1503951200
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ALSO BY CAMILLE GRIEP
Letters to Zell
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, organizations, places, events, and incidents are either products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.
Text copyright © 2016 Camille Griep
All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced, or stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without express written permission of the publisher.
Published by 47North, Seattle
www.apub.com
Amazon, the Amazon logo, and 47North are trademarks of Amazon.com, Inc., or its affiliates.
ISBN-13: 9781503951204
ISBN-10: 1503951200
Cover design by Faceout Studio
For Adam, who is my home.
CONTENTS
CHAPTER ONE
CHAPTER TWO
CHAPTER THREE
CHAPTER FOUR
CHAPTER FIVE
CHAPTER SIX
CHAPTER SEVEN
CHAPTER EIGHT
CHAPTER NINE
CHAPTER TEN
CHAPTER ELEVEN
CHAPTER TWELVE
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
EPILOGUE
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
CHAPTER ONE
Syd
On an evening like this, I should be gazing out over a wall of footlights, a tide of applause washing over me, exhausted, elated, distantly annoyed that I mistimed an arabesque or fell out of a fourth pirouette. That’s how things were supposed to turn out. Journalists would’ve introduced me as twenty-one-year-old Cressyda Turner, soloist-on-her-way-to-principal at the most prestigious ballet company on the left coast.
Instead, the plague happened. So, here and now, I’m simply Syd, galumphing down a pitch-black alley on my way home from clinic rounds. I’m not pretending to be a qualified professional medic or even a competent adult, but Doc needs a hand, and I made Danny several promises I shouldn’t have: first to find and tell the would-have-been Mr. Danny what he’d missed out on, then to eat all the SpaghettiOs I could, and finally to make the sick and dying of the City feel cared for. To fulfill the latter, I quit pouring tapers at the candle works and signed on with Doc Remington’s clinic.
The next best friend who decides to kick the bucket better have simpler demands.
Danny was a true Survivor. He beat the plague five years ago, only to be leveled by a case of once-treatable appendicitis. We kept him as comfortable as we could. But losing him is still tragic and painful and unnecessary. Had we had light, power, a sterile operating room, and water that didn’t have to be hauled in buckets from clean cisterns, maybe Danny would have made it.
The whole situation is stupid. Even more stupid than thinking I could possibly be suited for any sort of caretaking job. Doc says it’s good to have a brusque bedside manner, but that’s not really it. I’m angry. I don’t want to help people die nicely. I don’t want to help them die at all.
Instead of taking my third curtain call tonight, I am peering into a darkness punctuated by an even deeper darkness, listening to what sounds like a child crying for help. I should be done for the day. I should just go home. But I don’t, because I am not a monster. I should just get help. I don’t, because I am not a coward.
I curse as I hitch my supply pack higher onto my shoulders and retrace my steps to the street. If Danny has a ghost, he’s laughing because I have enough battery power to last my headlamp about fifteen minutes, thus it’s off and I’m stumbling around like a drunk on a three-day bender instead of a one-time professional ballerina.
“Hello?” I call. I hear the sound again, a ways down Bleeker and on the right. I keep going, thankful for the boots that lace up my shins, saving my ankles from the perils of ever-growing potholes.
Until Danny, I didn’t think anything would ever feel as bad as losing my mom, but it does, even though they’re two separate griefs. Mom was one of the first to die, back when they were still learning what the plague was. We’d thought it was the flu at breakfast. I went in for my first day of Company rehearsal and came home to paramedics. I said good-bye to my mother almost forty-eight hours later, still dressed in my knit body warmer and a holey green leotard.
I stop in front of the building where the sound is coming from. There’s no observable door, so I poke my head inside, where the wailing of a child grows constant and loud. “Hey, kiddo, can you hear me?”
It takes a moment for the wails to turn to sniffs and coughs. “I fell,” a girl says.
I can see a candle flicker above, though it’s not much brighter in here than outside. “What’s your name?”
“Mina,” she says, voice shaking.
“Mina, I’m going to try to come up the stairs now.” I test them with my weight. They are rutted concrete and for this I am thankful, though I’m still careful as I climb. On the second floor, Mina has fallen through a rotted plank. Though she has managed to remove her leg from the hole, it is obvious she will not be able to stand on it. The candle she brought is starting to gutter out, but I let it burn a while longer, hoping to use the headlamp to get us back to the clinic.
“What were you doing up here?” I ask. Children are rare in the City. Especially outside the boardinghouse. Most families went south, down the coast where things are a bit more stable.
The girl bites her bottom lip, seems to weigh how much to spill.
I try to ease her fear. “Are your people looking for you?”
She shakes her head.
I test the floor with my foot and it flexes beneath my weight. “You aren’t living up here, are you?”
She shakes her head again and looks to the corner, patting her knee. “Come on, Buster. It’s okay.”
A black-and-white dog steps out of the shadows, some sort of bulldog mix. “And what were you doing up here?” I ask the dog. He wags his tail. Mina laughs, a tinny small thing. Even in the candlelight she is too pale, red hair hanging in a half curtain over her face.
