65 - Teardrop Two-Step (6) [June 11th, Age 15]
Sokaiseva
I found myself with fingers crossed hoping this would work, because it felt like it was trending strongly toward another torture session, and those had yielded very little in terms of functional informationâcompletely divorced from the fact that I did not want to participate in another one.
I asked Bell as much, and she said she had faith that this was going to be just fine as long as I followed her lead and didnât contradict anything she didâand the absolute second that door opened, I needed to flood that house with a cloud so I would know if anyone was lying in wait for us. If there was, sheâd said, tap her somewhere with a droplet so sheâd know, and thenâdiscreetly, when possibleâhandle it. A second tap to confirm that, and weâd be off to the races.
âWith you there, and my flesh-key, we should be able to do a reasonable telepath impression,â she said. âPush comes to shove, I try to do an actual telepath impression and wring this shit out of him myself. If we get to that point, you can go outside if you donât want to be there.â
I blinked. âIâm fine,â I said, a touch too slowly. âItâs okay.â
âI gave what you were doing when me met again a lot of thought,â Bell-as-Esther said. âAnd I get it. I understand why youâve been apprehensive. It really doesnât feel like weâre getting anywhere. But this is our chance, and we canât let it go to waste. If the plan A doesnât work, I have decent faith the plan B will. Iâve tried this once before and I got something out of it. I think I can make it happen again, but itâll take a while and Iâll need you to guard the house.â
âHow long is a while?â I asked.
âThirty minutes minimum,â she said. âWhen I did it the first time, it took three hours, but I messed it up a couple times. Left her with permanent damage. Those kinks should be ironed out now, though. Should be just fine.â
I pursed my lips. Took a long inhale through my nose. Didnât let the thought escape its origin.
âLetâs hope it doesnât come to that,â I said, slow.
âLetâs,â Bell-as-Esther said.
0ââ0ââ0
She did exactly as she said she would: she walked up to the door and she rang the doorbell.
She had me crawl along the lawn, with the idea that the doorbellâs lingering noise would distract and-or scare Sal long enough for me to get to a position close to the house undetected, and togetherâher in front of the door, me about ten feet off to her left underneath a windowsill between a pair of shrubsâwe waited for Sal to meet his fate.
And he did. He opened the door, regarded the form of Esther with a smooth, sweeping look up and down, and said: âThey really brought out the big guns, didnât they.â
âAll we have are big guns,â Bell said. âNothing but.â
She flashed him a smile that felt distinctly out of place on the body I had identified as belonging to Bell.
It was almost genuine. Almost warm. If I didnât know any better, Iâd have believed it.
Sal didnât step far enough outside to see me, and even if he could, I was crouched in a shadow behind the bushes, so I figured he wouldnât have been able to spot me quickly even if it was possible. Bell seemed to sense that that was a possibility, though, so she set to work.
âHow about we step inside?â
I set to work, too. The second that door openedâand Bell had Salâs attention directed at herâI was able to sweep a light cloud into the room, slowly past Sal so he wouldnât notice, directing it down by his shoes and then up into the rooms of the house once the stream was safely behind him. It took a minute or so, but I had a vague outline of Salâs cottage planted in my memory, and I set about resolving the misshapen blobs in each room to see if any of them were vaguely personlike.
The cottage only had one floor, but in a room somewhere toward the back was a shape that felt about right. Lingering there for a moment, I found they were breathingâshallowly, but the moisture in front of their face betrayed them.
Iâd never dehydrated someone from that far away before. Briefly, I wondered if I couldâbut instead of devoting too much thought to that in that second, I sent a single droplet toward Bell, a big one, letting it splatter into the back of her ankle to let her know that someone was there.
As for the man of the hourâSal was somewhere between five and a half and six feet, with a five oâclock shadow that felt more like an eleven oâclock. All of his facial features sagged a little, like heâd been held in front of a flame for a bit too long. I figured he was just tired. That job, whatever it was, sounded exhausting.
That was all I really needed to know. I didnât want to know him too well.
Briefly, I wondered if just seeing Bell in her true form would scare him into talking by itself.
He scratched his chin. âMight as well, right?â he said, in a voice that was a bit higher than I was expecting out of him.
âTell the person youâve got waiting in one of those back rooms to stand down first,â Bell said.
She flashed that smile again.
Sal raised his eyebrows and made a half-eye roll that sank his shoulders in response. âGod. You all really want to throw the book at me, huh.â
âWe sure do,â Bell replied. âJust shout at them and have them come out here. Weâre gonna have a nice heart-to-heart.â
Sal pursed his lips. He didnât seem to have a key, near as I could tell from trying to get a feel for the shape of him. He was pretty much sunk here, and if whoever heâd stashed in that room lost the element of surprise, they were probably dead in the water to Esther alone, let alone me sitting outside.
