THE VIEWING OF KANATTA LARE, PART II
In which Attari, watching Kanatta Lare's interview, sees far more than she bargained for.
"Gah!" said Attari.
"Hi," said Lady Orialu.
"I am
so sorry, Ladin Ca'unaal," said an aide, which made Attari jump all over again. She hadn't realized there'd been other people in the room; the shock of Orialu's presence had obliterated theirs. "She – I mean, her ladyship – "
"It's quite alright, Missin Lau," said Rialeh. "Her Ascendant Radiance can be…difficult to deny. I promise you, I understand."
Rialeh stepped into the inquest chamber, Attari trailing just behind him. It was then that she noticed that today Lady Orialu carried her spear. Its bare blade and the rings adoring the crossguard gleamed quietly under the room's low light. Something about the sight of it filled Attari with a sudden, unreasonable fear, and she quickly cast her eyes about the room for anything that might distract her.
There wasn't much.
So this is the kind of room they were watching me from? For all Attari knew, it might have been the very same one. She looked around: dark carpet, table and chairs, one wall made up of screens showing different video feeds, ceiling-mounted luxtruder, a glass cabinet whose contents Attari couldn't make out in the dim lighting. It should have bored her. Instead, it unnerved her.
Plants… whispered Word in Emptiness, voice colored with unease.
Attari took another look around the inquest chamber, but saw none. No art, either. No human touches at all. Now that she'd noticed, it was impossible to put it out of her mind. Something about the fact that Attari's fate was being decided in a room just like this one made her wrap her arms around herself and suppress a shiver.
"Composite view," Rialeh said to the wallscreen that formed one end of the room. Attari stared. She knew, objectively, that the wallscreen had simply gone from showing multiple angles of the interview room to just one, but the display was so perfect that part of her wanted to go up to the screen and touch it, like a child, to make sure that there was actually a screen and that the inquest chamber hadn't simply stopped being one room and become another one.
Nice, said Word, low and awed.
Nice, agreed Attari.
Really, really nice. Gods, how much does a display like that cost?
The first person to enter the room on the screen was another legalist – pretty enough, Attari supposed, with his slender figure and dark-violet eyes, but certainly not as beautiful as Rialeh. Then Kanatta Lare walked in, and Attari flinched.
She couldn't help it. The reproduction on the screen was so perfect that for a moment Attari found herself back in Lare's office, hearing that impossible proposal, with the scent of smoked-yam liquor in her nose…
Lady Orialu looked over at the movement, which filled Attari with embarrassment and made Word in Emptiness shrink and cower. Attari stared determinedly straight ahead at the viewing screen, until she felt the strange heat-weight of Orialu's gaze leave her.
Kanatta Lare ranged across the screen, a long, rawboned woman with graying blue-black hair, slate-colored eyes, and star marks that glowed a faded blue.
She hadn't had her paired spirit taken away; the lacquered hand mirror that anchored Lare's partner, Cracked Seeing Glass, hung from a silvery chain at her waist, swaying and flashing in time with her strides. Lare's thin, hard mouth was set in a polite smile, as if she'd been summoned to this interview for nothing more than conversation.
Attari was faintly, sickly envious.
"I suppose I can't smoke here?"
Lare's rough-edged voiced sawed its familiar way down Attari's spine; Word in Emptiness shivered in sympathy with her flesh. Without thinking, Attari began to pick at her own cuticles, just as she'd always done back at
Cry Verasaahi whenever Kanatta Lare had called her into her office.
"I'm afraid not, Miss Lare," said her legalist as the two sat down opposite one another.
"Pity," said Lare. "I wouldn't have minded sharing a twist with a pretty thing like you." She leaned back and spread her long, thin hands over the arms of her chair. "If we can't share some leaf, there must be something else I can do for you." She raised one sharp brow. "Go on, then, and tell me what it is. I doubt I'll be surprised."
"You are here to provide testimony," Lare's legalist replied. "As Miss Attari Ila's employer, you have been identified as a person of interest in the case concerning her."
"And there it is," said Lare. "Yes, I expected to be pulled for testimony about her. Poor girl. She's an able enough employee, but this business with the Nineteenth Edict…"
"Yes," said her legalist. "I'm sure you've seen the footage of Ila's arrest? She claims she was compelled to violate the edict."
