Mae shuffled sideways to one of the usual runoffs. As she had hoped, it was gravelled, swept clean. It was also ankle-deep in racing water. Mae struggled up the slope against the current.
'Sezen!' she shouted. 'Sezen. Flood!'
Ahead of her on the hillside, a light went on. The wet slope reflected electric light like a field of broken mirrors.
The door opened. 'Madam Chung?' said a hesitant voice. Hatijah leaned out of the doorway, her husband looming behind her.
Mae stopped and windmilled her arms for balance against the current.
Hatijah called, 'Sezen has already left. She goes to wake the people of the Marsh.'
'Oh! She is a good girl,' said Mae.
'She has become one,' said Hatijah.
'You! What are you doing? Get to Kwan's! Get moving, now! Those terraces will be full of water, the walls will break!'
'We wanted to wait for Sezen.'
Mae felt a familiar stab of exasperation. She struggled up and out of the ditch. 'Hatijah! Sezen is not your mother, for heaven's sake; you have other children, get them out of here, now, now, now! Sezen has packed your bags, I know, just take them and leave!'
Hatijah was weeping. 'We can't leave our goat,' she said.
Inshallah. Mae relented 'Of course you can't, it is all your family's wealth. But Edrem, please tell her, life is more important than money. Let the goat go, perhaps it can save itself.'
Edrem's silhouette, tall, skinny and slow, murmured to his wife: 'We must go.'
Mae started to struggle higher up the hill, to the Shens. She shouted as she walked: 'Edrem, I rely on you! You take the children, Hatijah the bags, okay? Okay? And leave your lights on. We will all need light!'
Mae struggled up the hill, leaning on her hands. The hillside was sheathed in water, a solid rippling sheet that was seasoned with tiny cutting flints. The stones sizzled against her fingers like fat on a stove. My God, the whole hillside is moving!
All around her, suspended in the air, was a sound like sighing, a rushing sound of water, in a hundred thousand streams. It was a terrible sound, huge and gentle at the same time, vast as a world. As if Mae had heard the world for the first time.
That's it, that's the sound.
Unexpectedly, the ground flattened and Mae stumbled forward. She was at the schoolhouse. Already the dusty playground was a polished lake, reflecting the children's swings. Water poured out from one corner of the school as if from the spout of a pitcher.
Mae waded to the door and pounded. 'Teacher Shen! Teacher Shen!'
The door seemed to bounce open.
Mae felt another hot breath, but not the Dragon's. Moist, weepy, there was Suloi, her face sticky with tears. 'He won't come, Mae,' she said, and shook herself into sobs.
Mae hugged her sister from the Circle. 'What do you mean?'
A voice out of the darkness, like the darkness, growled, 'There will be no Flood. It is foolishness.'
'Oh, Shen, don't believe me, but believe the water, look at the ground! Shen, please come!'
Something wavered in the darkness, as if it were coiled, legless.
'There will be no Flood.'
Suloi backed away. 'He will not leave.'
Mae pleaded: 'Shen! Come outside! You can hear it. The snows are melting!'
'And the snows will run off, as they have for two thousand years. Do you think those machines of yours can change the world?'
'Do you think you can hold back a Flood? How? By teaching it arithmetic?!' Mae's voice broke with fury.
The darkness, the despair finally uncoiled and stood up. It cocked a rifle. The gun clicked in the darkness.
'I will not have scandalous filth such as you telling my family what to do,' said Despair, who once had been called Happiness.
'Go, Mae,' whispered Suloi, and gave Mae an invisible, loving push.
Shen growled, 'We stay here where we belong.'
Mae pulled Suloi to her, hugged her, whispered in her ear, 'Run in the dark.' Then she pulled back and ran and called over her shoulder, 'Live!'
The hills were laughing.
There was a giggling sound, thousands of chuckles as the water shook itself over rocks, down gullies. It slapped its way across the rock faces of the terraces.
Mae skittered down the slope to the square box of the mosque that had the public-address system mounted on its gable. She came to the door. She rattled it. The sound beyond was hollow. It was locked.
Who locks a mosque? It's never been locked! Mae had calculated, she knew it would take three hours to rouse each house in turn. Mae was near tears. She had planned and planned, but she had never planned that the mosque would be locked.
She would have to run to Mr Shenyalar, the Muerain. He would have the keys.
At least it was downhill. She turned and let the water and gravity carry her.
Mae staggered and slid down the hill. She skittered through the space between the Alis' and the Dohs'. She got tangled in old rusting bedding that someone had discarded. The springs made a merry sproing sound as she pulled her feet free. She half fell onto the cobbles of Upper Street, and spun herself into the concave frontage of the house of the Doh family.
Mae shouted up at the shuttered windows, 'Old Mrs Doh, all Dohs, wake up, wake up, there is a Flood, there is a Flood!' She had danced with them only hours before. 'Please wake up!' New Year, and everyone will be asleep, drunk, exhausted, happy.
Mae spun away onto the bridge. The little river roared, enveloping the arch in mist that stroked Mae's face and danced happily into her lungs. Over the stone balustrade, moonlit rapids shot white and hot and fierce down the gully. Mae remembered the ducks, the geese. Already they were a memory, already washed away. Below, the village square looked like an ocean, all glinting waves.
On the other side of the bridge, there was a huge puddle. Even here on Upper Street, a pocket of the road was flooded. Mae plunged down from the bridge and water poured in over the tops of her boots. Even now, the village was still asleep, still dark.
'Flood! Flood!' she shouted. Suddenly a flashlight flared around the corner of the back of the Haj's house.
'Mae, this way,' said a voice. It was her brother. 'We've got Mother up at the Wings. I've just been down to Lower Street.'
'Ju-mei! I need to get to the Shenyalars'.'
'Good, this is the way, down here.'
Mae waded towards him, the water above her knees. Ju-mei reached forward and grabbed her arm. Together they threshed their way down the rocky gap between the house of the Haj and his neighbours. The alley was like a water garden, all ferns and waterfalls. Mae and Ju-mei fell into Lower Street as if plunging into a river.
The current nearly swept them away. It poured around the corner of Ju-mei's house, rucking up like bedding, white as sheets.
Across the street was the Muerain's tall stone house, with its bronze plaque. Clinging to each other, Ju-mei and Mae crossed the torrent. It made them trip downstream as if dancing. They crammed themselves into the porch of the al Gamas' house to brake. Holding on to the rough walls, they pulled themselves upstream, as if up a cliff.
Something crackled. Mae turned to see the Haj's straw outhouse spin out into the current and down into the square. The square was a lake. The village's one streetlight glowed golden on waves rocking against the front doors of the Kosals' and the Masuds'. The outhouse roof, like a straw hat, swirled away on the current. The surface of the water roiled as if full of serpents.
Ju-mei pulled Mae into the doorway of the Shenyalars'. He pounded; Mae howled.
'Muerain! Muerain Shenyalar! Oh please, please open. Please wake up! Oh, Muerain! Muerain!'
Why, why didn't they move? They were religious Karz, they did not drink, they did not celebrate the New Year, why didn't they hear?
'There is a Flood, Muerain, please wake up!'
From somewhere down in the valley came a terrible spreading crash, as if someone had dropped a dresser full of china. The sound of breakage rolled, settled and then shushed to a halt.