110 - ...And With Nothing Left To Fear [September 19th, Age 15]
Sokaiseva
It was a few more minutes before I could muster the strength to explain the events of the past two weeks to them. It was only two weeks! I was pulled from the dry room on the third and now it was the nineteenthâa little over two weeks. It might as well have been an entire second lifeâand it almost was, really.
I almost became something totally different.
It took thirty minutes to explain, in brief enough terms, what Neville had actually wanted and how he went about trying to set it in motion. The perfect crime; or, rather, the perfect show. One little display to bring the whole charade to its end.
Now, though, with Neville dead and all his plans left to ruin we were right back at square one.
But I found, in the spur of the moment, that I did not want to the truth. Iâd never had much of an inclination to lie to Prochazka but I found that I couldnât bear the thought of him knowing that I was fully ready to throw him under the bus for what I saw as my only way home.
To a home, rather. To just any old place.
Instead, seeing as all parties involved were dead, I kept the details short and said that I bought time until the eighteenth, and when Neville brought me into his office for the final decision, I put an icicle in his skull immediately, and then when I emerged from the basement, Cygnus was more or less right there. I told them what Neville wanted with me. I did not tell them what I wanted with him.
I told them that Bell got him to the right place but no further, and that seemed to go over well. They both nodded as though theyâd long suspected that Bell would do something like that. If anything, Prochazka seemed at least a little pleased that she even bothered to help at that point, seeing as sheâd clearly made up her mind to abandon this wild waste of time long ago and still found some soft corner of her heart with which she gave Cygnus one last boost.
I told them about the murder.
I didnât tell them about the police. Prochazka didnât need to know that in a moment of weakness I spilled the beans. In my head it already didnât matter but I could tell from the way Prochazka listened to me tell the tale, deadly serious, that he still believed in the heart of the mission and my soft betrayal of it would not go over well.
Loybol, though, did not look so hard. Her expression was much softer. While Prochazka frowned at my description of Nevilleâs plan, shaking his head, Loybol did not move. She let the words sit as they were.
At the end of it all, though, she was still the first to speak. She said, âIâm so sorry, Erika. I canât imagine how that must have been.â
Prochazka offered a solemn nod; I found myself less accommodating. âItâs fine.â
We all paused at that, recalling the sheer howling with which I had melted ten minutes ago, and silently, collectively agreed to ignore what is and always has been a throwaway hand-wave statement designed to end conversation.
âIâm glad you didnât give in,â Prochazka said. âThat takes strength. Real, inner strength.â
I found myself unable to respond to that, and I was bailed out by Loybol, who broke in so I didnât need to.
âThatâs it, then,â she said, after some time. She glanced briefly at Prochazka, and then looked back at me.
Loybol said, âJanâcan I talk to her alone for a moment?â
I couldnât remember ever hearing anyone refer to Prochazka by his first name. Frankly, Iâd often forget he even had one.
Prochazka gave that some real thought for a moment, but then he said, âOkay. Iâll be up in my office.â
Then he stood, looked between me and Loybol again for a moment, and headed off slowly towards the stairs.
We both sat and waited for him to leave. Still sitting on the cold tile. Neither of us made a move to more comfortable accommodations.
Loybol said to me, âDo you have any idea what youâre going to do now?â
I pursed my lips. Shook my head. âNo.â
âIf youâre not going to be here,â she went on, as though it needed clarification.
âI know,â I replied, subdued, âI just donât know what Iâm going to do.â
âAnything but this, then,â Loybol said, which I answered with a nod.
She scraped her upper lip with her teeth. âI donât blame you. Iâd be done with this forever after all of that, too.â
While there were certain things I couldnât bear the thought of Prochazka knowing about me, with Loybol I didnât have as many barriers. I knew her for much less time but I trusted her twice as much.
She knew things about me that Prochazka could never understand.
âHe wanted to adopt me,â I said to her. âHe meant it. The whole point of his war was to rescue me from Prochazka. He had the whole thing lined up. All I needed to do was say yes to his plan to reveal magic, and I did. I did say yes. I was going to help him before Cygnus managed to get inside and assassinate him. I didnât pull the trigger. I didnât do anything. Iââ
I was about to start crying again so I clammed up. âI didnât do it. I failed and got lucky.â
âThatâs not true,â Loybol said. But she said it too fast; I knew she didnât mean it.
Or maybe she did; I donât knowâbut I decided immediately that she didnât and therefore it had to be.
âIt is,â I said. It hung between us, heavy and swollen. There was no last stand here. Iâm sure Iâd dreamed of one at some point and Iâm sure I stopped doing so because of how certain I mustâve been that Iâd get one. It was practically a guarantee with the life Iâd lived. The idea of going down in a blaze of glory seemed more like a given than anything else in my lifeâeventually, theyâd come for me, and eventually, Iâd have to uncork everything to escape with my life.
