Elizabeth Moon - Aura.pdf

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file:///G|/Program%20Files/eMule/Incoming/Elizabeth%20Moon%20-%20Aura.txt
ELIZABETH MOON
AURA
Once a year everyone else hated numbers as much as she did. She faced the pile
of bank statements, receipts, 1099s, and W-2s with the comforting certainty that
everyone else -- all hundred million or so heads of household (or their spouses)
-- felt exactly the same about the columns of numbers. Taxes again. Some people
used computers, of course, and some had accountants. She had herself, four sharp
pencils, and a pen to ink over the numbers if they ever balanced.
Brad would check them before she inked them. In an ordinary year, he would
expect nothing of her but a steady supply of coffee and snacks, and the assembly
of the documents, but this year he had orders --doctor's orders -not to bother
himself with tax preparation. He was sure she could do the taxes if she tried.
He had recovered pretty well from the stroke, but he found it very hard to read.
The words, he said, jumped around on the page.
She knew all about that, but with her it was numbers. Letters had graceful
shapes, decorative qualities. Words carried with them their meaning smooth and
rough, clear and opaque, each word on the page evoking a separate image in her
mind. They never tangled themselves up, and best of all no one ever insisted on
checking the sum, Numbers . . . she remembered her second-grade teacher slapping
a ruler on the desk, and insisting that numbers were simpler than words, that
any child who could read so well could surely add. "There's only one right
answer," her teacher had said, and she had understood even then why words were
better. You could imagine green as any shade of green you wanted . . . it didn't
have to be right.
She remembered the trickle of sweat down her sides under her starched dress
during flashcard drills, the horrible foreknowledge that she would blurt out the
wrong answer and have to sit down, while another child "traveled" to the next
desk. The children had laughed; the teacher had scolded her for carelessness;
her mother had dragged her to the eye doctor for tests. Her eyes, he'd said,
were normal. It was probably an emotional thing, a physical symptom of her
dislike of numbers. Most girls, he'd said as he parted her head, didn't like
arithmetic. Her mother and the teacher both interpreted this as laziness and
deceitfulness, and she'd spent miserable hours with the flash-cards until she
passed into third grade.
Now she watched the numbers writhe, the blurred print of Brad's W-2 shimmering
so that she could hardly pick out the middle two digits of his Social Security
number. Why did they insist on using numbers for identification? She'd have
gladly changed her name to something outlandish to ensure uniqueness. And if
they had to use them, why couldn't she put her own number? But they demanded
his, and there was something even more humiliating about being identified by his
number instead of her own. She didn't like it; she never had, and she never
would.
She printed Brad's number in the little space, grimly careful, and began filling
in the other blanks. Perhaps if she concentrated -- her teachers had emphasized
the dangers of daydreaming, of letting her imagination loose where numbers were
concerned-- she could get through this. She would treat it as a recipe, a long,
complicated old-world recipe, or perhaps directions for reupholstering a couch.
First you do this,then that, and at the end it looks like something you could
eat, or sit on.
The problem was that she had no picture in her mind of what the completed,
perfect tax form should look like. Cookbooks had pictures of those fancy dishes.
Sewing books or home decorating books had pictures, pictures of drapes, dresses,
furniture. The directions would make sense, because she would know what the end
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was . . . if you add sleeves to bodice, and bodice to skirt, you have a dress.
If you add filling to meat, and meat to pastry, you have a fancy entree. Numbers
had no pictures; she could not see anything in them, no final outcome of all
these blanks filled in except a form with its blanks filled in . . . it meant
nothing.
She found she'd miscopied the amount of interest income, and erased it
carefully. That was wrong of course. Carelessness. It did mean something; it
meant if she made a mistake, they would come for her. They would take the money,
and the house, and even put her in prison. The page before her shimmered, then
went flat; for a moment she could not find the right blank to fill in. Prison
was all numbers, like the military. Brad had been in the military; he still
said, "By the numbers," sometimes, a kind of joke from those days. She had
written him two letters, to addresses full of numbers and letters in a jumbled
mix that made no sense. Why, she had asked, couldn't the army have normal
addresses? He had laughed.
