void31
Previously Icathurus
The day he first cuts himself is the day reality finally sinks in for Daniel.
He stands in the middle of a pristine bathroom in a place he doesn't know, turned away from and approximately two feet to the left of a mirror he doesn't look into. His palm is turned upward, hovering at chest level. The skin is not his own. There are recognizable creases splayed through it in an illogical, agitating pattern, marred within their ivory matrix by a two-inch laceration that weeps red into his cuff.
This has happened before, of course. Not habitually, because the mistakes that lead to such inconveniences are far less frequent for him than they are for others. (And perhaps he'd never be here if that were untrue.) His only inconveniences are the results of a random occurrence which cannot possibly be taken into account: a window shattered by a straw baseball; a rowdy animal released in a careless error; a loose wire tossed into a damp sink basin. Things so rare and so entirely up to chance that they simply aren't cataloged by the human mind--or, in his case, anything produced by it.
There are some remarkable aspects of his current situation, however, that set this experience apart from his typical trauma. This is a new place, and he is a new person.
No--he is, now, in all technicalities, a person.
That's why he's bleeding.
Daniel will not reflect on this.
He knows what to do--he believes he knows what to do; he's almost certain of it, in fact--but the sight of blood, trickling from his own hand in thin, viscous crimson rivulets is more distracting than he'd ever anticipated.
Eleven months prior, the rare wound was no one's fault. Chance was the only perpetrator. And when chance struck, the consequences could be cleaned up in no less than ten minutes, twelve at the most. Replacing a suit in the event of a larger abrasion was always twice the bother.
He's never felt the need to look at himself when it happens, either. Realistically, it's a waste of time. He knows what is there, beneath the thin, porous layer of faux flesh. Or at least what should be there, and what should be there is a complex labyrinth of silver and gray, smooth cords and cables and the effortless bend of synthetic tissue, free from anything that even remotely resembles what he's looking at now.
There's some type of alert ringing at the back of what he assumes to be his mind. He knows humans don't experience such things, but he isn't sure what else to call it. It's sharp and incessant, intent on drawing his focus away from everything else (not as if he were focused on much else to begin with), riling up a hideous sensation somewhere in his midsection and making his fingertips quiver. All of this emanating from a stupid, insignificant little tear in the flesh of his hand.
He was in the compound courtyard where it had happened. They were chased out for thirty minutes each day, roughly at twelve in the afternoon--for what, Daniel does not know--and they, the victims, sat frozen among one another, with the same wide-eyed, terror-struck complexions throughout. Hybrids did not socialize--this, their superiors were apparently oblivious to--and the fact that they now had free tongues did not inspire anyone to be any more talkative.
He'd found solace between two other empty faces--a young blond male and a scruffy, odd-eyed female who seemed not to have survived the transition quite so well as the rest of them. They arranged themselves on a metal bench like birds on a wire, with he in the middle, only ever exchanging glances that could have meant anything. But there was something terribly secure about having others so close, and Daniel never made a move to abandon their display.
He'd had his hand curled under the seat of the bench when the compound faculty had come to round them back up that afternoon, resting above the head of a nail that he had not, in all his stiff silence, paid much attention to. The duration of the thirty minutes was primarily spent waiting for it to be over. But when one of their daily herders turned out to be a prim, older gentleman whom Daniel was not particularly friendly with, he'd shot right up before he could process why he would do such a thing, tearing the metal through his thin, worthless flesh like a blade through butter.
He finally forces himself from the corner of the bathroom, steps in front of the sink, but doesn't look up. He's not sure why he can't. He switches the faucet on and folds his hands beneath it, shocked at the sudden jerk of his forearms when the temperature proves to be unsatisfactory. He scowls at the curl of pale steam twirling away from the basin. He doesn't like that; he doesn't like not knowing what he'll do next.
He fixes the heat, rubs at the wound and promptly ignores the spike of aggravation still nagging at him from some obscure recess of his consciousness, watching the red dapple the water beneath. He does know how to do this. That brings some degree of comfort. Of course he knows how to do this; he's done this dozens of times.
