"Evil is quite a mundane thing," Lila mumbled to herself, dictating the words of her college essay for Modern History as she wrote them on the page, answering the prompt question that her teacher had set her, the question being about the measures used to control the German people during the length of the Fascist nazi regime.
She knew that she really ought to be discussing the carrot and stick method, used by the propaganda minister, Joseph the evil Gerbil, but the Israeli interview one the questioning of one nazi official, after the war, on why he had done the things that he had done, and the resulting New York Times article on the entire event had her mind racing and preoccupied.
On the video that the teacher had shown in class, the nazi had remained calm and unperturbed of the commotion around him, the questions that he had been asked, and the memories that he recounted to the lady that spoke to him.
His face was blank as he talked and listened, almost l
He awoke with the gasp once more, his eyes opening themselves up to the grey light above, shrouded in a blur, obscuring anything and everything of interest, no details at all present to see.Turning his head to the side, the boy on the table saw nothing different to what he had seen above, the ever present veil of obstruction that was the state of his eyes continued to prevail over his senses and keep him from observing the world around him.The other side of his body was in the same state: nothing to see but the grey that stretched out in front of him, moving out further and further the more that he kept his eyes facing that particular direction.The boy closed his eyes, trying to concentrate for a moment, squeezing his eye lids shut as hard as he could, feeling some sort of peculiar sensation within them that he could not particularly recognise, before opening his eyes once more, as soon as the feeling got too much for him to handle.It wasn't pain.
The seawater on his hands was fleeting and only temporary in the first attempt at grasps that Jasper's hands made to each out at it.His legs and feet were soaked in the water that reached up to his waist, swishing around him and constantly trying to uproot him and pull him away from the air that he needed.The more that he stood there, the more that the sea aggressively grasped at him and tugged at the edge of his clothing, the uniform that Jasper had worn every single day at the Sýnnefa military research facility, forcing him to do the same work every single day, with the same guards, the same workers, in the same conditions.The sea had wrapped itself around his body, and Jasper, feeling the cold rush of it, dipped his hands in properly, his wrists and forearms splashed and soaked by the current.To let go was tantamount to letting himself almost drown in the ocean, to let himself go was to surrender to the flow of the wider world around h
The white lights, lingering above, glared through dirty glass of their bulbs, flooding the grey single tables, the grey food, and the grey floor below awash, seemingly revealing all. The spoons were grey, the plates were grey, and the chairs were grey.Everything was grey.The engineer's eyes were grey, his standard issue shirt and trousers were grey, and a few grey hairs sat in the overgrown, bushy ginger cloud which lay atop his head.His sallow skin, once tanned and always flushing red, now held a grey hue.The bags under his eyes, however, were a staunch black.His head hung downwards, single-mindedly scooping the grey mush of his lunch into his mouth, swallowing without tasting and without thinking.He did not watch all the blobs of different shades of grey around him, unseeing of all the others who wore the same uniform as he and ignorant of all the ways that they looked at him.The central food hall of one of the North Western
Jasper hadn't known what the time had been when he had been forcefully yanked out of his drugged sleep and into the land of consciousness.He had sat there awake, for as long as he could possibly do so, waiting for the doors to open and to alert him of the beginning of the first third of his day.He hadn't found himself particularly possessing an appetite at that moment.Upon some reflection, Jasper realised that he hadn't had any inclination towards eating food for a while now.The duration of time that he had spent under Lila's, and her self proclaimed family's, care, he had only eaten a few meals, and he could recall what they all were, mostly consisting of tasteless mush that he knew was highly nutritious, just like the meals that they served here, at the facility.Trying to remember as far back as he could, Jasper attempted to recall the last time that he had been particularly eager for a specific dish, or meal, vaguely recalling o
When the doors had finally slid open, Jasper did not move from his place on the bed.He rolled the fabric of the sheet covering him within his fingers unknowingly as, he remained alone and preoccupied in the recesses of his mind, blind and deaf to the world around him.The hissing of the door of his room sliding open did not affect him, the sudden invasion of cold air as well had done equally nothing.The world could have crashed and burned, and he would have not even noticed.Gravity itself could have stopped functioning, and Jasper would not have felt it in the slightest.The guards at his doors stood with their backs straight, unmoving and unspeaking as they observed his lack of reaction to their presence, awaiting for some sort of movements from him to indicate that he had recognised them and their authority, and that he would proceed with the correct sequence of actions that had been expected from him.They did not him to keep sta
