{Book 2 - Teardrop Two-Step} 50 - Pass You By [April 10, Age 14]
Sokaiseva
Lately, Iâve been reading about army ants.
Thereâs a phenomenon with them, Iâve learned, where they misinterpret a pheromone trail and accidentally start walking in circles. If too many other ants start following this confused antâs trail, the pheromone trail gets stronger, and eventually you end up with a huge spiral of ants, sometimes the size of the entire colony, walking in endless circles until they all keel over in exhaustion. Army ants are blind, so the pheromone trails are their only way of figuring out where theyâre supposed to be. When that fails them, theyâve got nothing. Itâs their only lifeline.
This leads me to two places.
One: do the ants ever realize whatâs gone wrong, as they go around and around? Does the fear of being lost keep them in line, even to their ultimate end?
Two: do the other animals, when they come to a clearing in the forest and see a vast spiral of crumpled-up ant shellsâdo they know what happened there?
Do they know who to blame?
0ââ0ââ0
Weâd tracked the operative to the strip of pavement behind a K-Martâthe little pseudo-street behind all the department stores, where the trucks park. She was, by my best guess, crouching behind the set of concrete steps that led up to one of the buildingâs back doors; clutching a small bent object in her hands, something with a hole in the frontâa gun, surely. Between us was a parked semi-trailer, but the woman could have theoretically put the gun out close to the ground and shot at our legs from around the steps if she wanted to.
It wouldâve been a mostly blind shot, however, and making blind shots at a metallurgic is generally not advised.
âSheâs got a gun,â I whispered to Cygnus.
âMan,â he said, back against the wall, staring down the row at the set of concrete stairs she was supposedly behind, âI couldnât even feel that yet. And thatâs supposed to be my shit.â
âIâm not doing all that much else,â I said. I could only give him half my attention. Keeping track of all the objects in the areaâevery little thing someone could hide behind, the slow breath of the target, all the entrances and exits to the strip, the condensation dripping off the exhaust pipes on the single truck parked at the end of the rowâit was more than enough to keep my fully occupied.
Cygnus didnât reply. He inched forward, slowly along the wall, until he made a little affirmatory noise. âI got it.â
âNow?â I asked him.
He pursed his lips, and clenched his left hand.
Something from behind the concrete steps screeched and snapped hard and the woman cried out, involuntarilyâher breathing went from shallow and measured to a panicked heavy. Her hand, now a shapeless, semi-round mass, hit the pavement with a heavy thwack. I wasnât entirely sure what Cygnus was going to do when I asked him, but that was more than good enough.
âDoes she have a key?â I whispered to himânot that sheâd be able to hear us over the sound of her own pain.
Cygnus frowned, then said, âNo. Just a gun.â
That was relatively common among enemy combatants now. Only one in maybe five or so had access to real magic, and even fewer had anything approaching what Cygnus or I would call âpowerful.â None of them were even within orbit of me or Bell.
Unit 2âs stellar drafting was paying dividends yet again.
âLetâs move in,â Cygnus said.
âRight.â
We stepped away from the wall, followed the truckâs outline around, and emerged in eyeshot of the woman from a distance of around twenty-five feetâmore than enough to react cleanly to anything she might try to do.
Cygnus walked a touch faster than me, just to get ahead. With a better vantage nowâand less I needed to pay attention to, now that weâd de-escalated the situationâI could better focus on the bleeding ball of shrapnel that the woman had instead of a right hand. Cygnus had bent the gun backwards in her grip, fusing it around in a circle without regard for the soft, fleshy bits curled around the trigger.
No amount of surgery would be able to save that. I wasnât even sure Bell could do it.
The woman, gritting her teeth to keep from making any more sound, held the metal-fused hand in her left, squeezing it as if that would make it hurt less. She forced air through her nose hard, in and out, and watched us approach without a word.
âYo,â Cygnus said, waving. âNeed a hand?â
I personally wasnât a fan of kicking combatants when they were down, but I also wasnât about to make us look conflicted in front of an enemy, even if there wasnât a snowballâs chance this woman was making out of this place alive.
That said, if I had to make a list of worst places to die, âbehind a K-Martâ is probably up there, maybe topped only by âa K-Mart parking lot.â At least the employees would see the scene if you got murdered inside one; plus, by this point you probably had to actively seek out a K-Mart to die at.
