96 - House of the Blind [September 3rd, Age 15]
Sokaiseva
And so with all that new information in mind, I was able to resume counting the days just as Iâd done before. I found myself both surprised and underwhelmed by the amount of time thatâd passed while I was in the dry roomâit was somehow simultaneously more and less than Iâd thought. Thankfully, the catatonia worked in my favor there, and I remembered surprisingly little of the experience at largeâbut at the same time, it was long enough to wholly split my life into a section of before and a section of after: just like my life split when Prochazka found me in the woods that day three and a half years ago.
Phase threeâengine start, foot on the gas. Clench the wheel with white-knuckled fistsâand off we go into the wild blue yonder.
Matthew Biiri proved to be a steadfast companion, even if that wasnât really his choice, and it wasnât really his interest to be that way. Outside of the initial barrage of questions, which Iâd weathered well enough, he kept more or less to himself, sensing that I wasnât particularly conversational. If it was up to him, I think, we wouldâve talked a lot more.
That said, Iâve always been weak to my own curiosity, and after weâd eaten and some more time had gone by, a mixture of boredom and a craving for knowledge got to me and my shell cracked.
âHow old are you?â I asked him, out of the blue, some two hours after lunch.
âThirty-one,â he said, regarding me a touch more warily than he did before. âIâve been around the block a bit.â
âHave you been here long?â I asked, turning towards him and pushing droplets into the corners of the room, trying to get a more complete picture of the space I was in. Iâd already scoped out the entire place in depth, but I hadnât yet tried to hold a full image of everything all at onceâand at this point I was feeling a lot better. My headache was gone and I was no longer bone-achingly hungry.
It had taken just about all of my willpower to not inhale the entirety of my lunch all at once as soon as I smelled itâbut Matthew had cautioned me against that and I knew he was right, so I did my best to take it slow, and overall that worked out.
I felt more or less normal again.
I focused the droplets on Matthew, carving his face out of the air as Iâd done so many times before.
âYou know that most people can feel when you do that, right?â he said.
I paled. âWhat?â
âHuman skin is really sensitive,â he said. âWhen itâs super humid outside, you can probably get away with it, butâ¦â He gestured to his face with both hands. âWeâre inside, and itâs pretty dry in here anyway. I can feel it.â
âOh,â I said, and I pulled the droplets away and let his visage drop out of my awareness. âSorry.â
âIâm not saying you canât do it,â he went on. âJust that you should know that other people can normally tell.â
That explained why Ava always seemed to know. Everyone else probably just kept their mouth shutâbut Ava wouldâve called me out on it, just because she was like that.
âWasââthe past tense; she was dead, too.
I grimaced and tried not to think too much about it. Even though her death, and the time of it, was probably the only thing in this entire venture that truly went just as we drew it up.
âIâve been here for eleven years,â Matthew went on. âBit of an old-head at this point. Itâs recommended that Biiris find somewhere to be before they turn twenty-two or so.â
âSo you wereâ¦twenty?â
âYeah, but I knew I was headed here earlier than that. Twenty was just when I managed to land the job.â
He shrugged. âSay, you said Misha didnât know anything, right?â
I nodded.
