Part 1: There is only one truth about time in prison. Interrogation, and waiting
The walls of my cell are comprised of a total of 22 stones. No one stone is the same height or width. The Tapalanie prison is inefficiently built, painfully built.
Who would be able to live with themselves for erecting a prison? Slaves - only a slave would dig their own grave.
Every hour the guards announces the time. They do this to make time slow for us. But sometimes they mess with us and repeat the same hour over and over again. Gruel is more regulated. Now there are only two times. Porridge time and slop time.
The first week, when I was still recording the hours, I tried to be an indolent - a sweet, disgusting, submissive beggar. I thought they would have a hard time beating me, perhaps they would take better care of me. But, I am less than a dog, a trespasser. A Triset - And here, all Trisets are either rebels or are related to rebels.
The guards look at me like I have beaten their dog, they beat me worse than that. They think I have secrets because my brother, Kasil is with the Northern Triset Freedom Alliance. Days, hours, years, lifetimes - I am already dead. They keep just enough of me alive to search for more secrets. Secrets which are not mine to give. If they were mine I would, and be done with it all, and beg them to kill me. But they are not my secrets to give.
There is only one truth about time in prison. Interrogation, and waiting to be interrogated - sharp pain - dull pain.
They're are all bastards. I never hurt anyone, or did anything other than be Kasil's little sister. They better kill me before they let me go because if they ever let me go, I am going to go to the NTFA and tell them to do what they will with me for I am already dead.
It's nice to be dead. You can't feel anything. Even pain seems like it is far away. Of course my brain is fracturing a little bit. I kind of enjoy the sensation of it cracking.
I have been burned, beaten, cut and drowned. Lots of drowning. Two of my fingers have been broken. Every single one of my toe nails have been pulled.
But the truth is, is it could be worse. I will give them that. They don't touch me like a woman, they touch me like a bag of flour. And at least there is some food, and they haven't undone me yet. They will, but by the time they do my brain will be a spider web. I won't feel anything. Little Maleena, who does what she's told, who obeys her father, who loves her mother, who is supposed to marry Benthar - the son of her father's business partner, who likes to read and eat green tapyra and salty kintie and who could spin and sing - she will soon be gone.
I can't decide if I would prefer to make it quicker, or to make it slower. I have outlasted most of the other women who were gathered up in the same raid. I've known them by their cries. No one uses their name anymore. We are numbers. I am c3742. I don't hear of the 3800's anymore. I am the smallest number. But that means that there were b's and c's - plus 3741 more women before me.
"It's 1300 ladies. 1300." A guard announces. He swings a bat as he walks down the hallway. Each doorway rings and I flinch as I hear the echoes getting closer. We are all holding our breath. "1300...Whose turn is it today?" The bat rings out every two steps. The guards have developed a rhythm - they know it helps with the suspense.
We are waiting for the bat to pause, to stop, for a door to open.
Bang. One and Two and Bang and one and two and bang. He's getting closer, speeding up just perceptible. I feel like he is running towards my cell. "1300, which one of you mice are going to eat the cheese today?" The guard asks. I breathe steadily in through my nose and look at my favorite spider. She has strung a beautiful little web in the corner. One and two and bang. Almost to me.
"They can't hurt you little bird," My brother Kasil whispers in my ear.
"Yes they can." I mutter back. I don't care if he is real or not real. His presence is just one little lovely crack in my brain. I am no longer alone.
Kasil crouches beside me, he looks at me as if he is trying to tell me something I need to know, like he is trying to shake me awake from it. One and two and bang. "Little bird, you have wings."
I laugh at him. Not real. My brother has always been handsome and persuasive, but logical. "I am not a bird." The guard is so close I can almost smell him.
Kasil leans in close to my face so that all I see are his eyes - his bright, blue eyes - the kind that could convince anyone of anything with their sincerity. "If you can't fly away from here. Fly away in here." Kasil taps my chest. I feel him like I feel myself, but he is right. His eyes are my sky, and I can even shut the sky out, fall through the darkness.
"Winner, Winner little mouse." The guard bangs on the door of the cell behind me five sharp times. "C3867, it's time to go to confession." The woman screams. I float in my brother's eyes, they are good honest eyes. He is right. I am free. Free of my body, of my pain, of my cell. "Shut up, no squeaking, it's to early for that now."
Hours pass, tack and slop and then gruel and then tack are served. C3867 comes back. Endurance torture. I don't mind it as much as the quick pain. The slow pain I can slide into and become. If I am the pain, then the pain is me, and I am myself.
A strange amnesty descends through my being as the waiting begins again. My neighbor should be happy, she has survived, now others will take their turn. C3867 doesn't cry only whimper. I don't feel empaty for any of us anymore. I can't afford pity, and besides pity is a cruel way to think of someone else. Instead I send a prayer to my favorite that spider that the little mouse sleep and dream in Kasil's eyes.
"Grow wings little mouse, grow wings."
Part 2: Click. Clock. Scratch. Brack. Ark. My door is making sounds
Click. Clock. Scratch. Brack. Ark. My door is making sounds. The unlocking sounds. But there is no: "One and two and..."
"C3724 against the wall" a guard yells with a rough voice yells through the door. A routine has been broken. It jars me from my mat and I leap flat against the wall, suddenly alive and shivering. No crevices, no corners.
The bright light from the hallway nearly blinds me as the door opens. From the corner of my eye I can see that there are two of them. Such shiny, unblemished uniforms, the gloss of them makes me wince. Boots as shiny as pistols and mallets and knives.
"c3724 meet c3889," a shivering form half stumbles half falls onto the floor of my cell. I recognize her instantly. Benthar's twin sister Paloma is shivering on her knees. I am instantly shocked at how thin her legs look peaking out her pale smock of a shirt, covered in fresh, lurid bruises. Dried blood stains one side of her face, and a large, poorly stitched gash runs the length of her shoulder to her right.
Paloma and I had never really seen eye to eye. I am simply an obligation to be added to her household- an outsider, an intruder. And even worse, I might someday surpass her, in her brother's eyes.
"Why?" I gasp. What is she doing here? What does this mean for the rest of my family?
"There's been another attack," the guard barks at me. I shiver like a good little mouse,
"Your kind disgusts me. Trying to take what you don't own." His spit lands on my thigh - his disgust feels warm and slippery, the way other outrage feels.
I am tempted to tell him that he too is just a number. All guards wear a name tag with a number. This is how we know them. Zd1350. Another glossy man. They all look the same.
"Everyone will have a roommate soon," he menaces.
I can't help the pity I feel - mean ugly pity. My father would be so ashamed.