A cell is all Redโs world.
They take her from it sometimes to ask her questions. Commandant has so many, all variations on the basic: why, and when, and how, and what. They think they know mho.
The 1rst time Commandant asked those questions, Red grinned and told her to ask nicely. Then they hurt her.
The second time Commandant asked questions, Red told her, once more, to ask nicely. They hurt her again.
Sometimes they oPer pain. Sometimes they oPer steak and freedom, a word which means something to them presumably.
But when sheโs not in use, the worldโs this cell, this box: gray walls meeting overhead; a Aat, gray Aoor; rounded corners. A bed. A toilet. When she wakes, she 1nds food on a tray. When they come for her, a door opens at a random point on the curved wall. Her skin is raw. There are hollows beneath it where her weapons used to be.
She suspects they built this prison especially for her. They drag her past other cells, all empty. Perhaps they want her to think sheโs alone.
The guard comes for her one morning. She has decided to believe whenever she sleeps is night, whenever she wakes is morning. Absent sun, whoโs to care? They drag her down another empty hall. Commandant waits. No pliers this time. Commandant looks as tired as Red feels. Sheโs learned exhaustion in their many sessions together, as Red has learned fear.
โTell us,โ she says. โThis is the last time I ask. Tomorrow, weโll take you apart and sift the pieces for what we want to know.โ
Red raises an eyebrow.
โPlease,โ Commandant says, dry as steel. Red says nothing.
She does not think about pomegranates. She does not dare hope. All they ever had was a chance. Rnd euen if it movbed, euen if she mobe, mhoโs to say sheโd come fov you?
You betvayed hev.
Red does not think.
The guard drags her back down the long empty hall and pauses at the open door.
Red, ready to be tossed once more into her small gray world, looks back. The guard watches her with still and weighing eyes and a mouth twisted to a cruel, clever line.
โWhy are you doing this?โ GruP, low. They arenโt supposed to talk to prisoners.
Redโs always been one for small talk. Andโtomorrowโs the end. โSome things matter more than winning.โ
The guard considers. Red knows the type: idealistic but unskilled, hoping to rise through the ranks on dependability. Yet her defection loosened this oneโs lips.
Blue would have been impressed.
โYou broke into Garden, and out again, and you wonโt tell us how. So youโre not on our side. Why not join them when you had the chance? Sell us out?โ So earnest. Red was that way once.
โGarden doesnโt deserve us. Neither does the Agency.โ By us she means herself and Blue, wherever she may be, if in fact she is. She means all of them, all the ghosts on all the threads dying in this sick old war. Even this guard. Red gives her this truth, at the last. Maybe it will save her life.
The guard throws her into the cell anyway.
Red hits the Aoor and skids. She lies still and does not look up. Something rustles behind her. The cell door shuts. All over soon. She did what she could. The guard walks away, boot thud echoing heavy, measured, slow.
When Red looks up, a small rectangle of white paper lies upon the Aoor. She scrambles toward the envelope, claws it to her.
Her name. Handwriting she knows.
She remembers the guardโs grip on her arm. Remembers that voice. Was it familiar?
She rips the envelope open with her thumb and reads, and by the second line, her cheeks hurt from the 1erceness of her smile.
My dear Hyper Extremely Red Objectโ
I didnโt know what you would do.
I want to explain myselfโthis self youโve saved, this self youโve infected, this self that was Mรถbius twisted with yours from its earliest beginning.
I planted your letter. I watched it grow. I tended it and thought of feeding it my blood, rearing a mouth in it through which to speak to you. You said not to read it. The thought of your naรฏvetรฉ charmed me in the same breath as the thought of betrayal burned me. It had to be one or the other: How could you think that your failure to kill me would result in anything less than your own death? How could you not see this for the test it was? How, unless you trusted in your conquest sufficiently to know I would take myself oP the board for you, prompted by a clumsy show of your pain?
Either way, there was only one choice. To protect youโwhatever your intentionsโI had to submit to you.
It wasnโt hard. Truth be told, Redโnot reading your letter was harder.
When you said you wouldnโt write again, when you saidโthat is the only letter of yours Iโve wanted to obliterate from myself. If Iโm honest, thatโs part of why I took the bait. To be unmade, that last written overโto be destroyed by you was easier, truly, than living with what you proposed.
But Iโm greedy, Red. I wanted the last word as well as the 1rst.
I hope you did not take my reply too hard. I knew you might not be the 1rst to read it. I want you to knowโI died thinking that if anyone could keep me alive, it would be you. It was, I confess to you here, a smug thought: that I died by my own hand, and was raised by yours.
You remember I promised you in1ltration from my very 1rst letter
โdared you to be infected by me. I couldnโt know, thenโI couldnโt, and nor could youโhow thoroughly you were already inside me,
shielding me from the future. Youโve always been the hunger at the heart of me, Redโmy teeth, my claws, my poisoned apple. Under the spreading chestnut tree, I made you and you made me.
Thereโs still a war out there, of course. But this is a strategy untested. What would Genghis say if we built a bridge together, Red? Suppose we reached across the burn of threads and tangles, cut through the braidโs knotsโsuppose that we defected, not to each otherโs sides, but to each other? Weโre the best there is at what we do. Shall we do something weโve never done? Shall we prick and twist and play the braid until it yields us a place downthread, bend the fork of our Shifts into a double helix around our base pair?
Shall we build a bridge between our Shifts and hold itโa space in which to be neighbours, to keep dogs, share tea?
Itโll be a long, slow game. Theyโll hunt us 1ercer than they ever hunted each otherโbut somehow I donโt think youโll mind.
Iโve bought you 1ve minutes to bust out. Instructions on overleaf, though I doubt youโll need them.
I donโt give a shit who wins this war, Garden or the Agencyโ towards whose Shift the arc of the universe bends.
But maybe this is how we win, Red. You and me.
This is how we win.