26 - The Boundless Rage (1)
Sokaiseva
{March 13th}
Benji came to me that morning, over breakfast. He didnât sit down, but he addressed me by name, and that was more than weâd had in a good while as it was.
âHey,â he said. âAre you free today?â
âYeah,â I replied. âMore or less.â
âCool. Canâ¦can you help me with something? I need your help,â he said, and the grimace that followed told me everything I needed to know about how that sentence tasted.
âWhat do you want?â I asked.
âWellâ¦â He looked down. âI need a bruiser with me today and everyone else is busy.â
I figured. âYou want me to be your bodyguard?â
He nodded. âYeah.â
âAgain?â I asked.
By this time I was so far removed from the event that split us apart that I could regard it coolly, completely detached, as though it had nothing to do with me whatsoever. It was an old Erika that was a part of that terrible day, and the Erika I was now knew of it only through stories.
It was in the past. It meant nothing.
Benji, however, valued it a lot more than I did. His eyes went to the floor for half a second, then he shifted his weight a bit and made eye contact again. âYeah. Again.â
And all at once the façade against the event Iâd been building up falteredâa second chance! I could make this whole thing right.
I could make this whole thing go away.
âIâll do it,â I said.
âCool,â Benji said. âIâllâIâll send you then info as soon as I have it. Okay?â
âOkay.â
He nodded and walked away.
I looked down at my two remaining pancakes and found that I wasnât all that hungry anymore.
0ââ0ââ0
The mission, on the surface, felt a lot like the last one I tagged along with Benji on almost a year and a half ago.
Godâit had really been that long. Days at the Radiant just breezed by.
Benji wanted me to stand behind him and look menacing while he tried to talk some sense into a certain Marie Kilmer, a fellow water-key.
Benji wasnât sure how sane she was, andâas a ruleâwas against killing anyone he thought could still be saved. I wasnât so sure it was worth the effort, especially since she lived in Rochester, so she was fair game for getting scooped up by the Buffalo gangâthey split patrol of Rochester with us, so it was basically open season on anyone from there with magic. He told me that he was hoping that making a stand with or against Marie Kilmer, who was by all accounts fairly powerful, would deter the Buffalo gang from making a scene there, and possibly open a door for Prochazka to take control of the rights to the area. It didnât really matter which side we took, heâd said, as long as we did something proactive.
I thought that was a slim possibility, but this needed to get done anyway, and everything else was just upside.
Marie Kilmer was, apparently, a middle school math teacher who scooped up a key at what was commonly considered to be the last possible second (a couple days before her twenty-fourth birthday) following the deaths of her parents and sister in the plane crash over the North Atlantic that happened around a week and a half before. The kicker: at the same time, the annual class trip to Europe was happening at that school, and that happened to be one of the flights home.
So sixteen students were dead, too.
It was an international tragedy, but Marie Kilmer wasnât in the spotlight for it. The fact that her parents and sister were incidentally onboard was initially a fun fact for themâthey'd get to meet some of Marieâs students on the way back, how niceâbut it ended up being such a psychological one-two sucker punch for Marie that the emotional trauma of it was enough for whatever higher power controls these things to decide she needed a key.
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God only knew what she could possibly use that key for. The system is kind of stupid sometimes. It seeks out traumatized, damaged people, but it doesnât select for the causes of the trauma. So you end up with people like Marie, broken beyond repair by the whims of some mercurial god, and you give them magic, as though that would ever bring her family back. I could only imagine what someone like that would try to do with a flesh or telepathic key.
Sheâd been on sick leave since. Benji had it on good authority that she was planning to lash out against all of her least favorite colleagues. Not that it would accomplish anything, but motives are motives, and people like her didnât tend to think straight.
Cases like that happened all the time. Itâs what Benji specialized in. Talking people down from metaphorical bridges. Making them see that their magic can be used for goodâor, barring that, at least not for evil. Or, alternatively, convincing them to jump. As long as they jumped in a self-contained, easily cleanable way.
I never said Benji was a saint. He said it himself: we were the bad guys. A lot of the time, he successfully talked the person down. A lot of the time, he maneuvered them into a position where they couldnât hurt anyone. Whether thatâs moving to the wilderness, or jumping off a bridge, or whatever, it didnât matter. And, rarely, he rolled heads. When all else failed.
