Lyra woke up to laser lights.
She rubbed her head and looked at the blood trickling down onto her hands. She didn’t entirely remember how she’d gotten here or what happened to her, but she didn’t really need to. She didn’t exactly have a home to go back to, anyway.
She stood up and reached in her pocket for a mirror. Her wallet was missing, not that there was anything in it to begin with. Small as they were, she knew better than to leave her night’s earnings anywhere as obvious as a wallet.
The mirror on her compact had long since broken, but she couldn’t afford a new one. It was the first thing she’d ever bought with her own money, a whopping five credits and fifty three cents earned over the course of four days of double shifts. In hindsight, spending that much money on something as stupid as a compact seemed thoughtless, but she’d been young then. It was probably about a decade ago, so Lyra was five, maybe six?
Through the cracks in the mirror, she could see that her bright pink, bubblegum-colored hair was somehow even messier than it usually was, and one side of her face was covered in deep violet bruises she didn’t remember getting. Somebody probably beat her up and took her wallet, she reasoned. Part of her wondered why they didn’t just kill her if they were going to mug her and dump her in an alley, but maybe the robber didn’t want to get their hands dirty unnecessarily. Besides, they probably knew they’d never get prosecuted. Even if Lyra somehow worked up the courage to waltz into a police station, they’d never believe a Cantator, anyway.
She tried in vain to smooth the tangles on her head. The blood from the laceration she’d somehow sustained had dried in her hair, making it even worse. She remembered buying a comb at some point, but some other girl had immediately stolen it, and she never bothered trying to recover it. It was best not to pick a fight if one could help it down here.
Abandoning the hope of making herself look decent, she tucked the compact mirror back into her purse. Pretty girls got the best tips, but with the bruises and the cuts and the acne she already had, fixing her hair probably wouldn’t help much anyway. If she had makeup, she might have been able to make herself look better, but she couldn’t afford that, either.
She set off to work, not entirely knowing what time it was. Judging by the amount of teenage girls on street corners, it was probably late at night. Keeping track of time was difficult when the sunlight couldn’t shine through the buildings to reach here, and she had no idea how long she’d slept for.
She entered through the back door of the building, not wanting to deal with the crowd outside. “You’re late,” one of the dancers snarled, leaning against the wall by the door.
“You think I don’t know that?” Lyra asked.
“Well, if you knew that, why didn’t you get here faster? It’s been like an hour since you were supposed to be here. Viola’s going to be pissed.”
“Viola’s probably too drunk to notice.”
The dancer sighed. “I’d like to argue with you, but you’re probably right. At least, I hope you are, for your sake.”
Lyra rolled her eyes. “I’ll be fine.”
It was true that Viola could be nasty when she wanted to be. Still, Lyra had dealt with far worse before—Viola wasn’t anywhere near as formidable as a threat as she thought she was. She was one of those people who went mad with power when given the slightest hint of authority, and who exercised her drug-fueled stim rage on her underlings just for the hell of it. But when it came down to it, Viola was nothing more than a 30-year-old woman who looked and acted like a 60-year-old because of her history of violence and substance abuse, and there was nothing she could really do but yell at Lyra and steal her tips, which happened on a daily basis anyway.
Lyra washed her hands quickly—not like it would help; it was filthy everywhere, and she was sure the water had just as many germs as the surroundings—and put on an apron. It was probably supposed to look sexier than it did, but because Lyra was so short, it hung around her knees instead of high up on her thighs. Then she put on the rest of the overly cutesy, cheaply made, poorly designed ensemble—uncomfortable heels with no arch support, a choker with the same lacy details as the apron, thin satiny gloves that wouldn’t protect against anything, and bows for her scraggly hair. Because even the cleaning staff had to be eye candy.
“You look ridiculous,” said Alicaria. Alicaria wasn’t the name on her birth certificate—like many others here, she probably didn’t even have a birth certificate—but she was an alicaria, so that’s what they called her. It worked well that way; Sufflava for the girl with platinum blonde hair, Saltatrix for the prima ballerina, Sambuca for the harp player. Lyra had gotten her name from when Cithara was ill for two months and she’d made extra tips by playing the abandoned lyre. Cantatores didn’t get names. They were defined by their caste and their job, because that’s the only thing they were good for, and Lyra was no exception.
