07-13-2013, 03:09 PM
Sera was quiescent as Sid cleansed her palm and forearm; just minor, hissing intake of breath when she first felt the sting of the the alcohol and antibiotic wipes on the slashes she'd made in her skin; another layer of pain to push her - without, beyond, away, into the eternal space where there is notime except that which is Willed into being, by the collective dreams of the sleeping, by the active workings of the awakened, by the constrictive squeeze of their shared fucking reality.
Quiescent and quiet and breathing and fine but not really there. The far-away glaze of the oracle when the gods are riding her skin; when the dust of history or the gauzy haze of the future is filling her lungs. Twenty minutes or more, the slow rhythm of the rental car on the interstate, the dark landscape moving past them and Sera swaying in time with the car's movement, her forehead against the glass, her forearm and palm bound with gauze, her eyes open but unseeing.
She rouses to the Now in odd little stuttersteps, and it feels both like waking and falling asleep again, letting the shining threads of the past fall away from her fingertips. Her arm aches. Her head aches. Her first waking breath is deep and sudden and filling and the first thing she says to Hawksley and Sid is to Sid,
"Your hands are so warm." A deep, breathing sigh. "Like Justin's. You should hold hands. I wonder what would happen."
--
"She never intended it for anyone other than Willworkers." Pieces of the story Sera tells, they know already. They know from the mind of the maker, right into their own. Sera knows these details only in the most threadbare way: from Sid or Hawksley, by inference, as her mind was closed to the woman's Work. But now she knows them in a different way, entirely. In a dreaming and quickened way, twisted with emotion, wrapped in the immediacy of experience.
"Stavros," she has not moved from the window. Leans there, her eyes unfocused, watching her reflection swimming over the dark and moving night. There's a kind of wonder in her voice, a residual awe, inspiration, dreamt into being, pulled from the ether. "Stavros though, he got consumed by the idea that he could Awaken so many sleepers with her charms. Fucking PCP, Christ.
"Get them to let go. Open up. Dream." This fucking madcap idealism, right? Burned into his soul, as much by her resonance, by the sparking fuel of that drug as it ignited something answering in his soul. "They fought.
"She couldn't get through to him, not once he was high. And he was always high, on her work inside of them. It's like, that idea wrapped itself around his heart like a serpent, just sunk its teeth into the meat of that muscle and he couldn't feel anything except the pulse of the that promise with every goddamned contraction.
"Fuck.
"So, he left. Came back later and broke in and stole a fucking <i>hell</i> of a lot of her shit. Gave them to Byron to offload for him, to get out there in the world, to spread, fucking asshole. I couldn't tell you how much, but more than we've found or know about. More than the ones you Saw, Hawksley.
"When she figured out what was going on, Lydia tried to go back in time. To change that last - that last fight with Stavros, right? To find another way to navigate through it, something that would fix him or stop him or -
"But he sensed her Work. I mean, they knew each other so well, the tang of her resonance in the air - how could he miss it?
"They fought." Sniff. The sniff is audible, and Sera's throat is closing around the words. Her narrow shoulders twist backward, and if Sid turns around, if Hawksley looks in the rearview mirror, they might see her eyes shining, tracks of tears down her cheeks. "Lydia and Stavros. In the past or now - or recently, I can't peel it apart. Yesterday and a month ago. This morning, tomorrow.
"They were lovers. She didn't mean to kill him.
"But she did."
Another audible sniff. Sera's body language just - crumples - as she turns back to the window, the dark streets moving past the rental car. There's no denying the grief, echoed though it is, and her will is half-spent on the Work so it just courses through her.
She wants to tell them to turn around and go back.
Tell this stranger how sorry she is, share this pain.
--
"I don't believe her that nothing can be done for those who've taken it."
Sera says, when they've pulled up on the dark and treelined street where she lives with her housemates. Both Hawksley and Sid have been here, and know the walk and the steps, the overgrown, untended, once-loved garden. The quiet dignity of the façade, light behind the windows, the overarching canopy of the trees. The strange and lively chaos inside: layers and layers of lives, lived and living.
Tonight, someone's left the fucking unicycle on the front lawn. Not one of the housemates will admit to owning or using it, but it lives there, just the same as them.
Says it quietly, to one or both of them as she's getting out of the car. There's an intensity to her in that moment, though.
"Maybe we don't have the power but someone must. 'Cept Pan's in Mexico and Annie's in - wherever she's gone to. Or maybe you have to take it, right? Get down in there with her and show her how to get out. There's a way," a glance at Hawksley, with his fucking books. And Sid: her fucking Science. And Sera, her eyes still dark and full of tears, her nose red and running a little bit, her arresting features, the so-direct gaze, the quick and curling mouth drawn and hollowed a bit, from pain and hunger, deliberately chosen. From privation and memory and the clarity that attends to such things, all stripped down, all bare, entirely open. "There's got to be."