I snickered a bit, despite myself, and to his credit Cygnus did exactly the same thing I did just a moment previously and ignored the sound, despite the sequence of events making it look like we were reacting to each other and that neither of us cared.
Maybe it was better that way.
The woman didnât react to any of that. Judging the heights of crouching people is fairly tough to do by shape alone, but I did my best and pinned her at around five-five. She was wearing a soft t-shirt and exercise shorts that she may or may not have bought at the K-Mart immediately prior to us ambushing her. Aside from the fresh bloodstains and the sweat, the spots glowing warm in my perception like embers all over her, both of those garments seemed fairly new.
Thereâs a lesson here, I think.
âAre you a part of a platoon?â Cygnus asked her.
She kept her mouth pursed and said nothing.
âA company?â
âYouâre going to kill me no matter what I say,â she grunted, voice slow and forced even over the pain. âSo why the fuck should I bother telling you anything.â
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âWellâif you tell us youâre a part of a group, Iâll pull the gun off your hand. How about that?â
âYou think Iâm retarded or something?â
I grimaced.
âI mean, a little. Figured it was worth a shot, seeing as I lost nothing from trying.â
Cygnus glanced down at me for half a second, then turned back to her. âAnd watch your language.â
âWho the hell cares?â
âSome ways to die are far more painful than others. All Iâm saying is that this is entirely your choice.â
âIâll be dead either way.â
âWhat time is it?â Cygnus asked me.
I froze up for a second. He recovered pretty quickly from the slip-upâhow was I supposed to tell the time in my predicamentâand said, âWell, itâs eleven PM. Weâre not supposed to report in for another two hours, so thatâs a goodâwhat, how long do you think itâll take for us to get back to the check-in spot?â
Iâd already made up my mind about this, and despite my earlier decision to not question Cygnusâs methods, I pushed.
âAnywhere between one second and an hour-fifty-nine,â I said. âCan we speed this up? Sheâs obviously not going to talk.â
âThank you,â the woman wheezed.
âYou say that now,â Cygnus said.
âIâll say that later, too,â I said.
âItâs a rhetorical statement.â
âJust do whatever youâre going to do,â I said. âI donât care. Iâll keep watch.â
I turned around and faced the thin woods that separated us from the swamp behind the development. The swamp was moist enough for me to draw some water out of if I needed it, but Cygnus had this more than under control, so I didnât feel the need to be ready.
I sat cross-legged on the cool pavement and let myself feel everything.
Behind me, the woman said, âHow old is she? Sixteen?â
âFourteen,â Cygnus replied, terse.
âJesus Christ,â she said. âWhat the fuck is wrong with you people?â
Under the leaf litter, in the fifty-degree water, there wasnât much in the way of life. On a micro level it reminded me of something in the great northern tundrasâto an amoeba or a tadpole, an endless expanse of near-frozen waste.
I let myself be distracted by it. I had a whole system for this nowâa loose cloud of droplets on either end of the strip mall that Iâd feel if something passed through, a gentle fog over the swamp from the other direction, and another one directly above us. That covered all the angles with minimal effort on my end. I could search for tadpoles now and nothing could possibly hurt us.
We were safe and invincible and there was nothing at all that woman could do to stop what was coming.
âLots of things,â Cygnus said. âWhatâs your point?â
âI mean, Iâve heard all about you two,â she said. âIâve heard the rumors. Itâs weird that you two would get sent after someone who literally doesnât mean anything like me, but whatever. Iâm not going to pretend to understand what goes on in Prochazkaâs head. Dudeâs a fucking wackjob.â
âIf he had a list of everyone whoâs called him a wackjob twice, heâd have a blank piece of paper,â Cygnus said.
âYeah, because he just shoots everyone who dissents,â she said.
âThat was the joke, yeah.â
âIf weâre calling it one, sure.â
âYouâre awfully comfortable now.â
âYouâd be surprised how fast you come to terms with hopelessness. Iâm already dead, right? Least I can do is make small talk.â
Cygnus rolled his eyes. âSure. Why not.â
âIâve heard all the rumors,â she said, again. âAll kinds of stories about you Unit 6 people. And, likeâI remember the superiors telling us all this shit and me just going, âOh, this is just war propaganda, you know, they do this on both sides in every war, whatever, theyâre probably not actually that bad,â andâyou know what? Normally theyâve got to doctor the truth a bit but I think they just read off a laundry list of shit you two have actually done.â
âItâs possible,â Cygnus said.
