
Solitaire
Kelley Eskridge
Harper Collins, 9/02
ISBN: 0060088575
Chapter One
Chapter 1
So here she was, framed in the open double doors like a photograph: Jackal
Segura on the worst day of her life, preparing to join the party. The
room splayed wide before her, swollen with voices, music, human heat,
and she thought perhaps this was a bad idea after all. But she was conscious
of the picture she made, backlit in gold by the autumn afternoon sun,
standing square, taking up space. A good entrance, casually dramatic.
People were already noticing, smiling; there's our Jackal being herself.
There's our Hope. It shamed her, now that she knew it was a lie.
She took a breath and
stepped into the chaos of color and noise, conscious of her bare face.
Most people had made some effort at a Halloween costume, even if only
a few finger smears of paint along cheekbone or forehead. Enough to make
them unrecognizable, alien. She had a vision of Ko Island full of monsters
lurching to the beat that boomed like a kodo drum, so loud that she imagined
the huge western windows bulging under the pressure, only a moment from
jagged eruption. It could happen. There was always a breaking point.
But she should not be
thinking about things breaking, about her life splintered like a bone
that could never be set straight. She should wipe from her mind her mother's
voice, thin and sharp, They give you everything and you don't deserve
it, you're no more a Hope than I am! She should stop wanting to split
Donatella's head open for saying it. And she should not yearn to lay herself
in her mother's lap and beg her take it back, Mama, make it better
while Donatella stroked her hair. What good would it do? Her mother would
only find a way to break her all over again.
Enough.
She shook her head and braced herself against the jostle of bodies. Fuck
Donatella. Jackal would cope. She would find a way to work it out. She
was here, that was the first step: and somewhere in this confusion were
the people she neededher web mates, her peers among the second generation
of Ko Corporation citizen-employees. Her web was the world. Her web was
safety. She only had to brave the crowd long enough to find them.
She guessed they would
stake out their usual space by the windows that faced the cliffs and the
sea beyond. They would be drinking and laughing, expansive, expecting
only what everyone expectedthat the world turned, that business
was good, that the company prospered and its people prospered with it,
flowers in the sun of Ko. With Jackal as the tallest sunflower in the
bunch. It was a ludicrous image, with her olive skin and dark eyes, but
it was true. She was the one they looked to, the budding Hope of Ko. Every
person of the companythe three hundred in the room, the four hundred
thousand on the island, the two million around the worldwatched
their Hope with a mix of awe and possession, as if she were a marvelous
new grain in the research garden, or the current stock valuation. They
knew her latest aptitude scores and her taste for mango sorbet. They had
opinions about her. They parsed her future at their dinner tables. Is
she ready? Will she be a good Hope? Compelling questions for the past
twenty-two years, gathering urgency now as Jackal approached her investiture.
In just two months she would go to Al Iskandariyah, where the heart of
the world government pumped, to stand with the other Hopes in the first
breath of the new year, the shared second of their birth. At twenty-three,
they would be of age in any society, legally entitled to take up their
symbolic place in the global administration. But what was the task? You
are the world builders, the official letter from Earth Congress read.
Jackal knew it by heart; she bet all the Hopes did, the thousands scattered
around the planet who had been born in the first second of the first attempt
to unify the world. We honor you as the first citizens born into the
new age of world coalition. You are the face of unity: the living symbol
of our hope to be a global community with shared dreams and common goals.
That was who she was: the Hope of
Ko. The Hope of the only commercial entity on the
planet with its own home territory and almost-realized independence from
its host nation, only a few negotiations away from becoming the first corporate-state
in the new world order; the only commercial concern powerful enough to leverage
its impact on world economy into inclusion in the Hope program that had,
over the years, become an increasingly meaningful symbol of influence and
power in the emerging Earth Congress and Earth Court.
"Coming through!"
a man called as he bumped past her and spattered beer on her shirt. She
bit down on the impulse to say something nasty; instead, she ducked her
head and stepped back. The Hope must be always gracious. The Hope must show
the best face of Ko.
She had been aware for most
of her twenty-two years that she carried the future of the company in some
way that was undefined, emblematic. She had tried to visualize it. She could
see herself in Al Iskandariyah, living in a functionary's apartment near
the marketplace with its smells of boiled wool and incense and calamari
fried in glass-green olive oil. She could imagine the cool hallways of the
Green and Blue Houses of government. But she never pictured herself doing
anything. What exactly was a Hope supposed to do? All she was being taught
was what any manager at Ko might learn, albeit more quickly and with more
personal attention from her trainers; there had to be more to being a Hope
than that. She squeezed her eyes shut against the frenzied loop playing
in her brain: no more a Hope no hope no hope
Breathe, she told herself.