He doesn't know the man's name--he doesn't know anyone's name, in fact. From what Daniel gathers, he's an orderly, and engaged, though he finds himself wondering on more than one occasion who might be so audacious. He has dark hair and a bright, toothy smile, and his features are (somewhat) conventionally attractive. He’s nice to the rest of the faculty, and they seem to favor him the way most humans do their co-workers. But he'll find every excuse to be alone with Daniel. He looks at him like he might want to kill him, speaks to him in ways he doesn’t understand, and touches him like he intends to hurt him, but never does quite go through with it.
A part of Daniel understands. He’s a designer product, praised for aesthetic appeal almost as highly as intelligence and competence. He doesn’t understand sex, but he knows how the urge acts on humans, and he’s no stranger to their unique attractions to him. If he were home--if he had some kind of directive--he might have let the man do as he pleased.
He takes a rag from the cabinet perpendicular to the mirror, eyes skillfully avoiding the reflection. He’s still bleeding, but the irritation is ebbing somewhat as he wraps his hand once, twice, and ties it with his teeth. He watches a faint red stain blossom slowly behind the knot, aching.
His actions today were justified, he reasons. The orderly has been victimizing him for almost half his stay. His aggression had piqued earlier that month, when he’d backed Daniel into a wall in an empty corridor and squeezed his hip so hard that the bruises lingered for a week. A cluster of empty-eyed reversions hardly have reason to defend him if the aggression continues, the rest of the faculty don’t care, and he certainly can’t lash out in his own defense.
He drags the chair beside the door in front of the sink, and sits with his arms crossed over the counter and his head low, listening to himself breathe. The respiratory process hurt him so badly the first few days that he’d prayed to something nonexistent for death, or anything close to it. Now, it comes naturally--except when he thinks too hard. Humans are funny that way.
He finally braves a look up at himself. The mirror reveals to him a creature with flush skin and dark, sunken eyes, lined with shadows from lack of sleep, which terrifies Daniel. His features are still sharp and handsome, perfectly symmetrical. His jaw and cheekbones jut out a little more in result of his lack of eating, which is as disgusting as sleep is terrifying. His hair is soft, black and wispy, his lips a little dry, but having maintained their graceful shape. He can feel the threat of stubble when he runs his fingertips over his chin. His figure hasn't changed much, but he's thinner, and the muscle he'd been given has lapsed over these last few months. His waist is slimmer and his collarbones jut.
There are good things about this place. It's an idea he's tried very hard to keep at the forefront of his mind. Independent thought is another new concept to him, and it terrifies him no less than the rest. But it's keeping him alive.
There’s Lilian, a sweet, robust woman who works in the kitchen, calls him "sweetie", runs her fingers through his hair and convinces him to drink water. There's a skinny tabby cat who slinks through the chain-link fence sometimes and rubs up against his legs. There's the shower, the rain, the furnace in his room, and the little dandelions that have sprung up recently around his window, all of which Daniel loves. There's even his outside companions, which, he supposes, are better than nothing.
But it isn’t where he needs to be.
He misses her, the girl, and her father, too, though he struggles some days to recall what they were like. The thought comes to him again and again that he’s only seventeen years old--still a baby, Lilian would have called him--and most of his memory had been warped in the reversion process. It's taken him a while to grasp the concept of what “home” is, and when he does, he’s still not sure whether he had one to begin with.
But he does remember them. He remembers them in the little things--the aromas on the expensive suits which he somehow manages to snatch back from the faculty’s vaults; in the laughter of their children when they come to see the robots; in the faces of the others like him, terrified but yearning. They all need someone. It’s what they’re for.
Daniel peers up at himself through half-lidded eyes. There are good things about this place, but he's miserable. Lilian will fuss over him, but the orderly won't let him alone. The tabby will come to visit, but he'll still be gazing into the soulless eyes of his companions. The furnace and the dandelions will still be there, but he'll still bleed.
There's a terrible wrenching in his chest, and it's not the first time. He feels so little, so pointless. So terribly, awfully alone. A feeling returns to him, one he hasn't had since the very beginning of his stay.
