Politics of Payment
Carlos had followed the river for the best part of three days as Kuparr had instructed, and he was becoming increasingly nervous that he may never locate his destination. Yet logic told him it must be somewhere close ahead. The Bridge at least as he remembered it was far too big to miss. Before the war, it had been home to about twenty-two thousand people, and after the war, the numbers had swelled considerably. So he pressed on, scanning the horizon through the tall eucalyptus trees for the faintest trace of civilization.
He had to confess, after living in close proximity to such gentle people as Kuparr, and his beautiful daughter Medika today he had felt lonely. As the evening began to settle crowning the sky in vibrant lemons, and shades of peach, and reddening the already claret faces of the cliffs that plunged into the river below. The young warrior finally caught sight of the distinctive double bridges that spanned the mile-wide stretch of muddy water. Lifeblood to an entire desert state.
He paused for long moments, high up on the clifftops, taking in his unhindered view of the city below. A gentle breeze carried across the desert ruffled his wild hair. He could sight the thin slivers of the two bridges that joined the agricultural areas to the township, and the huge sprawl of the town proper on the bank opposite. Surrounded on its far side by the orange and browns of the desert, and the other side cut through by the mighty river, the rich flats covered in luxuriant green. There were lights in places winking down below, though he noted in many areas the mass of darkened shanty towns still remained just as he had remembered them before his abduction.
He tightened his grip on his gelding's reins and continued on. As he drew closer he could see that the span of the railway bridge was incomplete. Whether by flood waters or strife, the center of the metal structure was all but gone, teetering on crumbling pylons. He tried to remember if it was like that when last he was here, but he could not recall.
Memories of that time came flooding back to him as he drew closer to the pot-holed blacktop that still remained, beginning the descent into the river valley proper. He should never have gone with Wezley Bennett he thought. He was foolish and young and really believed the man would trade him for the.357 Smith & Wesson he had flaunted. Never realizing it was just a ruse to get him alone. He wondered what may have been if that event had never happened? Still his arrival here once more was better late than never.
It was dark as he rode his horse to the checkpoint in the center of the remaining standing bridge. A guard stood under a dim circle of light, he could see a couple of other men in the guard box obscured in shadow, all sporting rifles slung over their shoulders. He reigned in his horse and dismounted, the guard left the circle of light and walked towards him nonchalantly.
"Your papers?" The guard asked with a practiced boredom.
Carlos paused, he had no papers, no form of identification. He didn't know what to do.
"Your papers or be gone." The man snarled, already walking back to his post. The other two men were smoking now and looking in his direction.
"I have never had any papers." Carlos finally replied. "I left here years ago before papers were required."
"Well go back where you belong then." The guard replied in a disinterested tone.
Carlos sighed and wondered what would happen if he just got on his horse and galloped by. He'd probably be shot in the back he figured. There had to be another way. The warrior deciding to try another tact.
"Is there any way I might get papers?"
"Depends." The guard replied lighting a cigarette. "Maybe you have got something worthwhile to gain admittance? That is if you are not a runaway slave?"
Carlos blanched for a second, and a sharp feeling of fear rose up which he fought to quiet. He was a runaway slave. He thought for a moment, maybe they meant marked slaves. It seemed brutal, but there was no way they could realistically tell if he had ever been the property of anyone. In the same thought, wondering that it may be easier to just swim the river, and attempt to infiltrate the city by moonlight.
He almost turned about then beaten, electing for that alternative. The guards had lost interest in the newcomer and were talking among themselves, anything to make the tedious night shift go by faster. This evening there was no one else on the bridge seeking admission.
Carlos had very little in his possession of great worth, nothing really in his saddlebags but a few clothes and one decent knife, but he did have the semi-automatic rifle. The gun was well made, and well preserved. A Browning BLRM3 with a wooden stock, and silver insert which was engraved, the barrel was a polished blue.
"Will this gain me admission?" He gestured toward the rife tethered to his saddle in its leather holster. He did not deem it wise to pull the weapon.
"Depends if it's any good."
With great care Carlos slid the weapon from its protection, brandishing it so the men may see its worth. He would no longer need a weapon like this in the township. He preferred the offered concealment of a handgun or a knife, which he was sure if he moved in the right circles he could procure at a later time.
The guard exhaled a whistle of appreciation as he sighted the well-preserved and very illegal weapon. Semi-automatics like this one had all been outlawed or destroyed long before the conflict.
"Wow! One of the few that didn't get burned. Look guys!" The first guard was animated now, and the other two men came forth from the shadows to crowd about the weapon in admiration.
"Go get Gage, he needs to see this."
"On it." One of the men sprinted away, his footfalls loud on the pavement.
Carlos waited patiently, his horse fidgeting by his side, at least the evening was pleasant, but he noticed the mosquitoes were beginning to bite. They would probably be horrendous by summer.
After a lengthy wait, the man who had sprinted away returned alone.
"Gage is busy, but he said he will see you. Come."
With that Carlos entered the Bridge. The city was different and yet somehow it had changed very little. Many people were walking the streets at this early evening hour. They wove their way in between the lumbering carts ferrying goods and others riding on horseback. The roads were not in the best condition for a city center, some of the pavement remained, but there were numerous, treacherous potholes. They had been filled with rubble where they had become large, and the carts bumped and jostled noisily over them. The wrecked cars and truck bodies were gone, last he had been here the streets were all but impassable for their presence.
He gazed around at the familiar buildings lit by mostly mantle lamps and candlelight. Noting most of the shopfront glass was long gone, to be replaced by wooden or metal shutters on the retail establishments. Society had not progressed very far it would seem, when it came to manufacturing.
He knew already where the man was taking him, he could hear the strains of a band playing and people talking loudly. The bright lights of Sixth Street loomed before him, and the distinctive frontage of the Four Roses Hotel. It had been called something far less charismatic once like the Murray Bridge Hotel. However, after the war and influx of refugees, it was taken over by the Hell's Angels and the Banditos. The two biker gangs had since merged to become the Banned Angels. Carlos had remembered that much, but he had been no more than a young teen at that time; a street-wise rat on the periphery of the real power here.
He tied his horse to the hitching post and followed the man beneath the curved veranda and through the surprisingly, narrow doorway. Once inside the immense stone building, he was greeted by a press of humanity. It was uncomfortably hot from all the warm bodies, and cigarette smoke hung thickly in the rank air. There was no longer any operational air conditioning or air exchangers used in commercial spaces.
He was ushered by the long bar where the patrons were lively with drink and gossip, and upstairs to the quieter reaches of the building. Sex workers lingered with their johns in the dimly lit corridors negotiating services.
"In here." His escort said as he gestured to the partially opened door.
The stained wood was battered with years of use. The man turned and left, and Carlos hesitated, unsure if he should just walk in or knock first. He took a deep breath, stood straight gathering his confidence, and pushed the door aside.
Gage Freeman looked up from his winning hand, sporting a straight flush at the tall, young man who had just interrupted his evening. He was sure that Jimmy was incorrect in his assumption of the weapon the stranger carried, and this was just an annoying waste of his time.