Authors: Robert Charles Wilson
Tags: #Cults, #End of the world, #General, #Science Fiction, #Human-Alien Encounters, #Fiction
She was afraid he was dying. Her concern didn’t extend to the rest of the world, however. Jason had told her not to worry about that.
Things will be back to normal soon
, he said.
And she had believed him. The red sun held no terrors for Carol. The nights were bad, though, she said. The nights took Jason like a bad dream.
I looked in on Diane first
Carol had put her in an upstairs bedroom—her room from the old days, done over as a generic guest bedroom. I found her physically stable and breathing without assistance, but there was nothing reassuring in that. It was part of the etiology of the disease. The tide advanced and the tide ebbed, but each cycle carried away more of her resilience and more of her strength.
I kissed her dry, hot forehead and told her to rest. She gave no sign of having heard me.
Then I went to see Jason. There was a question I needed to ask.
According to Carol, Jase had come back to the Big House because of some conflict at Perihelion. She couldn’t remember his explanation, but it had something to do with Jason’s father (“E.D. is behaving badly again,” she said) and something to do with “that little black wrinkly man, the one who died. The Martian.”
The Martian. Who had supplied the longevity drug that had made Jason a Fourth. The drug that should have protected him from whatever was killing him now.
He was awake when I knocked and entered his room, the same room he had occupied thirty years ago, when we were children in the compassed world of children and the stars were in their rightful places. Here was the rectangle of subtly brighter color where a poster of the solar system had once shaded the wall. Here was the carpet, long since steam-cleaned and chemically bleached, where we had once spilled Cokes and scattered crumbs on rainy days like this.
And here was Jason.
“That sounds like Tyler,” he said.
He lay in bed, dressed—he insisted on dressing each morning, Carol had said—in clean khaki pants and a blue cotton shirt. His back was propped against the pillows and he seemed perfectly alert. I said, “Not much light in here, Jase.”
“Open the blinds if you like.”
I did, but it only admitted more of the sullen amber daylight. “You mind if I examine you?”
“Of course I don’t mind.”
He wasn’t looking at me. He was looking, if the angle of his head meant anything, at a blank patch of wall.
“Carol says you’ve been having trouble with your vision.”
“Carol is experiencing what people in your profession call denial. In fact I’m blind. I haven’t been able to see anything at all since yesterday morning.”
I sat on the bed next to him. When he turned his head toward me the motion was smooth but agonizingly slow. I took a penlight from my shirt pocket and flashed it into his right eye in order to watch the pupil contract.
It didn’t.
It did something worse.
It glittered. The pupil of his eye glittered as if it had been injected with tiny diamonds.
Jason must have felt me jerk back.
“That bad?” he asked.
I couldn’t speak.
He said, more somberly, “I can’t use a mirror. Please, Ty. I need you to tell me what you see.”
“This… I don’t know what this is, Jason. This isn’t something I can diagnose.”
“Just describe it, please.”
I tried to muster a clinical detachment. “It appears as if crystals of some kind have grown into your eye. The sclera looks normal and the iris doesn’t seem to be affected, but the pupil is completely obscured by flakes of something like mica. I’ve never heard of anything like this. I would have said it was impossible. I can’t treat it.”
I backed away from the bed, found a chair and sat in it. For a while there was no sound but the ticking of the bedside clock, another of Carol’s pristine antiques.
Then Jason draw a breath and forced what he seemed to imagine was a reassuring smile. “Thank you. You’re right. It isn’t a condition you can treat. But I’m still going to need your help during—well, during the next couple of days. Carol tries, but she’s way out of her depth.”
“So am I.”
More rain beat at the window. “The help I need isn’t entirely medical.”
“If you have an explanation for this—”
“A partial one, at best.”
“Then please share it with me, Jase, because I’m getting a little scared here.”
He cocked his head, listening to some sound I hadn’t heard or couldn’t hear, until I began to wonder whether he had forgotten me. Then he said, “The short version is that my nervous system has been overtaken by something beyond my control. The condition of my eyes is just an external manifestation of it.”
