19 - You Can't Get There From Here (3)
Sokaiseva
And so Bell and I walked down the hall, outside of Avaâs weed room, and we went downstairs and through the factory to the place where the representative was doing the interviews. Only Yoru was still standing around, and when he saw Bell coming he started to say, âEstherâs been waiting for you,â but as soon as he saw me behind her, he stopped and shot Bell a toxic look.
Bell ignored him completely. Kept walking. I just looked at Yoru and shrugged.
Bell opened the door and stepped into the conference room. Iâd been told to wait outside, so I did.
Yoru looked at me, looked back and forth, then beckoned for me to come away from the door.
I did so, walking up next to him. He whispered to meâin a half-hissââWhat the fuck are you doing down here?â
I turned beet red. âWeâve got a plan. This is serious stuff.â
âI know it is!â Yoru said. âItâsâProchazka specifically told you not to leave. God. Ava told me this would happen. Bell put you up to something, right? Fuck.â
He turned away for half a second. âWhat is it? Whatâs she making you do?â
âThis whole thing is a trap,â I said. âItâs just a spy mission. Estherâs just here to scope out the competition.â
Yoru paused. âThat would go against everything Loybolâs done up to now. I donât buy it, man.â
âThatâs what Bell told me,â I mumbled.
âBell says a lot of bullshit,â Yoru said. âYouâd better go back upstairs before Prochazka stops by to make sure youâre not here.â
âEstherâs a telepath,â I said. âShe already knows about me. Itâs too late.â
âDid Bell tell you that, too?â
My eyes dropped to the floor.
âLook, Erika, I know it sucks being stuck up there, but if Prochazka hasnât talked about you yet Iâve got to assume he has a good reason. Beats the hell out of me what the reason is, he hasnât told me, but itâs gotta be a good one. You really should go.â
âWerenât you supposed to meet with him earlier to talk about it?â
He grimaced, looked down. âYeah.â
The two of us couldnât meet eyes for a momentâbut I remembered what Bell told me, and I knew I had to make a stand here. Make a callâany call, just to prove I could.
âBellâs got a plan and Iâm following through with it,â I said. âIâmâIâve got a plan and Iâm following through with it.â
âBellâs plan,â Yoru said. âNot yours.â
âIâm in the plan.â
âBellâs just using you.â Yoru frowned. Shook his head. âGod. You really need to stop talking to her. SheâsâBellâs a piece of fucking work, Erika. You really donât want to associate with someone like her.â
âSheâsâsheâs so cool,â I said, quietly.
Yoru all but rolled his eyes. âGod, Erika, whatâs she been telling you?â
âJustâstuff,â I trailed off. âCool stuff.â
âHow old did she say she was?â Yoru asked.
âTwenty-six.â
âWell, she told me she was twenty-nine,â Yoru said. âLetâs see how old she tells Esther she is, huh?â
He walked over to the wall and but his ear up against it. I joined him, slow and numb.
Through the wall I heard an alien voice, presumably Esther: ââ¦flesh-key.â
âFlesh-key, huh? Pretty rare.â
âYeahâIâve, um, Iâve been told that.â
The first alien voice was Bell. It was higher, more childish, than I remembered.
âShe sounds like a fucking teenager,â Yoru said. âGod dammit. I knew Bell was gonna screw us with this. She literally cannot resist an opportunity to put on a new dumb face and lie to someone. She literally cannot do it. It is factually, completely impossible. Fuck.â
He turned away from the wall for half a second, saw me still listening, completely still, and he turned back.
Esther said, âHow old are you, Faith?â
Yoru snorted. âFucking Faith?â
âUmâIâm eighteen.â
Yoru could barely contain the spiteful laugh. âEighteen? Are you fucking serious?â
Meanwhile, I was frozen solid.
We listened to them talk for a little while, small talk, and all the while Esther became slowly more and more confident. I donât know what kind of character Bell was trying to play, but it was evidently some sort of God-fearing Catholic schoolgirl nonsense who happened to have a flesh-key and no conscience, but still cripplingly low self-esteem, as if someone as powerful as Bell could ever be in doubt that they owned the world.
