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Socket 1-3 - The Socket Greeny Saga

Page 28

by Bertauski, Tony


  “I got the flu or something?”

  “Flu? Dude, you’re half gone!”

  “Yeah,” was all he said. He wouldn’t look at me. “I’ve been puking a lot.”

  “Have you been to the doctor?”

  “It’ll pass.”

  “But you’ve lost all that weight. Something’s not right, you got to get it checked out.”

  “Maybe I’m on a diet.”

  “Why didn’t you tell me you were sick?” I said. “I haven’t seen you in three months—”

  “Look, I’m sick!” He bristled with hot energy now. “What’d you want me to say?”

  I pulled the shade and flooded the room with light. His color was all wrong. He blinked at the bright light, sat back down on the bed. I grabbed his face with both hands, forced him to look directly at me. His pupils were dilated; the rims of the irises were blurry.

  “How long have you been virtualmoding?”

  “I’m not gear-addicted.” He knocked my hands away.

  “You didn’t answer the question.”

  “I know what I look like, I’m not addicted!”

  “Look at the signs, man! Your eyes are the first to go! You look like a freaking withered up gearhead.”

  “Yeah, and what do you know?”

  “Face facts! Do you want to feel better or what?”

  “Don’t pull that Paladin shit on me! I know more about virtualmoding than you’ll ever know!”

  “What?”

  He struggled to stay still. He pulled the shade down, sat at his desk shaking his leg. He wanted me out of there in the worst way, but knew asking wasn’t going to do it. It wouldn’t be hard to pick a few thoughts from his mind, they were scattered like fallen leaves. It would be as easy as dragging a net through a school of minnows. My mind reached around him, gently applying pressure. I didn’t want to get inside him, just see a loose thought or two.

  “Don’t pull that bullshit on me!” he said.

  “What’re you hiding?”

  “I got a life so just stay out! You wouldn’t know about it. You and Chute.”

  “What’re you talking about?”

  He sat there drumming his fingers on the desk, grinding his teeth, finally said, “You’re not around, Socket, so it doesn’t matter. Neither is Chute. It’s just me. Just me, bro. So why don’t you leave me the fuck alone.”

  “I’m here to see you, not somewhere halfway around the world, you nut.”

  “Where you going to be next week?”

  His eyes were larger than ever. He was sensitive to thoughts, even though he couldn’t control them. That’s how he felt me looking inside him. And that’s another sign of gear addiction. He needed help.

  “You got to stay off virtualmode, man,” I said. “It’s killing you.”

  “I’ll do what I got to do.”

  I looked at the box on his dresser. “I’ll take your transporters.”

  “You don’t think I have backups?”

  “Streeter, this isn’t right. I’ll bring Chute here, if that’s what it takes. She’ll make you do it.”

  “Give me a break, she doesn’t have time.” He held his belly and burped. “I got to puke now. You know the way out.”

  He crossed the hall and slammed the door on the bathroom.

  He was always vigilant about gear addiction. In fact, he always made sure Chute and I had safeguards on all our gear before we went virtualmode. He checked records to maintain proper hours. In fact, the only way to abuse virtualmode was to disable the safeguards. Virtualmode would shut down if it sensed addictive symptoms. What was he doing? Better yet, where was he doing it?

  It sounded like a dry heave in the bathroom. How long would he fake that until he thought I was gone? I grabbed the disc-shaped transporters off his dresser wired to the black box. It was cheap ass gear. Nothing was wired these days, but Streeter could make anything work. This was crap he got down at a gear swap for next to nothing. It was probably easier to disable safeguards so he could virtualmode endlessly.

  I slid the transporters behind my ears, felt them suck against the skin and search for my nervous system. My awareness left my skin sitting on the bed, floating through the bodiless in-between until I landed in a giant sim.

  I was ten feet tall in a small white room with no furniture or monitors. Streeter’s gear didn’t even recognize I wasn’t him. The enormous body felt sluggish and powerful. The environment was cartoonish and senseless: no feeling, no smell.

