66 - Teardrop Two-Step (7) [June 11th, Age 15]
Sokaiseva
âDid you get them?â Bell asked meâher voice came from somewhere above and next to me simultaneously, drifting through a fine net. The words slurred into each other even though I knew she was speaking normally.
I nodded. Didnât trust myself to force words through my teethâbut as soon as I moved my neck I winced. Just that little shift of my head felt like the entire world slid into a wall.
I tried not to move much. Gave Bell a limp thumbs-up instead.
Bell made a small affirmatory noise and turned around. In the commotion both of the targets tried to separate themselves from Bellâwith Sal almost at the door and Sally almost at the window.
They didnât get far.
Bell barely had to tense and both of them dropped again, legs unresponsive. She simply walked up to Sallyâwho was completely immobile except for her faceâand dragged her back into the dining room.
The side of my head was warm. I hadnât noticed it before. Warm in the sense of heat, and also in the sense of a warm liquidâblood? My blood.
I shifted my hand up and cupped the spot. It was above my ear, below the crown of my headâand yes, it was bleeding. My hair was clumping up there.
I gingerly went to touch the woundâan impulse everyone hasâand my whole head exploded into red fury so fast it made me lose the room again. I sucked in a breath and shoved it out and did it again and again until the pain had subsided enough for me to come back to where I was.
ââ¦or you two are mush.â
Esther was gone. The Bell I knew was standing in her place.
So that was it for secrecy, I supposed.
Bell continued, speaking down to the immobilized pair. âI donât think either of you give enough of a shit about this organization to die for it, but youâve got one chance to prove me wrong. Either of you. Start talking. You know the questions. Youâve been preparing for them your whole lives.â
Sal did not speak. The agent got there first. âThereâs a team of us. Six. One of themâs dead already. Outside of the guy Erika shot. How the fuck did she get him from that far away?â
I wasnât sure if I was supposed to answer that. Was I supposed to crawl over there and be present? My name was called, anyway, but I wasnât confident I could get over there even if I tried.
Step one would be getting off my back.
âI guess that explains that, then,â Sally said. âSheâs the real deal, alright.â
âExplains what?â Bell asked.
I could only imagine what she looked like in that moment. Fragments of memories back from a time when Bell was the most powerful thing in the world.
She still is, isnât she? Nothing, really, has changed. Kingdoms of flesh are nothing to her.
This war is unwinnable for them. Surely, now, they know. They never had a chance.
âExplains what?â Bell asked, again. Demanded. I heard the agent suck in a breath and I knew what was coming, but Bell had allowed the agent just the tiniest scrap of hand movement so she could tap the floor to make it stopâand she did, so Bell stopped and let her talk.
âThe plan,â Sally said. âI donât know what it is, but Erikaâs the only one we have orders to take in alive.â
That confirmed it, then. I had my suspicions, but hearing it in the airâdense and foamy as the words were through my swimming headâchanged the way I thought about it.
It changed a lot of things.
âAlive,â Bell echoed, and it echoed again in my hollow skull three times more. âThe rest of us, I suppose, you thought you could slaughter.â
âThe rest of you we were supposed to kill,â Sally said, slowly. âYeah.â
âKnowing full well it couldnât be done,â Bell said.
âKnowing full well,â she admitted back.
âThey sent you on a suicide mission, then. I thought they might have.â
âThe hope,â she said, without any semblance of such, âwas that the sniper would kill you, and then weâd have time to knock out Erika or something before she could respond. The shock of it would paralyze her for just a second. I think that wouldâve worked, still. We put Wester a mile into the woods, and she still got him.â
âSheâs gotten targets from a mile out before,â Bell said.
âThatâs fucked up,â the agent said, quietly.
I was being talked aboutâI had to be present.
I tried to sit up, and even the tiniest head movement associated with simply starting to move was enough to put my whole existence into stars and force me down again.
How long had it been since Iâd been hurt? Had I ever?
The stone chunkâor was it a metal one? It was cold, that was all I knewâit ricocheted off something and hit me in the side of the head. I knew that muchâit was lying in the corner somewhere, with a scrap of my blood on it.
It occurred to me, through a mask and filtered, that even for all my theatrics, I still almost died.
And it also occurred to me that I saved Bellâs life.
