The walk couldn’t be too long. They were
allowed to reach a big boulder on the top of the hill and then go back almost
instantly. There was no way to really enjoy the moment, although no one got out
for a walk to enjoy themselves. They did it because it was necessary to walk,
to train for longer walks in the future. The funny thing was that the distance
had not change in a year so they couldn’t really know if they were able to do
more in the suits or not.
Helena arrived at the Boulder and looked up,
to the sun. The veil that covered the sky was especially thick that day,
blocking most of the sunlight from arriving to the ground. The sun appeared to
be cold, as if it didn’t care of what had happened. And he certainly didn’t
because everything that had happened had nothing to do with the sun but with
the planet and its inhabitants. They had always been a real danger but no one
ever thought something might actually happen.
The alarm begun. She had enough oxygen to go
back to the Hut and couldn’t waist more time looking at the sun or at the
reddish sky. She wanted the oxygen tank to be bigger, she had asked that
several times. But they couldn’t do it. They had no materials and also no
interest in letting anyone wander to far off. The truth was that the government
of the Hut was not interested at all in reconquering the surface, only in
surviving for a hundred years or more.
When she stepped into the entrance and the
airlock decontaminated the chamber, she felt sad. The world outside was no
different than in the books and the images she had on her computer. Yet, there
was death and desolation all over the place. As a team of people cleaned her
outfit with a variety of chemicals, she wondered if the human race could ever
be what it once was.
As she removed the suit in the next room,
Frank came to talk to her. He was the person that controlled every walk outside
and had some questions, the same questions they always asked people. It was
some kind of an obligatory test for every single person that asked to have a
walk. There weren’t many who did, not all wanted to go back and see what their
house was like now or what the world looked like. Some had actually moved on.
She answered the same as always: there was no
plant life, no animal life, the concentration of particles had not changed and
the deterioration of the different materials was advancing as scheduled. She
was obliged to take pictures but this time she hadn’t taken any. She told the
man it was because her earlier walk had only been a week ago and nothing had
change out there in such a short time.
Frank wasn’t happy about the pictures. He
wasn’t really the boss and he knew someone else would get all over him because
of that. But he didn’t insisted. Helena was one of the few people that dared to
go outside and walk around, they needed her more that she needed them or at
least that was the way he saw it. So he wrote in his report that the camera
inside the suit was damaged and that they hadn’t realized before she had
stepped out. That way, the questions would be less.
Helena thanked him and, walking slowly, she
went directly to the food court. According to her mother, that wasn’t the term
they should use but it was the one promoted by the government. They wanted
people to feel they were in a safe and fun environment, even if it was below
ground. And “food court” was one of those terms that reminisced something good,
or so it seemed, from a long time ago. Everyone ate there although they didn’t
have many options, only one.
As always, the young woman did the line and
the cashier scanned the code on her wrist to check that she hadn’t eaten
earlier. She received her tray and some minutes later she had hot food and was
looking for a place to sit down. Luckily, her friend Patricia was finishing her
meal so she sat down with her. Patricia was alone, as it happened very often.
Many people thought she was obsessed with the outside.
During the following twenty minutes, Helena
discussed with her friend every single thing she had seen outside. Of course,
it was nothing new for the scientific team but it was new to Patricia, who was
not allowed to go outside on mental health grounds. She had always wanted to do
it but from the first time she asked for permission, it was denied. And after
many times trying to apply, they finally told her why they wouldn’t let her
out.
She loved to hear every detail about the
outside and Helena knew how much her friend like her tales so she tried to make
as entertaining as she could. The tale ended when she arrived at the boulder
and looked at the sun. Patricia was smiling and her eyes were full of water.
She told Helena she was very lucky to have seen that because the world, as she
knew, was very beautiful.
Helena did not really know if the world was
beautiful. In theory, it was. The millions of pictures available to them seemed
to tell the story of a bright world were people were happy and lived very
complete lives. Yet, those same people had been the ones to destroy it, her
parents for example. So she always had problems processing that. Besides, the
world outside was dead and no sign of that beauty remained.
After lunch, both women went through the
Market. It was a large and long corridor filled with different stores. Each one
of them sold something different, so there was no competition. And the amount
of things each store sold was very limited. Yet, most people loved to stroll
around to check if they had pulled out something new from their vaults or
something. People still had hope that things would change suddenly, even if they
hadn’t changed at all for so long.
But that day, the fifth store on the left was
filled with people in front of it trying to look for something the vendor had
put in display. It was the store that sold paintings and pictures and such
things. Most of the things the man there sold were made by him or his family.
But the little image in the transparent urn he had put on display was something
another walker, the people that go outside, had found in a recent walk.
When they were able to get closer, Helena and
Patricia realized the image was very small. It was a black and white
photography, probably a very old one. It pictured three baby boys, or so it
seemed. One of the babies was crying, while the other two held hands and were
apparently playing with some cubes with letters. The most intriguing part of
the image was a shadow behind the crying baby. It seemed to be the arms of an
adult, or maybe the legs.
They could only see the picture for a while
before those who had just arrived pushed them aside to have a look. They talked
about the picture all the way to the dormitories, wondering if the shadow
behind the babies was really another person or maybe even an animal. It was a
very weird picture too: who would take a photo of a crying baby instead of
taking a look at what he needed.
Patricia concluded that it might have been a
fake. Maybe the vendor had taken the picture and he said they had found it
outside. That was very hard to do, thought Helena, but not impossible. They
separated in a corridor, as Helena lived further ahead and Patricia lived one
floor below. They committed to see each other the next day and then parted
ways. Not a minute had passed when Helena fell to the ground.
A very large, very powerful earthquake was
shaking every single part of the complex. It had been built for that but that didn’t
mean people wouldn’t get scared. It was the first one in a long while. Helena
could hear screaming behind the doors, where people lived. When it stopped, she
stood up fast and ran towards her home. But she never made it there. A general
alarm was issued: the compound had been breached.
No one knew what that meant. Was it toxic gas
or something like that? What did they mean with “breach”? Helena wasn’t sure
she wanted to find out but, instead of going to check on her mother, she
decided to turn around towards the laboratory. She had to know what was going
on.