You can. Look here. Arla saw another chamber, almost a twin to the one she encompassed. In this one stood colorfully robed Vitae. They laid scanners and analyzers against the walls and argued over what they found. Arla knew that if she reached, she could hear them. If she wanted to, she could be as aware of that room on the other side of the world as she was of the one where her body stood.
A black-robed man (Contractor Kelat, she knew) stood with a trio in blue. They bustled around a capsule that reminded Arla of the one she had carried across Amaiar. Curious, she reached toward the room until she cupped herself around it. She looked down from the ceiling and inside the capsule; she saw her sister.
“Trail?” She strained her awareness, trying to feel her sister, but the capsule isolated her. She could feel nothing but the restless Vitae.
“You see Broken Trail?” asked Jay. “Show me.”
Yes. Let us show him! The Mind’s eagerness was so infectious that Arla didn’t even hesitate. She looked hard at the chamber around Broken Trail until its image replaced Narroways’ devastation on the wall in front of Jay.
A broad grin split the Skyman’s face. “Too late,” he said to the image. “They’re too late, Kelat! We’ve won!” His voice dropped to a husky whisper and he struck her wall lightly with the side of his fist “We have!”
The Vitae won? thought the part of Arla that was still lodged in her body. No. We came here to stop them. To save Trail.
What does it matter? crowed the Mind. They will let us work! They will let us see and hear and move again! We will be alive again! Pure, innocent joy raced through her until Arla felt she might drown in the sensation, but she couldn’t stop drinking it in. She was free, she was limitless and infinite in her vision and knowledge. All that lacked was work. All she wanted was to be told how to use her sight.
This despised one asks in what way she may serve?
A discordant jolt ran through her. The thought hadn’t come from the Mind, but from her own memory. Her heart in her body, distant and small, skipped a beat. She was free as long as she served. That was what the Teachers told the Notouch. That was what the Notouch told each other, and now it was what the Mind told her, with such joy she could barely endure it, let alone deny it.
“But it’s a lie,” she whispered fiercely. “It’s still a lie!”
No, no, don’t be afraid, called the Mind. Don’t go. Don’t leave me here alone and blind.
Jay faced Arla’s body. “It is no lie, Stone in the Wall,” he said with the Vitae’s incorruptible calm. “Now, I need you to secure this chamber. Close the hatches and make us safe.”
The Mind sent a wave of sorrow through her.
“I can’t,” she said, and a tear prickled the corner of her eye. As the Mind fed the information into her she delivered it to Jay. “I am an Eye. I can see and show and know. I can move nothing macroscopic. You require a Hand.”
Eric? Arla thought a little dazedly.
“A telekinetic?” asked Jay.
“Yes.” Arla couldn’t stop herself. It felt so good to answer his questions. She wanted him to ask more. She wanted to stretch herself out until she filled the entire world and saw all the heavens. She wanted him to ask her something difficult, something that would make her, make the Mind, make her, have to think hard. She wanted …
This despised one asks in what way she may serve?
No! howled the Mind. Not That is not how it is!
Its pain was nearly as blinding as its joy had been. Arla’s body shuddered.
But I am right, she whispered inside her own, infinitesimally small mind. I am.
“Where is Eric Born now?” asked Jay. “Can you see him? Can you get a message to him?”
She could do it. Easy as breathing she could do it. She already knew how. But …
But …
“Arla?” Jay stepped closer to her. She felt his breath on her skin and her walls. “Arla, do it.”
You can do it, the Mind urged her. It’s easy. From a great height, she saw Eric through ash-filled air. He leaned out of the sledge, pointing up a rocky, thread-thin canyon. The dome canyon, she realized. He was almost to her.
Show him how easy it is.
But I do not want the Vitae here. I do not want to serve them. I do not want to serve anyone!
No! No! Not again!
Grief and fear raced through her, shaking her heart and soul. The Mind was remembering and its memory could fill the whole world. There had been centuries of bliss. The Hands and Eyes worked and the Mind worked for them and although they numbered in the hundreds of thousands, there was still more to be done than they could manage. There was always some new task, something new to see or think about. Endless work, endless joy in it.