Here are the first three chapters of my NaNoWriMo entry, Flight of the Eagle.
Flight of the Eagle
“There is nothing to writing.
All you do is sit down at a typewriter and bleed.”
- Ernest Hemingway
“You will return to me, won’t you, Conrad?”
“Of course, my dear.”
“I don’t want you getting killed in this silly war.”
“I know, my dear.”
“I’m not quite sure what i’d do without you... You know...”
The man turned around from his desk, dressed in a heavy black, woolen coat. The interior around him was littered with stacks of paper, spinning gyros, wheels and globes of all sorts. Books lay strewn out on the dark, lush mahogany, open to whichever pages. Light shone in with an abrasive bright, white luster from the outside windows to his left side. Opposite of him, a woman stood, dressed in heavy greens and blacks, gripping a closed umbrella with herculean might, twisting it back and forth.
“Oh, Conrad! Please!” She cried out, her coarse black hair shifting with her dramatic body movements at the shoulder. The man grimaced and turned back around, putting on an equally black top hat with his heavy winter coat. He stood on thin legs, dressed in a finer black polyester like apparel. “Conrad, please, don’t go.” The woman wrenched out once more, standing next to a lush, cream colored chair that was stacked with books all over, papers jutting out of them like torn pages.
The man turned from facing his desk and walked over to the door, now with the wall on his right, as sunlight bloomed from the window in almost unappeasable white. He grabbed his gloves off of a prong on the coatrack, as equally as lush crimson that matched the rest of the room. He turned around, facing the room that extended off into walled bookshelves, candelabras hanging from the ceiling, a few articles of clothing and papers hanging off of them. The woman stormed over, kicking up the white loose leafs that littered the floor.
“Conrad, you aren’t going! You can’t, it’s not safe over there yet!” The woman protested vehemently, moving up to the mans face.
“Ah, but my dear, life isn’t safe!” He joyfully said, a thread of annoyance stinging underneath his voice with a smile on his face. As soon as his gloves were on, he opened the door behind him and leaned backwards as a great deal of snow drifted inward, looking for a place to stay. Before he hit the few feet that rested on the ground, the man floated upwards, looking down at the door as he continued his skyward advance, backwards.
“Conraaaaaad!” The woman yelled, voice wavering with the distance and the wind.
“I will make sure to bring something back to you, my dear!” He said as he turned around, speeding upward into the sky. The wind turned from the red and brown based city below as he flourished through the cold snow, debris collecting on his coat and hat. He popped upward beyond the cloud as a contingency of floating ships coasted slowly above the snowstorm. They were mighty, looking much like ships that sat in the sea, without sails. Great, heavy metal warships with all sorts of cannons commandeered the sky, as the flying man reached the greatest one in the center. Upon it’s side read in bold, white lettering, “Sturmkrähe.” As he reached the deck side, layered in yellow wood, men were working and all turned to look at him, stopping their immediate course or discourse.
He smiled warmly as the men craned their heads to see the flying black shape above them. He reached the center hold of the ship, and vanished as the air around him turned blue and rippled outward like water disturbed. He appeared within the walls of the ship, back to the window he had vanished from, papers laying on desks flushing off around him. Inside, black, white, and red flags were draped across the red wood, much like the man’s own home. The floors were carpeted a dark blue, and tables were proximally placed around, and very stalwart, tall standing men were all around them. They were dressed in great uniforms, with epaulets and sparkling decorations, all of which shined in the white snowbound light. The men all turned to look as he appeared silently, and most went quiet as he did so.
“Herr Kaiser Wilhelm! The guest of honor has arrived!” One enlisted man said, and at the end of the conference room, a man with his back to the window turned around. He had a great upturned mustache, hanging epaulets and many sashes and cords in great decoration on his pure white uniform. A sword rested by his side, hanging downward to his shiny, reflective black leather boots. Most notable of all was the helmet atop his head, it’s edge right above his brow. It was black like the boots, but a golden eagle sat on the top, upward by half of a foot. Its wings were outstretched in a glorious pattern of bravery on the battlefield. He smiled as the man arrived, walking through the significantly less decorated men.
