“How are we going to tell the doctors? There’s no way they’re going to believe a couple of teenagers diagnosing a disease that disappeared centuries ago.”
Giselle reaches into her bag and pulls out a laminated medical identification tag from a hospital in Switzerland. “I’ve got this one.”
Of course. She’s a doctor too. “What are you going to say?”
She clips the tag onto her jacket. “That I’m a friend of the family and that I’ve seen this in rural outposts on my trips with Médecins Sans Frontières. All I have to do is point them in the right direction—once they do the research, they’ll figure it out for themselves.”
Giselle stands up and strides through the ICU doors like she owns the place. Peter’s still not back, and I’m acutely aware that Griffon and I are alone in the waiting room. At that moment my phone buzzes, and I can tell from his glance that Griffon hears it too. I check the display, but put it quickly back into my pocket. Not a call I want to take right now.
A flash of understanding passes across Griffon’s face. “It’s Drew, isn’t it?” His eyes, which had been so soft and concerned, turn hard and gleaming.
“Does it matter?” I say, putting every ounce of hurt and frustration I feel into my words. “You’ve already decided how things are going to be.”
“I just saved us both pain and aggravation because I already know how it would end.” His mouth is set so tight he can barely speak.
“And what about what I want? You took that totally out of the equation.”
I see a flash of indecision in his eyes, but he quickly turns away. “Look, I came here for Peter,” Griffon says evenly. “And for Rayne.” I can’t see his face, but the silence that follows that sentence says volumes. He didn’t come here for me.
Nineteen
My pocket is vibrating. I sit up straight in the chair, blinking in the dim light of the waiting room. I’ve been staring at the same four walls for two days now, only leaving when my parents demand that I come home because of the ridiculous notion that my staying here might somehow be doing Rayne some good. The hope that I had when Griffon first diagnosed the problem is starting to fade with every passing day, and whenever I think of the hostile words we said to each other even as Rayne might be dying, I feel sick to my stomach.
I glance over at Peter’s chair, but for once it’s empty. The only other people in the waiting room are an older couple quietly eating lunch out of plastic containers, and I wonder where Peter could be.
My phone vibrates again and I pull it out of my pocket. I told Drew the basics of what happened to Rayne and I know he’s concerned, but I can’t deal with talking to him right now.
Suddenly, I need to move, to feel like I’m doing something, even if that something is totally useless. I’m not sure where I’m going to go, but I can’t sit here any longer. I’m pressing the elevator button when Rayne’s mom comes rushing down the hall.
“Cole! Wait!” she calls, slightly out of breath. “Rayne wants to see you.”
“She—what?” I must have heard her wrong.
I see tears in her eyes, but she’s smiling underneath it all. “She asked for you. She’s awake, can you believe it? She can’t talk because of the ventilator, but she has a notepad to communicate.”
“How?” I manage.
Her mom shrugs happily and gives me a quick hug. “The doctors figured out that it’s some crazy disease that they thought died out a hundred years ago and gave her some medication for it. It’s a miracle. They say that if she continues to improve, they’ll take her off the ventilator tomorrow or the next day. Do you want to see her?”
“Of course,” I say, following her through the double doors. I can’t believe they listened to Giselle. There’s a change in the room, like a heavy cloud has been lifted. As soon as I pull back the curtains around her bed, Rayne looks straight at me, her eyes a mixture of pain and relief. She lifts one hand and motions me toward her bed.
“Go on,” Rayne’s mom says to me. She leans over the bed to talk to Rayne. “I’m going to get some of those lemon swabs the nurse said you can have, okay? I’ll be right back.”
Rayne nods with a small but decisive motion.
I stand next to the bed, amazed at the change in her, feeling suddenly awkward. Rayne points to the notepad that’s on the table by the foot of her bed. I pick it up and hand her the pen that’s lying next to it. Her fingers are still not working right, so she grips it awkwardly in her fist as I hold the pad up near her face.
You did, Rayne writes in a sprawling, nearly unreadable print.
“ ‘I did’?” I say. I look at her and she nods toward the pad. “I did? What did I do?”
Felt u. She puts the pen down for a second and I can sense her exhaustion. It takes a moment before she can continue. Here.
“I’ve been here the whole time,” I tell her.
Fixed this. Rayne has to put the pen down on the bed; the effort is taking too much out of her. Her eyes are wide open, expecting an explanation.
I look around, but all of the nurses are busy with other patients. I lean down close to her face. “I just helped figure out what was wrong. Griffon diagnosed what it was and told them what to give you to fix it.”
Rayne points to the floor, and I know right away what she means. “Yes,” I say. “Griffon was here. Peter too—I’m sure he’s still around here somewhere.”
Rayne looks at me with her eyes wide open, and I can almost hear her question. “No. Everything’s still the same with me and Griffon. But that doesn’t matter. What matters is that he figured it out and you’re going to be okay.”
I see one lone tear trickle down her cheek as she closes her eyes, exhausted from the effort of communicating. “I should go find Peter for you,” I say, even though I know she’s already asleep. I reach up to brush the tear away, but something catches my attention as my finger touches her skin. I pull back, startled, and then tentatively reach out to touch her one more time, to make sure I’m not imagining things. But I feel it again, and I hold my hand there to make sure there’s no mistake.
