A minute passed, with Dan sweltering in his garb. The phone stayed silent.
Wrong number, I guess
. He put on the beanie, an N95 mask, covering it with his samurai demon one - sturdy plastic with little holes for air intake, pulled his hood up, then put on thin knitwear gloves and pulled oversized nitrile ones on top. A bright blue disposable raincoat gave a nice finish to his all black and gray attire. He turned to face the tall mirror on the wall.
Beautiful. I'm the most fashionable guy on the block.
Nobody gave a shit about looks anymore. He put on a fresh pair of 3M protective glasses and walked out.
The inner courtyard was empty. Some of the fancier cars already gathered quite a bit of dust and fallen leaves. Piles of garbage bags neatly thrown into every corner, forming terricones two meters high, reminded him they didn't have garbage disposal either now. He turned around to look at the building - it looked... abandoned. Three of four apartments on his floor were empty now. The other floors? Probably the same.
He still remembered how his neighbor from across the hall was telling him to
trust the President, trust the Patriarch, they care about us
. Two weeks later cosmonauts took her out in a black bag, around the same time the country got the news about
untimely
passing of both fuckers. He couldn't help himself that day - braved an expedition to the liquor store. Barely made it in time - the champagne was going like ice cream on a hot day. Exchanging understanding glances with the girl behind the counter, he took off with a bottle of Martini Asti and got drunk that night, alone. There were some fireworks in the neighborhood, too.
But whoever was thinking that would change anything was a complete moron. Sadly, most of the liberal scene, whoever survived, fell into that category. Taught from his childhood to not ever trust the government, the state and the people in power, Dan had no illusions, so he wasn't disappointed like the rest of them. Hunkered down in his apartment - or rather his parents' apartment he inherited - he continued to work, workout, watch movies, play games - anything to keep himself busy to stay sane, while
ebanutaya*
suka
* Karina Ivanovich was rapturously destroying what was left of the country.
There was a real vaccine though, made in some lab near Moscow under her direct supervision. It was working, allegedly. The information blockade was full of holes, the expected result of competent IT people from the
Ministry of Truth
no longer there, so the Telegram news channels were full of rumors and fuller - of speculations. There wasn't a lot of information about side effects or anything, really, but the distribution speed and amounts reported by multiple people made it pretty clear - by the time Karina ramps up production to cover the entire formerly 140 million country, it would be too late. And then half of those who're left will, of course, refuse to take it.
Vaccine, they say.
He chuckled into his mask, making his glasses fog up immediately. A
vaccine made by those hands-from-the-ass government agencies could not be trusted. And even if it was working without lethal side effects - Moscow fuckers would rather see us dead. Hey, it's free real estate, right?
Dan wasn't happy living in conditions like these for the next 5 or so years until DuoHalo mutated so much it would stop being a threat, but he was prepared.
It is what it is. No Quaranteam for us, no happy harems, nihuya*. Should I finally immigrate to the US? Bet they're fighting to secure every male now. Doubt visa will be a problem with how things are going.
The street was empty, unsurprisingly, with all venues closed, some of them a long time ago - due to quarantine restrictions or, more likely, staff and clientele checking out. Closed stores, cafes and restaurants were completely empty inside to not fall victim to the looters. Apartment buildings in his neighborhood were better off, each of them fenced, each door requiring a passcode to enter, each apartment additionally protected by a steel door - the legacy of the 90s.
Dogs were worse than looters though. He couldn't see or hear any right now, but they were always around, packs of them, always hungry, roaming the streets. Dog attacks on people weren't rare these days, going out unprepared was never safe.
He walked down the street, hands in pockets, back hunched, which made his lean figure look no more than average. Sharp gusts of cold wind made his loose cargoes flutter, and Dan shivered, increasing his pace to warm up - there was a ten-minute walk to the Amir's general store ahead of him. But he'd take windy over rainy any day - the latter made his right wrist and left ankle, broken years ago, remind of themselves with dull annoying pain.
Yeah, I'd rather not be limping right now.