“I look better than you,” she retorted. Alicaria was dressed in a ridiculous ensemble designed to show off her curves, but she didn’t really have anything to show other than protruding ribs and a hunger-swollen stomach.
“Give it two more years and you’ll be in my position,” Alicaria said. “Hell, maybe even less than that. Just wait until Aria kicks the bucket.”
“What happened to Aria?” Lyra asked.
“Pregnant. The last kid nearly killed her—she woulda died if it weren’t for that charity doctor woman who cut open her organs to get the baby out. And God knows we aren’t going to get charity doctors down here anymore, not since Alestra passed all those regulations on which castes can go where.”
Lyra laughed. “Let’s hope Acidalia’s better.”
“Acidalia? Please,” Alicaria scoffed. “I doubt she’ll make it a month before she’s dead.”
Lyra knitted her eyebrows. “What makes you say that?”
“Did you hear the news? Last night, some aristocrat got fed up and tried to kill her in the middle of some party. Cassiopeia was her name, I think? The girl from the Generalis family. It was a whole big thing.”
“An assassination attempt?” Lyra’s eyes widened. “Wow. I would not want to be in that Generalis girl’s position right now.”
“More like you don’t want to be in Acidalia’s position. Half the court wants her dead, apparently.”
“Why?” Lyra asked. She was well aware that any sort of criticism of the Imperial family was liable to lead to death for treason. Even though the laws were always different for the upper class, she felt like trying to murder the Imperatrix Ceasarina was one of those things that was always frowned upon, regardless of social status.
“Beats the hell out of me. Apparently she’s a Martian bastard child, but that’s just a rumor. And you know, she supposedly has a rocky relationship with Alestra. Anyway,” Alicaria said, “I’m just a Cantator. What do I know?”
“More than me,” Lyra replied. “I don’t even watch the news. They never play it in here.”
“Yeah, guys like to watch sports mostly.” Alicaria rolled her eyes. “Drives me mad. I’ll be sitting there flirting with some guy and all he cares about is which idiot, doped-up transhuminist cyborg beats the other idiot, doped-up transhumanist cyborg… oh, shit.”
“What? Oh, Viola.” Lyra sighed. “I should go.”
“No, not Viola. Look.” Alicaria pointed at a pair of young men who had mistakenly waltzed right into the back entrance. “Who the hell are they?”
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“I don’t know, some soldiers on shore leave?”
Alicaria shook her head. “Nah, they’re immunes. Look at them. They ain’t the type of draft dodgers who show up in here on the regular. They’ve got money.”
“What’s an immune?” Lyra asked, but Aricaria was already hanging off one of the soldier’s arms, looking at him like a predator eyeing its prey.
“So,” she asked, her voice a husky vibrato, “come here often?”
The soldier boy laughed and puffed out his chest to show his shiny pins and badges. Lyra had no idea what they were for, but they sure looked important. “Not really,” he said. “What’s a pretty girl like you doing down here?”
“Mmmm, wouldn’t you like to know.” She twirled a piece of bleach-blonde hair around her finger and giggled as if she’d just heard the funniest thing in the world. “What’s your name, handsome?”
“Well, officially AX-C240, but my friends call me Ace,” he said cockily.
AX unit? Lyra thought. They were specialists, the type of people who got invited to classy parties and hung out with aristocrats—the sons of the rich and famous. Alicaria was right—these people had money, and they looked like the exact type of dumb upper-crusts who paid more than was necessary because they didn’t know what was the normal rate. And there were two of them. She’d never so much as touched a boy before, but she desperately needed cash, and—
“Stop it, Ace,” the other boy said, interrupting Lyra’s train of thought. For some strange reason, she felt almost relieved. “She’s a meretrix, she’s just trying to get your money.”