âI just keep thinking about that,â he said. âShe was our combat leader, you know? She was in charge of pretty much all the missions. Like Benji was for you guys. I just find itâreally hard to believe that she had no idea what the plan actually was.â
He fell silent for a moment. I didnât have anything much to add, since I probably knew somehow even less than him about this whole thing, but after a moment he straightened up and said, âOh, God, I figured it out. Holy shit.â
He rubbed his eyes with the palms of his hands. âJesus Christ. I canât believe they went for that. Thatâs insane.â
âWhat?â
Matthew regarded me briefly before shrugging. âNot like you can do shit about it now, so Iâll just tell you what I think it was. It didnât have anything to do with you, reallyâit was a long-con play to bait you all into coming out here. Basically, Neville told Misha to trust himâwhich she didâand he let her get captured. All he told her was that she was getting captured on purpose, right?â
âShe knew that, yeah.â
âRight. SoâMisha gets captured and knows stuff about events that have already happened, but not anything actually useful. A backup head of missions had already been appointedâI think Talia got that job, uh, like two months ago or so. So all of Mishaâs info is out of date. She baits you into coming out here, yâall get destroyed, and then after the warâs over, she can infect Neville with the Umbroids. Nevilleâs strong enough to overturn the hive-mind like Loybol did, or at least he probably thinks he is, so once heâs got the Umbroids set to a new home mind, he re-infects Misha and everythingâs back to normal, except he now also has access to the same basically unbeatable system Loybol uses to keep her people in line.â
He breathed out, slowly. âFuck, thatâs good.â
âLoybol wouldnât let Misha go out alone.â
âMight not have to,â Matthew said. âTheyâd just have to be separated for a bit.â
He shook his head, continuing. âGod. If Neville was willing to pull a long-con gambit like that, he must have been so certain heâd win that the risk justâ¦didnât mean anything to him. God. No wonder he never really felt like he was all that worried.â
Then he looked at me. âDid you guys seriously think you were going to win this?â
I tilted my head down, away from himâmy eyes pointed vaguely at my feet. âYeah. We did.â
âGod,â he said. âIâm sorry. You got played.â
âItâs fine,â I said, mostly by reflex.
âThereâs no way in hell itâs fine, but Iâll just take you at your word,â Matthew replied. âNot that it matters much now, anyway.â
âThereâs still a chance,â I said, quietly. âWeâre not all dead.â
âWell, youâre out,â Matthew said, holding up three fingers with his left hand and pointing to one with his right. He moved to the next finger and added, âCygnus isnât very strong, and Bellâs not going to fight this shit alone. The two of them are stranded in our territory without a way to contact home and without anyone who can scan stuff like Yoru or you could. Theyâre so unbelievably boned.â
I didnât respond.
âAnd they donât even have phones!â he said, throwing his hands in the air and suppressing a snort. âWeâre not the US government, weâre like three hundred dudes in skyscraper. Weâre not the goddamn FBI. How the hell would we have tracked a cell phone without, I donât know, owning a few cell towers?â
He rolled his eyes. âJesus. Prochazka was so confident. Fuck that guy. Honestly. He sent eight people to their deaths against a whole-ass organization and he didnât even have a good plan. Thatâs what you get for following two guys who fought in âNam, I guess.â
âHe saved my life,â I said, quietly.
âDid he?â Matthew said. âOr did he just trick you into signing it over?â
Matthew took a deep breath and got up out of his chair. âWell, weâve been sitting here long enough, I think. Everyoneâs got a high-level order not to hurt you, and youâre going to be monitored by a telepath twenty-four hours a day, so thereâs not much risk on either end here. I might as well take you outside now.â
âOutside?â
âOut of this room,â he said. âYou can meet the team and all that.â
âWhy would I want to do that?â I asked my feet.
âWell, the only possible explanation Iâve got for your capture is that this ends in us recruiting you somehow,â Matthew said, shrugging. âAnything else is just ridiculous. And he couldâve ordered me to kill you at any time in the last month and he didnât, so obviously heâs got something for you that you need to be alive for, so itâs probably not a surprise heart transplant. Might as well say hello and show folks youâre not all that bad, huh?â
I couldnât even begin to think of what I thought of that. The entire concept of it blew past me so hard and fast that it barely even registered.
But I found myself nodding, because Iâm nothing if not agreeable.