“A disease?”
“No, but that’s the effect it’s having.”
“Is this condition contagious?”
“On the contrary. I believe it’s unique. A disease only I can develop—on this planet, at least.”
“Then it has something to do with the longevity treatment.”
“In a way it does. But I—”
“No, Jase, I need an answer to that before you say anything else. Is your condition—whatever it is—a direct result of the drug I administered?”
“Not a
direct
result, no… you’re not at fault in any way, if that’s what you mean.”
“Right now I couldn’t care less who’s at fault. Diane is sick. Didn’t Carol tell you?”
“Carol said something about flu—”
“Carol lied. It’s not flu. It’s late-stage CVWS. I drove two thousand miles through what looks like the end of the world because she’s dying, Jase, and there’s only one cure I can think of, and you just threw that into doubt.”
He rolled his head again, perhaps involuntarily, as if he were trying to shake off some invisible distraction.
But before I could prompt him he said, “There are aspects of Martian life Wun never shared with you. E.D. suspected as much, and to a certain extent his suspicions were well founded. Mars has been doing sophisticated biotechnology for centuries. Centuries ago, the Fourth Age was exactly what Wun told you it was—a longevity treatment and a social institution. But it’s evolved since then. For Wun’s generation the Fourth was more like a
platform, a
biological operating system capable of running much more sophisticated software applications. There isn’t just a four, there’s a 4.1, 4.2—if you see what I mean.”
“What I gave you—”
“What you gave me was the traditional treatment. A basic four.”
“But?”
“But… I’ve supplemented it since.”
“This supplement was also something Wun transported from Mars?”
“Yes. The purpose—”
“Never mind the purpose. Are you absolutely certain you’re not suffering from the effects of the original treatment?”
“As certain as I can be.”
I stood up.
Jason heard me moving toward the door. “I can explain,” he said. “And I still need your help. By all means take care of her, Ty. I hope she lives. But keep in mind… my time is also limited.”
The case of Martian pharmaceuticals was where I had left it, unmolested, behind the broken wallboard in the basement of my mother’s house, and when I had retrieved it I carried it across the lawn through the gusting amber rain to the Big House.
Carol was in Diane’s room administering sips of oxygen by mask.
“We need to use that sparingly,” I said, “unless you can conjure up another cylinder.”
“Her lips were a little blue.”
“Let me see.”
Carol moved away from her daughter. I closed the valve and set the mask aside. You have to be careful with oxygen. It’s indispensable for a patient in respiratory distress, but it can also cause problems. Too much can rupture the air sacs in the lung. My fear was that as Diane’s condition worsened she would need higher doses to keep her blood levels up, the kind of oxygen therapy generally delivered by mechanical ventilation. We didn’t have a ventilator.
Nor did we have any clinical means of monitoring her blood gases, but her lips looked relatively normal when I took the mask away. Her breathing was rapid and shallow, however, and though she opened her eyes once she remained lethargic and unresponsive.
Carol watched suspiciously as I opened the dusty case and extracted one of the Martian vials and a hypodermic syringe. “What’s that?”
“Probably the only thing that can save her life.”
“Is it? Are you sure of that, Tyler?”
I nodded.
“No,” she said, “I mean, are you
really
sure? Because that’s what you gave Jason, isn’t it? When he had AMS.”
There was no point in denying it. “Yes,” I said.
“I may not have practiced medicine for thirty years, but I’m not ignorant. I did a little research on AMS after the last time you were here. I looked up the journal abstracts. And the interesting thing is, there
isn’t
a cure for it. There is no magic drug. And if there were it would hardly be cross-specific for CVWS. So what I’m assuming, Tyler, is that you’re about to administer a pharmaceutical agent probably connected with that wrinkled man who died in Florida.”
“I won’t argue, Carol. You’ve obviously drawn your own conclusions.”
“I don’t want you to
argue;
I want you to
reassure
me. I want you to tell me this drug won’t do to Diane what it seems to have done to Jason.”