âCâmon out,â he said, in not quite a shout but still a raised voice. âShowâs over.â
âAnd just in caseââ
Bell held out her left and hand snapped her fingers in my general direction, which was my cue to stand up, brush a bit of dirt off my pants, and walk over to the doorstep to stand next to Bellâor Esther, or whoever it was.
Sal, to his credit, didnât react much. He ran a hand through his hair and a little sigh squeaked out of his lips. âGuys, I really do not know as much about this whole organization as you probably think I do. Jesus. If I had real commanding powers, Iâd be throwing everything we had at anyone I knew was in the general vicinity of one of your agents right now. Bringing your top telepath and top gun out to talk to fuckinâ me seems like bad play-calling.â
âBellâs still out there,â Bell said. âI wouldnât do that if I were you.â
âBell dies to a gunshot to the head just like the rest of us. The only ones that donât are Cygnus, Erika, and you, and probably Loybol, but admittedly weâre not really sure on that one.â
âMight not be able to get Yoru either.â
âHeâs not strong enough to deflect a bullet.â
I let my lips shut tight and tried not to say anything thatâd make me look stupid.
âPoint aside. You can come in. Donât really want to attract attention from the neighbors, now,â Sal said, turning his back to us and heading inside.
Esther-slash-Bell gave me a quick look and stepped across the threshold, as did I. Once we were in, Sal shoved the door with the palm of his hand and it slammed shut.
Salâs house was nothing special. A small kitchen, single-sized, sat in the right corner of a large central room, with a similarly small four-person table area off to the side. Between the two half-rooms was a short hallway that went back to a part of the house I assumed had a living room and a bedroom or two.
I didnât poke around too much. There didnât seem like much of a point when Iâd already established that there were only four breathing entities in the building: me, Bell, Sal, and the agent sent from New York whoâd come out of the hallway that led deeper into the house and taken a seat at the kitchen table, waiting for us to acknowledge her.
Sal walked into the kitchen. âCan I get you all a drink? No alcohol here, Iâm afraid,â he said, gesturing vaguely to me, âbut I have some tea. Water, whatever.â
I did not react to the alcohol gesture. I saw it, but I didnât do anything about it.
Itâd been a very long time since Iâd had a drinkânot since Eliza bought me one when we first met. It was never much of a habit with me. More of a crutch, really. As I warmed to the people in Unit 6, I needed it less and less to look like a normal person around them. I drank because they drank, and so when they stopped drinking, so did I.
But I did, occasionally, want one. When things were particularly boring or hard, I felt that little question bubble up: wouldnât one beer make this just a bit easier? Two? Three?
It wasnât all that difficult to keep that question unanswered, though, since I couldnât buy any for myself, so I figured I didnât meet the threshold of âhaving a problem.â If it was something I had to actively fight against, itâd be an issue, but just the occasional slight suggestion wasnât enough to make me check into rehab.
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So it was what it was. With the way things are now, Iâm not sure having a drink or two then wouldâve changed anything.
Bell walked up to Sal and clapped him on the shoulder. Esther was touchy like that, wasnât she? I couldnât quite remember. Itâd been a while since Iâd met her.
Sal, again, didnât react as much as I thought he would. He already seemed pretty done with this whole ordeal. A true trained professional, or maybe just an apathetic.
âWhat a gentleman weâve got here,â Bell said, with a little laugh. âTeaâs fine, thank you. A green, please. Weâve got a long night ahead of us.â
I opened my mouth and Bell added, âTwo cups.â
âThree,â Sal said, pointing to himself.
âFour,â the woman at the table said. âIâm not thirsty yet, but I just want to be included.â
âSo do youââ
âYes, I do actually want one. Itâs a joke, Sal.â
He rolled his eyes and put the teapot under the sink. The water surged out of the faucet in a fluorescent cold lineâsomething real and tangible just in front of me. A proper lifeline I could grasp.
Sal filled up the pot, turned on the electric stovetop and put the pot on the heat. âYou two get along, right?â he said, mostly to the kitchen walls.
âSomewhat,â Bell said. âErikaâs only got eyes for Bell, mostly, but she gets along with pretty much everyone nowadays. Not nearly as standoffish as she used to be.â
I wanted to speakâbut it would be in Estherâs personality to talk for me, wouldnât it? Bell wouldâve let me talk for myself, but this wasnât Bell. That wasnât the point.
So, again, I kept my mouth shut and tried not to do anything stupid.