The music seemed louder, the air thicker with sweat and the smell of beer.
A new track was playing, that song about fame, and she felt her lips pull
back from her teeth. Easypeople were watching. She pulled her jacket
tighter around her chest and managed a general nod to as many of them as
she could. She had to find the web. Especially Snow. All she wanted right
now was someone to be safe with. But maybe she would never be safe again,
never safe, never
"Jackal!" A hand
on her arm. "Great, you're here. Hey, they're playing your song."
Tiger laughed at his own joke, and she made herself smile even though it
was hard.
"Hey, Tiger."
"Where've you been?
Everybody's asking for you. Come on, we're over here. I'll get you a drink."
Drawing her into the music and the laughter, his body warm from dancing,
just a little too close. Another thing to deal with. Later, she thought.
First a drink and some space to wind down. And Snow. I'll deal with the
rest of it later.
He led her to the back of
the room, opening a path with a touch on one person's shoulder, a gentle
nudge of his hip to an enthusiastic dancer, a grin and a clever word for
all of them as he cleared them from his way. The music battered at her;
her heart took up the beat. And there was the web, some dancing in the glow
of the sea-refracted sun, some stuffed two to a chair, loud and laughing;
a few at a corner table with a pitcher of beer, muttering over a project
timeline. Business and life moving belly-to-belly. Ko might be structured
along traditional lines of management, but it was sustained by the webs
that cut across hierarchies and divisions, people focused on the company
but loyal to one another. As familiar as family. Web mates liked or loved
or despised each other, but regardless they made each other successful,
and Ko thrived.
"Jackal!"
"Hey, Jackal."
"Hey." She was
especially glad to see Bear and Turtle, both good friends, both solid and
safe. She smiled, settling into a chair next to them. Bear blinked at her
from behind his feathered half-mask, turquoise and scarlet, dramatic against
his mahogany skin. "Where's your costume? We should send you back home
and make you change."
"She came as an ordinary
person," Turtle said, leaning over to hug her. From someone else it
might have been a nasty remark. Today, it hurt precisely because it was
so earnest, so obviously well-meant. "Feliz Vispera de Todos Los
Santos," he said with a smile.
"She always looks like
that," Mist said. That wasn't exactly nasty, just disapproving.
Tiger had come up beside
her with a tall glass of something orange and cold. "Oh, lay off,"
he said. Then, to Jackal, "Here, try this."
"What is it?"
He
gave her a look. "Try it. If you don't like it, I'll get you something
else."
She took a sip: lovely,
cool orange juice with something warm and rich behind it. "Mmm,"
she said, nodding. "Good." She took another, larger swallow.
"What is it?"
"Brandy and orange
juice. My new favorite drink."
"It's revolting,"
Mist said. Tiger rolled his eyes at Jackal. She raised her glass to him
and drank down the rest in one breath, then wiped her arm across her mouth.
Turtle chuckled.
"Well," Tiger
said. "You'd better have this one too." He handed her his glass.
"Thanks." Another
deep swallow, until her stomach felt hard and full, and waves of heat
started up her spine. The party rolled around her, music and laughter,
people in motion. She wanted Snow. The others were talking over her; as
far as she could tell, she'd interrupted a debate about planning the web's
holiday celebration. She tuned it out: she didn't care. She didn't mind
New Year's Eve; there were no presents to buy, and she liked champagne,
and the New Year toast always morphed into everyone wishing her a happy
birthday. But she did not expect to enjoy this New Year's. She would be
in some official residence in Al Iskandariyah preparing for investiture,
unless of course someone found out about her and de-Hoped her, whatever
that entailed.
That made her want to
cry. She blinked and peered at her empty glass. She could feel Tiger watching;
she asked, "Can I have another one of these?"
He studied her for a moment
before he answered. "Whatever's wrong, is there anything I can do?"
She gave him a plastic
cheerful smile. "Everything's fine. All I need is another drink and
to find Snow. Do you know where she is?"
"She's taking around
a group of little kid trick-or-treaters. She left about a half hour ago."
Oh, damn, damn, she thought,
and knew he saw it. She had been counting on Snow's comforting arm and
anchoring solidity. Tiger sighed so briefly that she almost missed it,
and it was one more thing she couldn't cope with right now. He said, "Does
that mean you're going too, or do you still want that drink?"
