1.1
Taylor promised herself she wouldn't lose sight of her morals after she got her powers. The pranks they had pulled on her were bad enough, but she
definitely wouldn't use her powers to respond. She'd just go to the library in one timeline, and read. That's what she would do. She would start from 800 in the DDC. Then work her way down the list.
Yeah.
It wouldn't be right to do things to her classmates for what they did to her. In the other timeline, she had soda poured into her hair. Taylor pursed her lips, then concentrated on the book. The book hadn't done anything. Unless you counted rhetoric as a crime; it could be, if you argued about it.
Had to argue
real good, though. Wasn't normal arguin' that would make rhetoric a crime. Had to be impassioned. Yell at that audience until you got arrested.
Yup, that was grape soda.
Shit.
Did the grape soda count as a garnish for the pencil shavings that had been dumped on her head, or was it the other way around? Taylor had
just gotten the salt out. It had taken days, and she was still finding little bits, like demented dandruff that refused to depart.
But her will was strong. She wouldn't use her power to harm the bullies. Taylor stood from the toilet seat, exiting the stall, walking to the mirror. She kept reading in the other timeline. If she screamed there, she'd get thrown out.
Breathe in, breathe out.
Easy does it.
She forced a smile at the mirror, shrugging to show
just how unfazed she was.
Not. Fazed.
Whooo.
To the gym. Shower time. Then class. Smile. Read that book on rhetoric. Find out how to fight Sophia with words. Pen was mightier than the sword. No violence.
It would be okay.
--
Yeaaah. Just a little bit of yelling at Emma was okay when it didn't really exist in two minutes down the line, right? It wasn't like she'd remember. It'd be okay!
Just a bit of stress relief. Like yelling into a pillow! She'd done a lot of that, recently. Good for the soul. A lot of tea, too. Maybe some tea ceremony classes in the alternate dimension. Shelling out fifty bucks wasn't bad when it didn't actually happen and she was learning. The repetitive process and concentration required was easy to lose oneself in. Relaxing stuff.
Wipe tea caddy. Resume position.
Wipe tea bowl. Resume position.
Wipe tea scoop. Don't hate them.
Wipe whisk. Ignore.
Ignore.
Stir, stir, stir, stir, whisk,
whisk,
whisk.
Drink
all the tea, screw everyone else, she
needed that.
Fuck.
--
Punching Madison felt surprisingly good. Watching her shocked face, the tears welling up as the cutsey little bully squealed in panic. Was it more of a squall? It was an easy argument to make. Taylor had moved on to 801, days ago. Watching her try to say another
zinger only to receive
another punch- that was
satisfying.
Taylor really didn't want to lose her morality. She resolved to be nice about it, and asked Madison if she needed a hand up. Madison slapped her. That
stung. Taylor closed the timeline, and decided she'd take another shot. Turn the other cheek. Madison's cheek.
That one hit the ground too, and Taylor offered her a hand up. Another slap. Oh
well. Third time's the charm?
--
Taylor was bored of killing Sophia. She had been for weeks. It was no longer interesting. Taser, stab, slit throat. It took surprisingly little effort after the thirtieth time. Emma was more interesting. Watching her facade crack, knowing her little secrets, but her expressions were all the same. It grated on her at first, but after a bit, it slowly became less and less. It was a matter of routine now, though.
In one, she went to one side. In the other, she stepped the other way. In one, Sophia tried to shoulder check her. In that one, Taylor calmly slid the knife into her neck, going with the shoulder check.
"You have very pretty eyes, Sophia." She said, taking out the pepper spray, and sprayed Sophia down as she went into her shadow form.
The screams formed a pattern that Taylor tried to listen for. Sophia's screams tended to be more interesting than her curse words. She twisted and gurgled, reflexively flickering back and forth between her shadow form and her normal form, and Taylor sat next to her. The first few times, it had been horrifying to see.
Sophia had very nearly killed her. Taylor reminisced, tonguing the top of her mouth, remembering the teeth missing, the way she couldn't properly move her jaw. The throbbing pain, growing worse with each breath as she lay on the ground, Sophia laughing.
