The Dazzling Heights (The Thousandth Floor #2)

“You’re leaving,” she said into the fractured silence. For some reason she hadn’t thought that Atlas would be leaving yet, at least not until next weekend’s party. The sight of him standing in the entry hall—surrounded by all his things, his eyes shadowed, wearing the soft brown sweater she’d always loved—struck Avery with a terrible finality. This was really it, she thought dazedly. Atlas was leaving, and he hadn’t even been planning to tell her good-bye.

“Actually, this is just stuff I’m sending ahead,” Atlas explained, and the panic in her chest relaxed a little. “Dad let me pick out an apartment in the new tower. I wanted to have some of my things waiting for me, you know?” His voice was stiff and mechanical.

“That makes sense.” She didn’t know what else to say. When would it stop hurting, seeing Atlas? Maybe it never would. She would become like those amputees from before they could regrow body parts; her relationship with Atlas like a ghost limb that she kept trying to use, even though it was no longer there.

Whether it was tomorrow or a month from now, he was still ultimately leaving. Avery stood there looking at him, thinking of all the things they had been to each other—all the jokes they’d shared as children, the secrets exchanged; the way Atlas had been the cool older brother, helping her navigate high school. And then, of course, all the secret kisses and whispered I love yous of the past year.

Now here they were, with nothing left to say to each other.

“Sorry, I’m late to aquaspin.” Avery hiked her bag higher up on her shoulder and moved to the elevator. The tension in the air was so thick she imagined she could see it, like water droplets hanging there, distorting her vision.

When she finally got to the aquaspin studio at Altitude, she peeled off her clothes with an audible sigh of relief. Wearing her old one-piece from swim team, she quickly slid into the pool, which was full of freshly imported Himalayan salt water.

It looked like an almost-full class today, though there was still an empty bike in the corner of the front row. Avery waded through the waist-deep water toward it, then lifted the seat to fit her long legs. Her eyes were adjusting to the dimness of the studio, which was illuminated by nothing except the floating fairy lights that danced above the water’s surface. Serene spa-like music emanated from all the speakers, creating the feel that they were in a mermaid’s cave.

None of it could relax Avery today. She kept mentally replaying her conversation with Atlas, wishing she’d said something more to him than “that makes sense.” She almost wished that she’d screamed at him instead, or punched him—anything to relieve the press of emotions roiling through her. It felt like her blood had turned to jet fuel and was bubbling hot near the surface of her skin, burning her from the inside.

A gong sounded to indicate the start of class, and a holo of a thin, tanned woman on a bike appeared on the opposite brick wall. A few of the surrounding men and women in class muttered to their contacts as they logged into the competition board. Avery had never done it before, but why not? “Pedal Board,” she said aloud. A silver icon labeled with her bike number immediately appeared on the wall next to the dozen other bikes, all of them moving in a holographic race to the finish line. The studio echoed with a deep electronic beat.

Avery picked up speed, her legs sloshing the pedals as she pushed endlessly against the heavy resistance of the salt water. She tried to lose herself in the movement, to work so hard that she would cut off the oxygen to her damn brain, so that for at least a few blissful minutes she wouldn’t torture herself with thoughts of Atlas.

Sweat poured down her back. Calluses were forming on her hands where they gripped the handlebars. Avery realized that she was neck and neck for first place with someone on bike eighteen, in the back row. She didn’t know who it was and it wouldn’t have mattered if she did; she just felt a sudden, primal resolve to win. It was as if all the mistakes and problems in her life had crystallized into this single race, and if she didn’t win, Avery was doomed to be this miserable forever. She raced as if the act of doing so could change things—as if happiness was right there ahead of her, and if she went fast enough, she might be able to catch it. She tasted salt, and wasn’t sure whether it was the water, or her sweat, or maybe her tears.

And then it was over and she looked up and almost cried from relief because she’d won; she’d beaten bike eighteen, just barely. She slipped off her bike and ducked her head under the water, not caring that her hair would get crunchy from the salt. She felt a strange and bizarre urge to weep. I’m a mess, she thought bleakly, and finally pushed herself out of the pool.

“I had a feeling that was you. On bike seven?” Leda was standing at the slatted wooden bench that lined the room, hands on her narrow hips.

“You were bike eighteen?” Of course it was Leda, Avery thought, somehow unsurprised.

Leda nodded.

They both stood there, immobile as statues, as the rest of the class streamed past into the golden light of the hallway. Neither of them seemed willing to make the first move. Leda wrapped a towel around her waist, tucking its corner into a makeshift sarong, and suddenly Avery registered the bright blue print along the edge of the towel. “That’s from Maine,” she heard herself say.

Leda looked down and shrugged. “I guess it is.” She traced the pattern for a moment before looking up at Avery, her eyes glinting in the dim light. “Remember that time we went hunting for colored sea glass because we thought we could give it to your grandmother? And that huge wave knocked me over?”

“I ran in after you,” Avery recalled.

“Wearing your new white sundress.” Leda exhaled a breath that was almost a laugh. “Your mom was so pissed.”

Avery nodded, torn between confusion and a mingled pang of gratefulness for the memory. She’d lost so many people in her life lately—Eris, Leda, now Atlas. Suddenly, all she wanted was for the cycle to end.

“Any chance you want to get a smoothie?” Leda asked, very quietly, as if reading her mind.

The silence in the aqua studio was suddenly deafening. Everyone had gone, leaving nothing but the quiet lapping of the saltwater pool, the intermittent flashing of the fairy lights. The holo on the brick wall before them flickered out.

“Can we make it tacos instead?” Avery’s blood was still pounding from class, her face flushed with exertion. She realized that for the first time in a week, she felt something other than howling grief—or worse, that terrible aching numbness. She wanted desperately to preserve this fragile sense of warmth before she clattered inevitably back to reality.

Leda smiled in response. “Cantina?”

“Where else?”

Avery wasn’t sure whether this was a good idea. She wasn’t sure how to treat Leda anymore, given everything that had happened between them. Were they best friends, or enemies, or strangers?

She slid her feet into her flower-printed sandals, determined to find out.





LEDA

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