Julian
Kyder, Age 9 July
7, 7009
Her body is stone. Her eyes glass. She doesn’t see me. Doesn’t
want me. Yet her blood runs through me, a river of pain.
I call her mother, but she calls me nothing. She hopes
to forget me. Hopes I will disappear. Conceived in violence, I am a constant
reminder of the crime that made me.
“Come,” she orders me. Like a dog. And I jog at her
heels, obedient.
She won’t use my name. It’s a reminder I exist. The
meaning behind it is empty, anyway. She refused to name me, so the hospital
staff did. Julian Kyder — Julian after the doctor who delivered me and Kyder after
the hospital. Forever marked by the circumstances of my birth.
She tried to abort, but I survived. She put me up for
adoption, but no one took me. She tried to release me into the system, but they
were already at overcapacity. We’re trapped. Stuck together as two halves of
misery. The doctor told me I am a miracle. She told me I am a curse.
“This way.”
She leads me along the edge of the Shelf toward the
market. With each step, my feet crunch along the parched gravel. To our left,
cliffs drop hundreds of meters into the Ruined Sea, a toxic cesspool that
encircles the island. In the distance, Mount Erebus puffs ash into the blanched
sky, a grandfather smoking the last bit of a cigar.
We mutilated our world, bombarded the planet for
centuries with nuclear weapons until we ran out of missiles, until Earth
flipped upside-down. The only habitable continent is Antarctica, now the North
Pole, and even here, the war melted the desolate wasteland into a scorching
desert.
Humans near extinction, huddled near the top of the planet like exiles.
But we deserve it.
A circular wound punctures the sky at its zenith,
ever-present. It’s the Rift — a dark, festering mass opened by the end of the
war one thousand years ago. The hole in the sky is the size of my fist from here,
unassuming from the ground, yet world-changing to civilization. It’s a gateway
to the other realms, though the gods are mostly silent, indifferent, rarely
speaking and never interfering. They care as little about this place as I do.
Sweat trickles down my back. I pull my robe tight
around myself, hoping to block out the sun. It’s summer, so there’s no respite
from the heat. The days are endless. They bleed into each other like ink on a
page, no distinction between the lines. Night won’t come for another few
months, and soon after it does, it won’t leave till winter’s done.
Some call it balance. Day and night. Light and dark.
Sun and stars. Birth and death. People look for meaning when it’s only chaos
disguised as order.
“Halela, it’s been too long.” One of the men from
church greets my mother with a warm smile.
“Reve.” She shirks away but manages to dip her head in
polite acknowledgment.
My mother has autism. Severe autism. Normal sensation
is overwhelming. Pregnancy was torture. The doctors drugged her into a
medically induced coma for the duration while I grew, a parasite in her belly.
And when I was ready, they cut me out, lanced her uterus like an overgrown
cyst. The first face I saw was a nurse. The next, the doctor. Then the midwife.
My mother was fourth, high on anesthetic. She didn’t touch me. Couldn’t touch
me. It was too much. She couldn’t handle it. They put her back under.
I never blame her for her condition. I blame her for everything
else. For her cruelty, for the things she can help. She could say she loves me or be there for me in her own way, but she
isn’t. She’s never even made an effort.
“Rations are limited today, I’m afraid.” Reve motions to the market
where a sprawl of tents crouches under the relentless sun.
He’s one of the nice ones. Keeps his distance,
understands our situation, but goes out of his way to help. Most aren’t like him. The
Shelf is a refuge for the rural poor, for those who can’t afford to live in
Zawad, the last city of human civilization. Most
of our neighbors are half-mad zealots preaching about nonsensical bullshit.
We fit right in.
“Yes, yes,” my mother says. She taps her fingers against
her thigh, a nervous tic.
“And who do we have here?” Reve asks. He squats down to look me in
the eye. “Little Kyder, how you’ve grown!
You’ll be tall as the Four Towers when you’re done.”
He addresses me properly, by surname, even
though I am but a child. First names are reserved for matters of love or intimacy.
I have neither.
“Yes, sir,” I say.
He ruffles my dark hair. “But too skinny. Here, take my bread. Ra
knows I do not need it.” He chuckles and pats
his round stomach.
“I cannot accept, sir,” I say. “Thank you, though.”
Reve shoves the bread into my hands. “Take it, child. And get inside right after the market. A sandstorm’s forecasted for this afternoon.”
I blush at his kindness. “Yes, sir. Thank you, sir.”
“Always a pleasure, Halela.” Reve bows and leaves us.
