Tube Riders, The (9 page)

Read Tube Riders, The Online

Authors: Chris Ward

Tags: #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Science Fiction, #Adventure, #Dystopian, #Genetic Engineering, #Teen & Young Adult

‘Well, what the fuck do we do then?’

They were relying on her. If they hadn’t needed a leader before, they did now. She looked around, thinking quickly. She saw the train’s lights approaching the tunnel mouth, looked the other way and saw the glow of the red stop light in the far tunnel. There was another rumble coming from that direction, too.

‘We have to get across the tracks,’ she said. ‘That train stops to let one through the other way. If we can get across, this one will cover us and we can ride the next one back. Hurry!’

‘The train’s coming!’ Paul shouted.

Marta heard the sound of rapid footsteps on the stairs behind them. ‘We have to jump across!’ she shouted.

‘I ain’t no fucking Cross Jumper–’

‘Just
do
it, Switch!’ Marta screamed. ‘And the rest of you! Jump or we’re dead!’

Jess and Simon didn’t need another warning. They sprinted for the platform edge and leapt out, easily landing on the far side. Paul landed just behind them, stumbling and rolling over. Marta glanced back to see the men halfway down the stairs, all now with guns in their hands. She turned and sprinted for the platform edge.

As she leapt out across the track, she looked to her left and saw twin eyes of light rushing towards her. She stared in terror. From this angle the train looked like some giant beast, rushing forward to crush her.

She hit the far platform just as the train broke from the tunnel. As she rolled, she looked back and shouted, ‘Switch!’

The little man hung in mid air between the platforms, legs and arms flailing like a bizarre cartoon caricature, his face was caught in a grimace of pain. Time seemed to stand still for a moment, and then there was a crack behind him. A gun muzzle flashed. The train was huge and just feet away; there was no way he could make it–

–yet he did, landing and rolling on the platform beside Marta as the train rumbled past them. He jerked and sat up, one hand reaching for the injury on his back, the other rubbing his left foot, now shoeless.

‘I don’t believe it,’ he muttered, wincing in pain.

Behind them Paul and Simon were already on their feet, Simon dragging Jess along behind him.

‘Come on,’ Paul said. ‘They’ll have a clear shot in about five seconds.’

As one train rushed past, another roar built up in the adjacent tunnel, on the opposite side. A moment later it surged along the platform, going far faster, not stopping.

‘Go!’ Paul shouted, racing for the train, Simon and Jess just behind him.

‘Come on, hero,’ Marta said to Switch, pulling the little man to his feet.

‘It ate my fucking shoe,’ he muttered, grabbing his clawboard off the platform and following after her. ‘I liked those shoes!’

As Marta jumped and caught, she looked back towards the far platform, revealed now that the other train had vanished into the tunnel. She counted six men there, standing still, watching them. The guns had disappeared, as though they knew they couldn’t shoot without risking the lives of the passengers inside the train. One man at the front lifted a hand, pressed two fingers to his temple and then pointed them at her.

I’ll remember you
, that gesture said.

Switch caught just behind her, and Marta felt the vibration of his landing shake the rail. As the train entered the tunnel and darkness surrounded them, the image of the six dark men fixed itself in her mind together with the image of the dead man whose face was now just a memory.

As they raced out of sight, she couldn’t quite get her head around what they had seen or what had happened. She knew, though, that Dreggo and the Cross Jumpers were now the least of their worries.

 

             

 

 

 

Chapter Nine

Enemies

 

As the train’s rumble receded into the tunnel, Dreggo looked up as the other Cross Jumpers crowded around her. Maul lay in front of her, his skin pallid, his body already cooling as the blood thickened and dried around him. Her heart rose and fell in her chest, pushing bile towards her mouth, wanting her to choke.

Maul, her friend. Dead. She didn’t love him, but as he lay before her she wondered what she did feel. He would have loved her had she let him, and in his brutish way he would have taken care of her. On the outside he was an animal, but he would have treated her well, respected her.

And he was dead.

She had brought her Cross Jumpers here to start a war with the Tube Riders, and she had found them more cunning than she had anticipated. To ride off into the tunnels like that was a masterstroke. They had time to go to ground now and it would take at least a few days to track them down. She could have handled them escaping, though. It was humiliating, but that was how wars were fought. But to escape mostly unharmed, leaving one of her own dead, one close to her at that ...

