange plumes mixed with black smoke blossoming into the air.

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"Day-um!" Hector yelled with a shaking pointer finger.

The tallest buildings collapsed, falling down like playing cards. The whole skyline seemed to disappear as smoke billowed upwards, the city dissolving into a sea of dust.

"What is going on?!" Hector cried.

Antoine said, "It's the war come home."

He had seen it when he was over there. They were spreading the dust before they slammed into the buildings. And the dust would change things. It would change people. It would spread outwards to cover everything with its nothingness. He'd be damned if he'd let that happen to his brother. Antoine got back into the truck and started the engine.

"Where we going?"

"To the city."

"Nah uh! Oh no, honey! Not me!"

Hector was reaching to open his door when Antoine grabbed his hand. He was gentle but his eyes were intense.

"We can stay in the truck until some of the smoke clears, but then we have to go into the city. They'll be building a safe place there. They've been doing the same thing in all the major cities overseas. Trust me, I know. We'll be safer in the city."

Hector looked around at the nothingness outside and then at Adrian sleeping in the back seat. He swallowed hard, then nodded.

A city can be silent only when something is not right. The wrongness of the world seeped into the truck along with the bad smell. They had spent three days sleeping on the road, and now they were going into the center of the metropolis. Smoke hovered over the water, making the city appear as though it floated on a cloud. Its crumbling buildings jutted into the air like broken teeth. The lights that once glittered in the night were gone, making the skyline seem draped in shadow.

They crossed over the gothic bridge that rose high above the river. Its cables strained under the weight of all the cars, trucks, and people on it. They drove slowly past those who walked with their faces covered with makeshift masks of ripped clothes or handkerchiefs or bandanas, a parade of the confused covered in dust and the debris of fallen buildings. These were the survivors trying to get home, if home was still there. There was nothing anyone could do. Night was coming, and soon it would be hard to see. God help them if it started to rain.

Before Antoine, Adrian, and Hector was a city in chaos. Buildings were missing and so were people. An eerie scene lay before them of emptiness where things used to be and quiet where the noise of a million voices once filled the air. Adrian was jostled and felt every bump and curve of the road they traveled. He lifted his head, feeling its enormous weight, and it throbbed in time with his pulse. In front of him, he could see that Antoine's shoulders were tense. His fingers gripped the steering wheel as if he could pull it out of its base. Adrian had for so long believed his brother dead that seeing him again was like a wild unbelievable dream. The presence of the beautiful boy who swooped down as if on eagle's wings to pluck him out of the depths filled him with a simultaneous sense of joy and foreboding. He had so many things he wanted to say to his brother. So many words that had formed in his mind. But he held back from speaking.

"I'm hungry," Hector said.

"Yeah, me too," Antoine said and pulled the truck over in front of a small supermarket. Its sign shined a hazy light through the settling dust. A gray shutter-gate was pulled down over the storefront's window, padlocks clamped on either side. Antoine went to the back of the truck and pulled out a crowbar. Hector watched him, shaking his head.

"Papi, I think your brother will make trouble for us."

Adrian sat up and watched as Antoine banged at the locks to the gate. He eventually broke them open and threw the gate up with a loud slam. When he returned to the truck he tossed the crowbar into the back.

"You know, you shouldn't break into other people's shit."

"There's no one here."

"That doesn't make it right."

"Whatever. I'm getting something to eat. Besides we shouldn't stay out here tonight. Help me get him inside."

Hector pursed his lips, but did what he was told and helped to lift the groggy Adrian out of the truck and into the market.

In the corner between the baby things and the feminine hygiene products, where it smelled of oversweet powder and deodorant, they set Adrian down. Hector made a bed out of packages of diapers and watched Adrian curl up in them. He was caressing Adrian's sleeping head when the lights turned on.

"I found the power switches," Antoine shouted from behind a wall.

The store had not been abandoned long. The milk was still cold, and there were plenty of canned goods, packages of dried snacks, and preserved foods in salt and bottles of brine. The refrigerators and their compressors huffed and puffed like overweight children. It felt wrong to just take things off the shelves and open them, but that's what Hector did. A package of peanuts, a bag of chips, a can of soda - then he changed his mind and went for a carton of chocolate milk. Antoine roamed the aisles taking food from the shelves, crinkling bags open and munching as he went. The cocking of a gun caught everyone's attention.

"What are you doing in my store?" a voice said.

Frozen. Speechless. Guilty.

Appearing from a doorway was a man shakily holding a big black gun. He was small and middle-aged and skinny. Dangling at the side of his neck was a dust mask. His hand might have been nervous, but his face was firm.

"This is my store."

"We didn't know," Hector said with a half-eaten bag of peanuts in his hand.

"You knew it was somebody's store."

"Everyone's gone," Antoine said. "We didn't think anyone was here."

"This is my store. I don't leave my own store," the man said.

"We didn't take much," Hector said. "We can leave."

The store owner wore an expression that was a mixture of skepticism and relief.

"You're the Mr. Kim from the sign, right?" Antoine said.

"Yes, I'm Mr. Kim and this is my store. I build this store. I make my business. This is my home upstairs. No one make me leave my home."

Mr. Kim went to the front door and locked it, then shook it hard to make sure it was shut. Hector slowly moved to put a small bag of nuts into his pocket.

"What did you see out there?" Mr. Kim said.

"Like what?" Hector replied.

"Anything? People? Did you see people?"

"We saw some people on the bridge," Hector said.

"You seen anything else?"

"No, just people."

"The people, how'd they seem to you?"

"I didn't see any sign of the disease, if that's what you mean," Antoine said.

"I seen some sick people two days ago," Mr. Kim said. "Very bad ... They will die soon. Very bad."

"What disease?" Hector asked.

"What disease?" Mr. Kim repeated back. "Where you been? Locked up somewhere? What disease? The thing that's been killing everyone."