Silence follows in his absence. My mother speaks only if
necessary. It’s a wonder I learned language at
all.
“Good morn!” an airsail vendor by the side
of the path calls to us several minutes later. “On your way to the market?
You’d go much faster in one of these.”
He pulls out what looks like a wooden
surfboard from behind his booth and throws it onto the ground. The board quivers. The top unfolds until a translucent sail interwoven with
gold webbing stretches two meters in the air. The
board hovers several inches above the gravel path, sail shimmering like
dragonfly wings in the sunlight. It’s a shred
of high technology pirated from Zawad, out of place in this apocalyptic Hel.
My mother twitches, flustered. Her mouth opens and closes
like a marionette as she attempts conversation. “N-no
money-y-y,” she stutters.
“I’ll make you a deal.” The vendor, oblivious to my
mother’s deteriorating condition, continues in singsong. “Pay half upfront and the other half next year.”
“M-m-my…I-I-I-I…” Words sputter from my
mother’s mouth like an engine failing to start.
I step in. “Thank you for your consideration,
sir, but we will unfortunately need to decline your generous offer.”
The vendor’s eyebrows shoot up, noticing
me. “How old
are you, boy?”
“Nine, sir.”
“You don’t talk like a nine-year-old.”
“I don’t act like a nine-year-old, either,”
I say, my temper rising. “Please allow us to pass, and we will be on our way.”
There’s something in my look that causes
men triple my age to cower before me.
My eyes are an unnatural shade, a shocking cyan that
glows with inner fury. They’re my one gift
from him, the him I never met, the him who abandoned me before my first cells
joined. My mother never told me his name, but
I don’t need his name to know his soul. I see
him in my face, in the blue fire that burns in my gaze. I sense him lurking in my subconscious, a shadow of
aggression that threatens to unleash if I echo the darkness.
The vendor senses it, too. He stumbles backward,
mumbles something about a special next month, and waves us on.
My mother glances at me, wary. I scare her. She fears me to be like him. I fear to be like her, an animated skeleton seeking death. She’s all I have in this world. And I hate her, as I suspect she hates me, or at least
hates what I symbolize. She’s never shown me
love or kindness or comfort, so in its absence, I substitute hatred and anger
and loneliness. And she blames me for what I’ve become.
We reach the market at noon. People swarm the stalls like
maggots in a corpse. My mother freezes,
paralyzed. She should have let me come alone,
but she doesn’t trust me. Her diet is very
particular, of her own doing, and she only trusts herself to acquire the
ingredients.
We make slow progress. The heat rises to stifling
levels. In the village school, they teach that
Antarctica used to be as cold as the Lost Realm of Mogard, but today, I find
that difficult to believe. Each breath sears
my lungs. The putrid mix of sweat and body
odor permeates the tents. Mirages rise from
the earth like warbled ghosts. People rest in
the shade, passed out from heat exhaustion.
My mother doesn’t mind the heat. She focuses on one stall at
a time. First vegetables. Only the green ones. Five
of each, except for seven leaves of spinach. Then
fruit. Only those with large seeds. Peaches, nectarines, papaya, and mango are okay. No apples. No watermelons.
No grapes or bananas. Next,
starch. We can only afford potatoes today.
She buys seven, for the Seven Realms, and touches
each four times, for the Four Towers of Ma’at.
“Kyder!” I recognize the voice.
A peer from my class. One
I tutor. Jereby. My stomach knots. I’m in
no mood for pleasantries.
Frantic, my mother scurries away. “I can’t,” she mutters in
excuse and leaves to finish the shopping. The
conversations with Reve and the vendor sent her over her threshold. It takes little to overstimulate her. I’m the opposite. I can’t
get enough.
Jereby jogs over to me, flanked by a group
of his friends. All beautiful. All
popular. All easy targets.
“Good morn,” I greet.
“So this is the boy you can’t stop talking
about,” a tall girl, Anjeli, says. As she speaks, her hair fades from auburn to platinum, and
the lashes around her sultry eyes widen. A
shapeshifter, then. Focused on parlor tricks.
Pitiful.
After the nuclear war ended, the fallout
radiation mutated human DNA. Everyone born since is connected with Earth’s cycles and
harbors a power linked with their season of birth
— spring healers, summer mages, fall shapeshifters, and winter shields. Proximity to the North Pole heightens our powers. It’s part of the village school’s curriculum. They teach us best they can. If you’re good enough, you can join one of the four seasonal guilds of
Ma’at. Most aren’t, though. The majority of the remaining population is marginal at
best.