“Just the man I wanted to see! I was beginning to wonder if we would have had to land the ship to fetch you.” He said with a great, hearty joy in his voice, marching with militant heel to toe over to the man in black. “Where would we be to claim our place in the sun if the man who had allowed us to do it were not here?”
He clapped the man on the shoulder and led him further into the room, to a table where a map of the world was strewn out, other papers sitting in a scattered way on top. He moved them aside with a quick hand, pointing to it. Across it, the world was largely covered in red, except for England, half of the Russian Federation, Australia, North America, and South America. Inside Europe, the German Empire was a darker shade of crimson.
“Ah, my dear Conrad, you will see with your own eyes the victory of our empire. Nineteen Eighteen will be a year to remember, in all of history, as we move across the sea and begin the true flight of the crow!” He valiantly declared, as the rest of the men cheered on, clapping in good aspiration. Conrad placed his hand gently on the map, as he forced the rest of the red to overcome the blue on the world, and eventually the oceans, as the Kaiser looked on with wonder.
“You’ve got the right idea in mind. With your capability and our knowledge, this red square will be our red square. Now and forever.” He said, clapping Conrad on the back as the man in the black coat just simply watched the table, unyielding, eyes transfixed on the red square.
Chapter One
“You’re going to be late.”
“I don’t care. Today is the only day it hasn’t been snowing.”
“Well, don’t get mad at me if you fail your classes.”
A young man dressed in pitch black stepped out of the door of his home and into the gleaming white snow. He put on his top hat and moved out into the trail carved by many months of foot to automobile. His roommate, dressed in eloquent white, followed him like a ghost into fog.
“Certainly Conrad, there can’t be anything special about this!”
“I know what i’m doing, Friedrich.” He kept walking, carving a new path into the snow, one untouched by feet for the season.
“How can you know what you’re doing? That stone is older than the both of us, it could be older than our city!” The young man in white called out, and the man in black turned around in a huff, hands jammed into the woolen pockets of the coat.
“Friedrich, that stone could be just as old as Hannover. That’s exactly why I want to go see it. I don’t care about our stupid Universität.” The adventurer remarked, snapping outward as the man in white stood on the common path.
“You’re being uncharacteristic, Conrad. These things can wait, you know, you’re not in class all day!” He called out, but Conrad had turned around and was walking across the back lawn and into the snowcapped tree line. “You’re just going to find nothing out there!”
Conrad had already moved out of earshot, weaving between trees as he marched through the snow, trudging his feet all the way up over the edge and down again, leaving knee high craters. He rubbed his stubbled jaw, unpreened and rough for a young man of his age. His blue eyes wicked from one place to another, as trees soon became all that were around. The landmarks of the ground were gone, covered in a great plume of snow that had pierced their deciduous canopy. His coat dragged in the snow behind him, bringing up a flurry of crystals. The birds in the trees were quiet with the winter, and the sun berated down on the snow with great passion through any gap it could find against the heavy tree line, all of the ancient woods leafless save the occasional pine standing mighty amongst the dead.
As the young man, stricken at the age of a university student, looked back and forth, he cried out in a yelp as his feet sunk downward and he tumbled forward along snow, down a great slope. He came sliding to a halt, side squeaking on a thoroughly frozen river, the snow brushed away on the slick surface, revealing the blue and white frost underneath, sparkling in the sun. It was frozen to the core, it seemed a small fish had been trapped in the wrath of the seasons, held in place. Conrad frowned, placing his hand over the top of the chilled river, feeling the same entrapment. He too, was a fish held down by the world.
Conrad shook his head, standing up to the best of his capability on the ice, making a move to step onto the snow as quickly as possible, arms outstretched for balance. Overhead, snow was starting to drift throughout the air as he turned and walked up the river, the wind taking hold through the valley indent made by the small stream. Trees stood mighty tall amongst the line of the valley, a few of their roots visible along the walls, partially covered in snow as compared to the rest of the area. Conrad marched onward, occasionally slipping on the ice and plummeting into the white below.