Great. Just terrific.
Snow was gone, Tiger was hurt, and Jackal felt overwhelmingly tired of
all of them, especially her own helpless self. What did people do when
they were uprooted, a torn tree tumbling in the funnel cloud? "Drink,"
she said, ignoring the voice inside her that was saying be careful,
Jackal. "I'll definitely have another drink."
"Okay," Tiger
answered, sounding surprised and slightly mollified. "I'll be right
back."
But he wasn't. She could
see the crowd around the bar, and she imagined him patiently negotiating
a way through the thicket of raucous people because she had asked. They
give you everything and you don't deserve it! the mother-voice screeched
again, rolling over her like the waves she had seen breaking onto the
beach as she walked to her parents' house earlier that afternoon. It was
a beautiful day: the sunlit asphalt road overhung by brilliant dying leaves
and a periwinkle sky, quiet except for the creek at the edge of the property
chewing its mouthfuls of silt, and a seagull skreeking toward the sea.
Her mother was in her
office, working. She put her cheek up distractedly for Jackal to kiss.
"Ren, sweetheart, what a lovely surprise."
Jackal could see that
she meant it. That was the hardest part, sometimes. She sat on the visitor's
chair by the desk, gathering herself. She thought she was ready, although
she always dreaded these conversations. When she was little, she had for
a time carried school papers and awards home as proudly as a cat fetching
a dead garter snake; but she had learned that Donatella responded strangely
to her daughter's success. And this time would be worse. Still, she had
to deliver the news, and then do her best not to see her mother's jaw
stiffen and her head start to shake very slightly, her gaze flatten as
her smile grew wide; Donatella would show too many teeth, and her congratulations
would be bracketed by the usual "Well, of course, if they really
think you can handle it," or, "Now don't worry, I'm sure they'll
give you lots of backup, they do make a lot of allowances for you."
Then her father would see her to the door, saying softly, "Of course
your mother loves you, hija, she's just very competitive by nature,"
as he had a thousand times since Jackal was old enough to start having
accomplishments of her own.
But
today Carlos wasn't there, and things went bad right away.
"I have some news
to share with you, but I'm a little nervous about it because I think it
might put us in an awkward position with each other," Jackal said.
She thought it was a good beginning; she'd been working on it all the
way to the house.
Her mother turned in her
chair so that Jackal could see most, but not all, of her face. It was
a power position: you have enough of my attention to serve courtesy,
but I'll be getting back to my very important work in just a moment.
"You don't need to facilitate me, dear," Donatella said, managing
to sound both irritated and amused.
"I'm not trying to...."
Jackal took a breath. "I want...."
"Ren, just say whatever
you have to say."
She wanted to say, Mama,
you're supposed to be such a good communicator, so why doesn't this ever
work better? But instead she replied, "Okay. I've been asked to take
over a new project in the next few weeks. The Garbo project."
Outside, a bird warbled
a few shrill notes.
"I'm supposed to
take Garbo," Donatella said.
"The administration
has decided it's an appropriate training opportunity for me."
"It's not a training
project," Donatella snapped, and Jackal tried not to wince. "It's
much too complex for someone at your level. I've been preparing for months.
It's my project," she repeated, as if Jackal simply hadn't understood
the situation and would become reasonable as soon as the point was clear.
"I'm sorry,"
Jackal said. "I wanted you to hear about it from me." She meant
to go on, perhaps say something like it's not my fault, or please
don't be mad at me, but Donatella rolled right over her.
"This is ridiculous.
It makes no sense. It's a huge assignment and you're leaving in a couple
of months. What are they thinking?" Her head was beginning to shake.
"Neill promised me the project himself. He's certainly not going
to like this when he hears about it."
"My instructions
came from Neill," Jackal said, trying to make her voice as calm as
possible so she wouldn't feed her mother's tailspin.
"There's been a mistake.
I'm sure that's all it is. I'll talk to him and get it sorted out."
"Mama," Jackal
began, and heard the pleading tone that her mother always seemed to bring
out in her, "Mama, I know you're upset"
"Of course I'm upset!
They've got no right! And giving it to you is laughable, you're clearly
not ready for it."
Jackal replied, as evenly
as she could, "It's true I need to prepare. I don't know much about
the background and the particulars yet. I would certainly value your advice."