Alicaria pouted. “Well, you don’t have to say it like that.”
“Well, I’m right, aren’t I?” the boy asked. “Neither of us have credits to spare right now, anyway.”
“Like hell you don’t,” Alicaria snapped. “You’re part of one of the highest ranked sectors in the entire army and you’re wearing ceremonial gear to boot. You look like the goddam Imperatrix herself.”
Suddenly the boy’s face went white. “What? Who told you that?”
“Jeez, nobody. Relax,” Alicaria said huffily. “You people are always so paranoid. Either spend some money or get out.”
The boy breathed a sigh of relief. “Okay, okay. We won’t be using your services, you can leave now.”
“Whatever.” Alicaria stomped away, her mismatched stilettos clacking against the grimy hardwood floor.
Lyra turned back to the two men. “Who are you looking for?”
“Are you trying to sell us something?” Ace asked suspiciously.
“No, I’m the maid slash underage eye candy for creepy dudes.” Lyra gestured to her apron. “Just trying to be helpful.”
“Well, you don’t look very much like ‘eye candy,’ no offense,” he said. “Did you know your nose has been bleeding for this entire conversation?”
Lyra lifted a hand to her nose. It was bloody. “Huh.”
“What happened to you?” the other soldier asked. “You look like you got jumped.”
Lyra shrugged. “I probably did get jumped.”
The soldiers looked at each other, surprised. They definitely seemed like the type of exploitable young idiots who didn’t know how things worked down here—anyone who came to the Undergound without knowing the incredibly high crime rate was setting themselves up for failure.
“You look awful,” the soldier said. “Do you want a bandage or something? The name’s T, by the way.”
“Lyra,” Lyra said, “but that’s not my real name. I don’t really have one.”
T shrugged. “Neither do I.” He reached into his pocket and pulled out a tiny medkit, which expanded open into a full kit like a pop-up book when he touched the red cross on the front. “Latex or non-latex?”
“Don’t care,” Lyra replied indifferently, but inside she was pleasantly surprised. She’d never had somebody pause to help her before, let alone ask her preferred type of bandage. T handed her a pink one in the same color as her hair, which she plastered on her bleeding cheek.
“Thanks,” she said, smiling at him—a genuine smile, not a please-give-me-your-money smile. “Who are you looking for anyway?”
“Her name’s Cassandra,” Ace said.
A lightbulb went off in Lyra’s head. “What’s her caste?”
Ace paused momentarily, racking his brain for something. “A Scientia, I think? Her daughter used to be an astrophysicist student, I know that much. But then Cass got caught committing some type of crime and they went on the run, and now they’re down here someplace.”
“I think I know her!” Lyra exclaimed.
T snorted. “Trust me, you’d know if you knew Cassandra.”
“I think I do. She’s kind of popular around these parts,” Lyra explained. “I’ve never met her personally, but I know a little about her. She’s supposedly nicer than most lenae and has a terrifying cat.”
“A well known lena cat lady,” T chuckled. “She was always bad at keeping a low profile, wasn’t she?”
Ace nodded. “She’s so attention-seeking. Do you know where she is?”
Lyra thought for a moment. “I think she might live near the lustris across the street? I always assumed she was the procuress, but apparently that’s not true.”
“Nah,” Ace said. “She just likes to make up stories. You want to come with us?”
T sighed. “Ace, we can’t just—“
“She’s bleeding, T,” Ace argued, his voice sounding more whiny than Lyra expected from such a pompous-looking soldier.
T frowned. “Fine. But only because you’re hurt and Cass has a bigger medkit than I do. And we’re in such deep shit that I doubt Cassandra would object to us bringing along a random praeministra.”
Lyra sighed. “I mean, I do have work. But I’m also late, and the more I can avoid Viola—my supervisor—the better.”
“Who’s Viola?” Ace asked.
“She works for my Magister,” Lyra said. “She’s not dangerous or anything, but she’s kind of a jerk.”
“And who’s your Magister?”
“The guy who owns me,” Lyra said.
The soldiers looked at each other, alarmed.
