Page 64
Story: Poster Girl
Eugenia sighs. She wipes beneath one eye, and then the other.
“You listened to the voicemail we received a few weeks ago?”
Sonya nods.
“Then you’ll understand what I mean soon enough,” Eugenia says. “The name of the dead woman was Alice Gleissner.”
Sonya hears the croak of the voice on the recording.This is your Alice.Alexander told her it was a reference to Alice in Wonderland.
“A ghoulish joke, perhaps, between my husband and me,” Eugenia says. “We called her our Alice because we didn’t want to trigger an alert from our Insights by calling her by a different name. We were assured that wouldn’t happen, that the loophole would take care of that—do you know about the loophole? Yes, of course you do, you’ve done your investigating—but we never felt sure of it. So we gave her the nickname, and we told her it was because of the girl in the story, Alice in Wonderland.”
“Oh,” Sonya says. “Um—do you have a piece of paper for me to write the name down?”
Eugenia looks her over for a moment as if unsure of her. She opens a drawer at the end of the island and takes out a notepad and pen. Sonya scribbles a message for Knox on it—here’s the name Grace’s Insight was registered under—and asks Eugenia to spellAliceGleissneras she copies it down.
“You’re different than I thought you would be,” Eugenia says toher, as she tears the sheet away from the notepad and folds it. “More serious.”
“Yes. Well.” Sonya tucks the paper into her pocket and pulls away from the island. Suddenly she needs to be gone, like she’s been underwater for too long and is becoming desperate for air. She leaves the half-finished glass of orange juice on the counter and moves toward the door. “Thank you for your time, Mrs. Ward.”
She’s made it to the door when Mrs. Ward stops her.
“Sonya.”
She looks back.
“Thank you so much,” she says, “for working so hard to find our daughter.”
Sonya draws a sudden, sharp breath.
“Don’t,” Sonya says, as she opens the door. “Don’t thank me, please.”
She leaves the house, forgetting to close the door behind her, and spills into the street, dodging a cyclist who screams an obscenity at her, stumbling toward the train station, taking deep gulps of air like she’s never tasted it before.
She rides the train back to Knox’s apartment, leaves the note at her front desk, and returns to the Aperture.
That night, she dreams of sitting at the table in the cabin as someone hums “The Narrow Way” right behind her, right into her ear. She stares down at the yellow pill in her hand, and when she lifts her head, she sees that the Wards, not her own family, are sitting all around her: Trudie, Eugenia, and Roger. They tip their heads back in unison, to swallow.
When she wakes, startled, she realizes she was the one humming.
Thirteen
She can’t get the song out of her head. She keeps moving to its rhythm, chewing on its words.Won’t you set aside the lies that you’ve held dear.She thinks of Sam in the sandbox, poking holes with a stick. The fog of Placatia inching toward her. The unobserved hours people bought from Knox.Don’t you know that what’s better is right here?When she got older, she thought of Aaron when she heard that. It would be good, she thought, to marry him, to have a nice little house and weekly dinner parties and two children—with a permit for the second, as the law required. No use resisting it, and no reason to. It was good, because it earned her DesCoin; DesCoin put everything in order, measured and ranked by desirability.
It felt easy.
She goes up to the roof, to the little greenhouse where the seedlings are growing. She knows enough about plants now to know they are best left unfussed with, so she just sits on the stool and watches them and hums the birthday song, to banish “The Narrow Way.” Her hands are shaking and she sits on them.
She hears footsteps on the roof, and sighs. She hasn’t spoken to Nikhil in two days, not since he told her that the world was changing her. She nudges the door open with her toe, expecting to find him there. But Alexander is there instead.
“Mrs. Pritchard told me you might be up here,” he says. “She hasn’t changed at all, has she?”
“No,” Sonya says. “Did she scold you for something?”
“She commented on the length of my hair.” Alexander steps into the greenhouse and makes it feel smaller than it already did. “She never liked me. One time I picked all her irises and gave them to my mom like I’d bought them.”
There’s trouble in his eyes. He’s always shifty, but there is something desperate in the way he sticks a hand in his hair, tugs it. She doesn’t want to ask about it yet.
“You were never good with small talk, either,” she says.
“You listened to the voicemail we received a few weeks ago?”
Sonya nods.
“Then you’ll understand what I mean soon enough,” Eugenia says. “The name of the dead woman was Alice Gleissner.”
Sonya hears the croak of the voice on the recording.This is your Alice.Alexander told her it was a reference to Alice in Wonderland.
“A ghoulish joke, perhaps, between my husband and me,” Eugenia says. “We called her our Alice because we didn’t want to trigger an alert from our Insights by calling her by a different name. We were assured that wouldn’t happen, that the loophole would take care of that—do you know about the loophole? Yes, of course you do, you’ve done your investigating—but we never felt sure of it. So we gave her the nickname, and we told her it was because of the girl in the story, Alice in Wonderland.”
