Authors: Julie Bertagna
Tain grasps Mara's hand in his.
“Mara, the seas are rising again. It happens in surges. Every few decades there's another great meltdown of the ice at the poles and then you get a sea surge. I know the patternâI've seen it before. We've had long, scorching summers these last years and now we're getting the sea surge from the meltdown that the weather has caused. I think the last of the polar ice caps must be melting.”
Last summer the heat had burned the island almost barren. Mara remembers air so hot it shimmered like glass. Days so long and bright the relentless sun hardly slipped from the sky. The sea was a haven thenâshe lived on the rocks like a mermaid, her wet hair a long, cool cloak against the sun, endlessly plunging her burning skin into the soothing balm of the ocean.
“We need to move again,” Tain is saying. “But not uphill this timeâthere's not enough land left for us.”
Mara feels panic lurch in her stomach. She grips Tain's hand.
“We need to find a new home in the world,” Tain declares. “Soon, Mara, before it's too late.”
A new home in the world?
Mara stares at Tain with wide eyes. The thought is so terrifying she feels numb.
“But where?” she whispers.
“Do you remember when you were little I used to tell you about the giant cities built high above the rising seas?”
“That was just a fairy tale!” Mara exclaims.
Tain shakes his head. “No, no. Remember I told you I saw a television newsreel about the very first of those cities when I was young. They were just beginning to build them. New World cities, they were called.”
Mara looks wistfully at the blank gray box that sits dead and useless in a corner of the room. Tain has told her all about television.
“So there really are giant cities?” she asks doubtfully.
“I don't know,” says Tain. “I don't know if the ones they built survived the floodâbut they were designed to. I don't know if they built more, as they said they would. In the time just before the flood all the news reports complained about an information blackout on the New World cities. Then the great flood came and there was no news about anything. Like I said, we were struggling to survive here on
Wing. Later, we tried to search for information on the Weaveâthat was the old worldwide computer network.”
Mara nods. She's well acquainted with the Weave.
“We looked hard but we never found anything. The Weave was in ruins and searching for anything was like looking for a needle in a haystack. So we gave up wondering what might or might not lie out in the world beyond us and concentrated on the here and now. But I'm sure those cities were built! There was a plan to build lots of them.”
In frustration, Tain rakes his white hair with his hand. “I always wondered if our fishermen didn't sail far enough south. They were brave men but they panicked when they saw the mainland was gone and turned back. If they had kept going though, maybe they would have found one of those cities. I don't know, but we need to find out now. Somehow we must. Those cities might be our only hope. Who knows what land is left in the world?”
He opens the old atlas that is lying on the table and studies it. “I've searched and searched for other options,” he murmurs, “but all the high lands are too far from here. We'd never reach them. Our fishing boats could never survive such a distance on the open ocean.”
But Mara is only half-listening, her mind filled with a picture of a beautiful city, towering safe and high above the ocean, far up into the sky. At the same time a shiver of dread runs through her at the thought of leaving Wing to live in such a place. It's unimaginable. She doesn't want to think of it. Dazed, she tries to collect her thoughts.
Tain puts a steadying hand on her shoulder. He knows her so well she doesn't have to explain what she is feeling.
“Your granny was a very special person,” he tells her now, as he has so often before. “She was a real leader in this community when the world changed and we had to
fight to survive. It was her vision and courage that helped these islands shape their own future in a world where people had lost heart and were ready to give up hope. I remember I almost did.” A smile deepens the lines on his face. “But she wouldn't. She just would not let us all give up.” Now Tain's voice trembles and his eyes burn with emotion in a way that Mara has never seen before. “She had a kind of greatness in her, Mary did. And you are her mirror image, girl. Her living image! You'll make a new future in the world, I know you willâbecause you've got that same strength and courage.”
“Why didn't you marry her?” Mara whispers. The words are out of her mouth before she can stop them.
Her grandpa, Granny Mary's husband, died before she was born, so it's hard to feel loyalty to someone she never knew; whereas Tain has always been close to her and has felt so much like a grandfather.
A sudden great gust hits the cottage. An almighty wind howls across the island. Doors shudder and shutters bang. Outside on the hills the blades of the windmills begin to thrash. Mara and Tain jump up and run outside to secure the shutters before they shatter the windows.
Storm clouds are already back on the horizon. Mara could cry with frustration. She can't believe her short burst of freedom is nearly gone. She hasn't even had time to visit her friends.
Tain has disappeared inside and returns quickly, clasping a small, highly polished wooden box that is covered in exquisite engravings. He places it in Mara's hands.
“For me?” Mara exclaims. She fingers the beautiful patterns of the box, then opens it to find a small mirror on the underside of the lid and tiny compartments in the base.
Tain nods. He is famed all over the island for his wood
engravings, but nowadays there is rarely any spare wood. All the island's trees have long been cut down. “I made it for your granny's sixteenth birthday. I was keeping it for yours but, well, you should have it now. A box for all your jewels.”
Mara laughs because he knows she doesn't have any. She hugs him tight. “I've never owned anything so beautiful.”
And suddenly she wondersâdoes he mean he made it for Granny and never gave it to her? And if not, why not? Somehow, she cannot ask.
Instead she looks in the little mirror that is set in the box and blinks in surprise. The fresh air has whipped color into her winter-pale cheeks and her eyes are brighter than she has seen them in months. Her hair is alive with sunshine. At her neck glints the iceberg quartz Tain made into a necklace for her last birthday.
The wind surges and there's a distant rumble of thunder. Mara looks at the approaching clouds in dismay and shuts the box.