It was stock horror-movie garbage, but Esther didnât appear to be outwardly questioning it.
After a few minutes, Bellâor Faith or whateverâsaid, âActuallyâI donât know if, um, if youâve found out about this already, but thereâs actually six of us.â
âSix of you. Six in six. That makes sense.â
âHer nameâs Erika. IâI brought her with me. Prochazka told us not to show you, but I really think you should see her.â
âIs she outside?â
âYeah.â
That was my cue.
I looked at Yoru, who shot me one last pleading look.
I came down here because I wanted to call some shots. These were shots, werenât they? I was calling something, I was sure. This had to be good enough. Esther was a telepath. She already knew I existedâso what harm could this do?
The least I could do was show her I wasnât weak.
So I looked at Yoru and shrugged.
And he grimaced.
And I turned around, and I opened the door, and I stepped inside the conference room.
Esther Bluebird was there, at the foot of the faux-wood conference table. She wore a crisp black dress that revealed close to nothing, with no designs and no accessories whatsoever. That was all I could see of what she was wearing, since I could only see whatever was above the table.
She was relatively normal-looking, I guess. Blonde hair of an indeterminate length tied back in a bun, no earrings or anything, kind of an angular face. I figured if I walked out of the room, Iâd immediately forget what she looked like.
What did strike me was the way she was looking at Bell before I came inâa kind of predatory half-smile that reminded me a lot of Bell herself, and that I only realized right then was almost exactly the way Bell looked at me.
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I forced myself to feel nothing. I mostly succeeded.
Then Esther looked at me, and all at once her posed look melted into confusion.
And out of the corner of my eye, I saw Bell smile.
âThis is Erika,â Bell said.
She no longer sounded meek.
Esther looked from me to Bell and back at me. To me, she asked: âHow old are you?â
âThirteen,â I said. âIâve been here for a year, though.â
My water key, on its necklace, glinted a little in the meeting roomâs fluorescent light.
âDo you mind if I do something?â Esther asked.
I shrugged. âDepends.â
âIâm going to put your key on the other side of the room and see if it goes back to you like itâs supposed to.â
I said, âOkay.â
Instead of letting her touch it like she was reaching to do, I took it off and lobbed it into the corner, then walked backwards until I was in the opposite corner of the room.
After a minute, I reached into my pocket and pulled the key out. âSee? Itâs mine.â
Esther blinked. Turned a bit pale. âJesus Christ,â she said. âThatâsâthatâs not supposed to happen.â
I blinked. âItâs not supposed to come back?â
Stupid. Of course it was.
âYouâre not supposed to have one,â Esther said. âThatâsâfuck. Thatâs crazy.â
She took on a weird thousand-yard stare for a second before adding: âWhere the hell did Prochazka find you? And why didnât he say anything?â
I felt a weird pang in the back of my head; it was strange enough and sharp enough to make me wince.
Bell said, âYouâre going to get out of her head now.â
Full confidence. The Bell I knew.
The pang subsided. âOkay, Erika,â Esther said, all tensed up. âWho are you?â
This was my time, I supposed.
âIâm the strongest water-key,â I said.
Esther did not visibly react. âReally.â
âIâll show you,â I said.
I closed my eyes and found the nearest source of waterâa leaky faucet in the menâs room across the hall. I drew out that basketball-sized ball of water like I did upstairs, and as it drifted into the room I said, âI canât raise a tsunami in here, so this is what Iâve got.â
I went through the whole routine with her, with a seven-by-seven-by-seven cube. Each ball perfectly still. Like seamless glass. Perfectly spherical. Even as they melted into each other, they did so in an even fashion, never becoming oblong or misshapen in any way.
I grimaced. It was, however, the hairy edge of what I could control. Simultaneously holding three hundred and forty-three perfect spheres was, as it turned out, kind of hard.
Esther watched, entranced.
Then, at the end, I shattered the whole thing into mist, and with that mist I gathered it around Estherâs limp hand, âand gently curled her fingers into a fist, and lifted her arm onto the table, and did the same with her other hand and her other arm, so they were crossed.