"Why did you come back?" one man asked, his uniform made him indistinguishable from all the others in the room, now all of them donning identical clothing that no longer distinguished them by their profession through the exact shade of grey worn.Jasper had not at all reacted when he had been dragged past the site where he had once worked with others.Jasper had not at all spoken when he had dragged through the area where he had murdered a man in cold blood and in vain now.And Jasper had not at all lifted his eyes when he had been dragged into the room where he had been shot at with lasers and had stolen the time machine from.His eyes had automatically been drawn onto the ceiling of the place where he had been unceremoniously been dropped down, thrown into the centre of the floor and unfortunately landing on his back.There were air vents up there.There were air vents up there.There were air vents up there.&n
"When you left, the operation to rebel was still in its final stages of preparation.We had come up with a plan to rebel, get rid of all the guards and then find some sort of connection to the outside world that we could exploit.He had found that point, the operating room on the floor above us.Yeah... nobody knew about that floor too so you can shut your mouth before some dust flies in and then you choke on it.There's a staircase hidden away in the side where none of us have been allowed to go into, 'cause we've always been led away from the place and have been put somewhere else because of the chips in our backs.So anyway, first things first.You were taken away and a couple of the kids under your wing got antsy because another member of their team had gone missing before, and they overreacted.One of them blew up completely, his face
"It was alright."The lie was a comforting one, passing through the old, old man's lips easily as breathing, those same lips too accustomed to lying.He had lied for a good portion of his life to both himself and the others.He had lied that today was going to be a good day, and had done so for every single morning for the past five years, gripping the edge of his blanket at he pulled himself off the floors of his room at the last possible moment he could manage, every single morning.He had dragged himself to the water fountain, splashing himself in the face and felt all the tiredness from his body drip away and leave him, as he told himself each and every time that he completed the small, personal ritual, fresh and rejuvenated, ready to take on the day and strive for the best person that he could possibly hope to be on this world.May the Sun Goddess Bless him with good health and fortune!It had been another lie.He hadn't seen the
“Why’re you sleeping on the floor like that? Come on, get up. You’ll hurt your back doing that,” Doctor Marigold chided, dragging all her bits of heavy machinery around the office space to prepare for her demonstration.Behind her, Lila remained still.“I know that you’re not dead. Come, get up already,” she called out, stepping over a few sheets of paper that she had laid out to grab Lila by the shoulder and heave her up into sitting.The stubborn girl just flopped down again, not opening her eyes.“If you get the fuck up, we can move the flight a week forward so you can stop worrying about it,” Lucy Marigold shouted across the room.Like a rubber band, Lila snapped back up and finally opened her eyes.It had been harder to see the bags below them when they had been closed and Doctor Marigold wondered if she should buy the girl some sleep tablets.“I’m awake,” Li
Yolanda seemed to understand that she needed to back off and stop teasing Gretel, when the other woman's eyes suddenly misted over, and it was if she was no longer a part of this world.She kept the bubbling annoyance within her away from her face, putting on instead a mask of concern as she reached out and poked Gretel's arms, trying to maybe prod her out of her stupor and bring her back from the recesses of her mind.Yolanda had never actually seen somebody collapse inwards to a catatonic state over her own actions.It was interesting to see it all happen and fold out in front of her.She poked Gretel again, touching her in the face lightly to see if that would possibly work to pull the other woman out of her mind and back into the world where she was needed proper.It wouldn't reflect well on her if Gretel didn't wake up within the hour.It didn't feel as
When she awoke, she was sat ready to eat and was dressed just like her mother, in a pastel blouse and a lungi down to the floor.Lila looked down at herself and jumped when she heard rattling, noticing the ten, or so, bangles on each arm and the lines of mehndi that ran down all the way to the hems of her sleeves, resting halfway between her shoulders and elbows. A pin held her blouse shut at the top and a quick once over of her hair, with one of her hands, revealed that it had been styled in a simple bun and adorned with flowers.“This is weirdly romantic,” Lila commented, staring at the lit candles nestled in the variously sized candelabrums set around the circular room.There was no door, but a giant window which led to a balcony outside. There was no ceiling but the walls reaching upwards, all the way up, until they formed a dome in the same shade of dull brown that coated the floor and the giant, round table in the centre.The only dishes