The landmarks had returned, partially. Snow was beginning to collect on him, piece by piece, melting under his body heat as the collided with his shoulders. He seemed to be walking forever, and scratched his head in mild confusion. It had, in fact, been years since he had been there. Back when it was summer, and wandering like a child was incredibly acceptable. It was sharply clear of what had happened, however.
The child slipped on his footing and slid through the mud, the specks of wet dirt flying through the air wildly. The heel of his prim black shoe hit a tree branch and the child launched forward, rolling into water that engulfed him, gravity was suddenly no longer a problem. The child opened his eyes as a fish slithered by, frightened greatly. The blue light shone downward, just as the young boy realized that breathing was unusually difficult, and his head burst from the water, the warm air filling his lungs in one deep breath.
The young man soon reached the great lake, coveted in ice. Snow was drifting across the sky and landing amongst the lake, swirling off in great fairy dances and patterns by the wind across the ice. The lake expanded around the trees, culling off in all directions. The young man, hands in his pockets gently, walked to the center, looking around. Trees had grown since then, the path wasn’t divergently clear.
To the child, it was. After hiking the great rise to the mouth of the water, the lake expanded as an ocean, far and wide as the young boy could comprehend. Along the right side shore led a pathway in, heavily guarded by brush warriors and stalwart trees, all a vibrant brown and green camouflage. The entirety popped with color, as the leaves and branches swayed in the wind. He trailed along the shore line, swinging a stick at every standing reed and branch that had embedded itself in the dirt.
The young man walked along the shifting, slick dunes of ice with great care. His hands were laced within his pockets, the shoulders were up and the wind began to take hold of the lake air, the forest side of the German state had grown heavy with ice and the lace of the winter grasp within one another. He crossed upon the water like the savior above, the ice-caked coat tail hanging from him in jagged, lofty waves.
The child had moved further into the brush, pushing away the green life that had begun to overtake the road and the dirt beneath, the leaves and the trees all pushed and swayed with a gentle unison, the strings of a symphony, the soft waves in the ocean breach. The entire woods seemed to be enwrapped with the motherly breeze of the nation, all slow and gentle as motion built forward. The sounds of the small lake had began to push themselves away, they were gently replaced with the thousand cacophonous array of wildlife that lingered within the greened trees, their branches gnarled and twisted with a great deal of age, the ancient woods of lore coming to life as the young child aimlessly wandered in a vast wonder.
Beyond his years, the man stepped off onto the shore of dirt and snow, the snow above him starting to push the trees as the partially spent blue sky was raptured beyond and the claustrophobic white clouds had overtaken in a furious, Wagern-esque display of capability. The young man was looking upward as he walked, right into a gnarled pathway that twisted in and out of the woods, the dead bushes and leaves all vanished into the earth from whence they came. He had kept his cold hands within the confines of his pocket, and brought his pockets up to cross his arms as the chill of the age had began to take hold into himself, beginning with the loss of feeling in his jaw.
He withdrew his hands, rubbing them together as the wind began to blow with a violent, vehement gale against him, rushing through the pathway in the trees and bulking against him in a rage. He looked up, top hat flying off of his head, and turned around to run after it. It picked up into the air and was brought over the tree line as a sacrifice to the woods. It was gone, and Conrad turned back around, feet grinding in the snow, and walked against the gust that had overtaken the entire woods, bringing a forthright full of snow that had begun to collect along the baselines of the trees that had created this open pathway.
The child had, without doubt, certainly gotten lost. The world was no longer the mythic pathway that had lead from his home and into the unknown-known, where adventure had lay in wait all ready with the golden road to lead one back to whence he was, to their home and particular refuge of hearth. The trees were no longer the guidance, they were the obstacle. They did not run in a direct path, they had suddenly and without warning become the deterrent to the return home. It was as if the woods was watching and waiting, a snake in the grass that served to disorient.