"Compelled," echoed Lare, disdainfully. "Yes, Missin Caih, I saw. The arrest wouldn't have been so bad if Attari had just gone along gracefully – but no, she had to try and find some higher, hidden figure to pin the whole mess on. Like a child looking for a skirt to hide behind."
Every word out of Lare's mouth put Attari more and more firmly back into the offices of
Cry Verasaahi, until even Lady Orialu's nearby presence barely registered to her.
I'm sorry, she wanted to say to the wallscreen's vision of Lare. Her hands twisted in her lap.
I'm sorry, I didn't think, I couldn't, I was so scared –
Attari! Word in Emptiness's voice snapped her back to her senses.
Blood!
Attari looked down and finally noticed the pain licking warmly at some of her nailbeds, and the faint, dark smear on her lap. She flushed and snuck glances at the others in the room. Rialeh didn't seem to have noticed, nor Missin Ru, nor Missin Lau –
– but Lady Orialu was staring directly at her, eye and spearblade gleaming.
Gods, I must disgust her. Attari's spine prickled as she tried to keep her shoulders straight, her eyes up and ahead.
I probably don't even look like a real woman to her – all shrinking and scared, flinching at every little thing around me – I'd be disgusted to see me, if I was as strong as her. She tried to stop picking, but it was no good. The moment Attari lifted her eyes to the screen, her fingers were back at it, releasing more blood, and Lady Orialu's gaze kept drilling into the side of her head.
Please! Her heartbeats started coming too hot, too fast. Her thoughts were unraveling.
Please, just stop, stop picking, stop looking –
Finally, desperately, Attari sat on top of her own hands. She felt so stupid, but it was the only thing she could think to do. And perhaps hiding her bloody fingertips away was all Lady Orialu had wanted of her, for after a few more moments, her gaze at last slid away. Attari nearly gasped with relief.
Kanatta Lare's voice rang out from the screen again. The relief vanished. Attari wanted to find Rialeh and excuse herself, but then someone would have to escort her back to her rooms, and what right did she have to pull Rialeh or Ru or Lau away from their work, or Lady Orialu away from her venarch's education, just because of her own weak nerves? She'd
wanted to be here.
"She never could own up to a failing, you know," Lare was telling Caih. She waved one long, dark-nailed hand through the air. "Always some excuse or another with her. I tolerated it, of course, for the sake of her mother's memory, but…well, I did always tell her that habit would disgrace her someday."
"That must have been vexing, as her employer," said Caih. He put a finger to his lower lip, as if in thought. "So why keep her at all, Miss Lare? Surely you'd rather have someone more…reliable?"
Lare laughed, a sound that had always reminded Attari of a flock of crows exploding into flight. "Oh, Attari has her good points," she said. Attari didn't want to be happy to hear that, but praise from Lare always made her melt. "Eager to please…very eager…and quite a hard worker, too, once you give her some direction. But really – " Lare sighed briefly, and the laughter left her face. "I took her on for her mother's sake, may she rest quietly."
"Ooh, what a saint
you are," said Lady Orialu in a low, venomous voice. Her words pierced the ballooning dread that had been filling Attari – in fact, they left her biting her own lip to stifle a laugh.
Shit! she thought.
What I wouldn't pay to watch her say that to Lare's face!
"My lady," started Rialeh, "please – "
"I know, Ca'unaal, feelings like that sway a verdict, I should control them," said Orialu. "But can the record state that I really want to turn her face into pulp right now?"
"Can
you stop disrupting the viewing of Miss Lare?" There was a faint, icy bite to Rialeh's voice that Attari had never heard before. Then, tiredly: "Missin Ru, Missin Lau, please do not let the record state anything of the sort."
Instead of getting afraid, or angrier, that actually seemed to make Orialu happy. With a grin, and an exhalation that wasn't quite a laugh, she turned back to keep watching the screenfeed. Word in Emptiness pulsed silent confusion through Attari's mind. There was little Attari could do but mentally shrug in agreement.
Nobles. Weird.
" – So when Aiura disappeared," Lare was saying, "and the industry shunned her daughter, I did what I could.