Then I re-gathered all the water into a ball and let it drift back to where it came from.
Esther blinked, again.
âHoly shit,â she said.
Bell smiled. âListen.â
Esther looked over at Bell. âWhat?â
âI know why youâre here,â Bell said, abandoning the meekness of Faith. âI know youâre a spy. And I want you to know something. If youâre scoping us outâif youâre trying to figure out how many slaves you need to recommend Loybol to bring to clean out the Radiant, I want you to keep in mind that what Erika just did didnât even cause her to break a sweat.â
Not entirely true, but I kept my mouth shut.
âYoru, Cygnus, Ava, and Benji are one thing, and Prochazka himself is one thing, but Erika and I are another.â
âYou?â Esther asked.
âMe,â Bell replied.
And then, in front of Esther, Bellâs face began to distort. She shrank somewhat, filled out a bit more. Her nose became a completely different shape, eyes angled differently, jaw re-set, hair changed color.
She turned into Esther.
And then Bell leaned in, and I could just barely catch that her eyes had taken on their mostly-pupil look, so they were just endless empty black holes surrounded by tiny slivers of cornea, and when she opened her mouth a superposition of the voice Bell used with me and Estherâs own came out.
âYou show up with an army,â Bell said as Esther, âand youâll have to get through Erika and I. And we will cut you down.â
Bell reached out. Took hold of Estherâs chin with two fingersâfingers just like Estherâs, slim pianistâs fingers unmarked by callouses.
âAnd if you think you can throw some Umbroids at me and make me your ownâ¦â
And Bell angled Estherâs face upward so it met her own.
Bell stood over Esther.
Bell spoke, and Estherâs voice came from her mouth, layered over her own. The two entwined.
âThink again.â
0 0 0
Prochazka was outside when we all filed outâI saw him there and instantly froze solid.
He regarded me with complete lack of expression, then looked at Esther. âI trust you found our team more than capable.â
Esther, to her credit, had swallowed her fear remarkably fast. By the time she was standing in the hall with ProchazkaâBell standing next to her and myself stuck frozen in the doorway behind the two of themâshe almost looked normal again.
But the paleness couldnât be masked, and the light shaking in her hand.
âYou all seem fine,â Esther said.
âYou go tell Loybol weâre doing quite alright, okay?â Prochazka asked, cracking a smile.
âI think Iâll do that.â Esther glanced around, lingering on Yoru who was still leaning against the wall, scrolling through something on his phone as though none of us were there.
âItâs been a pleasure showing you around,â Prochazka said, with his best and brightest face. âWhy donât I show you back to your car?â
âThat would be lovely, thank you,â Esther said.
She took a quick glance back at Bell, and a second, even faster one at me, and then she headed off down the hall with Prochazka.
Bell waited a few moments for them to be out of earshot, and then she said to me: âHey--good work today. That was just right.â
âThanks,â I mumbled, still staring down the hall Prochazka disappeared down.
âYouâre not going to get in trouble,â Bell said. âIâll make sure of it.â
Evidently that was enough to rile up Yoru, who made some loud huffing noise that was somewhere between a laugh and a growl.
âYeah, but youâd better,â Yoru said, sliding his phone back into his pocket. âWhat the fuck was that, Bell? Faith? Eighteen?â
Bell laughed, and I almost believed her.
âNot like anything I said to her mattered. She was a telepath, Yoru, you really think she was asking us about demographics because she needed to know?â
Around that time I realized that I hadnât actually seen what Estherâs key wasâshe wasnât wearing it. Maybe it was in a pocket somewhere, but dresses like the one she was wearing didnât tend to have those. Was she carrying a bag? Iâd already forgotten, even though sheâd only been out of eyeshot for maybe a minute and a half.
Maybe Esther was just designed to be forgettable.