‘Are you sure they aren’t back in the tunnel?’ she asked the closest Cross Jumpers, her voice cracked and hoarse.

‘No,’ said one called Spacewell, a skinny weirdo who made his money from petty theft. ‘They’ve gone. There’s no sign of any bodies back there either.’

‘Okay.’ She glanced back at Maul. ‘Let’s get him over to the tracks.’

Three men came forward to drag Maul’s heavy body away. Others just stood around, their knives and clubs at their sides, their eyes on the ground. Dissent was brewing. Dreggo had become leader of the Cross Jumpers through the code, and she had reinforced her leadership with acts of wanton violence. She ruled through fear, and they knew now what she could do with a knife. But dissent was growing nonetheless. She had brought them here, and now Maul was dead, for nothing.

As the three men pushed Maul’s body down on to the tracks, Dreggo turned to the other Cross Jumpers.

‘Listen up.’ Faces turned towards her, but they were angry, mutinous. ‘We came here today to give them an ultimatum. You all heard me offer them a chance at freedom. Didn’t you?’

There were one or two murmurs of agreement.

‘They didn’t need to fight. All they had to do was give up what they had, and walk away. Simple.
They
wanted the fight.’

‘No. No, they didn’t.’

Dreggo’s eyes bored into the assembled group.

‘Who said that?’

‘I did.’ A black-haired girl near the back raised her hand. Even at this distance Dreggo could see it was shaking. The hand belonged to Bethany, a former prostitute, now a night worker in a supermarket. ‘They didn’t want to fight,
you
wanted to fight.’ One or two others grunted in agreement.

Dreggo glared at her, and then let her gaze fall on the other stony faces. ‘Does what we do mean nothing to you people? Do you not understand what it means to be a Cross Jumper?’

‘We have violence above ground,’ said Matty, a shoplifter. ‘We didn’t come here for this.’

Dreggo’s mouth fell open. ‘Wake up, you idiots! Open your eyes! Maul is dead now because he believed in what we have! The Tube Riders were a legend, but the Cross Jumpers can become an even bigger legend!’

‘Whatever,’ Matty said. ‘Some of us don’t care about being a fucking
legend
.’

A knife appeared in Dreggo’s hand. ‘Is that so? You were happy to watch that Tube Rider die yesterday. Yet when it comes to fighting for your cause, you give up? How about I cut you open and see if you have a spine?’

She only had one knife left. There were more than twenty of them. There were secrets about her past that none of them knew, but that was too many even for her.

‘Some of us love what we do,’ said another voice. ‘But we didn’t want this. We didn’t want a turf war. Why don’t
you
leave? Go make your own legend.’

She looked for the speaker, and found him standing at the back.

Billy Lees, the man she had replaced.

Her anger boiled over, and before she could stop herself, she whipped her hand over, the knife whizzing through the air. It struck Billy in the neck with a soft thud, handle deep. He made a sound like a gurgling drain, his breath cut off, and staggered backwards, hands scrabbling for the knife. As his dying fingers knocked against the handle blood began to spray in little bursts, like a water pipe split by a hot sun. He staggered backwards a few steps and keeled over. His body writhed on the platform, his legs kicking out at the tiles. The others stared in horror, but not one person moved to help him. After a few seconds he fell still.

Behind Dreggo, a train raced out of the tunnel and roared past them, causing a soft popping noise as it struck and dragged away Maul’s body. Dreggo felt a well of regret fill her stomach as she remembered they should have had a farewell ceremony in honour of him. His body was gone now, his memory forever tainted.

‘Okay, leave,’ Dreggo shouted, waving towards the stairs. ‘You’re not Cross Jumpers, you’re cowards. Maul would have spat on you, all of you. Go on. Get on with your lives somewhere else.’

There was a murmur from the group as the backmost members of the crowd began to shuffle away towards the stairs. Few wanted to turn their backs on her, so to hurry the moment she did it for them, turning away and stalking back up the platform towards where Maul’s blood stained the ground. She knelt down and dipped her finger in it, feeling the stickiness, still warm.

Dreggo did not cry, but Maul had been her friend. She hadn’t loved him but she had respected him, appreciated his kindness. Now, her group, her identity, had been disbanded. There was blood on her conscience, and blood on her hands. And all because of
them
.

She clenched her fists and slammed them against the tiles, once, twice, three times, until tiny cracks appeared. No matter. She would hunt the Tube Riders herself, and one by one they would die. Then, and only then, would she start a new order of Cross Jumpers.

