6 - I Am but a Simple Girl (1)
Sokaiseva
{August 30}
Unpleasant morning.
I woke up with a hole in my head filled with stinging insects; the roar of a cement mixer between my ears. It was all I could do to sit up; all I could do to roll myself up into a tiny ball like a scared pill-bug.
Yesterdayâ
Cygnus and I were on a SAD mission, a search-and-destroy, where we seek to make as many people sad as possible by waltzing into a location like we own the place and just eviscerating anyone silly enough to stand still for too long. We werenât even told what the operation wasâit didnât matter beyond the fact that they were all irredeemables, all complacent in terrible acts, and therefore they all had to die, lest they spread their pitiful disease across upstate New York.
Prochazkaâs words.
Recalling them then I could just barely sense the shape of those phrasesâcold buzzing outlines of words, skittering back and forth across my brain too quickly for me to gather the whole sentenceâall irredeemables, all complacentâall irredeemablesâterrible actsâall had to dieâpitiful diseaseâthey spreadâ
He made a point of selling the rhetoric, that was for sure.
So Cygnus and I had walked in there, and I had a water bottle in my hand like I always did, and we were the angels of death, and all who stood before us were mowed down without remorse.
An angel of death like Iâd always dreamed I could be.
How long had I spent dreaming of exactly this? Of retribution against everyone whoâd ever wronged meâof rebellion against the thing everyone said I was?
I didnât know what was wrong with me. Nobody ever said. My dad worked a menial factory job that was just barely enough to pay for our house, so he never had the money or time to get anything looked at. He always said that heâd rather be homeless than be a slave to a landlordâso he chose freedom over health insurance, and he chose having a lawn and a basement over understanding me.
I think that was okay with me. Iâm not sure I ever wanted to be understood by him.
Every day I went to school as a mysteryâsome strange crumbling automaton that couldnât speak, couldnât understand. Maybe something was wrong with me, maybe there wasnât. I didnât know, but other people certainly felt like they did.
I still donât know.
But seeâ
On June 11th, my twelfth birthday, I received the only gift I had every prayed for.
And all of that fell away; and I became invincible. Now I had the means. Now I had the will.
The truth is that I am a simple girl, and I have simple desires.
0 0 0
I didnât really remember anything I did the night before. I had vague recollections, but nothing more. I couldnât think of myself doing anything particularly embarrassing, so I wasnât exactly worried, but the fact that my memory was spotty at all concerned me.
And my vision was blurryâI kept rubbing my eyes and it wouldnât clear up.
As soon as I could stand to do it, I opened my eyes fully and scanned the room, looking for a familiar face, and everyone was gone except for Cygnus.
Something I noticed:
Half the people in Unit 6 made their beds in the morning, and the other half didnât. I usually didnât, and neither did Yoru or Ava, but Benji, Cygnus, and Bell all did.
Although I got the sense that Bell didnât spend all that much time in hers, since she had that habit of disappearing at two in the morning every night.
It occurred to me, as the morningâs first real thought shot through my skull like a spike, that I hadnât seen Benji in quite a while. Briefly I wondered what he was up to, but then the smell of coffee hit my nose and I had to stop thinking in order to focus on not retching instead.
ââBout time,â Cygnus said, raising the coffee up in his hand as a greeting. âYou looked dead up there.â
âI think I am,â I mumbled.
âThereâs more than enough coffee in the pot for another if youâre interested,â he said.
âIâI donât know,â I said. It was all I could manage, truthfully.
âI told you to drink more water,â he said. âButânah, right?â
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I supposed I was being mocked, so I turned red.
âIâm not mocking you,â Cygnus said, looking down at his coffee again. After a sip he added: âJust poking fun, thatâs all.â
Cygnus was as put-together as he always was. He only seemed to own button-down shirts. Today it was a deep red, a shiny silk that he must have only been wearing since it was his day off. Coupling that with a pair of pressed black dress pants and he couldâve been ready to go for a nice meal at the townâs only boutique restaurant.
He sat, legs crossed, in one of the metal folding chairs associated with the big central table, but heâd pulled it away to face me once he realized I was awake.
âItâs ten-thirty,â he added. âOught to come down now, huh?â
The idea of climbing down the ladder right then made me light-headed, but Iâd have to get out of the bunk if I wanted to get some water, so I pursed my lips tight and squirmed my way over to the ladder.
I made it down in one piece, surprisingly enoughâbut if I just rolled off the bunk and hit the floor, I probably wouldâve been fine, too. Itâs not like the bunk was that high, and I was invincible, so it didnât matter.
I started rubbing my eyes again, and I noticed I was making a low groaning noise about ten seconds too slowly. Everything in my brain was running ten seconds behind.
Now that I was down there, Cygnus could get a better look at me. âGood Lord, Erika,â he said. âYou look like hell.â
I frowned. âThanks.â
It didnât even register with me that heâd said what he did. By the time I realized, it was too far in the past for me to care any longer.
