48 - Sew You Up Again [October 6th - January 5th, Age 14]
Sokaiseva
Even after that, it wasnât easy. I would still wake up every morning in a cold sweat, frozen in my bed with the echo of what Iâd lost gripping my brain in its claws.
And it would be all I could do to pull myself upright. To use the water from the humidifier weâd set up in there as a sort of training-wheel crutch to feel around the room. The faces of Yoru and Ava and Cygnus and Bell.
Those mornings became easier once I stopped wearing the contacts. I took Bellâs advice. I let myself die. I went all in. Everything on the line.
One day in November I went down to the lunchroom. Frustrated with how weak I felt in the mornings, and how much the vague light sensitivity reminded me of the colors Iâd lost. I went into the back, behind the counter, and rummaged through the boxes of plastic tableware and assorted items until I found the nice cloth napkins we used on special occasions. I pulled one out and felt the lengthânot long enough as it was, but doubled it would be fine.
With an ice knife I made from a fountain, I cut it in half, almost all the way down, and let the two long strips lay end-to-end, fastened at the corner I left intact. I had a needle and thread Iâd borrowed from someone earlier that dayâpeople were much more willing to lend me random things now, I foundâand I did my best to sew the short ends together to make one double-length strip.
It turned out that sewing while blind was hard. One more for the surprise struggles book.
I took the strip and wrapped it around my head, over my eyes, and tied it off.
There was no point in seeing the light. Light sensitivity did nothing for me.
If this was my life, then I had to make it so. Nothing in half-measures. No sense in clinging to the shriveled concept of something I would never have again.
I took a deep breath in the darkness. It was temporary. It was meaningless.
I knew exactly where the door was. I could feel it behind me.
I turned around and left.
0 0 0
I wasnât put on any missions for a few months. I donât blame Prochazka for doing that. Even after Christmas, when I felt fine enough, and had been doing okay in practice sparring sessionsâthe rest of Unit 6, slowly, had gotten on the rehabilitation bandwagon, following Bellâs leadâhe didnât want anyone to find out what had happened to me.
I was a secret weapon again. Let the world think I was gone. It was fine that way.
It was better that way.
0 0 0
Christmastime was approaching, but I hadnât thought of any good gift ideas. Call me conceited, but I had more important things on my mind that year.
Over the weeks following the event, I compiled a list of things I could no longer do. The absolute last thing I wanted was to realize that some vital part of me, more than what had already gone, was torn outâand I figured the best way to go about that was to face it head-on and give it a good, long thought. For all the things I found, I did my best to find a work-around.
Early on I discovered I could no longer read. That one was easy; Braille solved that problem for people much more blind than I was. Truthfully, I was only partially blind. The enhanced awareness of my surroundings I got through slowly perfecting the droplet-echolocation felt, in a few respects, like an upgrade to regular sight.
But it wasnât seeing. It was feeling; it wasnât vision.
0 0 0
One of the first things Ava did for me when she realized that I was going to make it, and that I was not, in fact, going to have to be put down: she went out to a store in Syracuse and bought me six decks of Braille playing cards, so I could keep dealing blackjack whenever we decided we wanted to do that. I could read those fairly easily by just sliding some water over them and feeling where the water was interrupted; and if I was careful about it, the cards wouldnât be slick when I handed them out. It was slow going at first; and it only got marginally better until Christmas, but it was going. It was possible, and that was all I needed.
I could only deal for around an hour before the headache became too much to bear. Iâd start getting woozy and non-conversational at around thirty-minutes. After that, if people still wanted to play, Ava would take over for me while I went to take some aspirin and lie down.
It was enough to feel like a regular person, though.
More on the subject of readingâ
I very quickly became frustrated with the lack of Braille-printed books. There simply werenât all that many of them, and they were tough to find in the area. The little town library had a meager selection, and I wasnât fond of walking in there unattended, especially since I was soul-committed to the blindfold at the time and I didnât want people thinking I was a circus act.
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So Iâd asked Cygnus to get some for me occasionally, and he did.
One day, I was struck by an inspiration. Those bolts of insight happened fairly frequently in those daysâthey were driven by desperation more than curiosity, but I indulged them all the same. I went down the ladder of the bunk-bed and scooped a book at random from the old stack of non-Braille books we had yet to get around to getting rid of in some way or another.
I sat on Bellâs empty bunkâshe was out on some mission, back in actionâand opened it to a random page.
Ink printed on a page naturally causes a tiny depression in the paper. Itâs so small that itâs almost imperceptible to a fingerâyou can feel it there as a change in height, but not closely enough to discern any meaning.
But I had something better than a finger to scan with.
I formed a tiny droplet of water, spread it thin into a rectangle so light in the air that it could scarcely be seen, and I laid it down on the open page over a spot where I figured there was text. It turned out that seeing text and feeling text were different skillsâit takes one longer to recognize an âaâ when itâs something they have to trace than it does when itâs simply something they can recognize.
So I laid that phantom square down on the page, and I searched for the depressions in the paper.
