Sirius
Orphanage
Chapter
One – Dark Rise
The boy was outside
of the window, looking down from the ledge. A rope was all that held
him in place, but he could not see the bottom below. Darkness had
already fallen down there.
“Ottie, see
anything?” Another boy from inside the building asked.
“No. Too dark down
there,” he responded and pulled himself back up to the ledge with a
flick of the wrist and then he was standing on the ledge and he rope
disappeared up a sleeve. Ottie was just a normal-looking boy in light
blue pajamas again as he climbed through the window.
“Then we have less
than a kilomin before it’s bedtime and lights out,” an older
blonde-haired boy said who the others looked toward and nodded, “That
means if anyone is on deck, or exploring below or out by the water
tower meeting a girl, they need to start back before the stalkers
appear.”
Another older boy
with close-cropped dark hair looked around the common area and
crossed his arms, “I don’t see Danny or Maxwell. These kids...”
“Danny was one
deck below,” a younger boy with a smart-alec sneer, “I think he
said he was playing with a stalker pup.”
The boys groaned and
shook their heads. Imaginary pets were against their code because it
might make one more sympathetic to the stalkers. The oldest boy
looked around and chose one of the younger boys, “Sam, go and find
Danny and drag him back before bedtime.”
The boy nodded and
took off through the far exit of the room.
“Now, does anyone
know where Maxwell is?”
…
The boy was sitting
on the edge of the platform swinging his legs above the abyss far
below as if he had no worries at all. Across a space too large to
jump was a similar platform, both built around very large metal
tanks. A girl, also in pajamas, was sitting on the edge of that one.
“How long do you
think we’ll be here?” she asked.
“Forever
probably,” the boy answered.
She scrunched up her
face, “Maybe we’ll be adopted someday.”
The boy looked
doubtful and frowned, “When’s the last time anyone was adopted
from here? Do you remember the last time anyone even visited?”
She thought and
shook her head, “I don’t remember very far back.”
The boy nodded, he
had already figured out that nobody could remember farther back than
a few solar cycles. It had been his private hobby to investigate
this, it was a slow process and had become a secondary thing since he
had met Loria.
“Do you want to
come over here?” he asked her.
She smiled but shook
her head, “It’s getting late, Max, and if I go over I might not
be able to make myself come back to this side.”
Suddenly another boy
was standing next to Maxwell. Max looked up to see Ottie there
holding a rope that was dancing in the air such as should have been
impossible.
“You should be
heading back,” the boy said, “Hi, Loria.”
“Oh, hello Ottie,”
the girl said starting to stand up, “I think it’s time to go.
Good night Max, I’ll see next time!”
Maxwell was
disappointed, “Ottie, I know what time it is.”
He got up and looked
into the abyss below to see that the darkness had risen farther than
he had realized. He nodded to Ottie, “Are you ever going to teach
anyone else how to do rope magic?”
Ottie looked
offended, “It’s my thing, find your own.”
Maxwell laughed as
they started moving from one platform to another back toward the main
boys building past the water tanks. Then they froze when they looked
back and saw a grayish creature on the top of the one they had just
passed.
“It’s too early
for a stalker!” Maxwell said.
“It’s not
messing with us, though. Not until darkness rises,” Ottie pointed
out.
The wolf-like
creature covered in a grayish exoskeleton paid little mind to them.
It was as if it was enjoying the last bits of light the way someone
might get up really early and look at stars.
“Let’s just
hurry,” Maxwell said. The last part of their journey was a climb of
a few stories back into the building. He looked over to see if Loria
was okay and saw a figure already climbing through a window on that
side.
“Let me do this,
Max. It’s cool,” Ottie said, Max was going to ask what it was but
a rope tightened around his chest and under his arms and both he and
Ottie went airborne all the way to the outside ledge of the proper
floor. Then the rope disappeared again.
“How do you do
that?” Maxwell asked, Ottie just laughed and shrugged.
As they entered the
large bedchamber the other boys were already in their beds and the
light was dimming.
“Hurry! Get in
your bed!” one of the older boys said.
Ottie and Maxwell
had beds on the far end since they were younger, so they took off
running. The room was getting darker and they could hear the other
boys chatter. It was getting dark faster than normal and hey had
almost been late.
Ottie whimpered and
nearly stumbled. Maxwell looked back to see if he was okay and he
could see a dark spot near the entrance. His stomach knotted.
