Tuesday, April 30, 2013

My Predicament - Chapter One


Let me first say that M&P, while paying well, were awful employers. Those favourable things I said about them in the early days of my journal? They were complete lies. I have no respect for them, other than how their technology got us through several wars. Even then, I cannot give them much respect, as it was also their technology which rendered much of Russia and China near uninhabitable wastelands. It is for that reason that the Clockwork Dragons are such a danger here in London.

Now, immediately after my March 17 post, I was sent to several more workhouses. Nothing particularly of note with the workhouses themselves, but what happened on the way was of much interest. After the incident outside the pub, I was under considerable stress. I was now constantly looking over my shoulder in search of the men in black. It was only a matter of time before I spotted one of them skulking in an alley. Contrary to the previous times I have seen them in daylight, this man was not talking to anyone. This time, he was watching someone - watching me!

Despite knowing even then what was the best course of action, I did not confront him. Something in the way he stared at me from the shadows frightened me on a fundamental level. I could not bring myself to go anywhere nearer to him.

After I carried out the inspection, I took a different route than usual. I think that I may have at one point intended to spend the night at an inn. But somehow, I felt safer in my home, so that is where I soon returned. On the way, I caught a glimpse of the two men in a fruit market. They nodded to each other, then went separate ways. I wasted no time in an attempt to lose the two of them by blending in with the crowd.

Upon returning home, I turned off all the lights. I closed the blinds and lit a small fire. For dinner, I simply warmed up some soup. Eventually, I peeked out the window. I saw the two of them standing on the other side of the street. They seemed to be speaking to each other, but I did not open the window to find out what was being said. I did not want to alert them to my awareness of them.

The next day, I set out as usual, but I took a different route. No matter which twist and turn I took, one or two of the men seemed to be on my tail. Even when I was inside the assigned workhouse, I kept looking over my shoulder. I swear to God above, I saw one of them going down a hallway.

This time, on the way home, I intentionally got myself lost in order to throw the men off the trail. I knew not what they planned to do with me if they got their hands on me, but I was in no hurry to find out. When I did return home, I was confident that no one had followed me. Naturally, they would be there eventually, but in the time it took for them, I could call the police. Since the shooting, the entire street has been under surveillance. The police would crack down on anyone who was reported as suspicious. I turned out the all the lights, and went to the phone, dialling the police department. 

But before I was even connected, the generator failed quite suddenly.

Now faced with the problem of no power, and the inability to contact the police, I looked out the window to the street. As luck would have it, I was just in time to see a man in a long black coat dashing from an alley, soon followed by his accomplice. Two men. As far as I knew, there were only two men, so my confidence (combined with panicked adrenaline) was boosted, and convinced me that I would be able to defend myself if it came to that.

Then I saw six more of them running out of the alley.

Damnation! A librarian is giving me a funny look. I will need to purchase this receptacle and continue at the inn. 

Good day, all!

 J.T. Marker


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