  “Take me to the last destination,” I called in a deep, gravelly voice.

  The walls jiggled, searching the coordinates for the last place Streeter was at. The walls weakened, then crumbled. An imposing metal gate appeared before me. It was thirty feet high with sharp staves on top of the bars, hinged to ivy-covered brick columns. Beyond was solid darkness. The night sky was covered with clouds, but a full moon peaked through an opening, illuminating the weedy path in front of me.

  “State your target,” a creepy voice spoke from the other side.

  “Where am I?”

  “The Gates of Death.”

  “What’s that?”

  Pause. “If you need orientation to navigate this world, please enter the room on the right.” There was a mausoleum buried in overgrown vines. “Otherwise, state your target.”

  “Just tell me what this place does.”

  Another long pause. “Gates of Death is a database of all those deceased. You may visit celebrities, historical figures, family or friends.”

  Family. “As long as they’re dead?”

  “State your target.”

  This wasn’t Streeter’s style. He was a smash and bash guy. He went to battleworlds, not historical. He didn’t look back, he looked forward.

  “Take me to my last target.”

  The gates opened slowly. The dark beyond took form. Colors and shapes emerged from the darkness. Water sloshed in an ocean. Trees sprouted—

  click.

  The world disappeared.

  I was yanked through the in-between like a fish snagged on a hook and slammed back into my skin. I tumbled off Streeter’s bed. My stomach churned. Streeter’s dirty socks hung off the ends of his feet near my face. He held the transporters in his hand.

  “What were you doing?” he said.

  “You can’t rip those off like that. My nervous system—”

  “What were you doing?”

  I leaned against his bed, took a moment to catch my breath. “I saw the gates. Is that what this is all about?”

  “You have no right—”

  “I’m your friend, Streeter. I’m not trying to take anything from you or… or… listen, you’re a goddamn mess, man! You can’t keep doing this.”

  He turned his back on me, faced the corner like he was in timeout.

  And then I knew.

  “You’re looking for your parents.”

  He twiddled the transporters in his fingers. “This is none of your business.”

  I didn’t budge. Instead, I emitted a soothing energy, filling the room with a calming, loving, embracing essence that permeated his radical aura. The energy settled around him. He started to say something, but the sweetness of the essence felt too good, penetrating his jagged mind. Calming it. Relaxing. Opening.

  When his posture released the tension, his shoulders dropped and his fists opened. He fell into the chair at his desk and slumped over, dropping his face in his hands, rubbing his tired eyes.

  “I was doing research for history class and stumbled onto the gates,” he said. “I talked to Einstein about the atomic bomb and his theory of relativity, pretty standard shit. He didn’t tell me anything new, really, but the details were good. I was about to leave and just had a thought. I didn’t really think they’d be there…”

  He didn’t finish. Streeter never talked about his parents, even when we were little. They died when he was five, about the time my dad died, but he said he didn’t remember much. Always figured he felt the same way I did about my
father, really. It happened a long time ago, so what’s the point of bringing up memories? That was then. Now is now.

  “That’s all?” I said.

  Energy spiked off him. “THAT’S ALL?”

  “No, I just mean—”

  “Imagine your dead fucking dad walking into the room, right now. You think you’d be a little freaked out? You think you’d be like, oh, hey pop, how’s it hanging? YOU THINK THAT’S HOW IT’D GO?”

  “What I mean is the gates is just a game world, it’s not real. Those weren’t your parents, it was just an image. You’re talking to data.”

  He twisted in the chair and stared a long time. “You think you’re better than me, is that it? Or do you just not have feelings anymore? Which is it, Socket? Huh? Are you just a robot programmed to save the world now, is that it?”

  He shoved me against the bed.

  “I’m no superhero, Socket, I can’t control my thoughts and feelings or, or… stop time or any of that horseshit. I’m like everyone else, just trying to get by. So, yeah, it’s just game, I’m sorry. I can’t handle my feelings, boo hoo. But I didn’t ask you to come in here. I didn’t ask you to give a fuck. I GET IT!”

