False Hearts (False Hearts #1)(25)
“It’s what needs doing, right?” I say, with a weak, humorless smile. “Have to tie off the loose ends before we really go fishing.”
“Yes.” Still, he hesitates. “If you don’t want to do this, nobody is making you.”
“You’ve changed your tune. What, do you now think I won’t be able to do it?” Does he think I’m weak? I don’t want him to think me weak.
“No, not at all. I haven’t changed my mind in the least. But … sometimes, I wish someone had asked me that, the night before I went undercover. Asked me if this was really what I wanted to do, and given me the option to back out, without shame.” His head tilts downward. I can’t see his eyes.
“Would you have turned it down?”
“I’m not sure.”
His words frighten me. “It couldn’t be without shame. Not for me,” I say, almost gently. “I couldn’t leave my sister. I might be terrified of what’s going to happen. I might be so angry at her for hiding things from me that if she were here right now, I don’t know if I’d hug her or scream at her. But I could never just leave her to freeze. That’s not an option.”
He meets my eyes. “Good.”
Detective Nazarin plugs me into the machine. My eyes grow heavy.
I sleep.
*
Tila’s sitting at a table almost identical to the one where I saw all the Ratel people interviewed the last time I was plugged in. It’s only been a few days, but I’m shocked at the change in my sister. She seems haggard, and thinner. They’ve dressed her in a plain, dark blue uniform similar to nursing scrubs. Her short hair is frizzy instead of spiky—prison shampoo, I suppose.
The biggest difference is in her eyes. I’ve seen it before—she gets the same look when she realizes she has to either start a painting over again or ditch it entirely. The look that screams, I failed. It wouldn’t matter what I said to her. She couldn’t shake that the failure was due to something deep within her. A flaw.
Yet her strength is still there. The bright glint in her eye when she knows she has something the other person wants. I’ve been on the receiving end of those bright, tormenting eyes before. It could drive me crazy.
Across from her sits Officer Oloyu, the man with the Golden Bear tattoo. I’m half surprised it’s not Nazarin for a second; but then, he wouldn’t have had time to go see her, wherever she is, interview her, and be back to train me. Oloyu leans forward, but I can tell he’s nervous. “Tell me about the Zenith club, please, Miss Collins.”
Tila plays with a snag of dry skin next to her fingernail, almost as if she’s bored. She recites her litany. “I’ve worked as a hostess for the last four years. I started in some really shitty clubs, like Gamma Ray. I bounced around a couple of other places, then Sal took me on at Zenith. Right away I knew that was where I wanted to stay.”
She leans back in her chair. She has an audience for the first time in days. After all she’s put me through, I find it infuriating that she’s still putting on a show.
“That’s something I didn’t realize going in,” she continues. “That even though people pay money to go to these clubs, they sometimes still hate you, deep down. Hate that they can’t form any genuine connections in real life so they have to pay for you. Or pay for Zeal in the rooms and for you to join in, as they don’t have any friends who will link with them. They resent you for it. It can make things plenty awkward, lemme tell you. In Zenith, people are nicer, and really seem to like being around you.”
She’d said something similar to me before, but she’d also shrugged, saying that they loved her too. Love, hate, desire, envy, or simple enjoyment of her company. Sometimes all of it wrapped up together.
“And did Vuk hate you?” Officer Oloyu asks.
That stops her. “No, I don’t think he did.” Her voice is quiet.
“What’s the exact specification of your job at Zenith?” Officer Oloyu asks. I can tell he’s interested. He’s likely never been to a club like Zenith. Not on his salary.
She crosses her arms over her stomach, pulling the fabric tight against her breasts. She knows Oloyu’s looking. Her head tilts up, defiant, one corner of her mouth quirked. I know that look, too. “I suppose—I’ll never work there again, will I? I’ve been called a hooker, a whore, a call girl. All that. Whatever. It’s not just sex—sex work rarely is, anyway. I’m their fantasy.” She smiles, and it lights up her wan face. She has reclaimed many of those terms for herself, telling me the words couldn’t hurt her if she did. Maybe she’s distancing herself from other types of sex work because she’s speaking to a police officer. Even if being a hostess is not illegal, she’s still nervous. “These days, so many men and women work all alone, connected to their wallscreens and their small, cramped apartments. They don’t seem to understand how to make real friends, or maybe they want some who are a bit less … complicated. So they come to clubs like Zenith, where friends, lovers or almost-lovers are all lined up at the ready. There are no expectations, no birthdays to remember or weddings to attend. Connection without attachment. Without strings. Without disappointment.
“So that’s what I do. I talk to them. I pour them drinks. I laugh at their jokes. I listen to them. I look them in the eye. Most of the time, that’s all they need. They have a nice time, and then they go home to their empty apartments and their wallscreens.”