88 - Polaris Inverted (1) [August 1st, Age 15]
Sokaiseva
We stood in our rowâCygnus, then Bell standing up straight for a full eight inches over him, then Ava who refused to look anyone quite in the eye, and then me.
We all stood with our hands folded behind our backs, at ease, like true professionals. Like real soldiers before the sundown.
We all knew exactly what we were walking into.
This, as Prochazka explained, was the plan:
It was too risky to simply drive up to the building in Manhattan that Misha had mentioned. Our leadership had ascertained that there was no guarantee that the adversarial Neville Nguyen even lived in that building anymore. Our data was only as good as Mishaâs time of capture, and Misha admitted she hadnât received any orders from New York in almost two weeks when we got her.
So, before we marched in and gassed the place, we had an obligation to verify that anything was there at all.
This sat unpleasantly with us. If it turned out that Neville wasnât there, and that all of this was a ruse weâd fallen for, then we were completely up a creek. Neville would take his victory lap and weâd get picked off by assassins posed in high city windows, perfectly undetected.
This was our only lifeline.
Prochazka remained confident. âHeâll still be there,â he said. âItâs too much work to actually relocate a headquarters, especially one thatâs been in use for as long as Nevilleâs. The New York gang in its current form has been running things over there since the mid-nineties, and while Iâm sure there are loads of secret basements in Manhattan, thereâs probably fewer than you might think. On top of thatâNeville has an interest in actually being where he says he is.â
âHe does?â Iâd asked, falling for it hook, line, and sinker.
Prochazka nodded, eyes closed. âHe wants to see you personally, doesnât he? Knocking someone out and dragging them halfway across the country is harder than it sounds.â
I pursed my lips and did not speak again.
âNevilleâs plan,â he said, âis to lure us over there and catch us off-guard somehow. Weâll be walking into enemy territory, soââ
âNo, weâll be walking into enemy territory,â Ava said, low. Gesturing back at us. âDonât act like youâre gonna do shit.â
Prochazka stopped. Raised an eyebrow. âPardon?â
Cygnus leaned back slightly and glanced at me, around Avaâs back. Bell didnât, but she cracked a tiny smirk that was just enough to show me we were all on the same page.
The three of us, yesterday, had discussed this as a possibility. Ava had too much rage to be totally bottled up, and given that killing me was out of the question, the next best thing would be to snap at the man upstairs.
All these orders to protect me had to come from somewhere, didnât they?
âYouâre gonna sit here and watch us die,â Ava said. âWhat part of that didnât make any sense to you?â
Ava was still fairly disheveled, despite cleaning up quite a bit today. In the past week she couldâve passed for one of the homeless drunks we occasionally saw in town on late nights, but when I came across her in the hall today sheâd seemed better. I only caught a passing reference, but she was standing up straighter, sober, her hair not quite as matted. I had no way of telling what the look in her eyes was like, but I could easily imagine it: still dull, still dead. Empty. Like mine, or at least, what she saw in mine.
And to think I used to want to model myself after her. Now it was more like the other way around.
A lot of that had slipped away by then, though. She wasnât standing up as straight as she had been that morning. She swayed a bit. Biting her lip to keep the words in orderâmaybe she was drunk, maybe not. I wasnât sure and I didnât want to get close enough to her to smell the booze on her breath.
I had my guesses, though.
âAvaââ
âNo,â she snapped. âItâs fine. Really. Iâm okay. I mean, fuck this, right?â
Her words dropped out of the air and nobody moved to pick anything up. She continued. âYouâre sending us to die, Jan. This is a suicide mission.â
âItâs not a suicide mission,â Prochazka said. He did not move. His face didnât change. All of this went straight through him. âItâs the next step. Thatâs all.â
âNo. You donât get it. I told you, itâs fine. I donât care that this is a suicide mission. I just want you to say it. Just once, when you say youâre giving us the business, I want you to actually fucking tell the truth. Weâre all gonna die.â
âI know youâre upset about Yoru,â Prochazka said, slowly. âButââ
âYou think this is about Yoru? God, Jan. I miss him every day but Iâve been over that shit for days. Love comes later. I donât have time to worry about petty shit like that right now. All I want you to do is say what weâre all thinking. I donât care about the missionâIâm gonna do it no matter what. Iâll die for you, you piece of shit. You know it, I know it, we all know it, and it doesnât matter because Iâm still gonna go out there and try. And I donât know if that says more about you or me.â
Earlier this weekâmaybe yesterday, maybe the day before thatâCygnus, Bell, and I all put five dollars in a pot on Ava. Cygnus won if Ava said something about Yoru, Bell won if Ava lashed out at Prochazka specifically, and I won if she cried.
