103 - Angel in the Empty Room (September 11th, Age 15)
Sokaiseva
Itâs hard for me to say exactly what I was feeling as the two of us walked home that afternoon. Part of me knew it would come to this, somehowâI wouldnât be involved if my role couldâve been played equally well by a magically-endowed bundle of oak logs. Obviously this would have something to do with me. Neville had more than enough power at his fingertips to not need any moreâand me minus my power was just a little bundle of nerves and cauliflower brain tissue.
I didnât really know what was going on, but that mightâve just been the shock of what Neville was laying on my shoulders. To be honest, Iâm not sure. I mightâve stared just as blankly even if I was those aforementioned logs.
Neville dropped me off with a solemn goodbye at my door and I was left standing there again, still and silent, except this time I had my door key-card with me, and in theory I could let myself in.
Key-cards like that were always a touch embarrassing, since they were perfectly blank slices of plastic to me, but theyâd only read in the machine in one specific wayâso I only had a one-in-four chance of getting the orientation right.
So, limp, I slipped the key into the slot once, twice, three timesârotating it accordingly each time until the lock made the right clicking noise and I was able to get inside.
I stepped into the room, gently closing the door behind me, and only when the door was good and shut did I spread droplets around to find out where Matthew wasâand I found that Talia was there, too, and that both of them were facing me. Staring at me.
I put the key in my pocket and walked, slowly, back to my easy-chair.
We all sat there in silence for a moment waiting for someone to take the plunge.
Matthew did the honors. âWell?â he said. âWhat did he say?â
âBefore he left?â I asked.
âNo. Inâin general. What did you guys do, where did you go, all that.â
Both he and Talia sat there in near-identical posesâtense, waiting. Still.
âWe went to the park,â I said, slowly. âAnd he told me that heâs been thinking about what Talia said.â
âWhat you told him I said,â Talia said, slowly. Without turning to me.
âWhat you said,â I corrected, taking a hard edge. âTo the letter. Exactly what you said.â
âWhatever. Justâwhat did he say?â
âHe told me that he considered your plan, and that he likes it.â
âWe already knew that,â Talia snapped, but Matthew raised his hand and she stuffed whatever second half of her response she had ready to go.
This was my big bargaining chip. I knew, walking home with him, standing alone in front of the door a few moments ago, that the thing that Neville had burdened me with had at least one upside: it put me in total control of the situation with Talia and Matthew for the next seven days. All their demands could fall on deaf ears. For all intents and purposes, I owned them.
So I savored the moment. Sometimes I have to let myself take a win. I was due for a few of those, right?
I let my eyes wander between the two of them, building the second. And then I said, âHe wants to go through with it, but only if I agree to help him.â
Talia slumped back in the couch. âSavior Lord Jesus,â she mumbled, âWe are all gonna fucking die.â
Matthew sighed. He splayed his fingers over his face. âOkay. Soâ¦what do we do with that?â
I shrugged. âYou start listening to me is what we do with that.â
âMore than we already are? Not sure what your angle here is, kid. You already called my bluff. I think weâre both on the same page when I say you correctly sniffed out that Iâm not willing to put my life on a coinflip. Obviously weâre all kind of looking for the same thing here. So whatever youâre gonna demand, just do it.â
Something in a back corner of his mind changed and he let out a hard snort. âWhatever. I donât give enough of a shit anymore, and I donât think Talia does, either. This might not be fun for you, but this is beyond life or death for us. Iâm not sure thereâs any kind of stakes that could make you really understand the gravity of any situation, let alone this one, so let me lay some shit out for you so you understand our angle here. As I see it, hereâs the possible outcomes of this. One, you help Neville show magic to the world and millions of people die. Two, you donât, and Neville shrugs and we kick the can down the road. Three, you help us kill Neville and put someone else in charge, Ivan or Talia or me or I donât fucking know, just anyone else, and then we have this conversation again later with someone whoâs a little more sane, and by that I mean you and Talia do, because Iâll be in a fucking shed in the family compound until I rot. Do you see any glaring issues here?â