Now, Sophia was reduced to
this.
An education that she'd long since surpassed, in the school of literal hard knocks. Taylor patted Sophia on the head, and shut the timeline.
In the other one, Taylor moved out of the way of the shoulder check, and Sophia gave her a nasty glare. She diverged things once more, giving her a sunny smile in one, and nodding at her in the other.
She had read a lot of the books in the library. Stock investment seemed like a pretty great idea to make money, and it wasn't like her investments were going to fall through. High-risk never held less meaning than today. Every day, when she didn't do this bit where she wasted time, trying to avoid the trio and relieving stress, she was doing something productive. Her killings were more and more efficient, but she was running into a wall.
Shadow Stalker wasn't good enough for her anymore. In fact, it was probably
worse for her to keep fighting Sophia.
Very few people fought like they could phase through your fist, and then punch you.
She had learned quite a bit from Sophia, and for that she was very thankful. Taylor did her best to compliment her, because while she felt very little each fight, she didn't want to lose the affectionate side of herself.
It felt a bit misplaced already, and it had only been three weeks.
Picking fights on a constant, consistent basis allowed her to counter, think up ways to dodge, attack, move. Her workout routine had shown results, even if she had "accidentally" played hooky from school once or twice when she realized that her results would not carry over to the other timeline. Just her mind.
Whoops. Sorry, Dad. He didn't mind too much.
She was the perfect daughter, able to finish dinner, do her homework, and then copy off herself.
Not many girls could do that, she suspected.
So, he let some things go. It was easier on him, and easier on her. They talked. She carefully screened the conversations, searching for things he wanted to hear, closing the timeline, then starting things once more.
Taylor figured she could do the same thing with anyone she wanted to date. It wouldn't be difficult. She wouldn't even have to fake it.
This ability didn't allow for infinite time, but it did allow for a doubled amount of time, with a serious amount of backbreaking flexibility.
Taylor had even experienced death. She hadn't committed suicide, just played hooky in one dimension and hadn't been paying attention.
Turned out, cars hurt. She wasn't sure how many bones were broken, but there were a lot, and not all of them were fully inside her anymore.
Nobody would be making a xylophone out of her rib cage, that was for sure. Her heart stopped, and she'd been
very scared. Also, very curious.
Then, the timeline went dark. She assumed she'd died. No great loss. Science moved on, and her ability was useful once again. Taylor had taken the use of her ability to forgive Sophia, Emma, and Madison. She'd seen each of their reactions, and it was amusing how each of them responded. Taylor provided them personal details with each apology.
Emma getting mugged and almost raped didn't really phase her anymore, but Taylor forgave Emma for treating her like the Asian Bad Boyz had treated
her in that alleyway.
Watching Emma break down and cry had been amusing for a while. Taylor looked for buttons to press, searching through her lexicon of words, trying new ones and interrogating her at the edge of a knife. Turns out, Emma didn't like knives very much. Or knives against her hair. Anywhere, really. She turned into a blubbering mess, and it was all very interesting.
Lately, she was trying benevolence out. Her time had been spent in the morning scrupulously watching a judo video, as opposed to Sophia's more aggressive striking style. Taylor assumed it had been created out of a mix of watching MMA and some improvisation developed from experience and her abilities.
In one reality, she watched the video over and over, trying to get a hang on it. In the other reality, she attempted to put it into practice against Sophia.
She was very convenient, and made for a great practice dummy. Aggressive, but not stupid. Angry, but not panicky. (Well, until she realized skinny tall Taylor Hebert was crushing her.)
"You have really great hair, you know that?"
Whoops. Sophia's skull made a
crnkching sound, and she started foaming from the mouth. Taylor closed that timeline and tried again.
"You've got a really nice smile. Looks great with all your teeth in it."
Arms weren't supposed to bend that way. Damn. Let's try that again.
"You're like a storm, angry, but gorgeous."
Aha! Alright, time to repeat that.
Lunch was over, and Taylor was smiling at the end of it.
An hour was definitely too short for lunch.