Read Zima Blue and Other Stories Page 14


  Mick agreed to meet her at the offices at ten, after his round of tests. Everything still felt the way it had the day before; if anything he was even more fluent in his body movements. But when Joe had finished, the news was all that Mick had been quietly dreading, while knowing it could be no other way. The quality of the link had continued to degrade. According to Joe they were down to one-point-eight megs now. They'd seen enough decay curves to be able to extrapolate forward into the beginning of the following week. The link would become noise-swamped around teatime on Sunday, give or take three hours either way.

  If only they'd started sooner, Mick thought. But Joe had done all that he could.

  Today - despite the foreboding message from the lab - his sense of immersion in the counterpart world had become total. As the sunlit city swept by outside the tram's windows, Mick found it nearly impossible to believe that he was not physically present in this body, rather than lying on the couch in the other version of the lab. Overnight his tactile immersion had improved markedly. When he braced himself against the tram's upright handrail, as it swept around a curve, he felt cold aluminium, the faint greasiness where it had been touched by other hands.

  At the offices, Andrea's colleagues greeted him with an unforced casualness that left him dismayed. He'd been expecting awkward expressions of sympathy, sly glances when they thought he wasn't looking. Instead he was plonked down in the waiting area and left to flick through glossy brochures while he waited for Andrea to emerge from her office. No one even offered him a drink.

  He leafed through the brochures dispiritedly. Andrea's job had always been a sore point in their relationship. If Mick didn't approve of nervelinking, he had even less time for the legal vultures that made so much money out of personal injury claims related to the technology. But now he found it difficult to summon his usual sense of moral superiority. Unpleasant things had happened to decent people because of negligence and corner-cutting. If nervelinking was to be a part of the world, then someone had to make sure the victims got their due. He wondered why this had never been clear to him before.

  'Hiya,' Andrea said, leaning over him. She gave him a businesslike kiss, not quite meeting his mouth. 'Took a bit longer than I thought, sorry.'

  'Can we go now?' Mick asked, putting down the brochure.

  'Yep, I'm done here.'

  Outside, when they were walking along the pavement in the shade of the tall commercial buildings, Mick said: 'They didn't have a clue, did they? No one in that office knows what's happened to us.'

  'I thought it was best,' Andrea said.

  'I don't know how you can keep up that act, that nothing's wrong.'

  'Mick, nothing is wrong. You have to see it from my point of view. I haven't lost my husband. Nothing's changed for me. When you're gone - when all this ends, and I get the other you back - my life carries on as normal. I know what's happened to you is a tragedy, and believe me I'm as upset about it as anyone.'

  'Upset,' Mick said quietly.

  'Yes, upset. But I'd be lying if I said I was paralysed with grief. I'm human, Mick. I'm not capable of feeling great emotional turmoil at the thought that some distant counterpart of myself got herself run over, all because she was rushing to have her hair done. Silly cow, that's what it makes me feel. At most it makes me feel a bit odd, a bit shivery. But I don't think it's something I'm going to have trouble getting over.'

  'I lost my wife,' Mick said.

  'I know, and I'm sorry. More than you'll ever know. But if you expect my life to come crashing to a halt--'

  He cut her off. 'I'm already fading. One point eight this morning.'

  'You always knew it would happen. It's not like it's any surprise.'

  'You'll notice a difference in me by the end of the day.'

  'This isn't the end of the day, so stop dwelling on it. All right? Please, Mick. You're in serious danger of ruining this for yourself.'

  'I know, and I'm trying not to,' he said. 'But what I was saying, about how things aren't going to get any better . . . I think today's going to be my last chance, Andrea. My last chance to be with you, to be with you properly.'

  'You mean us sleeping together,' Andrea said, keeping her voice low.

  'We haven't talked about it yet. That's okay; I wasn't expecting it to happen without at least some discussion. But there's no reason why--'

  'Mick, I--' Andrea began.

  'You're still my wife. I'm still in love with you. I know we've had our problems, but I realise now how stupid all that was. I should have called you sooner. I was being an idiot. And then this happened . . . and it made me realise what a wonderful, lovely person you are, and I should have seen that for myself, but I didn't . . . I needed the accident to shake me up, to make me see how lucky I was just to know you. And now I'm going to lose you again, and I'm not sure how I'm going to cope with that. But at least if we can be together again . . . properly, I mean.'

  'Mick--'

  'You've already said you might get back together with the other Mick. Maybe it took all this to get us talking again. Point is, if you're going to get back together with him, there's nothing to stop us getting back together now. We were a couple before the accident; we can still be a couple now.'

  'Mick, it isn't the same. You've lost your wife. I'm not her. I'm some weird thing there isn't a word for. And you aren't really my husband. My husband is in a medically induced coma.'

  'You know none of that really matters.'

  'To you.'