My face did not change. It all rolled right off me. âItâs bad, Matthew. Obviously I know itâs bad. Obviously I know youâre not happy with it. You know what Iâd rather have? Iâd like to be back with my friends at the Radiant. I could be watching cartoons with Cygnus right now, and you all could sort this for yourselves, because all Iâm ever supposed to do is be a big gun for Prochazka to shoot and I was okay with that. I donât make these decisions because I donât care, Matthew. I donât know what the fuck it means. Iâve spent a very long time telling myself that. This,â I waved my hands around me, âmight not look like it, but most of it is curated to filter out things I donât want to think about because Iâm bad at it and it confuses and scares me. This is one of those things.â
I let it draw out. âSo, to answer your question, I donât know. I havenât thought about it. I havenât thought about it because I donât want to. Because this is not my job, not my problem, and not my interest. You said it yourself. Iâm going to be fine. Someoneâs gonna want me for something. But you two, near as I can tell, are way more replaceable. So when Neville says heâs leaving the fate of the world in my hands, he knows heâs leaving it. You know what I want to do right now? I want to go home. Thatâs all I want to do. I want to take Bell and Cygnus and go the hell home and pick up the pieces of my life and try and figure out something else to do, because I think Iâve learned my lesson now, whatever lesson that was, and Iâm done. This place, as far as I can tell, was pretty clearly in the process of imploding even without me being here. So, maybe you can shove your perspective up your ass and think about my perspective, because Iâm getting really sick of this back-and-forth, and all Iâm really thinking about now is which outcome gets me home the fastest.â
Matthew may have been somewhat cowed, but Talia jumped to her feet, finger extended hard at me, teeth gritted. âYou donât have a home,â she snapped. âYou donât have shit. Prochazka doesnât give enough of a fuck about your well-being to do the right thing and you know it. Youâre gonna walk back into the Radiant and heâs gonna give you a donut and seven dollars and call it square.â
It bounced right off me. I simply did not care.
âMaybe youâre right,â I said. âWho knows? But what I do know is that Nevilleâs being awfully nice to me for no reason and Iâm at least a little interested in seeing that play out. I know what he wants me for, now, but heâs given me a week to think about it and weâre going to see each other at least a few more times between now and then. The point here,â I slowed down, taking a breath, âis that Neville wants me to help him and you two donât. The pivot point is me.â
I tapped my sternum with my index finger. âMy choice. My show. You two are making a case to me, for the next week. You prove to me that Nevilleâs insane, and Nevilleâs got to prove to me that he means it. And me? Iâm crazy! Iâm zany! Iâm off-the-fucking-wall! Who knows what Iâll do next?â
Waving my hands in the air. âCrazy old fucking Erika, at it again!â
At some point during that, Iâd gotten up to match Talia, and Iâd managed to wither her back down to the couch, slumped much like before, staring out at a spot above the TV on the wall across from the couch.
Slowly, sensing that this was all over, I eased myself back down.
Stolen from its rightful author, this tale is not meant to be on Amazon; report any sightings.
The silence persisted far longer than I thought it would. It sagged into the shapes of the room like a damp tarp and it eventually ate at me enough to craft a response. âObviously weâre all very stressed out,â I said, in a monotone. âAnd Iâm about as thrilled to have to make this choice as you all are about it being my choice to make. If it was up to me, I wouldnât be deciding anything, but thatâs not where we are. The bottom line is...I donât know what Iâm going to say to him on the eighteenth. I think the odds are just as good as any that Iâm not gonna know right up until the moment an answer leaves my mouth. It might just be random. I donât know nearly enough about the state of the world to know which outcome is best for everyone. Iâve spent my life ignoring consequences because I donât want to understand them, and...honestly, Iâm not sure if I think itâs too late to change that now, or if itâs just straight-up beyond me.â
âThen let us make it for you,â Talia said.
And I shook my head. âHonestly...I donât think you can do it, either. I donât think anyone can.â
0 0 0
The three of us rapidly found that beyond that development, we didnât have much to say to each other. The world sat limp in my hands and neither Talia nor Matthew were allowed to touch it.
And, to an extent, neither was I. Hold but donât manipulateâjust hold, only hold.