Doggedly, she poked the calculator's flat-topped buttons. Wrong; she forgot the
decimal point. Another wrong; her finger had slipped from the 8 to the 5. She
blinked at the bank's form. Was that a computerized 0, or an 8? Hard to read
anytime, and now . . . her chest tightened. She took a deep breath, held it, let
it out slowly. Eight, or zero? Zero. Eight. The diagonal wavered, became
horizontal, wavered back to diagonal, a tiny compass needle leading her the
wrong way. She felt pressure in her head; the numbers acquired a sinister aspect
on the page, even beyond the threat of taxes, IRS, flash cards. She would have
to quit for today; she would have to come back to this later, another time,
after a night's rest.
She carried the wineglass carefully by the stem, so that she .would not smudge
the clean delicate curves with her fingers. It seemed a long way from the
kitchen to the dining room. It was the first time she had been trusted to carry
anything so breakable. She was setting a holiday table for Aunt Sarah, who
wasn't really her aunt, but her mother's best friend in the neighborhood.
She leaned forward between the chairs, enjoying the sound of men's voices
speaking a language she did not know, to place the wineglass at the tip of the
knife, just as Aunt Sarah had instructed. Strangers had come, friends of Uncle
Sam's and Aunt Sarah's, from a time before they'd moved to the brick house on
the comer. The men ignored her, as they talked; she expected that, though she
didn't like it. Unlike the local men, they wore long sleeves, even in the heat.
She wondered about that as she wondered about most things. Had they come from
someplace even hotter? One of them, sitting with his back in a blaze of
sunlight, had finally unbuttoned his cuffs, and turned them back, so perhaps
they felt the heat just as she did.
But the numbers. The numbers on the stranger's arm, funny dark numbers that
showed through wiry dark hair. She had never seen that.
She never remembered asking only that she had. Only that Aunt Sarah, for the
first and only time, knuckled the back of her neck and dragged her into the next
room, hissing fiercely in her ear: "Don't ever ask! Don't EVER ask!" And she
remembered the man's face turning toward her, white as his shirt, as white as
the cuff turned back so carefully . . . and buttoned down as quickly, emotions
she could not understand quickly hidden as the numbers, buttoned snugly under a
common face of gentleness and good holiday manners.
She had a headache that night, the kind with blinding flashes of light in her
eyes that would not go away, the kind she could not explain to grownups. The
next day the grownups explained to her--gently, because she was young (the first
time she had been allowed to carry the wineglasses, so carefully, so quietly)
about the numbers. They explained again later. They tried not to frighten her.
You're lucky, they said. You will never know such things. It's all right. It's
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over. He's not angry with you.
But that one sidelong glance, and the feel of loving fingers fastened on the
neck of her dress, suddenly harsh, suddenly strange: that could not be undone.
She never saw the man again; she was not surprised. He had been angry, she knew,
whatever they said; he had been hurt, and it was her fault for being lucky, for
being rude, for all the things she had ever done wrong. The headache had been
punishment.
The memory cycled endlessly. She remembered the texture of the cloth, the
pattern of Aunt Sarah's knives and forks, the feel of the wineglass stem between
her fingers, the struggle she had had to walk carefully, not skipping from the
kitchen, the dense sunlight streaming in the windows, the smell of the roast and
vegetables, the way her foot had bumped the table leg. The dishes that day had
pink roses around the rims, not linked blue squares; Aunt Sarah was funny about
that, and never used both sets on the table at once.
She remembered the faint clean smell of Uncle Sam's shaving lotion, the men's
strong hands gesturing as they talked in that language she had never heard, a
language full of blocky, angular sounds. It sounded old, she thought, older than
anything she spoke, older than Spanish, or the Latin the priests spoke in her
friend Mary's church. She had liked the language, but she had not really liked
the other men that much. They were ignoring her. Uncle Sam and Aunt Sarah never
ignored her; they had no daughter and she fit neatly between their sons in age.
She enjoyed a special position in this house; she often pretended she really was
their niece, that she belonged to them. So even though she had been told to
leave the men alone to talk, she wished they would all look at her, recognize
her as part of the family, even approve of her, as Uncle Sam did.
It was in that context she had leaned forward, flicked a flirtatious glance at
Uncle Sam, and asked what she had asked. About the numbers.
