It's nearly one in
the afternoon before Alice finally gets back to the shop. She is
carrying two large plastic bags, and the scent of fried chicken wafts
in the air around them. “I brought lunch,” she announces in her
subtly accented voice. I could never quite determine what that
accent is. “I hope you weren't too particularly attached to your
Lean Cuisines.”
She sets the bags
on the counter and smooths a lock of long ebony hair behind one
subtly pointed ear. Alice
is tall and statuesque, always dresses
with a dark, understated elegance, and has some sort of genetic
condition that left her with white fingernails and oddly shaped ears.
She never really said what the condition is, but it makes her look
exotic and elfin, a stark contrast to my petite curves and mousy
brown, choppy-layered hair. “Have we had much store traffic this
morning?” she asks as she starts digging through the bags and
opening styrofoam containers before passing them out. “Vi, this
one's yours. Evie, for you. And this one for me. I trust these
meals are what you wanted?”
“You know me too
well,” I say, though I am a bit annoyed that she didn't consult me
about it first. Alice has a habit of making these sorts of decisions
for me, probably because of the role she played in my life when I was
a child. She was never really a mother to me, but definitely like an
older sister who often had to play surrogate parent. I love her and
chafe at her in equal measure. “Um, yeah. It's been dead here.
We've had one customer, and she didn't buy anything.” This isn't
very unusual; I often wonder how Alice can afford to even stay open,
let alone give us our paychecks every week. We'd probably do better
if we were in New Orleans proper, but we're hidden off in suburbia,
and quite frankly, the word “hidden” is rather appropriate. Even
I have difficulty seeing the store sometimes, have actually passed it
up more than once while driving here, and I'm here every day.
Alice nods, looking
unsurprised, then says, “Okay, I can take over the register for a
little while if you two want to take lunch.”
Violet and I grab
our respective food cartons-- I also sling my bag containing the
mysterious book over my shoulder-- and head for the break room.
I close the door
and look at Violet for a minute. She raises one pierced eyebrow at
me and says, “Whaaaaat?”
“Can I trust you,
Vi?”
“Um. Why?”
“Because I did
something, and am continuing to do something, which I really don't
want Alice to know about.”
Violet sighs.
“Right. This wouldn't have anything to do with that package you
klepto'd from her office, would it?”
“Um--”
“I saw you put it
in your bag. Big, old-looking book that looks like it came from a
museum? Not exactly your usual behind-the-register reading material.
And seriously, I just hope the thing doesn't fall apart in your bag.
The thing looks like it needs climate control or something just to
stay together.”
I shake my head.
“You win an Oscar.”
She takes a bow.
“Why, thank you. So. Mind telling me why I'm lying to my boss for
you?”
“I'm your boss
too.”
“And she's your
boss,” she enunciates slowly, exaggeratedly.
“Oh, she is not.
She's not my boss! We're equal partners.”
“Try telling her
that!”
I sigh. “Look.
I just... I had a very good reason for taking it. I need to figure
some stuff out, and I don't want her to know I've seen it.”
She crosses her
fishnetted arms over her chest. “Why?”
“Because...
because. Because! I can't tell you. But I need to do this.”
“Why? Whywhywhy?
You want me to stick my neck out without so much as an explanation?”
I pull a chair out
and slump down in it. “It's complicated, Vi. I just... somehow.
For some reason that I don't understand, this book that she received
somehow... pertains to me.”
Violet looks at me
for a moment, then reaches for my bag. I quickly pull it out of her
reach. “Let me see it,” she growls.
“No! No, I'm not
gonna show you. You wouldn't really understand why it's got me
worked up anyway. There are... things you don't know about me. And
I thought Alice didn't know either, but now... Well. I'm not so sure
now.”
Violet plops into
another chair and rests her chin on both hands, elbows on the table,
staring at me. “You are so incredibly cryptic. It's kinda sexy.
And yet ridiculously annoying.”
“Are you gonna
help me out or not?”
She sighs. “You're
trying to split my loyalties, Eve. Got me in a tight spot here.
It's not exactly fair to me.”
I nod. “I know.
And I'm sorry. I wouldn't ask if I didn't think it was absolutely
necessary.”
She considers it
for a moment, and is about to speak, but before she can utter a word,
the door to the break room opens, and Alice steps through. I look at
her for an instant, wondering if she had heard us talking.
“Violet,” she
says, “Do you remember that package delivered by private messenger
yesterday? The one I put in my office? Any idea where it got to?
It seems to be missing.” She looks at me for an instant, before
looking away again, and I suddenly get the overwhelming sense that
she knows more about me than I know about myself. I shiver a little.
Violet shrugs.
“Nope, haven't seen it since you took it back to your office, Boss.
Evie, you seen it?”
“Nope,” I
confirm, shooting Violet a look of gratitude.
Alice nods
thoughtfully, glancing between us. “If either of you happen to see
it, please let me know. It's a very important package.”
We nod, and she
leaves.
“I feel like I'm
fourteen years old and lying to my mother,” Violet says. “You
owe me, Eve.”
“I do, I know,”
I say. “Thank you, Violet.” I squeeze her in a one-armed hug.
“You're good people.”
“Yeah, whatever
you say,” she says, and digs her cigarette pack out of her pocket.
“Smoke time. Touch my food and die.”
“It's gonna get
cold!”
“And how will I
ever warm it up, considering we don't have a big ol' Panasonic
microwave in dire need of a cleaning sitting on the counter over
there? I'm doomed to eat lukewarm chicken. Oh, fate, I curse thee.”
I shake my head and
shoo her off with my hand, waiting for her to wrestle the door closed
behind her before sliding the book out of my bag. I know I should
probably wait until I get home to prevent Alice from walking in and
seeing me with the book, but patience has never been one of my
virtues. I need to know what's going on here.
Slowly and
carefully, I turn the first brittle page, and look at the script.
Instead of flipping through the book like I did before, I scrutinize
the elegant black ink lines and flourishes on the aging paper, and
once again I am filled with that bizarre sense of almost being
able to understand the language, as if I saw it a very long time ago.
As I stare at the
writing, words begin to shimmer into existence in my mind, not
English. I won't write them here, not as they sounded to me (I don't
know that I could do so if I tried), but I will attempt an
approximate translation.
In the beginning, were the Twins.
There was All That Is, and there was the Emptiness. They existed in
the same space and in the same time, but never did touch, never once,
for if they touched, a devastation like to which no one had ever seen
would befall the Real.
In time, though, the equilibrium of
the Real began to shift off balance, and the Emptiness began to seep
into the All, and the All into the Emptiness, like water pouring out
of a tilting vessel. And this happened slowly, subtly, and no one
noticed at first. No one noticed until the first Unmakers were
loosed...
The outside door
scrapes as Violet pulls it open to come back into the break room, and
I snap out of the trance, feeling as though I have been punched. I
look down at the text in front of me with a shudder, and then close
the book, sliding it back into my bag.
“That must be
some riveting reading,” Violet says as she puts her lunch in the
microwave. “Someday you're gonna tell me what this is about.”
I can't think of a
single way to answer her.
If you like what you see here, you can support this project by clicking on the Paypal-linked perfume bottle at the bottom of the Welcome Post.
If you like what you see here, you can support this project by clicking on the Paypal-linked perfume bottle at the bottom of the Welcome Post.
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