  'It shouldn't matter to you either. And your husband - me, incidentally - agreed to this. He knew exactly what was supposed to happen. And so did you.'

  'I just thought things would be better - more civilised - if we kept a kind of distance.'

  'You're talking as if we're divorced.'

  'Mick, we were already separated. We weren't talking. I can't just forget what happened before the accident as if none of that mattered.'

  'I know it isn't easy for you.'

  They walked on in an awkward silence, through the city centre streets they'd walked a thousand times before. Mick asked Andrea if she wanted a coffee, but she said she'd had one in her office not long before he arrived. Maybe later. They paused to cross the road near one of Andrea's favourite boutiques and Mick asked if there was something he could buy for her.

  Andrea sounded taken aback at the suggestion. 'You don't need to buy me anything, Mick. It isn't my birthday or anything.'

  'It would be nice to give you a gift. Something to remember me by.'

  'I don't need anything to remember you, Mick. You're always going to be there.'

  'It doesn't have to be much. Just something you'll use now and then, and will make you think of me. This me, not the one who's going to be walking around in this body in a few days.'

  'Well, if you really insist . . .' He could tell Andrea was trying to sound keen on the idea, but her heart still wasn't quite in it. 'There was a handbag I saw last week--'

  'You should have bought it when you saw it.'

  'I was saving up for the hairdresser.'

  So Mick bought her the handbag. He made a mental note of the style and colour, intending to buy an identical copy next week. Since he hadn't bought the gift for his wife in his own worldline, it was even possible that he might walk out of the shop with the exact counterpart of the handbag he'd just given Andrea.

  They went to the park again, then to look at the art in the National Museum of Wales, then back into town for lunch. There were a few more clouds in the sky compared to the last two days, but their chrome whiteness only served to make the blue appear more deeply enamelled and permanent. There were no planes anywhere at all; no contrail scratches. It turned out the aircraft - which had indeed been military - that they had seen yesterday had been on its way to Poland, carrying a team of mine-rescue specialists. Mick remembered his resentment at seeing the plane, and felt bad about it now. There had been brave men and women aboard it, and they were probably going to be putting their own lives at risk
to help save other brave men and women stuck kilometres underground.

  'Well,' Andrea said, when they'd paid the bill. 'Moment of truth, I suppose. I've been thinking about what you were saying earlier, and maybe . . .' She trailed off, looking down at the remains of her salad, before continuing, 'We can go home, if you'd like. If that's what you really want.'

  'Yes,' Mick said. 'It's what I want.'

  They took the tram back to their house. Andrea used her key to let them inside. It was still only the early afternoon, and the house was pleasantly cool, with the curtains and blinds still drawn. Mick knelt down and picked up the letters that were on the mat. Bills, mostly. He set them on the hall-side table, feeling a transitory sense of liberation. More than likely he'd be confronted with the same bills when he got home, but for now these were someone else's problem.

  He slipped off his shoes and walked into the living room. For a moment he was thrown, feeling as if he really was in a different house. The wallscreen was on another wall; the dining table had been shifted sideways into the other half of the room; the sofa and easy chairs had all been altered and moved.

  'What's happened?'

  'Oh, I forgot to tell you,' Andrea said. 'I felt like a change. You came around and helped me move them.'

  'That's new furniture.'

  'No, just different seat covers. They're not new, it's just that we haven't had them out for a while. You remember them now, don't you?'

  'I suppose so.'

  'C'mon, Mick. It wasn't that long ago. We got them off Aunty Janice, remember?' She looked at him despairingly. 'I'll move things back. It was a bit inconsiderate of me, I suppose. I never thought how strange it would be for you to see the place like this.'

  'No, it's okay. Honestly, it's fine.' Mick looked around, trying to fix the arrangement of furniture and de'cor in his mind's eye. As if he were going to duplicate everything when he got back into his own body, into his own version of this house.

  Maybe he would too.

  'I've got something for you,' Andrea said suddenly, reaching up to the top of the bookcase. 'Found it this morning. Took ages searching for it.'

  'What?' Mick asked.

  She held the thing out to him. Mick saw a rectangle of laminated pink card, stained and dog-eared. It was only when he tried to hold it and the thing fell open and disgorged its folded paper innards that he realised it was a map.

  'Bloody hell. I wouldn't have had a clue where to look.' Mick folded the map back into itself and studied the cover. It was one of their old hill-walking maps, covering that part of the Brecon Beacons where they'd done a lot of their walks.

  'I was just thinking . . . seeing as you were so keen . . . maybe it wouldn't kill us to get out of town. Nothing too adventurous, mind.'

  'Tomorrow?'

  She looked at him concernedly. 'That's what I was thinking. You'll still be okay, won't you?'

  'No probs.'

  'I'll get us a picnic, then. Tesco's does a nice luncheon basket. I think we've still got two Thermos flasks around here somewhere too.'

