“Hi! I sensed some broken bindings
and –.”
He muffles a scream, a boy not older
than a Jay, spins toward me. “Who – what – you can’t be here
– is this a trick?” falls out, whisper-quiet in the bedroom. His
eyes are wide with terrors.
“Jaysome isn’t a trick and
I am pretty good at
it!”
“But – my
parents – if anyone is over –. I don’t know what you are, but
you can’t be here,” and the words are almost magician-like,
pleading like a command.
“Huh?”
“I don’t know
how you got into my room, but they’ll –.” He stills, fear
falling inward. “You have to go.”
A door
opens, and it was locked from the other side. A man looms, shadows
gathered about him. “Tyler? What is – what in the fuck is
this?” and he is only human, but his voice –.
The boy stumbles.
He is pale, and brave in terror. “It’s not what it looks like,
dad, it’s not –.”
“You are not
allowed guests. What if they find out? What if they learn?” is
demanded.
Tyler is shaking,
and bindings are breaking because of the ones forming.
“You are ten.
That is far too old to wet your bed,” the father says, and –.
“Oopses happen
you know,” I say, firm as a Jay.
He turns, and his
hand is open and solid.
I’m quick like a
Jay and tough like a Jay but there are bindings he can do in this
room. To hit, to harm. I hit the wall, bounce, stand. He moves in for
another blow.
Tyler is in front
of me. “I don’t know who this is, or how they got in. I don’t,
dad!”
I grab the next
blow in bindings before it reaches Tyler, pushing the man back. There
is a woman behind him, and Tyler lets out a small wounded sound.
“You’re
hurting
him, and that’s not jaysome at all!”
They move in. Certain. Sure of their power and control.
I reach into bindings. Touch Tyler’s. I’m not Charlie, to pull
out energy. Not Honcho, to see deep into things. But bindings have
history, and he’s scared and always scared and hurting and hurt all
because he wets a bed. And other things, but I don’t understand
them at all cuz there’s nothing jaysome about what they do to their
son.
There are other children in the house. Hiding too. Scared.
“Honcho would do terrible things to you,” I say. “And Charlie
might do worse. I’m not them. I don’t do human things.”
And
I smile, and it’s not a smile a Jay does because there’s too many
teeth and they’re sharp and some aren’t teeth at all. There is
being a jaysaurus. And then there is being a jaysaurus.
And then, too, there is being Jayseltosche. Which
is even bigger in all the bad ways of the word.
I reach inside. No binding. Nothing like that, me to me. Hi? Time to
wake up, I say. Need you.
And
I smile again and it’s not a smile at all and there are bindings
breaking and I remake them and twist them into new shapes and I’m
breaking the rules Honcho told me about not
doing bindings on people
but I’m not Jay right now and I don’t care. They twist,
and again, and I let go of the smile, and settle back down into Jay.
Even my fingernails hurt a bit.
Tyler is staring at me. Even Honcho has never seen me like that. He’s not afraid. He’s crying, but not afraid, and he knows what I did because I let him sense the bindings.
“Thank you,” he whispers.
The parents have left. To another room, shaken. Broken of their
power, for now and ever.
“That
was a really bad bindings,” I whisper, and: “There’s others
like that, but I don’t know if I can –.” And I don’t because
it hurt.
“I’ll be jaysome,” he says and means it and I’m crying and
we’re crying and it’s okay.
It shouldn’t be, but it’s okay because he’s tough like a Tyler
and a human and his jaysome is a really good one too!
I
find Honcho outside. He just looks at me. Hugs me, gently. Offers ice
cream, and I know he’s doing lots of helping and fixings too so I
eat a lot and Honcho
looks at me after.
“That was pretty brave of you, Jay.”
“Nope. I was doing what is right and that’s doing what is right,
and –.”
“Jay.”
And he is Honcho and I just nod and follow him outside. I have
another good cry at the hotel, and it is a good one and he just holds
me and presses a finger to my lips when I try and talk.
“There are hard lessons you’ll have to learn, and one of them –
this one – is that there are things that can’t be solved by being
jaysome. And no, you didn’t do anything wrong.”
“But –.”
“You didn’t,” he repeats, and I’m crying again and held again
and I don’t understand Tyler’s parents even if I saw every
binding they had and Honcho says it’s okay not to, sometimes, that
sometimes one can know so much that they can’t be wise and it’s
dangerous to learn what you can’t unknown.
And he says lots else I think, but I fall asleep and almost dream.
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