Episode Eleven: Wings
Geneva
remembers the halls at summer time, how empty they were, how they echoed her
footsteps, but they were nothing compared to this. The lights are out and the halls are lit only
by what pale, winter light the windows let in.
It stabs at the darkness but does not penetrate deep, and she has to
take a moment for her eyes to adjust before entering.
She
follows Ms. Olivia through the empty halls.
Their footsteps echo. The
compound never truly welcomed Geneva, but her harsh treatment of Erak has made
it worse. A new place was needed, and so
Ms. Olivia decided to use the school until she could find another, more
perminent solution.
With
school out the halls are cold and, Geneva finds, unfriendly. The air feels tense, like there are ghosts
around every corner watching them. She
keeps close to Ms. Olivia for fear that a teacher will manifest in the air and
reprimand them for being there.
They
reach the gym and flick on the lights.
Geneva rubs her arms, trying to get warmth in them. Her jacket isn’t thick enough. “Think we could turn on the heat?”
“No,”
Ms. Olivia says. “I want our presence
here to go unnoticed. We cannot stay for
long, but I assume this is preferable to the compound?”
“What,”
Geneva says, puffing into her hands.
“You saying I’m not welcome there?”
Ms.
Olivia gives a level stare and turns.
She sets a black duffle bag on the bleachers and begins extracting a
host of training equipment. She pulls
out a few bottles of water, some bandages, a few empty bottles, and two wooden
training swords. She twirls one absently
while turning to speak to Geneva.
“You’ll want your jacket off, I think.
If things go well, you’ll be plenty warm soon enough.”
“Exercise
and all of that.” Geneva undoes her
jacket and sets it aside. Her arms prickle
as soon as they touch the cold air. She
rubs her hands together again, futilely.
“Let’s hurry up then. How do you
want me?” She pauses. “That sounded
better in my head.”
“Armor
first, please.”
Geneva
nods, closes her eyes. She imagines the
switch, the choice, and makes it. The
ring spreads up her hand, up her arm, and across her body. It slithers and crawls and solidifies. When Geneva opens her eyes, she finds Ms.
Olivia smiling.
“You’re
faster.”
“I’ve
had some free time to practice. Now
what?”
“Your
wand, please.”
“Swand.” Geneva reaches down, draws her wand in one
smooth motion. “So, is this review or
something, because I think I have all of this mastered. My problem isn’t dress up. It’s everything after.”
“We
will be practicing our combat, but I have ideas. I’ve been doing research on the armors,
reviewing what texts we have. How much
do you remember of what I’ve told you?”
“That
there is more than one.”
Ms.
Olivia sighs, pinches the bridge of her nose.
Then, she picks up one of the bottles from the bleachers and steps out
onto the gymnasium floor. “Yes? And what else?”
“They
have swands, too?”
Ms.
Olivia places the bottle at the center of the gym and stares across at
Geneva. “Ms. Oaks, please, do try and
take this seriously.” Geneva shrugs, and
Ms. Olivia shakes her head. “Each armor
has its own special strength, a gift of sorts.
Do you remember yours?”
Geneva
looks her armor over. “It’s white and
blends in with the snow. Winter soldier
style.”
“Ms.
Oaks.”
“You
know, you could just save yourself some time by telling me the answers you want
to hear.”
“Yes,
I suppose I could,” Ms. Olivia says, strained.
“Yours is the feather signet.
Supposedly, your armor is gifted with flight, though we won’t be doing
that just yet. Instead, I want to test
the capabilities of your wand.”
Geneva
holds the wand up and turns it over in her hands.
“If
you remember, each armor has its gift and also a wand with which to channel
that gift.”
“So,
what, my swand can make things fly?”
Ms.
Olivia smirks. “In a sense, if I
understand what I read. Your armor
catches air currents. In particular, it
glides and, if done properly, can do so for extended periods of time. In the same way, your wand can be swung and
release bursts of air.”
“Right?” Geneva takes a few steps forward, swings in
the direction of the empty bottle.
“Sounds like science. Don’t know
if you’ve seen my grades, but I don’t exactly science well.”
“Yes,
which is why I have an interest in giving you hands-on experience.” Ms. Olivia steps away from the bottle and
points at it. “Knocks this over, if you
will.”