He began to run, aimless, through the tree line. The wind gently tossed around leaves, they danced and circled around the young boy. Fear was the first emotion to set in, followed with a full right of panic. It coursed through his blood, possibly for the first time. Every breath he took was uncharacteristically cold for the midst of summer, he was no longer weightless in the water, but now there was nothing but forlorn opportune for dying, a concept that was unthinkable, uncreatable. The woods twisted, they turned, they stole terror throughout the boy, they took his senses and spread them across the woods. He continued to move, with a great frightened aspect.
Within the cusp of the woods, all caked in snow and the sky was a flashing white and burdening grayscale that was growing dark in anticipation, the wind pushed him backwards, it was at the point of nearly removing the young man from his feet, from turning him away from his destination. The woods no longer wished to guide him to their destination, to their very soul, but now they only willed to turn him away from his recourse. He was in a struggle against the elements, against the forest. The Universität was at the extreme far from his mind, the entire morning seemed to be as if it had never happened, as if none of it had come to fruition. His housemate would probably be home at this point, as Conrad checked his pocket watch with great difficulty, the winds battering gale was beginning to distort and shift in intensity, from great to greater.
The effort was becoming incredibly herculean for both the young child in the summer breeze and the young man in the hardened grip of the winter. They were both against a seeding feeling that caught beneath their souls, like the beginning of a mighty tree or an invasive vine. It was but a seed, but the warm conditions and the power of the woods had let it grow at an immense rate that life itself would be incapable of doing. Frost had begun to correlate itself along the jawline and the cheekbones of the man, it was collecting and combining as atoms did, the shards of ice had become a singular sheet of frost that had coated his face.
He had turned away from the path that he was once lost upon as the wind berates through the trees, it howled with a great anguish as the trees heaved with the weight of the snow. His vision had deteriorated, and there was no longer the sense of control as he continued to wander throughout the trees. The memories of his youth had resurfaced back to him in a great speed, they flourished inward like the imaging pictures of opening a long lost book or chest, the history of his life had been returning to him all at once and without warning. The child and the young man were one, they were once again reunited with the comment element amongst each other, fear.
The young child was running through the brush, there was no vision other than the immediate, the there. The trees came and went in a camouflaged blur, they began to blend in with the ground and the sky, the forest soon became the world, the whole together and the world as one. He ran, as the man walked, the child was pushed, the elder was resisted. The direction of the wind came from a starkly single viewpoint to the elder Conrad, it seemed to wrap around the trees and push against his core, chilling him downward to the soul. His face had begun to paralyze within the grip of the cold, his jawline was ethereal, a phantom to his physical body.
It was within this point that the young Conrad had found the destination that the woods had pointed him to, that had directed him in the great sweep, and the entire woods had calmed. The fear had vanished as the wind subsided. The clearing was a small circle, but the clearing was no terminology worthy, it was enwrapped in gnarled vines that had overtaken the ground and the trees surrounding. The center of the clearing was the resting home of a great obelisk, towering upward to the skies, ravaged by time. The youngling cautiously stepped forward over the vines, the footing disabled, the world shifted. The air was a peculiar state of calm, the breeze had subsided, as if the magic was gone from the woods.
The eldest Conrad had not reached his destination, the wind against him drove a great gale as he trudged onward. The younger, however, reached the land before him. The older withdrew his pocket watch with another great difficulty, the bastion of wind unrelenting. He barreled himself up against the trunk of a tree, snowbound on one side and merely frosted on the other. The time was reaching the evening with almost unreal speed. He closed it, grabbing the line of his coat and raising the collar, pursuing the wind with spartan comfort.
Within the great hold of the woods, the young Conrad walked with great trepidation to the obelisk, towering high over his head. Beneath, a small plate of corroded stone barely read an inscription of days gone past.
