The bedroom door opens and Rachel comes out, her young face drawn. McHabe smiles at her, and then his gaze returns to Jennie.”I don’t think soldiers are trained in stopping termites, but I’ll definitely brim?
On his second visit to me six days later, just before the Block dance, Tom McHabe seems different. I’d forgotten that there are people who radiate such energy and purpose that they seem to set the very air tingling. He stands with his legs braced slightly apart, flanked by Rachel and Jennie, both dressed in their other skirts for the dance. Jennie has woven a red ribbon through her blonde curls; it glows like a flower. McHabe touches her lightly on the shoulder, and I realize from her answering look what must be happening between them. My throat tightens.
“I want to be honest with you, Mrs. Pratt. I’ve talked to Jack Stevenson and Mary Kramer, as well as some others in Blocks C and E, and I’ve gotten a feel for how you live here. A little bit, anyway. I’m going to tell Mr. Stevenson and Mrs. Kramer what I tell you, but I wanted you to be first.”
“Why?” I say, more harshly than I intend. Or think I intend.
He isn’t fazed. “Because you’re one of the oldest survivors of the disease. Because you had a strong education Outside. Because your daughter’s husband died of axoperidine.”
At the same moment that I realize what McHabe is going to say next, I realize too that Rachel and Jennie have already heard it. They listen to him with the slightly open-mouthed intensity of children hearing a marvellous but familiar tale. But do they understand? Rachel wasn’t present when her father finally died, gasping for air his lungs couldn’t use.
McHabe, watching me, says, “There’s been a lot of research on the disease since those deaths, Mrs. Pratt.”
“No. There hasn’t. Too risky, your government said.”
I see that he caught the pronoun. “Actual administration of any cures is illegal, yes. To minimize contact with communicables.”
“So how has this ‘research’ been carried on?”
“By doctors willing to go Inside and not come out again. Data is transmitted out by laser. In code.”
“What clean doctor would be willing to go Inside and not come out again?”
McHabe smiles; again I’m struck by that quality of spontaneous energy. “Oh, you’d be surprised. We had three doctors inside the Pennsylvania colony. One past retirement age. Another, an old-style Catholic, who dedicated his research to God. A third nobody could figure out, a dour persistent guy who was a brilliant researcher.”
Was. “And you.”
“No,” McHabe says quietly. “I go in and out.”
“What happened to the others?”
“They’re dead.” He makes a brief aborted movement with his right hand and I realize that he is, or was, a smoker. How long since I had reached like that for a non-existent cigarette? Nearly two decades. Cigarettes are not among the things people donate; they’re too valuable. Yet I recognize the movement still. “Two of the three doctors caught the disease. They worked on themselves as well as volunteers. Then one day the government intercepted the relayed data and went in and destroyed everything.”
“Why?” Jennie asks.
“Research on the disease is illegal. Everyone Outside is afraid of a leak: a virus somehow getting out on a mosquito, a bird, even as a spore.”
“Nothing has gotten out in all these years,” Rachel says.
“No. But the government is afraid that if researchers start splicing and intercutting genes, it could make viruses more viable. You don’t understand the Outside, Rachel. Everything is illegal. This is the most repressive period in American history. Everyone’s afraid.”
“You’re not,” Jennie says, so softly I barely hear her. McHabe gives her a smile that twists my heart.
“Some of us haven’t given up. Research goes on. But it’s all underground, all theoretical. And we’ve learned a lot. We’ve learned that the virus doesn’t just affect the skin. There are—”
“Be quiet,” I say, because I see that he’s about to say something important. “Be quiet a minute. Let me think.”
McHabe waits. Jennie and Rachel look at me, that glow of suppressed excitement on them both. Eventually I find it. “You want something, Dr. McHabe. All this research wants something from us besides pure scientific joy. With things Outside as bad as you say, there must be plenty of diseases Outside you could research without killing yourself, plenty of need among your own people—” he nods, his eyes gleaming “—but you’re here. Inside. Why? We don’t have any more new or interesting symptoms, we barely survive, the Outside stopped caring what happened to us a long time ago. We have nothing. So why are you here?”
“You’re wrong, Mrs. Pratt. You do have something interesting going on here. You have survived. Your society has regressed but not collapsed. You’re functioning under conditions where you shouldn’t have.”
The same old crap. I raise my eyebrows at him. He stares into the fire and says quietly, “To say Washington is rioting says nothing. You have to see a twelve-year-old hurl a homemade bomb, a man sliced open from neck to crotch because he still has a job to go to and his neighbour doesn’t, a three-year-old left to starve because someone abandoned her like an unwanted kitten… You don’t know. It doesn’t happen Inside.”
“We’re better than they are,” Rachel says. I look at my grandchild. She says it simply, without self-aggrandizement, but with a kind of wonder. In the firelight the thickened gray ropes of skin across her cheek glow dull maroon.
McHabe said, “Perhaps you are. I started to say earlier that we’ve learned that the virus doesn’t affect just the skin. It alters neurotransmitter receptor sites in the brain as well. It’s a relatively slow transformation, which is why the flurry of research in the early years of the disease missed it. But it’s real, as real as the faster site-capacity transformations brought about by, say, cocaine. Are you following me, Mrs. Pratt?”
I nod. Jennie and Rachel don’t look lost, although they don’t know any of this vocabulary, and I recognize that McHabe must have explained all this to them,
“As the disease progresses to the brain, the receptors which receive excitory transmitters slowly become harder to engage, and the receptors which receive inhibiting transmitters become easier to engage.”
“You mean that we become stupider.”
“Oh, no! Intelligence is not affected at all. The results are emotional and behavioural, not intellectual. You become—all of you—calmer. Disinclined to action or innovation. Mildly but definitely depressed.”
The fire burns down. I pick up the poker, bent slightly where someone once tried to use it as a crowbar, and poke at the log, which is a perfectly shaped moulded-pulp synthetic stamped “Donated by Weyerhaeuser-Seyyed.”
“I don’t feel depressed, young man.”
“It’s a depression of the nervous system, but a new kind—without the hopelessness usually associated with clinical depression.”
“I don’t believe you.”
“Really? With all due courtesy, when was the last time you—or any of the older Block leaders—pushed for any significant change in how you do things Inside?”
“Sometimes things cannot be constructively changed. Only accepted. That’s not chemistry, its reality.”
“Not Outside,” McHabe says grimly. “Outside they don’t change constructively or accept. They get violent. Inside, you’ve had almost no violence since the early years, even when your resources tightened again and again. When was the last time you tasted butter, Mrs. Pratt, or smoked a cigarette, or had a new pair of jeans? Do you know what happens Outside when consumer goods become unavailable and there are no police in a given area? But Inside you just distribute whatever you have as fairly as you can, or make do without. No looting, no rioting, no cancerous envy. No one Outside knew why. Now we do.”