This World We Live In (The Last Survivors, Book 3)

This World We Live In

(Last Survivors #3)

Susan Beth Pfeffer

Chapter 1 April 25

I'm shivering, and I can't tel if it's because something strange is going on or because of the dream I had or just because I'm in the kitchen, away from the warmth of the woodstove. It's 1:15 am , the electricity is on, and I'm writing in my diary for the first time in weeks.

I dreamed about Baby Rachel. I dream about her a lot, the half sister I've never met. Not that I know if Lisa had a girl or a boy. We haven't heard from Dad and Lisa since they stopped here on their way west, except for a couple of letters. Which is more than I got from anyone else who's left.

Rachel was about five in my dream, but she changes age a lot when I'm sleeping, so that wasn't disturbing. She was snuggled in bed and I was reading her a bedtime story. I remember thinking how lucky she was to have a real bedroom and not have to sleep in the sunroom with Mom and Matt and Jon the way I have for months now.

Then in the dream the lights went out. Rachel wanted to know why.

"It's because of the moon," I said.

She giggled. A real little-girl giggle. "Why would the moon make the lights go out?" she asked.

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So I told her. I told her everything. I explained how in May an asteroid hit the moon and knocked it a little closer to Earth, and how the moon's gravitational pul got stronger, and everything changed as a result. There were tidal waves that washed away whole cities, and earthquakes that destroyed the highways, and volcanic eruptions that threw ash into the sky, blocking out sunlight, causing famine and epidemics. Al because the moon's gravitational pul was a little bit stronger than before.

"What's sunlight?" she asked.

That was when the dream turned into a nightmare.

I wanted to describe sunlight, only I couldn't remember what the sky looked like before the ash blocked everything. I couldn't remember blue sky or green grass or yel ow dandelions. I remembered the words--green, yel ow, blue--but you could have put a color chart in front of me, and I would have said red for blue and purple for yel ow. The only color I know now is gray, the gray of ash and dirt and sadness.

It's been less than a year since everything changed, less than a year since hunger and darkness and death have become so

commonplace, but I couldn't remember what life--life the way I used to know it--had been like. I couldn't remember blue.

But there was Baby Rachel, or Little Girl Rachel, in her little girl's room, asking me about how things were, and I looked at her, and she wasn't Baby Rachel anymore. She was me. Not me at five. Me the way I was a year ago, and I thought, That can't be. I'm here, on the bed, tel ing my half sister a bedtime story. And I got up (I think this was al the same dream, but maybe it wasn't; maybe it was two dreams and I've combined them), and I walked past a mirror. I looked to make sure I was real y me, but I looked like Mrs.

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Nesbitt had when I found her lying dead in her bed last fal . I was an old woman. A dead old woman.

It probably was two dreams, since I don't remember Baby Rachel after the part where I got up. Not that it matters. Nothing matters, real y. What difference does it make if I can't picture blue sky anymore? I'l never see it again, anyway, or yel ow dandelions or green grass. No one wil , nowhere on Earth. None of us, those of us who are stil lucky enough to be alive, wil ever feel the warmth of the sun again. The moon's seen to that.

But horrible as the dreams were, they weren't what woke me. It was a sound.

At first I couldn't quite place it. I knew it was a sound I used to hear, but it sounded alien. Not scary, just different.

And then I figured out what the sound was. It was rain. Rain hitting against the roof of the sunroom.

The temperature's been warming lately, I guess because it's spring. But I couldn't believe it was rain, real rain, and not sleet. I tiptoed out of the sunroom and walked to the front door. Al our windows are covered with plywood except for one in the sunroom, but it's nighttime and too dark to see anything anyway, unless you open the door.

It real y is rain.

I don't know what it means that it's raining. There was a drought last summer and fal . We had a huge snowstorm in December and then another one later on, but it's been too cold and dry for rain.

I probably should have woken everyone up. It may never rain again. But I have so few chances to be alone. The sunroom is the only place in the house with heat, thanks to the firewood Matt and Jon spent al summer and fal chopping. We're in there together day and night.

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I know I should be grateful that we have a warm place to live. I have a lot to be grateful for. We've been getting weekly food deliveries for a month now, and Mom's been letting us eat two meals a day. I'm stil hungry, but nothing like I used to be.