“ER LYSE ERE MERLYN
Y’ERE MERCHNT THE VYLD
MAJK LYVE ERE TO RETVRYNS”
This was all it had read out, it appeared, the rest laid to ruin in time. The letters themselves were far from pristine, but still there. As the young man ran forward with all of his might, oppressed by the growing wind, the young boy slid off his glove. The young man had reached the clearing but the wind had not calmed as it did in his youth, he had lost his footing and was grabbing the vines, moving towards the obelisk as if he were scaling the horizontal forest. The boy reached to touch the obelisk, but halted. He stopped, locked in thought.
The young man stole forward with great might, invigorated by his arrival. There was the slight touch of fear within them, an unsettlement. Elder Conrad bit his lip, reaching the base of the obelisk. The pocket watch had flown from his fingertips, lost with his hat in the woods. This compelling necessity to return to the stone was by and far unusual, but it had to be done. As he reached out with great might, uncertainty took hold yet he barreled forward, and just as the young Conrad touched the stone, so did the older. Their fingers touched the stone, and the two of them felt nothing.
The wind sabotaged him, and Conrad went flying off into the tree line, tumbling backwards and landing out of sight of the epithet. The wind and the snow still carried, as Conrad coughed from the deep of his throat, a burning sensation down at the bottom. The young Conrad was still standing there, looking around as if something were to happen. The magic of the woods felt as if it had vanished, no longer resting in wait for the wandering soul in need of help. He looked around, and knew where home was. Unceremoniously, the young Conrad left, traveling through the tree line until he was certain the road was ahead. Stepping out into a lower ditch, his assumptions were correct. The road led off left and right, obviously deeper in to the right and the other going the opposite.
The modern Conrad was unfortunately not as lucky. The snow still blazed, covering his shoulders in a patch of sleeted ice, which was beginning to freeze down his back as he walked away, pushed forward in greater speed by the wind behind him. It was stoic to move his joints, as he moved behind tree to tree to catch a break from the vicious wind that bore against his very soul, the bones and the exterior. The fear was replaced by a small settlement of anguish, it tore at him at the lack of spectacular happenings. Was his housemate right, had he wasted the day for nothing? The sky was growing dark, the fallen snow was reflecting the meager light the day had produced against the sky. Conrad vaulted forward, stumbling into the valley entrenched in snow.
He looked up, deep into the sky, and the sky stared back to him. It was dark, and loomed over, the clouds with no thread or form but a consistent darkness that rained white. He shook his head, red with the deepest burn of the frost upon his skin. The young man strode across the lake, head drawn low and shoulders raised high, the slide of the ice trekked with cautious movements. He stepped downward along the beaten path, the wind subsiding greatly since his return from being lost amongst the wood. The snow drifted lazily from the sky to the forest below, in wide, decorated snowflakes, landing on the cold Conrad.
He made no effort to brush them off as he walked along the frozen stream side, returning to the place in which the snow had once been brushed from to reveal the river beneath, and his footprints had started marking. He turned to the slope, stepping with great steps along the narrow footholds, steeply. The snow slunk downward in a swishing pattern along his trail, climbing to the stable level. He marched onward, sniffling greatly and rubbing his jaw, the feeling completely gone forth from him.
He weaved in and out through the trees and broke back into the edge of the city, the lights of Hannover lighting up the snow and reflecting an orange hue into the sky. He marched along the paths set earlier and opened the back door with great ease, a flourish of snow gusting inward as he shut it. The entire home was dark, as he stood in the claustrophobic back kitchen, the rickety table bare of any sign of life on it. The lights shone in from the closed curtains in light threads, barely illuminating his path. Feeling around, stumbling and shivering, Conrad managed to make his way into the living room from the pathway of wall and cupboard his fingers walked upon. He stepped inward in great, slow strides, cautious of what hit his feet.