âNo, seriously,â she said. Her voice was stronger nowâsheâd gotten Cygnus invested in whatever it was she was spinning.
Iâd found a tadpole, and I was following it though the water by the vibrations it made with its tail.
She went on. âThey told me yâall were evil incarnate and that Prochazka was a commie and, like, thatâs all actual, true facts. For fuckâs sake, I was alone and basically unarmed and you froze this gun to my hand for shits and giggles and then walked over here and made fun of me. Like, câmon, guys.â
Cygnus rolled his eyes. âYeah, sure. Whatever.â
âAnd Erika froze up when you asked her for the time like youâd told her that her parents were dead. So I guess all that stuffâs true, too, right?â
What do tadpoles eat? Do they just chase after bugs that fall in the water, or do they eat plants? I was pretty sure Iâd read about that at some point but Iâd long since forgotten.
âLikeâwhatâs she even doing over there?â
How long do tadpoles bumble around before theyâre frogs?
âDid you tell her she doesnât get to kill me so sheâs justâ¦sitting there? Like thatâs all there is?â
âYou knowââ
âI certainly do, donât I?â she said, again. Slowly, she got to her feetâsomehow, although in hindsight only her hand was messed up so it wasnât quite as impressive as I thoughtââGod. If Prochazkaâs plan is to win the hearts and minds, heâs doing a pretty shit job if heâs sending aâ"
I didnât even really think about the icicle I shot backward, without even turning to face her, square into the center of her forehead. I certainly didnât think about it enough to make sure it was sharp enough to pierce her skin, but I did shoot it with more than adequate force, since it slammed her head into the edge of a concrete step so hard that the resulting impact of her skull on the pavement smashed her open like an egg.
âYou know,â Cygnus said, after a second. Regarding the wreckage without a change in expression. âI was probably going to do that once she got to the second half.â
âI know,â I said. âDo you feel robbed?â
He regarded the wreckageâthe skull fragments and the wet spray spread wide in a fan across the stepsâwithout a change in expression. âNot really.â
âThen letâs get out of here.â
Cygnus grimaced, shoved his hands in his pockets. Turned away. âSure.â
We set off back the way we came. On our way out, I told him about the tadpoles, but it was obvious even to me that he wasnât really listening, so after a few moments of talking to myself I let it taper off.
It didnât matter, anyway.
0ââ0ââ0
I never really thought of myself as a solider. I was, but I wasnât. It follows, then, that I donât really think of these as war stories. They are, but they arenât.
A war story isnât the same for me as it would be for someone else. I think, for essentially every anecdote Iâm planning to share, that I could give you the first few lines, trail off, and say âYou had to be there,â and get about as much meaning across as I would have if I finished.
If I was a solider, who was my company? Unit 6? We were rarely ever all together; some company that would be.
If I was a solider, who was my general? Prochazka? I made too many of my own decisions, made too many judgement calls on the fly. Prochazkaâs orders only went so far and only covered so much; some general he was.
If I was a solider, where was my gun? I was the gun.
If this was a war, and if I was a solider, then why were there only a thousand combatants, total, on all sides? It was a spat, it was a street fight, a bickering between gangs. A war is supposed to be grand. Countries, lives, generations on the line.
And sure, they wereâbut they also werenât.
Iâm older now. I suppose I classify as a veteran, if what I fought in was a war; but Iâm not allowed to get any benefits. I canât go to a veteranâs hospital. I canât get a military pension; thereâs no such thing for people like me. I donât get to share my story when weâre all crouched around the campfire.
I canât even rent a car.
War stories are supposed to be like war itselfâtheyâre supposed to be grand, to reflect the size and scope; theyâre supposed to be brutal, to reflect the deaths and tragedies; theyâre supposed to be moving, to reflect the dreams and the force behind every action.
I donât think I have that. If I did, I donât remember now. What I do have is all these anecdotes about this big grand thing we did. All this half-baked nonsense where we did things nobody else could do for people nobody should be, in places nobody should go, in ways nobody should fathom, for purposes nobody should ever describe.
If that doesnât make me a soldier, I donât know what would.
Oh well. I suppose you just had to be there.