Yoru frowned. âWhy did you drag Erika down here?â
âBecause sheâs a part of the team. Scaring the spy seemed like a good idea, given that she was here to scout out the competition, not to figure out if we needed help. We donât need help, do we?â
âNo, we donât, butââ
âThen why should we act like we do? What does that give us?â
Yoru pursed his lips for a second. âYou coerced Erika to disobey a direct order.â
âI didnât coerce anyone,â Bell corrected. âErikaâs a human, she can make her own decisions. I offered her a plan and she agreed to it. She couldâve said no and that wouldâve been that.â
Yoru swallowed, took his phone out again, and went back to aimlessly scrolling. âGod, youâre impossible,â he said.
Bell frowned. Like she was actually, honestly annoyed.
âWhat, because Iâm right?â Bell replied.
He grimaced and put his phone away again. âNo, because itâs impossible to prove that youâre wrong. So maybe Esther was a spy and maybe Loybol wants to kill us all, secretly, and maybe this whole thing was actuallt Erikaâs idea in the first place and youâre just fucking with me, but Iâd never know, right? All I can do is just trust that whatever bullshit youâre spinning now isnât bullshit, like itâs been literally every other time.â
âWhen have I ever lied to you, Yoru?â Bell asked, quietly. âWhen have I ever?â
âAll you do is lie!â Yoru shouted. âI...â
He appeared to realize something; the dawning crashed over his face in an instant. On a dime he turned around and shoved his hands in his pockets. âFuck it, itâs not worth arguing with you. Waste of my time.â
Apparently, though, he was of a bunch of minds, because yet again he thought better of what he was doing and he turned around again. âStop fucking with Erika, okay?â
âWhat, exactly, do you think Iâm doing?â Bell asked, all innocently. It wouldâve been perfect if the words werenât coming out of Bellâs face, from under her dead-fish eyes.
âCorrupting her,â Yoru said. âMaking her like you. I donât know. Whatever the hell you two are up to, itâs probably bad.â
âHow so? What am I corrupting? Please. Do tell.â
Yoru made a face that was something along the lines of a stroke. âOut of everyone here to latch on to, she had to latch on to you. The person whoâs never here, doesnât talk to anyone, barely interacts with the team, and only goes on solo missions.â
âThis sounds like an issue you should take up with Erika,â Bell said. âI mean, youâve already established that you donât think she can make her own decisions. Why donât you two have a nice talk, so you can tell her exactly what sheâs supposed to think, hmm?â
I was still hung up on getting in trouble for all of this. Most of what they talked about went in one ear and out the other. All the pretext was lost on me.
I was just standing there, I guess.
Bell turned to leave. âYou two sort this out, okay? Iâm going to go talk to Prochazka.â
And then she went down the same hall Prochazka and Esther went down, turned the corner, and disappeared.
Yoru looked down the hall after her for a moment and sighed. âWhat the fuck is wrong with her? Good lord.â
It began to dawn on me what this whole thing was about. It was the first clear thought Iâd had since everyone started talking, so I dived onto it.
âNeither of you think I can handle myself,â I said.
âWe both do,â Yoru said, instantly. âThatâs not it.â
âNo, it is. You donât think I can make my own decisions, and Bell doesnât think so either. Sheâshe's just pretending that she thinks I can.â More quietly, I said, âBut she doesnât.â
âI think you can,â Yoru said. âTrust me, I do. But BellâBell's whole thing is lying. She lies with her whole being. Maybe this is the one time sheâs actually honest about something, but Iâd side with the majority on this one if you know what Iâm saying. Ifâif this is something youâre worrying about, which it looks like it is, thenâwell, youâve gotta make some of your own calls, I guess. I donât really know when youâll get the opportunity to do that, but...â
Yoru trailed off. âFuck, thatâs what this was, wasnât it.â
I nodded, silently.
âBut you didnât make a decision,â Yoru said. âBell made your decision.â
I nodded again. Words were failing me. I could barely comprehend what I'd just trapped myself in, let alone put it to words.
The overflow fell into an endless pit. It was disregardedâand in time, it all was.
Yoru and I stood in silence for a moment, considering my condition, I guess. He might have just been staring at the floor, hoping the condition would change on its own. I donât know.
Then, breaking the silence, he said, âFuck it. Letâs get ice cream.â
I was desperate for a new thought. Ice cream was a good enough distraction.
He set off and I followed.