âPerfect,â he said. âUp you go. Letâs stretch those legs a bit.â
0 0 0
The second I tried to slip off the bed and put weight on my legs, I collapsed. They were wholly unprepared for anything vaguely resembling real work, and so for a moment I sat there dazed and sprawled on the floor as if Iâd fallen out of a wheelchair. Matthew Biiri looked down at me, vaguely expressionless as always, before saying, âWell, that makes sense, I guess. Youâve basically been bedridden for a month, so itâll probably take some time before you can properly walk again.â
He turned away, looking around the room. âMaybe I can get you a cane or something?â
âIâm not an invalid,â I muttered. âI can walk.â
âYou probably literally canât,â he said. âAtrophy or something. I donât know how much thereâd be after just a month, but youâll probably need some support.â
âJust get me some more water,â I said, through tight lips. Face flushed hot. âPlease.â
âSure,â he replied. He opened the door and said to one of the guards out there, âGet us a big jug.â
âOfâof water?â the guard replied.
âNo, of pizza sauce. Obviously of fucking water, Michael.â
I didnât need to be a telepath to know how the guardâMichael, apparentlyâwas feeling. âRight. Sorry. IâllâIâll be right back.â
Matthew turned away from the door, pushing it gently closed, mumbling, âThese guys, Erika. Man.â
I reached up for the side of the bed and pulled myself upâwhich in itself was harder than I thought itâd beâshifting my weight until I was sitting on the side of the mattress with my legs hanging off the side. Then, gripping the edge for support, I slid forward, off the bed, and leaned out, my arms reaching toward the wall and letting my knees lock, pivoting hard forward on my ankles until I was upright and braced against the wall, my weight half down on the floor and half against the wall.
I just stood there for a moment while Matthew watched me, bemused.
âHowâs that working out for you?â he asked me, arms crossed and slightly smiling.
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âFine,â I said, to the floorâbut I didnât take my hand off the wall.
Let my breath go in and out, slowly.
âWell,â he went on. âIf you need a shoulder, Iâm here.â
0 0 0
After a minute or two, I worked up the courage to rock back on my heels and stand under my own power, which worked outâmore or lessâwell enough. With my knees locked, I wasnât at much risk for buckling over, and Matthew hovered close being me. He offered to give me and hand but I pushed him away. Couldnât accept his pity.
And so, slowly, I hobbled to the door and out of the room.
My earlier suspicions about this being a proper hospital were only half-right. This floor of the building was, anyway. Most of the wardsâthirteen of the sixteen excluding the one Iâd left, by the dropletsâ countâwere empty, doors ajar, but two of them were closed, and the handful of droplets I slipped under the doors there showed two bodies on the beds there. I didnât have time to properly resolve the shapes of the injured before Matthew spoke to me and I had to split my attention elsewhere.
âThese are the wards,â Matthew said. âAs Iâm sure youâve gathered.â
The structure of the walls made me think there was a wall of windows behind me, opposite the sixteen wards, but we were high enough up where they didnât have any opening mechanisms.
âWhere is this?â I asked, glancing towards where I figured the windows were.
He chuckled. âNot the building you guys attacked, thatâs for sure.â
âThen...â
âOh, that was where we were based out of,â he said. âBut I donât think Neville was actually there at the time. He might be there now, Iâm not really sure.â
I let a breath go in and out, slowly. No need to panic. No need to feel much of anything at all, really.
What could I possibly have been feeling that would help me in that moment?
âSo we never really had a chance, then,â I said.
Matthew shook his head, grim. âYeah. Not really. We had our bases covered. Honestly, if you guys just pulled up guns blazing way earlier, somehow, we probably wouldâve been in more trouble. Iâm talking, like, all in on abductions and mind-reading. Just brute force your way through this. Bust a hole, strip everyone there of anything vaguely resembling a conscious thought, move on. Estherâs stronger than the three of us individuallyâJohan, Jessie, and meâand while Johanâs pretty tricky I donât think any of us wouldâve been able to set up a psychic trap she couldnât have handled. Plus, Loybol more or less passes for a telepath in that situation, since she can just assimilate folks. Then Esther and Loybol just go around as the two attackers while the other six play their bodyguards. That was the plan we were worried about, but Loybol and Prochazka decided to take it slow because they underestimated their own firepower, and that was perfectly okay with us. Every second that ticked by was a second we got to set up more lines of defense.â
âI was worried about that, in the beginning,â I said. âI didnât reallyâumâdidn't really understand why we werenât just rushing in here when we had me and Bell.â
âWell, your heart was in the right place, even if it wasnât you or Bell we were really worried about.â
âLoybolâs still alive,â I said, suddenly energized. âSheâsâsheâs still out there.â
âLoybolâs not gonna march in here alone,â Matthew replied. âLetâs go downstairs.â
He started off, but I didnât move. âShe swore sheâd protect me,â I said.
