5 - Street War, No Survivors (3)
Sokaiseva
We made it to the top floor. On the way there I executed three other random henchman who hadnât explicitly followed the other one to their deaths. We werenât strictly supposed to kill everyone, but it just ended up being easier that way.
Why bother trying to separate the innocent from the guilty?
On the top floor there was a bedroom with the door closedâit was the only room up there that had a door. Presumably, it was where the boss of this operation worked.
Given that the door was still closed despite all the commotion downstairs, I wondered if we could have just ignored him, gone downstairs, freed the prisoners, and left.
Ava seemed to share that sentiment. âMaybe we should just go free everyone first.â
Yoru shrugged. âI donât care. Do whatever you want.â
âI can handle this myself. You go down there,â she said.
âGot it,â he replied. âIâll come back when Iâm done, âkay?â
Ava grunted something vaguely affirmative in his direction and took hold of the doorknob. Yoru disappeared back down the steps, and Ava opened the door.
Behind the desk was a man clutching a small handgun; paralyzed by the sounds heâd heard coming from downstairs. He was oddly well put together for a human traffickerâthat didnât seem like a suit-and-tie sort of job, but here that man was: some flavor of eastern European, six foot on the dot if I had to guess, wearing a suit and tie and sitting behind a childâs desk in a converted bedroom, clutching a little black pistol at a young woman and child.
What a world.
There hadnât been any screamsâonly squelches and thumps; a sign of a job well done. As soon as he saw Ava his finger twitched around the trigger; but then he saw me, and he held back.
âWho the hell are you?â he growledâit was the closest thing to a menacing voice he could manage, surely.
Ava opened her mouth and I cut her off. âIâm Erika, this is Ava. We killed everyone.â
She took a quick glance at me, one of no substance that I could tell whatsoever, and said: âYeah, thatâs more or less it. Iâm gonna be real with you, man, I donât really know what weâre supposed to do here. My colleague is downstairs right now busting all the prisoners out. We represent Jan Prochazka of the Radiant, by the wayâIâm supposed to tell you that. Not that it matters much.â
Ava shrugged. âListen. Weâre supposed to negotiate with you for the release of the prisoners, but since you only have four guys in this whole building for some fucking reason, we just killed everyone and weâre just going to bust the prisoners out. Theoretically there was supposed to be a way youâd make it out of this alive, but at this point I just want to go home.â
She punctuated it with another shrug. âAnd God, I just really do not have any sympathy for you.â
Ava gestured vaguely at me, then turned around. âDo whatever you want. Dudeâs too much of a pussy to shoot a kid. I donât know if youâve got anything resembling rage up in there, but if you do, nowâs the time.â
She patted me on the shoulder once. I zapped to attention.
Then she said, âGet âem,â and left the room.
I blinked; the guy behind the desk did more or less the same.
What was his name? Last week I was toldâby the guy I froze to the side of a pool table; something heâd gasped before I decapitated him. That was only seven days, wasnât it? Maybe eight; but either way, not that long. And for all I knew it might as well have been a lifetime, with everything Iâd seen and done since then.
God, it was on the tip of my tongue. I clawed at that blank spot in my memory and could not for the life of me dredge it up.
Instead, I started thinking about how Yoru and Ava essentially didnât do anything today. I can read a map, I couldâve gotten here myself. Iâve taken the city buses around before, itâs not hard. We didnât actually negotiate with anyone, either, and not negotiating is one of my strong suits.
So why couldnât I have done this alone?
âIt was all me,â I said to him.
âYou what?â
âI did all the dirty work today,â I replied. âYoru and Ava didnât even do anything. Iâm just a bruiser again.â
He didnât react to that. Iâm not sure the term meant anything to him. Instead, he asked me: âThat was Ava, huh?â
âYep.â
He put the gun down on the table. âShe seems like a real bitch.â
I didnât have much of an opinion on Avaâit only went as far as this: âI donât think she likes me very much.â
âCanât imagine why,â the guy said.
I glanced down at the water bottle. âIâm almost out,â I mumbled, mostly to myself.
He had a mug of coffee on his desk, though, so in a pinch I could use that. It was still mostly full, too, which was a plus.
