Chapter 34
VI
I can’t sleep.
Mara’s breathing is slow and even beside me, the deep rhythm of someone who’s no longer afraid to close her eyes.
Good. One of us should sleep. I lie still for twenty minutes, staring at the ceiling, listening to the Rot do its nighttime thing—the distant hum of the generator, the creak of infrastructure settling, someone’s cough three rooms over traveling through the ductwork.
My brain won’t shut off. Dad’s papers. The names.
The network of officials who were so brazen, they barely bothered hiding what they were doing.
The bastards so certain they were untouchable that they left a trail anyone could follow.
Except the person who followed was my dad, and they destroyed him for it.
Every time I close my eyes, I see his handwriting, the pen pressed hard enough to dent the paper.
I ease out of bed without disturbing Mara, pull on a sweatshirt, and slip out the door. The Rot at night has a different quality. There’s always someone awake. Always someone working a late shift or walking around or sitting alone with whatever keeps them up.
The Skylight Room door is ajar. That’s unusual. The guys’ private space is always closed, always locked when unoccupied. An open door means someone’s inside.
Sting.
He’s sitting on the floor beneath the cracked glass ceiling, legs stretched out, back against the wall.
Moonlight comes through the broken panes in slivers, cutting across the floor in ragged lines.
He’s not reading, not working, not checking anything, or running schedules or doing any of the hundred operational things he considers his.
He’s looking up at the sky. Through the cracks in the skylight, you can see a star or two.
That’s pretty much it, though, since the glass is cracked and broken and what’s left is smeared with years of grime and bird poop.
But through the broken sections, the sky is there, the distant light that doesn’t care about collapsed towns, dead malls, and being obsessed with clearing your father’s legacy like I am.
Sting, looking at stars. Chalk that up to something I never thought I’d see.
He knows I’m here, but he doesn’t turn or acknowledge me. He just keeps looking up at the skylight.
“Can’t sleep,” I say.
“Join the club.”
I cross the room and sit down beside him. We don’t say anything for a while but it’s comfortable. Sting’s silence is different at night but I don’t push. I don’t ask questions, I just sit and look at the stars through the broken glass and let the silence be what it is.
Sting breaks it. “My mother was a nursing home aide,” he says.
There’s no preamble, and no setup. Just that bit of information arriving out of nowhere, not because someone asked, but because it’s two in the morning and whatever wall that usually holds back Sting’s words is letting them through.
He’s never talked about his life before the Rot. I’ve picked up fragments from Armen and Rogue, from the way certain subjects make him go rigid. But from Sting himself? Nothing. Ever. Until now.
“Rothwell Elder Care,” he says. “On Franklin, near the overpass, the city-subsidized facility. She worked there eleven years, nights, mostly. She cleaned people, changed sheets, administered medication, sat with people when they couldn’t sleep. She was good at it. She loved it.”
He’s talking to the sky more than me, which might be the only reason he’s talking at all.
“The facility ran on city funding. Social services budget. When the money started disappearing, the infrastructure funds, the public works accounts, all of it being routed into whatever bullshit the people at the top were running, the social services budget was one of the first things they cut. Elder care, youth programs, community health, that sort of thing. You know, the stuff nobody fights for because the people who depend on it don’t have anyone representing them or what they need. ”
I swallow hard. I can see where this is going and it won’t be pretty.
“They cut staff first,” he says. “Then hours. Then the facility closed. Residents got transferred to a place two counties over that was already at capacity. Some of them didn’t survive the transition.
One of my mother’s regulars, a woman named Dorothy who she talked about a lot, died three weeks after the transfer. ”
He says the name Dorothy with a care that tells me his mom said it the same way. A person, not a patient. A woman who couldn’t sleep and needed someone to sit with her. The person who sat with her was Sting’s mother, and then the money dried up and both of them were discarded.
“My mother couldn’t find work after that,” he says.
