โWe can live in the lake,โ she says simply.
โWhat?โ I almost laugh. โWhat are you talking about?โ
โIโm serious,โ she says. โI heard my mum talking about how to make it so people can live underwater, and Iโm going to ask her to tell me, and then we can live in the lake.โ
I sigh. โWe canโt live in the lake, Ella.โ
โWhy not?โ She turns and looks at me, her eyes wide, startlingly bright. Blue green. Like the globe, I think. Like the whole world. โWhy canโt we live in the lake? My mum says thโโ
โStop it, Ella. Stopโโ
I wake suddenly, jerking upward as my eyes fly open, my lungs desperate for air. I breathe in too fast and cough, choking on the overcorrection of oxygen. My body bows forward, chest heaving, my hands braced against the cold, concrete floor.
Ella.
Ella.
Pain spears me through the chest. I stopped eating the poisoned food two days ago, but the visions linger even when Iโm lucid. Thereโs something hyperreal about this one in particular, the memory barreling into me over and over, shooting swift, sharp pains through my gut. Itโs breathtaking, this disorienting rush of emotion.
For the first time, Iโm beginning to believe.
I thought nightmares. Hallucinations, even. But now I know. Now it seems impossible to deny.
I heard my mum talking about how to make it so people can live underwater
I didnโt understand right away why Max and Evie were keeping me captive here, but they must blame me for somethingโmaybe something my father is responsible for. Something I unknowingly took part in.
Maybe something like torturing their daughter Emmaline.
When I was sent away for two years, I was never told where I was going. The details of my location were never disclosed, and during that time period I lived in a veritable prison of my own, never allowed to step outside, never allowed to know more than was absolutely necessary about the task at hand. The breaks I was given were closely guarded, and I was required to wear a blindfold as I was ushered on and off the jet, which always made me think I mustโve been working somewhere easily identifiable. But those two years also comprised some of the darkest, saddest days of my life; all I knew was my desperate need for oblivion. I was so buried in self-loathing that it seemed only right to find solace in the arms of someone who meant nothing to me. I hated myself every day. Being with Lena was both relief and torture.
Even so, I felt numb, all the time.
After two weeks here, Iโm beginning to wonder if this prison isnโt one Iโve known before. If this isnโt the same place I spent those two horrible years of my life. Itโs hard to explain the intangible, irrational reasons why the view outside my window is beginning to feel familiar to me, but two years is a long time to grow familiar with the rhythms of a land, even one you donโt understand.
I wonder if Emmaline is here, somewhere.
It makes sense that sheโd be here, close to homeโclose to her parents, whose medical and scientific advances are the only reason sheโs even alive. Or something close to alive, anyway.
It makes sense that theyโd bring JulietteโElla, I remind myselfโback here, to her home. The question isโ
Whyย bring her here? What are they hoping to do with her?
But then, if her mother is anything like my father, I think I can imagine what they might have in mind.
I push myself off the floor and take a steadying breath. My body is running on mere adrenaline, so starved for sleep and sustenance that I have to
โ
Pain.
Itโs swift and sudden and I gasp even as I recognize the familiar sting. I have no idea how long itโll take for my ribs to fully heal. Until then, I clench my teeth as I stand, feeling blindly for purchase against the rough stone. My hands shake as I steady myself and Iโm breathing too hard again, eyes darting around the familiar cell.
I turn on the sink and splash ice-cold water on my face. The effect is immediate. Focusing.
Carefully, I strip down to nothing. I soak my undershirt under the running water and use it to scrub my face, my neck, the rest of my body. I wash my hair. Rinse my mouth. Clean my teeth. And then I do what little I can for the
rest of my clothes, washing them by hand and wringing them dry. I slip back into my underwear even though the cotton is still slightly damp, and I fight back a shiver in the darkness. Hungry and cold is at least better than drugged and delirious.
This is the end of my second week in confinement, and my third day this week without food. It feels good to have a clear head, even as my body slowly starves. Iโd already been leaner than usual, but now the lines of my body feel unusually sharp, even to myself, all necessary softness gone from my limbs. Itโs only a matter of time before my muscles atrophy and I do irreparable damage to my organs, but right now I have no choice. I need access to my mind.
Toย think.
And something about my sentencing feels off.
The more I think about it, the less sense it makes that Max and Evie would want me to suffer for what I did to Emmaline. They were the ones who donated their daughters to The Reestablishment in the first place. My work overseeing Emmaline was assigned to meโin fact, it was likely a job theyโd approved. It would make more sense that I were here for treason. Max and Evie, like any other commanders, would want me to suffer for turning my back on The Reestablishment.
But even this theory feels wrong. Incongruous.
The punishment for treason has always been public execution. Quick. Efficient. I should be murdered, with only a little fanfare, in front of my own soldiers. But thisโlocking people up like thisโslowly starving them while stripping them of their sanity and dignityโthis is uncivilized. Itโs what The Reestablishment does to others, not to its own.
Itโs what they did to Ella. They tortured her. Ran tests on her. She wasnโt locked up to inspire penitence. She was in isolation because she was part of an ongoing experiment.
And I am in the unique position to know that such a prisoner requires constant maintenance.
I figured Iโd be kept here for a few daysโmaybe a weekโbut locking me up for what seems to be an indeterminate amount of timeโ
This must be difficult for them.
For two weeks theyโve managed to remain just slightly ahead of me, a feat they accomplished by poisoning my food. In training Iโd never needed more than a week to break my way out of high-security prisons, and they mustโve known this. By forcing me to choose between sustenance and clarity every day, theyโve given themselves an advantage.
Still, Iโm unconcerned.