Matt's regained the strength he lost from the flu, and I think Jon's grown a little bit. Mom's gotten back to being Mom. She insists we clean the house as best we can every day and pretend to do some schoolwork. She listens to the radio every evening so we have some sense of what's happening in other places. Places I'l never get to see.

I haven't written in my diary in a month. I used to write al the time. I stopped because I felt like things were as good as they were ever going to get, that nothing was going to change again.

Only now it's raining.

Something's changed.

And I'm writing again.

April 26

I didn't tel anyone it rained last night. When you share a room with three people and a cat, anything you can keep secret feels good.

This morning I thought maybe I'd dreamed the rain, the way I dreamed Baby Rachel turning into me and me turning into Mrs. Nesbitt (dead Mrs. Nesbitt, at that), but I'm pretty sure it did rain. When I made my bedpan-emptying run, it seemed like more snow had melted.

I never thought I'd yearn for mud and slush. Then again, I never thought I'd be responsible for bedpan emptying.

I wonder if it rained where Dad, Lisa, and the baby are.

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I'd rather wonder about stuff like that than wonder if they're stil alive.

Sometimes I ask myself what I'd give up to see Dad again or even to know how he is. Would I give up a meal a day for the rest of my life? Would I give up electricity? Would I give up my home?

It doesn't matter. At some point the two meals a day wil become one, the electricity wil vanish, and we'l have to leave here just to survive.

When that happens, I know I'l never see Dad again, or Lisa, or Baby Rachel, who may not even exist. Because once we leave here, Dad wil never be able to find us, just like we can't find him, or any of my friends who left here hoping things would be better someplace else.

We stayed behind. I tel myself we've made it through the worst and we can face whatever wil happen next. I tel myself what Mom always says, that as long as we're alive, hope is alive.

I just wish I knew if Dad was alive also.

April 27

It rained again.

This time it rained hard for most of the afternoon.

You would have thought it was raining food and sunlight and dandelions, everyone was so excited.

Even Horton tried to get out when we went to the front door to check on things. Jon shoved him back in.

"We should get pails," Mom said. "Buckets. Pans.

Anything that'l hold the rainwater."

We raced around the house finding containers.

We got soaking wet putting them outside, and none of them fil ed

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up al that much. When we poured the water into a couple of pots, though, it looked more impressive.

"Do you think it'l rain again?" Jon asked after we'd dried ourselves off and hung the towels on the sunroom wash line.

"It rained a couple of nights ago," I said.

Everyone stared at me. I couldn't tel if that was a good thing or not.

"The sound woke me," I said.

"You should have told us," Mom said. "We could have put pots out."

"I didn't think of it," I said. "I had a bad dream and I woke up and heard the rain fal ing. Or maybe I heard the rain fal ing and then I woke up. I don't know."

Mom sighed. It was her "Miranda is never going to grow up and be responsible and understand that when it's raining she needs to let me know so I can put pots and pans outside and catch the water and make al our lives easier" sigh.

"What?" I said. "It was raining. I didn't wake you up. It stopped raining. Now it's raining again, and for al we know it's going to rain every day for the rest of our lives and we'l float away to sea."

"What if the rain washes away the snow and then it stops raining?" Jon asked. "What would we do for water?"

"If the snow melts, the wel wil fil up," Mom said.

"As long as the pipes don't freeze, we'l be fine."

"Running water," I said. "Now that we have electricity sometimes, it'l be a lot easier to do laundries."

"It's funny," Mom said. "The things we used to take for granted. Water. Power. Sunlight."

"We stil don't have sunlight," Matt pointed out.

"And we can't count on power. Or water, for that matter."

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Mom looked at the pot with al the accumulated rainwater. "It's a good sign, though," she said. "A sign better things are coming."

April 28

It started raining again yesterday afternoon, and it hasn't stopped since. A heavy, steady rain.

Mom decided to celebrate by giving Jon and me pop quizzes.

Jon flunked his. Mom got al scowly.

"What difference does it make?" Jon asked. "So what if I don't learn algebra?"

"Someday schools wil be open again," Mom said. "Things wil be more normal. You need to do your work now for when that happens."

"That's never going to happen," Jon said. "And even if schools do open up somewhere, they're not going to open up here. There aren't enough people left."

"We don't know that," Mom said. "We don't know how many people are like us, holed up, making do until times get better."

"I bet whoever they are, they aren't studying algebra," Jon said.

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