Matthew didnât look at meâhe was still focused on the staircase at the end of the hallâbut he still cracked a smile. One I was perfectly capable of feeling, even if it was faced away from me.
One upside of the droplets, I suppose.
âAnd how well is that working out for you?â he asked me, again.
0 0 0
The building, Matthew said, was fifteen stories tall. The wards, where Iâd been staying, were on the third floorâwe took the stairs down to the second, which was a mostly open-air office space. There were living accommodations on the sixth floor, Matthew told me, and Iâd be moved into one of those once theyâd confirmed that everything was okay with me, any risks were neutralized, and they could prepare to return to normalcy.
Not that I had any idea what that was.
Walking was slow, but possible. Every step made me a touch more confident in my legs. The muscle memory, just like everything else, slowly returned to me, and by the time Matthew was ready to tell me what I was seeing with the droplets on that floor, I could stand up mostly straight and mostly steady.
âThis is our main hub,â he said. âFollow me for a second, okay?â
He stepped away from the staircase and waved me forwardâand after a brief moment of disorientation, I followed him.
Nobody seemed to notice I was thereâor if they did, they made a point of not staring. From my vantage, this floor didnât appear to be meaningfully different from any other new-age open-concept office space. People lounged around on beanbags and at various mobile desks with laptops and phones and I had no idea what any of them were supposed to be doing.
I also, honestly, didnât really care. It was different than the Radiant, and that was all I really gathered from the scene.
Matthew led me to the back-right corner of the floor, where there was a small cubicle nestled in with a sliding ribbed plexiglass door. He took a bit of a winding path to get there, taking a wide berth around a group of people who didnât bother to look up at the person going around them. And given that I was already so adept at making myself small, the odds were good that they didnât even see me at all. Maybe Matthew had a second shadow; but given what heâd said about the Biiris, it wouldnât surprise me if people already thought that about him.
And so I could completely disappear.
âHey, Talia,â Matthew said, knocking once on the plexiglass. âYou busy?â
Talia was sitting in a high-backed office chair, facing away from usâI put droplets over the door to get a head-start on trying to see her. She had a pair of over-ear headphones on, but took them off as soon as she heard Matthewâs knock, so I assumed she wasnât really listening to anything.
Maybe she just had them on to dampen outside noise. Iâd definitely done that before, back at the Radiant.
She turned around, spinning the top of the chair by kicking at the base, and leaned in to open the door. âWhatâsâoh.â
Talia caught sight of me and froze. âJesus, Matthew, sheâs not your service dog, you canât just bring her wherever you want.â
âFolks better start getting used to it,â he said, shrugging. âCertainly seems like thatâs the direction things are going, anyway.â
She scratched her forehead, leaning in. Her hair was tied up in a relatively dense, neat bun, and she was wearing a suit-like top with a long skirtâall of this is to say she was exceedingly normal-looking, kind of like Loybol.
Iâm not sure why I consistently expect people in Taliaâs position to look strange. Maybe she had lime-green hair or pink eyes or something, I wouldnât have known, but I have to admit that it was a bit deflating to meet a new person who was a higher-up in an organization like this, expect a full-fledged demon with bat wings and fangs and all, and get a very standard office-worker lady instead.
At least Ava looked distinctive, even if the rest of her was nothing to write home aboutâand then I remembered she was dead, again, and I flushed red.
âIs it?â Talia asked.
