I knew Faye.
In the brightest of days and under the darkest of night's cruel shadows, I knew her as innately and as intimately as I know myself. I could trace every freckle on her face, the spattering of them over her shoulders and onto the top of her chest, without needing a single look. I knew every line and feature of her. I knew the sound she made when she breathed. I knew her scent. Her becoming part of me had been the most natural process imaginable, and now that she was here, I couldn't imagine my city without her.
She had been quiet after Becky's death. Jeeves had been, too, knowing to give me space to process for however long that took. But as much as I had been overwhelmed by that seething, simmering anger, I had always been able to feel her presence. It was the warmth of a child's beloved blanket. It was an undercurrent of security and love, like no matter how bad things were, how long the day, or how dark the night, she would be there when I needed her.
I just didn't realize how much I needed her until I did.
I had always done things on my own; I'd had to. There was never another option. It wasn't that I misanthropically rejected support from others; it just wasn't in my nature to ask for it. So when it came to recognizing that I was struggling, I just didn't.
Becky had been murdered. I don't say this as another comment on how my thoughts about her affected my judgment but simply as a process of law. The fire department had been called to the warehouse the very night of her death and had struggled to bring the blazing inferno under control until the following afternoon. It was then that the bodies had been found. Not just Becky's, of course, but those of the inquisitors who had been punished for her kidnapping.
That had turned the whole area into a crime scene. Jeeves, with no small amount of help from Jerry, had made sure that nothing could tie any of the forensics back to me; anything that they
could
have was deleted as soon as it entered the systems, or at least its connection to me was. But still, there was a lack of closure. Those investigations took time, it would be more than a month before the coroner was expected to release Becky's body to her family, and it was only then that they could even begin to arrange a funeral.
I never had a chance to say goodbye. Moreover, despite Charlotte's assertions, I was still convinced that I bore the responsibility for Becky's death. That conviction was making me doubt I should go to the funeral even when there was one.
It was, perhaps, for this reason, that I found myself making something of a pilgrimage to the plaza inside my city that contained - and now honored - her effigy.
The city in my mind, for reasons which I had never really worked out or thought to ask about, was perpetually bathed in soft sunlight, like a late summer afternoon. There was no nighttime. Part of me always wondered what it would look like with its towering monoliths shadowed against the burning sunset or how the long shadows of the sunrise would play off the high city walls and flood up the long tree-lined avenues.
But with no actual sun in the sky, there was no rising or setting of it. And with no sun, there were no shadows to mark its passing.
However, since Becky's death, a single part of the city now seemed to be exempt from that one underlying constant.
My city was massive. Of course, in real terms, it took up no space at all, so it was difficult to gauge exactly how large it was. But walking at a steady walking speed of about two miles per hour, it would still take several hours to walk from one side of the city just to the enormous, imposing spire that constituted my Palace at its center, let alone walk from one side of the city to the other. With the massive area that my city covered, probably consisting of at least a few dozen square miles, there were parts of it that - despite having years' worth of time to explore it - I had never visited. My mind usually just knew where I wanted to be and put me there.
Today, like every other day, it knew where I needed to be.
Traditionally, in every other Evo city, a building's importance to that person's life was directly related to how large it was and how close it was to the city center. Mine was different. All buildings and all parts of my mind, or my city, were given equal importance and were sized and spread out accordingly. It, therefore, didn't concern me when I faded into my metropolis in the far northeastern corner of the sprawling urban area.
Things were more spread out here, less crowded; this was the closest to leafy suburbs as it was possible to get inside a walled city. The thrumming blue glow of the palace and the spires of the bustling city center were visible over the rooftops of the lower buildings around me, and the colossal city walls loomed large beyond the simple memorial garden that had sprung up here. But whereas the rest of the city was bathed in brilliant, vibrant sunlight, the air around this memorial seemed to reside in a mournful, respectful dimness, like the light itself was lowering its happy gaze in reverent sorrow and tempering its usual sunny disposition.
This wasn't the same plaza as the one closer to the city center, the one with the other, happier vision of Becky in it. In that monument, her face was turned to the heavens, and her eyes were closed in rapturous ecstasy. It immortalized the moment she climaxed with me for the first time in the hospital all those months ago.
I didn't even want to think what that plaza portrayed now, and I couldn't decide what was worse, if it hadn't changed at all, or if it had.
This one was different; I'm not sure if I would even have needed my eidetic memory to recognize it immediately. It was a bust of her smiling, happy face, as it had been that night in the club when I had taken them out to thank them for the care they had given me during my stay at the hospital. Despite the bust being made of something that looked like faded granite, her eyes still almost danced with the laughter that would forever grace her wonderful, beautiful face. She was looking a little to the side at something just over my left shoulder, and no matter where I stood, her eyes would never quite meet mine. They seemed to move as I did.
Always just that little bit out of reach.