I had a week to make a decision, anyway. That much kept Talia and Matthew from completely blowing their tops. A lot could happen in a week. Hell, itâd only been just over a week since I woke up from the dry room, and look at how much had happened then.
Things just go by so fast sometimes.
I meant what I saidâI did not have any idea what I was actually going to do. I wasnât sure that making a plan sometime in the next seven days would change that. Put on the spot, with the world hanging in the balance, an answer would escape my lips, one that Iâd be bound to for eternity, and there was no actual guarantee that it would be whatever weâd pre-decided.
There are some things you can put me on the spot for, and some things I can reliably quick-drawâbut the right words are not one of them.
I didnât know how the world worked. Iâm not sure anyone really does, but thatâs beside the point. I only knew things as they related back to me or what Iâd been told to do. Everything else I intentionally ignored. I had assumed that this would never come back to bite me, because if I just plugged my ears and sang loudly enough nothing I did would ever have any meaningful consequences.
All of a sudden, I understood the skull-peeler. Every time I did something that couldnât be undoneâtaking a life, busting a crime, destroying a placeâI took a little off the top, and I was betting on the fact that I was so stupid, so irredeemably thick-headed and empty-minded that Godâs knife would never hit gray matter. I was playing it all up. Yoru was right, Ava was right, Benji was rightâI wasnât that stupid. I was just playing a stupid person on TV so people would think I didnât know any better, and would pass any consequences I created as a result of my actions on to the person up the chain. Whoever pointed the gun was to blame. The gun, if left alone, would just sit there.
And yet Neville deemed it worth his while to disassemble a gun and scatter the parts like scrying bones to find his answer.
Maybe Matthew and Talia had it right from the get-goâmaybe Neville really was insane. I guess it wasnât really my call to make. How was I supposed to know what an insane person looked like? What frame of reference was I supposed to use? Yoru? Ava? Cygnus? My father?
I didnât know any normal people. From here in the future, Iâm comfortable saying that I donât think normal people actually exist. Thereâs no standard by which to measure these things. Itâs an inherently meaningless statement that people hang way too much of their hat on.
It was in all of our best interests to try and wrangle this fifty-fifty Iâd be sitting on in a week and push it one way or another, but Iâd be damned if I knew a good way to go about doing that.
I asked Talia and Matthew if they knew anything about Cygnus and Bell, and they told me that they were alive at the very least, although their exact location wasnât super clear. Neville had each told them different things. Theyâd discussed the matter before Iâd returned. Neville must have suspected that something was up.
I told them then that Neville told me it was okay to discuss this matter with Matthew, and that sealed the deal that Neville had sniffed out our little rebel sect.
Talia sank back in her chair. âOkay,â she said, at that news. âOkay. So Neville thinks something might be up. Which means thatâ¦if you say youâre not going to help him, heâs going to assume that we coerced you into doing that somehow.â
I shrugged. âI donât know,â I said.
âSo if you say no,â she went on. Slashing a finger across her throat. âWeâre dead.â
Again. I shrugged. âOkay.â
âRight, youâre not a person. Almost forgot.â
âTalia, all I know about you is that Iâm your worst enemy and you want me dead. You canât blame me for not caring what happens to you.â
It was her turn to shrug, now. âOkay, thatâs fair.â
Matthew finally found something to say. âWell, I guess Iâm going to ask this. What do you think Nevilleâs going to do in the next week?â
âProbably keep taking me to various restaurants and things around the city.â
âJustâ¦being nice to you.â
âYeah.â
âDo you like it when he does that?â Matthew asked me.
I paused. My mind went blank. âIâI donât know. I donât think Iâm supposed to.â
âSo you do like it, guilt aside.â
I frowned. âHalf the time he doesnât even ask me for anything. We donât even talk about anything of consequence. We justâ¦talk about stuff. Unrelated stuff. Iâ¦only Cygnus ever did that with me. I know, obviously, that he wants something from meâI know because he told meâbut heâsâ¦umâ¦doing a really good job ofâ¦I donât know, couching it. Hiding it. Making itâ¦making it seem like he doesnât.â
âBut you like it.â
Pursed my lips. Nodded.