Geneva
stares across the room, her attention now on the bottle. She looks between it and Ms. Olivia. “Yeah, I’ll get on that. How, exactly?”
“Try
swinging your wand.”
“At
what? The air?”
“Yes,”
Ms. Olivia says, and then more certainly, “Yes, try that.”
“Guess
I’ll try anything once.” Geneva looks at
the blade of her wand, eyes the evenly spaced notches across the surface of
it. There are eight in total, each granting
access to the hollow interior. To
Geneva, it makes the blade look to her almost like a feather. She takes a deep breath. “Okay, time to feel silly.”
She
takes a charge and leaps into the air, spinning her sword and swinging it about
like a child with a basket. Then,
skipping and stumbling to a stop, she lunges forward. A hard roar of air fills the room and knocks
a foam pad from its place on the far wall.
The bottle rattles gently on the floor.
Ms.
Olivia looks between the pad and the bottle. She takes another step back. “It seems as if you were able to make a
current.”
“You
sound surprised.”
“Try
again.”
“Could’ve
said you weren’t to make me feel better.”
Geneva walks back to where she was and turns. She sets her feet and this time flourishes,
twirling the blade around her. She gives
four quick swipes at the air, feeling the momentum building, and then swings
down. Another current of air, a howl of
wind, and Ms. Olivia falls flat onto her rear.
“Oh, crap!”
“No,
I am fine.” Ms. Olivia pushes herself
back up. “I think you were a tad
high.” She eyes Geneva and takes another
step away. “And perhaps a bit too far to the right.”
“Yeah…”
“Try
to aim lower and over. Also, try the
thrust. It seems to give you more
precision.”
Geneva
nods and holds her blade before her. She
lines it up with the can and closes her eyes.
A deep breath, and then she repeats the process. Again, she takes for quick swipes and then
steps forward, thrusting
The
air shifts, spirals forward, and tears the bottle apart while scattering it
across the floor. It comes to a stop,
the lid tossed to one side with the body sundered.
Ms.
Olivia claps. “Quite impressive, Ms.
Oaks!”
“Yeah. Only took three tries.” Geneva cheers ruefully.
Ms.
Olivia climbs the stairs to the bleachers and grabs another bottle. She sets it in the same place. “Now, let’s see if you can give a repeat
performance.” As she speaks, she makes
sure to put distance between herself and the target.
“No
problem, I’ve got this. In fact, I’ll
try something a bit more flashy. Maybe show off a bit.” Inside of her helm, Geneva sticks her tongue
out while lining up her sights. She
takes another deep breath and starts spinning her wand. Then, she twirls and swings upward, holding
her blade like a golf club.
Air
rushes across the floorboards, shifting the dust. It hits the bottom of the bottle and this
time sends it rocketing up toward the ceiling.
Ms. Olivia cheers in the background as the bottle takes a quick,
decisive flight into the light directly above it. Sparks shoot and fly, and the bottle falls, a
blackened, smoking chunk on the ground.
Glass gathers around it.
“Oh,
my,” Ms. Olivia says after a brief silence.
Geneva,
cringing, whines out a, “Sorry,” and then whistles nonchalantly.
Ms.
Olivia sighs. “Yes, well, I suppose that
is our cue to move on to something else.
First, let’s change the light, though”
Geneva
slides her wand back into the waist of her armor. “Right. Yeah. Good idea.”
-The
Knights of Sheba-
They change the
light together, an act which involves Geneva watching and making half-hearted
suggestions while Ms. Olivia does all of the work. Afterward, they put away the remaining
bottles and stand apart in the center of the gym. Ms. Olivia paces a wide circle around Geneva.
“So,
what are we going to do now,” Geneva asks.
She is happy to find that the cold seems distant to her now. Ms. Olivia shivers occasionally and hugs
herself for warmth, and it reminds Geneva that her armor protects from extremes
in temperature..
“Now,
we will test the other properties of your armor. The wand allows you to channel your armor’s
gift, focus it into a point. It gives
you control of air currents, but your armor should be able to glide on its
own. Before it can do that, however, we
must conjure your wings.”
“Wings?’ Geneva looks over her shoulders and, finding
nothing, feels along her shoulder blades.
“Yeah, any advice on that?”