“It’s okay, Mina. My name’s Syd, and I’ve been on my own for a while, too.”
She lets out a breath, her shoulders slumping. “Buster was alone. Until I saved him. Before today, I mean. Today he was chasing a cat.”
“Well, sometimes even we savers need saving. Let’s get you out of here.” I belly over to her, trying to distribute my own weight over the boards. When I reach her, the dog gives me a once-over and looks back to her. She nods.
She’s a tough kid. I splint her calf, while the dog watches my every move. She doesn’t cry, doesn’t whine, doesn’t babble. The candle gives its final sputter while we’re inching our way over to the stairs on our stomachs. I pick Mina up and flip on the headlamp. The dog, who does not need a headlamp, leads us down the stairs.
“I’m going to borrow him someday, Mina,” I say. “So he can lead me through the dark.” But she’s already asleep, her soft breaths warm against my neck. At the door, Buster waits for us to catch up, tethered to the girl by some invisible leash. I’m a little bit in love at first sight with them both, despite myself.
I look up at the sky, where I imagine Danny looking down. “I hope you’re happy.”
Doc Remington throws open the door to the clinic—which doubles as his house—in striped pajama bottoms and a paisley shirt, and offers me tea. Mina blinks at him, cautious, while he pretends to check Buster over with a Popsicle-stick tongue depressor.
I leave the girl and the dog in Doc’s humungous, capable hands and sprint through the start of an
evening rain to the Pioneer Lofts about ten blocks south. I throw my gear in my apartment, then head across the hall to Agnes’s cat-scented two-bedroom overlooking the ocean. We consolidated food some time ago, and eat dinner together most nights. Sometimes the guys from the police force join us, which I love because every once in a while they bring SpaghettiOs.
Agnes and I have a never-ending supply of tuna and corn. I have come to the conclusion that, pre-plague, the world had an obnoxiously unmitigated appetite for canned tuna. And no one wants to get me started bitching about the ubiquity of corn.
The elderly dame is in her armchair with a couple of cats on her lap when I come in, and I motion for her to keep sitting. Making dinner is pretty simple as long as our can openers stay in good repair.
The candles are already lit, which is good because some nights Agnes forgets them. She’s one of the last “family” members I have, besides Doc, and I worry about her memory getting worse—though it’s possible she’ll outlive all of us, a withered sentinel haunting the darkened hallways with her favorite aluminum bat.
Some nights she remembers to light the candles, but then forgets to put them out. The cats are pretty good fire alarms, but the calico singed her tail a month or two back, and was not the least bit amused. We now keep a full bucket under Agnes’s sink, just in case.
“How was your day, dear?” Agnes asks, after I’ve banged around in the kitchen long enough, trying to find the Niblets corn instead of the awful creamed stuff.
“Okay,” I say, and tell her about Mina and the dog, and the way he never strayed more than five or six paces away from her.
“Danny would be proud of you,” she says. Agnes is doing better at all of this than I am. At Danny’s funeral, she calmly told me his death was only one raindrop to the ocean of sorrow. Maybe so, but he was still my damn raindrop.
“I hope so. I’m not sure I’m really helping anyone, though.”
“Nonsense,” she says. She tells the cats I’m crazy, too.
We fall into the silence of eating, forks against cheap, unbreakable plates, dreaming our dinners into something else, watching the candles reflect against the rain-streaked windows.
“It is all so unfair, isn’t it?” She’s looking out the window. Or at our reflections. “The selfishness of a few men.”
“It’s all of them, Agnes,” I say. “The entire population of New Charity is responsible. How can the Sanctuary not know that we’re dead without the river? Not care?”
She casts me a doleful smile. “At least we have our library,” she says. “There’s hope for us yet.”
A diaphanous-shawled, rhinestone-bespectacled university librarian in the old days, Agnes is installing a library on the empty second floor of our building—a heavy-lifting labor of love. We’ve been collecting books for over a year now—though most were burned that first winter when people grabbed the easiest thing.
Doc checks for unwanted books on rounds, and the ragtag police sniff them out while patrolling abandoned houses and buildings. I scavenge when I’m raiding old gardens and making rounds for the clinic. Regardless of genre or providence, we take whatever we find and try to shield them until the future is more certain. Each day Agnes floats down to the second floor, a court of cats behind her, to catalogue and organize what we bring.
“I found a big haul today over on Eighteenth,” I say, acquiescing to her subject change. “I’ll take a grocery cart to go get them in the morning.”
“That many?”
“In good shape. Doesn’t look like the room’s been disturbed much. Some foreign-language stuff, too.”
“How wonderful,” she says, lifting her plate out of reach of a fat tabby.
I do my best German accent. “Ve go get ze buchen.”
“Bücher,” she corrects.
“Yup. That’s what I said.” I wink at her. “College, schmollege.”
“You know, you should be in school. It’s a real shame.” She tuts to herself, to the cat.