âGo drink some water,â he said. âAnd take some aspirin every couple hours until you feel better.â
âYouâre fine?â I asked him.
âI donât get hungover,â he replied. âIâm responsible and shit.â
Behind him, his newest pipe-swordâfrom yesterdayâlay up against the wall, unsheathed, balanced against the drywall only by the bottom of the hilt and the pressure of its tip.
âDid I do anything afterâ¦umâ¦â
I stepped into the fog of my own memory, trying to recall the last sequence of angry red numbers on Yoruâs side-table digital clock. 9:45, 10:21, 11:13â¦midnight-something? One or two?
âAfter one?â I guessed.
Cygnus frowned. âYeah, I knew I shouldnât have let you have that last one. Thatâs on me.â
âDid I black out?â I asked.
âIf you have to ask that question, the answer is always yes,â he replied.
âOh.â
âBut to answer your question, not all that much,â he said. Took another sip. âYou laughed a lot.â
âLaughed a lot?â
âYou just thought everything everybody said was a riot. I donât think Iâd ever heard you laugh before.â
Even through the mire, that made me pause. I suppose saying I donât laugh much makes my life sound far more pitiful than it actually was. I wasnât an orphan, I wasnât slaving away in a coal mine somewhere for pennies. My life, in the grand scheme of all possible lives, wasnât actually all that bad.
That didnât mean I wasnât happy to leave it. When I came home to that place every dayâmostly aloneâI spent every waking second waiting for the time when I could have something better. Even if I felt like I didnât deserve it because of the things I wanted to do.
I wasnât ever expecting to have one of my wishes granted. Iâd always assumedâmiserable as I wasâthat wish-granting was a linear process. It went backward from the most miserable forward, to ensure that everyone whoâd been wronged got their revenge.
It turns out that it doesnât really work that way. In a perfect system, that would be the way it wasâbut in the world we had, it was far more arbitrary. Sometimes, people whoâd never wished for anything in their lives get powers beyond their wildest dreamsâand for every child like me, there was another who choked to death on coal dust.
What more could I ask for than a purpose, a will, and a set of people who at least tolerated me? I had none of the three before and now I had all of them. Asking for more than that was just greedy.
I couldnât let myself ask for more. I just couldnât.
âIâm happier than Iâve ever been,â I said, after a moment.
âIâm sure.â
âIâve never felt like this before,â I said.
Cygnus nodded.
I blinked. It turned out that I didnât have anything else to say.
âI meanââ Cygnus started into something, but thought better of it and bit his tongue, for the first time in the two months Iâd known him. God only knew what it wasâand even through my fog I caught it. In the time Iâd been at the Radiant, Iâd become very vigilant of how other people reacted to me. I paid a level of attention that bordered on fanaticism to it. I knew it made Ava uncomfortable, because it was accompanied with an amount of staring that she didnât like.
So I was hell-bent on making sure nobody here hated me. I wanted to know what they were thinking. I spent more time than Iâm willing to admit day-dreaming of being a telepathâhow cool would that be? No more mysteries. No more wordplay. Only truths. It wasnât something I found myself actively wishing forâbut it was an alternate reality, no better or worse than this one, that I played around in.
It would be so much simpler.
Cygnus liked me well enough, I figured. The teasing was just a part of his personality. I hated teasing, donât get me wrongâGod knew Iâd had enough of thatâbut heâd had my back enough times during missions where I felt fairly confident that he actually did, in fact, like me. If not, then at least he respected me, which was new in itself.
Yoru seemed to like me okay, too. Ava didnât, but Yoru made a point of defending me against her on a couple of occasions. Something in his demeanor changed after our mission together last month on High Streetâheâd started asking how I was when he saw me in the factoryâs halls. Our conversation would never go beyond the simple script, but it was better it was before.
I felt like I was getting somewhere.
Benji, I didnât see often enough to know. He was busy with management stuff, and going out to talk to people. Iâd only seen him a handful of times.
Bell was a complete enigma. We hadnât spoken a word to each other since that day at lunch, even though Iâd seen her once or twice. I had no idea what she was doing and I didnât yet feel comfortable just asking her.
I snapped back to attention just in time to catch Cygnus talking again. âI didnât realize you could drink away your problems that efficiently.â
I blinked. Didnât really know what to say.
âI meanâ¦last night, you wereâ¦â
He faltered. His eyes dropped to the mug. âMan, this isnât worth it. Forget I said anything.â
I didnât.
I never could.
0 0 0
I spent a lot of time that day walking around outside, trying to nurse the remnants of my hangover and enjoy the sunshine, but it wasnât until three or four that I felt up to speed again.
But I couldnât shake Cygnusâs half-thought. It wasnât possible to drink away what I had. It just doesnât work like that. And yetâif he thought it did, wasnât that just as good? Wasnât that the same thing?
Did it matter what I had if nobody else thought it was there?
But I supposed it didnât matter. Alcohol was for nights after missions, nothing more.
If I only got to be normal twice a week, so be it.