“How
do you conjure your armor?”
“I
don’t know. I just, kind of—It’s like a
switch, but it’s more.” She sighs. “It’s
stupid.”
“I
highly doubt that, but whatever it is, it works, Ms. Oaks, and that is what is
important. Try to do the same sort of
thing.”
“Right. Just imagine a switch. That makes wings pop out. Like a switch blade.” Inside of her helmet,
Geneva rolls her eyes.
“Don’t
roll your eyes, Ms. Oaks.”
“How
did you even…”
“Just
try it.”
“Fine.” Geneva straightens up, closes her eyes, and
she breathes, calm and deep. She
imagines the switch in her head, the one that turns her from a girl into a
knight. Then, she imagines another, one
that turns her from a knight into something else, something she can’t
fathom. She opens her eyes. “This is stupid.”
“Come,
Ms. Oaks. You’ll never get anywhere with
your complaints.”
“Yeah. Maybe you should pull your gun on me again.”
“Ms.
Oaks.”
“You’re
a real pain today, you know that?”
“The
feeling is mutual, I assure you.”
Geneva
huffs, closes her eyes again. There are
two switches, but one doesn’t work. It
isn’t right. It isn’t her. She can hardly see herself as a knight. Flight seems so much like fantasy and, after
the battle, she knows that none of this is fantasy. It is real, and harsh, and hard, and her nose
still aches, and so does her body.
Instead
of the switches, she clears her mind.
She imagines, instead, wings and feathers, pure and white like
snow. She imagines her armor, extending,
stretching, growing into them. They are
fictional but distinct, and they are there.
They aren’t her, but she can feel through them, feel them swaying,
folding, fanning.
“Ms.
Oaks?”
“I’m
trying to focus.” The image is
lost. She opens her eyes, glares. “What do you want?”
“I
was just making sure you were okay.
You’ve been quiet for some time.”
“I
was,” Geneva sighs and runs her hands along the helm. “Know what? Never mind. This isn’t happening today.”
“Fair
enough.” Ms. Olivia pulls her sleeve up,
checks her watch. “It is almost
noon. Let’s retire for the day.” She tosses Geneva her jacket. “Come, get out of your armor. I will drive you home.”
“Wait,
we’re done today? We haven’t even trained with swords.”
“Ms.
Oaks, not to be confrontational, but you clearly need a break. So, we should quit for the day.”
Geneva
holds the glare. Her armor slips away,
compressing back into the ring, but the glare stays. She jerks her arms into the jacket and zips
it up. “Fine. Let’s go then.”
-The
Knights of Sheba-
The
sun appears at noon, bleeding through the clouds and touching the snow drifts
with its warm fingers. They melt,
slowly, great streams of water pooling in the streets, filling the drains. That night they will freeze, only to thaw and
refreeze in the days to come.
Claude
watches from the window, still isolated and increasingly irritated by his
situation. Shirley is at home with him,
having lunch. She sits on the mattress
with a plate on her lap and tears small bits from her sandwich before eating
them.
“You
should get out of here for a while, get some fresh air,” she says.
“Nothing
to do out there.”
“More
to do than there is in here,” she says.
“Go to that sporting equipment store we saw. You could look at the bows, see how much a
new one would cost.”
“It’d
cost a lot.” He turns and leans against
the wall while biting, almost bitterly, into his sandwich.
“When
you get back to work, we’ll be fine.”
She smiles. “Don’t worry so
much.”
Claude
sets his plate to the side and scratches at his cast. “I can’t wait until this thing is off.”
“Me
either.”
“You
just want me out of the apartment.”
“Maybe
a little.” She stands and takes her
plate to the sink while he glowers, and then she blows him a raspberry. “I’m just kidding. But you are getting little cranky. Go out for a walk, at least. It’s sunny out, and you don’t know how long
that will last here.”
Claude
glances back out the window. “Probably
only a few hours.” He sighs. “Maybe I will.”
Shirley
crosses the room, takes his plate and puts it in the sink with hers. She runs water over both of them before going
to Claude and hugging him about the waist.
Then, she smiles up at him. “I
think you should. It might cheer you
up.”
He
smiles back at her and relaxes into her grip.