  'Never mind the Thermos flasks, what about the walking boots?'

  'In the garage,' Andrea said. 'Along with the rucksacks. I'll dig them out this evening.'

  'I'm looking forward to it,' Mick said. 'Really. It's kind of you to agree.'

  'Just as long as you don't expect me to get up Pen y Fan without getting out of breath.'

  'I bet you'll surprise yourself.'

  A little later they went upstairs, to their bedroom. The blinds were open enough to throw pale stripes across the walls and bedsheets. Andrea undressed, and then helped Mick out of his own clothes. As good as his control over the body had now become, fine motor tasks - like undoing buttons and zips - would require a lot more practice than he was going to have time for.

  'You'll have to help me get all this on afterwards,' he said.

  'There you go, worrying about the future again.'

  They lay together on the bed. Mick had already felt himself growing hard long before there was any corresponding change in the body he was now inhabiting. He had an erection in the laboratory, halfway across the city in another worldline. He could even feel the sharp plastic of the urinary catheter. Would the other Mick, sunk deep into coma, retain some vague impression of what was happening now? There were occasional stories of people coming out of their coma with a memory of what their bodies had been up to while they were under, but the agencies had said these were urban myths.

  They made slow, cautious love. Mick had become more aware of his own awkwardness, and the self-consciousness only served to exaggerate the stiffness of his movements. Andrea did what she could to help, to bridge the gap between them, but she could not work miracles. She was patient and forgiving, even when he came close to hurting her. When he climaxed, Mick felt it happen to the body in the laboratory first. Then the body he was inhabiting responded too, seconds later. Something of it reached him through the nervelink - not pleasure, exactly, but confirmation that pleasure had occurred.

  Afterwards, they lay still on the bed, limbs entwined. A breeze made the blinds move back and forth against the window. The slow movement of light and shade, the soft tick of vinyl on glass, was as lulling as a becalmed boat. Mick found himself falling into a contented sleep. He dreamed of standing on a summit in the Brecon Beacons, looking down on the sunlit valleys of South Wales, with Andrea next to him, the two of them poised like a tableau in a travel brochure.

  When he woke, hours later, he heard her moving around downstairs. He reached for the glasses - he'd removed them earlier - and made to leave the bed. He felt it then. Somewhere in those languid hours he'd lost a degree of control over the body. He stood and moved to the door. He could still walk, but the easy facility he'd gained on Tuesday was now absent. When he moved to the landing and looked down the stairs, the glasses struggled to cope with the sudden change of scene. The view fractured, reassembled. He moved to steady himself on the banister, and his hand blurred into a long smear of flesh.

  He began to descend the stairs, like a man coming down a mountain.

  THURSDAY

  In the morning he was worse. He stayed overnight at the house, then caught the tram to the laboratory. Already he could feel a measurable lag between the sending of his intentions to move and the corresponding action in the body. Walking was still just about manageable, but all other tasks had become more difficult. He'd made a mess trying to eat breakfast in Andrea's kitchen. It was no surprise when Joe told him that the link was now down to one-point-two megs, and falling.

  'By the end of the day?' Mick asked, even though he could see the printout for himself.

  'Point nine, maybe point eight.'

  He'd dared to think it might still be possible to do what they had planned. But the day soon became a catalogue of declining functions. At noon he met Andrea at her office and they went to a car rental office, where they'd booked a vehicle for the day. Andrea drove them out of Cardiff, up the valleys, along the A470 from Merthyr to Brecon. They had planned to walk all the way to the summit of Pen y Fan, an ascent they'd done together dozens of times during their hill-walking days. Andrea had already collected the picnic basket from Tesco's and packed and prepared the two rucksacks. She'd helped Mick get into his walking boots.

  They left the car at the Storey Arms then followed the well-trodden trail that wound its way towards the mountain. Mick felt a little ashamed at first. Back in their hill-walking days, they'd tended to look down with disdain on the hordes of people making the trudge up Pen y Fan, especially those who took the route up from the pub. The view from the top was worth the climb, but they'd usually made a point of completing at least one or two other ascents on the same day, and they'd always eschewed the easy paths. Now Mick was paying for that earlier superiority. What started out as pleasantly challenging soon became impossibly taxing. Although he didn't think Andrea had begun to notice, he was finding it much harder than he'd expected to walk on the rough, craggy surface of the path. The ef
fort was draining him, preventing him from enjoying any of the scenery, or the sheer bliss of being with Andrea. When he lost his footing the first time, Andrea didn't make much of it - she'd nearly tripped once already, on the dried and cracked path. But soon he was finding it hard to walk more than a hundred metres without losing his balance. He knew, with a heavy heart, that it would be difficult enough just to get back to the car. The mountain was still three kilometres away, and he wouldn't have a hope as soon as they hit a real slope.