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The Legacy

The Legacy

Titel: The Legacy
Autoren: Unknown
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been on the Most Wanted list. If he so much as tried to use a credit card he’d be tracked, traced, caught and imprisoned or worse. The Underground might not offer much in the way of hospitality, but at least it protected him, kept him safe. He looked around cautiously then, with a sigh of relief, saw that the job was done. Quickly he pul ed the wires apart, jumped down and started to sprint away.
    But as he ran through a door and what had once been a ful y functioning staircase, Jude was stopped in his tracks by the sound he’d heard before. He looked around and careful y sank back into the shadows, his heart beating in his chest – from the running or from fear, he wasn’t sure. And then he heard it again. A gasping, wheezing noise. It didn’t sound like enemy guards. It wasn’t like anything Jude had ever encountered before.
    Hesitantly, he crept along the wal , being careful to stay hidden in the shadows. He was on a platform, a corridor that was now missing both of its wal s. Beneath him were two platforms just like this one; beyond the gap where the other wal had been was a five-metre drop down to the central floor where disused machines sat redundant, rusting like sunken ships.
    The wheezing was get ing louder. Jude thought again about running, but he couldn’t – he had to know if he’d been fol owed, had to know what or who was making this sound. It could be a trap, but that was unlikely. Free food would have been a bet er trap than the sound of someone gasping for air. Free food, if it was good, would almost be worth walking into a trap for. Pausing briefly to contemplate his concave stomach, Jude shook himself and continued edging towards the sound.
    He turned the corner; the sound was louder and yet he stil couldn’t see anything.
    Frowning, he moved away from the wal to look down at the central floor, but stil he could see nothing. It sounded like an animal, he realised with growing relief. It wasn’t human. Probably a dog. He listened careful y; it was coming from directly under him. Dropping down to the floor, Jude inched to the edge of the platform and lowered his head over the side, craning to see the wounded animal making the now frantic noise. And then he felt the blood drain from his face and felt his hands go clammy, because it wasn’t a dog. It wasn’t an animal of any sort. It was a woman.
    She was sit ing clutching her throat, her skin tight around her hands, around her face, and she looked as though someone was strangling her, as though they were pul ing at an invisible cord round her neck, because she was choking and her eyes were bulging and staring wildly, her hands scratching at the air above her head as though it might save her. But Jude could see no one pul ing the invisible cord; the woman was alone. Without thinking he turned, gripping the floor he’d been standing on with his hands, lowering himself down to the platform where she sat. She saw him, but she could barely bring herself to look at him.
    ‘Water!’ she gasped.
    Jude took out his precious water bot le and after only the briefest of pauses offered it to her. She tried to grab it but her arms were flailing hopelessly. Careful y, he poured some of the water into her mouth. She nodded frantical y and he poured the rest in, but as the liquid slipped down her throat, she wailed agonisingly.
    ‘What? What is it?’ Jude asked anxiously, but the woman wasn’t looking at him, she was clutching her throat again.
    ‘Water!’ she said again.
    ‘It’s finished,’ Jude said. ‘What’s wrong with you? What happened?’
    ‘Thirsty,’ the woman said, her eyes glinting now. ‘Water.’
    Jude edged back, his eyes wide, his heart thudding loudly. ‘I don’t have any more water.’
    The woman nodded, as though final y understanding what he was saying. Then, without warning, she mustered her strength and launched herself at him, taking him by surprise and toppling him to the ground.
    ‘Water,’ she screeched. ‘Water!’
    Her hands were clawing at his neck and then her elbow was pressing into his windpipe and he couldn’t breathe. He tried to push her off but she seemed to be imbued with incredible strength – the strength of desperation, he found himself thinking – and everything started to go black. And then, without warning, the pressure disappeared. He gasped for air, choking for oxygen, rol ing over on to his front, pul ing himself up to al fours. The woman had fal en away from him; she was on the ground
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