31

I read the report through twice then a third time, curled up in my bed while rain slashes the large bay window. I underline passages, make notes in the margins, my cramped scrawl underneath Dr. Varghese’s surprisingly legible comments—the habits of reading Aunt Irene has taught me.

Tears blur the edges of the words until I have to wipe my face with the back of my hand. Afterward I stare outside as the setting sun casts bloody fingerprints on the surface of the river. The water is fast-moving, swollen with the runoff from the rain. Debris floats by, plastic bags and discarded soda bottles. I’m sickened by our carelessness, how humans are so willing to let something become someone else’s problem.

All I can think about is Martin. How I left him there on the field when I should have done something, helped him to safety. How the Centre should have done something to help him. But Ballard wouldn’t. He knew that Martin was alive but he didn’t care.

I take pictures of the report but I’m at a complete loss of what to do with them. I doubt, despite what she said, that Dr. Varghese would be willing to go on record if I leaked them. Would they believe me? I don’t think so. No one trusts people like me. I understand that better now. They’re cut off from what’s happening to us. Nate Peverill seemed to hate Lilee and me before he got sick. He didn’t want to believe he was just as vulnerable. Now he has JI2 he’s one of us. He understands.

I decide to send the photos to Bryan and a few minutes later my phone buzzes.

BTaite: bloody hell

BTaite: sophie where did you get this?

FeeFeesFeed: my clinician gave it to me

BTaite: I don’t understand it not all of it anyway but

BTaite: god poor Martin and they just

FeeFeesFeed: I know

A long pause.

BTaite: how could they do that to him?

FeeFeesFeed: they’ve been hiding this from us. they know something survives

FeeFeesFeed: they know that much about the nymphs and still

I stare at the phone, thinking about how different Dr. Varghese had looked from when I first saw her. Then she’d been professional, authoritative—but not always. Sometimes when I’d talked to her I’d see a chink in her armour, the sense of another person underneath: a sister, a friend. She’d cared about me—and maybe she’d cared about Martin too. She’d tried to fight on his behalf but it hadn’t been enough to save him.

BTaite: what about m-plagge?

FeeFeesFeed: i wouldn’t want that not in a million years

BTaite: not even if it would make you better?

FeeFeesFeed: he was trapped they did that to him they didn’t care about who he had been or what he was they just didn’t care

FeeFeesFeed: the nymphs were talking to him

FeeFeesFeed: he wanted to go with them

FeeFeesFeed: then they killed him.

FeeFeesFeed: theyll do that to us won’t they? if we die. if we let them

And now the tears are coming harder, so hard I can’t see the screen anymore.

FeeFeesFeed: bryan u still there?

The carrier is up but he still doesn’t answer. I wait half an hour, an hour, my frustration mounting. I feel so useless. All the things I used to count on are slowly disappearing and there’s not a goddamn thing I can do about it.

The HemaPen is lying in its cradle. I pick it up, thinking about how I helped Kira to use this the first time. It hurt, she told me, and I’d insisted she use it anyway. I’d tracked her symptoms just like they told me to, tracked my own—because I thought they had my welfare at heart. From the bookshelf I search for the heaviest thing I can find: a Folio Society hardback of The Deeds of the English Kings wrapped in pebbled brown leather. It’s expensive, beautiful—but I don’t care. I slam it down against the device again and again until the frame cracks and the delicate filigree of its innards is revealed.

I stare at the ruined thing. And I know there won’t be another. Whatever treatment the Centre has developed, I want no part of it.

“Sophie? Are you okay?” Aunt Irene knocks on the door. “I heard a crash.”

“Hold on a second!” I sweep the fragments of the HemaPen under Kira’s old bed along with the papers before I open the door. “It was nothing. You don’t need to worry. I just slipped on the last rung coming down.” I glance at the ladder leading up to my bed.

“I suppose you could always move to the bottom….” She trails off when she notices my red eyes.

“Have you been crying?”

“I’m fine.”

Fidgeting under my gaze, she tries the light switch but nothing happens. “No power, huh?” she murmurs. “Nada.”

“I just sent Charlotte to pick up more candles.” Another long look. “Do you want to give me a hand with this? It’s okay if you’ve…got other things you’re doing right now.”

In the hall is what looks like a large fishing box.

“What’s that?” I try to keep my voice level but there’s that push again, the twitch in my blood when my emotions are intense.

“An emergency kit. There’s a storm front building and I want to be prepared. Just in case.”

“Just in case?” She doesn’t respond. Instead she carries the box downstairs into the kitchen, me following behind. She places it on the counter and cracks the lid open. Inside are heavy duty flashlights, what looks like a hand-crank radio, a penknife and a whistle. She begins rooting around in the pantry cupboard, pulling out tins and stacking them on the table.