“Not owns me like a slave,” she added quickly. “I mean, he didn’t buy me—well I guess he did, kinda. I’m just in a lot of debt to him—well, actually, my mother is in a lot of debt to him, but she’s probably either dead or worse, so it’s my problem now.”
“That doesn’t seem fair,” Ace said.
Lyra smiled sadly. “Life isn’t fair. You just have to make do with the cards you’re dealt.”
“Maybe we can deal you another, better card,” Ace offered, holding out a hand. “Actually, that’s probably a bad analogy. I don’t know how card games work.”
“It works well enough for me,” Lyra laughed, taking his hand. “You know, I want to go with you, but I don’t think I can. I have a job… and as shitty as it is, it’s a job. Those are hard to come by, especially for Cantatores. And I need money, badly. I can’t just walk away from this to follow two guys I just met.”
T and Ace looked at each other. They shared a moment of understanding that Lyra was not privy to, then turned to face her again.
“I can offer you a lot more money than you’re making now,” T said, his voice quieter. “And a comfortable place to sleep, and three hot meals a day.”
Lyra suddenly had a realization. “You’re trying to rope me into some human trafficking ring, or a cult, or an organ harvesting operation, aren’t you? Because that’s exactly what this sounds like.”
T rubbed the back of his neck sheepishly. “Yeah, I guess it kind of looks like that. It’s not, though.”
“And I should believe you why?” Lyra asked, crossing her arms.
“I mean, there really isn’t a reason. You don’t have to come with us,” Ace said. “I just… feel bad. No offense, but you look like garbage.”
Lyra didn’t think she looked that bad, all things considered… but then again, these two were clearly wealthy—not even middle-class, could-afford-their-own-apartment wealthy, but really wealthy—and they probably had different standards for how people were supposed to look. And they were being nice to her. That was new.
“Your nose is still bleeding,” T added, offering her thick bundle of gauze.
Lyra looked at him, then looked at the doorway to the inside of the bar. Truthfully, she wanted to take this chance, but there was just such a high risk of it being something deadly. If she followed these soldiers, as nice as they were, there was a high chance she’d never return.
But what did she have to come back to, anyway?
She had no future down here. In all honesty, she would never work off that debt—she’d be in her sixties before it was gone, and that’s assuming she made it past twenty, which most girls didn’t. Aria probably wouldn’t make it past 18 if Alicaria was right, and she usually was. And what would Lyra do then? She wouldn’t be indebted, but she’d still have no money to speak of and no job lined up, so she’d just keep working here… and nothing would change, debt or no debt. She’d be broke forever, reliant on people born into money to give her scraps of charity off their great table. This might be the one opportunity she had to break that cycle.
“Okay,” she decided. “Let’s go, but quickly.”
“You sure changed your tune,” T said, surprised.
“Ever come to the realization that the whole system is a kind of screwed up cycle and you’re stuck in it?” Lyra asked.
“Funnily enough,” he said, “I have.”
Lyra assumed he was talking about the military complex—she didn’t entirely know what that was, but it seemed like a newsworthy buzzword that soldiers would talk about—but there was something in his tone that suggested otherwise. She looked more closely at him, trying to understand what he meant. Then she noticed that his almost-orange skin and brown, Martian eyes were incredibly familiar. He reminded her of somebody she’d seen before.
There were plenty of half-Martians in the army, and most Eleutherian soldiers were supposed to look alike. She was probably just thinking of some other man. Still, for some reason the resemblance was almost reassuring.
Lyra took the apron off and hung it back up on the nail that served as a hook. She wanted to say something cool about leaving the system or breaking out of their programming, then she realized that it would make her sound like a protagonist from a crappy cyberpunk movie, and she probably wasn’t cool enough to pull it off.
Instead, she held the gauze tighter to her nose and left the bloodstains sitting there on the floor, reveling in the fact that for once she didn’t have to clean it up. Maybe she was going straight into an organ harvesting ring or a murderous cult, but maybe this small victory, this ability to just walk away from this place, was worth it.