It turned out that we were all getting our money back. Oh well.
âYouâre brave,â Prochazka went on.
âBrave?â Ava asked, shaking her head. Fists hard. Tears down her cheeks like streaks of ice. âNo, Jan, I think Iâm just retarded.â
Bell rolled her eyes. Nobody seemed to notice it but me.
I thought Bell was going to leave it at that, but then she decided against it at the last second. âAre you done?â she asked, glancing at Ava. âCan we let the adults talk now?â
Bell generally wasnât the type to publicly choose violence like that, so Cygnus shot me another look, to which I could only respond with a returned glance and a shrug. Iâd had this crisis already. Ava could do this shit on her own. She certainly didnât need my help.
Ava pursed her lips. âOh yeah. Iâm done. Thatâs all I wanted to say. To be honest, I just wanted to scream for a minute. Iâm gonna get so unbelievably fucked up that Iâm not going to know what direction the sunâs in, and then Iâm going to choke out a bunch of people with vines, and thenâI donât know, maybe Iâll hang myself or something. I havenât gotten that far. But I finish what I start, at least, and I started this, so Iâm seeing it through one way or another.â
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Five of the six of the assembled outside of the two active parties were more-or-less equally confused. Esther glanced at Loybol, who didnât say anything. Cygnus and I shared our looks. Bell had her eye-roll.
Eliza, whoâd been uncharacteristically silent throughout this whole thing, was the only one who seemed like sheâd seen this coming. Theyâd been talking a lot, hadnât they?
Maybe this was rehearsed.
Ava cleared her throat. âIâm done, Jan. Iâve said my piece. Go ahead.â
Any evidence that sheâd been crying was gone. Wicked away like the tears were never there.
It was an act convincing enough to me that my mind started to wander to quarters: maybe, with my last few seconds here at home, I needed to go back up there and find that old styrofoam cup I kept in my single drawer of clothes that held all my spare change, so I could split my five in half.
It could be said that Ava would mention her lost love, and it could be said that sheâd lash out at Prochazka, but no matter what it came to, it could not be said that sheâd cried. I was almost certain she didâbut in that moment I remember second-guessing.
I guess sheâd always have that over me, no matter how many times I told myself I wouldnât cry for anything anymore.
0ââ0ââ0
Prochazka finished his talk with the details. We had rooms booked for us in the hotels that flanked our target building: one toward the front and one toward the back on the left side, and one in the center on the right, making a rough triangle that surrounded Nevilleâs supposed home.
This obviously excluded me, whoâd be performing the role of bodyguard, rotating between the rooms as necessary to dissuade any would-be assassins. Hotel room windows donât open, usually, and especially not tenth, fourteenth, and eighteenth floor ones, which were the elevations weâd be watching from.
Normally Iâd be upset about being left out, but I was okay with it this time. Reconnaissance was mind-numbingly boring and I didnât want any part of it.
I was told to rotate my shift every two hours, except on every third rotation, where Iâd go after an hour. This did have a vulnerability where the three watchers would be alone in the ten minutes itâd take for me to run across the block to the next hotel, but that was the best we could do with only four soldiers.
Technically, we couldâve had eight, but that wasnât on the table. The brass did not ride into battle.
âBut above all else,â Prochazka said, finishing his talk. âUse your discretion. Youâve been on enough missions now to have a sense for it. I trust you all the make the right calls on the fly. Esther wonât be able to get info to you in any reasonable time frame, and Iâm not giving you cell phones. The enemyâs cell phones are what got us this far in the first placeâwithout Salâs phone, I donât think weâd be anywhere near this close to victory.â
At the sound of that word, my breath caught. He still believed, didnât he? If he did, then I needed to, as well.
But then I thought about it a second longer and I realized that the statement was completely meaningless. He was obligated to say that. What else could he possibly say? This is our last chance; weâre about to lose? Even if that was the truth?
No. He could never. What kind of general would he be then?
Iâve always thought of non-optional lies as a backdoor to truth. When the only choice is to fluff up a limp sentiment as the truth and parade it out to the masses, the correctness of it doesnât matter anymore: you have to believe, you must believe. At that point, whatâs the harm in swallowing the bait?
So I closed my eyes and I swallowed my fear and I did my very best to believe.
And thatâs all I have to say about that, I suppose.
0ââ0ââ0
We were instructed to take public transport as far as we could, so we all walked over to the bus stop in town about an hour later and waited there for our ticket to the front lines.
