68 - These Heartless Creatures (2) [June 15th, Age 15]
Sokaiseva
I left her office not long after that and went up to the old Unit 6 barracks to relax for a moment. The aspirin hadnât quite kicked in yet and I knew I had to be firing on all cylinders in front of Prochazka. He wasnât strictly expecting me at a given time, so I could take a few moments to myself and collect.
It was, as always, fine.
Prochazka wasnât sleeping any of the buildingâs watchers in our old room. Everything was exactly as weâd left itâour mugs all in a row over the mini-fridge, the TV and its dangling HDMI cable weâd used to stream things from Cygnusâs laptop, the beds in various states of disarray. The case of poker chips and cards under my set of bunks, on the left side. The chairs around the center table, some pushed in, some pulled out.
To me the room still felt lived inâlike the five of us that existed here back then were simply deleted from the world and our room was left perfectly intact. No planned exitâjust a vanishing. Or maybe it was like we still lived there, but invisibly. Even now the faded specters of Cygnus, Ava, Bell, and Yoru milled around there, sitting at the table for blackjack, sipping coffee or whiskey or whatever out of mugs from opposite sides of the room, waiting for a mission, or for me to deal the next hand.
Waiting for something, anyway.
Just to complete the image I went over to the bottom bunk of the set of beds I slept onâtechnically Bellâs old bedâand slid the case of chips out. Carried it over to the table, to my chair, and opened it up. That wasnât the set I had true nostalgia forâif I can really say I had nostalgia for anything at age fifteenâthat set lived under the bed on the other side. It was unusable now; the numbers on the chips were printed on a sticker; there was nothing to grab on them. Nothing for me to see. This set had the numbers engraved on them, so I could read them a lot more easily. The whole unit got together and bought it, partially as an upgrade to the old, beat-up set, but also as a Christmas gift to me. Something to celebrate pulling through the bad times with.
Itâs hard to say, really, that any given points in the past were âthe good timesâ or âthe bad timesââit implies that things like that canât happen again. âSomeâ good old days, I guess, would be closer to the truth.
It could always be good again.
0ââ0ââ0
After fifteen minutes or so, my headache subsided to the point that I felt safe going up to Prochazkaâs office. I still couldnât quite think clearly, and stringing together a cogent sentence was going to be a struggle, but there was only so much I could do on day one after a concussion. Prochazka would understand. Iâd be fine.
But when I turned to the doorâspecifically, to the little rack next to the door where we used to keep our shoesâI found that there was a figure there: a man, about a head taller than me. Waving.
âItâs like you knew I was here,â Cygnus said, grinning. âYo.â
Words tripped over my lips. âHow did youâno, whenââ
âIâm off work today,â he said. âAnd I got my driversâ license not too long ago. This set of missions was only for pairs, and since thereâs seven of us now I drew the short straw. I heard about what happened and I figured Iâd take the day to come and visit. Itâs been a while, yâknow, on pretty much all accounts.â
I hadnât seen Cygnus since May, when Iâd met Eliza. I bounced around Yoru, Benji, and Ava for about a month after that before I came back to Bell, but Cygnus had always eluded me, one way or another.
Maybe that was one of Benjiâs plans, too.
I came up short on a conversation starter. âI got a concussion,â I said, instead of anything heâd actually want to hear about.
âI know,â he replied. âLoybol told me this morning. She sends her regards, by the way. You can still bounce droplets and stuff, right?â
I nodded, turning away for a second. Embarrassed, maybe, but I donât remember. âYeah, thatâsâthatâs all fine. Iâm not weak or anything, just kind ofâ¦woozy. I get headaches as lot now, but thatâs supposed to go away.â
This text was taken from Royal Road. Help the author by reading the original version there.
âYeah. It didnât sound like you got a really bad one, so Iâd imagine youâll be back out there in a week or so. And hey, in the meantime you get to be alone in the old factory. Thatâs kind cool, right?â
âI guess.â
âYeah. Minor concussions arenât too bad, really. I had one in school, I was over it in a few days, but generally they make you wait a bit longer than they need to just to make sure nothing got hit loose up there.â
âI know that, I just didnât think theyâdâ¦umâ¦theyâd be keeping me here that whole time. Bellâd said two weeks when we were driving down here and I didnât really take that number all that seriously, butâ¦itâs really gonna be that long, huh.â
âWhat, you think Prochazkaâd throw you back out there when you can barely stand up straight?â Cygnus asked. He took his old sheathed swordâmade from some random scrap metal, I was sureâoff his shoulders and laid it over the shoe rack, then walked over to the table and took a seat at his spot.