Sometimes when she is away, it startles him to realize that they are
living together, as a couple, even sharing a bed, but when they are together,
it is like they were never anything else.
They
stand together, swaying, and kiss.
“Okay, if you insist. I’ll go.”
“Good.” They part.
“Maybe you could buy something nice for your date.”
“I
really wish you would stop calling that.
It’s weird enough that we’re meeting at all.”
“Oh,”
she slaps his chest before grabbing her purse from the bed. “You’re over-thinking it. She’s just a girl who needs help, and you’re
the one who can help her. It’s sweet.”
“I
have no qualifications for this sort of thing.”
“You’re
a hero, aren’t you?” She gives him that
look, the one she always wears when she says something like this. It is her way of saying that she knows what
he is and that he better know, too.
“I
guess. Just wish it was a little more
impersonal, you know?”
“It’ll
be fine.” She goes to the door and
stands with it open. “I’ll see you
tonight.”
“Yup.” He waves, and she blows him a kiss. Though embarrassed, he returns it.
“Also,”
she says, peeking back inside, “Go for that walk!”
“I
will, I will,” he says, and he smiles as she closes the door. Then, he turns to the window and watches the
people on the street, watches the snow melt again. Soon, Shirley is out there, looking both ways
before crossing to the parking lot.
When
she is gone, he has nothing to distract him, and he starts thinking about
tomorrow.
-The
Knights of Sheba-
“You
know, you could always use the house phone.”
Geneva holds her cell to her ear while crossing the room to lock her
door. Once the door is locked, she
returns to her bed. “I’m weird, but even
I don’t walk around my room and talk to myself.
My parents are paranoid enough without me having to hide a cell phone
from them.”
“Tell
them it is from your teacher.”
Geneva
shakes her head. “Listen, that isn’t
really the best excuse in the world, and it would definitely start more fires
than it would put out.”
“Well,
we can’t risk anyone listening in, so this is the safest option. Erak is already upset that Mr. Sylvain is
involved.”
“Yeah,
yeah, wouldn’t want to put my family in danger, secret identity,
yadda-yadda. I know.” She falls back onto her bed and stares up at
her ceiling, traces a small spiral leading in toward her ceiling light with her
gaze. After wincing in the light, she
follows the spiral back out. “So, what
do you want now?”
“I
had considered surprising you, but I think it is better to give you warning
ahead of time. Tomorrow, your training
will be different.”
“What,
are we taking a class trip to the nearest mountain so I can try jumping
off? Because, I don’t really think that
will help me much with the whole sprouting wings thing.”
“No,
Ms. Oaks, but we will not be training at the gym. Instead, I would like for you to meet with
Mr. Sylvain.”
“Mr.
Sylvain? Oh, that Claude guy?” Geneva furrows her brow. “What for?”
“Now
is the time to build connections, Ms. Oaks.”
“But
I thought Erak hated him.”
“He
does.”
Geneva
waits, shrugs. “Okay, fine,
whatever. I’ll meet with him. I guess.”
Ms.
Olivia is quiet for a moment, perhaps apprehensive. “Really?”
“Yup. You say jump, and I say, ‘I’m tired,’ and do
it anyway.”
“I
see. I suppose that will work. So, I will pick you up at our usual time
then.”
“Yeah,
yeah, and I’ll go build some connections.”
“Yes,”
Ms. Olivia says, briefly, sounding somewhat surprised. “Well, then, I will see you tomorrow.”
“Ah-huh.” Geneva hangs up and goes to her jacket. She stuffs the phone inside. Then, she goes back to her desk and sits. She stares at the wall but doesn’t see it. Instead,
she sees a young adult, a man, with dark hair and dark eyes and a serious
expression on his face. He fires an
arrow that explodes on contact, moves with precision, with meaning, and perhaps
this works against him.
She
sees a beast towering over them. It
attacks the man, snaps his bow, snaps him limb.
She sees bone through flesh and blood in the snow, and then she sees
fatigue and smells burnt flesh and, over that, fresh blood. The bruises across
her body, now healed, ache in remembrance.
Looking
at her ring, the material polished and shining, she wonders what sort of
battles the knights fought, wonders what sort of person Belquis was behind the
legend. Having fought demons, she finds
it hard to see someone so different from her, someone larger than life, and she
thinks how experience seems to make the mythic mundane.