She took another deep breath. "Of course you can talk to Neill, but
he said plainly that I will be leading the project. I hope you understand
I'm not happy about the way it's been handled. I don't want you to feel
I'm taking something away from you."
"You little pig,"
her mother said shockingly, sickeningly, her voice like flint. "Of
course you're taking it away from me. Did you even stop to think about
it?" She threw up a hand. "Don't bother to answer. You probably
think, oh well, they'll just give her something else. And they will, but
not like this one. Not as important. Garbo's getting more attention from
the Executive Council than any project in at least the last five years.
I've been talking to Neill about it since Phase One started. I've been
working overtime to get my other projects wrapped up so I could be ready.
I've read every single project report, the minutes of every meeting. And
you have the nerve to sit there and say you don't know much about it.
But you'll take it. Again. Again! Because you're the Hope. No,
just be quiet," she said, her voice rising. Jackal was trying to
say Stop, Mama, don't do this. "And don't look at me like
that," Donatella continued, the words foaming out like white water
boiling over sharp stones. "Of course it's because you're the Hope.
Anything Ren Segura needs, anything Ren Segura wants, whether you're ready
for it or not, whether you can even understand it. All of it taken from
someone else! Every training opportunity," she spat the words, "every
accelerated class, every place at the head of every line, every second
of attention could be going to someone who's worked and worked and worked
and then has to stand by and see it all go to you because you're the precious
Hope. Again and again
and
again! But you can't have this, you can't! You've had your chances. This
is mine!" She was shouting now, her mouth enormous. "It's not
fair, they give you everything, everything, the best chance I'll ever have
and you don't deserve it, you're no more a Hope than I am!"
And then her mother gasped
and put a hand to her mouth, the left hand with the old scar showing stark
white: and they sat in awful silence until Jackal said, "What do
you mean?"
Born too late, was what
it came down to, even after all the careful planning, the induced labor,
the drugs, the forceps. They had dragged her out of her mother's womb
well past the first second of the new year; her birth, as with all the
potential Hope births, recorded by tamper-proof time-stamp technology
supplied by EarthGov. Which had promptly been subverted by the technicians.
"It's Ko technology, after all," Donatella said. "We should
know how to get around it."
And so they had, and little
Ren grew up and took the web name Jackal and worked and trained and prepared,
the unknowing center of an enormous secret, a plan that had seemingly
run itself like clockwork for twenty-two years. Until now: until her mother
had lost her temper in the one way she never should. Jackal understood
why Donatella's voice had changed from fury to fear at the end, why she
had followed Jackal onto the front terrace, saying "Ren! Ren, wait!
Come back and let's hammer this out." But Jackal hadn't gone back.
Don't negotiate me, she had thought bitterly, I'm not a fucking business
deal. Except she was; and that was the real problem, the bottom line.
The company had wanted a Hope badly enough to take the enormous risk of
creating one, and the Hope's own mother had destabilized her at this most
critical juncture. Ko would crucify her mother if they knew.
And maybe they should.
How dare Donatella do this to her, make her so miserable that she could
sit surrounded by her web and feel so alone? She had a sudden longing
to hurt her mother. Hurt her deep. She imagined herself in some vice president's
office telling the story doggedly, piously, saying, "I'm completely
on board with this, but I'm a little worried that my mother is so upset."
God, it's tempting, she thought.
"What is?" Tiger
said, drinks in hand, startling her; she hadn't meant to speak aloud.
Can't tell you, she thought, can't tell anybody, and then hoped she hadn't
said that out loud as well. "This is," she said as brightly
as she could, reaching for the glass.
Around her, her web mates
chattered on. She wanted to scream. She wanted to hit something. She wanted
Snow to hold her. But she had come here to get centered, so best be about
it. She roused herself and waded into the conversation, made herself focus
and listen and smile, smile, smile. She shifted so Tiger could perch on
the arm of her chair. She recounted for Bear the entire plot of a play
she'd seen in Esperance Park, complete with arm-waving descriptions of
the fight scenes. She fetched her own next drink from the bar, and commiserated
with someone from another web about the stress of the holiday season,
her voice saying agreeably, "It sounds like you have a lot on your
plate right now," while her head said you have no fucking idea,
sport.
None of it worked. She
knew she had only to say, "I have a problem, I need your help,"
and she would get everyone's undivided attention, the benefit of the dozens
of brains here and the others who were part of the web, whether a mile
away or a thousand. But she couldn't do it; she didn't know how to open
her mouth and say I'm not a Hope. It was like saying, I am a
lie; I am not real.
