ext_119307 (
tezcatl-ipoca.livejournal.com) wrote in
estdeus_innobis2013-07-14 10:59 pm
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The years flow by like water, and one day men come home again.
The Carnival
June 3
Three years. Nearly, anyway. I've been angry the whole time.
I wanted to know why we left. I wanted to know why he didn't come and find me. I wanted things to be alright with Syl again. I wanted - want - to find a way to punish Management for what they did. I wanted things to be right. I wanted to go home.
The Carnival used to be home. It's not any more. I realised that soon after we left town. Leaving hurt, like something tearing in me. And even if I wasn't missing - people - things weren't how they used to be. I can't do the sort of show I used to, and if I could I don't like people looking at me, now. Working as a roustie's been different from being a turn.
I couldn't leave, so I wrote. Letters to Valmont and Alice, long and rambling, talking about what I saw and some of what I felt. And I sent - things, to Iblis. I started writing to him, one night in some nameless place when I missed him so much it hurt, and when I touched the paper after I could feel that pain throbbing out of it. I burned it and buried the ashes, but a while later I put that same longing into a carefully-pressed flower, a reminder of another time, and sent that.
I never got a reply, but I sent other things, from time to time. My anger like a spring-coil in a page torn from a book. Fear, as a kind of dry joke, in a handful of dust. I never sent any letters, just - moments. Pieces of myself. I don't know if he got them.
And now I'm back here and he's still caught in me like a fish-hook. And I want to see Valmont and Alice, and Glass as well (I stole a book for her once and sent it, delicate drawings of herbs). Other people, maybe. His child. I'm twenty now, in this body at least, and I look more like a man.
And I think I know why we've come back. I have my own plans now.
[OPEN]
June 3
Three years. Nearly, anyway. I've been angry the whole time.
I wanted to know why we left. I wanted to know why he didn't come and find me. I wanted things to be alright with Syl again. I wanted - want - to find a way to punish Management for what they did. I wanted things to be right. I wanted to go home.
The Carnival used to be home. It's not any more. I realised that soon after we left town. Leaving hurt, like something tearing in me. And even if I wasn't missing - people - things weren't how they used to be. I can't do the sort of show I used to, and if I could I don't like people looking at me, now. Working as a roustie's been different from being a turn.
I couldn't leave, so I wrote. Letters to Valmont and Alice, long and rambling, talking about what I saw and some of what I felt. And I sent - things, to Iblis. I started writing to him, one night in some nameless place when I missed him so much it hurt, and when I touched the paper after I could feel that pain throbbing out of it. I burned it and buried the ashes, but a while later I put that same longing into a carefully-pressed flower, a reminder of another time, and sent that.
I never got a reply, but I sent other things, from time to time. My anger like a spring-coil in a page torn from a book. Fear, as a kind of dry joke, in a handful of dust. I never sent any letters, just - moments. Pieces of myself. I don't know if he got them.
And now I'm back here and he's still caught in me like a fish-hook. And I want to see Valmont and Alice, and Glass as well (I stole a book for her once and sent it, delicate drawings of herbs). Other people, maybe. His child. I'm twenty now, in this body at least, and I look more like a man.
And I think I know why we've come back. I have my own plans now.
[OPEN]
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"I hope you don't have too many plans for them," I add, and cover his hand with my own. "I want to - own myself," I say.
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"I hope you don't have too many plans for them. I want to - own myself."
"Could you end them?" I say to him. "Once, perhaps..." I feel his heart beating beneath my hand. "Now you are weak," I say simply. "Come with me, and I will cut away what binds you to them."
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"For now." I'm thoughtful: I remember how being around him makes me more.
"Come with me, and I will cut away what binds you to them."
"They said that," I say. "That they would cut you out of my heart. They knew I would say no. It - wasn't a fair bargain." That not fair has been sitting in me all this time. My fingers tighten on his hand and then drop away. "Yes," I say. "Alright." I wouldn't have said yes three years ago. A lot has changed.
