TANGO Heavy - Chapter 12
Added 2021-02-28 19:24:47 +0000 UTCFirst Patreon advance chapter for this story! If you haven't read this story yet, you can find the first >11< chapters on RoyalRoad / Scribblehub, which I would recommend, because the 'Early release' ones here are very outdated and don't have the menus.
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The howling of the snowstorm outside was becoming louder and louder to Pen’s sensitive ears. Quietly, they walked on down the way that the large man had chosen, neither of them speaking a word that might break the awkward tension present between them now. Pen was exhausted, her body hurt and her heart ached now as well. The memory of the splendor of the majestic view, that she had earned through her suffering, was now rubbed and smeared and covered with this new, unpleasant feeling. The frigid, mountain winds continued on to blow. What season was it? She had no idea. They had been walking for hours now.
Wasn’t it always cold on mountains? Or was it winter and it was colder than usual? She didn’t know. The last season she remembered keeping track of was summer, but that was years ago. Since then she had no idea, there was little to see through the blanket. Little to feel in the dank air of old warehouses and tunnels. The backs of carts and the insides of crates. It all felt the same. The body became numb, as did the spirit. It all felt the same. The wind howls. All the while the winding steps of the giant audibly make themselves heard around her, as the machinery lifts and pushes with silent, pressurized hisses with every step. The one thing she did have was good ears. But good ears can be a curse too, they can let you hear too much. Things that aren’t meant for your ears. Dark truths.
“-ink there’s something up ahead,” says the voice. Pen snaps out of her daze, the vague images that were unable to properly form in her mind’s eye, now all fading away at once as she snaps upward, her dark-patterned daydream now dispelled.
“What?” she asks, not even sure if she wants to.
“I said there’s something up ahead, look,” says Tango. Pen’s eyes rise up to the window immediately, but all she sees is a white flurry raging around them. Occasionally a glimpse of a rocky outcrop, or some dead shrub barely withstanding the freezing weather would make itself seen. But slowly, as they kept walking, she saw it too. Her eyes were bad at seeing things that were far away, but somehow the little window made things clear for her. It was as if the far away things were right in-front of her face. The vague jumble of shapes comes into form behind the thickly surging white. The gale that was pelting it through the air not relenting for a second; as if it were determined to bury them both on the mountainside.
A giant, rocky outcrop stands out from the core of the mountain. A wall of stone with a hole in it. A passage. It looks as if there was a sheer, solid mountain-face in front of them, one that towered up on high. But something had cut a perfectly round cylinder through the stone. As if a god had simply, in their boredom, pushed a single finger through the titanous cliffside, letting them see through to the other-side of the passage. Though there was little to see, beyond the thick flurry of snow that had piled up on the entrances. A sheet of ice loosely hangs on either side of the tunnel.
Pen stares in fascination, as Tango keeps moving forward.
“We should take shelter here for now, until the storm subsides,” suggests Tango. “I could probably make it down the mountain if I had to, but it’s better to be safe than sorry.”
Pen doesn’t say anything.
They approach a sheet of ice, the small wall climbing up high up to their waist. But Tango simply walks through it and she can hear a shattering around them, as they step into the tunnel. Immediately it becomes quieter. Thankfully, the wind is blowing in the opposite direction. She imagined it would be quite unpleasant if it sheared straight through this perfectly cylindrical passage. How odd. She scanned the screen. She had never seen anything like it. Though, that was not a surprise.
At least it was quiet. The howling of the raging winter storm outside, the shearing of the winds, both of them now were held at bay by the thick stone surrounding them. They were back underground in a sense and that made her uneasy, but at least from here she could still see the world outside. It wasn’t so bad. They push in deeper into the tunnel. Tango’s hand slides along the wall as he walks, she can hear it running along the stones. Something loud clicks in front of her causing her to flinch as a light turns on, shining out from their front to illuminate the way.
Tango stops. She looks.
The perspective in the window turns, panning towards the left-hand wall of the smooth tunnel, where there is an opening. It is dark beyond what they can see. Both of them are quiet for a moment.
“Should we go in?” asks Tango.
Pen looks away from the window, her arms crossed.
“Well?” asks the bot.
“Don’t care,” mumbles Pen, tucking her knees up under her chin and wrapping her arms around them.
“You should,” says Tango.
“Do whatever you want, I don’t care,” pouts the girl.
“I want to know what my partner thinks,” responds Tango.
Pen’s eyes shift upwards, but she doesn’t release her position. They stare at each other for a while. “Doesn’t matter what I say, you’re in charge,” says Pen. She knows better than to fight back now that she is the lesser. She knows what happens to those who did.
“No I’m not, we’re working together. You help me, I help you,” said the man’s voice ringing in her ears.