"I am real,"
she told herself. "I am real."
"What?" Tiger
asked, leaning in closer, smiling down at her. "What did you say?"
"I am really drunk,"
she said. "And I am really tired of the whole stupid world and I
just want to forget about everything for a while."
"Then let's dance."
"That's a great idea.
I'd love to. Umm...can you help me stand up?"
He laughed. "Sure."
She took his hand. "Don't
let me fall, Tiger," she said. "Don't let me fall."
That night
she dreamed of Terry on the cliffs.
They were seven years
old, on a school trip to the south coast of Ko on an early spring day.
This was one of the few natural parts of the island; the rest was human-made,
a project of the company's very profitable custom land-mass construction
subsidiary. Ren and Terry scrambled along the cliff's edge with the other
children, examining rock formations. They were supervised by teachers
and the requisite accompanying parents, including Donatella. It was already
clear to Ren that these trips made her mother restless and impatient,
and she wished Donatella wouldn't come; not all the parents did, even
though they were supposed to take turns. But her mother always put on
her best pair of walking shoes and insisted brightly that she was looking
forward to it, darling Ren, of course she wouldn't miss it.
Today, Donatella was organizing
the parents and teachers as easily as she ran multinational projects;
she had completely rearranged the supervising teacher's safety plan and
was ordering everyone about. The teacher tried to argue: Ren sighed, and
pulled Terry farther along the bluff, farther than they were supposed
to go. Behind them the teacher's voice grated against the rocks, and Donatella
murmured soothingly.
Ren and Terry dug together for a while, saving the best rocks aside in
a fiber bag, and making a game of pretending that the rejected bits were
horrible criminals being forced to leap to their deaths. The adult voices
buzzed behind them.
"Your mom never yells
back," Terry said, after a while. He was smaller than Ren, and even
better at math, and the only person she knew beside herself who had ever
stayed up all night just to see what happened to the moon.
"She doesn't need
to yell," Ren answered. "She always gets what she wants. She
calls it clarifying."
"Maybe"
Terry began, and then the cliff suddenly sighed and slid away from under
his bottom, and he went down with it in a silent, surprised bundle of
arms and legs, his mouth and eyes wide. He broke apart on the rocks as
he fell.
The ground under Ren began
to shift. Her fear was liquid silver weighing down her arms and legs.
"Ren, get away from
the edge!" her mother shouted in her command voice, the voice that
must be obeyed. Donatella was forty feet away, already in motion; but
Ren could not move. Down below, Terry's small body lay in an impossible
shape. Another large section of crust began to slide, and Donatella howled
and threw herself the last ten feet, landed hard on her stomach and flung
out both arms to snatch Ren's wrists as the ground under her went down
in a rumble. Ren hung over the raw new edge and heard her mother's left
hand crackle as one of the big rocks rolled on it. Donatella turned white
and began to pant, but she didn't let go of her daughter until there were
two other adults there to help lift her the rest of the way.
Surgery
restored most of the function of the hand, after endless weeks of physiotherapy
and a confining rehabilitative brace that made Donatella clumsy and bitter.
Ren knew that she was to blame for her mother's pain, because she hadn't
obeyed. And maybe it was her fault that Terry had fallen. She wasn't sure:
no one had told her. But she knew that she had failed in responsibility.
She decided that she must
make sure to never, never forget what she had done. She crept out to the
garden and found the largest stone that she could hold with one hand,
a beautiful ragged thing of gray and brown. It was a day like a painting:
a hundred shades of green in the leaves and grasses and lily pads of the
pond, in the vegetable tops waving from the brown grit of the soil; the
sky that looked as if one of the blue colorsticks in her classroom had
melted across it; the pinks and lavenders and sun-yellows of the flowers
whose names she didn't know, that nodded wild and rangy on their thin
stalks because her father liked them that way. The pain, when it came,
was sharp and orange. She managed to hit her left hand twice before Carlos
found her.
"Oh, Ren," he
said, after he'd made her an ice pack and wiped her tears. "Don't
hurt yourself. That won't help. The only thing that helps is to do better
next time."
She waited for him to
tell her how, but he only hugged her and said, "Okay?"
She wasn't sure, but she
wanted to please him, so she told him, "I'll do better."
The above is excerpted from Silitaire by Kelley Eskridge (copyright by Kelley Eskridge 2002). All rights reserved. No part of
this book may be used or reproduced without written permission from HarperCollins Publishers, 10 East 53rd
Street, New York, NY 10022
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