Or, at the very least, take them all down with me.
But just as always, that didnât happen. The army that was sent to get me, got me. There was no final fight.
All the best laid plans of man and so on.
âI didnât do anything,â I said, again.
And Loybol faced me. âYou survived,â she said. âMost would not have.â
I didnât reply.
She glanced back at the staircase for a moment. Prochazka was, in fact, goneâI'd followed him with droplets until the door to his office came between us, so I knew that already, but Loybol must have suspected that heâd only gone as far as a hidden corner so he could eavesdrop. Noâhe gave us our space, and Iâm sure he expected to be filled in on whatever this was later.
I wasnât so sure of that, though. I didnât work for him anymore, and Loybol only took his orders as far as they matched her own.
Maybe heâd never get to know the truth.
Loybol said, âThis whole endeavor, categorically, was a mistake. Every part of it was ill-advised. Neville should not have declared war on Prochazka. Prochazka should not have heeded the call. I shouldnât have bothered helping him.â
I expected her to trail offâit sounded like she was about toâbut then she added a few more. âI should have just killed those prisoners when I had the chance.â
You might be reading a stolen copy. Visit Royal Road for the authentic version.
I paused. âWho were they?â
âThe prisoners?â Loybol shrugged. âNobody in particular. Thatâs the thing. It was just a few operatives who didnât realize whose territory they were in.â
AgainâI thought she was going to trail off, but she didnât. She was just choosing her words carefully. âIâI have a bad habit with things like this. I'm a hoarder. I tend to keep these things, these people, close. On the off-chance Iâll ever end up needing them. Iâm not sure where I got that habit from. Maybe itâs because I grew up poor, that I canât bear the thought of throwing anything away.â
She looked at me again, expressionless. There was no pity there. No hate, no love, nothing.
It reminded me a lot of the way Bell used to look at me.
She said, âProchazka should have left you alone.â
I blinked. It did not occur to me that anyone outside of the organization would have an opinion about that. My origin story was so set in stone in my head that it didnât make sense that someone could see it as a violation or a wrong. Something that should be undone if given the chance. I could question it all I liked but hearing someone else say it was almost insultingâlike being told I was breathing too loudly.
âIâd be dead,â I said, simply.
âYou donât know that. And now, from here, youâll never know.â
I let the droplets fall away from her face and tilted my own downward. âI guess.â
A pause. And then: âBut thereâs time now, Erika.â
That got my attention again. âWhat do you mean?â
âYouâre free. Itâs over.â
âI donât know what Iâm going to do,â I said, after a momentâmore as a deflection than anything else.
âYou donât need to,â Loybol responded. âBut I can give you some suggestions, if youâd like.â
Weakly, I said, âOkay.â
She may not have put it in her eyes but her words still felt like pity. The hard knot of tears rose in my throat again. I couldnât cryânot in front of Loybol, not in front of anyoneânot in front of myself most of all.
Those, though, were Radiant rules. I didnât live there anymore. This wasnât my homeâit was just a place I was in.
So they came. Slow, but they came. This time there was no haunted wailing. It was a quiet affair. I let them roll and didnât say anything. Loybol regarded me plainly again and said nothing for a second, watching meâand then she leaned forward with her arms out and I let her pull me in for an embrace.
I sniffled, face in her shoulder, for a second. For a second I was, again, just a child.
Alone in the woods with nothing at all. Nobody coming to save me.
Turn around, Erika Hanover.
In that position she whispered to me: âIf you come to Hinterland, youâll be safe.â
I didnât respond and she continued: âI can get you a place to live and a spot in a public school. Itâll be the closest thing to a reset you can have. And...I wonât ask you for anything. You live your life and Iâll live mine. One day I suspect weâll need each other again. I donât think itâll be as long as either of us would like. But until thenâyou know as well as I do. You have to try.â
âI have to try,â I repeated.
âThe path forward will not be clear. You wonât even know youâre on it until you look back. But you have to try. If you ever want this to truly stop, you have to try.â
âI do,â I said. Quiet. Slow.
âThen come with me,â she said, âand then go alone.â
0 0 0
This place is empty now.
It was never particularly full, of courseâthis factory, in its true heyday, had more than a thousand workers in it and even in the Radiantâs best years it only ever maxed at around a hundredâbut without the rest of Unit 6 around, without the faces I knew, I couldnât help but feel like everyone was gone.
I didnât bother to analyze and learn the faces of random people in other units. I could see back then; I didnât need to. I recognized their faces even if I didnât know their namesâbut now without the former Iâd need the latter to re-identify them.
But I didnât live here anymore. I didnât want to know.
Being faceless didnât stop them from staring. They stared even in the best of times, I knewâthat part I remembered clearly. We were always pariahs. Without the rest of them to deflect the blame, though, it concentrated on me.
Iâd made up my mind to go up to our old barracks and nothing was going to stop me from doing that; but the eyes laid upon me from every side-corridor made it tougher.
