The Destroyer (2 page)

Read The Destroyer Online

Authors: Tara Isabella Burton

She gave me two blue eyes to replace the ones she had taken out.

That night I danced with Caesar. He slid his hand up the side of my thigh; I did not feel it. I let him take me to one of the back chambers, and there I let him open the various panels on my legs, on my forearm, in my back. I showed him where my mother had fused wires together, and where they snaked into veins. He asked me to show him my strength.

The next day a member of the senatorial science council was found poisoned, and Caesar offered my mother his place. The following month she improved upon my spine.

There was only one part of me my mother refused to operate upon. She would not risk my ability to bear children. “It is the greatest thing I have ever done,” she said to me. “It is the only way I know I am truly alive, knowing that I will live on in you. It means that I will never die.”

In the end it didn't matter. When I was sixteen, one of her refurbishments resulted in infection, and to save my life it became necessary to remove my womb.

“Never mind,” my mother said then. “I'll build you a better one tomorrow.”

II.

When I was seventeen Caesar's chief scientist died; my mother replaced him. We moved to the official residence: a glass-fronted monolith just outside the city walls. From the top floor we could make out the old city in the distance—the Colosseum, the Triumphal Arch, Trajan's Column—swarming with tramcars. With my new eyes I could even make out the stray cats.

“It's happened at last,” my mother said. “This is what we've been working toward. They know now what we can do.” She considered me. “You've gotten so beautiful, you know.”

I was not beautiful; nevertheless, I commanded attention. Men stared at my legs in the street, marveling at their symmetry, sometimes suspecting. There were rumors among the political classes—whispers of senator's wives with false hands or bionic ankles, minor modifications among the Praetorian Guard—but the totality of my replacements was unheard of, even here. My appearance in the marketplace prompted whispers, dark looks, greengrocers crossing themselves and lighting candles to the saints. By now my mother had replaced every part of me, with the exception of my left arm.

This, I had informed her, would remain precisely as it was.

My mother and I still took our walks around the Capitoline, where men bowed to us when we passed them by. My mother's name was inscribed upon the ministry walls, now, for services rendered to Caesar; she liked to go there each morning at breakfast time, to make sure that it was still there.

“All fools,” she said. “The whole lot of them.”

“Except you.”

“I've done so much, now. I've been cleverer than they were. The others: they made toys, children's games. I made things for
men.
And, you see? Now they know. It was the least they could do for me, given all that I do for him.”

She wrapped her arms around me and kissed my forehead, and in the warmth of her, nothing else existed. There was only that double strand of our being, our arms twining into one another. There was only her face in my face, her voice in my voice, and so she did not realize that I was lying to her.

It was a lie of omission. I had taken to wearing a shawl, as peasant women did, to cover the falsity of my face, and in that anonymity I had begun to wander the insalubrious alleyways of the city, like the palm readers and chicken sellers, uniformly made of flesh. There I walked for hours, in the fruitless hope of blistering my feet, of starting to smell. Alone I went across the river into Trastevere, and there I wandered anonymous in the back alleys of the marketplace.

One day I went, head covered, to the fishmonger on the riverbank; he pressed live squid into my hands and commanded me to feel their freshness; I squelched the tentacles between my fingers and marveled at how easily I crushed them.

I took my left hand out of its glove and carried it bare-handed to the bridge; there I tore at it with my teeth; there I swallowed it raw. I spit the ink out into the river and thrilled at my transgression.

I had even taken to going to church. I wasn't sure if I believed, but my mother set no store by it, and so I took perverse pleasure in listening to the old rites, in the incense that clung to my clothes. I never took a cushion for my knees when I knelt to pray—I did not need one—but the old women of the congregation took this for penance, and thought me the most pious of them all.

I lit candles for my mother, and left them burning. I took communion, and sanctified whatever parts of me could still be sanctified—five of my fingers, the wrist of my left arm. In those moments, I used to imagine that I was transfigured and that my body was neither mechanical nor flesh, but something ethereal and else, some yet-undiscovered material that my mother had not learned the secret of creating. Those parts of myself, incense doused and made whole, were all that did not belong to her.

My mother sensed this. She caught me on the stairs, twenty paces ahead of my bodyguard, and knew where I had been; she sniffed the incense that had settled on my hair.

“What must people think of you?” She stood with her arms crossed and laughed. “What must Caesar think? The senators? They probably think you're mad—or doing something political.”

“Why?”


Nobody
goes to church.”

At last she forbade me to go. It wasn't right for me to be seen there, she said—anyone who knew anything at all knew the story of her parthenogenesis; my existence routed all faith. Hadn't she done herself—simply and without any trouble—what was prophesied? In any case, Caesar would think us no better than peasants.

She asked me why I wanted to go out into the dirt, into the soot, why I wanted to smell of sweat and fruit and onions, of the filth of the world.

“It'll get into the wiring,” she said, and began to scrub at my ankles with steel wool. “I'll have to spend hours fixing it for you, and then where will we be?” Her laugh was long and high-pitched and hollow. “I don't know why you insist on going out among them,” she said. “It's only the unloved that need to go to those places, and you're the best-loved girl in Rome.” She began tinkering with the panels on my back. “Don't you think?”

I had grown used to nodding. The panels at the nape of my neck often triggered it a half step ahead of my own thoughts.

I went anyway, sneaking out at strange, orange-lit hours, lingering in the marketplace. Sometimes I bought prayer cards from the women who sold reliquaries on the church steps and took them home, just to annoy her.

“You just don't
try
,” my mother said when I returned.

My mother returned to her experiments. In my absence she filled her laboratory once more with objects both slithering and mechanical. She engineered griffins to guard the compound; she made pills that obviated the need for water, for grain, for meat.