“It won’t,” I said, but I think Carol knew I was editing out the caveat, the unspoken
to the best of my knowledge
.
She studied my face. “You still care for her.”
“Yes.”
“It never fails to astonish me,” Carol said. “The tenacity of love.”
I put the needle into Diane’s vein.
By midday the house was not merely hot but so humid I expected moss to be hanging from the ceilings. I sat with Diane to make sure there were no immediate ill effects from the injection. At one point there was a protracted knocking at the front door of the house.
Thieves
, I thought,
looters
, but by the time I got to the foyer Carol had answered and was thanking a portly man, who nodded and turned to leave. “That was Emil Hardy,” Carol said as she pulled the door closed. “Do you remember the Hardys? They own the little colonial house on Bantam Hill Road. Emil printed up a newspaper.”
“A newspaper?”
She held up two stapled sheets of letter-sized paper. “Emil has an electrical generator in his garage. He listens to the radio at night and takes notes, then he prints a summary and delivers it to local houses. This is his second issue. He’s a nice man and well meaning. But I don’t see any point in reading such things.”
“May I look at it?”
“If you like.”
I took it upstairs with me.
Emil was a creditable amateur reporter. The stories mainly concerned crises in D.C. and Virginia—a list of official no-go zones and fire-related evacuations, attempts to restore local services. I skimmed through these. It was a couple of items lower down that caught my attention.
The first was a report that solar radiation recently measured at ground level was heightened but not nearly as intense as predicted. “Government scientists,” it said, “are perplexed but cautiously optimistic about chances for long-term human survival.” No source was credited, so this could have been some commentator’s fabrication or an attempt to forestall further panic, but it jibed with my experience to date: the new sunlight was strange but not immediately deadly.
No word on how it might be affecting crop yields, weather, or the ecology in general. Neither the pestilential heat nor this torrential rain felt especially
normal
.
Below that was an item headlined lights in sky sighted WORLDWIDE.
These were the same C- or O-shaped lines Simon had pointed out back in Arizona. They had been seen as far north as Anchorage and as far south as Mexico City. Reports from Europe and Asia were fragmentary and primarily concerned with the immediate crisis, but a few similar stories had slipped through. (“Note,” Emil Hardy’s copy said, “cable news networks only intermittently available but showing recent video from India of similar phenomenon on larger scale.” Whatever that meant.)
Diane woke for a few moments while I was with her.
“Tyler,” she said.
I took her hand. It was dry and unnaturally warm.
“I’m sorry,” she said.
“You have nothing to be sorry about.”
“I’m sorry you have to see me like this.”
“You’re getting better. It might take a while, but you’ll be all right.”
Her voice was soft as the sound of a falling leaf. She looked around the room, recognizing it. Her eyes widened. “Here I am!”
“Here you are.”
“Say my name again.”
“Diane,” I said. “Diane. Diane.”
Diane was gravely ill, but it was Jason who was dying. He told me as much when I went to see him.
He hadn’t eaten today, Carol had informed me. Jase had taken ice water through a straw but otherwise refused liquids. He could barely move his body. When I asked him to raise his arm he did so, but with such exquisite effort and torpid speed that I pressed it down again. Only his voice was still strong, and he anticipated losing even that: “If tonight is anything like last night I’ll be incoherent until dawn. Tomorrow, who knows? I want to talk while I still can.”
“Is there some reason your condition deteriorates at night?”
“A simple one, I think. We’ll get to that. First I want you to do something for me. My suitcase was on the dresser: is it still there?”
“Still there.”
“Open it. I packed an audio recorder. Find it for me.”
I found a brushed-silver rectangle the size of a deck of playing cards, next to a stack of manila envelopes addressed to names I didn’t recognize. “This it?” I said, then cursed myself: of course he couldn’t see.
“If the label says Sony, that’s it. There ought to be a package of blank memory underneath.”
“Yup, got it.”
“So we’ll have a talk. Until it gets dark, and maybe a little after. And I want you to keep the recorder running. No matter what happens. Change the memory when you have to, or the battery if the power gets low. Do that for me, all right?”