Snow melted slowly off of him as he made his way to the mantle, nearly knocking off a few framed portraits as he did so. His stiff, unrelenting hands managed to secure a box in the midst of the darkness that coveted the home. He opened the box and withdrew one of the sticks inside, ripping it on the side. It flared in a spark shower and created fire, everything within inches of it visible. Conrad bent over and stuck it to the firewood resting in the dark gray stones, the fire transferring and catching hold of the barked wood. He shook out the match as the room slowly but surely illuminated into a soft orange light that harshly shadowed the silhouettes of every outstanding thing in the room. Conrad stepped backwards and collapsed on the couch, eyes and bones heavy with the spirit of exhaustion. He sat with his arms laying by his side, the red orange light flickering and swaying back and forth with unpredictable anticipation.
Behind him, Conrad turned his head lazily to his left as a door opened. The soft press of footprints carried off a womanly figure into the light and into the kitchen where a light was turned on. He looked back further as his housemate stepped out as well, hands in the pockets of a white robe.
“You’ve been gone all day and all night, Conrad.” The young man in black turned his head back to the fire, the feeling recovering in his bones. He took a deep breath and coughed the rest out heavily.
“It just had to be done. The dreams had to stop.” He said, still leaned back against the plume of the back rest and his neck on the hard, shaped wood.
“You’re probably sick.”
“Probably.”
Friedrich turned, walking around the couch and into the kitchen. A few moments later, the woman walked back into his room without a glance or a word. Conrad paid her no attention, staring into the warmth, safe fire.
“You have no restraint, do you?” Friedrich asked, crossing his arms. “No fears, no foresight.”
Conrad simply raised his arm, slowly growing less stiff, waving him away. Friedrich simply shook his head and walked into his room, shutting the door with a gentle knob turn. The man in black closed his eyes in front of the fire and drifted off to sleep, breathing heavily and slowly. The house was still except the crack of fire and the brush of wind against the front wall.
---
The light slit into his eyes and the young man looked up, onward to the high reaching ceiling. The heavy, dark wood contrasted in the soft gray light, casting penumbra shadows in all directions. They curved and arced along the ceiling, as Conrad lowered his head with a small push and the swing of gravity downward. The fire was extinguished, the wood completely burnt away. All that remained in the fireplace were a desert worth of gray, monotone ashes. He coughed again, the burning sensation deep within his lungs. The sound of wind was no more, only replaced by the quiet tick of a clock, unmuffled by the crackling of the fire and the berating cry of the wind.
Conrad placed his hands on the edge of the couch, pushing himself up with great force as all of his muscles ached in great pain, driving spears into his nerves. His legs, shoulders, arms. All were entrenched in a great pain, one that tore through his body. He locked his knees and stood, the pain pulsing dully in his thighs. He breathed, slowly, the blood rushing into his head. The entire home was silent in the gray morning around him, stagnant and hollow. The quiet sound of his breathing carried throughout the entire acoustics of the home.
The young man shook his head, slowly. He jammed his hands into his pockets, the cold air of the house as nearly unpleasant as being outside. He coughed openly, too sore to move his hand up rapidly, it simply escaped his unblocked lips in small pockets. He took a small step, walking very stalwart and stocky as he took another. Pain was dully apart of his walking now, as he sniffed his nose, freezing from spending the night out of bed after the fire had extinguished. He opened a thin brown door and carefully navigated himself down dark, narrow stairs and into the basement below.
The basement, closed in with its dark walls, was significantly warmer than the house above it, safe from the arctic wind that pummeled the house. Conrad shut the door behind him and stepped down onto the flat stone, his workspace resting below, benches and chairs all abounding. He walked over to a mighty iron heater, standing tall and proud in its distinguishable dark iron. He opened up the squeaky grate, reaching over to the nearby desk for a small matchbook. Conrad ripped out one of the paper matches and struck it against the coarse iron of the heater, tossing it into its gaping maw.
