Are they still there?
We had written no new songs.
Peter and Mamie circle among the other couples. “Starships and Roses” ends and the band begins “Yesterday.” A turn brings Mamie’s face briefly into full torchlight: it’s clenched and tight, streaked with tears.
“You should sit down, Gram,” Rachel says. This is the first time she’s spoken to me since we left the barracks. Her voice is heavy but not angry, and there is no anger in Jennie’s arm as she sets down the three-legged stool she carried for me. Neither of them is ever really angry.
Under my weight the stool sinks unevenly into the ground. A boy, twelve or thirteen years old, comes up to Jennie and wordlessly holds out his hand. They join the dancing couples. Jack Stevenson, much more arthritic than I, hobbles towards me with his grandson Hal by his side.
“Hello, Sarah. Been a long time.”
“Hello, Jack.” Thick disease ridges cross both his cheeks and snakes down his nose. Once, long ago, we were at Yale together.
“Hal, go dance with Rachel,” Jack says. “Give me that stool first.” Hal, obedient, exchanges the stool for Rachel, and Jack lowers himself to sit beside me. “Big doings, Sarah.”
“So I hear.”
“McHabe told you? All of it? He said he’d been to see you just before me.”
“He told me.”
“What do you think?”
“I don’t know.”
“He wants Hal to try the cure.”
Hal. I hadn’t thought. The boy’s face is smooth and clear, the only visible skin ridges on his right hand. I say, “Jennie, too.”
Jack nods, apparently unsurprised. “Hal said no.”
“Hal did?”
“You mean Jennie didn’t?” He stares at me. “She’d even consider something as dangerous as an untried cure-not to mention this alleged passing Outside?” I don’t answer. Peter and Mamie dance from behind the other couples, disappear again. The song they dance to is slow, sad, and old.
“Jack—could we have done better here? With the colony?”
Jack watches the dancers. Finally he says, “We don’t kill each other. We don’t burn things down. We don’t steal, or at least not much and not cripplingly. We don’t hoard. It seems to me we’ve done better than anyone had ever hoped. Including us.” His eyes search the dancers for Hal. “He’s the best thing in my life, that boy.”
Another rare flash of memory: Jack debating in some long-forgotten political science class at Yale, a young man on fire. He stands braced lightly on the balls of his feet, leaning forward like a fighter or a dancer, the electric lights brilliant on his glossy black hair. Young women watch him with their hands quiet on their open textbooks. He has the pro side of the debating question: Resolved: Fomenting first-strike third-world wars is an effective method of deterring nuclear conflict among superpowers.
Abruptly the band stops playing. In the centre of the square Peter and Mamie shout at each other.
“—saw the way you touched her! You bastard, you faithless prick!”
“For God’s sake, Mamie, not here!”
“Why not here? You didn’t mind dancing with her here, touching her back here, and ass and… and…” She starts to cry. People look away, embarrassed. A woman I don’t know steps forward and puts a hesitant hand on Mamie’s shoulder. Mamie shakes it off, her hands to her face, and rushes away from the square. Peter stands there dumbly a moment before saying to no one in particular, “I’m sorry. Please dance.” He walks towards the band who begin, raggedly, to play “Didn’t We Almost Have It All.” The song is twenty-five years old. Jack Stevenson says, “Can I help, Sarah? With your girl?”
“How?”
“I don’t know,” he says, and of course he doesn’t. He offers not out of usefulness but out of empathy, knowing how the ugly little scene in the torchlight depresses me. Do we all so easily understand depression?
Rachel dances by with someone I don’t know, a still-faced older man. She throws a worried glance over his shoulder: now Jennie is dancing with Peter. I can’t see Peter’s face. But I see Jennie’s. She looks directly at no one, but then she doesn’t have to. The message she’s sending is clear: I forbade her to come to the dance with McHabe, but I didn’t forbid her to dance with Peter and so she is, even though she doesn’t want to, even though it’s clear from her face that this tiny act of defiance terrifies her. Peter tightens his arm and she jerks backward against it, smiling hard.
Kara Desmond and Rob Cottrell come up to me, blocking my view of the dancers. They’ve been here as long as I. Kara has an infant great-grandchild, one of the rare babies born already disfigured by the disease. Kara’s dress, which she wears over jeans for warmth, is torn at the hem; her voice is soft. “Sarah. It’s great to see you out.” Rob says nothing. He’s put on weight in the few years since I saw him last. In the flickering torchlight his jowly face shines with the serenity of a diseased Buddha.
It’s two more dances before I realize that Jennie has disappeared.
I look around for Rachel. She’s pouring sumac tea for the band. Peter dances by with a woman not wearing jeans under her dress; the woman is shivering and smiling. So it isn’t Peter that Jennie left with…
“Rob, will you walk me home? In case I stumble?” The cold is getting to my arthritis.
Rob nods, incurious. Kara says, “I’ll come, too,” and we leave Jack Stevenson on his stool, waiting for his turn at hot tea. Kara chatters happily as we walk along as fast as I can go, which isn’t as fast as I want to go. The moon has set. The ground is uneven and the street dark except for the stars and fitful lights in barracks windows. Candles. Oil lamps. Once, a single powerful glow from what I guess to be a donated stored-solar light, the only one I’ve seen in a long time.
Korean, Tom said.
“You’re shivering,” Kara says. “Here, take my coat.” I shake my head.
I make them leave me outside our barracks and they do, unquestioning. Quietly I open the door to our dark kitchen. The stove has gone out. The door to the back bedroom stands half-open, voices coming from the darkness. I shiver again, and Kara’s coat wouldn’t have helped.
But I am wrong. The voices aren’t Jennie and Peter.
“—not what I wanted to talk about just now,” Mamie says.
“But it’s what I want to talk about.”
“Is it?”
“Yes.”
I stand listening to the rise and fall of their voices, to the petulance in Mamie’s, the eagerness in McHabe’s.
“Jennie is your ward, isn’t she?”
“Oh, Jennie. Yes. For another year.”
“Then she’ll listen to you, even if your mother… the decision is yours. And hers.”
“I guess so. But I want to think about it. I need more information.”
“I’ll tell you anything you ask.”
“Will you? Are you married, Dr. Thomas McHabe?”
Silence. Then his voice, different. “Don’t do that.”
“Are you sure? Are you really sure?”
“I’m sure.”
“Really, really sure? That you want me to stop?”
I cross the kitchen, hitting my knee against an unseen chair. In the open doorway a sky full of stars moves into view through the termite hole in the wall.
“Ow!”
“I said to stop it, Mrs. Wilson. Now please think about what I said about Jennie. I’ll come back tomorrow morning and you can—”
“You can go straight to hell!” Mamie shouts. And then, in a different voice, strangely calm, “Is it because I’m diseased? And you’re not? And Jennie is not?”