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Everything

Author: Januar Storm
last update publish date: 2026-06-26 12:56:46

Saoirse POV

I went to Priya’s apartment on Tuesday night.

I did not bring curry. I did not bring wine. I brought nothing, because I had understood, lying awake on Monday night beside the man who was writing his own confession in the next room, that what I was going to do at Priya’s apartment on Tuesday was not a thing you brought food to. I drove to her place in Kensington and I climbed the stairs to the third floor and I knocked, and when she opened the door I said, before I was even inside: “I’m going to tell you the whole thing. The thing I couldn’t tell you Saturday. I need you to let me get all the way through it before you say anything.”

Priya looked at me for a long moment in her doorway.

Then she stepped back and let me in, and she said: “Okay.”

──

We sat at her kitchen table.

And I told her.

I told her about the night. The door coming off its hinges. The man in the silver mask. Derek on the kitchen floor. I told her what I had asked the man for not to kill Derek, not at first, but to give Derek a thing worse than what the man had planned, which was to make Derek understand what he had never earned. I told her about the mask lifting. I told her, because I had decided she was owed even this, that the night had not only been violence, that I had reclaimed something in my own living room that Derek had spent three years trying to take, and that I was not ashamed of it and was not going to pretend to her that I was.

I told her about driving to my mother’s. The three sentences. The investigation.

I told her about the tulips, and the door put back on its hinges, and the book moved to the chair, and the photograph with the cleaned frame. I told her about the café and the bookstore and the envelope and the house in Brooklyn Heights.

I told her his name.

I said: “Marcus Reed. He runs a company called Arbitr AI. It makes the harm-detection tool, Priya. The one your office uses. The escalation queue.”

I watched the first piece land.

I kept going. I told her about the second queue the private one, the one that routed the cases the system was going to fail to a desk where one man reviewed them alone and, sometimes, acted. I told her the count. Seventeen public. Twenty real. Twenty-one with Derek.

And then I told her the last piece, the piece I had not been able to give her over the curry, the piece I had driven to Kensington specifically to put into her with my own hands because she had a right to receive it from me and not from a compliance office.

I said: “When you escalated Derek’s case fourteen months ago it went into the public queue, and the routing rule moved it to the private one. That’s how it got to him. That’s how the night happened. You didn’t know. You couldn’t have known. The second queue is invisible. But the case got to Marcus because you sent it, Priya. You are the reason he found me.”

I stopped.

I had gotten all the way through it.

I let her say something now.

──

Priya did not say anything for a long time.

I watched her face do the thing I had watched it do over the curry, except this time it had all the pieces, and the assembling was not a slow dawning but a fast and terrible completion, like the last few pieces of a puzzle going in all at once and the picture being a thing you cannot unsee.

When she finally spoke, her voice was not the voice I had expected.

I had expected anger. I had braced for anger for *how could you,* for *you let me bring you curry while you knew,* for the fury of a woman who has been kept outside a thing she was at the center of.

What Priya said, instead, very quietly, was: “It worked.”

I said: “What?”

She said: “The thing he did. It worked. You’re alive. You’re sitting at my table and you’re alive and you have an apartment with trees and you laughed at dinner three weeks ago for the first time in four years, and the reason the reason for all of it is that a man murdered your husband.”

Her eyes filled.

She said: “I have spent my entire career my entire life, Saoirse, since I was a kid watching my mother believing that the system is the thing that saves women. That if we just make it better, fund it better, escalate the right cases to the right people, the system protects them. I have given everything to that. And you are telling me that the thing that actually saved my best friend’s life was the thing that the system could never do, that the system was never going to do, that the system failed to do for three years while I watched you disappear and a killer did it in ninety minutes.”

She put her hand over her mouth.

She took it away.

She said: “And I sent him. I sent the case. My hands. My escalation. I did the one thing I know how to do, the thing I do to help, and the thing it did was deliver your husband to a man who kills people, and it *worked,* and you are alive, and I cannot ”

Her voice broke.

“I cannot decide if I am horrified or grateful, and I have been able to decide things my whole life, and I cannot decide this one, and I am never going to be able to decide it, am I.”

──

I reached across the table.

I did not take her hand. I had learned, from my mother, that there are moments when reaching for a person’s hand is a way of asking them to comfort you for the thing you have done to them, and I was not going to ask Priya to comfort me. I put my hand flat on the table, near hers, available, and I let her decide whether to take it.

She did not take it.

Not yet.

She sat with her hand over her own mouth and she cried, quietly, the way a person cries when the crying is not about sadness but about the collapse of a structure they had built their life on top of. I had cried like that on a kitchen floor at two AM. I knew the cry. I let her have it. I did not interrupt it. I did not perform my own remorse on top of it.

After a while she said and this is the part I am going to carry for the rest of my life she said: “I need you to know that I am not going to do anything. The compliance question I know what it’s going to do, I have known since Saturday, and I have been sick about it since Saturday. I am not going to add to it. I am not going to go to anyone. I am not going to tell Elena Park or the DA or my supervisor or anyone, ever, what you just told me. Not because I think it was right. I do not know if it was right. I am never going to know if it was right. But you are my person, Saoirse. You have been my person since we were fourteen. And whatever this is whatever he is, whatever I did, whatever the right thing would have been you are still my person, and I am not going to be the one who takes you down.”

She looked at me.

She said: “But I cannot tell you it’s okay. I am never going to be able to tell you it’s okay. I love you, and I am on your side, and it is never going to be okay, and you are going to have to let all three of those be true at the same time, because that is the most I have.”

──

I said: “That’s enough.”

And it was. It was more than I had any right to. It was, I understood, the same thing I had been learning to do all autumn, handed back to me by the person I had just handed the hardest version of it to the holding of things that did not resolve, the carrying of more than one true thing, the refusal to collapse a contradiction just because the contradiction hurt.

Priya had, in the space of an hour, been handed the worst load of her life.

And she had done with it the thing I had spent three years and one terrible November learning to do.

She had decided to carry it.

After a long time, she took my hand off the table and held it.

We sat in her kitchen in Kensington, two women who had known each other since they were fourteen, holding hands across a table over a thing that was never going to be okay and was never going to break us, and neither of us said anything else for a long time, because there was nothing else that needed saying, and we both knew it.

Before I left, she said one more thing.

She said: “The compliance question is going to reach someone. Soon. I can’t stop it now it’s logged, it’s in the system, the system does what it does.” She wiped her face. “So whatever he’s going to do your Marcus tell him he doesn’t have as much time as he thinks. Tell him the thing I started is faster than he thinks. Tell him to hurry.”

I drove home with that in the passenger seat.

Tell him to hurry.

The clock had just gotten shorter, and it had been my best friend horrified, loyal, holding her impossible load who told me so.

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