As the wood began to catch and burn, it was here he realized that he had not dreamt. For the past handful of weeks, Conrad had envisioned himself reaching the stone at that certain day, at that exact moment within the sunset. It never changed, there were no other-worldly dream like aspects. He stood up with a grunt from bending over, mind enwrapped in this phenomenon. For once, his sleep was free of it’s deep anguish and pain. He had awoken for the past month, without fail, in a state of fear and shock, as it something had frightened him.
For now, it appeared, the dreams were gone. His actual triumph had done exactly what he had meant it to do. The basement began to grow in warmth as the fire cooked and the metal heated, smoke pressured outside. Conrad sat down at the table covered in scrap metal and tools and slowly picked up the copper wires and heaps. He sat right next to the fire, his joints and muscles warming to his left as he began to twist and turn the metal with various tools. Above him, the door opened, and footsteps came echoing in the basement. Conrad turned around, placing his arm on the back of the chair while sitting.
“Conrad! They say Europe is on the brink of war, and the Chancellor has been removed from power.” Friedrich said, the woman from last night gently shutting the door and lightly prancing downstairs with grace. Conrad tore his eyes from her back to Friedrich, who was looking over a slightly damp newspaper. He cleared his throat, prompting Conrad to cough another deep cough, and read. “The great Deutsches Reich is losing once solid ties with Russland, made to not provoke any acts of violence from one to another between Deutschland, Russland and Frankreich, as Friedrich Wilhelm Viktor Albrecht von Preußen becomes Kaiser of Deutschland and Prußen. He has a specific plan for bolstering the Deutscher military within his reign.”
Conrad looked at him as Friedrich looked back at the woman, who was looking over his shoulder at the paper, long brown hair falling like a river onto his arm. Conrad turned back to his table, picking up one of the small bent copper pieces.
“So, what does that mean for us, do you reason?” He asked, twirling the piece between his finger, mind racing with possibilities back and forth.
“Well, we could be drafted if one starts. But, who would we be fighting against, everybody?” Friedrich asked, looking back over his shoulder at the woman, who shrugged, holding up her hands in an innocent non-answer. “I’m not really the warring type.”
“I don’t think anyone is, Friedrich. Anyone sane, at least.” Conrad responded, looking back over the chair at the standing pair.
“Well, if one does happen, it won’t be for a while. All these things take time to come together, look at the Americans and their civil war. It didn’t just happen overnight.” Friedrich mused, turning back around with his damp newspaper, walking around the basement in his white shirt and black vest, and matching black pants. The woman was dressed in a much heavier winter outfit, complete with tall, rounded fur hat.
“Tell me, did you put out the fire last night?” Conrad asked, coughing quietly after he asked.
“I did when I got up this morning, when it was light. I’d have woken you but I was incredibly late.” He responded, turning back around as the woman trailed after him like a anxious puppy. “Before you apologize, you didn’t wake us up last night. We.. Well, I was waiting for you, at least. I’d rather not have to call the police on you.” Friedrich explained, the woman latching onto his arm, looking quite tired. Conrad hadn’t even crossed the thought of apologizing.
“I’m alright now, mostly. You and Katja can return to what you were doing.” He said, still holding the thin copper wire.
“We were going to go out and get foodstuff while the weather wasn’t murderous. It’s supposed to be incredibly awful tonight, from what I hear. If you had gone out this morning instead of last, I doubt you would have come back.” He said, looking down from the top of the stairs, the woman following him in silence. “I’ll return by this evening with enough supplies to last us through a snowstorm or small war. Who knows if they’ll begin rationing us, Conrad.” Friedrich finished, and deftly moved through the door, the woman swiftly following. It shut, and he was still looking up at the stairway.
Conrad turned back around, rubbing his unshaven jaw and looking at the copper strewn out in front of him, in varying bits and pieces. There was a whole glass jar full of the thin strands, clippings of copper wire. He took the piece he was rolling in his hand and bent it, taking another and bending it as well, touching the two ends into a crude, hand bent circle. As he did so, the two ends sparked, and he dropped the piece with a startle, staring down at it. It fell as one piece, the four endings did not separate.