“So what do you reckon then, niece of mine?” she says in an overly chipper voice. “We’ve got peanut butter, some canned tuna, chili…green beans or peas?” I don’t answer her but she carries on as if I did. “I’m going to put in enough food for a week, so whatever we pack in here you better be willing to eat.” Aunt Irene stacks the cans carefully.

I dig around further in her kit and come up with Ziploc bags filled with tablets. One of them is labelled WATER PURIFICATION. The other contains an assortment of prescription medications, plus ibuprofen, paracetamol, and a packaged tin of something called Queasy Drops.

“Where would we go?” There isn’t enough here to last for long. “The JR Hospital is the evacuation point. It’s on high ground so it should be safe if there’s a major flood. Safer than here anyway.”

“And after that?”

“We’d wait until the water levels go down. Then we’d come back, I suppose, and get on with things. The same as always.” She stops what she’s doing and looks at me. “I’m sure we won’t have to evacuate. This is just a precaution.”

“That’s not what they’re saying.”

“If it went on for very long we’d go inland. Wait it out in a shelter.” She runs a hand through her hair, staring at me. “Come on, you. Help me finish this off?”

She’s already got several two-gallon jugs of water as well as a knapsack with a couple of warm shirts and trousers wrapped in plastic bags. I try to distract myself by helping out. I add my own clothes, two old T-shirts I used to wear camping, a pair of jeans, and a Common Misfits sweatshirt from last year. Strange to hold it now—it used to be my favourite but I haven’t worn it in months.

“You okay, sweetie?” She’s looking at me, concerned, her hair loose, as long as mine. “Your mum said you had a difficult meeting at the Centre.”

Tonelessly I answer, “Things have been pretty bad all around.”

“I suppose they have.” Wiping the sweat off her forehead, she gives me a sympathetic look. We shove the last of the things into the closet. “Let’s go into my office.”


Her office at home mirrors her office as the university. Her books are crammed haphazardly into makeshift shelves. To the right side of her desk hangs a corkboard bristling with a hodgepodge of clipped news articles, updates from the World Health Organization. She sits down in a large leather chair wedged in the angled space beneath the stairs. “So apart from the obvious, what’s on your mind?”

I choose my words carefully, torn between my desire to trust her and some sort of deeper fear that maybe she won’t understand, that she’d side with them. “I’m worried about the Centre, what they’re doing. They want to set up long-term care facilities for people like me.”

She looks up sharply.

“You didn’t know?” I ask.

“No one has told me anything,” she says, a trace of bitterness in her voice. “They’ve left me flying as blind as you. These are strange days—sometimes it feels difficult to be an adult. To know the right thing to do. Maybe your doctors are right. Maybe we just need to find a way to keep you safe until we can stop what’s happening.” She touches the objects on her desk as if they are charms. A way of warding off danger. But all this tells me is she doesn’t understand at all. How can I get through to her?

“What if we shouldn’t stop it?”

“What do you mean?”

“What if we need to let this happen? Let nature take its course?”

She stares out the window. “I thought I understood but this is unlike anything we’ve seen before. People are dying and I don’t know.” Her voice cracks with emotion and she squeezes her eyes shut.

“But it isn’t death,” I tell her. “That’s what I’m trying to say.”

She doesn’t want to admit it. “It’s worse.”

“Nature finds a way when it’s threatened, doesn’t it? It changes itself so the next generation will survive and have a better chance. What if that’s what’s happening? You told me you thought it might be happening for a reason, didn’t you? That maybe this has happened before?”

“Maybe.” Her gaze returns to me but she still sounds skeptical. “I’ve been searching through the records for anything that resembles what we’re seeing. There are references to strange—unnatural—phenomena. In the Middle Ages, there was frequent flooding and freezing. Roses on the willow trees at Lent.”

“Maybe they were clues.”

“It’s just speculation, Sophie. It still doesn’t tell us what this is. Or what we should do about it.”

“So speculate,” I insist and the urgency of my tone makes her glance up. “What’s the commonality? Why did it happen then? Why now?”

“The climate shifts, perhaps. Fluctuations in the temperature triggering an onset of the condition. I don’t know, the ash in the air? Sophie, there’s no way to be sure. We’re still digging into the records, processing soil samples. We don’t have enough information yet to say anything conclusively.”

I brush this aside. “So you still think it was the environmental triggers?” I remember Lane Ballard on the television, talking about locusts, the announcer’s frightened response. “But then why wasn’t it as bad as this back then?”

