84 - Highly Unresponsive To Prayers (1) [August 1st, Age 15]
Sokaiseva
Iâd be lying if I said that nothing Misha said stuck to me. Having to see her for two more weeks certainly didnât help matters much. Every time I caught sight of her in the hallway and sheâd smile and wave at me Iâd rememberâand then Iâd remember again, and Iâd return the gesture.
Weaknessâas alwaysâwas not an option.
It turned out that her statement about working for Loybol was, in fact, true. I didnât get to ask Loybol about it for a day, but when I did, she was up-front about it, and repeated the same reasons Misha had given me.
The rest of Unit 6 had varying feelings on Misha. Cygnus didnât like her at all, which surprised exactly nobody. He especially hated how she liked him in spite of it. âShe just sees a weapon when she looks at me,â he said. âNothing else. She spits in the face of everything weâre trying to do here. Everything weâve ever done. Honestly, I canât believe youâd even stoop to talking to her.â
âIâm bored,â was my response to him.
âSo am I, but Iâm not out here interfacing with terrorists.â
Ava, as I found out from Cygnus second-hand since she wouldnât talk to me for long enough to go into details on something like this, actually liked Misha a decent amount. That also wasnât much of a surpriseâAva and Eliza got along fairly well, and Misha was basically the same person as Eliza, anyway. Plus, they could talk shop together, since they were both nature keys.
The only thing Ava had told me was that sheâd learned a few new tricks from her, which Misha had shown her under the banner of ânot that it matters, anyway, since none of this will help you survive whatâs coming.â
Misha, to her credit, didnât just go around doomsaying all the time. She could have and none of us wouldâve been able to stop her, since Loybol had taken her in, but she generally stayed civil. Most of her time was still spent alone with Loybol, who I assumed was doing her best to exhaustively ensure that no part of Misha could possibly disobey her in a way that mattered.
Iâd asked Loybol, one day, if sheâd lend us Misha to help fight the war since she presumably knew all the plans, but sheâd shot that down. âMisha knows one version of the plans,â sheâd said. âPresumably thereâs a new head of operations now whoâs built new plans based around us knowing the old ones. Sheâll stay with me.â
I wanted to ask Loybol why she wasnât going to provide us reinforcements if Misha was so confident we were going to lose, but I didnât. At the end of the day, I couldnât really tell the difference between fact and bluster, and despite all the time thatâd passed between our first meeting and now, I still was not quite able to let myself look stupid in front of Loybol.
0ââ0ââ0
On August 1st, Prochazka came to us and relayed the news: it was time. Today, we were heading out for the final push. Hell or high water, we were bringing this home.
All four of us were there, so all four of us heard it. Those last words.
One last jump. One last try at it.
Stick them clean in the heart or donât do it at all.
Prochazka stood at ease. âI know this probably isnât the way we drew it up,â he said to us. âBut itâs clear to us now that this slow approach isnât working. By leaving Loybol and Eliza here, alongside Misha, weâve got plenty to defend our home with in the event that they try and sweep in while you four are occupied. You know where to go and you know how to get there. We have a name and an address. Itâs time to strike.â
âWhy not just wait until winter?â Ava asked.
âWinterâs four months from now,â Prochazka said. âFive, if weâre looking for the first real snowfall, which doesnât normally come until January. Thatâs too long to bum around here, staying safe. Theyâve already had too long to prepareâgiving them an extra five months to bolster their defenses is out of the question. Plus, itâs going to be on-and-off thunderstorming for the next three days. Itâll be ninety and dripping-humid every day. Thatâs about as good as a blizzard, isnât it?â
I nodded. Iâd seen the forecast, tooâand a few days ago, when I saw this stretch coming up, the thought crossed my mind that Prochazka might take advantage of that time to do something drastic.
This counted, I guess.
Prochazka looked at his watch. It was silver, if I remembered correctly, a cheap unit for someone with expensive tastes. âItâs eleven oâclock now,â he said. âAva, Bell, Erika, and Cygnusâyouâll be heading out at nine tonight. This is everything youâll need to know.â
For the first time, in all my memory, Prochazka came to our table in the middle of the barracks. He took one of the chairsâYoruâs, now that we had an empty slotâand sat down as one of us.
He sat down and told us all there was.
0ââ0ââ0
After a few hours of the various logistics and pathways and situations, he turned us loose. Meet outside the factory doors at nine oâclock sharp, heâd told us, and the rest of your time is up to you.
Once he was goneâand out of earshotâthe four of us dissipated. Ava left to go to her old attic room. Bell returned to her bunk and opened a book, and Cygnus and I headed outside.
This story originates from Royal Road. Ensure the author gets the support they deserve by reading it there.
I could already feel the humidity creeping in. I had to imagine the sky matched itâsome gray stormclouds like warships sailing over the horizon. To anyone else, itâd be an ill omen, but for us it was anything but.
Iâd had a different relationship with the sky once I went blind. Before, you can see itâthe clouds, the blue expanse, the bright hole of the sun, the pinpoint specks of stars, and so onâbut I didnât have that luxury. Above me was void. There was ground and then there was nothing. Even though, logically, the skyâs too high for any human to properly reach, itâs still a lid on the world. It still gives people a sense of a ceilingâa shield between us and ours and the vast nothingness of space.
I may as well have been walking on the moon. Back in the day, when this was all still new to me, I used to send the droplets straight upward, just for fun. Just to see how high I could reach. I found, though, that the distance tended to make me dizzy. The world was just so huge. Even a water-key of my caliber was still short of being able to pull down the clouds.
Believe meâIâd tried.