She woke sweating from that nightmare again. She never quite heard her own
voice, never quite remembered which intolerable words she had used to ask that
intolerable question. If she heard herself, she sometimes thought, she could not
bear it. She pushed the covers aside, and sat up. Over forty, and still caught
in that old disgrace -- ! Ridiculous. Her friends told her that, and had told
her that, and still once or twice a year she woke in a panic, like this, with
the full weight of it still on her head. She knew, as they did not, that nothing
could undo the pain she had given, and if an innocent child could thrust so
sharp a sword into so wounded an adult, what hope for adults? What hope for her,
who had made so many stupid mistakes, not only that one, and not only from
opening her mouth to ask stupid questions . . . though that was, even now, a
constant failing.
Brad was asleep; the cry she remembered giving must have been in the dream for
he had not stirred. She pushed herself off the bed and blinked hard, trying to
see in the darkness. Flickers of light, not quite enough to signal a migraine on
its way, but a warning. She found her slippers by feel, and shuffled down the
hall, running her hand along the wall. No sound from Lee's room, and none from
Tina. They both slept heavily; she'd been lucky that way, too. Glimmers danced
in her sight, linking into shapes she didn't want to see. Migraine aura, she
reminded herself firmly. It's not really numbers, and certainly not those
numbers; she had never been able to remember the numbers, not even when she
could see the man's arm, the cigarette in his fingers, and the line at the wrist
where the brown hand became the white arm. She could see the fine dark hairs,
the white skin below, and the numbers...but not which.
She staggered into the kitchen doorframe, and clung to it. The glimmers
twitched, pulsing: with her heartbeat, edging into almost coherent patterns. No
longer strings of numbers . . . now they made headlines, glowing in nasty
lime-green, of the most stupid or creel things she had ever said, and now
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dislimned into portraits of dead faces, green on black. Then they turned gold,
brilliant glittering specks of gold that broke crisply into angled patterns,
dazzling. Migraine aura. She knew it had to be that, and nothing more . . . even
when the gold brightened intolerably, each speck spreading to a wide flake like
one lens of an insect's compound eye.
It stared at her, remote and hostile, each lens reflecting her child's face, the
two little bows she had worn holding the side-hair back, the lace collar. The
child's mouth opened -- her mouth -- and out sped geometric solids of glittering
gold, flashing light from each facet, from a numeral etched on each face.
Hundreds of mouths, hundreds of solids, hundreds of numbers, sickeningly in
motion as the vast insect turned its head. From around the eye jointed antennae
sprouted, proliferated, elaborated, into great feather fans that waved toward
her.
She turned the light on. She had never seen the room before, this tiled kitchen
floor with its glittering reflection, the ominous bulk of some purring alien at
her side. She grabbed for safety, and its side came away in her hand; cold air
poured over her feet. Re-fri-ger-a-tor floated through her mind in a stuttering
sequence, each sound edged with tattered frills of meaning. She leaned toward
the light and cold, but it disappeared with a faint thud, exhaling a stale odor
of roast and vegetables. All across her vision, the faceted mosaic of gold and
black lay between her and the strange room. Then it wavered and vanished,
leaving behind only an edge of brightness around each object, a vague shimmer.
She still did not know the room. Or, she told herself, she knew it
intellectually, but as an abstraction. She knew the canned peas would be behind
that door; she knew her dishes had a pattern of blue flowers on white. It did
not interest her, and it held no memories of emotion. Her dishes could have been
cream with pink roses, or yellow with a chain of blue squares. The table on
which she had served so many meals might have been oblong instead of round. It
might have had another cloth on it. The printed pattern of hers, a wreath of
green vine leaves, seemed to mock her.
Take your medicine, one comer of her mind told her. Take it now. Medicine. The
medicine was down the hall again, in the dark, in the bathroom cabinet. It was
locked, she would have to turn on the light to find the key. Brad would waken,
and be muzzily sympathetic. In less than a breath, the right side of her face
went stiff, she could feel the hardening of that side of her brain, as if
someone had poured concrete into her empty skull. Too late now . . . a spike of
pain impaled her head. Nausea rolled her stomach. So stupid, she told herself.
You should have taken the medicine when you woke Up. She told herself that every
time.