Cry Verasaahi is no
Glittering Record, I won't pretend otherwise, but I saw how badly Attari wanted to follow in her mother's footsteps and couldn't help but offer her a place with me. I'm sure she would have gone anywhere else if they'd have had her, but…" Lare made a spread-fan motion with her hand, as if to say,
you see how it all turned out. "She's stayed for, oh, a little more than ten years now. If she really wanted to leave my humble little ragmill, she would have. No one's
forcing her to keep working in media, Missin Caih."
The brazen magnitude of Lare's lie nearly made Attari choke on her own tongue.
If I wanted to! Her hands tried to clench up under her thighs; her brain ran in idiot circles. Word in Emptiness buzzed like a wasp trapped in her skull.
If I wanted to! You think it's that easy? When you – when Mother – if I wanted to!
By the time her anger had receded enough for Attari to rejoin reality, the interview had moved on.
"I would describe my leadership of
Cry Verasaahi as fair, though perhaps a bit unforgiving," said Lare. "But in my defense, the media industry itself is unforgiving, even for a paper as small and humble as my own. Especially for a paper as small and humble as my own. Smaller fish are swallowed up much more easily than bigger ones, after all."
"Fair," said Caih. "Yes, I suppose every business owner wishes to see herself that way."
"Why, Missin Caih, are you speaking shadewise about me?" Through the hyperperfect display of the wallscreen, Attari could see Lare stiffen ever so slightly in her chair. Or could she? Maybe she was only seeing what she wanted to see in Lare – a guilty conscience, a touch of discomfort, something, anything. "I didn't know you legalists were permitted to do that."
"Perhaps not," said Caih. "But we are permitted to take testimony from all of your employees before approaching you." He smiled, sweetly.
"All of them, Miss Lare, not just Attari Ila."
There was a long, stony silence.
"Is that so?" Lare said. There was no question of whether Attari's eyes were fooling her now; Lare's face was unchanged, but the tendons in the backs of her hands stood out clear and stark. It was a warning sign Attari knew well.
But she can't grab you by the face here, she reminded herself.
Or slam her hands on the desk, or throw a bottle, or get out her mirror – none of that, not here. Thinking that didn't stop Attari's heart from pounding clear up to her eardrums, but it did at least let her breathe evenly.
"Did you know, Miss Lare? All of your employees from whom we took testimony have something in common," said Caih. "Would you like to guess what it is?"
"Not particularly," said Lare. Her face was hard, unflinching, but her eyes were somewhere far away. "I expect you're about to tell me, anyway."
"All of them," said Caih – his smile now lit up his violet eyes – "were desperate. For one reason or another, they felt there was no place for them to go but
Cry Verasaahi. Hard but fair, is that how you described your workplace? I suspect it may be something more akin to a cradle of despair. And Miss Ila – she certainly seemed desperate. I do wonder what could have made her desperate enough to violate the Nineteen Edict so dramatically."
"You don't need to ask
me that," Lare spat, with a sudden, terrible coldness that made Attari startle in her seat. "I know you've mined the little slit's brain dry already. Not that there could have been much to dig out."
"There's no need to speak of her like
that," Caih said, raising one well-groomed brow. Attari, sickened by Lare's words, felt absurdly grateful. "I simply – "
"You simply dragged me here with a verdict already set in your minds," Lare said, and uttered a jagged laugh. Her eyes looked darker somehow, and terribly distant. "Coming for me last of all – oh, yes, I see how it is. How kind of you, to preserve my dignity by pretending it was only an interview! Truly, no light shines brighter than the grace of our venarch! Excuse me." Her voice fell abruptly back into its normal pitch. Just as abruptly, she rose from her chair. "I must walk. It will help clear my head. No, no, I won't try to leave this room, I'm not as stupid as you people think." She gave another laugh. "Why don't you tell me the suspicions leveled at me while I pace, Missin Caih? I'm sure they'll blossom into a lovely set of charges soon enough."
"Very well." Caih sighed and tucked a loose strand of hair behind his ear, as if Lare's rage were a mere annoyance. "At this time, you are suspected of coercion, of abusive employment practices, and of being the greater conspirator in the case of Attari Ila. More charges may arise; the investigation is scarcely a week old. I will say, regardless of how your case unfolds, the charges relating to workplace abuse are likely to stick."
Lare, still pacing, gave another harsh laugh. "Yes," she said. Her eyes were lightless holes. "Yes, and once you have me, you'll be able to extract further confessions at your leisure. Stop looking at me, I can feel your contempt when you do. What sort of way is that to treat a guest?" Her voice inched nearer to hysteria. "You haven't even offered me any
tea!"