The longer Iโm here, the more leverage I gain. If they know what Iโm capable of, they must also know that this is unsustainable. They canโt use
shock and poison to destabilize me indefinitely. Iโve now been here long enough to have taken stock of my surroundings, and Iโve been filing away information for nearly two weeksโthe movements of the sun, the phases of the moon, the manufacturer of the locks, the sink, the unusual hinges on the door. I suspected, but now know for certain, that Iโm in the southern hemisphere, not only because I know Max and Evie hail from Oceania, but because the northern constellations outside my window are upside down.
I must be on their base.
Logically, I know I mustโve been here a few times in my life, but the memories are dim. The night skies are clearer here than they were in Sector
45. The stars, brighter. The lack of light pollution means we are far from civilization, and the view out the window proves that we are surrounded, on all sides, by the wild landscape of this territory. Thereโs a massive, glittering lake not far in the distance, whichโ
Something jolts to life in my mind. The memory from earlier, expanded:
She shrugs and throws a rock in the lake. It lands with a dull splash. โWell, weโll just run away,โ she says.
โWe canโt run away,โ I say. โStop saying that.โ โWe can, too.โ
โThereโs nowhere to go.โ
โThere are plenty of places to go.โ
I shake my head. โYou know what I mean. Theyโd find us wherever we went. They watch us all the time.โ
โWe can live in the lake,โ she says simply.
โWhat?โ I almost laugh. โWhat are you talking about?โ
โIโm serious,โ she says. โI heard my mum talking about how to make it so people can live underwater, and Iโm going to ask her to tell me, and then we can live in the lake.โ
I sigh. โWe canโt live in the lake, Ella.โ
โWhy not?โ She turns and looks at me, her eyes wide, startlingly bright. Blue green. Like the globe, I think. Like the whole world. โWhy canโt we live in the lake? My mum says thโโ
โStop it, Ella. Stopโโ
A cold sweat breaks out on my forehead. Goose bumps rise along my skin.ย Ella.
Ella Ella Ella
Over and over again.
Everything about the name is beginning to sound familiar. The movement of my tongue as I form the word, familiar. Itโs as if the memory is in my
muscle, as if my mouth has made this shape a thousand times.
I force myself to take a steadying breath. I need to find her.ย I have to find her.
Here is what I know:
It takes just under thirty seconds for the footsteps to disappear down the hall, and theyโre always the sameโsame stride, same cadenceโwhich means thereโs only one person attending to me. The paces are long and heavy, which means my attendant is tall, possibly male. Maybe Max himself, if theyโve deemed me a high-priority prisoner. Still, theyโve left me unshackled and unharmedโwhy?โand though Iโve been given neither bed nor blanket, I have access to water from the sink.
Thereโs no electricity in here; no outlets, no wires. But there must be cameras hidden somewhere, watching my every move. There are two drains: one in the sink, and one underneath the toilet. Thereโs one square foot of windowโlikely bulletproof glass, maybe eight to ten centimeters thickโand a single, small air vent in the floor. The vent has no visible screws, which means it must be bolted from inside, and the slats are too narrow for my fingers, the steel blades visibly welded in place. Still, itโs only an average level of security for a prison vent. A little more time and clarity, and Iโll find a way to remove the screen and repurpose the parts. Eventually, Iโll find a way to dismantle everything in this room. Iโll take apart the metal toilet, the flimsy metal sink. Iโll make my own tools and weapons and find a way to slowly, carefully disassemble the locks and hinges. Or perhaps Iโll damage the pipes and flood the room and its adjoining hallway, forcing someone to come to the door.
The sooner they send someone to my room, the better. If theyโve left me alone in my cell this long, itโs been for their own protection, not my suffering. I excel at hand-to-hand combat.
I know myself. I know my capacity to withstand complicated physical and mental torture. If I wanted to, I could give myself twoโmaybe threeโweeks to forgo the poisoned meals and survive on water alone before I lost my mind or mobility. I know how resourceful I can be, given the opportunity, and this
โthis effort to contain meโmust be exhausting. Great care went into selecting these sounds and meals and rituals and even this vigilant lack of communication.
It doesnโt make sense that theyโd go to all this trouble for treason. No. I must be in purgatory for something else.
I rack my brain for a motive, but my memories are surprisingly thin when it comes to Max and Evie. Still forming.
With some difficulty, Iโm able to conjure up flickers of images.
A brief handshake with my father. A burst of laughter.
A cheerful swell of holiday music. A laboratory and my mother.
I stiffen.
A laboratory and my mother.
I focus my thoughts, homing in on the memoryโbright lights, muffled footsteps, the sound of my own voice asking my father a questionย and then, painfullyโ
My mind goes blank.
I frown. Stare into my hands.
Nothing.
I know a great deal about the other commanders and their families. Itโs been my business to know. But thereโs an unusual dearth of information where Oceania is concerned, and for the first time, it sends a shock of fear through me. There are two timelines merging in my mindโa life with Ella, and a life without herโand Iโm still learning to sift through the information for something real.
Still, thinking about Max and Evie now seems to strain something in my brain. Itโs as if thereโs something there, something just out of reach, and the more I force my mind to recall themโtheir faces, their voicesโthe more it hurts.
Why all this trouble to imprison me? Why not simply have me killed?
I have so many questions itโs making my head spin.
Just then, the door rattles. The sound of metal on metal is sharp and abrasive, the sounds like sandpaper against my nerves.
I hear the bolt unlock and feel unusually calm. I was built to handle this life, its blows, its sick, sadistic ways. Death has never scared me.
But when the door swings open, I realize my mistake.
I imagined a thousand different scenarios. I prepared for a myriad of opponents. But I had not prepared for this.
โHi birthday boy,โ he says, laughing as he steps into the light. โDid you miss me?โ
And Iโm suddenly unable to move.