If this is humanity, he'd rather be dead.
He stands in the middle of a pristine bathroom in a place he doesn't know, turned away from and approximately two feet to the left of a mirror he doesn't look into. His palm is turned upward, hovering at chest level. The skin is not his own. There are recognizable creases splayed through it in an illogical, agitating pattern, marred within their ivory matrix by a two-inch laceration that weeps red into his cuff.
This has happened before, of course. Not habitually, because the mistakes that lead to such inconveniences are far less frequent for him than they are for others. (And perhaps he'd never be here if that were untrue.) His only inconveniences are the results of a random occurrence which cannot possibly be taken into account: a window shattered by a straw baseball; a rowdy animal released in a careless error; a loose wire tossed into a damp sink basin. Things so rare and so entirely up to chance that they simply aren't cataloged by the human mind--or, in his case, anything produced by it.
There are some remarkable aspects of his current situation, however, that set this experience apart from his typical trauma. This is a new place, and he is a new person.
No--he is, now, in all technicalities, a person.
That's why he's bleeding.
Daniel will not reflect on this.
He knows what to do--he believes he knows what to do; he's almost certain of it, in fact--but the sight of blood, trickling from his own hand in thin, viscous crimson rivulets is more distracting than he'd ever anticipated.
Eleven months prior, the rare wound was no one's fault. Chance was the only perpetrator. And when chance struck, the consequences could be cleaned up in no less than ten minutes, twelve at the most. Replacing a suit in the event of a larger abrasion was always twice the bother.
He's never felt the need to look at himself when it happens, either. Realistically, it's a waste of time. He knows what is there, beneath the thin, porous layer of faux flesh. Or at least what should be there, and what should be there is a complex labyrinth of silver and gray, smooth cords and cables and the effortless bend of synthetic tissue, free from anything that even remotely resembles what he's looking at now.
There's some type of alert ringing at the back of what he assumes to be his mind. He knows humans don't experience such things, but he isn't sure what else to call it. It's sharp and incessant, intent on drawing his focus away from everything else (not as if he were focused on much else to begin with), riling up a hideous sensation somewhere in his midsection and making his fingertips quiver. All of this emanating from a stupid, insignificant little tear in the flesh of his hand.
He was in the compound courtyard where it had happened. They were chased out for thirty minutes each day, roughly at twelve in the afternoon--for what, Daniel does not know--and they, the victims, sat frozen among one another, with the same wide-eyed, terror-struck complexions throughout. Hybrids did not socialize--this, their superiors were apparently oblivious to--and the fact that they now had free tongues did not inspire anyone to be any more talkative.
He'd found solace between two other empty faces--a young blond male and a scruffy, odd-eyed female who seemed not to have survived the transition quite so well as the rest of them. They arranged themselves on a metal bench like birds on a wire, with he in the middle, only ever exchanging glances that could have meant anything. But there was something terribly secure about having others so close, and Daniel never made a move to abandon their display.
He'd had his hand curled under the seat of the bench when the compound faculty had come to round them back up that afternoon, resting above the head of a nail that he had not, in all his stiff silence, paid much attention to. The duration of the thirty minutes was primarily spent waiting for it to be over. But when one of their daily herders turned out to be a prim, older gentleman whom Daniel was not particularly friendly with, he'd shot right up before he could process why he would do such a thing, tearing the metal through his thin, worthless flesh like a blade through butter.
He finally forces himself from the corner of the bathroom, steps in front of the sink, but doesn't look up. He's not sure why he can't. He switches the faucet on and folds his hands beneath it, shocked at the sudden jerk of his forearms when the temperature proves to be unsatisfactory. He scowls at the curl of pale steam twirling away from the basin. He doesn't like that; he doesn't like not knowing what he'll do next.
He fixes the heat, rubs at the wound and promptly ignores the spike of aggravation still nagging at him from some obscure recess of his consciousness, watching the red dapple the water beneath. He does know how to do this. That brings some degree of comfort. Of course he knows how to do this; he's done this dozens of times.