"Tea could be arranged, should you cooperate with us," said Caih.
"Cooperate with
you!" said Lare. She sounded as if Caih had suggested that she dump her mother's ashes into a wasteway.
"It would make your life easier," said Caih, almost gently. "A quicker case, a lighter sentence…"
"And the life after the sentence, did you consider that?" Lare's hand went to her partner's anchor and began to rhythmically clench and unclench about the mirror's handle. "How do you imagine the person who contracted me will feel, to know that I
cooperated? Because I can imagine it, Missin Caih, I can imagine it very – clearly!"
And with that, Kanatta Lare smashed her partner's mirror against the interrogation room wall.
On the hyperreal screen display, Attari watched Caih turn slowly – too slowly. Already Lare held a shard of glass in bleeding fingers. As Caih began a hopeless run towards her, Lare plunged the shard into her own throat and then gave it a sharp, effortful jerk sideways, through skin and meat and gristle. Lare made a gagging, gurgling noise. Blood sheeted down her front as she collapsed to her knees, turning her skin dark-red and her clothes a sodden black.
Attari saw no more. She was as powerless to stop the scream that erupted from her own throat as Lare was to stop the blood from hers. She was just as powerless to stop her body as it flew from her chair to the door of the observation room. The handle wouldn't turn; Attari yanked on it again, desperately, and again.
Blood! Word in Emptiness sent panicked flutterings through Attari's mind.
Attari! Blood!
Then Rialeh was pushing her gently aside and unlocking the door. Attari flung it open and practically fell through the frame. Her legs didn't seem to want to support her.
As Attari leaned, shaking, against the nearest wall, she heard a metallic jangling and felt a sudden breeze blow past her face. She looked up to see Lady Orialu stalking down the hallway at a rapid clip. Each line of her body looked like a tension cable stretched to its limit. The rings on her spear chimed in time with her strides. Even Attari, in her shock, sensed that if no one were watching her, she'd be running.
When Orialu left, she took some of Attari's terror with her. But there was no time for Attari to parse that; the terror left behind was still more than enough to shut off any serious thought. She tried to close her eyes, thinking it might help somehow. Instead Kanatta Lare's bloodspill filled her mind's eye so completely that Attari half-feared it would pour over into the real world. She pictured red tears trickling from behind closed lids and snapped her eyes back open, then rubbed at them, half-expecting her hands to come away smeared scarlet.
"Are you alright, Miss Ila?"
Attari gave a tiny scream before realizing that it was Rialeh who'd spoken to her.
"I'm not," she said weakly. Her eyes, desperate for a beautiful sight to wash out the blood, latched onto his face. Something about the combination of his dark skin and deep blue star marks was soothing to look at. She noticed that he'd done up his lips with a faint blue gloss today. For a moment, Attari lost herself in the bright little squiggles and dots of light reflected on Rialeh's lips, dancing in time with his words –
Oh. He was still talking to her.
"I – I'm sorry," she told him. "I didn't hear, um – any. Of what you just said."
"Well, you've had quite a shock," said Rialeh. There was a quiet sympathy in his dark eyes. "I was asking you if you'd like to return to your rooms."
"Please," said Attari. "Please."
Yes, Word echoed, though only Attari heard it.
Yesyesyesyes. Its voice was that of a hurt and frightened child.
"No further casework today, I think," said Rialeh. "Shall we?"
For the first time, he offered Attari his arm. Out of fear and need, she clutched it tighter than was proper. She wanted to do worse; she wanted to press herself into Rialeh's side and drink in his calm, his stability, his living warmth. She didn't dare. He was Ca'unaal, a trueblooded son of the venarchy, and she was no one. So instead Attari held her body apart from his and tried, with looks at her surroundings and at Rialeh, to hold off the visual memory of Kanatta Lare's blood pouring silently from her ruined throat.
She was proud of herself for managing to wait until she was alone in her rooms with the door closed before bursting into tears.
I'm baaaack! Vacation was wonderful, but I'm so happy to be back at the writing again. Kanatta Lare is awful, but I sure had fun writing her falling apart here. This was a pretty short chapter! Next POV: Orialu! I'm excited to start another chapter from her POV again, I've missed my main girl.