She stopped sleeping. She locked herself in the laboratory, and at night I could hear the whirring of machinery: computer fans and bone saws. She did not speak to me, but her eyes were bloodshot, and even in repose her fingers scratched and picked at one another because she could not bear to sit still.

She built a robot with my face and tasked it with the domestic chores. She said nothing to me, but one day I came home to find my bed made and the dishes washed, and a girl with my old brown eyes staring at me across the kitchen table.

I pretended not to notice.

For Caesar she worked harder than ever. She worked on weapons, on bombs and spores. She no longer admired him. He too had failed her. He was weak in private—easily ruffled. She was too clever for him. She explained her formulas to him and he did not understand them; he only nodded—like an owl, she said—and sent her on her way.

Rome was not enough for her. She had come to hate it. She hated the obsequious waiters and the motorcycle oil that pooled up between the cobblestones. She hated the marketplace sounds: the squawking of chickens, the hawking of squid.

“They don't realize how much better I could do,” she said. She had stopped speaking to me; instead, she had taken up the habit of addressing the robot to whom she had given my eyes, inevitably in my overhearing. “You understand that, don't you? I could give them something
worthwhile
.”

Nothing was worthwhile. She stood at our window and pressed her palms against the glass; at times she muttered curses at the passersby below. They did not understand her; nobody could understand her. Did they not know that the medicine in their drinking water, the fortifications in their joints, the serenity of their sleep—all this they owed to her?

I watched her from the doorway, tapping my feet upon the threshold, and relished her unhappiness. I was one of them, after all, with my still-beating heart, my left arm still fashioned of flesh. Like them I had the power to disappoint her.

One night she came into my room, woke me two hours before dawn to tell me she had discovered it—that through which all things would be purified. She had molted, melted, melded; she had alchemized and vaporized and at last she held in a ball no bigger than a thimble the secret to the beginning and the end, the proof of her greatness, the seal of her wisdom, the stamp of herself.

She would not let me sleep. She flung open the curtains; she stomped dust from the carpets; she dragged me into her laboratory and there, humming with joy, she revealed to me a small and spinning black sphere, the size of my rosary beads.

“You see?” she said. “I've done it. I'll show them, now.”

“What does it do?”

Her laughter echoed from machine to machine. “Everything
.
” It realigned asymmetries; it gathered viscera into geometrical shapes. It took cells and rearranged them in her image. It could cure congenital deformities, she said, from the inside out.

“Is it safe?”

“What do you take me for?”

She told Caesar she wanted to test it. She asked for five hundred men. The response came swiftly, on printed letterhead. It was too dangerous, he said. Perhaps she would be content with rats?

All night long she raged, throwing beakers and jars against the wall. The maid with my face scuttled behind her, sweeping up the mess.

“You see how they've treated me?” she said. “They've made me a laughingstock—and it's because of you! You think they don't see you walking out alone, by yourself? You think they don't wonder what kind of influence I am, letting you go out among the plebs? You think it's not your fault?”

I had no answer for her.

She grabbed me by the shoulders, fixed her gaze on mine.

My eyes were made of electric sparks, and they gave nothing away.

The next morning my mother took me on our customary walk to the Capitoline, to see where her name had been inscribed upon the wall.

“It's a wonder they've got the balls to leave it up,” she said, “if this is how they're going to treat us.” She took my hand. “Come. We'll go to the Forum. We'll have a picnic.”

We sat once more on the pillars; she spread cheese on bread—a rarity, now; she almost never ate food. Together we turned our faces to the sun. She pressed my cheek against her breast and ran her fingers through my hair. The crimson light of the dusk had settled upon her cheeks, and in that light she was beautiful. I leaned against her; her body was warm on mine, and I do not know if I have ever loved her more.

“It's only that I wanted to give you the world,” she whispered to me. “It's only that I love you, and that nobody else really can.”

She began to hum—quietly at first, and then loudly enough for passersby to stop and stare—hum until every panel and every wire and every metal bolt within me began to vibrate with the beauty of it.

Fa la ninna, fa la nanna

nella braccia della mamma

Fa la ninna bel bambin

nella braccia della mamma

It was only when she stopped singing that I realized what she was about to do.

There was a flash, and then there was no more world.

III.

We can never go back. From time to time I don the necessary helmet and walk alone along the ramparts of the old city.

The men at the border press their foreheads to the floor. They retreat into their elevators and then I walk alone past the Colosseum, past the legless statues, the bones of stray cats. Now all seven hills are dust and shadows, and so alone I go to Pompey's Theatre, to the stultifying emptiness of the Hippodrome where even the eagles are dead, and alone I venture into hollowed-out tramcars; the upturned Pantheon; the parks on the Janiculum, where the vines reach all the way to the river, which has not flowed for twenty years.

I walk until nightfall, and there is no sound but my footsteps, which is like no natural sound and which sickens me still. I go alone to what's left of the basilica, to pray, and when my knees fall to the earth the clang echoes in my ears and it is the only sound left in the world.

Sometimes, briefly, I forget, and I think that I am home.

There is a caesura between all that was and all that is, between the city I loved and the city that I know now, between my mother's city and my own.

My left arm is gone now; it was the only part of me that could not withstand the blast. I screamed from the gurney for them to let it be: it was withered and misshapen; it was all that was left of her. But in those days nobody knew what was happening, or how long the effects would last, and there was a fear the spores might spread. They cut off the arm and burned it; two hours later they placed Rome under quarantine.

Caesar died instantly. In the wild and wrecked months that followed, in those frantic and fevered weeks of dead burying and barricading ourselves indoors, we went on without him. Those of us who survived were those with false arms, false legs, false eyes, bearing, all of us, my mother's seal.

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