Shattered

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Shattered Page 35

by Robin Wasserman


  Never there, I told myself, and danced. My mech mind processed music as little more than syncopated noise. There was none of that wild abandon I’d once felt, the loss of body and self in throbbing notes. Only silent commands, from brain to limbs. Twist. Turn. Jump. Wave. Shuffle. Shimmy. The motions looked seamless; I knew, because I’d practiced in a mirror. It turned out there was nothing too hard about building a smooth surface for yourself. If you knew the steps, if you knew which muscles to move, if you knew how to smile and how to speak, if you knew your lines and played your part, then it didn’t matter what lay behind the pose.

  The hands that slipped over my eyes were cold.

  The whisper in my ear was familiar.

  “Miss me?”

  Remember they’re watching.

  I grabbed his wrists, dug in my nails. Knowing it would make him smile. Then turned around slowly, fake smile fixed on my face. He had one to match.

  “Didn’t expect to see you anytime soon,” I said casually, lightly.

  Because he was a fugitive, accused of trying to blow up a laboratory full of orgs. He was guilty; I knew, because I’d helped him—and because I’d stopped him. Not exactly the safe, harmless face I wanted to present to the world.

  He nodded, his eyes flickering toward the fly cam hovering above my shoulder, and his full lips curled upward.

  “I’ve been around,” he said. “Maybe you haven’t been looking.”

  Riley would be watching this, I realized, keeping my face blank. Riley, who knew only the story I’d told him, a fairy tale in which he’d never betrayed Jude, never seen cold hatred in his best friend’s eyes.

  You were supposed to stay gone forever, I thought.

  The skank fish spotted him and began to swarm. Girls distinguishable only by their hair color rubbed up against him, and he let it stretch on, grinning at the lame flirtations, complimenting one on her scales and another on her elaborate wings, forgoing what I would have thought would be the irresistible urge to point out that fish don’t fly. He was weirdly good at it, juggling them with an oozing grace, meeting their eyes with a gaze intense enough to convince them of their special place in his heart, fleeting enough to leave hope beating in the hearts of the rest.

  He’s what you want tonight, the voice commanded me. Then it gave me my first line.

  “Want to dance?”

  Before I finished the question, Jude’s arms were around me, and we were floating across the dance floor.

  “So you’ve decided the high life isn’t so bad after all,” I said carefully. Jude twirled me out, our fingers linked tightly so I couldn’t escape.

  “What’s not to love?” We turned and turned. Lights flickered overhead, mimicking the effect of sunlight on water. “I can see how glad you are to have me back.”

  I couldn’t see anything in those cat-orange eyes. I only knew that he wanted something, because Jude always did.

  This is all for us, he’d always said. The good of the mechs, not the good of Jude. Just a coincidence, then, that they were so often the same thing.

  “We’ve got a lot to talk about.” He dipped me so low that my hair brushed the floor.

  “I’m not much for talking these days.” I shot a mischievous glance directly into the camera buzzing over our heads.

  “And the world sighs in relief.”

  “Well, you know what they say; talking’s overrated.”

  Which meant shut up.

  Not an instruction he’d ever been inclined to follow. “When you’re feeling chattier, let me know. I’ll be a mile past human sorrow, where nature rises again.”

  “You’re an enigma, wrapped in a moron, shrouded in pretension,” I said, sweetly as I could muster.

  “I aim to please. And, since I gather you do too—” He shot another look at the hovering cameras, and I stiffened, waiting for him to spout some anti-org drivel that would ruin all my work.

  He leaned toward me, one hand tight around my waist, the other latched on to my shoulder. His voice was low, but the mics would catch it, as they caught everything, and he knew it. “Let’s give the people what they want.”

  Maybe if I’d known it was coming, I could have ducked out of the way.

  Maybe I did know it was coming.

  I didn’t duck.

  Just for the cameras, I told myself.

  His lips were as cold as mine, his eyes open, watching me.

  No different from any of the others, I told myself.

  His lips were so soft.

  His chest was silent, an empty cavity pressed against the emptiness of my own. A perfect fit.

  This is harmless, I told myself.

  It couldn’t have lasted more than a few seconds. And then I remembered what fifteen days had almost made me forget: that I could act, that sometimes the puppet could pull her own strings—and that the people liked a fight.

  I slapped him.

  He saw it coming, like I did; and he let me, like I did. There was a sharp crack, but he didn’t flinch. There was no angry red welt left behind on the synthetic flesh. Like nothing had happened.

  “When you want me, you’ll know where to find me,” he whispered. And let go. He melted into the crowd before I could stop him. Not that I would have tried. I told myself I wanted him gone, for good this time.

  I almost believed it.

  ROBIN WASSERMAN is the author of the Cold Awakening trilogy (Frozen, Shattered, Torn), Hacking Harvard, the Seven Deadly Sins series, and the Chasing Yesterday trilogy. She lives in Brooklyn, New York.

 

 

 


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