He doesn't know the man's name--he doesn't know anyone's name, in fact. From what Daniel gathers, he's an orderly, and engaged, though he finds himself wondering on more than one occasion who might be so audacious. He has dark hair and a bright, toothy smile, and his features are (somewhat) conventionally attractive. He’s nice to the rest of the faculty, and they seem to favor him the way most humans do their co-workers. But he'll find every excuse to be alone with Daniel. He looks at him like he might want to kill him, speaks to him in ways he doesn’t understand, and touches him like he intends to hurt him, but never does quite go through with it.
A part of Daniel understands. He’s a designer product, praised for aesthetic appeal almost as highly as intelligence and competence. He doesn’t understand sex, but he knows how the urge acts on humans, and he’s no stranger to their unique attractions to him. If he were home--if he had some kind of directive--he might have let the man do as he pleased.
He takes a rag from the cabinet perpendicular to the mirror, eyes skillfully avoiding the reflection. He’s still bleeding, but the irritation is ebbing somewhat as he wraps his hand once, twice, and ties it with his teeth. He watches a faint red stain blossom slowly behind the knot, aching.
His actions today were justified, he reasons. The orderly has been victimizing him for almost half his stay. His aggression had piqued earlier that month, when he’d backed Daniel into a wall in an empty corridor and squeezed his hip so hard that the bruises lingered for a week. A cluster of empty-eyed reversions hardly have reason to defend him if the aggression continues, the rest of the faculty don’t care, and he certainly can’t lash out in his own defense.
He drags the chair beside the door in front of the sink, and sits with his arms crossed over the counter and his head low, listening to himself breathe. The respiratory process hurt him so badly the first few days that he’d prayed to something nonexistent for death, or anything close to it. Now, it comes naturally--except when he thinks too hard. Humans are funny that way.
He finally braves a look up at himself. The mirror reveals to him a creature with flush skin and dark, sunken eyes, lined with shadows from lack of sleep, which terrifies Daniel. His features are still sharp and handsome, perfectly symmetrical. His jaw and cheekbones jut out a little more in result of his lack of eating, which is as disgusting as sleep is terrifying. His hair is soft, black and wispy, his lips a little dry, but having maintained their graceful shape. He can feel the threat of stubble when he runs his fingertips over his chin. His figure hasn't changed much, but he's thinner, and the muscle he'd been given has lapsed over these last few months. His waist is slimmer and his collarbones jut.
There are good things about this place. It's an idea he's tried very hard to keep at the forefront of his mind. Independent thought is another new concept to him, and it terrifies him no less than the rest. But it's keeping him alive.
There’s Lilian, a sweet, robust woman who works in the kitchen, calls him "sweetie", runs her fingers through his hair and convinces him to drink water. There's a skinny tabby cat who slinks through the chain-link fence sometimes and rubs up against his legs. There's the shower, the rain, the furnace in his room, and the little dandelions that have sprung up recently around his window, all of which Daniel loves. There's even his outside companions, which, he supposes, are better than nothing.
But it isn’t where he needs to be.
He misses her, the girl, and her father, too, though he struggles some days to recall what they were like. The thought comes to him again and again that he’s only seventeen years old--still a baby, Lilian would have called him--and most of his memory had been warped in the reversion process. It's taken him a while to grasp the concept of what “home” is, and when he does, he’s still not sure whether he had one to begin with.
But he does remember them. He remembers them in the little things--the aromas on the expensive suits which he somehow manages to snatch back from the faculty’s vaults; in the laughter of their children when they come to see the robots; in the faces of the others like him, terrified but yearning. They all need someone. It’s what they’re for.
Daniel peers up at himself through half-lidded eyes. There are good things about this place, but he's miserable. Lilian will fuss over him, but the orderly won't let him alone. The tabby will come to visit, but he'll still be gazing into the soulless eyes of his companions. The furnace and the dandelions will still be there, but he'll still bleed.
There's a terrible wrenching in his chest, and it's not the first time. He feels so little, so pointless. So terribly, awfully alone. A feeling returns to him, one he hasn't had since the very beginning of his stay.
If this is humanity, he'd rather be dead.