âThatâs good,â Sal said. âGod forbid youâd have to put up with this bitch all day.â
âThis bitchâ was the agent; who scowled at the remark and said, under her breath, âYeah, sure,â but didnât elaborate. She had a key, but I couldnât really tell what it was. Another downside of my condition: without a fight or a question, the actual scope of my enemy was lost on me. The most I could hope for was to end fights before whatever they had ended up mattering. That was the plan A to begin with, I supposed, but it was another asterisk in a long line of exceptions to droplet-sight.
She wore a simple t-shirt and a medium-length skirt, key in full view around her neck. I assumed the peacoat on the hook near the door was hers, just judging from the shape of it. Sal didnât seem like the type to wear a nice jacket, and there were only two people who lived here, so by eliminationâ
Either way, she faced us with a muted half-frown, but didnât speak.
I figured if she was a telepath, she wouldâve blown the lid on this thing wide-open by now, so we were safe enough. Nothing, really, to worry about.
âWireâs on now,â Bell said. âSmile, youâre live.â
âWonderful,â Sal replied, flatly. âLetâs all sit down and talk this over like adults, okay?â
I pursed my lips but didnât say anything. Wasnât the time.
âSeems fine to me,â Bell replied, walking over to the table with a light, almost skip-step that was completely unlike her. She went behind the agent, and as she walked past, she reached out and ruffled the agentâs hair for half a second, which made her go all lock-jointed like sheâd been electrocuted. For half a second, I thought she was going to straight-up lash out at Bell, but she held back, sucked in a breath, and stayed civil.
Bell, as Esther, just giggled at herâbut I knew what that was for now. She clapped Sal on the shoulder for the same reason.
She took a seat on the tableâs back side, or at least what I as such since it was the one opposite the entrance. I sat to the left of her, facing the kitchen, and Sal sat across from me. Bell took the last remaining seat, at the agentâs front and center.
I was starting to think there was a slight change of plans.
Bell cleared her throat. âOkay, letâs get started. Iâm Esther, here with Erika. Itâs a fine warm evening here on June 14th. Tonight, weâll be interviewing Sal, regional manager of operations for the New York magical policing group, whatever yâall are called, I donât care. Joining us is a special guestâ¦â She gestured at the agent and added, âState your name for the recording, please.â
âNo,â the agent said.
âGee,â Bell replied. âI sure donât remember asking for your permission.â
The agent crossed her arms. âYouâre the telepath here. Why donât you just go pry it out of me?â
âIf you insist,â Bell said. âItâs gotta be on record, though. Management needs me to have this on tape, so itâs still gotta be you saying it. You can either say it of your own volition, or not. Up to you.â
She still didnât say anything. Bell flexed her fingers back, cracking her knuckles, and said, âOkay then. We can do this the hard way.â
I pursed my lips. Held my tongue.
Bracedâ
The agentâs neck snapped uprightâshe wasnât quite facing the eyes of the person she thought was Esther before, but now she was. Her jaw jumped sideways and down and froze there, twitching, and from somewhere deep in her throat rose a low hum-growl that sounded more like some beast than something a person could make.
I couldnât see if there was fear in her eyes, but I can imagine.
The growlâs singular tone jumped and splutteredâoccasionally sheâd hit a hard consonant noise, a âkâ or a âpâ or a âtâ, or sheâd slide into a long string of âshhhhhââand in that last held noise it dragged into a wider âaaaahâ and down into a borderline shouted âpuhâ like a truck backfiring.
Shapâstop?
Bell found it. âOh, you want me to stop?â
The agent could barely twitch her head up and down, but it did, in a jittering tensed motion a fear-struck hand.
âOkay,â Bell said, and she let go.
A single huge breath dropped out of the agent all at once and she slumped back in the chair, just breathing for a bit. She patted a few of the things on her faceâher ear, two spots on her forehead, her nose, her lips, her left cheekâand once she was confident everything was still there, she said, âYou know, we had to undergo telepath defense training before this.â
Her voice was still low and weak.
âHow was it?â Bell asked.
âFine,â she said. âI didnât get top marks, but I passed. That wasâcompletely unlike anything they did to us. And they did some pretty bad things to us.â
âUs being a group that includes you, a person who still needs to tell me her name for the tape,â Bell said.
The agent looked up and away for half a second, eyes flicking toward the kitchen cabinetry that I was facing. There was an in-set part of the wall thereâa window, I figured.
It occurred to me that I didnât check nearly as far into the woods on that side of the house than I did on the side we came from.
âSally,â she mumbled.
âSally?â Bell repeated.
âI know,â she said. âDonât start.â
âSal and Sally,â Bell said, snickering. âGood lord. No wonder you guys hate each other.â
âIâve been assigned to tail this shitheel in case you all find him for the last two months. He keeps leaving weird notes for me around the house and in the yard because he knows Iâve got to case the place every once in a while, and I literally have to pick them up because itâs a fucking security hazard if I donât since they have my goddamn name on them.â
âThis isnât really relevant, butâdefine weird.â
âLove notes,â she said, flatly.