She
wonders if Belquis was there, fighting the big demon, would Claude have gotten
hurt, or would Belquis have gotten hurt, but she knows there are no answers to
those questions. She knows, also, that
they are pointless, that Belquis is gone and dead, and she is there. She is wearing the armor, the armor without
wings, the armor that can fly but won’t for her.
It
reminds her that, whatever she is wearing, she isn’t really a soldier, or a
knight, but a scared young girl crying herself to sleep in the dark.
The
phone rings, the house phone, and Geneva jerks into awareness. She waits for someone to answer and, after
three rings, sighs. “Oaks residence,
Geneva speaking.”
“Hey,
just who I was looking for,” Kit says from the other end.
“Oh.
Hey.”
There
is a short pause. “So, how are you?”
“Good. I guess.”
Geneva shifts in her seat, drums her fingers on the desk.
“Me,
too,” Kit says quietly. “You busy?”
“No more than usual. Why?”
“Wondering
if you wanted to go out tonight, maybe catch a movie.”
“Oh.” Geneva looks around her room, leans back in
her chair. She stares at the ceiling and
tries to come up with an excuse, but her thoughts never go where she wants them
to anymore. “Can’t tonight. Sorry.”
“Oh.
School stuff?”
“Always,”
Geneva says, and she worries that the lie is getting too easy for her. Sometimes, she worries that she is even
beginning to believe it, but then she always thinks that Kit is just being
patient with her. The latter options
always hurts worst. “Sorry.”
“It’s
fine. What about tomorrow?”
Geneva
thinks about Claude again, about blood in the snow. “Can’t, either.”
Kit
sighs on the other end, not angry but disappointed. “That’s fine. Rain check?”
“Yeah. Sometime.
When I’m not so busy.”
“Of
course.” Another pause, more
silence. “I’ll let you get back to it,
then.”
“Thanks,
Kit.” She hangs up without waiting for
response.
Off
the phone, Geneva pulls open her drawer and finds the journal inside. She eyes it and then shoves the draw
closed. Instead of reading, she crawls
into bed and curls up, and she hugs a pillow tight to her chest and tries hard
not to think about anything at all.
-The
Knights of Sheba-
The
sky is dark, bleak, and the air so cold that it chokes. Icy winds blow, tossing snowflakes, twisting
them across the sky. There is no light
to speak of, but everything shines in the darkness. A creature glides through the air, shaking in
the earth with the movement of its leathery wings.
A
woman, tall, blonde, and shapely, is pursued by figures that glow. They follow her close as she retreats, but
she never turns her back to face them.
She isn’t running; she never runs.
They surround her, holding blades that gleam in the non-light. The woman staggers and stumbles, landing on
her back.
A
tower looms in the distance, watching without a care. The beast sweeps by it again, going
unnoticed. Whatever it is, it is
enormous, and its scales gleam white in the dark, pure like the snow.
The
woman is surrounded by light but doesn’t seem afraid. Instead, she looks furious, stands up and
stands her ground, fists balled, jaw set.
She is wearing a dress and a crown and looks to be a princess of some
sort. The lights ready their blades and
close rank.
The
beast drops and lands amidst them, the size of a house and its scales
shining. Talons cut the earth, leave
deep gashes as its feet settle. Its
body, long and serpentine, curls around the princess while its wings fold in,
and it snaps at the light, roars like a maelstrom.
The
wind shifts, fast and hard, and the light is carried away, and he stands in the
center of it, hair tossing, blinded and deafened by the wind. He hears voices calling out to him, and then…
Claude
wakes up, stares at the ceiling. The
room is dark, but the first blades of sunlight drift in. He sits up and stares, at first, at the wall,
and then rubs his face. He is sweating.
Shirley
peeks out of the bathroom with a toothbrush in her mouth. “You okay, sweetie?”
“Yeah,
I just,” he looks at her, “Strange dream.”
“Dream
or dream?” He looks away, and she joins him on the bed. “One of those, huh? You sure you’re okay?”
He
nods. “Nothing bad, just confusing.”
“Should
we cancel your date?”
“No. And stop calling it that.”
She
giggles and stands, spits and rinses before going to the clean laundry and
digging around until she finds socks.