  “I’m sorry, I’m sorry… I just thought…”

  “You thought it shouldn’t matter, seeing my parents? You don’t understand, that virtualmode world is as close to being real as this right here.” He thumped his chest. “I thought you might get it, but clearly you’re not human anymore. It matters to me, superboy. It matters to me.”

  The front door opened. Bags rattled somewhere in the house.

  “You need to leave,” Streeter said.

  “Hang on a second—”

  “Granny?” Streeter called.

  His grandma looked into the room. “Are you feeling all right, darling— oh, you have a friend. Good.”

  “He was just leaving.”

  “Hi, Granny,” I said.

  “Hello, darling.” She looked confused, held out her frail hand. “What’s your name?”

  I’d been coming over to the house all my life and she’d forgotten me after a year with the Paladins. I shook her hand gently.

  “I’m not feeling good,” Streeter said. “Could you take him to the door?”

  “Certainly, sweetheart.”

  He stood in the corner and watched me leave. His grandpa was in the kitchen putting away the groceries. He waved as I passed. What else do you do to a stranger but wave?

  Granny stopped on the porch. “Please come back,” she said. “He needs company.”

  I should’ve told her to unplug the transporters, but Streeter would find a way to fire them back up. We spent many nights in virtualmode without them knowing. And what was I going to tell her? Your grandson is visiting your dead daughter? Oh, and I think he’s gear addicted.

  I should’ve.

  T R A I N I N G

  The fade

  I pulled the glass dish from the stove. The baked salmon flaked apart with a fork, just like the directions said it would. It seemed like if I was going to screw up dinner, it shouldn’t be fish, but the guy at the market recommended it, said all I needed to do was throw some butter and brown sugar on it and bake. Even a dope can’t mess that up, he said.

  I turned the stove off, slid the dish back in to keep it warm. What was I going to tell Chute about Streeter? I couldn’t lie, but she’d want to know. She’d been calling him, even knocking on his door. She just wasn’t willing to peek through his window like I was. He was lucky she didn’t see him; she would’ve dragged his ass to the hospital, no mercy.

  So, if I tell her the truth – how he looked, the thing with his parents – she wasn’t going to stay for baked salmon no matter how it tasted.

  I’d tell her after dinner.

  A car door slammed.

  I checked the sweet potatoes, made myself look busy. I didn’t want to look like I’d been looking out the window for the last forty-five minutes. My heart thumped when she knocked. Get a hold of yourself, man!

  “Come in!”

  I was bent over the stove pulling the dish out when she came in. Then I stood there like I forgot where I was, staring at her. She didn’t need to dress up or do the make-up thing. Just the way she was, right then, it was perfect.

  “I came right from practice.” Her braids were frayed like she came over on a motorcycle. “I’m sorry, but Coach worked in some new plays.”

  I was still standing. Still staring.

  “I’ll go clean up,” she said.

  “Yeah, yeah,” I said. “Use my mother’s bathroom. I’ve got a few things left to do. Um, it’s over…”

  “There.” She pointed. “Yeah, I’ve been here before.”

  I arranged each filet on a plate, then spritzed them with lemon. I split two sweet potatoes and hit them with butter and reached for the spinach salad, hit that with cherry tomatoes, sunflower seeds and parmesan cheese.

  “We’re expecting a record crowd at the game tomorrow night,” she called from the bathroom. “They’re saying more people will be there than football. They’re talking about two or three thousand people showing up. Can you believe it?”

  I lit the candles on the table. I called the television on and a fire crackled on the screen.

  “I’m getting a little nervous, thinking about it,” she said. “The expectations…”

  She stepped into the living room. Her face was radiant. Not in the way someone steps out of the shower or returns from the beach, but bubbling with this essence of pure joy, like one of those paintings of patron saints with the halos. I was staring, again.