Her eyes rolled before she closed them again, keeping them that way. What a bunch of nonsense. Someone was always in charge. Someone always held the leash. Someone always tightened the straps. She didn’t need to say anything. He probably already made his choice and was just waiting for her to say something against it. To use those words against her. She should have left him asleep. No. No… then she would be dead now too, along with him. Whatever. She didn’t care anymore, thought the girl, her mind frazzled and burnt out. The wind howls, quietly now, off in the distance outside of the tunnel.
A minute passes, silence. Then another. Then another. The radiating heat of the cabin and her weak, starved and malnourished body make her deeply sleepy, but she keeps her mind aware. She doesn’t want to sleep again. They still stand there, not moving. Another minute passes. Warily, she opens her left eye and peeks up to the bauble without moving her head, so that he doesn’t see.
“I’m not moving till you tell me which way you want to go,” says Tango.
Quickly she closes her eye again.
So they stand there. The wind howls. She listens to it off in the distance, it sounded so cold and so deathly. The hairs on the back of her neck stood on end, as the fresh memory of the ruins below came to her. Her body was still covered in the fresh, aching wounds. It was one day. It all happened in one day. Everything. All of this. The wind reminds her of that, its whispering voice reminds her of the bad places. Of the bad people. All of them were always filled with whispers. With hisses. They were always cold. Soon another half-hour passes. They still stand there. Her body hurt. Everything hurt. The whispering voice of the wind reminded her of that. Of how much everything hurt. She didn’t want to hear it anymore.
Pen opens her eyes, keeping her gaze low. “Go left,”
“What’s that?” asks Tango.
The girl looks up to the bauble, clenching her fists, her eyes now fuming. “GO LEFT!” she yells at the eye, not caring anymore. It didn’t matter. Pen sat back down, expecting their forward march straight down the tunnel to continue, now that she had made her desire clear. Now that there was a string of hers that could be cut. A plea of hers that could be ignored. A hope that could be crushed. That’s why they did it after all. That’s why all of them did it.
They go left.
Pen looks up at the window, as they go down this new way. The little light on the front of the bot piercing the darkness. He actually went left she thinks, shocked.
“I wanted to go left too, actually. Glad you agree,” says the voice above her. Huh?
She looks at the window. What was happening here? Why was he going left?
“That’s what partners do,” says the voice around her, as if reading her mind. “I listen to you, you listen to me and if we don’t agree we can talk it out. If we do… well then we can go left,” explains the disembodied man. “We work together. I help you. You help me,” he finished.
Hearing those words, Pen felt a strange sense of Déjà vu that she couldn’t quite explain. Something small touches her chest, curious she places a hand on the disturbance. It was the small ring that she had found before, still tucked away securely in her dress’ pocket. She fumbled around with it through the fabric, trying to make sense of the foggy fragments of memory that she couldn’t quite see anymore.
They stop.
“Will you look at that,” says Tango. At the command, Pen’s head snaps upward to look instinctively, immediately, her heart skipping a beat. But then her mind catches up. It wasn’t a command. He was just talking. Her eyes went to the window. The small streaming lights emitting out from the body of the bot brought the dead-end of the short passage into view. It wasn’t a side tunnel, it was just a little bubble inside the stone that someone or something had carved a long time ago. A small metal box sits before them, illuminated by their glow.
“I wonder…” says the man idly, as he reaches forward towards it. His hand reaches it, but nothing happens. “Ah, dang. Well, I guess it is ancient, and it's been sitting out here for who knows how long. Too bad. Well, at least it’s not a total loss.”
Pen had no idea what the man was talking about.
“Check it out,” says the voice as they turn to the side, to look at the right side wall of the stone chamber they were inside. A tiny concrete structure that looked like it belonged to the first-people sat there against the wall. It was ancient. Forgotten and dilapidated. Next to it was a simple round pit, around which a tiny ankle high layer of bricks had been laid in a circular pattern. The inside is filled with frozen water.
“What is it?” asks Pen, now too curious to resist.
“I’m not sure, this must have happened after my time. It looks like a little outpost really. Maybe they tried to take back facility nine from here.”
He walks towards the tiny structure nested into the wall. It is rectangular with rounded corners. A series of thin windows line the solid gray walls, looking out over the empty space here now. Nothing stirs behind them, as Tango’s light shines through their time-aged panels.
“I’d like to stop here till the storm passes, is that okay with you?” asks Tango.
Pen fidgets with her fingers and loosens her posture a little, waiting for the hammer to drop. But nothing happens.
“Okay…”
Comments
Please enjoy, friend! I'm having a lot of fun with this one. It's kind of a different vibe, but also everything is still terrible, so it isn't too different haha
2021-03-02 15:19:11 +0000 UTCwill go wander over to Royal Road, new story thanks :)
Shadowsmage
2021-03-02 14:36:59 +0000 UTC