âYouâre one of them key users, huh?â he said. Slipping out of formalities.
I nodded. âYep.â
âYou can manipulate water?â
âMhm.â
âThatâs pretty cool,â he said.
âIt is,â I replied.
It was more or less all I had to call my own, but I didnât say that.
Then, like a revelation from heavenâ
âJim!â I said.
âHuh?â he asked.
âThatâs your name,â I said. âI just remembered.â
I turned red; what a stupid thing to say to someone. Obviously, Jim knew his own name.
âHow old are you?â Jim asked.
âIâm twelve,â I said. âI joined the Radiant about a month ago.â
âBit young for this work, arenât you?â he replied.
âI donât think so. I canât really do anything else.â
âSure you can,â Jim said, adopting some kind of mock concern. It couldnât have been real concern; that was impossible for guys like him. âYouâre young, youâve got your whole life ahead of you.â
âNot really,â I said. âI donât think Iâm going to make it past thirty.â
His eyes narrowed. âIâm sorry,â he said. âIs thatâis that a key thing, orâ¦â
âNo, most key users live to around a hundred and fifty or sixty.â I paused, briefly; but I was never going to see this man again, so what did it matter? I was going to shoot him through the head and walk out in two minutes anyway.
Anything I said in here was as good as said to myself.
âI donât think much about the future,â I said. âThereâs too much to think about. I used to think Iâd justâstop, kind ofâ¦I donât know, blink out of existence when I turned thirty. Like that was enough life for me, orâ¦that was all the time Iâd bought, or something. Now, Iâm not so sure. Iâve got it pretty good now. I could see myself going past that, butâ¦I donât know. Iâll cross that bridge when I come to it. I used to be pretty dead-set on stopping then, when things were really bad. But Iâve been blessed.â I drew a bit of water out of the bottle and let it slither around in the air for a moment, just to show him that I could. âWith this. And with them.â
You might be reading a stolen copy. Visit Royal Road for the authentic version.
I gestured behind me. I thought I had more to say, but somewhere in there it fell out of my short-term memory, so I just let my arm limply fall back to my side and stopped talking.
âOh,â Jim said. After a moment, he added: âYou consider Ava a blessing?â
âYep.â
âSheâs horrible to you,â he said. âIâve seen her for maybe five seconds and even I can tell that.â
âI donât think youâd understand,â I said.
âIâm not sure I need to,â he said. âShe obviously thinks youâre trash.â
âItâs not her specifically. That Iâve been blessed with, I mean. Itâs all of them. You wouldnât get it.â
Jim paused. âMaybe not,â he said, quietly. He looked down at the gun again, and for a moment I wasnât sure if he was going to pick it up and shoot me or pick it up and shoot himself. Neither option wouldâve surprised me.
Instead, he said: âErika, look. What are you doing with people like them? They obviously donât respect you, and Iâ¦I mean, God. Not like theyâre angels either.â
âYouâre a human trafficker,â I said.
Jim looked me dead in the eyeâit made my mind buzz; it gave me an irresistible urge to look away.
âErika, there isnât anyone in the basement,â he said. âSwear on my life. I have no idea why the hell you people are here.â
But he shrugged, gave me a halfhearted smile. âBut youâre a key user and Iâm just a guy with a toy gun, so itâs not like I can stop you if you donât believe me.â
âI could just go downstairs and check,â I said.
âYou could,â he replied.
âThat seems like a bad idea, though,â I said. âWorst case I just wait for Ava to get back and then I kill you.â
Jim shrugged again. It seemed like all he was capable of doing, like this was some cruel jokesâ end for him. I suppose it was, after all. âWorth a shot.â
âI guess,â I replied.
I looked at him again. âWhy do you care what I do with my life?â
Jim looked down into his coffee mug for a momentâit dawned on him that even if I put down the water bottle, or if I missed with my shot from it, he was dead to the coffee anyway. So there was no way out, none at all.
No outs. Dead to ritesâdead on board, as Benji occasionally referred to it.
