35 - Heartless / Mindless / Loveless / Lifeless (1) [July 30th, Age 14]
Sokaiseva
Prochazkaâs office, ten-thirty in the morning. As usual as it ever got for us.
The only deviation from the norm was that every single person in Unit 6 had something to do except meâalthough, given my presence in Prochazkaâs office, I assumed that was about to change.
I took a seat in one of the more comfortable chairsâquietly thankful I didnât need to use the spareâand after a brief exchange of banal pleasantries, he cut to the chase.
âItâs been a busy few days,â he said. âTo the point where if I didnât have housekeeping things to do, Iâd probably have to put myself on this mission with you.â
With Prochazka, âhousekeepingâ meant something between âensuring all the other units were doing their jobs,â âliteral housekeeping,â and âshooting a possible traitor in the head while they sorted mail.â
It was just one of his terms. All it really meant was âsomething I canât, or donât want to, tell you about.â
So I shrugged and said okay.
âPersonal policy says I never send people on missions like this by themselves, but youâve had a good track record on solos so far, and this is urgent, soâ¦â
He grimaced. âTimes like these make me wish I had the budget for another hire.â
Iâd always wondered where Unit 6 got their money from. My understanding was that it was Unit 1âs job to secure funds, or maybe Unit 4âs. I wasnât sure. It wasnât ever important to us. Maybe Prochazka had a big hedge fund or something and we all lived off the interest. Maybe Unit 1 was another group of clandestine operatives just like us, a bunch of bank robbers and jewel thieves making something from nothing. That sounded way cooler than what I did.
It couldâve been anything, really. There was very little about Prochazka or the workings of his organization that wouldâve surprised me.
Another noteâmy âtrack recordâ on solos was only good because I did so few of them. In all fairness to myself, it was a perfect success rate, but one-hundred-percent in this case was only three out of three, and all of those were simple hits that were hard to mess up.
It turned out that it was very hard to send me on solo missions because I couldnât drive, and there was little for public transportation around the factory.
âWhat am I doing?â I asked him.
âRescue,â he replied.
I blinked. That was far from my usual, which I supposed I should have been expecting given the circumstance.
Prochazka grimaced. âI never send people alone on rescue missions. One person canât really be trusted to keep eyes on all sides of their head at once. That being said, youâve been ambushed unsuccessfullyâ¦what, four times now?â
âEight,â I said, sitting up a little straighter. I was really proud of that stat. It was a nice number to remember whenever I was having a bad day.
âI suppose you only tell me when youâve been ambushed half the time, then,â he said, expressionless.
I faltered. âSorry.â
âDonât hold that kind of information from me,â he said. âKnowing youâve been ambushed eight times makes meâ¦even less thrilled about the fact that I have to send you on this one alone anyway.â
âNone of them worked, though,â I said.
âTrue.â He went quiet for a moment. âWell, whatever. I just have to trust you. I donât get to second-guess this.â
Business time. I nodded.
âWeâve got a mentally-unstable fire-key outside of Syracuse that apparently abducted some little girl. Weâre donât want to make a sceneâweâre almost certain that if she isnât there, this guyâs not going to lash out or anything. Heâs unstable but heâs not outwardly violent.â
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I shrugged. It didnât matter.
Prochazka went on. âHeâs convinced this kid is the antichrist. Heâs got the child in his house somewhere, but he hasnât figured out what heâs going to do yet. Thatâsâ¦all the intel we have, really. What I want you to do is just remove her from this guyâs presence. Bring her to the bus terminalâher family is going to be on the bus arriving at 1:12 AM from Buffalo. Have her get on the bus and donât let her family see you.â
âThatâs it?â
He nodded. âYeah. Head over there tonight. Cut it close but not too closeâtry and get there while heâs sleeping, but make sure you leave enough time to walk a small child to the bus stop.â
All of that trust in me.
I swallowed.
