us now.’
I’m silent. The phone wanders away from my ear. Julie looks at me expectantly.
‘Hello?’ M says.
‘Sorry. I’m here.’
‘Well, we’re…
I rest the phone on my shoulder and look at the wall, at nothing. I look at the papers and plans on General Grigio’s desk. His strategies are all gibberish to me. I have no doubt it’s all important — food allocation, construction plans, weapon distribution, combat tactics. He’s trying to keep everyone alive, and that’s good. That’s foundational. But like Julie said, there must be something even deeper than that. The earth
‘What’s going on?’ Julie asks. ‘What’s he saying?’
As I look into her anxious face, I feel the twitch in my guts, the young, eager voice in my head.
I angle the phone towards Julie so she can listen. She leans in close.
‘M,’ I say.
‘Yeah.’
‘Tell Julie.’
‘What?’
‘Tell Julie… what’s happening.’
There’s a pause. ‘Changing,’ he says. ‘Lots of us… changing. Like R.’
Julie looks at me and I can almost sense her neck hairs standing on end. ‘It’s not just you?’ she says, moving away from the phone. ‘This… reviving thing?’ Her voice is small and tentative, like a little girl poking her head out of a bomb shelter after years of life in the dark. It almost quivers with tight-leashed hope. ‘Are you saying the plague is healing?’
I nod. ‘We’re… fixing things.’
‘But
‘Don’t know. But we have to… do more of it. Out there… where M is. “Outside”.’
Her excitement cools, hardens. ‘So we have to leave.’
I nod.
‘Both of us?’
‘Both,’ M’s voice crackles in the earpiece like an eaves-dropping mother. ‘Julie… part of it.’
She eyes me dubiously. ‘You want
I nod.
‘Do you grasp how insane that is?’
I nod.
She is silent for a moment, looking at the floor. ‘Do you really think you can keep me safe?’ she asks me. ‘Out there, with them?’
My incurable honesty makes me hesitate, and Julie frowns.
‘Yes,’ M answers for me, exasperated. ‘He can. And I’ll… help.’
I nod quickly. ‘M will help. The others… will help. Besides,’ I add with a faint smile, ‘you can… keep yourself safe.’
She shrugs nonchalantly. ‘I know. I just wanted to see what you’d say.’
‘So you’ll… ?’
‘I’ll go with you.’
‘You’re… sure?’
Her eyes are distant and hard. ‘I had to bury my mom’s empty dress. I’ve been waiting for this a long time.’
I nod. I take a deep breath.
‘The only problem with your plan,’ she continues, ‘is that you seem to be forgetting you
‘Should we… attack?’ M says. ‘Get you… out?’
I put the phone back to my ear, gripping the receiver hard. ‘No,’ I tell him.
‘Have… army. Where’s… battle?’
‘Don’t know. Not here. These are… people.’
‘Well?’
I look at Julie. She looks at the ground and rubs her forehead.
‘Just wait,’ I tell M.
‘Wait?’
‘A little longer. We’ll… figure it out.’
‘Before… they kill you?’
‘Hopefully.’
A long, dubious silence. Then: ‘Hurry up.’
Julie and I stay up for the rest of the night. In our rain-wet clothes we sit on the floor in the cold living room and don’t say a word. Eventually my eyes sag shut, and in this strange calm, in what may be my last few hours on Earth, my mind creates a dream for me. Crisp and clear, alive with colour, unfolding like a time-lapse rose in the sparkling darkness.
In this dream,
I hear the waterfall.
‘R.’
My eyes open and I sit up. Julie is cross-legged next to me, watching me with grim amusement.
‘Having some nice dreams?’
‘Not… sure,’ I mumble, rubbing my eyes.
‘Did you happen to dream up any solutions to our little problem?’
I shake my head.
‘Yeah, me neither.’ She glances at the wall clock and bunches her lips ruefully. ‘I’m supposed to be at the community centre in a few hours to do story time. David and Marie are going to cry when I don’t show up.’
She looks out of the window at the city, its every crack and flaw brought into sharp relief by the blinding white light. ‘I’ve been trying to get them into the
I nod.
‘Are you thinking about your kids at the airport?’
I hesitate, then nod.
She reaches out and touches my knee, looking into my stinging eyes. ‘R? I know things look bleak right now,