{Book 2 - Teardrop Two-Step} 93 - The Neon Machine (3) [August 2nd, Age 15]
Sokaiseva
Misha had told us that there was a code we needed to put into the elevator. A sequence of numbers that we had to enter on the floor-selector panelâone, four, six, seven, then all four buttons twice. That would take us down.
We approached the elevator at the other end of the hall slowly. I had droplets hung all around usâscanning the office-building lobby for any evidence of life, of which there were none whatsoever.
But weâd been in this situation before.
Cygnus held his nail gun with both hands, drawn like a pistol. Ava followed behind him, little vines growing out of her pockets and wrapping themselves around her wrists. Iâd only seen this part of her in action a handful of timesânormally, she did the talking while Yoru did the fighting, but that wasnât an option here. There was no talking to be done.
Bell simply stood, at ease. Eyes forward, eyes black.
I pressed the call button for the elevatorâonly upâand the doors opened smoothly, slowly. Cygnus stepped up, laying a hand gently on the open doors, eyes closedâand then he leaned into the elevator chamber slightly, pointed the nail gun up, and fired a shot into the chamberâs ceilingâthe nail going faster than my perception could track it, straight through the metal roof, and straight into the head of some hidden assailant waiting for us up there.
Ava sent a vine into the chamber then, sending it straight up and through the hole Cygnus made and wrapped it around something up thereâthe vine formed a watertight seal with the hole, so I couldnât tell what was going on. After a moment, she said, âNice shot.â
âThanks,â he replied. âThereâs no way thatâs the only guy.â
âObviously,â she said back, low. âLetâs get that code in and get this shit going.â
And Ava turned to me. âYou do the honors.â
I was the only person who knew the code, as far as I knewâunless Loybol told the rest of them at some point, its secret was safe with me. Gingerly I stepped into the metal enclosure and I turned to the elevator panel, facing it. I reached out and touched the metal, dragging my finger down, feeling for the number symbol and the letters that followed, holding their locations in my perception with the droplets. And once Iâd found all four, I splayed my fingers across the buttons and pressed: one, four, six, seven, all buttons once, all buttons twice.
Then I put my arm in the doorway to stop the doors from closingâbut they made no attempt to. The elevator did not move.
Instead, the ceiling in the lobby dropped out.
From eight or nine different places the ceilingâs big square tiles fell and with them fell eight or nine assailants, who I didnât have time to identifyâwe were already leaping out of the elevator, the four of us spreading out, Avaâs vines surging toward the nearest, Bell taking off running toward one, Cygnusâs nail gun extended and taking aimâand a piece of steel from the ceiling twisting down and skewering one of the assailants through the neck right as a nail pierced his stomach.
I took in a breath, standing right in front of the open elevator doors, and I searched for any water I could feelâand found that there were no pipes, no mains, nothing, in the entire building. The water was off. Itâd been off for agesâof course, of course. The pipes were bone dry. As they obviously would be.
So instead, I grabbed what little water I could from the air, tightening my fist and allowing the water to condense around me, and I stretched my mind out to the fallen soldier who Cygnus had already killed and I took hold of his body and pulled as hard as I couldâhis final exhalation grabbed and dragged out alongside the vast majority of his bodyâs moisture, until I had two balls of water around my hands large enough to properly maneuver.
And then I felt the world around meâ
Ava had snagged one of the assailants in vines, but another one (a nature-key in her own right) had intercepted them and kept them from choking out their target or from entering any bodily hole and destroying them from within. The assailant in question was an earth-key, judging from the chunk of ceiling tile they held (I now understood how all of the assailants were able to reach the ground safely), and piece of one of those tiles now leapt into his hand with a speed I thought only Loybol was capable ofâ
And I fired a piece of ice at him, shifting my weight forward to do soâ
And the second I did a blast of air, I think from the assailant furthest away from the elevator, closest to the door, smacked into me and knocked me off my feet, sending me careening into the elevator cavity and smacking my head hard into the back wall where I sat woozy for a moment before regaining most of my bearings and firing an icicle dead-center into that air-keyâs foreheadâshe conjured some kind of wind in an attempt to blow it off-course but she moved as if through syrup in my perception, too slow, far too slow, and the icicle pierced her forehead plate and sent bone shards and moist warm-red flying across the front of the lobby.
Off to the air-keyâs left was Bell, jumping over the shapeless mush-pile of one of the three sheâd already handledâa hole in her chest the size of a bowling ball, one in her thigh the size of a baseball. Things simply passed through herâa metallurgic, one of the four left alive, fired a bullet at her skull that simply did not penetrate: a hole opened up in Bellâs head before the bullet had even left its home, and the bullet went right through her without touching a single thing.
The metallurgic looked at Bell, eyes wide, eyes glowing, teeth grittedâand then he looked at me, across the hall, still standing in the elevatorâs cavity.
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And he reached out and clenched a fist and the elevatorâs doors slammed shut.
With the droplets outside I could still keep track of the action, and I shouted out for Cygnus and called some of the droplets back to wrench open the door but found them slammed so tightly shut and expanded around their edges to form a totally watertight sealâso I pulled harder and more sharply and the metal began to heave and scream under the weight of my pulling, despite my splitting headache and dizzinessâstill I pulled with all my heart and soul and Cygnus heard my call and as soon as he had a spare second, he turned away from the action and focused on the doorsârealizing quickly that it was a bad axis to fight on and instead calling out for Ava to get the metallurgic herself.