It must have only glanced off me. Anything resembling a direct hit wouldâve crushed my skull for sure with the speed it was going.
I breathed, slowly through my nose, trying not to inflate my lungs too much. Lying very still.
There was no more breath coming from the agent. Bell must have taken her out while I was distracted. I went searching for her head and didnât find itâthere was a misshapen pile of flesh and bone-shards there much like what Iâd turned the sniperâWester?âinto a mile outside.
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Mouth shut tight. Donât think about the smell.
âYou can tell us where your boss is, or I can put you into a more mobile container and take you to the real Esther, who will drag it out of you anyway.â
And Sal saidâto his credit, still perfectly toneless, âIs there any chanceâany at allâthat I make it out of this house alive?â
Bell paused. âDepends how good your information is.â
âTake my phone,â Sal said. âIâll shut off the lock-screen for you. It should have everything youâd need on it. Iâve been to my bossâs place before. Itâll be in the Maps history. The numberâs at 78, but I donât remember the street nameâshould be enough to find it, though.â
His eyes flicked down to his jeans. âI canâtâI canât really move, soâ¦â
Bell crouched down and slipped her fingers into his pocket, pulling out the phone and dropping it onto his chest. âIâll give you one hand so you can remove the lock from it.â
She fulfilled her end and he did his.
âThisâll have everything I need,â she said, looking at it. Standing again. âGood. Anything more?â
Sal paused. âThereâs a layer of management above me that controls ground operationsâthatâs the person youâre looking for. Above her is the man himself.â
âAnd his name?â
âYouâll have to ask my boss,â Sal said. âIâm just a small nothing. I donât know shit.â
Bell shrugged. âThatâs fine. A leadâs a lead. Let me make sure this place is actually in your maps history before we part, hmm?â
She turned his phone screen onâand satisfied that there was no longer a lock screenâwent into his maps app and looked for the last searched places.
â78 Gregor Road in White Plains?â
âThatâs the one,â he said. âWeird building but thereâs not much in it.â
She tapped the address and looked at the details of it. âThis is a plumbing company.â
âThatâs the front,â he said. âItâs a small building with a big basement. They normally keep an earth-key down there, since the whole thingâs concrete. Incidentally, thereâthere actually is a plumber guy who works upstairs. Heâs innocent. He doesnât know anything. Literally just a plumber. Please donât kill him,â Sal said.
For onceânot deadpanned. He mightâve meant that one.
âWeâll see,â Bell said, scrolling around the neighborhood.
âGive me your word,â Sal said, his voice suddenly hard. âGod. Fuck. Give your word that just this once, you wonât.â
Bell looked up from the phoneâor down, I suppose, given the scaleâand said quietly, âWhatâs it to you what I do or donât?â
âHeâs just a fucking plumber,â Sal said. âI got coffee with him last Tuesday. Heâs got a family. He knows weird shit happens in the basement but knows not to look and he doesnât. Dude doesnât know anything. Heâs just a random goddamn plumber. He doesnât even know about magic. Godâhe might be the only innocent one left. Pleaseâjustâ¦whatever you do, tell him to get the fuck out before you knock the joint. Okay?â
Bell frowned. âCanât guarantee Iâll be the one on this job.â
âErikaâll be there, right?â He tried to sit up to get a look at meâpresumablyâand Bell slammed his head back down against the linoleum so hard I thought his skull cracked.
âTell her,â Sal wheezed. His lungs werenât inflating right. Bell wouldnât let them.
For half a second, Bell turned back toward meâa nightmare silhouette in a shattered world.
Then she looked back at Sal and said, âIâll forward that to the relevant parties. Anything else?â
âThatâs it,â he said. âThatâs all.â
âIâll going to put you to sleep now,â Bell said. âA crew will come by and get you when they clean up this house. Youâll be moved to a secure facility where Estherâthe real one, not meâwill scrub anything else relevant out of your head. Itâs not her first time, youâll be fine. After that weâll release you somewhere in upstate. Youâre not going to have much, but itâs better than being dead, and itâs better than being a part of this sinking ship. Those are the terms. Take it or leave it.â
âIâll take it,â Sal said.
âNoted. Good night,â Bell saidâand with that, Salâs breathing slowed.
Slower and slower andâ
Bell was next to me. When did she get there?
âErikaââ
She was standing over me.