âItâs new for me,â I said, slowly. âItâ¦reminds of the time when my dad taught me how to mix drinks and deal card games. I know he just wanted someone else to do those things for him, but I likedâ¦not being ignored. I liked the attention.â
We all fell quiet for a second. âI like attention,â I repeated, slowly, sounding a bit more defeated than I meant to.
âYouâre what, fifteen?â Matthew said. âThat checks out.â
âI guess.â
He paused again, and then he said, âIâm going to change the scope of the question.â
âOkay.â
Matthew grimaced. Turned away from me a bit. âWeâve already established that Neville wants you to help him reveal magic to the world. But what we havenât doneâ¦â he trailed off, choosing his words. âWhat we havenât done is establish what you want from him.â
I did my best to remain expressionless. âWhat does that mean?â I offered, as flatly as I could.
âIt means that you obviously want something from him,â Matthew said. âOr we wouldnât still be sitting here. Weâve already established that me versus you is a quick-draw coinflip of whoever strikes first, and youâre willing to stake your life on that while Iâm not.â He exhaled, slowly. âAnd weâve also established that Neville is willing to give you a pretty long leash. It stands to reason that if you really wanted to fuck off, you could, and the odds of that working out, thanks to Nevilleâs truly stellar planning, are in your favor. But youâre still here.â
âBecause I want to see how this goes,â I said.
âNo, I donât think thatâs it. I donât think you give a shit how this ends. We could all link arms and sing Kumbaya or get executed one-by-one via firing squad and itâd mean exactly the same to you, wouldnât it?â
âI want to go home,â I replied. Still, even. âWhatever gets me home the fastest is what I want to do.â
âWhat gets you home the fastest is putting an ice-bullet in both of our heads and getting on the first Greyhound to Albany,â Matthew said. âSo thatâs not true.â
âIâd have to get Cygnus and Bell first.â
âThat seems trivial and you know it.â
I pursed my lips. âWhy donât you just go ahead and tell me what I think, since you seem to know so much about it.â
âAbsolutely,â Matthew said, without skipping a beat. âLetâs take this a step back. You want something from Neville. Maybe you donât know what that thing is yet, but itâs been made clear to you that Neville is trying to navigate this to a position where he can offer you something, and you canât make a hard call one way or another until you find out what it is. I donât necessarily think asking you to help him reveal magic to the world is it, because he didnât even know that was an option on the table until we invented it. I think you donât want to go home, Erika. You want an excuse to not have to see Prochazka again because you know, deep down, that heâs used you, and that he probably doesnât care if you live or die.â
âWeâve been over this already,â I said, a touch more quietly than I intended.
âWe can both be right, Erika,â he said, matching me. âItâs not about one or the other. Youâre waiting. You donât know what youâre waiting for but youâll know it when you hear it. Itâs something thatâll make this all make sense, Iâm sure. And maybe it exists and maybe it doesnât, but thatâs not the important part. The point is that youâre waiting for something.â
âWaiting for what?â I asked him.
He pursed his lips. Face tensed up. Beyond a simple snappingâthis was the first time I felt that he well and truly hated me. Beyond confusion or simple fascinationâheâd moved past that. He was shifting, slowly, to Taliaâs point of viewâthat whatever was going on in here, whatever I was buying time for, whatever this holding pattern was supposed to be about: it wasnât worth the effort to understand.
Fuck it, whatever, it doesnât matter.
Matthew, I think, came to understand me right then, and he found exactly what Talia found: an empty chest with a little dust bunny and a curled-up spider husk.
âI donât know, Erika,â Matthew said, shrugging. The vitriol seeping through his teeth like predatorsâ drool. âWhy donât you try looking deep within?â
0 0 0
In hindsight I can say that I really did intentionally avoid the only possible conclusion I could draw from all of this for as long as possible. Once I was told what it was I was looking for, it all came perfectly clear. Of course this was the one thingâit couldnât have been anything else. The sheer clarity of it made me feel so perfectly stupid once it was revealed to me.
Of course, stupid girl, what else could you possibly have wanted?
What was the one little thing you could still ask for?