And there they wereâ
A âCâ, an âAâ, an âLââno, two âLâsâ¦
âCallâ¦â
I began to shake. Last Iâd checked, Yoru was still on the other side of the roomâand in my haste I shot a loose ball of droplets at him too fast, too hardâit found him and splattered over his face densely enough to get him a little wet; I felt him frown and wipe some of the water off his nose.
But he turned to me all the same.
âYoru!â I called, holding the book steady. It took all my effort to do so.
He got up, put down whatever he was doing and walked over. âWhatâs up?â
âLook!â
I put my finger on the words, and I shifted that rectangleâwhich I had to remake, since in my haste Iâd let it sink into the pageâover to the next few letters.
And I read to himâexcruciatingly slowly but reading all the sameâ
âCallâmeâ¦a dancerâ¦beâbecauseâtheâ¦dancerâ¦wantsâ¦!â
0 0 0
But I would never have colors again, and that was the hardest loss to bear.
I missed colors. I had a better understanding than ever of shape and formâof the way things moved, of the contours of muscles and the clenching of teeth. I couldâve been an amazing sculptor if that was something I had any interest in doingâbut what I had lost far outweighed what I gained in that respect.
The sharp blue glee in Avaâs eyes when she cackled; the glitter-flash from Cygnusâs newest sword; the sky at dawn breaking over the low and folded buildings in the town; all the things I wore and the food I ate and the cars gliding by on the highway behind the factory.
It was gone. Non-recoverable. Lost to memory and rapidly fading.
For each color I held onto a single sample. Avaâs eyes for blue. The grass outside the factory for green. The dawns for red, the overcast winter sky for white, Yoruâs favorite Christmas sweater for yellowâ¦
For each color a single representative among my entire life.
I clutched them to my chest like the most vital pearls. Like they were as pivotal to my being as my own beating heart.
I swore on every God I knew that I would melt into dust long before I forgot them.
0 0 0
Christmas day. We were all off workâeven Bell, who traditionally found something or other to do on Christmas day to avoid spending too much time with everyone.
I decided I deserved a day off (even though I hadnât worked a formal day since October) and resolved to spend every hour walking around in my pajamas with the stuffed frog on my shoulder. Who was going to stop me?
Nobody.
Cygnus had essentially the same plans. Heâsheepishlyâtold me about how he had to swap out the gift heâd gotten for me before, because it didnât make any sense anymore. He made a point of dodging my questions about what it was.
âItâs not worth it,â he said. âThereâs no point in telling you if I donât have it.â
Prodding wasnât worth it, either. âFair.â
âItâs what I get for doing someonesâ shopping in June,â he said. âI think I was out getting it when Bell came back in the ambulance.â
The memory replayed in my head; and despite all the panic I felt in the moment, thinking about it now, in that context, made it almost a fond one. A moment where we all bonded, even though it was explicitly not that.
âYeah,â I said.
âSoâlast month, I got something else,â he said.
He held out a small gift-wrapped box; a cube of maybe eight inches per side. âGo ahead.â
I took it from him; it was heavier than I thought it was going to be.
So I plucked the bow off the top and set about unwrapping it. Cygnus was by far the best gift-wrapper at the Radiantâprobably because he was the only person who always got something for everyone.
I wanted to get something for him. I resolved itâas soon as I was able, Iâd get him something. It was the least I could do for who heâd been to me.
I ripped away the wrapping and opened the box insideâand in there was an object it took me a moment to identifyâI had to pull it out and hold it in my hand for a moment before I realized what it was.
A cool metal statue of a frog.
Cygnus spoke: âI was thinking about that time Loybol got Prochazka a gift, andâwell, I know we all thought it was really funny at the time, but I personally thought that gift was really touching. And, well, I realized that I was somewhat capable of doing that, too. Iâm no artist, itâs not perfect, butâwell, I hope you like it as much as I liked that hawk.â
I did.
Tears welled up in my eyes. I made no effort to wick them away.
In me, somewhere, a boundary brokeâthe force of it came through so fast that I was completely powerless to stop it.
I stepped forward, closer to Cygnus, and I reached out and I hugged him.
After a momentâs hesitation, he hugged me back.
We stood there embracing for an amount of time I canât quantify.
It was a just second; it was forever.
He said: âItâs good to have you back, Erika.â
0 0 0
Christmas came and went, and the dead of winter arrived.
That first snowfall, I went outside. It was late some early January evening, according to Yoru, and the air was bitter and cold.
But I took a step outside and the world was alive.
Each snowflake shimmered like stars in my awareness, a universe of glittering silver, their forms landing on all places, and in that moment I existed in everything for a mile around simultaneously. I was in every muted lamppost, every skeletal bush, every person hurrying home in damp hats and gloves. Every window dusted over. Every car creeping down the highway.
I was everything and everyone.
And for an hour or more I just stood in the snowfall, only a few steps outside the doorway, and I felt the universe go by.
And I knew.
For whatever came, I would be ready. I could rise stronger than ever before from this. Not immediately, but in timeâand I had time; I still had time.
There was time.
I knewâ
My voice will move mountains.
My power will shatter the world.