After the Fall of Efrain
With the Prince of Sorrow's Song dead and gone, the opera dissipates, spitting its victims out on the summit of Crane's Ridge where the Dance of Celestine was held some months before. It's getting late, and there is no one yet in town to run the train. Some will brave the trip home simply for the sake of collapsing into their own beds and achieving some sense of normalcy. Others will do so with the hope of returning with help. But many others will simply say "fuck it" and camp out on the mountain, still fitted with extra firewood from the festival and the means to build temporary structures in nearby storage sheds. The journey down will be safer in the morning, and there's solidarity to be had in a cool spring night spent under the stars.
Oh, look, there's even some non-perishable food and wine from the Dance. Combined with what can be hunted or foraged, as well as snacks and drinks stolen from the concession stand, there's plenty to go around. This might even be a little bit fun! Anyone up for another game of Never Have I Ever? Maybe a little Truth or Dare? Or perhaps you just want to chat and unwind with your friends. Whatever the case may be, have fun. This is your time. After darkness, there is a dawn. At the death of Sorrow, there is joy.
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Half a beat, and she adds gently, "Whenever it's a good time for you."
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He looks up at the ceiling.
"If you're available in an hour or two, I think I could do that. Would it be too much trouble to ask you to come by to the house?"
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"Not at all. I'll see you then. Should I bring anything?" And she can't help asking that last, even though she's sure he will say no.
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And he does. When Zivia does come by and knocks, a voice rises up from the garden out back. "Zivia, is that you? I'm outside! Come join me in the yard?"
And when she does, going down the path beside the house and passing the fence gate, there is Mulcahy in the midst of his budding garden. Though there are boxes and pots, it seems like he's letting them grow into something that more resembles a wild field. There is a small statuette on the back porch resembling Saint Francis holding a mostly-empty dish of birdseed; a birdbath; and standing tall on a pole in the middle, a thriving dovecote.
"Hello." He stands up from the table on the back porch and smiles gently, if a little pained. "Thank you for making the trip. I'm, ah, a little reluctant to be in public, at the moment."
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The backyard feels like a nice compromise; out of the house, under the sky, but still in relative privacy. If he's up for it.
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"Feel free to take a seat on the porch. I'll go get the kettle." For the briefest moment he slips inside, then back out; the open window does show that the door leads directly into the kitchen. He has a tray with a small teapot and matching cups.
He sets it down, and the smell of it is divine; it's certainly a tea that's expensive. "I hope you don't mind if I went ahead and took the liberty of brewing one of my favorites? It's, ah, an oolong."
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The little basket's on the table, with the tea towel folded aside: sweet rolls, made with honey and hazelnuts and just a little cinnamon.
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"Are those your baking? That's terribly kind of you, Zivia."
He sets the table; a plate for each, a cup and saucer for each, and pours for them both. He allows himself to take one of the sweet rolls, and quietly says his thanks over it.
Once they're settled... well, they're settled. There's no putting it off anymore.
"So I believe you had a few, ah, questions about... what you saw of me onstage."
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A beat, to see if he seems at all likely to withdraw.
"Powell, that was ... he was the man in your dream? Going by a number?"
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He sighs, lacing his fingers together, and stares into his cup. A moment passes.
“Yes. I knew him by that number for longer than I knew him by the name.”
There’s more, of course. The air weighs with all the explanation unspoken. But it’s such a long, winding tangle, he isn’t even sure where to start.
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"And that was after the ship, or before?"
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A long, long pauses as he visibly tries to figure out a good way to explain this.
“The prison ship… ran, quite literally, on our suffering. We were batteries to be spent and discarded. When the Captain was about to do the same with our group, a man named Number 2 stepped forward and made some kind of deal with him. He was granted a… uh—? Pocket dimension is the term? Yes. One that was his to control completely, in every aspect. A little world. He told us he could save us by taking us there.”
He prods his sweet roll absentmindedly. “The… experience was… well, er—uh… well, not to put too fine a point on it, but I suspect something like being a prisoner of war where they do not regard the Conventions.”
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"And that's what your dream was about? How ... literal was any of that?"
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Facetiously: “I was never a fox, though, to be clear, unless you mean a silver one.”
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He says, and bites into his sweet roll.
“The actual manner of pain in the pocket world—the Village—didn’t involve transformation like that. It was far more… psychological. And medical.”