âAre you okay?â
Itâd been some time, right? I could try speaking.
âIâmâIâm okay,â I said, but the words came out wide and soft. Pillowy.
She moved slightly over to my left side, looking down near where my wound was. âThe cutâs not all that deep,â she said. Laying her hand gently on my forehead, she added, âNothingâs broken. You probably just have a concussion.â
âAââ
âYouâre going to be out for a little while. Prochazkaâs probably got a protocol for this. Iâll give him a call on our way back to the motel. For nowâcan you stand?â
âMy head hurts,â I mumbled.
âI know,â Bell said. âBut youâre not in any extreme danger. For now, weâve got to get back home before the clean-up crew gets here. Iâll help you stand. Okay?â
I took a breath. Deep, this timeâand it hurt, it did, but it was okay.
I was going to be fine.
Bell took my arm and pulled me upright, and even though my legs didnât quite catch at first, she held me up.
We stood there in the wreckage of the dining room, silent for a moment.
âDid the agent say anything about Benji?â I asked. zzMy voice was low. I didnât want to move my jaw too much.
âShe didnât know,â Bell said. âThe team was supposed to sync up after this.â
She surveyed the house, and then said to me, âLetâs go to the door.â
She took a step, and so did Iâand nothing fell out from under me. I was fine. This was okay.
I was okay.
The steps were slow, but they were steps and we made themâand we got to that door, opened just a crack right where Iâd left it.
Bell said to me, in a low voice to match my own: âThank you for saving my life.â
0ââ0ââ0
It was slow going, but we made it back to the motel in one piece, without too many stares. After a while, and a bit of stumbling, I was able to walk under my own power. I was a bit nauseous, and everything I did felt rounded and numb, but overall, I was all there. It was a bit tough to talk, too, so I generally kept quiet. Not that that was all that different from before.
We got what we wanted. The information was in hand, and two of the six were down. Three, if Yoru was to be believed. That shadow-unit tailing us was real, and yet somehow felt completely inconsequential. Their efforts were completely in vain, werenât they?
Were we not all invincible?
All of us exceptâ
0ââ0ââ0
What came the next day didnât come as a surprise to me. I knew it was coming. It couldnât have been anything else, could it?
Every step Bell and I took toward the bus stop that next day, still woozy from the day before, convinced me more of that. He was dead. He had to be dead.
It couldnât have been anything else, could it?
The feeling of responsibility Iâd had two nights ago was gone. I was at peace with the idea that this was in no way, shape, or form my fault. I wasnât there. I couldnât have done anything. Saving Bell somehow absolved me of a failure to save Benji. I saved the one I was there for; therefore, I couldnât be responsible for saving the one I wasnât there for.
But maybe if heâd liked me a bit moreâ
He didnât, though, and that was past. There was nothing I could do about it.
I was so certain of what was going to be said that when I felt Loybol and Eliza there in the bus stop, not looking at each other, Loybolâs hands folded in her lap and Elizaâs braced back on the seat raising up her shoulders in a perpetual shrug, I knew it immediately.
The switch flipped. The answer received.
She didnât have to say anything. I could tell from the faces, from the muscles. This was it. The lights went down and the war-dance had begun. Yesterday was the prologueâthis was the true performance. Everything before was rehearsal, everything before was trivial.
This was it. This was the thing weâd been warned ofâthe thing Prochazka dreamed of while the rest of us sat and waited.
Nowânowâthe show. The curtain is up, the band is playing.
Too late for stage-fright. Too late for second guesses.
The time is now. Not only nowâthe time had already gone.
It began when the bullet passed through his head.
Eliza didnât acknowledge me when I came in. Loybol did, through a tiny eye-flick in my direction. That was all I needed. In that moment, I was the telepath I always wanted to be.
Nothing had ever been easier, despite the implication. Nothing had ever been clearer, despite my condition.
Bell and I stepped inside the glass enclosure and I asked Loybol, âHeâs dead, isnât he.â
Her face was loose. Expressionless. I felt her lips move, the tongue in her throat, before I heard her answer.
âHe is,â she said, and that was that.
Our shoes clacked down hard on the stage. Beat one, measure one: go.
0ââ0ââ0
I did not cry for him.
TruthfullyâI barely knew him and he barely knew me.
We had passed each other in the night and nothing more.