âYou couldâve told me you didnât like them. Iâm crushed,â Sal said. He was so toneless with everything he said. I could barely make heads or tails of it, but just this once I had a pretty good guess.
âIâm not actually supposed to ever talk to you.â
âThere was plenty of space on the back for you to write a reply.â
âGod, justâ¦just shut the fuck up.â
Bell cleared her throat. âWell, if either of you decide to turn yourselves in, we can play Dr. Phil in the car-ride back to the base, but until then, letâs stay on topic, shall we?â
âSure. Fine. Whatever.â
Bell launched right into it. âIâm assuming youâre one of the members of the team assigned to pick us off?â
âArenât you supposed to be interviewing Sal?â
âNot anymore. Not while Iâve got you here.â
AdmittedlyâI stopped paying attention at that point. The information Bell was about to get strictly wasnât all that important to me. Iâd long since abandoned trying to actually follow the course of the war in favor of keeping to me and myself. As long as I was doing what I was supposed to do, and I wasnât getting yelled at for anything, and I was something vaguely approaching happy, it didnât matter all that much to me what the next mission was, or what a mission three times down the line could be.
Just point me at something. Whatever.
At that moment, though, I was trying to find a gap in the house I could use to get back to the outside. Sal had closed the door behind him, so agenda item oneâafter finding that no walls in the house were leaking or anythingâwas getting that door open again, just a crack, without anyone noticing.
I rounded up a bit of moisture in the roomâlately Iâd taken to collecting moisture along the baseboards of a room and in the corners, places where people wouldnât notice it, just in case I had to strike suddenly. With the water skimmed off the moldings, I slid it down toward the door, squeezing it along the doorknob and trying to twist it, just a touch. It was slick, though, the smooth metal offering me no purchase. As a second attempt I waited until the eyes of Sal and Sally were directed toward the person they thought was Esther, and as soon as they werenât looking, I froze a thin layer of ice around the knob and twisted that instead, using the dry surface and the screw-hole that held the knob in place as a hold to get leverage over it.
And the knob turned, slowly, the latch pulled back, and as soon as I could open the door a crack and break the weather-stripped seal on the bottom of the door, I sent all the water Iâd gathered out there and felt the world outside again.
With so much space between me and it, it was a bit of a struggle to find my footing. All I had to go on were the memory of shapes outside the house, the arrangement of the bushes in the front yard and the mailbox at the end of the driveway alone to orient me.
Coupled with the total darkness I now sat inâ
I swallowed. Ten seconds. Maybe twenty. No more than thirty, and I was done.
I sent the water out east, expanding it out into a vast cloud that drifted through the forest, a hundred-foot square patch of droplets touching every last leaf and stick out there, all the way out as far as I could go, looking for something, anything, that didnât feel quite right.
And somewhere out there, up high in a tree, was a soft shape on top of a bough that did not belong.
Ice shot through my spine and instinctively my head flicked right toward Bell, but neither of them were paying attention to me in any true sense.
The soft shape out in the woods was slowly moving. Extending from it was a poleâno, too detailed to be just a poleâan armâand at the tip of that arm was a finger and on the end of that finger was a cold, pointed rock. A bullet.
Pointed atâ
And the shape drew in a breath and let it out andâ
I leapt out of my chair and grabbed Bell by the neck of her dress and yanked her down to the ground with me right as the window across from me in the kitchen shattered and that cold thing shot like a laser directly to the ground, and it was so large that it skipped off the floor and bounced upward and smacked me right in the side of the head.
And for half a second I lost everything.
Bell stayed put on the ground as Sal and Sally jumped out of their chairs and instantly collapsed right to the floor, paralyzed by the contact Bellâd put on them both when she walked in, and even though my head felt light and sloshy and I wasnât certain I could stand up even if I wanted to, the adrenaline kept me steady.
I gathered up all the water in the room, sucking it down to zero-humidity instantly, and forced it all out through the broken window out into the forest, where the soft shape had dropped from the tree and was rushing backward into the woods trying to get out of rangeâ
But they could not run fast enough.
As the cloud chased them back, all subtlety lost as Iâm sure it appeared to them as a wall of solid fog swallowing their wake, they took a look back at that fog and the sheer size and scale of itâit scraped the treetops and kicked up leaves as it pushed forward like a tornado, and within a second the fog was around that soft human shape and all at once it crushed down and in and the soft shape was shredded by thousands of tiny, indiscriminately pushed icicles as the fog froze their explosion solid.
Into red-snow mush.
I breathed out.