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I wake with dust in my mouth again. Bitter, dry, metallic-like I've been
chewing rust. The wind must've kicked in last night while we slept. It
always finds a way in, no matter how tightly we seal the crates. I spit into
the corner and roll over.
Gray.
Everything is gray.
The metal walls of our shelter groan like they're mourning the sun. Outside,
it's probably another dead-skied morning-where clouds hang like bruises
and the wind smells like ash. The Regime calls it "Atmospheric Stability."
Toma calls it "a slow death."
I call it home.
"Reya," he mutters beside me, his voice muffled under an old army tarp.
"You're grinding your teeth again."
"I wasn't asleep," I whisper.
A beat. Then his head pokes out, copper hair sticking up like a flame. "That's
worse."
We sit in silence. It's not peaceful. Not really. Silence is dangerous in the
Dustlands. It means someone's listening. Or someone died.
Toma stretches and tosses me a piece of salvaged tech-a busted comm
chip from the northern zones. "Found this near the silo wreckage. Could
still have intel on it. Maybe coordinates."
"Or it could blow off your hand next time," I say.
He grins. "Then I'll be half the burden."
I want to laugh. I almost do. But the weight in my chest doesn't move. It's
there every morning-like something's watching. Waiting. Like the silence
is alive.
"Did you hear anything last night?" I ask.
Toma tilts his head. starvation?"
"You mean, besides your stomach fighting off
I shake my head. "No. Something... else. Like a whisper."
He pauses. His eyes sharpen. "You're serious?"
"I think it said my name."
Outside, a Regime drone hums past-low and slow like a predator sniffing
the dirt. We freeze. We always do. The hum fades into the distance,
swallowed by the wind.
He exhales. "You're dreaming again."
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I wake with dust in my mouth again. Bitter, dry, metallic-like I've been
chewing rust. The wind must've kicked in last night while we slept. It
always finds a way in, no matter how tightly we seal the crates. I spit into
the corner and roll over.
Gray.
Everything is gray.
The metal walls of our shelter groan like they're mourning the sun. Outside,
it's probably another dead-skied morning-where clouds hang like bruises
and the wind smells like ash. The Regime calls it "Atmospheric Stability."
Toma calls it "a slow death."
I call it home.
"Reya," he mutters beside me, his voice muffled under an old army tarp.
"You're grinding your teeth again."
"I wasn't asleep," I whisper.
A beat. Then his head pokes out, copper hair sticking up like a flame. "That's
worse."
We sit in silence. It's not peaceful. Not really. Silence is dangerous in the
Dustlands. It means someone's listening. Or someone died.
Toma stretches and tosses me a piece of salvaged tech-a busted comm
chip from the northern zones. "Found this near the silo wreckage. Could
still have intel on it. Maybe coordinates."
"Or it could blow off your hand next time," I say.
He grins. "Then I'll be half the burden."
I want to laugh. I almost do. But the weight in my chest doesn't move. It's
there every morning-like something's watching. Waiting. Like the silence
is alive.
"Did you hear anything last night?" I ask.
Toma tilts his head. starvation?"
"You mean, besides your stomach fighting off
I shake my head. "No. Something... else. Like a whisper."
He pauses. His eyes sharpen. "You're serious?"
"I think it said my name."
Outside, a Regime drone hums past-low and slow like a predator sniffing
the dirt. We freeze. We always do. The hum fades into the distance,
swallowed by the wind.
He exhales. "You're dreaming again."