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March 25th, 2170.
Today, the 381st catfish got sorted and cleaned.
"So, did you get any sleep?" – Gavriil joked, approaching his deputy Konstantin Bogatoy (number 5396413B2; category "b" – deputies). The latter was glad to hear such a joke, because all the other jokes he had heard concerned his surname.
"You know… How I'd like to get into a fight with you," he replied doubly: plagues were killed on the spot for fighting, but it was an easy death.
"Should I take it in a positive light?"
"And only with her. All day long I think about death…"
"Good. Even great for the start of the work week. That we have a plan."
Konstantin opened his decrepit yellow-and-black (half charcoal, half clay) notebook and tried to read something. "Okay. If the 420s make it to 11-all and the 647s make it to 13-all, we'll have to clean all 24."
"Is there a deal on the 'exit'?"
"Output" was "left" cargo, which the plagues did not know about. That is, it was extracted, but it was not registered anywhere – it was given to "blacks" (in other words, "doomed" workers, who were put into separate pits with a small layer of coal and in three cases out of four were never taken out of there; only two of them were really saved).
"No," the deputy proclaimed.
"All right, I'll handle it myself. Keep an eye on things here. I'll be back in twelve minutes." "Got it."
Gora motioned toward the 2 way.
The sorting room was a large hall with a total area of 30000 square meters (100x300) and a height of 3 meters, so that the plague was easier to observe. In addition, there was electric (though weak) lighting in the form of bulbs covered by a thin grid. In spite of these "conveniences" it was the most difficult to work in the purification room: the plagues were too visible. Every time one looked at that gorged face breathing fresh air through the mask, listened to that disgusting laughter spewed by yellow throat and pale green snake tongue and realized that it would go on forever – it was a real torture.
Rounding the corner, the commander looked around the room – empty for now, just two chum booths on either side; Groups A and B wake up early for five minutes to study the plan.
Entering the "coal face hall" (the room where direct mining was done), two figures came into view: Dominik Brazik (number 572644A2) and Piotr Dozyk (number 323372B2). Their faces were not grim with the gravity of the task at hand, but they were squinting from sleep.
"What, didn't sleep?" – Gabriel greeted the miners. He liked to inspire the people with such remarks, arousing anger and rage in strictly limited quantities (and it didn't matter who it was poured out on, the main thing was that it would help them survive). Today, the plagues were only allowed to sleep for 4 hours, as opposed to the usual 8; generally speaking, this was the only thing humans were lucky with – the plagues needed 16 hours of sleep, and they thought it was similar to humans, so they cut it down to 8.
"Sleeping. – whispered Dominic to the approaching commander, "Those bastards got in the way. Don't know what's causing all these surprises today?"
"It's not hard to understand," said the deputy. – They've got their hands full."
"Two boots to a pair. How lucky they are to work together. – thought Gora. – Even their eyes are the same… Dark blue with spark and hate. How come they haven't been caught yet?"
"What do you think Gora?" "What can I say… Assholes…" Everyone laughed in unison.
"From words to action. – Gabriel continued. – Here's a question…"
Their foreheads tensed, their eyes glistened, their mouths opened slightly – in short, every part of their faces was engaged, as if in anticipation of a lightning strike in a clear field where only one man stood.
"Exit."
"Well, I thought so," the muscles relaxed.
"Don't tell anyone what you're thinking. It's not time to think yet… But it's time to dream." "That's what everyone's thinking about, and you know very well."
"And plagues, too," Gabriel brightened here. He had said the phrase before, but only now did he realize the power its realization gave him. It's a chance.
"Well Exit…" – Dozhik said.
"This is a chance. It really is a chance," thought Gora. "Kilograms 125, ah…"
"What?" – Stumbled the commander. "YOU asked about Exit."
"Ah, yes. И?"
"We're 125, 647 is 80. I've already talked to them, so you don't have to try, they say they're getting hit hard today." "They haven't finished their work yet and already they're seceding…" – the chums had a whole charter on
punishments – "All right. We'll organize the transfer," Gora replied and thought again: "This is really a chance.
When the commander returned to the sorting place, the catfish began its work. But Gora didn't care about that now: for the first time in his forty-five years he saw a real chance to free people.
"Gora," Konstantin called out to his commander.
The one in turn "woke up" for the third time that day, "What?" "Raphael. He decided to come out today."