Many found purpose in the knowledge of
realms and gods and guilds, especially after the war. It gave people hope,
something to look forward to, something to dedicate their lives to, someone to
pray to, a category to fit neatly inside. No
longer did they have to search for meaning. They
were told from birth who they were, what they should do, and where they should
go. Simple. Uncomplicated.
You are your birth. And
I am mine, more than I’d like.
Progeny of rape. Heir to violence. Drunk with power. Forged
from fire. The sun-made child. Sometimes, I wish to be ordinary. It would be easier if I was normal. Easier, but far less fun.
Jereby’s ears redden. “I do not talk about him all the time.” He
nudges Anjeli, and the motion sends her flying. He’s
a mage, like me, a master of gravity. But he’s
not that good. I am.
I’m a prodigy. I was born at noon on the
summer solstice and am thus bestowed with the highest possible genetic gift.
It’s wasted on me, though. I’m a poor nobody from the outskirts of civilization.
The most I’ll amount to is a criminal. The least, a statistic in a gutter.
Anjeli brushes the dirt off her robe. “Clumsy oaf.”
“Sorry, Anj, I didn’t mean to—” Jereby
starts.
“Don’t worry about it.” She smiles at him. Perfect white pearls for teeth. Cheater.
“Are you okay, Anjeli? Do you need me to heal
anything?” a tiny, shriveled boy asks. Spring-borns
are always so annoyingly helpful.
“No thanks, Shel. I’m good.”
The last of their group, a large brute,
looks at me and squints. “Hey, aren’t you the kid who got suspended last month?”
“Leave him alone, Rylan,” Jereby says.
Rylan doesn’t. “Yeah, I recognize you.
You lit the gym on fire, didn’t you?”
“Yes,” I reply evenly. I have no wish to discuss my
reasons with this pea-brained thug.
“Why?”
“I got bored,” I say. I’m always bored.
“Bored?” Rylan asks, the word foreign on
his tongue. “How are you bored? Don’t
you take advanced physics or something? And
ancient Latin?”
Jereby covers for me. “Kyder’s wicked smart.
He’s top of the class. A genius.”
Please don’t, Jereby, I beg silently. Whenever people learn of my intelligence, I see the
judgment in their eyes, the instant challenge of my brilliance. I want to be a fly on the wall. Unseen. Unnoticed. But then I’d have to stop lighting things on fire. That’s not going to happen.
“Is that true? A genius?” Shel asks.
“By the arbitrary conditions set forth by
an antiquated system of determination, yes,” I reply.
His face is vacant.
“My IQ is over 200,” I say.
And there’s the spark of comprehension.
“Holy Ra,” Shel gasps.
“Who cares? He’s still a creep,” Anjeli
says.
I turn my blue glare on her, and she falls
silent. I could
kill her with the lift of a finger. Puny
fall-born.
“Careful, Anj,” Jereby says. “He’s summer-born.”
She scoffs. “So are you.”
“But he’s really summer-born. Noon on the solstice.” Jereby
shifts from foot to foot, nervous. He’s seen
what I’m capable of. Once. An accident. But it served
its purpose. He won’t cross me again. He also won’t have full use of his left arm again.
“I’m not afraid of playing with fire,”
Anjeli says. “Show us, sun boy. Rylan’s
a shield. He’ll protect us if anything gets
out of hand.”
He can’t. Few can match me, and I’d
bet the last of my mother’s dwindling bank account that Rylan is not one of
them. Winter-borns are too eager to prove
their incompetence. My mother is one of them.
“It’s not a good idea,” Jereby warns. He cradles his arm,
remembering. He challenged me to a duel a year
ago after I stole his sugar rations. Before he
could move, I crushed his arm from the elbow down. It took five adult healers to set the bone, but even they
couldn’t fix it entirely. I was suspended for
a month. I didn’t care. It let me focus on my own projects.
“What’s the worst he could do?” Anjeli grins at me,
flirtatious. It’s disgusting. Fake. Plastic. Hollow like her head.
“Would you like a synopsis or a summary?” I
ask, grinning back. I have a knack for charm that’s served me well in my short
life.
“Oh, details, please.”
My eyes narrow. “I could squeeze your chest
until your lungs pop like balloons. I could
shatter your skeleton and make you a bag of bone soup. I could throw you from here to the
Ruined Sea and scatter
your limbs throughout the Shelf. And since
we’re in the fruit section, let’s make a few comparisons, shall we? I could burst your heart like a melon, peel your skin like
an apple, and pluck off your fingers like grapes. Would
you like me to continue?”