âGod, itâs been so long,â he said, scanning the room. âAll our mugs are still there. Yoruâs bed is still a goddamn mess. I bet thereâs still water bottles in the fridge too, right?â
I could vaguely sense water in there, but it was a very non-distinct shape. I couldnât tell if it was general moisture or ice crystals forming along the sides or if there were actually bottles, so I just shrugged instead of providing a real answer.
Then, though, I said one anyway. âI mean, weâre supposed to come back, arenât we? When this is over.â
âSure,â Cygnus said. âEveryone except Benji, anyway.â
The name made me remember. âHe doesnât live here, though.â
âTrue.ââ
âIâI mean, just sitting hereâ¦if we all came back, it wouldnât matter that much thatâ¦no, thatâs mean,â I said. âI donât mean it like that.â
âNo,â Cygnus said, leaning back. âI get it. You didnât see him much so it didnât feel like he was there.â
I blushed, looked down. âIs it bad to think that?â
âI think itâs fair, which isnât on the spectrum of good or bad.â
âI guess.â
I got up and opened the fridge, confirming that there were, in fact, bottles of water in there. Not all that interested in going for a walk or doing anything too stressful, I opened two of the bottles and dumped them into the reservoir of the coffee maker that lived just behind the mugs, on top of the fridge. The container of coffee itself was in the fridge, tooâI took it out and it smelled fine, so I put some in the washable filter, closed the lid, and started it up.
âDid you make enough for me?â Cygnus asked.
âYeah.â
âCool,â he replied.
I went back to the table and sat down, resting my chin on my hands. Cygnus took a glance back at the door and said, âYou know, if we all put to a vote which member of Unit 6 weâd kick off the team, I think itâd be a split vote between Benji and Bell. I donât think youâre alone in feeling like he wasnât really there. We were on good terms, butââ
âEveryoneâd vote for Bell except me,â I said, dully. âI know.â
âNot necessarily. Bell voting for Benji makes it two against four.â
âYouâd vote for Bell, too?â I asked him.
He paused. âI donât know. Not particularly fond of either. Benji might have been a grumpy old man trapped in a twenty-five-year-oldâs body, and he mightâve had a stick jammed so far up his ass he could lick it, but at least he had principles. He had honor, you know?â
âAnd Bell doesnât.â
âI donât know what Bellâs got,â Cygnus said, folding his arms behind his head. âNever been able to tell. Sheâs dead even in both columns for all I know.â
I turned to him for a secondâjust rolling my cheek along my hand to face him, and then back again. He said, âI probably shouldnât have brought this up. Itâs not really a good time.â
âSpeaking of Bellââ I started talking without a clear idea of how to form the thought. âWhen we were out interrogating Sal, and we gotâumâwhen the assassination attempt happened, this just occurred to me. They shot at Bell, but they didnât shoot at me.â
âBell was probably in better view, or they were planning to get both of you anyway.â
âIâm the one theyâre after, though, right?â
âWellâtheyâre after all of us.â
âBut their plan,â I went on. I found the thread and I gripped it for dear life, talking fast so I wouldnât lose it or stumble over a gap. âBenji said they structured this whole thing to keep me as small a factor as possible. They started the second we were done with snow to give themselves the biggest window to get this over with. We were sitting pretty close together, and I was barely fast enough to save Bell in the first place. I thinkâI think itâs safe to say if they had a shot at Bell, they had a shot at me. Why didnât they take it?â
Then I paused. A detail Iâd lost in the haze. âSally said they were supposed to take me alive.â
Cygnus was quiet for a moment. âSo Benji was right.â
âIâmaybe. Itâ¦umâ¦it seems that way, anyway.â
âI think youâre overthinking this, Erika,â Cygnus said, stretching back. âWeâre all just happy youâre both alive.â
I took a breath. He was right. I was overthinking it.
But stillâ
Maybe, I figured, it was a better question for Prochazka.
âYeah,â I said. âThatâs good.â