Read The Death of the Wave Online
Authors: G. L. Adamson
Let it begin again,
to the charge, there is nothing,
nothing left to take away from me.
Your move.
–Descartes.
For a few weeks more
they tested my mathematics
in application to the stars.
I braved the last exams,
but here there were few gunshots.
I had never seen a world such as this.
It gleams like the birth of the world,
it is perfect and silent,
the hush of a church on less than holy ground.
When I passed my last exams to their satisfaction
I was reassigned to Health Corps
to play with the pretty toys in the labs.
First, development.
I was staring at a slide, carefully gauging
when a slim cool hand came around to grasp mine.
“Careful not to lower the scope too far.”
A soft voice whispered in my ear
and I hesitated on the dial.
“You’ll break the glass.”
I shook off this stranger, defiantly,
turned and faced
Galileo’s adolescent,
smiling at me with eyes as black as dying.
He was astonishingly inappropriate for the setting
in a three-piece suit,
casually toying with a piece of equipment
worth more than I would make in a year, in ten years.
And I could only start and stare.
“Boring work, isn’t it,”
he murmured lazily,
and smiled again his rehearsed little smile.
I turned to my work.
“It is…not…not really… all that boring….”
I babbled idiotically.
“No need to lie to me,”
he replied.
The son of the king shook his gleaming head
and gestured with one hand.
“Follow me.”
I jogged behind him, an ungainly figure in oversized whites
trying desperately to keep up with his furlong strides.
“What will I be working on—” I questioned,
not knowing his name.
“Darwin.”
“Darwin.”
And considerately, his steps began to slow.
He led me outside in the snow
where a Palace car was waiting
and told me:
“Lives.”
I remember.
I remember the cold.
The marks our footsteps made in the snow,
and how the falling snow glittered like diamonds
in your dark hair and lingered like a lie.
Your black eyes were shining
and you smiled to see my confusion
as I shivered, watching the sleek car pull up to meet us.
You never felt the cold,
and as we waited,
pulled your suit jacket from your lean shoulders
and draped it over mine.
“Where are we going?” I questioned through chattering teeth.
But you only smiled again
your empty, mysterious smile.
You and I climbed in the back of the car
and I heard you whisper directions to your driver,
directions that must have led to the Camps.
I had never been out of the Hives, Darwin.
None of us in my Hive had.
I lived in ignorance of how it might have been for the others.
Life in the Camps had been a vague thing, a warning.
A nightmare upon waking.
But lives, Darwin?
We had been lucky.
For outside, the gates,
they closed behind us.
Descartes.
Memories of you,
the first time I had written
it was your hand guiding me.
And once, there was music,
music from the minds of men long dead.
Descartes.
Yours were the first kind words
that I had heard from your kind.
I had grown to hate the pale face of the aristocrat
and the dark eyes,
and the lips that gleamed
like blood in the snow.
Until you.
No one ever asked me
what it was to be a Breaker.
We do not even have names.
Descartes.
I was once a Breaker.
But now I am nothing
but memories of you.
In your mind, you created the rebellion.
By your hand, you outlined the plan.
We would share the works of the masters with the world.
Wake them to the inequalities between Palaces and Camps.
We would dismantle the tests.
Silence the Voice of Eden.
And one day—
One day—
the Tree of Eden would burn.
Such lofty plans,
from the Breaker who broke
and the aristo-who-wrote.
Galileo’s bastard son.
How I loved you.
For we had our very own son.
The boy who stalled a rebellion.
Who was destined to live in a Hive
and one day become an Artist.
For then the Camps awaited us,
the shanty-town ramshackle of Poet’s Camp,
the colorful madness of Perform
all falling apart, and half forgotten.
Darwin.
Your driver opened the door,
and we stepped out into a world of desolation.
The Camps.
Narrow streets.
The sound of something beautiful
playing mournfully over makeshift rooftops.
And you lifted your head to hear it,
as I trembled in the snow.
“What is it, Darwin?” I whispered.
The mournful sound that twisted and wailed
as if it had remembered all the sadness in the world.
For you smiled to tell me:
“Music.”
And for once that word became more than a word.
The first time that I heard music.
Does art need to be beautiful?
Does love need to be fair?
We found the player in Musician’s Camp.
The man with the instrument he called a violin
leaning against his broken house and playing
as though the strings were lit on fire.
Beside him lay a still, cold child,
and he played as if playing to the child.
Darwin, alien in a three-piece suit,
you asked him why he played.
Why continue on if the world was ending?
If Author had sharpened the control of the Citadel—
if the Palace and the Camps were so far separated—
did he know of the injustice?
But he only smiled and played on,
as relentlessly, again,
the snow began to fall.
We watched the blinking of the neon lights.
The all night pharmacies
where huddled men and women
waited for a sackcloth angel.
The lines of the forgotten.
And Darwin asked of me:
What do you know?
But I knew nothing,
and so said:
“Everything.”