He picked up a decent speed when the lanky figure dressed in all black head to toe turned the corner and headed his way, black robe sweeping the pavement.
Blyat. Here's the guy I did not want to see today.
It was too late to hide on an empty street. Dan gradually slowed down and stopped about five meters from the man in black, who greeted him from behind the mask.
"
Zdravstvui*
, Danila. Just the man I prayed to see today."
"Good day, Father," Dan nodded, inwardly bracing for a cringy conversation. "How can I help you?"
Father Alexander was no mere priest - the rector of the Church of Christ's Ascension, one of the biggest in the city. Dan had seen him around the neighborhood, walking tall, parting crowds like Moses the Red Sea. His mother was a huge fan, ever since high school, when they were classmates, always singing praises to his wit and sense of humor. There were no signs of that man in front of him right now - Father Alexander looked pathetic with his hunched back and drooping shoulders. He was not accustomed to begging for favors, yet that's exactly what he was going to do right now.
"I... um... I don't suppose... Is it possible to convince you to donate some money to the church?" Father asked, peering into Dan's eyes apologetically. "You see... Patriarchy has abandoned us... and I still have my congregation to support. What's left of it anyway..."
Dan furrowed his brows.
Asking a raging atheist to donate? Father must be real desperate.
"I'm not going to do that, Father. Simply because I don't trust the eparchy."
The priest sighed and his eyes dropped.
"I'm not finished," Dan continued. "How many people do you still have left?"
"Two... two hundred, I think," he raised his eyes again, full of hope.
Two hundred Orthodox Christians out of the neighborhood that formerly had a population of a hundred thousand people.
"Here's what we are going to do. I will order a delivery of non-perishable foods to the church, on my account. Given that's an order for two hundred people, it won't be big when distributed among your congregation, but will let them pull through another week at least. That works?"
"Oh!" The priest's face brightened. "Yes! Thank you, Danila!"
"On one condition - you take your services outside and make them keep distance from each other. I don't want you to turn your mass into a superspreader event."
"But..." Alexander tried to evade. "It's cold outside..."
"Keep your sermons short then. Do we have a deal, Father?"
The priest steeled himself, his back straightened.
"Yes. I swear to God," he nodded.
"Even I know that's a blasphemy," Dan chuckled. "Expect delivery sometime tomorrow, the courier will call your office."
"This is very Christian of you, Danila!"
"That's just normal human behavior, Alexander Vladimirovich."
They parted ways and, without looking back, Dan could be absolutely sure the priest's walk was way more energized now.
I bet he'd be skipping if he was younger.
The Church of Christ's Ascension was built back in the 90s with
bratva's
* money - their way to buy themselves an absolution for their sins.
Am I different, I wonder? Am I flirting with religion too?
The rest of the way there and back again was uneventful. Amir spotted him from a hundred meters away and stuck the plastic bag with his order out of the shop's window on a long stick with a hook at the end. Amir was properly masked and wearing gloves - that gave his customers some sense of protection. Dan grabbed the bag, gave Amir a thumbs up and headed home.
Walking through the courtyard, he heard a car behind him and stepped aside to let it through. Black Gelandewagen with heavily tinted windows and Moscow plates.
I don't like this. And that call earlier...
The Mercedes parked right near the entrance, and the driver's door opened. He grabbed the bag with his left hand and put his right into his pocket, feeling the cold surface of the telescopic baton under his fingers, preparing for a fight.
A pair of legs swung out of the driver's seat. Even trapped in baggy uniform pants masking their shape, the legs were definitely female. Female legs, most likely beautiful - though he couldn't be perfectly sure about that - clacked the heels of heavy combat boots on the asphalt. Their owner followed to reveal herself, getting out of the SUV with her back to him. Dan was presented with a view of gorgeous auburn mane reaching down past her shoulders, and amazingly round ass, tightly hugged by the pants. The rest of her figure was hidden by a waist-length uniform jacket of military kind. The woman turned to him, meeting his steel gray ones with her deep green, and his heart skipped a beat.