I would lay in the grass and let tiny droplets rise on the warm air straight up into the sky and Iâd keep track of them for as long as I could. A weather balloon into the great unknown.
But after a while whatâs up started to feel like what was down, and the sheer distance between me and it would start to feel like I was teetering on the edge of a pitâand a few moments after that, inevitably, Iâd let them go.
I never did reach a cloud. I never did hit the roof of the world. I had to assume it was impossible, and anything that mightâve been up there was strictly out of reach.
And to think people used to believe God was up there somewhere, reclining on a star and giving sinners the stink-eye from on high.
Cygnus was looking up there, too, as we walked toward the coffee shop we frequented downtown. We didnât have much in the way of actual plans, so we just did what weâd normally do.
We didnât really know any better.
âItâll be good to get away from Misha,â Cygnus said, after a longer stretch of silence than I was prepared for. He shoved his hands in his pockets roughly and kicked at a piece of loose sidewalk. âGod, I fucking hate her.â
âIâm not really a fan, either,â I said, more or less copying what he was doing. âEven though she likes me for some reason.â
âSame,â Cygnus said. âGod, what was it she said to me? She âadmires my spunkâ or some shit like that?â
âI donât like the sound of that.â
He rolled his eyes. âJesus. Yeah. Sheâs just so full of shit. I kind of hope Loybol rips her brain out, honestly. A year or two of drooling and sweeping floors might do her a bit of good.â
We fell quiet for a moment. Someone had to address the elephant in the room, I knew, so I did it before it got any worse. âShe really does think weâre going to lose, doesnât she?â I said, after a time. Quieter than Iâd meant to. Slower, too.
âWeâve still got you and Bell,â he said. âWeâre fine. They canât do shit to us.â
âAs long as Bellâs here,â I replied, dully. âAnd Iâm not being mind-controlled.â
âAnd none of that shitâs going to happen,â he went on. âGod, please tell me youâre not actually listening when she talks to you.â
âI try not to, but itâs hard. Sheâs persistent.â
âThen youâve gotta be persistent, too.â
âPersistent with what? Not listening?â
âYeah,â Cygnus said, stopping. Weâd arrived at the café we were known to frequent. Prochazka always said it was bad to show your face around a place too many times, and we followed that rule in general, but we ignored it just for this. They had the best pastries in town, and Cygnus wasnât settling for second-best. It was also fairly well-known around Unit 6 that if you ever needed to bribe me for any reason, it could be done with one or two of their mint double-chocolate cookies.
We all have our weaknesses, I guess. I could take or leave sweets as a general statement, but Iâd shoot someone for a lifetime supply of those.
Although, I suppose that statement doesnât mean as much when I say it.
âI mean, I know youâre getting better at that,â Cygnus said. He reached out for the doorâs handle, but didnât actually take it. âAva told me all about what happened at the bar. I canât say I agree with the way you started it, but shaking that off is a big step forward. In the past it wouldnât have been as easy to get back to normal.â
âI guess,â I said, turning toward the door. In the past, there were flyers and things taped up inside thereâads for local shows, the caféâs hours, the likeâbut now it was just a blank wall with hinges.
One of those things, I suppose. You donât realize all the things you lose until you meet the hole they used to fill.
âYou donât sound convinced,â Cygnus said. âItâs a good thing shit like that doesnât knock you down anymore.â
âIt didnât really make me feel much of anything,â I said. âIt sucked for a few minutes and then I got over it.â
âThatâs how it should be,â he said.
âI should just be numb to it?â I replied, a touch sharper than I wanted to. Turning a bit red, I went on: âBecauseâbecause thatâs how it felt. Like it just bounced off me. Is it supposed to do that? Am I supposed to just feelâ¦I donât know, nothing? Pity? Noâno, it was nothing. I didnât really feel anything at all. I mean, the first thing I remember thinking after she left wasâ¦was that she couldnât possibly kill me even if she wanted to. I went straight to the logistics of her acting out her anger. It didnât bother me at all that she hated me enough to try, andâ¦I donât know. I feel like it should have.â
âI donât agree,â Cygnus said, and the bluntness of it startled me. âIf Ava wants to have a hissy fit over something thatâs ostensibly not your fault, then she can go scream in a corner by herself. We all knew something like this was going to happen eventually, didnât we? Yoru got over it when Benji dropped, and Avaâs going to have to get over it too.â
Maybe Cygnus was just in a sour mood. None of that sat right with me.
âYoru didnât get over it,â I said, quietly. âI saw him a lot more than you did. He wasnât okay. When Benji died, he gotâhe got sullen. It really hurt him, and he never really got passed it.â
After a pause. âHe lashed out at me, too. In the car, on the way there.â
âYeah,â Cygnus said, shrugging. âYoru was always a bit two-faced. He was just better at it than Ava was.â
âI really thought we got along,â I said. âI really thought we hadâI donât know, maybe not a real friendship, but we at leastâyou know, were work acquaintances or something. Civil coworkers. Ava, Iâ¦if Iâm honest, even though she said so, Iâm pretty sure she always hated me, but I thought Yoru wasâI donât know, helping her with that. I justâ¦â
I shook my head. I didnât have the brainpower to process things like that, and either way, one of the involved parties was dead and the other was dead to me, so it hardly made sense to worry about it any further.
Weâd have plenty of time to discuss the nuances of it in Hell.
Cygnus decided that weâd stood around long enough, and went to grab the door handle. âYouâd be surprised how easily people lie,â he said. Pulling open the door and leaning against it to hold it there.
He made a sweeping gesture with a free hand and added, âAfter you.â