âI donât,â he said. âI mean, youâre about to blow my brains out. But you probably should, right?â
I thought briefly about the stuffed frog I didnât get to buy, and for half a second I was sad.
âItâs not really much of a life.â
âAny life is a life.â
âI donât think the people downstairs would agree,â I said.
And I felt really proud of myself, because that was the first good comeback Iâd ever come up with in my life. I stashed it in my memory for future usage.
His shiny veneer of care broke. The weight of his imminent death broke over him, and as he slumped forward under the weight of it he spoke his true feelings, as best I understood them: âYouâre twelve fucking years old,â he said.
âI am,â I replied.
âWhat the fuck is happening?â
âThis is,â I said. âThis is happening.â
âNo. YouâreâGod, Iâm just gonna repeat myself again. This is some crazy shit. Benâs never gonna believe me when I tell him,â he said.
âYou wonât be telling him anything.â
âHeâs dead,â Jim said. âHe was my twin brother. He died of a brain tumor when he was twenty-six. It wasâ¦umâ¦four years ago now? God, where does the time go. Youâll be thirty before you know it, you know. It sneaks up on you. One day youâre thirteen and all you care about is the math test and that fuck who keeps shooting spitballs at youâdo kids still do that?âand the next youâre twenty-two and youâre trying to get a job out of college, but none of your skills line up with anything because you were too goddamn stupid to major in something useful, and thenâ¦wellâ¦youâre thirty years old and you donât know how you got here or when you got so jaded. I donât know where I am, Erika, I really have no idea. How did I get here? I donât think I could trace the path back even if I tried.â
He looked down at his desk again, glanced over at the coffee. He picked up the mug and took a sip. âYou know what, fuck it. I was gonna try and distract you with a story and shoot you, butâ¦god damn it, that bitch was right. I canât shoot a kid. Thatâs your real superpower, you know. I donât know who Jan Prochazka is, but if heâs enough of a rat bastard to put a kid on the front lines, then he deserves whateverâs coming to him.â
âI do this of my own free will,â I said. âI want to do this.â
âSure you do,â he muttered. âSure you do.â
My tone did not change. âIâm going to kill you now,â I said.
âKnock yourself out, kid,â he mumbled. âYou do you.â
I took hold of the coffee in his mugâit was room-temperature black coffee, which made this whole thing easierâand I made it bubble a bit, in anticipation.
âThirtyâs a blink away,â Jim said. âThatâs all I got for you. Youâll be thirty before you know it. If I were you, Iâd make the deadline forty or fifty. Thirtyâs not enough time to figure out if life is good or bad. Itâs barely enough time to figure out who the fuck you are.â
I picked a point in the center of the coffee mug and pulled it out, dragging all the coffee out behind itâfreezing it as it wentâand it fired itself like a model rocket into Jimâs forehead, cracking through the bone plate of his forehead and splattering his red-gray brains across the window behind his desk.
That was it, I suppose.
I donât really have anything else to say.
0 0 0
That night Yoru announced we were gonna play some blackjack, which put me on the hook to deal, much to Avaâs chagrin.
Before we started, though, he pulled me aside.
âCan we talk for a second? Outside,â he said.
I nodded. âSure.â
By that point I already had a beer in me, and Iâm so small that it was enough to loosen me up a bit.
I never really felt like a real person until I had one. I knew it wasnât good to drink too often, but I figured one or two beers two times a week wasnât going to kill me. It was a small price to pay to not have to stand out when everyone was together, having fun. At first, I didnât like it, and just suffered through the drink for the sake of it, but lately I was changing my mind.
We left the big room that Unit 6 used as a joint common-room and barracksâwith two bunk beds on either side, a single bed next to each bunk set, and a big round table in the middle flanked by mini-fridges, and stepped out into the lonely hall.
Yoru shuffled a bit. He only met my eyes for a second. âWhat took you so long out there?â
I blinked. âOh. Umâ¦Ava talked to the guy up there for a bit, and then she left, and I shot him. I spent a little while just standing around up there, though.â
Iâve never been good at lying, not outright, anyway, but over time Iâve developed an equally useful skill, which is telling stories that are technically true, but donât invoke the same conclusions. I was, technically, standing around for a while, and maybe the events were in a different order than I said, but I didnât say anything that was outright false, so I didnât struggle.