But there was no response from Avaâin the commotion Iâd lost track of her and didnât have time to re-identify her. I knew where that metallurgic was, though, because I had so many droplets hung around him that even though a closed door he burned red like the sky in Hell, and I pulled those droplets away for a moment as he was running and condensed them into an ice-spike to drive into his heartâ
And his eyes were wideâhis eyes were glowingâ
And he, in the final seconds before the spike destroyed his heartâhe clenched his fists.
And the elevator I was in made a great heaving groaning sound and dropped, knocking me off my feet, dizzy from the head-hit as I already was, fear and bile rising alike in my throatâ
And I heard Cygnusâs screamâhis scream of my nameâand I heard a second scream, a gurgling noise that could only have meant Bell had reached anotherâ
And all was drowned in the screeching of the elevatorâs collapse dragging itself down through the shaftâand the distance and concrete and steel between me and the droplets became too great and I lost them, I lost Cygnus, I lost Bell, I lost the entire lobby.
I lost everything.
The elevator free-fell and it was all I could do to hold myself.
I lost everything.
0ââ0ââ0
The elevator fell for a good five or six secondsâI have no idea how far or how fastâand then it slowed and stopped, even though the cable holding it up had been cut.
It bobbed and screamed and I knew a metallurgic, another one, was holding it up.
And a slit appeared between the fused doors and I immediately shot droplets into the crack and spread them in tiny hail-stones across the hall that lay there but found nothing soft, no flesh, nothingâ
And then the hailstones fell.
And then I could not move.
Eyes wide and unseeing I became fully and completely blind again, paralyzed, and I knew what was happening to me well because it had been prophesized since the day we went to war. This was the moment. This was the timeâall else became nothing, all else became gone, and I knew what I had to doâ
The doors creaked and heaved and dragged themselves open and vaguely, from the sound of footsteps, I knew that there were two figures deep in the hall, running toward me, but I didnât know how far and I didnât know where and all I knew was that this was the prophesized time and if I did not do what I was told to do now, then all was lost, the world was forfeitâwe would die, we would lose.
This was the logical conclusion of all things.
I squeezed my useless stupid eyes shut and surged against the telepathâs hold over meâand I reached out and found the tiny ice particles, as small as snow, scattered on the floor outside the elevator, and I pulled them together into a single icicle with an exertion to rival Godâ
And the two figures had stopped coming towards me but I didnât know which one was the telepath and which was the metallurgic. There was no way to know. I didnât have enough droplets over there to resolve their forms. There was no timeâthere was only the prophesized action, the trumpets blaring harsh through my empty skullânow, Erika, nowâprove your worthâshow your resolveâtake what youâve been told and perform your greatest act in service of the world!
All of this for one more dayâ
All of you for one more secondâ
The pair was far but I was close, and as the doors began to open wider I spun the icicle around and it leapt through the open crack to the ground before me, and I lurched forward and swept it into my open hand, every muscle I had straining, every piece of my brain caught in turmoil, and I clutched the icicle sharpened to a point to pierce reality itself and I held it up to my temple, the point breaking the surface of my skin with just the lightest touchâ
And I pushedâ
And I tried to pushâ
Benjiâs promise, my promiseâ
All of this for one more dayâ
But I could not bring it in. There was a crash from the hall as one of the pair fell to their kneesâ
âJust shut her off!â a voiceâa male voiceâshoutedâ
âItâs not that simple!â a second male voice shouted backâ
âJust do it!â
âIâmââ
Their words became lost to me. My hearing cut outâand then my sense of touch shorted out as well, and suddenly I didnât know what was up and what was down and I could no longer feel the cold of the icicle in my hands nor the pressure of the icicleâs point against the side of my skull and in the pit of my stomach I knew that something was wrong and that this was not death, this was not what death was supposed to feel likeâthere was supposed to be hellfire, there was supposed to be burning, there was supposed to be pain and the screams of the damned and the sense of finality and foreverâ
I pushedâ
And for a moment I felt the pressure on the side of my skull againâ
And then I felt it relieve.
I heardâin half-measures, as the sound cut in and outâsomething clatter. Something shatter against the metal floor of the elevator.
And then I felt nothing at all.
0ââ0ââ0
And then, I awoke alone. Barely. Scarcely consciousâawake, alive.
Alone.
Didnât even try to move. Everything hurt too much. All my limbs too heavyâand I had a suspicion they were tied down, anyway.
The air came into my nose so hard and dry it made me cough.
Couldnât move. Could barely think. Didnât try to. Couldnât raise the droplets. Too weak. Too slow.
I knew what Iâd done.
Somewhereâdistantly, or maybe it only felt that way because of my conditionâI heard a voice. The second male one from before: âSheâs up already?â
And the first: âWeâre not ready yet, are we?â
âNot even close.â
âThenââ
âYeah, I know. Gimme a sec.â
And then everything cut outâhearing, smell, touch. No longer aware of the completely dehumidified air scraping my lungs.
And then I was no longer aware of anything at all.