Tag: #PostApocalyptic

  • The Prophet of Order

    The Prophet of Order

    Salim stepped towards him and stopped two paces away.

    “Who are you?”

    “Ged Quinn,” Harvey replied at once, keeping the same steady tone.

    “Where do you come from?”

    “I came from Woolwich Arsenal. I had a transit permit heading east. I was looking for work. Repairs, transport, whatever turned up. I belong to no one. I’ve got no people, no weapon. Just a passport.”

    Salim studied him for a long moment. He did not seem interested in the answers. He was searching for something else.

    “And you entered King’s Cross St. Pancras alone?”

    “Yes, sir.”

    “Without announcing yourself?”

    “I came through the eastern routes and passed inspection before entering. They checked me and let me through. If you have doubts, ask the men at the checkpoint.”

    Salim took a single step to the side.

    “You can still be saved,” he said quietly. “You have not yet been chosen by those who will perish.”

    He drew a book from the satchel on his back.

    The Qur’an.

    Its cover was black, worn at the corners, yet carefully preserved.

    “You see, Ged, the Tube is sick. People hide in corners, trade loyalties for a bowl of food, and sell one another another day of life. Where there is faith, there is order. Law is not something to be negotiated.”

    Harvey remained motionless.

    “The Iron Legion will not wait for chaos to return,” Salim continued. “We will not remain trapped in stations ruled by drunkards, thieves, and men who mistake freedom for disorder.”

    His voice dropped lower.

    The room seemed smaller now.

    “We will decide what remains.”

    “Oxford Circus. A monument to fallen pride. They still believe they are the centre of the network.”

    “Canada Water. A crossroads of smugglers and lawless traders.”

    “Liverpool Street. A junction that survives on fear.”

    “Stratford. They still dream of power.”

    “Wapping. A refuge for fugitives and doubt.”

    “Aldgate East. Too close to the centre and too far from order.”

    “Green Park. A weary council clinging to the illusion of stability.”

    Salim fell silent and looked at Harvey once more.

    “All of them will fall. Not through fire. Through order.”  

  • Chapter 7: The Border Office

    Chapter 7: The Border Office

    Adrian was left empty-handed, exposed under the flickering light of the lamp. The sentry continued to keep his weapon aimed at him. Motionless. Calm. As if time itself were waiting for a single error. The other guard, who was bulkier, wore a filthy maroon beret and seemed even harder to read. From the shadow beneath the vault, only his eyes emerged—a cold blue that did not seek submission, but rather fissures. The air was becoming increasingly heavy. Adrian could barely feel the platform beneath his boots. Only their stares. One distant, the other direct to the point of brutality.  

    A faint rustling was heard from behind, perhaps a delayed echo from the platform, perhaps a gust of wind lost through the tunnel. The inner gate had just opened. The sound instantly clenched his stomach. He understood then that he had entered the station. But that brought no peace. Only a different kind of pressure. Beneath London’s buried network, bureaucracy had become a more efficient form of control than weapons. The passport, a simple, crudely laminated A4 sheet, replaced any trace of identity. For those without old documents, without a name in the pre-war registers, that filthy piece of paper was the sole proof that they still belonged to a station and not to the darkness between them.  

    Suddenly, the heavy iron door opened with a metallic crash that shattered the silence of the room. In the doorway appeared a massive man, bald, with dark skin and thick eyebrows that darkened his gaze even further. The uniform hung heavily on his shoulders, but his authority did not come from it. It came from the way he occupied the space. His eyes locked onto Adrian. For a second, his expression remained rigid, then something cracked.  

    “Good God… Adrian?”  

    The voice struck the room with the force of a memory suddenly brought to light. The man took a step forward. Adrian was now looking directly at him, the tension still present in his body, but transformed into something else. Confusion. Relief. Disbelief. He stood up as much as his chains allowed.  

    “It’s still me, Leroy,” he said softly. “Just a few years older.”  

    Leroy stood motionless for a moment, then approached and pulled him into a brief, rigid embrace. The chains rattled between them, cold and awkward, but for the first time since he had entered the station, Adrian managed to breathe without feeling that every inhalation could be misinterpreted.  

    “How are you, my friend?” Adrian asked. “You look well.” His voice was still tense, but more stable.  

    Leroy smiled briefly. “I’m well. And I’m glad you’re not dead.” Then his expression vanished immediately as he turned to the soldier by the table. “Unlock him. Can’t you see I know him?” The tone left no room for hesitation.

  • Excerpt from Chapter Two: Between Fire and Darkness 

    Excerpt from Chapter Two: Between Fire and Darkness 

    “Some things could never be packed into a rucksack. Memory. Guilt. The stubborn need not to forget who you were, and why you kept moving forward.”

    “In the Underground, time had lost its purpose years ago. Only direction mattered.”

    “He held the map in his right hand. The past in his left.”

    “The silence was stretched across the station like cold skin pulled over a wound that had never truly healed.”

    “The Tube was no longer a place to explore. It had become a territory where every step carried the possibility of an ending.”

    “For those born beneath the earth, there was no ‘outside’. There were only stations, corridors, shelters, and the struggle to survive one more day.”

    “Hope was worth very little in the Tube.”

    “The rumours were wrong about one thing. The deforms did not belong to the night. They did not hide inside it.”

    “They were the night.”

    “And now the night had a face.”

    “Sometimes he wondered whether he still used light to see the way, or simply to convince himself that the world still existed beyond the darkness.”

    “The city had not died. It had been frozen in the moment it tried to take its last breath.”

    London fell.
    The tunnels remained.
    And beneath the ruins, humanity kept breathing
    .

    London Tube 2033