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"Come, then," and I take his hand, link my fingers through it. We walk through the carnival, a strange sort of sight: a tangle-haired tanned boy and a youth of white and gold.
I take him to a quiet place on the riverbank. I hear the distant drone of a wasp's nest, the steady presence of the water. The air is warm and soft as new milk.
"Do you trust me?" I say. There is no reason that he should. But he will let me do this, anyway.
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"Do you trust me?"
I look at him for a while. What does he mean by trust? I don't have a belief that he wouldn't hurt me, deliberately or not. I don't think I can predict what he'll do, or that I'm safe with him at all. I trust him to be what he is, and I'm willing to put myself in his hands. So: "Yes," I say, quite simply.
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Passing beyond that, I go into his darker places, where I can still smell jungle. Threaded through them, the greasepaint and sawdust of the carnival. Here, yes. Here he made a promise. The knot is very tight and elegant, and as I start to unpick it, it reknots, tighter and more elegant than before. It is fine and beautiful work.
I have a gift for destroying beautiful things.
It hurts him, of course. But soon he will be free.
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I'm sick at some point, from the pain. I can't see well, with it hurting and with him so deep inside me, but I can taste the acid of it in my throat, smell it in the air. I think of Management fiercely. They shouldn't have asked for what they did. They shouldn't have made me leave. I won't be their tool, whatever it takes.
إبليس, I say, inside my head. إبليس, إبليس. Yes.
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"You are free, now," I say, smiling. "Of everything but me."
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"You are free, now. Of everything but me."
I wipe my nose on my sleeve. "I could have been free of you," I agree. "Would you have destroyed me?" I smile up at him, though it's shaky. Have I ever seen him find something so difficult? It makes me thoughtful.
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"I know," I say, to all of it, and I carry him out onto the bank, lie him down. "You cannot go back to the carnival now," I say. "Where do you want to go?" I sit on the grass beside him, wet clothes clinging to my skin.
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I wonder if Syl will be furious. I think she's given up the right to be, though. "I do feel free," I say, wondering. I suppose I don't even have to stay in Excolo now - he could find me if I went somewhere else. I'm not ready to think about that yet.
"How's your daughter?" I ask, turning on my side to look at him. "I thought about her. When I couldn't be with you, I wished I'd had your child, that time you talked about it. I'd have had part of you with me, then."
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"You would be a terrible parent," I say, quite fondly. "Rose is well. Her mother has a copy of the Kent body that lives with them, do you know? She claims they are blissfully happy." I shake my head. Wanda. "My daughter grows strong, and fast. She will be very beautiful, one day. And terrible, perhaps." I smile and stroke his hair back. "I feel the end of things rushing in, now," I say, more quietly. "I am... glad you are here, for the time that is left."
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"I feel the end of things rushing in, now. I am... glad you are here, for the time that is left."
I prop myself up on my elbows and look at him. "Yes," I tell him seriously. "I am, too. I think I - have to be." I don't understand all the things deep in me. "And I...wouldn't want you to be alone." I shrug, because I know I'm ridiculous.
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"I am, too. I think I - have to be. And I...wouldn't want you to be alone."
"I am always alone," I say gently, leaning over him. "I will be alone at the end." But when I kiss him, pushing him slowly back into the grass, it is something like thanks.
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"I am always alone. I will be alone at the end."
When he kisses me it's like warm sun. It hasn't been like that between us since a long time before I died. There's a memory somewhere of vines in a room, him crowned with leaves. I shrug a little: "I will be there, then, when you are alone." I put my arms up round his neck. "Whatever else," I promise, because he's always been wise enough not to trust my nature, "I'll be there." I tug him down further and kiss him again. I'm very hard. I smile against his mouth, remembering when I was with him last, when this body was new to me.
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"I'll be there."
"I know," I say again, and return his kiss. He is hard underneath me. "Do you remember the things you did with this body, before you died?" I ask. "You liked this one particularly. I burned it for you, when you died."
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