Part 15 (1/2)

Anew: Awakened Josie Litton 100860K 2022-07-22

She imparts this wisdom matter-of-factly, as she has other morsels over the past few days, not bombarding me with information but not allowing me to remain in ignorance either. Little by little, she has built up a picture of the world I am about to enter that is more than a little ominous. I appreciate her intent but I am troubled all the same.

”Surely not everyone is like that?” I suggest.

Edward and Adele certainly are not but beyond them I remember Ian's dedication to finding better ways to grow food in order to prevent conflict, the flashes of tenderness he showed, his horror at the idea of hurting me-- But I have resolved not to think of him. As I remind myself several dozen times a day. And even more often at night when the determination not to think of Ian contains within it the seeds of its own defeat, leading me from one thought to the next, memories piling upon each other, my body twisting in the sheets, seeking but unable to find the relief that it seems only he can provide.

What did he say in the spa? That before he was done, it wouldn't be Susannah I was imprinted with, it would be him? I s.h.i.+ver with the fear, delicious and otherwise, that he is right.

”There are exceptions,” Adele admits. ”But they come wrapped in their own challenges.” She shoots me a look that makes me wonder how much she has guessed of what happened at the palazzo.

My grandmother has not mentioned Ian. Not once, not a word. He might as well not exist. Yet he and Susannah were together for more than two years, as I have learned from Edward. Even if Adele isn't aware of my precise legal status, she must have guessed why I awoke in Ian's presence.

She is either a paragon of discretion or she simply sees no purpose in revisiting what she considers to be a closed chapter in my so far brief but tumultuous life.

At the thought that I may never see Ian again, my eyes burn. He has not called or contacted me in any way. His message couldn't be clearer--he had me and he's done. I have to accept that and move on or risk being ground down and destroyed.

Pride is my refuge. I will be d.a.m.ned if I will waste a moment of the precious life that I have been given pining for him. To the contrary, I intend to live it to the fullest.

”You have time for a nap before the performance,” Adele says as we are leaving the couturier. ”I suggest you get some rest.”

I nod but absently. As we approach the car waiting for us at the curb, I remain preoccupied with my thoughts, so much so that I don't immediately notice when a scuffle breaks out nearby.

A young man darts from between the pa.s.sersby, his thin, unshaven face taut with equal measures of fear and desperation. I have a moment to notice how raggedly he is dressed before the shrill shriek of whistles followed quickly by the bark of a siren pierce the quiet of the elegant avenue.

At once, all the workers in their various monotone uniforms stop moving. As though they have been trained to do so, they stand frozen in place with their eyes downcast. A large, armored vehicle bristling with antennae and emblazoned with the words ”Munic.i.p.al Protection Services” hurtles around a corner. Men in blue uniforms leap from it.

Several of the more garishly dressed people who, unlike the workers are under no restraint, shriek and dart about in an excess of excitement. But most of them only watch with evident satisfaction as the young man is quickly surrounded, stunned with an electric prod, and thrown to the ground.

No sooner is he down and restrained than the police begin kicking him with their steel-tipped boots. He doubles over, trying to protect himself but to no avail. Hard blows land all over his body, aimed at his chest, stomach, groin, and head. Bone crunches sickeningly as blood spurts from his mouth, spraying in droplets through the air to land only a few feet from where I stand. He cries out in pain.

At the sight of him, the sheltering coc.o.o.n of privilege in which I have existed ever since awakening tears. The dark reality beneath the glittering facade of the city is suddenly in front of me, impossible to ignore. Horrified, I step forward.

”What are you doing?” I cry out.

One of the uniformed men turns toward the sound of my voice but I doubt that he really even sees me, driven as he is by the unrestrained impulse to lash out at anyone who defies him.

In the same moment, a flicker of movement draws my attention back to the young man on the ground. Huddled in his own blood, bruised and battered, he nonetheless lifts his head and stares at me intently. Unlike his a.s.sailants, he does actually see me. For a moment, I look into brown eyes filled with surprise but also with keen, intelligent a.s.sessment.

”That is quite enough!” My grandmother's voice rings out, calmly but with clear authority. Addressing the officers, she says, ”You have your prisoner. Unless you wish to answer to McClellan Holdings, you will do nothing further to endanger him or anyone else.”

The name appears to have an almost magical effect. Abruptly, the officer who an instant before appeared intent on chastising me, takes in my appearance--the beautiful clothes, the waiting limousine, and the liveried driver who has reached into his jacket to draw a weapon, preparing to protect me.

A scowl darkens the officer's face. He mutters something under his breath and turns away, barking an order. The prisoner is hauled to his feet, dragged to the police van, and tossed inside. Moments later, the vehicle vanishes around the same corner where it appeared. Except for the spray of blood on the pavement, there is no evidence that anything happened.

Almost at once, activity in the vicinity returns to normal. The workers begin moving again, their faces carefully blank. Excitement still ripples among the others, several of whom glance at me with mingled curiosity and censure.

