Authors: Maggie Helwig
Tags: #General, #Literary, #Toronto (Ont.), #Airborne Infection, #FIC000000, #Political, #Fiction, #Romance, #Photographers, #Suspense Fiction
âAre you taking pictures tonight?'
They were standing just outside the door of the coffee shop in a raw wind, wondering again what should come next.
âThe weather's a problem,' said Alex. âIt's harder inside, I mean you have to get permission more inside.' He folded his hands into his armpits. âLook. If there's some other way I can help â trying to find him ⦠'
âYou don't have to worry about that part. Really. I talk to so many people on the street. Somebody's bound to have a lead on him eventually.'
âYeah, just, if I can help, you know?' He felt the sting of freezing rain on his face.
âYou could do one thing.' Susie reached into her pocket. âThe last address I had for him was a rooming house around here, kind of your neighbourhood. You could just knock on the doors there and ask if anyone knows where he went. I mean, I already tried, but not everyone was home, so it's worth trying again.' She fished out an old receipt from a bank machine, and pressed it against the wall of the building to scribble an address on the back. âAnyway, I was thinking about your photos,' she went on. âHarbourfront's a semi-public space that's indoors. We could go down there together if you wanted to.'
âI don't know.'
âOkay, sorry. I shouldn't interfere.'
âIt's not that.' He thought again about what could happen if he touched her, and it was like a wave of vertigo, the abandonment of the rational world. âIt's really not that. I'm tired is all.'
âYeah. Sorry. I didn't mean ⦠' She pressed the button to cross over to the streetcar stop, the car weaving towards them along its worn tracks.
âAnother time maybe?' said Alex, as she flashed her Metropass at the driver. She was already halfway up the step, the doors sighing closed.
âI'll let you know when I find Derek,' she said.
Alex turned on College and started walking to the west, his hands in his pockets. He only meant to go home. But his route took him past the little church again, and Adrian was standing outside leaning against a tree, smoking a cigarette.
âHey,' he said. âI thought you might come back this way.' He exhaled smoke, rubbing one slender arm with his free hand. âI'm taking a break from my duties as hired muscle.'
âI find it hard to imagine you as muscle.'
âI'm about as close to muscle as we get around here. We're the church of the tiny weak saints.' He reached into his jacket pocket and held out a pack of cigarettes, but Alex shook his head.
âYou know I live just over at Grace? It's funny I've never seen you in the neighbourhood.'
âWe've only been at this church a couple years,' said Adrian. âAnd it's not like anyone's standing on the street with a megaphone.' He dropped the cigarette butt and ground it out with his boot, and he and Alex stood for a minute in the wind.
âI noticed a phenomenon at Mass on Sunday,' said Adrian eventually. âEven before these latest girls at Jarvis. I noticed three or four people wouldn't drink from the cup. There's this little old lady who usually sits behind me, she's the angriest little old lady in the world, and the whole time she was muttering, “There's
no
excuse for this! It's a
terrible
shame! Why don't they use a
disinfectant
!” Because it would be very healthful to be ingesting disinfectant. But everything makes her angry. She gets angry because there's singing at Evensong. “I can't tell you how
mad
it makes me! All that
singing
!”'
âI suppose it'll only get worse.'
âThey're going to be looking for someone to blame soon. That's the aspect that causes concern.'
âSo tell me. What do you think is actually happening?'
Adrian pulled up the collar of his jacket as a gust of frozen rain shrilled down on them. âMy sense is that there's a curse on the city,' he said.
âOkay, that's original at least.'
âActually, it's more early-classical. Like yellow fever as a consequence of civic wrongdoing. Somewhat Hellenic.'
âAnd we're cursed on account of what?'
âDon't ask me. Maybe somebody on city council killed his father and married his mother.'
âI guess that's as plausible as anything else.'
âI have to go back inside soon,' said Adrian. He folded his arms and scuffed the dirt with one foot. âYou should stay in touch, Alex. I was sorry you kind of disappeared.'
