what you have to say about the Flood. Can I tell you what it sounds like, Mae? That you are afraid – not of the Flood, but of the future. All this talk of wiping everything away. That is what Air will do, not the Flood. Everyone sees you as a woman who is scared but cannot admit it.'
'And is driving herself and everyone else crazy,' added Sunni.
Kwan sighed. 'It reminds everyone that you have Mrs Tung inside you. It reminds them of the first disaster, that Test. It just makes them think all progress is madness.'
And I am the crazy adulteress woman and I am an embarrassment to you. I didn't think I was, but I am.
The two women looked at each other. Something was clinched.
'Mae,' said Kwan. 'We want you to stop working.'
'Take time out to sleep, eat, relax.'
'Leave the Circle to us, leave the new screens for the site to someone else.'
'Stop going out all over the hills pretending to be a weatherman.'
'Also,' said Kwan, 'there is a lady from Yeshiboz Sistemlar, called Fatimah, who has told us about the pregnancy…'
Sunni leaned forward with concern. 'For heaven's sake, Mae, get rid of it. You know what I am talking about.'
'Fatimah says it will kill you!'
The whole room started to buzz. It was as if the walls were full of hornets. Mae felt herself go dim and old, and she was frightened and alone.
'Don't do this,' said Mae, in a very quiet, distracted voice, half hers, half Mrs Tung's. 'Don't leave me alone.'
Kwan leaned forward and took her hand. 'That's exactly what we will not do, Mae. We are your friends, and we will always stand by you.'
Sunni took her hand as well. 'Yes, Mae. We have had disagreements in the past, but we have overcome them. Listen to your friends; we do this out of concern for you.'
Kwan's eyes were firm. 'We think it is best if you just leave the TV alone.'
'For a while,' said Sunni. 'Until you are well and rested again.'
'Mae! You should see yourself! You look like a ghost. Your face is thin, your eyes stare, your hair is like a witch's.'
'You – who were the most elegant woman in the village,' said Sunni.
'You need help,' said Kwan, with finality.
'And,' chuckled Sunni, 'you need to leave that thing alone.'
'You need a rest from the TV,' said Kwan again, determined.
'Don't do this to me,' Mae repeated.
Her friends – her friends who had stood by her, who had not deserted her – why were they doing this now?
'Let Siao do the screens for Mr Pin and the others.'
'Maybe you could go to Balshang, stay with your son. Have tea with your new friend, Miss Soo. Have you ever seen the capital?'
'No,' said Mae, arms folded.
'There you go!' Sunni lifted up her arms as if everything were evident, settled. 'Maybe we could all go together. I would love to see the big city!'
'My work is here,' said Mae. 'The road is closed. What business is any of this of yours?'
'Come and live with me again for a while, Mae. Please!' said Kwan.
'No,' said Mae. 'I am happy living here with my family.'
Kwan leaned forward, her voice flat. 'Mae,' she demanded. 'Come with us.'
'I am happy as I am,' said Mae.
They tried for a further fifteen minutes, cajoling, tugging on her arm, offering her tea, saying she had worked harder than anyone and that she had won, she had succeeded, all the village was learning. Was the village not a Centre of Progress? Everyone knew that it was because of her.
'But even strong branches break when the load is too great,' said Sunni.
Everything they said availed nothing. They had stopped talking about making her stop work or taking away her baby, but that was what they intended.
Finally, sour, made angry and defeated, Kwan and Sunni left.
Mae sat still until she was sure they were gone.
Then she locked and barred her door. She thought about what Kwan might do next if she were determined enough.
Mae conferenced Mr Oz. 'Yes, yes, hello, it's always a pleasure. Look, I need a wireless account of my own for my TV.'
Mr Oz sounded relaxed and cheerful, away from the road. 'That should be easy enough. Just call the telephone company.'
'It's urgent. I need it done today.'
'Today? I don't know. You used to have a mobile phone, didn't you? You could try calling them. Why? Is there a problem with Swallow Communications?'
'Let's just say I just have a suspicion that Kwan might develop account problems.' She might cut Mae off.
Mr Oz groaned. Why was he upset? He was not the one with the problem. 'You've got extendable credit with the bank. Make sure they know that. Have the bank references ready, make sure you have your phone account number, and everything about your TV. It's a Hitachi 7700 PDTV. Okay? And Mae? What's wrong?'
Mae thought for a moment about future and past, and then said, 'I am too far ahead of them.'
Then she conferenced Sloop at his desk at the telephone company.
His round face glistened and he chuckled. 'There is no problem. We like new business.'
'I need it done today,' she said.
Sloop blinked. 'Today?'
It was complicated. Mae would have to download her new ID from their servers. Sloop would have to talk her through the process of reconfiguration.
She was at work on that when Kwan and Sunni came back. They hammered on the door. 'Mae! Don't be ridiculous! Open this door!'
'Mae, why are you leaving Swallow Communications?!' Mae looked out from her attic skylight. She looked down on them shuffling in front of her bolted door. They had Mr Wing with them.
Sunni's voice was shrill. 'Mae! We are your friends! We are trying to help!'
Mr Wing chortled, 'Mae, if we wanted to cut you off, it would be just as easy to cut the power!'
Kwan's voice was like a knife, shushing him in anger.
Mae unlatched her window. 'I have my own account, I have my own food, I have my own family. I will carry on my business, and I will continue to tell people about the Flood.'
Kwan puffed out air. 'You will end up damaging the thing you want to save.'
Sunni stepped forward. 'Mae! At least go to see doctors about that baby!'
'Thank you for shouting my business all over the valley,' said Mae. She latched the skylight shut, and went back to work.
'Mae! No one wants to hurt you!' Sunni called.
Mae heard Kwan murmur, 'I think we're just making things worse.'
Mae turned again to her beautiful screens and the messengers like birds.
There was another knocking at the door.
'Mrs Chung-ma'am,' someone called. It was Sezen.
And Mae's response was: What now? She went to the trapdoor. Suddenly it looked a long way down to the kitchen floor. Mae didn't want to move. She wanted to stay in her loft, above the floodwaters, with her