Then, she slips them on while looking around their tiny apartment. “We really need a dresser.”
“We
need a lot of things.” He leans back,
supporting his weight with his good arm while Shirley closes in and kisses him
on the lips. He smiles up at her while
she stands and poses.
“How
do I look?”
“Good.”
“As
always.” She flips her hair and
laughs. “Guess I should head out. I’ll get something for lunch today, if that’s
fine with you.”
“It’s
fine, but why not come home?”
She
grins. “You might need some privacy.”
“You
are really enjoying this, aren’t you?”
The
grin spreads, and she goes to the door.
“Just have fun, okay?”
“Yeah,
yeah, you too.”
“Love
you, Claude.” She pauses at the door,
leans against it and waits. “Always
have.”
He
smirks. “I love you, too.”
“I
know,” she says, and she saunters out the door.
-The
Knights of Sheba-
Nina
picks Geneva up shortly before noon and drives her downtown. The ride there is quiet, with Geneva
slouching in her seat and staring, absently, out the window. She has her arms crossed and her feet up on
the dashboard.
As
they enter downtown, they slow to a stop at a traffic light. The streets are long and narrow, clogged with
lunchtime traffic. People walk brusquely
in the sunny cold, passing the cars by.
Geneva shifts in her seat.
“This
isn’t some weird child prostitution thing, right?”
Nina
gives a befuddled glance. “Excuse me?”
“This
visit. I mean, you weren’t clear on the
details. So, I’m just asking, it’s not a
child prostitution thing, right? You’re
not selling him my body or anything, are you?”
“No. Ms. Oaks, I would never!”
The
car inches forward, and Geneva tugs on her seatbelt and shrugs. “Now that I
think about it, and I mean really think, I guess it wouldn’t be so bad. If it
was child prostitution, I mean. So long as I got a cut.” Geneva pauses,
thoughtfully. “Though, I don’t know if you can still count me as a child. I’m a
bit too old for childhood. So, it’d be teenage prostitution, I guess. Is that
even a thing?”
“Ms.
Oaks, this is in no way any form of prostitution. I simply feel we should reach
out to Mr. Sylvain and make connections.” Nina takes a right, stops suddenly
and waits for the other cars to start moving again. “He was quite helpful
during the battle with the demon lord, was he not?”
“Yeah,”
Geneva says, distantly, sinking further into her seat. “Wouldn’t have won
without him.”
Nina
glances again before pulling forward. They turn down another long, narrow
street, this time going north. The buildings in this area of town are tall and
old. Though it is late morning, they block much of the sunlight and cast
everything in deep shadows.
“Hey,
Ms. Olivia, can I ask you a question?”
“Of
course.” Nina eyes the numbers on the buildings as they pass.
“It’s
about Belquis. Or the Queen of Sheba. Or whatever she’s called.”
Nina
slows the car and they make brief eye contact. “And what would you like to know
about her?”
“Well,
I was reading, and it said she betrayed the elves. Froze an entire world shut,
and I was wondering, well, how did she do that?”
Nina
goes quiet, pulls into a parking space across from a squat, brick building.
With the car parked, she keeps gripping the steering wheel and stares ahead, as
if considering her words. Finally, she
says, “In truth, Ms. Oaks, I am uncertain. No one really knows, and so few
people—elves, mostly—are willing to ask the question. If there ever was an
answer, it has long since been lost to the revised and re-revised history of
the knights.”
“It
all just sounds like magic.” Geneva stares across the street, too, unclips her
seatbelt. “This is the place, I assume.”
“Yes.”
“Okay.
Well, guess I should go inside. Make connections.” he grabs hold of the door handle. “Though, I
don’t think I’m the best of representatives.”
“You
will do fine.” Nina watches Geneva open the door and then grabs her by the
shoulder. They make eye contact again, and Nina pulls her hand back
quickly. “Ms. Oaks, call me if you need
anything.”
Geneva
quirks her brow. “I’m going to need a ride home.”
“Yes,
of course, I simply meant—I will be waiting on word from you.”
“Sure,” Geneva says, and she climbs from the car and shuts the door behind her. After a half wave and a shiver, she crosses the street. Nina watches Geneva to the doorway, where Claude greets her and shows her in.
The Knights of Sheba 111 A…End