“Oh,” Sonya says. “Um—do you have a piece of paper for me to write the name down?”
Eugenia looks her over for a moment as if unsure of her. She opens a drawer at the end of the island and takes out a notepad and pen. Sonya scribbles a message for Knox on it—here’s the name Grace’s Insight was registered under—and asks Eugenia to spellAliceGleissneras she copies it down.
“You’re different than I thought you would be,” Eugenia says toher, as she tears the sheet away from the notepad and folds it. “More serious.”
“Yes. Well.” Sonya tucks the paper into her pocket and pulls away from the island. Suddenly she needs to be gone, like she’s been underwater for too long and is becoming desperate for air. She leaves the half-finished glass of orange juice on the counter and moves toward the door. “Thank you for your time, Mrs. Ward.”
She’s made it to the door when Mrs. Ward stops her.
“Sonya.”
She looks back.
“Thank you so much,” she says, “for working so hard to find our daughter.”
Sonya draws a sudden, sharp breath.
“Don’t,” Sonya says, as she opens the door. “Don’t thank me, please.”
She leaves the house, forgetting to close the door behind her, and spills into the street, dodging a cyclist who screams an obscenity at her, stumbling toward the train station, taking deep gulps of air like she’s never tasted it before.
She rides the train back to Knox’s apartment, leaves the note at her front desk, and returns to the Aperture.
That night, she dreams of sitting at the table in the cabin as someone hums “The Narrow Way” right behind her, right into her ear. She stares down at the yellow pill in her hand, and when she lifts her head, she sees that the Wards, not her own family, are sitting all around her: Trudie, Eugenia, and Roger. They tip their heads back in unison, to swallow.
When she wakes, startled, she realizes she was the one humming.
Thirteen
She can’t get the song out of her head. She keeps moving to its rhythm, chewing on its words.Won’t you set aside the lies that you’ve held dear.She thinks of Sam in the sandbox, poking holes with a stick. The fog of Placatia inching toward her. The unobserved hours people bought from Knox.Don’t you know that what’s better is right here?When she got older, she thought of Aaron when she heard that. It would be good, she thought, to marry him, to have a nice little house and weekly dinner parties and two children—with a permit for the second, as the law required. No use resisting it, and no reason to. It was good, because it earned her DesCoin; DesCoin put everything in order, measured and ranked by desirability.
It felt easy.
She goes up to the roof, to the little greenhouse where the seedlings are growing. She knows enough about plants now to know they are best left unfussed with, so she just sits on the stool and watches them and hums the birthday song, to banish “The Narrow Way.” Her hands are shaking and she sits on them.
She hears footsteps on the roof, and sighs. She hasn’t spoken to Nikhil in two days, not since he told her that the world was changing her. She nudges the door open with her toe, expecting to find him there. But Alexander is there instead.
“Mrs. Pritchard told me you might be up here,” he says. “She hasn’t changed at all, has she?”
“No,” Sonya says. “Did she scold you for something?”
“She commented on the length of my hair.” Alexander steps into the greenhouse and makes it feel smaller than it already did. “She never liked me. One time I picked all her irises and gave them to my mom like I’d bought them.”
There’s trouble in his eyes. He’s always shifty, but there is something desperate in the way he sticks a hand in his hair, tugs it. She doesn’t want to ask about it yet.
“You were never good with small talk, either,” she says.
Table of Contents
- Page 1
- Page 2
- Page 3
- Page 4
- Page 5
- Page 6
- Page 7
- Page 8
- Page 9
- Page 10
- Page 11
- Page 12
- Page 13
- Page 14
- Page 15
- Page 16
- Page 17
- Page 18
- Page 19
- Page 20
- Page 21
- Page 22
- Page 23
- Page 24
- Page 25
- Page 26
- Page 27
- Page 28
- Page 29
- Page 30
- Page 31
- Page 32
- Page 33
- Page 34
- Page 35
- Page 36
- Page 37
- Page 38
- Page 39
- Page 40
- Page 41
- Page 42
- Page 43
- Page 44
- Page 45
- Page 46
- Page 47
- Page 48
- Page 49
- Page 50
- Page 51
- Page 52
- Page 53
- Page 54
- Page 55
- Page 56
- Page 57
- Page 58
- Page 59
- Page 60
- Page 61
- Page 62
- Page 63
- Page 64
- Page 65
- Page 66
- Page 67
- Page 68
- Page 69
- Page 70
- Page 71
- Page 72
- Page 73
- Page 74
- Page 75
- Page 76
- Page 77
- Page 78
- Page 79
- Page 80
- Page 81
- Page 82
- Page 83
- Page 84
- Page 85
- Page 86
- Page 87
- Page 88
- Page 89
- Page 90
- Page 91
- Page 92
- Page 93
- Page 94
- Page 95
- Page 96
- Page 97
- Page 98