The Frozen Desert, Moein Mansoori Fard [easy books to read in english .txt] 📗
- Author: Moein Mansoori Fard
Book online «The Frozen Desert, Moein Mansoori Fard [easy books to read in english .txt] 📗». Author Moein Mansoori Fard
It didn’t go in the way we wished. Vorarin is caught and because of our bad chance, the fire is with him.
Samirana signs me with her hand to sit on the chair:
Why the fire is with Vorarin?
I welcome her offer and go toward the chair to be able to see her face.
Everything mixed up. Vorarin was constrained to transfer the fire but I don’t know what happened that he caught. You should helped him.
Finally I position somehow I can see her face under the light of candle. Her girly face is completely goes with her body. She has hidden her hair under a kerchief and tightened it with a knot behind her head. Her big and black eyes, while is in complete contrast with her small mouth, show her very beautiful. In comparison with other women, she is tall and her face is calm.
The only thing that makes me wonder are the small wounds on her face, but they give her face special attraction instead of make her ugly. She dressed in a rather thick and long shirt down to her knees and wore a long raincoat on. She seems to be younger than me.
She says indifferently:
That was enough.
Saidan looks at me in wonder and says:
You alone could hide Zairas.
Samirana goes toward a table which is in darkness and sits on it.
We had to backtrack. For this, first I got Zairas away from them then Vorarin had to do his job well, but he didn’t.
You coped out too soon.
I said don’t engage me in this story.
But now you engaged.
I don’t want continue anymore.
Saidan gnash his teeth and says:
You must say this at first. Don’t think I’m fool.
Samirana comes down from the chair angrily and, while fisted her hands, says:
What’re you trying to prove?
Saidan rises from his chair too:
Whatever happens to you is because of your fault, you shouldn’t blame it on others.
You don’t know anything, so you’d better don’t talk about it. I didn’t cop out but I can’t go on.
Why don’t you can go on? Because you’re weak.
Yeah, I’m weak. I’m leaving now.
Yeah you’d better didn’t come here, you showed yourself, you’re a wretch.
Saidan turns his face to me and says:
Let’s go Zairas.
Saidan looks indifferently at Samiran who stares at me with the grudge and hatered. Then he goes toward the ladder and goes up. Samirana’s fisted hands suddenly open. Her tears washes all of the apparent disgust elements away from her face. I take some steps toward her involuntary. Her body shakes with her sobs and her hands tremble.
I owe you an excuse for you save my life. If you didn’t help me, I wouldn’t have any chance to compensate my fault.
Some failures can’t be redressed.
Fate gives all chance, it just depends to ourselves to use it or miss it.
Aside from fate, many things contribute to.
No one interferes but you. Maybe your work wouldn’t be valuable for anyone but it is important for yourself. The most important part is just this. You should be satisfied with what you do.
This’s not easy as you say.
I smile:
We determine whether it would be easy or not. Maybe the actions of all the people around us is just for notice our work.
I can’t hear any voice from her. She is sitting as before and doesn’t move. Her hands don’t tremble anymore and she is silent.
It’s all words.
Her voice still trills a little. I say:
I just so believe in my words that I’m here now and will do my decision.
She lifts his head and while looks at me, says:
Prove it.
It’s not the thing to prove by words, but should do it.
So how you try to prove something with words?
I didn’t talk with you at all and I never wanted to prove something with my words. The main reason is me who is standing in front of you now. I’m not the word.
Hey Zairas, what’re you waiting for then? Let’s go.
I return and go toward the ladder. Saidan is standing up there and looks at me with a sad and dull face. I go up the ladder and stand by him.
I didn’t want to talk with her that way, but I had no choice but that.
What’s her problem?
She sees the world differently. No time to explain it to you, we should go, I have to think.
So what about Samirana?
It’s her choice. We should act ourselves for the time being.
Saidan, gun in hand, wends that suddenly, before we get out, we hear a footstep on the ladder which echoes through the trench. Samirana gets out through the trapdoor and stands in front us. Her face is now dry. She, while looks at me, says:
I know where the red’s shelter is. I have a plan.
Chapter 25
Escape
It is twilight. I review the plan with each step I take, lest I make a mistake. I go toward the red group’s base through the buildings, which are just some walls rather than the building. Once in a while I stop to check the situation.
I almost reach the building which Samirana drew it for me and I saw it from afar. This is just in front of me. A big building which like all other buildings, its upper floors are ruined and as far as I can see only three floors of the building are useable. The rear parts of the building are completely ruined and there is no other building within a 20-meter radius of this building.
