Below, in the public atrium of the house, Ms Will was walking towards the open gate. The sight of Ms Will had never been so welcome.
‘Going out?’ Milena asked pleasantly.
Milena had not made an effort with Ms Will. She was too much like what Milena had imagined a Party wife would be, a kind of overstuffed, throwaway cushion. She was well dressed, hair coiffed, well fed, looked after, and her face carried an expression of settled resignation. Her husband did not really need her. The circles under her eyes were black rings in the full July flush of a Rhodopsin face.
‘Yes. I have to do the shopping myself,’ said Ms Will.
‘Do you mind if I join you?’ Milena asked, feeling false. I ignore people, she thought, until I need them. It’s like the chicken. Thrawn was right.
‘If you like, I’m not doing anything special,’ said Ms Will. ‘I never do anything special. It’s different for you artists.’ Ms Will waited, staring into space as Milena’s feet applauded their way down the steps. Milena half ran to her across the woven floor.
‘The weather has been lovely,’ said Milena.
‘Oh, it’s far too hot,’ said Ms Will. Behind Ms Will, unseen by her, the walls started to ooze mucus, and there was a whisper of sound, a voice in the air, a reminder. Thrawn was still with her. As if prodded, Milena walked on.
The main gate had been left open, so the air could flow through the house. The sunlight they stepped into was blistering, blinding. The ground was white, as bleached as bone. The What Does woman was hanging out sheets and underwear. They burned white in the sun. Already there was a smell of rotting reed. Already the grass on the bank was brown and brittle. A slope of mud led down towards the narrowing channel.
Everything was already going dry.
The What Does, Ms Marks, called out to them.
‘Wonderful weather for sheets. They dry as soon as you look at them!’ Suddenly Ms Marks’ smile sprouted fangs and an eel’s head glared out from between her teeth. Look! thought Milena and tried to pull Ms Will around. Then the image was gone. Ms Will blinked up at her, only momentarily distracted from her complete absorption in herself.
Milena kept thinking. The eel’s head and that buffalo carcass were very good. Thrawn is using references. She’s in a market somewhere, somewhere with beef carcasses and fish. Milena walked towards the quay. It no longer reached the water. The bank of the Ark ended, high over the edge of the water. From the kilns, smoke still drifted, and the formless choir of Remembrance still sung in the distance.
Ms Will took Milena’s arm, as if she were a What Does companion. ‘It’s not good for you, all this sun,’ said Ms Will. ‘I got a terrible sunburn yesterday, just sitting out on the balcony. And it puts you straight off your food. You’re never hungry. I told our girl Emily to come up with something especially appetising. But she can’t change, won’t change. No, it’s tamales again.’ Ms Will had not the least idea that she was extraordinarily privileged.
‘It’s so difficult to remember to eat,’ Milena agreed.
‘Well Emily blames the shortages. I can’t fault her there. The perfect excuse. Isn’t it ridiculous? Food shortages now that we have electricity.’
‘There are a lot of people to feed,’ said Milena, keeping her voice mild. ‘And all this sun is lovely, but it’s very bad for farming. A lot of the land crops have just burned up.’
‘It’s the costermongers, too, of course,’ said Ms Will. ‘I think they engineer these shortages, just to put up the price. Making everyone else pay. I don’t want to eat tamales for the rest of my life. So I’m just going to have to do the shopping myself.’
Oh God, oh God, oh God, she’s so boring, thought Milena. Fear made her more irritable.
‘I’d like some bananas,’ said Ms Will. ‘Just for a change. I’d like something different.’ The flesh on her face hung dead on her skull. The smoke of the dead from the Estate lay overhead. They waited for a punt, in the full, glaring horrible light.
I have an enemy, thought Milena. And I am alone.
Eventually a boat came past, punted by a stringy, burnished old man in his mid-thirties. Ms Will needed to be helped down off the Ark and into the boat. She let her full weight rest on the withered arms of the dying man.
As she sat down, Ms Will complained that it was so far to the market. Party Members should have their own market, she felt.
‘I find it awfully difficult to get anyone to pay any attention when I’m talking,’ said Ms Will. ‘Do you find that? People can be so extraordinarily cruel for no reason.’
‘Yes,’ said Milena. She was thinking about the light all around them. Light was her enemy, too. The holograms were exchanges of light. Light in one place was exchanged for light in another, through the fifth dimension, where thought and light could interact. But it was a reciprocal exchange. Only as much could be donated as was received. So I could live in the dark, too, thought Milena. She looked down into the water. It was opaque, like moving gelatin, but in its depths, she could see the heads and hands of children swimming. They had long reeds in their mouths that broke the surface and let them breathe. They hunted for fish or for snails.
And suddenly, just under the water, she saw Thrawn. Thrawn was a corpse and fish was nibbling the flesh of her face. Milena looked up and away.
‘My skin feels so peculiar,’ said Ms Will.
It seethed with worms, just under the surface, as if they would eat their way out any moment. You can’t imagine flowers, Thrawn, thought Milena, but you can imagine that.
There was a niggling in Milena’s nose. She sneezed. The tickle grew worse. She sneezed again. She began to sneeze over and over. Her head was tossed helplessly from side to side. Her nose and eyes streamed, trying to eliminate the tickle. The tickle suddenly took shape. It became a voice, resonating in the bones of Milena’s skull.
‘Achoo!’ it said, in mocking imitation. ‘Hello, Milena.’ The voice sounded like her own. ‘Think of me as a virus. You have caught a conscience from somewhere. You have committed a grave injustice, of which you are deeply ashamed. You hurt Thrawn McCartney. You must make amends.’
She knows I can’t answer back, thought Milena. I am with someone, and I can’t start talking to myself in public. Or, again, people will think I’m the crazy one.
‘This is your own voice, Milena. Your own mind is telling you what is right. Your own mind is telling you: go to the Zoo and tell them you want Thrawn to be part of the Comedy.’
What now? wondered Milena in dismay. What game is this now?
Until October, she thought, I just have to hold out until October. In October, I’ll be made Terminal, and the Consensus will see what’s happening and…. And then Milena understood what the game was. She groaned and hid her face.
‘You’d never believe it, but I used to have a beautiful complexion,’ said Ms Will, feeling her seething cheeks. The worms had pincers.
‘I’m sorry, Ms Will, I’m afraid I’m not feeling too well,’ said Milena.
It was quite simple. Thrawn had never once admitted that she was sending holograms. She was saying that Milena was producing the images herself, out of a bad conscience.
‘You don’t have to tell me about illness,’ said Ms Will. ‘Not with my back, my kidneys. And all the Nurses can say is that I’m making it all up.’
When I am made Terminal, all the Consensus will know is that someone they have never Read is seeing impossible things and thinking that someone else, someone she dislikes, is beaming them at her.
When I am made Terminal, the Consensus will think I’m the crazy one.
‘I told you the light was too strong,’ said Ms Will.
The thirty-five-year-old boatboy punted them to the floating market. It was some five kilometres away from the smoke of the funereal Estate.