“Stalker!”
someone yelled and the animal looked in that direction, momentarily
distracted.
Maxwell was near his
own bed and was thinking of helping Ottie but then a rope appeared
from the boys sleeve and he was flying through the air towards his
own bed. Rope magic again. Maxwell hopped onto his own bed and pulled
the covers over himself.
Ottie and everyone
was safe. The stalker would pad around the whole chamber for hours
but there was little for it and its pack to do but patrol. Nobody
would dare get out of bed before the twilight.
The only human that
was safe from the stalkers and other threats was the Caretaker. The
Caretaker was a chubby younger man who walked slow and talked slow as
if he were dim-witted. Max knew the guy was probably smart though, he
just wondered if the man was motivated.
Chub had been the
assistant once upon a time. There had been a much older man, Martin,
with a gray beard who had been in charge for a long time. Something
happened one night, though. As far as Max could gather, a boy and a
girl had been caught out in the dark-rise and the old man Martin and
Chub had tried to save them.
Apparently those two
orphans had entered a mirror gate to escape and were never seen or
heard from again. There were more than stalkers around in those days
and Martin had tried to appease the angry creatures who had lost
their prey. He had somehow slipped and fallen down into the abyss.
Maxwell had tried to
formulate a time-line through all of the events. He could not make it
work. As far as he could tell, the passage of time was not uniform at
the orphanage. It seemed impossible but he once tried to calculate
how long he had been there. It came out to sixteen solar cycles,
which was impossible because he was twelve and he had been dropped
off when he was seven.
If sixteen cycles
had really passed Max figured he would be full-grown by now. He
wasn’t and this was proof that his calculations were wrong. Even if
someone were manipulate time and the clocks, they couldn’t mess
with how fast someone grew, right?
Maxwell had always
listened and made mental notes when the older boys spoke. Over time
he had found that Wendell, the oldest, arrived at age nine. The
second oldest kid, the blonde named Ranger said he had been about
ten. But Ranger had arrived first somehow and nobody seemed to see or
understand the discrepancy.
Nuggets of
information collected over a long time was suggesting that time was
not linear, and Maxwell could not wrap his mind around it. It was a
puzzle he was unable to solve and he didn’t dare mention it to
anyone else. It was his thing, like Otties’ rope magic.
…
Chub was on the
deck, at the top of the orphanage. He was peering down into a
circular pit that was like a miniature abyss. A black rope tied off
nearby disappeared into its depths. The Caretaker was waiting for
something to emerge. Finally something did.
A black-colored
version of a stalker pulled itself out of the round abyss and stood
there. The Caretaker nodded.
“Well, Barnabas,
did you detect anything?” Chub asked. In response the creature
whimpered.
The man nodded in a
resigned way, and started pulling the rope back out of the abyss, “I
guess tonight is not the night, then.”
Once the rope was
completely out of the abyss, it disappeared and was once again solid
metal, just another part of the deck. Chub yawned and stretched. The
darkness should be on its way back down soon and the kids would be
awake again. Twilight was always his favorite part of the day, you
could briefly see all of the stars and sometimes the husk would pass
overhead.
Thankfully none of
the kids remembered ever seeing the husk. That would bring forth far
too many questions. Even if they might occasionally steal away to see
the stars, none had so far seen the burned out wreck of space station
that still orbited the abandoned planet.
The only way off
this planet now was through a portal and those were far too
dangerous. Chub could get away with a little occasional exploration
by sending Barnabas through but he shuddered to think about what
would happen if the kids learned of it.
Chub had been
worried when Ottie had found about his rope magic. He had awaited the
rush of kids trying to figure out their own gifts, but none of them
had. It was a relief that most of them was completely disinterested
and continued their routines. The charm had worked to suppress that
normal instinct in humans, that which made a person ask “Why?”
Wendell was nearly
ready to be made Assistant Caretaker. Soon enough he would be taken
off charm and Chub would start showing and telling him about the ways
of this world. Without charm his curiosity would explode of course,
but the answers would anchor him quickly.
Barnabas growled and
looked up at Chub. Chub smiled, “Go home, boy!”
The creature ran off
to join the stalkers and other creatures that fled as the day
returned. Their realm was the darkness. As the creature leaped over
the edge, Chub wondered briefly if it would be back. Except that it
always came back.
The light soon
obscured the stars, their presence between the dark and the light
never lasted very long.
“It’s morning,
time to make a head count and get them breakfast,” Chub said to
himself.
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