Plus, I was a little tipsy already, so it was fine. It helped me not think about it too much.
âOkay,â he replied. He pursed his lips for a moment, and looked away from me, but when he opened his mouth to speak again it was about something else: âIâm sorry about Ava. Sheâ¦isnât really comfortable around you.â
âI know,â I said.
âOh,â Yoru said. He scratched his neck, looked away from me. âI mean, itâs pretty obvious, isnât it?â
âShe basically said so.â If I wasnât a little out of it already, I never wouldâve spoken ill about someone I had to see every day, but I was, so I did. âShe said âI donât know if youâve got rage, but if you do, nowâs the time. Or, um, something like that.â
âThatâs sort of underhanded,â he said. âSounds like something sheâd say, though.â
âIs she going to be pissy at the table again?â
He shrugged. âBeats me. I donât know if sheâll even play. I meanâ¦look, Erika, Avaâs a nice girl, I swear. You justâ¦kind of freak her out a little, thatâs all.â
That kind of comment used to make me uncomfortable, because it was a signal that I was about to be treated like a subhuman. But nowadays I was too used to it to care, and being a little drunk did little to change that.
âI get it,â I said. âItâs fine.â
But I didnât get it, really, and it wasnât really fine.
âThatâs good,â Yoru said. He took it straight at face value, and I realized that Iâd just lied to his face, and it didnât make me uncomfortable.
Or maybe it was one of those half-truths I told so often, but at that time I couldnât really tell how much of what I said was true and how much just adjacent to the truth. It was a complicated net of things I couldnât prove, couldnât see, and couldnât properly understandâit wasnât worth thinking about.
Well, it wasâtruly it wasâbut the truth is that I didnât think about it because I couldnât.
I just didnât understand. It was beyond me. It was too much work for too little payoff. Maybe, with it all written out and with a good couple of hours, I could draw the lines from one word to one feeling and back around through all of everyoneâs actions and properly draw a net that encompassed who I was to everyone I cared about, but what did that matter when I could just choose to take everyoneâs word at face value instead, and hope everyone did the same for me?
Surely, that was good enough.
Yoru went to go back inside, but instead he stopped and faced me again. âCan I ask you a frank question?â
I was still in the glow from a job well done, or maybe it was the alcohol. I wasnât about to let something as puny and insignificant as words stop me. Sure, maybe Ava didnât like me, and maybe Yoru was still on the fence about siding with his girlfriend or trying to change her mind about me, but that was all inconsequentialâit had nothing to do with me, really, because there wasnât all that much I could do about it.
It was foreign affairs to me, nothing more.
âOkay,â I said.
âThereâs no connotation,â he added. âJust a yes-or-no thing.â
âOkay,â I repeated, a little more forcefully.
âIs there somethingâ¦you know, wrong with you?â he asked.
And I considered that for a moment. I did what I was supposed to do, and I did it wellâI filled the entirety of my role and I exceeded expectations. Sure, there was a rocky moment there at the endâbut if I didnât think about it, it didnât exist; it was only an event in my mind. Nobody else was there thatâs alive to corroborate it; therefore, it didnât matter if I decided it didnât matter.
I did a perfectly good job. Full stop. And if I did a perfectly good job as I knew I did, then there couldnât possibly be anything wrong with me. Everything was exactly as it should be. As it was ever supposed to be.
On the other handâhow was I supposed to know if something was wrong with me? All I really knew was myself, and even then my grasp on that was tenuous at best. Other people, who knew themselves and more, could make that call, but I couldnât. My sample size was one, and I remembered from science class that we werenât supposed to draw conclusions from just one piece of evidence. I didnât know enough about, say, Yoru or Ava or Cygnus to say if anything was wrong with them. By my standards, we were all essentially the same.
So maybe the question didnât have an answer. Maybe it did, and I simply wasnât the person who could answer it. Or maybe the question didnât matter. No matter what, though, I decided it wasnât worth my time.
So I shrugged and said to him: âThatâs not really my call to make, is it?â