She looked back towards the stairs, and found the platform empty. Billy Lees’s body still lay where it had fallen. She took hold of one of his limp arms and dragged him over to the platform edge.

‘You were a coward, but at least you stood up to me,’ she told his dead eyes. ‘That in itself makes you deserving of a Cross Jumper burial.’ She put one foot on his chest and shoved him down on to the tracks. Then she turned away, the last living person in St. Cannerwells Underground station.

Dan had told her there were only four Tube Riders, but she had seen five. The punky girl Marta had been their leader. That was without question. The one with the jippy eye who had murdered Maul and the fat guy had ridden pretty well. Then there was the couple, the pretty boy and the cute, homey-looking girl with the neat hair and the nice clothes. It had to be her, she had to be the new one. She had looked more tentative, more uncertain than the others. The others looked like street kids, and might live anywhere, maybe even moving from place to place. But the homey girl, she probably had a proper home. If Dreggo could find her, she would find the others.

She rubbed the side of her head, just above her eye, and for a moment her hair lifted up a fraction, revealing a cluster of wires that disappeared into her skin just above her ear.

Feeling a renewed sense of purpose, she moved across the platform to where she’d first seen the girl standing, looking for a scent.

#

The older of the two men in the DCA uniforms rubbed his chin thoughtfully, his grey eyes narrowed. In front of them, the rails still hummed from the recently departed train.

The taller, younger of the two said, ‘Tell me that didn’t just happen, Clayton. Tell me we didn’t just get interrupted by a bunch of kids with a fucking digital camera. You think they got footage of that?’

Leland Clayton began to massage the bridge of his nose. He glanced back towards the stairs, where the other four men had gone on his orders to start cleaning up the mess that his gun had caused. He lowered his voice, aware that echoes could carry in a place like this. ‘Are you aware who those …
kids
were, Vincent?’

Adam Vincent shook his head. ‘Meth heads, runaways, what does it matter? They saw us kill the Ambassador, and they might have got digital footage of it. That’s a big problem.’

‘They were Tube Riders.’

‘What?’

Clayton put a hand inside his coat and pulled out a little pamphlet magazine, sixteen pages in black and white. The single word title identified it as
VOICE
. It was an illegal magazine printed and fastened in some filthy squat somewhere and distributed with the main intent of talking shit about the government. Clayton made a point of getting his hands on such things as it made the perpetrators easy to track down. There were always clues in the pages somewhere, and while Clayton was no latter day Sherlock Holmes he had a pretty good reputation for flushing out rebels and revolutionaries.

‘Page thirteen or fourteen, I believe. It’s just a little article in amongst all the government hate bullshit.’

‘The Tube Riders?’ Vincent muttered, scanning the poorly copied, unaligned text.

‘Come on, Vincent. I’m sure even you’ve heard of them.’ Clayton, who enjoyed a good ghost story, smiled. ‘People say they’re ghosts, demons, the souls of train suicides.’ He shrugged. ‘But they’re not. As we’ve just seen, the Tube Riders are just a group of kids.’

‘Look, Clayton,’ Vincent said, handing the magazine back. ‘I don’t give a fuck who they were. I want to know what we’re going to do about it.’

Clayton turned towards the younger man. Adam Vincent, while not quite fresh off the DCA boat was still a junior officer. With his spiked, mullet hair, know-it-all swagger and disrespectful attitude, Clayton, who considered himself a tolerant person, had taken an instant dislike to the man directly beneath him in order of seniority. His grizzled, pockmarked face was set, his eyes suddenly hard. ‘Don’t make me remind you of your rank, Vincent,’ he said.

For once, Vincent looked sheepish, his cheeks reddening. ‘I’m just, you know, saying that this talk isn’t doing us any good. We have to find them. Eliminate them.’

‘I’m aware of that.’

‘So what’s the plan of action?’

‘Let me speak to the Governor first.’

‘Is that wise?’ Vincent shook his head. ‘Do we even have time? If they have digital footage of that hit they’re capable of starting a goddamn war.’

Clayton nodded. ‘I know. But while we’re on government orders we have a duty to make a report.’ For a moment he felt a pang of fear. The thought of an audience with the Governor was something that could keep him awake at night. ‘We have to follow procedure, Vincent. Trying to clean up this mess without the Governor knowing could be the death of all of us.’ He sighed. ‘First though, let’s get that body down onto the tracks as planned.’

 

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