I am shaking as I join Adele in our car. The aftereffects of what I have seen are only just beginning to make themselves felt. I'm vaguely nauseous and glad that I had only a little breakfast.

As we pull away, my grandmother says, ”Edward will check on the young man and make sure that he is all right. In all likelihood, he will be released without charges and just dropped off somewhere outside the city.”

Staring down at my hands, I take a deep breath, fighting against a wave of panic. As shocking as it was, what I have seen is all too familiar.

If there is anything that I understand, it is that people with unchecked power will inflict pain on others without a flicker of hesitation or compa.s.sion. Yet I still struggle against accepting that this is the inevitable reality of the world in which I find myself. Is there truly no escape from it?

Faintly, I say, ”Why did those men act so brutally? Surely, behavior like that shouldn't be tolerated?”

My grandmother sighs. ”You're right, of course, it shouldn't be. But if they hadn't responded as they did, you can be certain that some residents who were at the scene would have wasted no time filing complaints against them. Those police officers could very well have lost their jobs. They and their families would have suffered.”

Am I hearing her correctly? She can't seriously believe that they beat another man almost into unconsciousness because they were coerced into doing so by the presence of witnesses?

”Most of the people at the scene,” I point out tightly, ”were doing their d.a.m.ndest to make themselves invisible. I can't imagine any of them daring to file a complaint.”

With a weary nod, my grandmother says, ”I am speaking of residents, my dear, not workers.”

When I continue to look at her, she explains. ”Residents are property owners. They have a considerable financial stake in the city, both in the investment that they have made in order to live here and in the taxes they pay. As such, they expect their interests and well-being to be of the highest priority. Incidents such as the one you witnessed are deeply troubling to them. They demand a rigorous response.”

”How was that poor man any sort of threat?” I ask. ”For that matter, why is anyone in this city so ragged and dirty? With so much wealth, how could anyone be left in such need?”

My grandmother sighs. She is clearly reluctant to discuss the subject but finally she says, ”The young man you saw is a scavenger. Unlike residents and workers, he and the others of his kind have no legal right to be in the city. They live in the shadows, surviving on the food, clothing, and the like that are routinely thrown away. So long as they remain out of sight, most people prefer not to think about them.”

”But I thought the government provides stipends for those who can't find work.”

I have read about this on the link. As technology takes over more and more of the functions once performed by humans, people have no choice but to accept the government's support.

”It does but only up to a point,” Adele says, ”and not for those who have been convicted of a crime, any crime, of which there is a very long and ever growing list. Inevitably, people in that situation come to the city and other places like it in search of the means to survive.”

”Couldn't more be done to help them?” I ask. Criminals or not, the waste of human beings with all their potential for creativity, innovation, and so on strikes me as appalling.

”Of course it could,” she concedes. ”If there was sufficient will to do so. But the constant flow of mindless entertainment, legal recreational drugs, and empty promises of a better future have a certain tranquilizing effect.”

She drops her voice a notch. ”Change won't come from the ma.s.ses. They have neither the means nor the will to bring it about. If an organized rebellion does happen, it will have to start at the top, among men and women of privilege who also possess a conscience. The revolution that created our country, and about which almost no one speaks any more, began that way. The same will have to happen again.”

As though she suddenly remembers herself, Adele pats my hand. ”Don't trouble yourself about this. You're just beginning to know this world. Enjoy the good aspects, and there are many, before you consider the rest.”

I don't dismiss her advice but images of the beaten young man haunt me hours later after I have retired for the night. Lying between the cool silken sheets of the bed in the lovely tower room that was Susannah's, I remember the intensity of his gaze, so fierce and strong despite his suffering.

My grandmother believes that change can only come from the top. I can't help but wonder if she is wrong. Surely, men like the one I saw have the will and courage to act on their own behalf. But beyond that, I have to wonder how we came so quickly to talk of revolution. At the very least, I cannot escape the thought that the idea was already prominent in my grandmother's mind. What could have put it there?

I turn over in the bed, nestling my cheek against the pillow, as I wonder what Ian would make of all this. With his background and his resources, would he see the potential for revolution as a threat to be ruthlessly crushed? Or could he be one of those Adele was thinking of when she mentioned people of conscience in the highest reaches of Society?

Scarcely does that latter possibility occur to me than images of Ian fill my mind. Ian walking toward me in the garden, on the balcony in the rain, above me in the golden bed, in the spa, again in the golden room, our image captured in the mirror in which I saw myself, a creature of pure carnality, enslaved to his touch.

I become so caught up in thinking about him that I scarcely notice when my hand slips under my nightgown and down my body to the apex of my thighs. I hesitate but the hollow pain that has been inside me since those moments in the library is suddenly unbearable. I am desperate for some relief from it.

Remembering Ian, how he touched me with his mouth, his hands, all of him, I touch myself tentatively. The sensation is...pleasant. Nothing more, nothing to frighten or alarm me. And certainly not distasteful. In fact, as I persist a little it becomes...enjoyable.