“Diseases spread so much faster now, Sophie. Our population is bigger than it was then, crammed into smaller spaces. Pathogens can spread further and faster than ever before.”

“You’re still thinking about this as a disease. But it isn’t a pathogen. That’s what Dr. Varghese told me. It’s something else, some sort of inherited condition. What if you’ve been looking at this wrong?”

“Fine. Perhaps things weren’t so extreme then, so the condition wasn’t so widespread. The…triggers weren’t as powerful.”

What she’s saying makes sense. Everyone has been talking for ages about how bad things are, how the storms are much worse than they used to be. What if this is it, the end? A shiver starts to build in the base of my spine but I flex my fingers, trying to follow the thought. “But why don’t we have records of the nymphs then?”

She looks at me thoughtfully. “Maybe we do. In 1337, the chronicler Heinrich of Herford began the Liber de rebus memorabilioribus, the Book of Things That Must Be Remembered.” Her gaze relaxes. She’s on safer ground here, citing her sources. “He recounted the birth of piglets with human faces. Babies born with teeth. Visions of fantasmata, ghosts, who caroused in churchyards and meadows.”

“So they existed.”

“Sophie, you’re jumping to conclusions. People thought they were superstitious.”

Bird bones in the graves of the Greeks. The carvings of doves, a gift from one child to another. I start to bounce my leg in excitement, my pulse racing. Maybe there were other signs too, we just didn’t know what they were. “But you don’t.”

“I don’t want to be reductive. They were intelligent people who were trying to make sense of the breakdown of their world. But their conceptual schema was different than ours.”

“So if they were seeing nymphs, what happened to them?”

“I don’t know,” she insists.

One possibility hits me hard and my leg stills. “They were wiped out.”

She jerks her head up.

“It’s what we’re doing now, isn’t it?” I whisper.

“The Centre has good reasons for the approach they’re taking, even if I don’t always like it. Sophie, above all, our souls—if we can call them that—live in our minds, our memories and experiences. But the structure of the human brain is delicate. It can’t survive the kind of trauma those bodies are going through. So whatever lives on, even if biologically it’s alive, it isn’t the same. Don’t you think I want to believe as well that something continues on? But that’s false hope, Sophie. It’s a trick. And it’s dangerous for you to think that way.”

“Why?”

“Because it means you might to do something stupid,” she says bluntly. “You can’t trust your instincts right now. What your body is telling you, it’s chemical. It isn’t real.” When she sees the stubborn look on my face she sighs. “Even if what you’re saying is true—even if this has happened before—then we still need to look at the evidence. Millions of people died from the Black Death. It’s hard to comprehend how terrible a loss of life that was. We need to prevent a global catastrophe. You understand that, don’t you?”

“But what about what you said? That things change and we grow stronger from them.”

“This isn’t another disaster we could survive. It’s as if the rules of nature have been rewritten.” She shakes her head. “Death is understandable. It’s part of a natural cycle of destruction of growth. We’re meant to die, Sophie—but this? I don’t understand it.”

“That’s not how history works though, is it?” I argue. “We don’t get to put things back to how they should be just because it makes life easier to understand. You told me not to trust despair and I don’t. But the flip side of immersing yourself in history is false nostalgia, thinking things were better before when they weren’t. The planet was in a tailspin before my diagnosis. There isn’t safety in the way things were. So what if there’s an answer here, something radical and new?”

“What do you mean?” Her eyes are wide.

“Maybe this was supposed to happen.”

“Magical thinking, sweetheart. Nothing is ordained. If this were supposed to happen…” She hesitates and a shadow of grief crosses her face. “Then why you? Why now?” And buried within that question are others: Why not me? Why not my daughter too?

“I don’t know. I don’t know what any of it means, only it isn’t what they’re saying.”

“Sophie.”

Her eyes slide away from mine. For a moment I felt she almost grasped my line of thought but now she’s shifting away, her mind rejecting what I told her, antibodies pushing out a foreign bacterium. I guess that’s one way of living, of protecting yourself. But there’s another way too: you could take what it brought you, let it break through your defences, and you could find a way to use it. But she can’t bring herself to do it. Not yet.

I could show her Martin’s file. Would that be enough to convince her? I don’t know. I need to talk to someone who understands first. Bryan. Still I want to mollify her. “Look. I’ll think about what you’ve said, what the Centre said.”

“Good girl.” My aunt looks faintly relieved. She tries to smile but I can’t bring myself to do the same. I want her to understand but after everything we’re at odds with each other. She doesn’t want to listen.

Outside the sky has begun to dim, casting long shadows. The heady scent of paraffin wafts into the room. The wind starts to moan like a live thing.