She could not have worked on taxes the next day even if the threat of another
migraine had not pressed in on her, squeezing her mind to the lining of her
skull. She had visitors.
"Do you come from a dysfunctional family?" asked the new rector's wife. They had
come to introduce themselves, to I earn "about your needs and how the church can
help you," they had said. The rector's wife had the competent air of a good
nurse who expects cooperation.
"No . . . not really," She had backed into her chair as far as she could; she
flinched inwardly from the rector's wife's expression. They would already know,
she supposed. They would already have made their judgments. "My -- uh -- parents
were divorced, but aside from that --" That was not something most people could
put aside, but she still felt that society's reaction m divorce, especially in
school, had done her more harm than the divorce itself. Now it was fashionable
to have, come from a dysfunctional family; back then only perfection would do.
She distrusted the change in attitude.
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"Aahh." A knowing professional sound, judgment made and rendered all in one.
Efficient. "Are you all right, really?"
She was all right, really. She had learned to ignore the shimmering edges, the
sudden disruption of vision into fragmented, faceted forms (easier, now, with
computer graphics so common -- she could tell herself firmly that her visual
computer was malfunctioning), even the strangeness that made her own house, her
own family, so disturbing. Migraine aura. That's all it was, and the association
with a childhood event purely accidental. No alcoholism, no drug addiction, no
physical or sexual or emotional abuse. You've got nothing to complain about,
said the anonymous voice. You're lucky. Luck being, as it were, her only
handicap.
"Really all right," she repeated, hoping it was only once. "Fine." The rector's
wife had begun to glitter dangerously; perhaps she would leave before she turned
into an abstraction of planes and angles of beaten gold. The rector's wife would
be terrifying as an insect, vast and intrusive; she would have grasping claws
and the impersonal determination of a mantis dissecting a grasshopper for lunch.
She must have said something else, because the rector was talking now, replying,
it seemed, to something she had said. Something about her father. She blinked,
hoping to resolve the pattern of bright dots and dark ones into something
recognizable. The rector had dark hairs on the backs of his hands, and
fingernails neatly dipped.
"-- ought to tell him how you feel," the rector said. "Or that's a kind of
lying, too, isn't it? Concealing things? One should be honest . . ."
As a child, perhaps, A child craving attention. A child honestly curious. A
child putting together those two childish things . . . instead of putting away
childish things . . . and thereby releasing . . . whatever she had released. She
knew better than to say that; she had said too much already. She walked them
from the houses they smiled and waved. They had left their packet of wisdom for
her. Honesty, forgiveness, love, wrapped in shining paper with shining ribbons
around it. Her mind plucked at the glittering bows.
But it was not hers. It belonged to someone else. She glanced around, feeling
unseen eyes. They had been blue, she remembered. Clear blue, and the whites very
white, only a slight rim of red at the edge of the eyelid, probably from the
smoke. Below his eyes a gray stain of sadness, the flesh sagging away from the
bones. He had had one crooked front tooth, and some steel caps when he spoke
that reflected points of light. It's not me that won't forgive, she said
silently to the car that had long since driven away.
Around her, the gray blocks piled up, neatly, inexorably. The time she had said
something about Emily's nose, the time she had snapped at Laura, the time she
had lied about the check being in the mail. Days of plenty and peace, days of
happiness, days when she had not thought of him at all, each one a gray stone
walling her in. Stupid questions, cruel remarks, each a spike fixed in the
stones, pointing inward. Clumsiness, inattention, laziness: the complaints of
her teachers. Pride, insensitivity, selfishness: the complaints of her spiritual
leaders. Hypersensitivity, priggishness: the complaints of her friends.
She looked at her arms, unsurprised to find them covered with blue numbers, zero
to infinity, all she had done wrong and failed to do right. Her head shuddered
and split into wedges, like a chopped tomato. Each wedge, impaled on a spike,
had its own faceted eyes with which to see, and what remained of her voice rose
from the soggy puddle of juice at the joining of the wedges. Sorry, it said, in
a child's tremulous whisper. I'm sorry. Being sorry is not enough, said the
voice she would never quite forget, in the language she had never heard before.
She knew the meaning though. She always did.
Her usual reluctance to confront numbers suggested the mail as an escape. A pile
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