“No. No change.” She walked in. Benny stopped in midsentence. “We’re reading the latest issue of Whirlwind.” But he set the hand-held aside. “Got company, Cill.”
“We can sit with her awhile if you’d like to get some air,” Roarke said.
“No, but thanks.”
“I wanted to let you know,” Eve began, “Var’s lawyers and the PA’s office have reached a plea agreement. I can break it all down for you if you want, but the short version is he’ll do fifty years, hard time, off-planet.”
“It doesn’t matter. What happens to him doesn’t matter. She’s all that matters. Three days now. The doctors, they say that every day she . . . that every day’s good. That she could wake up in five minutes. Or five years. Or never.”
“You believe she’ll wake up.” Roarke laid a hand on Benny’s shoulder.
“And I think when she does, it’ll matter to her that Var pays. For what he did to her, to Bart, to all of you,” Eve added.
“We thought he was one of us, but he wasn’t. Four square—but it was all a lie. I don’t understand it. I can’t. We were together all these years, every day. We worked together, studied, played, ate, laughed, cried. I don’t know how he could do what he did. I’ll never understand it, so he doesn’t matter to me. He won’t ever matter to me again.”
But he drew in a ragged breath. “Why didn’t he go for me instead of her? Why?”
“Do you want the truth or do you want it easy?”
He looked at Eve. “The truth.”
“You were more useful, and she more dangerous. In his mind, in his plan. She’s more of a leader, and you prefer the solo, the research. He could use you, and when he’d used you enough, or when he just couldn’t resist, he’d have set you up, too.”
“If I’d gone in with her. If I’d just—”
“She’d be dead without you,” Roarke said. “He meant to kill her, Benny, and if you hadn’t been there, if you hadn’t stayed with her every second when you found her, he’d have finished her. You saved her life.”
Roarke pulled a chair over, sat beside Benny. “What will you do now, with U-Play?”
“I don’t care about that.”
“She will. She helped build it as you did, as Bart did.”
“If we hadn’t, Bart would be alive. She wouldn’t be here.”
“No. Var’s responsible,” Eve corrected. “Not a company, not a game, not technology. A man. He put her here.”
“I know that.” His tone weary, Benny rubbed his hands over his eyes. “I know it, but . . . You could buy it,” he said to Roarke. “We have good people, and—”
“I could, but I won’t. Bart wouldn’t want that, and neither would she.”
“She’d hate it. But she’s hurt so bad. Even if . . . when, even when she comes out of it, she’ll have so much to go through.”
“But not alone,” Roarke murmured.
“No, not alone.” With his eyes on Cill’s face again, Benny stroked the back of her hand with his thumb. “I keep sitting here, thinking about all the times I had a chance to tell her I love her. I’ve loved her since we were kids, but I never have the guts to tell her or show her. I was afraid I’d screw up what we had. And now—”
“You’ll stop wasting time,” Roarke finished.
“You don’t understand.”
“Don’t I?” Roarke looked at Eve. “I know love, and what it does to you, for you. I know that it can bloom out of friendship, or that friendship can open out of love. Both are precious. And when you have both, there’s little th
at can’t be done.”
“You need to stop feeling sorry for yourself,” Eve told him. “And start doing what can be done.”
Anger flashed over Benny’s face, then died. “You’re right. I’m not helping her by thinking about what I can’t do, what I don’t want. Fuck Var. We’re not going to let him win. Dammit, Cill, we can’t let him win. Fifty years? Think of all we can do in fifty years. We’ve barely started.”