Anjeli’s skin is green. Literally. “No,” she rasps, swallowing hard. “Thank you.”
“For the love of Llyr.” Shel swears the name of his
patron god.
“You’re not normal,” Rylan says, backing
away. He looks
at me the same way the vendor did. With fear.
“No,” I say, “I’m not.”
Though I want to be. No thoughts rushing through
my mind all hours of the day and night. No
violent fantasies about how best to kill my adversaries. No questions as to my lack of empathy or guilt or remorse.
It would be so much simpler. Maybe therein lies happiness. In ignorance.
“As I said, leave him alone,” Jereby says,
embarrassed. He keeps rubbing his arm.
“We’re just playing, Kyder,” Shel says.
“I am not playing,” I say.
“Why do you hang out with this freak?”
Anjeli asks Jereby. Her skin has lost its green luster, but she is still pale.
Because he feels my power and is drawn to
it like a moth to the flame. If he can’t be the fire, he wants to feel its heat.
Jereby shrugs. “He’s not always like this.”
Yes, I am. I just don’t always show it.
So I turn it off.
I flash them a stunning smile, concealing
the monster within. I can hide from adults, but children have a way of
revealing the truth in a person.
“I apologize,” I say. “I’ve been running lines to
audition for the new play. I think I’ve taken
to the role of Ra too well. Please forgive
me.” I lie easy as breathing. Always have.
The others relax a bit, though they’re
still anxious around me.
“Yeah, Ra’s a crazy son of a bitch,” Rylan
says.
“Don’t speak of his god in vain,” Shel
says. “Show
some respect.” He eyes me like a loose cannon.
“It’s fine,” I say. “So did you hear about the
sandstorm?” I switch to weather, the universal
topic for shallow conversation.
“It’s going to be insane!” Rylan exclaims. “Bibby got a bunch of the
guys together to watch from the top of Erebus.”
“Is that safe?” Jereby asks.
“Who cares? They’re saying the wall of
sand could be five kilometers high!”
Anjeli rolls her eyes. “Boys.”
“Weren’t you the one who bungee jumped
Blood Falls a few weeks back?” Shel asks, cocking an eyebrow.
“Touché,” she says, and they all chuckle. I forget to exhibit normal
behavior and join their laughter a few seconds late.
“Time to go.” My mother appears behind me,
baskets of groceries in hand. She stares at
the ground, avoiding eye contact.
Before anyone can notice her condition, I
interject. “It was a pleasure visiting with all of you. I will see you in school
on Monday.” I plaster on a smile and bow.
As I walk away, I hear Rylan whisper, “He
talks like a bloody robot.”
I am
a bloody robot, you imbecile. I wish I was a real boy. I
wish I fit in, like you, something you take for granted.
Once we leave the market, my body
compensates for the bravado. Composure leaves me, and I succumb to my nature. My eyes twitch — twice the left, then the right, two times
to match, then twice again the left — a rhythm to my insanity. My teeth clench together, my jaw locked like a vise.
Pain throbs in my neck from the strained muscles, and
I hum without realizing it — short, low grunts in the back of my throat, echoes
of my inner torment. The doctors diagnosed me
with depression, anxiety, and obsessive-compulsive disorder thus far, though
I’m sure there are many other demons stuffed inside of me.
My mother ignores me when I have these
spells. It’s the
one decency she shows me. The one crucible
that binds us. We are enemies to ourselves.
And what we have, even the healers can’t fix.
I try to calm my mind. I recite the powers of two.
2, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64, 128, 256, 512, 1024. It’s not enough. I try
seven. 7, 49, 343, 2401. Still not enough. Prime
numbers? 2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29,
31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 101. It’s not working.
I switch to language. The seasons in French.
Le printemps,
l’été, l’automne, l’hiver. German. Frühling, Sommer,
Herbst, Winter. Gaelic. An t-earrach, an
samhradh, am forghar, an geamhradh.
The Gaelic works. I repeat the seasons and
move to months, days of the week, and colors. We’re
halfway back before I harness control of myself. My eyes calm, my jaw loosens, and my breathing steadies. I fear the day normalcy fails to return.
We pass the vendor’s booth, but he’s gone. Dozens of airsails stand
unprotected behind the counter. I hop over the
desk and snatch one. My mother glances toward
me but says nothing. I throw it on the ground,
and the sail unfurls. If they catch me,
they’ll throw me in prison. But I’m clever.