âOkay.â
0 0 0
So that night at around ten-thirty, I drank a cup of coffee and put another in a disposable paper cup for the road, since I figured it was going to be a late night, and the last thing I wanted was to crash in the middle of a skirmish.
Then I walked down to the bus terminal. It was about a twenty-minute walk, all things told, including the time I spent getting out of the factory. Down the driveway and along that slumped row of highway-facing buildings down to a gap in the town, a hole in the development scooped out by God, where there was nothing for twenty feet around or more but a black-painted steel and glass covered bench and a bunch of signage depicting where one was and where one could be. I caught some odd glances from late-night walkers as they went by, but nobody stopped to ask me any questions.
I sat down on the bench, rolled the sole of my shoe over the tube of a syringe on the ground.
It was a warm enough nightâright around the temperature where you donât even notice that there is one. Fairly dry; it hadnât rained in a week, which was another reason to keep the coffee on me. It was an emergency source of water in case I needed to make something happen.
Kicking my legs back and forth, waiting for the bus. Sitting just outside the cone of light from one of the dim lamps on the roof of the bus stop.
I was nothing and no-one.
And then it arrived, the headlights announcing the noise and the procession of advertisements plastered along the side of it. The doors opened and white light cascaded out, revealing steps to heaven.
I stood up, went inside. Paid for my fare, took a seat somewhere secluded, and watched the town fade into the rhythmic passing of streetlights on the highway.
0 0 0
I was sent on solo missions so rarely that it the gravity of being on one always stuck with me. I didnât feel the presence of a teammate on missions so much as I felt the absence of oneâthere was a void shaped like Yoru or Ava or Cygnus sitting in the aisle seat next to me on the bus, and every time I looked away it shifted rapidly between the three in the corner of my vision.
It made me acutely aware that I had no backup. No recourse.
11:15 PM. Dark as it would get. I took a sip of the coffee Iâd brought, cupping it between my hands as if it was my only source of warmth. I think knew it was going to be a long night. Prochazka only put me on overnights once in a blue moon, which made this task being mine all the more alien. He liked putting Cygnus on stuff like thisâoften alone. And I think Cygnus liked being put on these kinds of missions, too. He liked being a night-warrior. Made him feel like a true-blood vigilante.
Someone who truly embodied the spirit of justice.
Sometimes I think backâwith the wisdom of hindsightâand I see the Radiant for what everyone saw them as. We always thought ourselves as omnipotent, as self-determiningâbut every other unit knew the truth: that we were simple and violent and hateful people who let ourselves be aimed in good directions.
But Cygnus was different. I never thought of him that way. No matter what happened, I always believed he really did have everyoneâs best interests at heart.
That he always knew right from wrong.
This is a contradiction I live with. Itâs one of many that I have that I simply choose to not think about. By that time at the Radiantâand forever afterâthe morality of the things I did simply did not occur to me. I didnât ever give them more than a passing thought. Maybe I just didnât allow myself toâand yet I always knew that whatever Cygnus was doing was right. Morally correct, as if any such objective thing as that existed.
I know thereâs no point in arguing over stuff like that now. Itâs all semantics. It means something different to everyone, so it means nothing it all.
But in the context of Cygnus and Cygnus alone, I let it slide.
Over time I found it got easier and easier to live with contradictions like that. Over time I simply stopped worrying about them. What was the point? What would worrying solve?
Nothing. Worrying about why morals only applied to Cygnus wouldnât make my opinions change. Worrying about why I felt next to nothing while rolling heads wouldnât change the fact that I was being paid to do so.
Worrying about who I was becoming wouldnât make anything in my life make any more sense.
I was too fast and too slow, too old and too young, too strong and too weak. It didnât make sense. I didnât need it to make sense. It wasnât supposed to make sense, I figured, and because of that it made me an individual. It made me more than the sum of my parts.
And the nagging voice in the back of my head could stuff it.
I would never admit it to the teamâand I never didâbut I hated overnight missions.
Despite everything Iâve gained and the person Iâve become, some part of me never stopped being afraid of the dark.