“Go on home now,” warns Tain. “I fear we're in for another hard blast. As soon as there's another break in the weather I'll call an island meeting and we'll make plans for the future.”
Mara runs down the hillside. Too late, she realizes that Tain never answered the question about Granny Mary.
Mara doesn't go straight home. She heads down to the village that lies in a fold of the hills and battles against the rising wind that is beginning to howl through the gaps between the houses. The hammers and saws have all stopped, the shutters secured, as Wing barricades itself against more storms.
Mara thumps upon the shabby door of a cottage that
sits near the edge of the village. There's a shout from inside, then a tall, lean, strong-looking boy, with the reddish blond hair and bright blue eyes of the Celtic inheritance that her father, young brother, and many of the islanders share, opens the door. Mara's dark eyes and midnight hair is evidence of other ancestorsâan ancient shipwreck of Spanish sailorsâan inheritance that she shares with her mother, Granny Mary, and countless generations before.
The blond youth pulls her inside and quickly shoves the door shut against the wind. He's a mess, covered from top to toe in dust and dirt and cobwebs.
“Mara! What are you doing still out?” Rowan exclaims, but his lopsided smile says how glad he is to see her.
“I was just helping Tain and the storm came on so suddenly and I wantedâ”
Mara stops because all she really wanted was to see her friends before the island barricades itself indoors again. But now that she's here she finds she is desperate to tell them all about her conversation with Tainâyet she can feel the growing force of the storm. Is there enough time?
“You look like you've seen a ghost,” says Rowan as Mara falls silent. “Are you okayâis your family all right?”
She nods mutely but she can feel her lips tremble. “I can't stand any more of this, Rowan. I'll go mad if I'm stuck indoors anymore. At least you two have each other to talk to.”
“
We
don't talk.
Gail
talks. All the time. My job is to listen to her,” Rowan reminds her with a grin. “But you've got Corey.”
“He's just a little kid.”
Mara knows she should go home. The slow boom of storm waves on the shore has begun. But she needs to talk. Her father will only argue against Tain's predictions for
Wing's future. Her mother will say it's nonsense, then stay awake all night, worrying. Corey's too young to understand.
“Quick, come down to the den for a minute,” says Rowan. “Gail was out looking for you. She'll want to see you.”
Mara hurries after Rowan, along the hallway and down a narrow flight of stone stairs. The stairs descend into the gloom of a musty cellar. One corner of the den is alight with candles and Gail sits there on a heap of sheepskin, bent over some sewing as Mara knew she would be, her blue eyes frowning behind a longer version of her brother's blond hair. Above her, in a billowing canopy, she has draped old curtains and adorned them with masses of shimmery, glinting thingsâsilky scarves and ribbons and old necklaces. She looks as if she is sitting in a bedraggled but strangely exotic tent.
“Gail's winter project,” explains Rowan. “Inspired by a picture in
The Arabian Nights
.”
Books and sewing materialsâold bits of cotton, ribbon, nylon, or silkâare like treasure on the island. Gail and Rowan beg and borrow the biggest hoard of each that they can find to occupy themselves through the storm season.
Gail looks up to see who Rowan is speaking to and bounds out of her Arabian canopy.
“Mara! Oh, I've missed you.”
Gail begins to talk a mile a minute without a pause for breath. “I went up to your house to find you this morning and no one knew where you were and then I tried the shore and then I met some people and we talked and talked and by the time we'd finished the wind was starting up but I was just thinking I should have tried Tain's because maybe you'd gone there but then I thought surely
you'd have come here first to see us because we haven't talked for
so-o-o
long.”
Gail grinds to a sudden halt, seeing the stricken expression on her friend's face.
“What is it?”
Mara flops down on a dusty cushion, then takes a deep breath and begins to tell Gail and Rowan about her conversation with Tain. Rowan listens raptly, shooshing Gail's many attempts to interrupt.
“Tain doesn't believe in miracles,” Mara finishes up. “I don't think I do either. I wish I did. That sea is rising and rising and nothing's going to stop it. We can't just barricade ourselves up and hope that something will save us. We have to act.”
“But what can we do?” argues Gail. “Even if it's trueâand it's
not
,” she insists, “we couldn't just launch out on the ocean and hope we come across one of these New World cities. I don't believe they exist. It's too incredible. It'll be some film Tain watched on, um, tele-what's-it.”
“Television,” says Mara.
“And now he's getting upset and confused,” Gail rattles on. “He's an old man, after all.”
“He is
not
confused,” Mara interrupts hotly. “He's the sharpest person I know.”
“Well, okay,” Gail backs down. “But we would
know
if there were giant cities out there. Someone would have come and told us.”
“Like hell they would!” argues Rowan. “They'd do exactly what we've done and just look after themselves. I bet no one in the outside world knows we exist. If there
is
any outside world left.”
“Do you think the rest of the world drowned?” Mara whispers. The thought is almost too terrible to voice.
“No!” cries Gail, horrified. “Stop it, you two! I won't listen if you talk like that. Mom says God looked after us, so he must have looked after the rest of the world too. Of course he would.”
“God?” Rowan puzzles. “What's God? Maybe that's just another old story. Then people convinced themselves the story was true. I love stories but how can they save us?”
He stares at the books that are piled in precarious towers all around the den. Then he shudders. “When I read these old books and imagine all the amazing people and places that once existed, I wonderâwell, is any of it still out there? What if we're the only people left in the world? And if we are, how can there be such a thing as God? Or else it's not the kind of God you mean,” he tells his sister, “cuddly and caring. How can you decide you believe in God but not in a giant city? You've no more proof of one than of the other.”