âI donât know. You tell me.â
Talia frowned. âYouâre the butler. Donât you know?â
âWasnât this whole thing your doing?â
âNo, I most definitely did not order the team to capture the enemyâs nuke so we could let her wander around our facility with an servant like she owned the place. Neville made me do it. If it were up to meâ¦â Talia turned to me with a dismissive gesture, âYouâd have been in a casket a long time ago.â
I decided I was better off keeping my mouth shut.
Matthew, for the first time since Iâd met him, scrunched up his eyes and looked away from Talia, unable to maintain his standard quiet disenchantment. And I will admitâseeing him get knocked down a peg made me crack a smile. âSoâ¦is it just Ivan and Neville who know why the fuck we did this?â
âIâd be floored if Ivan knows,â she said. âHeâs just the head of HR, right? I donât know if capturing Erika falls under âhuman resources.ââ
âI meanâsheâs a human and theoretically a resource, right?â
âI think both of those are debatable.â
Silence wasnât doing me any favors anymore. âIâm right here,â I protested. âIâm not deaf.â
âI know, and I donât care,â Talia replied. âWhat the hell are we supposed to use her for, Biiri?â
âI donât know. Murder?â
âWeâve got loads of people for that already.â
âBut are they as efficient as Erika?â
âYes!â she said, half-yellingâand then she paused, mouth pulled tight. Looked at me, briefly, before continuing in a lower voice. âAll our strike teams are great. Weâre a bit strapped for numbers, now, but I really do not think addingâyou knowâour number one enemy to them is going to make things all hunky-dory.â
âOur number-one enemy is Prochazka.â
âYours, maybe,â Talia said. Pointing at me. âBut mine is definitely this idiot.â
âMe?â
âWell,â Talia held up a few fingers. âLetâs count the ways, shall we? One, I lost my mentor to Nevilleâs fucking scheme, God only knows what heâs planning for herââ
âI think I figured it out, by the way,â Matthew said. âIâllââ
âCan it, Biiri,â Talia snapped. âTell me later.â
He frowned and didnât add anything. Talia cleared her throat and continued. âMoving on,â she said, âyouâve killed like seven of our top guys, including Weston, who we really really still needed. I donât know how the hell you got him from that far out, butââ
âYouâre not the only one,â I said, quietly. âYoru told meââ
âShut up, Erika, Iâm not done. Why does everyone keep interrupting me?â
I pursed my lips. Matthew glanced down at me, brieflyâa look I can only imagine was vaguely sympatheticâand Talia picked up her train of thought again. âIâm not normally this frustrated, but in case you canât tell, our well oiled machine is a chaffing a bit right now because Neville has decided that something about you is just so important that we need to hemorrhage resources and employee goodwill to bring you on board alive. God only fucking knows why. So we lost our top sniper, I lost my mentor, weâre down like forty percent of our keysâfor what? You? Why? I donât know, because Neville wonât tell me shit, andâGod, seeing you just standing there makes my fucking blood boil.â
She shook her head. âWhy canât you have the decency to look intimidating?â
âWhat?â
âYouâre so normal looking,â she said.
âI was going to say the same thing about you, actually,â I repliedâmore nervously than I meant to sound, butâin hindsightâprobably suitably so.
Talia rolled her eyes, the moisture swirling in her sockets. âOkay, fine, thatâs fair. Butâ¦if you were likeâ¦I donât know, if you had some piercings or some bloodstains on you or something I could at least feel better about hating you. Fuck, Iâd settle for a Cannibal Corpse t-shirt, honestly, just likeâ¦something that implies violence, you know? Something that makes you not just look like my teenage cousin.â
I shrugged. âIâmâ¦sorry? I think?â
Talia sighed. âGod, I just want to punt you over a fucking fence. I hate that weâre supposed to be nice to you so much.â
Something inside of her headphones made a noise that caught Taliaâs attention. âListen, Iâve got a meeting now and Ivanâs gonna be there so Iâll just pull him aside and ask him if he knows anything then. You two justâ¦I donât know. Shoo. Iâll go find you later.â
âWeâre either in ward 10 or room 608,â Matthew said.