I wasnât looking forward to going into the city. Syracuse was right around the maximum city size I could handle. Even back in the old days, when my father took me to a few museums in New York, Iâd been uncomfortable with the sheer number of people there. There was simply too much going on. I couldnât possibly give every little thing the time of day it deserved.
Even though I was older, that part still worried me. I mightâve been better at ignoring random small stimuli like that, but bouncing droplets around to keep my surroundings steady in a place as hectic as that sounded just as hard. All Iâd done was trade one hobble for another.
As if thatâs not the story of my life. At least there was a coffee shop on every corner, from what Iâd heard, so as long as I could keep myself sleeplessly wired for four straight days Iâd survive.
The other alternative was to get absolutely blasted in the hotel minibar before we started to try and relax, but I was going to have to be quick, so âjittery but alertâ was preferable over ârelaxed to the point of lethargy.â
Ava, as sheâd said while talking at Cygnus on the bus, was looking forward to the trip. She was from the actual city-of Chicago, and she absolutely hated any half-assed signs of civilization.
âEither pack everyone together or donât,â Ava said. âThis shitââ she gestured out the window at the rolling farmlands the bus was probably rumbling pastââshouldâve been fully automated a long time ago.â
âWell, youâre the nature-key,â Cygnus replied, blunt. His eyes did not leave the book heâd brought. âGo on, hop to it.â
âI would, but Iâm dead as fuck,â she said. âAinât no way Iâm getting out of this alive.â
She said that with a borderline grin. We sat in a square cut-out of the busâs interior, Bell and Ava in the two seats in front of us and Cygnus and I together behind them. Ava spent most of the trip turned around, arms draped over the back of her chair, with both Cygnus and Bell desperately trying to ignore her.
Bell had it easier, given her position near the window, but it was tough for Cygnus.
âAwfully cheery for a death-row inmate,â Cygnus said back, with the same treatment as before.
âI donât know. I feel like I should be more upset than I am, butâthings are just really clear now. I donât know, Maybe I overrated autonomy. Maybe I just wanted to be pointed at shit.â
She gestured vaguely at me. âMaybe Erika was right all along.â
I blinked. âUmââ
âDonât get the wrong idea,â Ava said, still bright. âThis isnât an apology. If anything, I shouldâve been meaner to you.â
That more or less passed straight through my head. âOh.â
âThe only person I owe an apology to is Bell,â she went on.
Bell perked up at the sound of her name. Like Cygnus, sheâd brought a book along for the bus ride. She must have figured that was her cue, because she closed her book and joined the three of us in the conversation, if this could really be called one. âOh?â
âYeah.â Ava didnât quite turn to face her, but she angled herself slightly enough. âI shouldnât have called you weird. I totally understand why you donât want to associate with us.â
âNo, you really donât,â Bell said, flatly. She looked down at her book again.
âSeriously, no. I do. I get it.â
âYou realize that if you get taken hostage, Iâm letting you die. Right?â
âThatâs fine. The feelingâs mutual.â
I donât think Bell was expecting that, but given the pattern of Avaâs responses I kind of was. âFair,â Bell said. âAlthough I donât think you have to worry about me being taken hostage.â
ââCause theyâll just shoot you.â
âTheyâll certainly try,â Bell said, committing to her decision and reaching for the book again.
We fell quiet. Bell and Cygnus turned back to their books. I didnât bring anything of the sortâand out of force of habit I angled myself toward the window as if I could see out of it.
Ava saw it and chuckled. As soon as I heard thatâas a whip-crack across my neckâI flushed red and reached up to the latches to open the window a crack.
âCâmon, everyone. Chin up. Weâre almost done.â
âWeâre not,â Bell said.
âAre you just saying ânoâ to everything I say, orââ
âThis might be the last mission, but there isnât a chance in hell this is actually close to the end.â
Ava paused. âYou donât think heâs gonna be there.â
âOf course not,â Bell replied. âIf Neville had half a brain cell heâd be managing this war through a Zoom call out of Bermuda by now.â
None of us were willing to actually entertain that thought, as realistic as it seemed. Neville bailing and running this whole thing remotely would mean that everything weâd fought for was completely null and void. It was just another entry in the long list of things that would do that: âif Neville wasnât hereâ joined âif Neville decides to just go scorched-earthâ, âif knowledge of magic gets out next week anywayâ, and âif Neville gets what he wants with me.â
I shook my head and let them scatter. There was just a small handful of realities in which anything we did here meant anything to anyone and we just had to assume that one of them was the one we called home.
But Bellâs grimace didnât waver and I couldnât help but worry all over again.
Ava eventually found an answer for her. âWeâll cross that bridge when we come to it,â she said.