I’m sure I could escape. I can bribe anyone with the proper leverage.
“You first,” I say. My mother steps onto the
board and grabs the mast. I step behind her
and kick off. We skim above the ground,
soaring over the edge of the Shelf on the way back to the village. We make it in a quarter of the time.
Our home is underground. The earth insulates against
the heat. I descend the staircase, park the
airsail by the door, and help load groceries into the freezer.
“You sh-shouldn’t…” my mother starts. She taps her fingers against
her thigh. “You shouldn’t have d-d-done that.”
She points to the airsail.
A rage flares only she can summon. “You’re judging me?”
She doesn’t respond. Can’t respond. Guilt was all she could manage. Unfortunate for her, I don’t feel regret, but I do feel
anger.
“Don’t patronize me,” I growl, my cool
cracking like ice. “If you provided enough, I wouldn’t have to steal.”
“Demon child,” she spits at me. “Child. Child. Child. Child.” She repeats the
word over and over in echolalia, a symptom of her disease.
The chant lights the short fuse of my temper. I pick up a peach and throw
it at her. It catches her in the chin, and she
staggers, clumsy, until she hits the wall. She
turns toward the packed earth and bangs her head against the dirt, over and
over. Each repetition is the same as the last,
a dance of madness between her and the world that disclaims us both.
I desert the groceries and grab her arm,
yank her back to sanity. “I’m sorry.” It’s a lie,
but it’s what I’m supposed to say.
She pushes me away and crosses to the
opposite end of the room, leans over a table for support. “I see…I see…I see who you
are…are. You’re no bet-t-t-ter…no better…no
better than him. Spawn of dark-k-ness…of
darkness. I’d k-k-k-kill you myself if I
wasn’t a…wasn’t a…wasn’t a c-c-coward.”
She straightens and faces me. Her fingers tap furiously
against her thigh as her eyes meet mine. She
looks away after a second, overwhelmed by sensation.
“I’d like to see you try,” I whisper. She’s a shield. A powerful one. Though she
isn’t as powerful as I will become.
Fear flickers in her gaze. I am her nightmare
incarnate. But when she wakes, I’m still here.
“G-get out-t-t…out…out…of m-m-my house…my
house…my house…my house…my house,” she says, staring at the floor.
“Gladly,” I say. I pick up the airsail and
head toward the door.
“Bastard. Bastard. Bastard. Bastard,” she
murmurs behind me.
Fire floods me. Wild. Uncontrollable. I shoot
out my hand and unleash a gravity wave. My
mother raises a shield at the last second, a bubble of energy conjured from the
heart of the universe. She protects herself,
but our home crumples into a mound of dirt. Shafts
of sunlight shine through the tattered roof. The
walls slide in avalanches onto the floor. Furniture
becomes kindling. The groceries explode.
Their sticky juices cover the wreckage.
I almost killed her. And I feel nothing.
Fury mobilizes her. She takes two steps toward
me and slaps me across the face hard enough to spark stars. The only time she touches me is in violence. Her hatred for me is the one force strong enough to
override her condition.
“Remember your birth,” she hisses at me
like a snake. Her voice is the steadiest it’s been in years.
“You never let me forget,” I say. I mean the rape that
conceived me, but she means my power.
I am a cataclysm. If I was born in Zawad, I
could be Komanguard, Arch of the Sun Guild at Ma’at. But I wasn’t born in Zawad. I
was born on the Shelf to a crippled mother and
an absent father. I doubt I’ll live long
enough to see the Four Towers.
“Take off your shirt,” she orders.
I freeze. “No.” I won’t let her do it again.
“Take. Off. Your. Shirt.” With each word, she closes the distance between us. “Shirt. Shirt. Shirt. Shirt.”
The word is like the pounding of a war
drum.
I step backward, flatten myself against the
door, clutch the airsail like a lifeboat.
“If you whip me again, I won’t control myself.”
My back burns with phantom pain. She had a healer tend me
afterward, so there are no scars, no evidence of her abuse. But my body remembers. It’s
not the punishment that bothers me. It’s the
shame.
“You won’t control yourself,” she says,
noticing my word choice. Won’t, not can’t.
The power inside me is a behemoth, bucking to break
free. If I don’t stand in its way, it will possess
me. I would let it possess me if it would save
me from her.
“Go, then.” She dismisses me with a wave
of both hands she repeats four times. “Don’t
return until morning. Morning. Morning. Morning.”
I unfold the airsail and kick off
into the sandstorm.
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