âI never did.'
âDid so. Nobody knew where you were, even.'
âI keep telling you I'm in the phone book.'
âYeah, that's really not quite what I meant.' He shrugged. âAnyway. They probably need me for some manual labour. I'll talk to you?'
âAre you guys some kind of conspiracy?'
âI hardly know Suzanne, actually. She and Evvy have got quite close, but I've never really known her. I did know you, though. And I was sorry not to see you. So I'm just taking advantage of a chain of circumstance.' He pulled open the door of the church and ducked inside, glancing backwards. âDo try to stay in touch.'
The girl who first fell was left behind by events now. She still felt less than well, still had tremors in her hands at times, attacks of fatigue, which her doctor said were due to stress, and which a medical person, who preferred not to be named by the media, suggested could be the after-effects of nerve gas poisoning. But she was no longer a focus of attention.
She sat in her room and stared at the cover of her exercise book, where she had written
Bible Themes in Literature
, and filled in the circles of the B with her pen. Then she opened it to the first page and wrote
Book of Genesis
. Paused and checked her cellphone for text messages, picked up her pen again.
Located in garden
, she wrote.
V. signif
, then closed the notebook and picked up the phone.
âOh my God,' said Nicole.
âDid you see the show last night?'
âI cried. Seriously I did.'
âIf Luke and Lorelai don't get together I'm honestly going to die. I'm not even kidding. Did you see where he ⦠'
âOh my God. I so did. I was like dead.'
She doodled a heart on her notebook and wrote
Luke
inside, then scribbled over it.
âSo are you doing this Bible themes thing? Do you even get what this garden thing is all about?'
âWell, sort of innocence and stuff, right? So when there's, like, vegetation in literature it's like this innocence thing? You know what I mean?'
âYeah, but I just think that's kind of fucked up.'
On the small
TV
across from her bed, which was playing quietly in the background, she saw, yet again, the footage of the girl with the braided wool bracelet, covering her eyes. She reached for the remote and changed the channel.
She remembered how it felt to fall, the sickness and the narrowing vision; but as well, though she had no words to express this, the slow pleasure of her surrender to the body's weight, a strange sweet chemical rush as her muscles released.
Those who did not believe in the man with the poison gas had settled on iron-deficiency anemia as the meaning of her fall, and it is true that the girl's hematocrit and serum iron were not in balance, that she ate french fries and drank Coke and avoided red meat and baked beans and multivitamins. But the girl herself knew something different. She knew she had been singled out at that moment in the subway. That she would always be, at least in some small way, the girl who fell down and started it all, and she knew there was a reason for that.
But there was no one she could talk to about it, no one who would understand why, and though she herself had only said that she smelled roses and fell, the story about poison gas and evil motives gathered around her with no effort on her part. She allowed it to happen.
Sometimes, in her room by herself, she considered other meanings. She thought that there would be a change in her life, not now, but someday, and this would be part of it. She took her iron supplements and saw, on
TV
, the others falling.
The rain picked up strength and began to fling itself against the windows, washing the snow down into the gutters, eating away at the low, piled drifts. A little later in the winter, a few degrees colder, it would have coated the snow with a hard layer of shining ice, and in the morning the streets would have sparkled white and silver, tree branches like black engravings on the sky, but it was not yet that time, not fully within the season.
The roof of Alex's building wasn't supposed to be accessible to tenants, but the landlord often forgot to lock the access door. And it hurt no one for him to be here, huddled against the icy rain in his coat and hat, looking out over the street lights and the trees, the peaked and gabled Victorian houses, the downward slant of College towards the Portuguese Centre and the little strip mall and the basement where the Apocalypse Club used to be. The lens of his camera dripping with water, the water becoming a part of the picture, streaking and smearing the yellow glow of windows across the darkness. The slick hiss of the cars below as they slid through puddles, someone running under a dark umbrella. He sat on the roof, sodden, focused, a single point, and the fugitive light fell through him.
