Patreon LogoYour support makes Blue Moon possible (Patreon)

[VforV] A Revolution Without Dancing

Kawamura

Supernova
Joined
Jan 9, 2009
Today is my first day at the new facilities. When I indicated alarm at performing the tests on human subjects I was promptly informed that the participants were, every one of them, criminals: murderers, rapists, pedophiles, the lowest of the low in the British prison system. I was shocked to see the numbers. Perhaps itâ??s due to the background I come from, but I did not expect to see so many. Most of them also appear shockingly normal.

One of my colleagues expressed disbelief and was subsequently asked to leave the project. The rest of us are keeping our mouths shut. This is much too good of a chance to pass up in questioning the authorities, and these men and women will be able to serve the society they have wronged.

Is that so bad?


---

Love me love me love meâ?¦Say you do

Nina Simone crooned softly from the old, reconstructed record player, the vinyl adding a warm static to her voice. The man in black humming along was much too young to have listened to the original thing, but he enjoyed it none-the-less, no matter how off-key he was. Outside of these walls, Ms. Simone had been silent for nearly a decade. In here, among the precarious stacks of books and the low lighting, she had an appreciative audience of exactly one.

Let me fly awayâ?¦With youâ?¦For my love is likeâ?¦The windâ?¦

He turned, looking at himself carefully in the mirror while he let the music play without him being fully aware of it. He wasnâ??t young, wasnâ??t old. If anyone were to ask (not that there was ever anyone around), heâ??d figure himself to be in his mid thirties. â?¦sfy this hungrinessâ?¦ Coffee-colored skin of the sort of shade he had vague memories about sipping from too sweet, too milky drinks in too full shops was marred by the whites of scars and burns, though his thin, angular face was mostly smooth. It made him wonder, sometimes, why they spared his face. Perhaps they hadnâ??t wanted to waste their energy on extra spite. Perhaps it was a means of identification, so he'd match somewhat the picture of the man he came in as. Hazel eyes stared back at him in the mirror, striking against the darker skin. Before putting the mask on, he reached up, tracing the line of his poorly healed nose. The face was always unfamiliar: recognizable now after all these years, but he simply couldnâ??t connect it to himself.

One day, heâ??d find the man it belonged to. Maybe.

You...Touch me...I hear the soundâ?¦

He still looked half starved, no matter how long he had been out of the camp. Some things never changed. The over-wide, haunted eyes and harsh angles would probably never go away. With a sigh, the man pulled on his mask, then looked up again. â?¦your kissâ?¦My life beginsâ?¦ A bone-white face grinned back at him, eyes wrinkling with mirth over the theatrical blush, the only color now. His lips curled under the mask. Ah. If only he lacked certain â??colorâ?? back in the day, he would have been safe, wouldnâ??t he? Thatâ??s what he figured they brought him in for, since it hadnâ??t taken much pattern recognition skills to realize everyone in charge was the proper, full-blooded British sort, and their victims, their subjects, werenâ??t.

The radio he left on a timer coughed into activity, weak and old, the noise giving him the time as well as the cost of water coupons, the extra starch coupons this quarter (all thanks to their mighty and compassionate government, of course, that they had extra rations this month), news of the weather, all of it vying for his attention under the music. â?¦ creaturesâ?¦.Of the windâ?¦ Along with those old coffee shops, he vaguely remembered a time when people didnâ??t need water coupons, but that was a whole life time ago.

Before the record ended itself, he stood, removing the needle. He feltâ?¦ Melancholic today, not the feeling he wanted. A poor song choice, then. â??A tragedy, Mr. Aristotle?â? he said softly to somewhere out of the warm circle of light he was at the center of, voice hoarse,. Not from disuse: he talked to himself often, after all. It was another thing, like the unrecognizable face and the deep eyes that the camp had given him, generous experience that it was. The man turned, taking in himself from the side. His figure, he noted, was even more slender from all the black. He was struck by the urge to rub his short, brown, curly hair, but he thought better of it, reaching, instead, for the long haired wig perched crookedly, almost jauntily on the philosopherâ??s bust. â??Iâ??m afraid this looks better on me, old chap,â? he said, pulling it on and repositioning it in the mirror like an actress getting ready for the stage. However, his mirror had tucked in its frame not notes from well-wishers, but snippets of poems, of chemicals, pictures of his victims and his objectives. â??Not that you canâ??t have it back when Iâ??m done,â? he added conversationally. â??Just need it a few nights, you see. Iâ??ve got a play. Or something like it.â? Good. Nothing of him showed.

Not that it really ever did.

Something similar to fear, but not quite, tightened his stomach. Nervousness, maybe, or the rush of adrenaline. Excitement. Never fear, but something close. Fear, after all, was something they took from him, in return for all they had given. He wanted things to go well, that was sure, and tonight was a difficult night, what with an explosion and an assassination on the itinerary. â??Break a leg,â? he muttered to himself before slipping away into the darkness off stage.
 
It was hard to not hear the news station at any time of day. In a small apartment, Helena was completely surrounded by other rooms which held paranoid followers of the party. Though her own telly was off, she could still hear in the background loud shouts of England prevailing, or whatever they yelled these days. At the age of twenty-three, she hadn't seen as much as others, but she did remember the acts of violence for her childhood. Before books and songs were banned, before food became more like processed cardboard. Oh these thoughts filled her mind every day, and she had to wonder if others thought of them too. Of course they did, but such things were not spoken of. In fact, most neighbors didn't speak at all anymore. But trying to mention things against the party was... dangerous.

Shaking her head, the brunette tried to push these thoughts aside. Her long, loose curls framed her face ever so elegantly, and her light blue eyes made her face shine. She was quite a pretty girl, if she didn't try and hide it so. Normally she would throw her hair up into an ugly bun, wipe dark powder over her porcelain skin, try to make her face less attractive. But why would someone do this? Being different - pretty - was something her mother had talked down to when she was younger. Supposedly, it would make things harder in this new world. If you stood out, you would get attention. And that was the last thing anyone needed. It was more of a paranoia now, to keep herself looking average. Perhaps she herself had a few mental problems.

Standing from her vanity seat, she grabbed a grey beret from the corner of her desk, and shoveled her hair into it. Loose locks fell, and she looked rather like a French orphan. Laughing at the idea, Helena pulled on a long black trench coat. "Pourquoi est-ce que tout le monde entier d'accepter ce sort?" It was illegal to speak French, and she knew it, but the accent of her mother still pushed her to tempt the law. Her parents hadn't been exact fighters of the new world, but they did not easily accept it. They always yelled at the telly, yapped at their friends about the evils of Sutler, but never something that would get them hurt. No, they were still safe in sound in western London, quietly arguing with the new ways.

Slipping on a pair of older rainboots, she inspected herself in the mirror. Oh yes. Her thin figure was now hidden behind bulk, luscious locks tucked away, any sort of personality was hidden by baggage. It was safe to go out. House keys in hand, she exited the small apartment, locked the door, and headed into the streets.

---​

It was a little over half an hour later that she slipped into a small alley way. It was now dark outside, and she wasn't supposed to be out. But she had told her mother she would go to her home and help clean out the piles of junk that had accumulated over the years. It wasn't uncommon for people to slip out past curfew, but it was a punishable crime. Still, Helena didn't seem nervous as she walked through the dark streets, careful to keep herself in the dark shadows.
 
Back
Top Bottom