The supercilious tug of a smile
that faded, as he lifted his head
to the single trill of the violin
that had been taken up by others.
Music I had no name for,
the thrill of an orchestra playing on broken bows
and he shook his head.
“I promised you lives,”
he whispered,
and I drew his jacket closer
to keep out the cold.
“These Proto-pills, you took them in the Hive—”
“We all did,” I replied softly.
And he nodded and said:
“That will be your task.”
“Distribution?”
“Development.”
His dark eyes were half hooded.
“Artists in the time of first Author lived half the life
of a Scientist in the Palaces.
Now it is less.”
His gaze never flickered.
“So tell me then, Scientist.
If the Proto-pills are meant to
extend the lives of Scientist
and Artist alike—
why are they not working?”
I had no answer.
So he smiled to say:
“Design.”
I had been given a chance, and I was always going to take it.
My Breaker had forgiven me,
remembered me, and granted me nods in corridors.
She often came back from her Hive
exhausted and alone,
and would not speak of what she had done.
She was nearly impeccable,
exhausted, but still cleaned her uniform
of any trace of villainy.
I have lived in the Hive system,
and knew where she would go.
My Breaker, for she was close to mine.
She had begun to trust me.
But it was not enough.
Not close enough.
Galileo spoke to me in his white chambers.
The angel spoke to me.
He told me of his fears of my Breaker.
The beginnings of the stirring in the Camps,
classified information that was revealed.
And I feared for her.
I feared his suspicions.
But the angel spoke to me
the Artist whose name was a lie,
for he called me Artist,
and never spoke my name.
My name is Blue,
but the king, he remembered me.
He told me to watch her,
to watch her where she goes,
and learn of what she did.
And I saw her death in those black eyes.
But I was in love,
and love makes you blind.
I kissed the hem of his robes,
and burned my lips on silk
from a place once called Arabia.
Galileo, you had promised
that I would be the savior of Eden.
The protector of the State.
And would always be remembered.
And I believed you, Galileo.
I believed in you.
Greatness, for all the citizens can aspire
And if pure words turn fates,
Light hearts burnt upon a pyre
I’ll build in the states
Listen, tell a tale, my liar
Each in fire hates.
Only, close the doors behind them.
I had sent the words out into the world
and there is no going back.
For it is the words
that define immortality.
It is the mere fact
that the words exist at all.
I was to save the people
no matter the cost.
And if I die,
I will live on
under my name.
For I am words
and words know how to wait.
I had sent the words out into the world
and there is no going back.
For it is the author
that defines immortality.
It is the mere fact
that I exist at all.
I was to save the State
no matter the cost.
And if I die,
I will live on
under her name.
For I am words
and words know how to wait.
For we are
For I am
On the side of the angels.
So it began.
The Camps had been caught by fire.
For pure hearts build.
Citizens turn upon the tale.
The words burned in a fire!
How quickly they deciphered the messages
that I had given them.
My clever Artists.
In the Camps, they were building their guns, their blades
out of what they could find.
Useless debris, put to use.
They had begun to deface the posters.
The Camps were almost ready.
They trembled in apprehension.
All they needed was one more spark.
One more spark that was stolen from us.
The Voice, the Voice of Eden,
still called out the Edicts every hour
over the sound of the gunshots.
Soon it would have been silenced.
Soon, when they were ready.
The children were hungry, the Citadel had cut off aid quickly.
But we had to wait.
Wait, or risk the failing of our future.
Better to die out of love
than to die for hate.
Better we die together
with the words of our history ringing in our ears
than to peter out by population.
We were great once.
We could have been again.
I dreamed of a world where we existed
and the people knew the truth.
For we stood there with the new world order in our hands,
and the promises that you Artists gave me
could have won a revolution.
I loved you all.
Had it been enough.
G
reatness, for
all
the
citizens
can aspire
A
nd if
pure
words
turn
fates,
L
ight
hearts
burnt
upon
a pyre
I
’ll
build
in
the
states
L
isten, tell
a
tale
, my liar
E
ach in
fire
hates.
O
nly, close the door behind them.
To the Artist:
Ah, you respond!
A moving confession.
And no, to me, you shall always be the Artist.
You vain, postulating boy.
They gave you a pen, not a kingdom.
Remember:
There are no good or bad people,
and therefore no true ‘winning side’.
There are only bad people,
but some of them rally to a different drum
and have longer life expectancies.
So stand your ground.
Be noble.
It won’t bring her back.
Enough. Listen.
You must take up the pen.
Take up the name,
and write the words.
Spur the fight, the retribution.
Burn the Citadel so that something new may grow from the ashes.
I know you can write, even if it was under another name
and you’ve seen her work.
Atone for your mistakes, your pointless changing of sides.
Protect the State,
by having it broken.
Save the Artists
if only for Author.
I’ll contact you down the line again
once you think of a draft.
Oh, and Blue?
Consider the children.
—Descartes