“So, is she finally asleep?” Emmet asked the boy stood behind the counter. He was exceedingly slim for someone surrounded by sugar all day and Emmet could make out the outlines of his spindly elbows through his shirt. His face held a no nonsense, blunt, and almost bored expression. “Yeah, she is. She’s been knocked out on the sofa since I sent her back there,” Kai answered the long haired man in front of him, his hair pulled back by a ribbon matching his eyes before being pulled over his shoulder once more. He looked vain. “Oh good. Don’t tell her that I was involved,” the man asked, putting both his palms up to face Kai. “I’m telling her that you’re a fucking weirdo for that,” was the scowled answer. “No. Seriously, don’t tell her. She doesn’t like me and I don’t like her. She’s known my partner for longer that I’ve known him. She doesn’t trust me with him. Why’re you making that face?” Emmet tried to justify himself before giving up
“Are you sure that you’re getting enough sleep?” Kai asked Lila, watching her sway on her feet and clutching the front counter.“Yes,” she gasped, dropping her head into her hands, elbows on the table.“Go and lie down on the sofa. Go to sleep for a bit. I’ll wake you up when I have to leave for college,” Kai instructed her, tapping her on the shoulders and shepherding her towards the office.“… fine,” she conceded, letting Kai move her along towards the back.“You know that this just proves my point,” Kai pointed out, pushing her through the boundary of the door and closing it behind her.“Fine,” she whispered back to him, talking into the silence of the office.She let herself fall over the sofa, draping her upper body over the arm rest and letting her head be cushioned by the pillows. Shuffling a bit over to put her body entirely on the sofa, Lila f
“One! Two! Three! Four! Five!Now again!One! Two! Three! Four! Five!Now keep on going!”Lila landed each punch, timing her breaths to the count as she moved her fists, dodging underneath the swing that came towards her head, before blocking the second hit that came to her and moving along with the force of the fist that hit her arm.The swinging punching bag forced distance between Lila and Tweedle Dum, and she stepped back to where she was stood before, within the path of the moving bad, to put more distance between him and her.“One! Two! Three! Four! Five!One! Two! Three! Four! Five!”Lila punched the bag once more, landing all of her hits.“Okay, time for a break,” Tweedle Dum announced, grabbing the punching bag and pulling it back to him as Lila moved away from the centre of the room, sitting down on one of the rickety plastic chairs at the side of the room.She took of
“Bitch! Why’d you run off and abandon me like that!?” Lila shouted from behind the counter when Kai finally walked back into the store.She was waving her hands about and wore an apron covered in flour as the single customer in the store, an old man precariously balancing on his cane, slept whilst leaning on the radiator.“I thought that you wanted some bonding time with your family so I left you to do that it private!” Kai answered her, tiptoeing past their unconscious patron, in a combination of whispering and shouting.“They’re hardly my family and you left us in the middle of a public café!” Lila cried, not modulating her voice at all.In the background, the old man began to snore.“But you still talk to them a lot like you do to me, so I let you, and besides, I got about fifty more pages of Good Omens done in Waterstones,” Kai appealed, finally at the counter and opening up the
Gretel and Silver had their fun as he continued to teach her how the interface worked and how he had managed to figure out that the system was an older model from the lack of integration between the screen and the touch pad, and explaining how easily it would potentially be to do so once the technology, as displayed in this device, had been demonstrated and established to work in a functional product."We were working on something like this as well, back in the workshops back home for the company that I was in the research and development department for. We were trying to get our motion sensors to be as small as possible for more commercial and personal use of technology that we could sell to the public and those who couldn't afford the contact computers.We had no idea on how their tech worked, because of trade and company secrets and all, but we managed to piece together a few things by looking at the patents and when we bought a few and m
“Alright, the shop’s free. Why are you actually here?” Lila questioned, crossing her arms and staring down at the tablecloth of Jasper and Emmet’s table.“I’ve got lesson now. I’ll be back in a few hours,” the teenage boy behind Lila announced, picking up a bag that had been hidden behind the counter the entire time and rushing outside.Lila continued to stand there, waiting for a reply.Jasper couldn’t help but notice that she wasn’t meeting either his or Emmet’s eyes.“Are you planning to leave us?” he asked her back.Lila’s fingers dug into the creases of her shirt,” I’m going to be leaving for a trip soon, and I’ll be back as soon as I can. Kai’ll be running the shop and will be looking after things, broadly. He lives here now and I scheduled my leave for when his school term ends so he can take care of things.”“On thi