“The whole sector was collapsing. Every facility in the county was cutting staff. No one was hiring. She picked up what she could. Cleaning. Retail. Anything. But she was diabetic. Without steady insurance, the insulin costs ate through everything she made. She’d skip doses to stretch a vial.
I didn’t find out about it until later.”
I bring my hand up to my mouth, and while I’m pretty sure Sting does not want a strong reaction from me, I can’t help it. Stretching diabetes medication. In what kind of fucked up world is a woman forced to do that?
Sting’s not looking at the stars anymore. He’s looking at the floor between his knees, his voice the same controlled, tone it always is. However, there’s something underneath it I’ve never heard, the sound of a wound that never healed and probably never will.
“She died shortly before the collapse,” he says. “Heart failure. She was fifty-one. She never knew what was going on behind the scenes like your dad did. She just knew that one day, her job existed, and the next day it didn’t, and nobody gave a shit about any of it.”
For a moment, I can’t breathe and I force myself to swallow away the lump in my throat.
“She didn’t do anything wrong,” Sting says. “She wasn’t fighting anyone. She was just there. Going to work. Taking care of people. She was anonymous, invisible. The people running Rothwell never knew her or her name.”
There it is.
The thing underneath all of it. Underneath his cold assessments and operational precision and refusal to believe that any official could be worth trusting.
It’s not about corruption or cover-ups or who did what to whom.
It’s about invisibility. His mother was invisible to the people running Rothwell.
She didn’t matter enough to be saved. She was just ordinary, and ordinary people are the ones who get ground up first when the machine breaks.
That’s why my argument about Dad took so long to get traction. Every time I said he was one of the good ones, Sting wasn’t hearing a defense of my father. He was hearing but where was he when my mother lost her job? Where was he when she got sicker? Where were the good guys then?
I don’t blame him. I’d ask the same. Only probably not as politely as Sting.
Dad was on the city council when those cuts happened.
He was in the room. And maybe he fought it and maybe he didn’t, and maybe it doesn’t matter, because the end result was the same.
Sting’s mother lost everything while the mayor’s daughter grew up with a roof over her head, two facts that existed in the same town at the same time.
I want to say I’m sorry. I want to draw lines and make connections and explain that Dad was fighting the same people who defunded the nursing home.
But Sting didn’t tell me this to have a debate.
He told me because it’s two in the morning and something between us has changed enough that he opened a door he’s kept locked for years.
If I charge through it with arguments, the door closes and it doesn’t open again.
So I sit with him in the moonlight, on the cold floor, with six inches between my shoulder and his.
“Dorothy,” I say. Just the name. Just acknowledging that his mother’s people mattered.
We sit for a long time after that. I think about his mother in a nursing home at night, sitting with an old woman who couldn’t sleep, and I think about a city council making budget cuts, and I think about what it does to a young man, to learn his mother skipped insulin doses and pretended she was fine.
That man became Sting with all his precision, control, and relentless need to know every variable and manage every risk.
It makes sense now. If you grow up watching someone you love be destroyed by a system that never noticed she existed, you spend the rest of your life making sure you’re never invisible again.
You make yourself essential. Indispensable.
The person who sees everything, controls everything, holds everything together so tight that no one can take it away.
And you never, ever trust the people at the top. Good ones. Bad ones. It doesn’t matter. They didn’t see your mother. Why would they see you?
Eventually I stand. “Good night, Sting.”
He looks up at me. The moonlight catches his face and for a second, I see him without any of it, the control or the measured distance. Just a man, looking at a woman in the dark, carrying something heavy that he set down for a few minutes because she was there.
I reach out and touch his shoulder, enjoying my fingers on the fabric of his shirt, the warmth of him underneath, and the muscle that tenses and then releases.
He doesn’t say good night. He watches me go. I can feel his eyes on my back all the way to the door, and the weight of his gaze is different now. Like he doesn’t want me to leave.
I close the door behind me and stand in the corridor. My heartbeat is fast and steady, the rhythm of someone who just saw something she wasn’t supposed to see and will never unsee it.