I move forward from the margins slowly and stop at a distance of a few meters from the base. I hide behind a wall and wait. I can see two soldiers who stand guarding in the third floor. At the margin of 20-meter radius four soldiers also are guarding just within a five or six-meter radius.
I pause for a while both to keep cool and the necessary situation appears. I close my eyes and empty my mind. I stay this way for a minute, then take a deep breath, use autosuggestion, open my eyes and take the first step.
It is very harder than what I thought. It is like one hundred people pull me with a rope from behind and just by one person from the reds’ base. I think of Vorarin, and the fire.
I take another step hardly, but guiding my feet is not under my control. I take some steps until I reach behind a thick iron beam. I have to wait a little until the red soldier be in front of me. He approaches me calmly and slowly, while he doesn’t care about around more. He sometime looks downward and then looks at the sky. He also shakes his head or hand for his teammates.
It seems I am lucky. He stops in three steps away from me, and his teammates are in the farthest point from us. Thanks to an iron beam and a wall, I am out of his sight. I close my eyes for the last time and take steps at full speed toward him.
I jump at him who is subjected to my sudden attack, and we both roll on the sands. Before I can react, I see in absolute belief that he gets up from the ground sooner than me and comes toward me with the fisted hands. I feel like someone pulls me from behind. His fist passes by my face at a distance of some centimeters, but when I come to myself, his leg lands on my breast and after slightly flying in the air, I come down on the sands on my back. I feel no energy in my body. My eyes become dim and I suffer vertigo. I feel as if my heart beats in my head.
Hurry up! Get up! Sit on your knees!
I open my eyes hardly and look at the red soldier who has a mask on his face.
Hey! What’s the matter?
I hear two footsteps who come toward us.
I said sit on your knees!
He shows me to obey him with a kick on my side. I hold my breath while I sit with the help of my right arm and push my other and on my breast to mitigate its pain. I close my eyes and sit on my knees with the help of my hand.
Who’s he?
The first soldier who still aimed his gun at me, says:
I don’t know. He suddenly went at me.
One of those two soldiers comes toward me, he smiles while appraises me and says:
I know him. We were looking for you in the heavens but now found you on the earth!
The best reaction is to be silent.
Surely you’ve come to save your friend!
I stipulate:
I came to make a deal.
He says angrily:
A deal?
He sneers:
Thanks God I didn’t blow your brains out.
I say with a sardonic tone:
I don’t think Baltin has the same idea about the fire.
He stops appraising me and stares at me without motion. Time passes in silence for a while until I feel that I am lifting from the ground. The same soldier grabs my collar and lifts me.
Come in, I see what’re you saying.
Suddenly the first soldier says insistently:
I’ll take him in.
The second soldier push me ahead and says indifferently:
No, you stay here. I myself will take him. I wanna see how he wants to deal.
He pushes me forward with his gun every two or three steps. Now that we are close to the entrance door of the building, I can see four personnel carriers on the right side of the building. One soldier is guarding between them. As we approach there, he looks at us carefully.
We go toward the door and stop in front it. Four support beams hold the door from two sides. The corners of the door are rough casted and two steps are made with arranging two rows of stones. The outer side color of the door has turned to yellow-orange and many holes can be seen on it.
The wicket on the door is pushed aside and two red eyes appear. The handle is pulled and the door opens. Three soldiers, who are gathered around the fire, rise as we enter. Three other soldiers are guarding in the first floor. Two other soldiers at the end of the building, one standing and one sitting, turn toward us as we enter. The right side of the door have been out of my sight. Two soldiers are sitting on two almost intact wing chairs and are talking to each other.
His gun is pressed on my back and guide me toward them. One of them rises and makes the other one rises. Then they stride the remained steps toward us and stop one step away.
How did you find him?
The soldier removes his gun from my back and says:
He himself came here.
Those two soldiers who have not mask on their face, look at each other in wonder and then the soldier who is in front of me, clasps his hands behind his back and while his cold look goes with his face, says:
What do you mean?
When I arrived I saw him fighting with one of our soldiers.
The soldier who is in front of me turns his eyes to me and while frowns, says:
Well?
The soldier behind me replies instead of me:
He says that he’s come to make a deal.
He has his own tongue and can talk. You can go now.
Yes sir!
The sound of opening the door is heard and he gets out through the door.
Well?
I try not to look in his eyes lest I can talk more easily.
I want to talk with your chief.
The corner of his lips slightly lifts up:
Baltin isn’t here. You can make deal with me!
I guess he should be Lasfor. I just look at him. The sound of burning firewood and the wind are the only sounds which can be heard. It seems all are looking at us.
Send him where his friend is!
One of those soldiers who are sitting around the fire, comes toward me with no delay and takes me dragging to the end of the base. In some parts a few threadbare
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