âGot it,â she replied, and then she turned back toward her computer and grabbed her headphones from the desk. âClose the door, okay?â
Matthew silently complied, and for a second we just stood there staring at the closed door before Matthew started off back towards the stairs.
I paused for a bit too long and had to jog a second to catch up. âWhere are you going?â I asked him.
âOut.â
ââ¦Outside?â I asked.
He sucked in his lower lip. âRight, thatâs hard for you, isnât it?â
âItâsâ¦not great,â I said, âButâ¦I can manage. Itâs not the first time.â
âManhattan sucks, I know,â he replied. âJust suck it up.â
âIâ¦okay.â
I didnât exactly have bargaining power here, and Matthew knew that. âIâm taking âbe nice to youâ pretty liberally,â he said. âIâm just overall not a very mean person.â
âI guess.â
The stairs we took to get down here continued down to the ground floor, and we started on that staircase down to the lobby.
âAnd Taliaâs not normally like that,â he said. âSheâs just frustrated by this whole thing. I get it. Itâsânot really our plan A, you know?â
I was used to this sort of thing by now. Talking about me like I wasnât thereâlike it wasnât my life in the balance. I was properly half-dissociated anyway. None of this, really, was real to me. It still felt like a semi-dream, some kind of drugged-out mid-conscious state where I waded through Jell-O and nothing I said had consequences. I still expected to wake up at some point, but the thing that caught me from buying fully into that fantasy was the fact that I wasnât quite sure where Iâd be waking up.
The events in the elevator shaft, and in the lobby of that building, were just a little too real to be a dreamâand to be completely honest, I distinctly remember going down those steps to the lobby and thinking that I had yet to see concrete evidence that I was still alive.
Crossing the big perfectly-smooth tiles to the double-doors that led out into the eternal tempest of a Manhattan street and wondering if this was purgatory, Hell, or the afterlife of some tiny long-forgotten tribal religion that had it right all along. The odds seemed equally good to me in any direction.
Above all elseâabove all our mutual confusion, above the ghosts of the rest of the Radiant Iâd left behind, above the scrabbling shells of Cygnus and Bell somewhere out there fighting for their lives without me, fighting for a cause neither of them surely believed in, I remember feeling well and truly blind.
The droplets simply were not good enough. Even real sight wouldnât have been good enough to not make me feel like I was emptily feeling my way through pitch darkness.
Matthew opened the door out into the street and I walked out behind him, still waiting for the other shoe to drop, still wondering when I would come to, strapped into an intricate torture machine built for me aloneâor maybe, still in the dry room, in which everything Iâd seen to this point was a conjured illusion designed to keep some tiny shred of my consciousness running just in case I ever escaped and had to rebuild myself: scavenge up scraps of a personality from pieces of TV and books I remembered, memories Iâd saved that were soft and inoffensive. Just enough information to do a recovery in the unlikely event that one day some shining knight would knock down the door, unplug the dehumidifier, and breathe life back into my bones.
I think that, in hindsight, I clung to the idea that I might be dead for far longer than any sane person normally would have. Not that comparing me to the average sane person was particularly fruitful, but to most, I think, breathing in the fresh air (well, stale city air, but air that wasnât recycled and air-conditioned, at least) and tasting food and feeling water on my tongue would be enough to prove lifeâbut no, that wasnât good enough for little Erika Hanover, who wanted more, who needed moreâwho was just so fucking needy all the time.
I still, even now, even holding all these events in my hands and poring over them with the extra years behind my eyes, canât decide if I held onto the idea that I could have been dead for that long because I wanted it to be true, or if it was because I was afraid it was. If I was dead, then this was my eternityâbut if I wasnât, then that meant that despite everything, Erika Hanover was still ticking, still marching, just like she always knew sheâd be, and I couldnât say then and I still canât say now which outcome was scarier to me.
I felt blind then, and I still feel blind now.