  “You expecting someone special?” she asked.

  “Not anymore.” I pulled out a chair. “Madam.”

  She curtsied and danced to the table. “Why thank you, kind sir.”

  I went back to work on the salad, focused on cutting cherry tomatoes and onions.

  “It smells good,” she said. “Who cooked?”

  “The chef is in the house, my lady.”

  “Are the Paladins training you for housework?”

  “Cooker, cleaner, and slayer of evil doers.” I slid a plate in front of her. “They leave no stone unturned.”

  She closed her eyes and hovered over it, letting the steam drift against her face. She forked a small piece of salmon in her mouth. “Oh, my.” She moaned. “Oooooooh, my.”

  She dug into the food. Her lips glistened with butter and the fire popped on the wall. I watched her eat half of it then tried some. That market guy was right on the mark. It was freaking awesome. Chute hardly opened her eyes, and when she did they were brilliant.

  The whole scene was like a romance novel. Pon would shit. If he could see me sitting around like some star-crossed, zit-popping teenager, his head would explode.

  “Did you see Streeter?” she asked.

  “Yeah, I saw him earlier. You know, this morning.”

  “He’s not right.”

  “Yeah, well, no… he’s not well.”

  “What do you think’s wrong?”

  I chewed slowly, watched the flames dance on the candles. There were so many ways to answer that question, none of which were lies. Most of which weren’t exactly truths, either.

  “I didn’t get a chance to talk to him all that much,” I said. “His granny wanted him to rest. So, you know.”

  “Maybe we should go over there.”

  “He’s coming to your game tomorrow night,” I said, quickly. “We’re planning on getting together afterwards. The three of us, you know. Just like old times.”

  Now that, the second part… yeah, that was a lie. I’m pretty sure the first part was, too. Even though Streeter said he was going to her game on the message, I knew he was lying, so in a way I was lying. Just go with it, stop thinking about it.

  Things were just too good. Streeter could wait until the morning, right? What were we going to do if we went over anyway? It’s not like he was going to let us in, and his grandma wouldn’t know who I was so nothing was goi
ng to change. I just wanted this night, that’s all. Not too much to ask.

  “He misses you,” she said. “He won’t tell you that, but I think that’s what’s going on.”

  “It’s more than that, I think.”

  “He’s just having a hard time since you left and I think some things are coming up. He doesn’t feel like he’s got anyone.”

  “Don’t we all.”

  “He’s got it worse.”

  I clutched my fork. “He’s got great grandparents, he’s one of the smartest guys around, and he’s not starving. Is it really all that bad?”

  “He’s got no one, Socket, that’s all I mean. Making friends is hard for him.”

  “Well, maybe he needs a new skill.”

  Chute looked at me strangely, not sure what to say. Even I was a little surprised by the tough love I was spewing.

  “Look, I’m sorry,” I said. “Sometimes I forget what it’s like to be normal. I know it’s all relative, but we can’t save Streeter. Only Streeter can do that.”

  “We need to be there for him.”

  “I know, I know,” I said. Desperation was creeping through me. “You’re right. We’ll get with him tomorrow night at the game. Who knows, maybe everything will sort itself out by then.”

  “You sure he’s coming?”

  “He said he was.” That’s what he said, swear to God.

  She pushed her food around, contemplating. I turned my attention to my own plate, avoiding the temptation to look at her thoughts. Soon, she was eating again. Eating until everything was gone.

  The evening was cool, but humid. The sun was down but the sky was still lit. Chute hooked her arm through mine and laid her head on my shoulder. I couldn’t have scripted it better. We walked down the sidewalk, stepping in time, occasionally tangling our feet and laughing.

  An old woman was at her mailbox, sifting through a wad of magazines.

  “Hi, Mrs. Higgins,” I said.

  She looked up from her cache and squinted. “Hello.”

  Chute looked back. Mrs. Higgins was already on her front steps. “She acted like you were a stranger.”

 

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