"Jim and I, we'll find Byron. We've got another half-hit or so."
And, hey. They have a Serafíne, too. And she knew him,
once.
Quiescent and quiet and breathing and fine but not really there. The far-away glaze of the oracle when the gods are riding her skin; when the dust of history or the gauzy haze of the future is filling her lungs. Twenty minutes or more, the slow rhythm of the rental car on the interstate, the dark landscape moving past them and Sera swaying in time with the car's movement, her forehead against the glass, her forearm and palm bound with gauze, her eyes open but unseeing.
She rouses to the Now in odd little stuttersteps, and it feels both like waking and falling asleep again, letting the shining threads of the past fall away from her fingertips. Her arm aches. Her head aches. Her first waking breath is deep and sudden and filling and the first thing she says to Hawksley and Sid is to Sid,
"Your hands are so warm." A deep, breathing sigh. "Like Justin's. You should hold hands. I wonder what would happen."
--
"She never intended it for anyone other than Willworkers." Pieces of the story Sera tells, they know already. They know from the mind of the maker, right into their own. Sera knows these details only in the most threadbare way: from Sid or Hawksley, by inference, as her mind was closed to the woman's Work. But now she knows them in a different way, entirely. In a dreaming and quickened way, twisted with emotion, wrapped in the immediacy of experience.
"Stavros," she has not moved from the window. Leans there, her eyes unfocused, watching her reflection swimming over the dark and moving night. There's a kind of wonder in her voice, a residual awe, inspiration, dreamt into being, pulled from the ether. "Stavros though, he got consumed by the idea that he could Awaken so many sleepers with her charms. Fucking PCP, Christ.
"Get them to let go. Open up. Dream." This fucking madcap idealism, right? Burned into his soul, as much by her resonance, by the sparking fuel of that drug as it ignited something answering in his soul. "They fought.
"She couldn't get through to him, not once he was high. And he was always high, on her work inside of them. It's like, that idea wrapped itself around his heart like a serpent, just sunk its teeth into the meat of that muscle and he couldn't feel anything except the pulse of the that promise with every goddamned contraction.
"Fuck.
"So, he left. Came back later and broke in and stole a fucking <i>hell</i> of a lot of her shit. Gave them to Byron to offload for him, to get out there in the world, to spread, fucking asshole. I couldn't tell you how much, but more than we've found or know about. More than the ones you Saw, Hawksley.
"When she figured out what was going on, Lydia tried to go back in time. To change that last - that last fight with Stavros, right? To find another way to navigate through it, something that would fix him or stop him or -
"But he sensed her Work. I mean, they knew each other so well, the tang of her resonance in the air - how could he miss it?
"They fought." Sniff. The sniff is audible, and Sera's throat is closing around the words. Her narrow shoulders twist backward, and if Sid turns around, if Hawksley looks in the rearview mirror, they might see her eyes shining, tracks of tears down her cheeks. "Lydia and Stavros. In the past or now - or recently, I can't peel it apart. Yesterday and a month ago. This morning, tomorrow.
"They were lovers. She didn't mean to kill him.
"But she did."
Another audible sniff. Sera's body language just - crumples - as she turns back to the window, the dark streets moving past the rental car. There's no denying the grief, echoed though it is, and her will is half-spent on the Work so it just courses through her.
She wants to tell them to turn around and go back.
Tell this stranger how sorry she is, share this pain.
--
"I don't believe her that nothing can be done for those who've taken it."
Sera says, when they've pulled up on the dark and treelined street where she lives with her housemates. Both Hawksley and Sid have been here, and know the walk and the steps, the overgrown, untended, once-loved garden. The quiet dignity of the façade, light behind the windows, the overarching canopy of the trees. The strange and lively chaos inside: layers and layers of lives, lived and living.
Tonight, someone's left the fucking unicycle on the front lawn. Not one of the housemates will admit to owning or using it, but it lives there, just the same as them.
Says it quietly, to one or both of them as she's getting out of the car. There's an intensity to her in that moment, though.
"Maybe we don't have the power but someone must. 'Cept Pan's in Mexico and Annie's in - wherever she's gone to. Or maybe you have to take it, right? Get down in there with her and show her how to get out. There's a way," a glance at Hawksley, with his fucking books. And Sid: her fucking Science. And Sera, her eyes still dark and full of tears, her nose red and running a little bit, her arresting features, the so-direct gaze, the quick and curling mouth drawn and hollowed a bit, from pain and hunger, deliberately chosen. From privation and memory and the clarity that attends to such things, all stripped down, all bare, entirely open. "There's got to be."
"Jim and I, we'll find Byron. We've got another half-hit or so."
And, hey. They have a Serafíne, too. And she knew him,
once.
But my heart is wild and my bones are steel
And I could kill you with my bare hands if I was free.
- Phosphorescent, Song for Zula
And I could kill you with my bare hands if I was free.
- Phosphorescent, Song for Zula