The next morning a man, a forty-five-year-old insurance broker, fell to his knees as he was getting off a train at the King station. He didn't faint, but lay in a crouch in the doorway of the train, gasping for breath, his face turning purple. A man in one of the seats nearby grabbed at his own throat, and moaned, and slid down to the floor. Alarms began to sound.
âSedentary middle-aged men,' said Walter Yee, standing by the operating table and watching one of his residents crack open a patient's chest. âBoth moderately overweight. You can't tell me there wasn't cardiac involvement. Were they put through complete stress tests?'
âTwo simultaneous cardiac episodes? Does that seem likely?'
âOkay, I'll grant you one psychosomatic reaction. But I'd like to see the test results on that first man.'
âDr. Ryvat in pulmonary thinks it was asthma,' said one of the nurses. âDr. Lissman in neurology thinks ââ
âOkay, okay. When you're a hammer everything looks like a nail. I'd still like to see the tests.'
Thursday morning, and Alex was standing in a corner of the
OR
, waiting for the preliminaries to be finished before he moved in towards the table.
âWow,' said Walter, peering into the chest cavity. âTalk about accidents waiting to happen. Alex, come on over here and get some horrible-example photos.'
âPeople in general still think it's poisoning,' said the anaesthetist.
âThere is no such thing as people in general,' said Walter. âIt's okay, Adina, you go ahead, I'll just keep an eye.'
âOf course there's such a thing.'
âNo, that's sloppy thinking. There are only many people in particular.'
âFine. Many people in particular think it's poisoning.'
âI've heard disease as well. There's a bird flu theory floating around.'
âOh, give me a break.'
Alex was standing near the resident, watching her hands, when she faltered and paused.
âReally,' said Walter. âYou're fine for this, Adina. You are.' The resident looked up at him, looked back at the patient's heart and started to cut, then her hands stopped moving and Walter jumped forward, pushing her aside, reaching into the chest.
âOkay, okay. We can fix this,' he said, and grabbed something from the instrument tray, his eyes on the opened chest. âExcuse me, why am I not getting suction here?' he shouted. âJesus Christ, people! David, why aren't you clamping?'
Alex saw the chest cavity filling with blood. He focused the lens and took a series of fast pictures.
âWe can do this,' said Walter. And the photographs changed too, subtly, in their purpose, being part of the documentation now that Walter and Adina had done everything right as far as they could, that there were no gross errors but only the limits of the body; or else that there had been preventable error, that something human had intervened and broken down in disaster. Alex himself didn't know clearly what was happening, but he knew just enough to take the right pictures, pictures that would help to lay out the story when it would have to be told.
Alex had not often seen people die. But it had happened â he was part of that strange elite in Western society, one of the witnesses. This man did not die, he was not exactly dead when he left the
OR
, but Walter was silent and grim, and whatever would happen over the next few hours, it was clear he expected nothing good.
There was nothing different to do, nothing that had to be done but to send the photos to the hard drive by wireless transfer. Alex would hear, sooner or later, what was needed from them. He would sort and select the shots, isolate the particular details that were requested. He would know this man's heart. He might not ever find out what happened to him.
But the afternoon was lucky. Things could change like that; he could walk out of the
OR
shaky and sick, and then be sent on one of those assignments that was pure enjoyment, upbeat and playful. This time a girl with new prosthetic legs, a bright, opinionated kid with spiky black hair and little gold earrings who found the devices â her fourth set so far â to be totally excellent. She had never had such good legs before, she told him, doing little steps to demonstrate. The previous legs had sucked like a suckhole but these were much better, her old doctor didn't know what he was doing, not like this new lady doctor who was absolutely cool. Completely aware of the camera,
and flirting with it in a little-girl way, a necklace of rainbow butterflies around her neck.