It seemed to me in those days like Benji failed more often than he succeeded, but that was because Benji rarely ever talked to me, and when he did, it was because he was at the end of his rope for some reason or another. I never really got to see him do well, so all of my stories of Benji talking someone down successfully were second-hand.
Iâd spent the morning preparing some lines and plans for a couple different ways the encounter could go down. She was a water-key like me; maybe I could show her what being a water key could be like and inspire her to not throw her life away. Maybe weâd draft her as a seventh.
Maybe just seeing someone who could very well be one of her students would make her break down. One way or another, this job was ending that day. Thatâs what Benji said: it was going to be the final stand for her. Whether she knew it or not.
So I spent all that time, maybe three or four hours, thinking through every possible permutation of the next six. Everything she could say and how Iâd respond. Every way she could attack and how Iâd retaliate. Every possible thing Benji could ask me do to, and how Iâd fulfill it.
I was ready as ready could be.
Then Benji walked into the room and told me we were going to do it tomorrow instead.
0ââ0ââ0
I hadnât felt that deflated in quite a while. I was so readyâso pumpedâto finally make this whole thing right. I was so ready that Iâd physically written out my plans. I had literal lines that Iâd reviewed. Iâd even come up with a couple of snazzy one-liners to use if the situation called for it.
I was so ready!
And Benji didnât even have the kindness to tell me why he was delaying itâheâd just walked into the room, gotten my attention, told me the mission was being delayed, and walked away.
Ava was there when it happened, and she saw me just sit on my bed with all my papers in front of me, lightly frozen, trying to figure out why heâd do that.
I came up with nothing.
Ava said, âYouâre going on a mission with Benji again?â
Slowly, I replied: âI was. Um, I think.â
âYou probably still are,â she said, looking at the door as though Benji was still there. âHeâs just pissy for some reason or other. God, that guy could do with a pair of balls.â
âWhatâs he done to you?â I asked.
âNothing. I just donât like him.â
That was a good enough answer for me.
âI had everything all lined up,â I said. For proof, I picked up some of the papers and gestured to them.
âI can see that,â Ava replied, flatly.
âDo you think...â It came to me as I was speaking. âDo you think heâs giving it one last shot on his own?â
Ava, who was sipping a drink and browsing through a magazine, said, âAlmost definitely.â
I frowned. âHe really doesnât want me for this, does he?â
âBenji holds a wicked grudge,â Ava replied. âDudeâs just hateful. I donât know why.â
I followed her eyes to the door. All I could do is shrug. âWell, I guess I donât have anything else to do today.â
Ava snapped to attention. âOh, right! I almost forgot to tell you. Remember how I keep complaining that thereâs no real bar here?â
I didnât really remember that beyond a spare mention here or there, but I pretended I did. âYeah?â
âUnit 3 finally pulled down the funding to get it built. Itâs in the basement, so itâs a hike from here, but it exists. Self-serve, though, weâre not hiring anyone to tend it.â
âIs it stocked?â
âSure is,â Ava said. âI checked it out this morning.â
She seemed sober so I assumed she left it at âchecked.â And while Ava was a fairly heavy drinker, even by Unit 6 standards, she wasnât so far gone as to help herself before two oâclock.
âI know a bunch of drinks and Iâve got a decent head for coming up with stuff on the spot,â I said. âMy dadâumâtaught me that stuff. If you donât feel like helping yourself and Iâm around, let me know.â
âWill do,â Ava said. With a smile, nonetheless.
Progress!
I slid off my bed and started toward the door. âMight as well take a look, right?â
âHave fun,â she replied, turning back to the magazine.
0ââ0ââ0
I checked out the bar; it was a bar. There wasnât a lot to say about it. The factoryâs basement was a big concrete wasteland underneath the main floor, but it didnât extend to the full size of the room above it. If I had to guess, it was a space around thirty feet long and wide, maybe a bit longer.
All that was in there was old rusted-out factory equipment and a brand-new bartop with eight seats in front of a wide cabinet of various liquors. There was a rack holding some twenty glasses and beer mugs, a sink and a few small refrigerators. All of this was pushed up against the left wall from the entranceâjust there, as the only thing in that space built new in twenty-five years.
Kind of odd, to be sure, but a welcome addition to that place. The mini-fridge in Unit 6âs barracks was never quite big enough.
I went around the bar and peeked into some of the refrigerators back there. They had pretty much any mixer I could ask for back there. Briefly, I thought about the tuxedo vest I wore when I dealtâand I said to myself, maybe tonight.
Then I went back upstairs.