But I did not shrink back. They could think whatever they wantedâthey always had; and there was no reason to believe that would change now.
They watched me crouched behind corners, like childrenâhiding from meâhiding from the kingâs procession.
And ifâwhenâI turned to face them, they flinched. Without fail. Flinched.
My eyes alone were enough to cow them.
If I wanted all of this to stopâ
I came to our old barracksâ door and paused. For a moment I almost didnât want to bother going in. What was I hoping to find? Everyone back again, alive and well, as though this whole endeavor was some long-winded prank?
It was going to be empty. Dusty. Things left just as they wereânone of the vermin crawling around these halls would ever dare to set foot in there. That was a unholy place, where the demons lived, and to see it was to peek in a portal to Hell.
Or something like that, anyway. In their shoes Iâd want nothing to do with itâand nobody had been in there since I was, a few months ago, when I stopped by with Cygnus after I got hurt.
What was I looking for in there? A sign? Would Bell be there againâsitting on one of the bunks, waiting for me to return. The apology I craved on her lips. Benji at his deskâapology on his lipsâAva with her plants upstairsâthe apologyâ
No.
I opened the door and I will tell you what I saw.
The room was empty. The bunks exactly where they were left. A fine layer of dust on every hard surface.
My little stuffed frog, dangling over the railing on the top bunk of the bed I slept in for two years. It didnât face me but I found myself walking inside and standing in its line of sight anywayâapproaching it straight on and plucking it off the rail.
Held it in my hands, bobbing it up and down and feeling its felt feet flap limply along with it.
I wanted to say I found something in there, but I didnât.
The room was empty. It was over now.
Itâs over.
0 0 0
Except, of course, that it isnât. I am still alive, despite all of our best efforts. Itâs not over. I, against all odds, continue. That one point continues to ring trueâsomeone, somewhere, is always going to want me for something.
Thereâs too much gold here to not go digging.
But those are just my recursive thoughts. They haunt me the same as anyone elseâforever asking what, why, how.
It doesnât matter what happened. It doesnât matter why or how. The factsâthe events as they areâdonât care about these things. I can look at them from any vantage I like and get nothing.
Iâm fairly certain, if I was willing to sit in front of a doctor, that thereâs medication I could get for that.
The barracks held nothing for me. I got my stuffed frog and left. That was all there was in there.
I resolved to tell Loybol that I was going to take her up on her offer. In Hinterland I could see something new. I wasnât sure if I was going to try school again but I didnât need to make that decision right nowâalthough it was September already, so it would need to be made somewhat soon.
The idea of sitting at a desk doing math worksheets again after all of this almost didnât make sense. It drew a smile out of me, if only because of how silly it all seemed. These pieces were completely out of orderâworksheets and then war, not the reverse.
I took the frog with me as I went out of the factory. I took a back door to avoid as many eyes as possible. The last thing I wanted was to run into Loybol or Prochazka again before I was ready.
I went outside to the field, out to the rocks where Loybol spoke to me in one of my weakest moments a few months back. She wasnât there now, of course, but I could still imagine the outline of her there, the warmth of her breath swirling red like a dying star as she told me who she was.
It would be naïve to pretend that Hinterland held anything particularly special for me. It was just a change of scenery and I knew that, even then. A change of scenery could only go so farâa change of heart was what I needed.
No, Erika Hanover, donât turn around. You know whatâs back there. Youâve seen it. Thatâs Hell youâve walked out ofâbut itâs over now. Itâs over. You donât need to do it again. You never have to.
It lives inside you foreverâbut thatâs what the past does: it exists, once, and never again.
Time will pass and I will be well again.
Now, with nothing left to fear, with no more missions and no more targets, I could stop and look.
Clustered around the rocks and the shrubs were a handful of dragonflies. The air off their wings cooled blue into long streaks that resembled something more grandâwide and feathered like angelsâ wings.
They regarded each other and everything between the rocks and shrubs in moments and then they left, as suddenly as they arrived.
I sat there with the stuffed frog on my shoulder. I waited. I had all the time in the world to wait.
The sun was downâthe air cool again, the summer heat dwindling with the days, and for a while I sat there doing nothing at all, thinking of nothing at all.
The hope for me is this: after that moment, when I was ready to walk away, I stood up and turned around and I faced the factory again, empty now, whole now, the past as closed as it would ever be. Never again in my life would I be as at peace with this chapter of my life as I was right then, just after the dragonflies, just before I set back across the field.
But now I know. I have the proofâI can feel this way. It can be done.
As long as there is time, there is a chance. And if the time goes onâthen so do the chances. They extend as the day is longâas the days are infinite.
I know one thing about myself: I always haveâand always willâget up again.
That is what Erika Hanover is for. The clock ticks and she returns.
Invincible as I amâendless as I amâ
I endure forever.