I reassure her about this a lot, and have since she agreed to let me live on my own after my mom died, as long as I check in with her three times a day. Maybe we have the same conversation over and over again because of her memory. But maybe we have it because she wants to keep having it. “I was never going to school anyway. I mean, maybe after I stopped dancing. They had a program where you could take some classes, see if you were good at anything else.”
“Well, of course you would be,” Agnes says, offended. “You could do anything you set your mind to.”
“What I mean is, I’m not sure what we were preparing for in the first place. If this is what life really boils down to? Survival?”
“Human beings have been in the business of survival since the beginning, Syd. You’ve read enough history to know that. Your generation won’t have your wants, your needs handed to you, but that onus has always been on the individual. Even in easier times.”
“Are you telling me to stop whining and do something about it?”
She pats my arm as she passes, momentarily dimming the low light. “Do be a dear and blow out the candles on your way out, won’t you?”
I once started each morning at the barre. Now, I start my mornings at the bar—or the space that used to be one in the lobby of our building. After the panic of finding things to eat and drink and repairing wounds quieted down, the few hundred of us who survived in the city limits agreed to some rules of decency—what to burn, how to signal one another, where and how to take a dump. Extra chairs and tables were delivered to a community firewood pile, and so what’s left in the lobby is a smooth wood floor and a slightly higher than standard brass rail.
My soft slippers are mostly duct-taped together these days, but they serve their purpose. I’m sure I’m cultivating a zillion bad habits working without instructors, but the hour I spend emptying my head of everything but alignment and balance and center and weight over the second metatarsal is about as spiritual as it gets for me these days.
This morning my work is engrossing—the music in my head swelling—and I find myself humming as I stretch, counting and correcting myself aloud. When I finish, I take the stairs by twos, pausing at each landing to wipe the sweat out of my eyes.
I open the door and find Doc in my kitchen, standing on one leg like a lanky, overgrown pelican. He holds a hand up, caught red-handed drinking a cup of my precious instant coffee.
“Hey! That’s for emergencies,” I say, swiping the mug for a sip. “I should call the police.”
Mina’s eyes widen.
“Don’t worry, honey,” I say. “He’s friends with all the police. Just be careful with your coffee around him.”
“It is an emergency,” Doc says. “We were up all night wrangling that cast, weren’t we?”
Mina, her leg swathed in gauze and glue and elevated on my coffee table, nods from the couch. Buster sits next to her, pressed into her side.
“How are you feeling, honey?” I ask, but she pulls the end of her ponytail over her face.
“I need to ask you a favor,” Doc says, not waiting for her answer.
I suppress a groan. Maybe Mina can sit with Agnes while I explain to Doc why no one in their right mind would leave a houseplant, let alone a child, in my care. I yank a sweatshirt off the chair and pull it over my workout clothes. “Hey, Mina, would you like to go next door to meet my friend Ms. Agnes and her cats?”
“No,” she says, matter-of-factly. “Doctor Remington says I have to stay with somebody. I don’t know anyone but you.”
All eyes are on me, including Buster’s. “But you don’t know me, Mina. We just met.”
“I’ve known you the longest.” Buster lowers his head in her lap, as if to console her.
I both do and don’t want to ask what awfulness left her so alone so early in her journey in life, but I’ll have to do it when four poignant brown eyes aren’t surveying my every reaction.
“She’s only twelve, Syd. Even you weren’t alone yet at that age. I need her to b
e on these antibiotics for a couple of weeks. The break will be fine, but the gashes she tore into herself getting her leg out are deep, and I want to make absolutely sure they aren’t infected. She’s not sick enough to need a bed at the clinic, but . . . will you?”
“I’m not sure I’m qualified.” I look around my apartment at the shabby disarray.
Doc is laughing. “You’ll be fine.”
“I mean, I guess? If she wants.” Mina’s face remains unchanged—neither thrilled at the prospect nor repulsed by it. “How bad could I screw it up?”
“I can just see your mother’s face right now,” Doc said, taking a slurp of coffee.
I shake my head. My mother would be appalled that I’m using my living room floor as a holding pen for muddy boots, and eating out of cans. I can’t even begin to fathom her thoughts on my taking a child on. Sometimes, I think it’s better she doesn’t have to see how messed up things are versus the future she had imagined for us. She gave up her entire life in New Charity—our home, my dad—for my dream and everything that was supposed to follow. My ballet career, a partner, children, a family, hobbies—the fulfillment of a life she herself never completed.
In all of this, I have failed and continue to fail. I’m not ready for the responsibilities of womanhood. I should be flirting with the leader of the police force—the most eligible bachelor in the City. I should be working on having little ex-ballerina policeman babies, keeping house, and serving family dinners at five. Things that are probably important to the effort of rebuilding, repopulating, restoring things to the way they were. But I don’t even know what that sort of normal family life looks like—it never happened in my childhood, with my dad working in the barn and me training at the studio—let alone how to implement it. It’s not that I know for sure that I don’t want those things, but I’m scared to want them for myself.
“Let’s step outside for a second,” I say. Doc unfolds himself, draining his coffee mug, and follows me into the hallway.
“Are you sure I’m the right choice for this?” I ask.