The vibrations coming from her are the same ones that I’ve learned to recognize in others over the past few months. I stare at her, sleeping fitfully, and can’t believe it’s happened. The one thing in all of this craziness that I never even considered possible has actually happened. Veronique, for all her desperation and manipulation, actually did it.
Rayne’s Akhet now.
Even as I’m listening to Zander butcher my favorite Chopin piece, I have one eye on my phone propped up on the music stand, willing it to ring. Rayne and her mom both insisted I leave the hospital and get on with my life, but my mind is still back there with them. I must have left five messages for Janine on the ride between the hospital and the studio. She hasn’t called me back and it’s killing me to not talk about Rayne with someone. I’ve given her until five o’clock, and if she doesn’t call by then, I’m going to Veronique’s lab alone. If it really was ergotoxicosis, then I know exactly where Rayne got it and why.
I touch my jacket pocket to make sure Veronique’s business card is still safe inside. Thank God I kept it from last year when she introduced herself at one of my concerts; otherwise I wouldn’t have a clue where to find her.
We’re finishing up a particularly screechy section when my phone finally jumps to life. I grab it and look through the window in the practice-room door around the hallway and down toward the lounge, but there are parents and students everywhere. I glance at Zander, who looks so bored he’s barely conscious. “Do you care if I take this?”
“Whatever,” he says, dropping the bow and grabbing his phone out of his pocket. He’s immersed in a game before I can even answer mine.
I turn my back to Zander, even though he’s not paying any attention. “Janine! Thank God!”
“I must have gotten half a dozen messages from you,” she says. “But you were talking so fast I barely understood anything. What’s going on? Is Rayne okay?”
>
“I think so,” I say, trying to stay calm and make sense. “At least she will be. Did Griffon tell you what Veronique did?”
“Yes, but I can’t believe it. The whole link between ergotoxicosis and Akhet transition is just a myth, a theory that some Iawi use to explain a particular period when there was a lot of activity. It’s crazy to think that someone would actually try it.”
I hesitate. “Well, it must have been ergotoxicosis, because the medicine they’re giving her seems to be working. But that’s not why I called.” I look over my shoulder at Zander, but he’s still totally absorbed in his game. And even if he was listening, he wouldn’t understand anything anyway. “Veronique was right!” I whisper. “It worked. Rayne transitioned! I could feel the vibrations when I went in to see her.”
There’s total silence on Janine’s end.
“Did you hear me?”
“I did,” she says slowly. “But do you realize what you’re saying? If this is true, it could have enormous implications for the world. For the future.”
“But I’m sure about what I felt. Rayne is Akhet. It’s incredible!”
“Look, I’m not saying I don’t believe you, but creating Akhet is impossible. It’s something that happens to the essence organically. Maybe you were just excited to see that she was getting better.”
“That has nothing to do with it.” I feel fear gnawing at my stomach. I never thought she wouldn’t believe me. “I know what I felt. I’ll take you with me so you can see for yourself. I may be Shewi, but I’m not an idiot.”
“I believe you,” Janine says quickly. “I’m sorry. It’s just so hard to get my head around it. Don’t talk to anyone else about this, okay? We need to find Veronique and see what she’s done. Do you have any idea where we can find her?”
“Her lab’s in Mission Bay,” I say. I reach into my pocket and pull out the card. “The University Annex. I can meet you down there in forty-five minutes.” I read the address to her.
“Got it,” Janine says. “I’m going to get some people to go down and check it out. Stay by your phone and I’ll let you know what we find out.”
Just sit by the phone? That’s my role in this? “But I think I should—”
“Stay there,” she insists. “Leave this to Akhet who have a lot more experience than you do. It could be dangerous.”
More dangerous than standing on a rooftop three stories up with a gun aimed at my head? I got through that episode with Veronique okay, and I’m a little irritated at Janine’s patronizing tone. “I can handle it,” I say firmly. If I hadn’t called her, they wouldn’t know anything about this.
“The best thing for you to do is sit tight. I know it’s hard, but you’ve done your part. I’ll call you back,” Janine says with a clipped tone, and my phone goes dead.
“I’ll call you back,” I mimic out loud.
That gets Zander’s attention. “Fight with the boyfriend?”
“No,” I say, but I notice my hands are shaking as I put my phone back in my bag. I glance at the clock. Only five minutes left in our lesson, but there’s no way I can concentrate now. It feels like big things are happening while I’m forced to sit behind the scenes and wait. I want to confront Veronique, want to do something horrible to her like she keeps doing to the people who are close to me. She’s a selfish, crazy Akhet scientist, and I want to be there when they take her down. Instead, I’m stuck in the studio waiting by the phone. “How about we cut this lesson a little short?”
Zander shoves his phone back in his pocket. “Works for me.”
“Go to the lounge and get a juice box,” I say. “And walk really slowly. Like, five minutes’ worth of slowly.”
He shoves the music in his backpack and closes the cello case. “I got this.” We stand up and I hold the door open for him.
He leans toward me. “And if you ever need relationship advice, I’m your man.”
I stare at him, slightly disgusted. His head barely reaches my shoulder. “Just. Go.”
Twenty
The sky is streaked with orange as I finally step off the bus. It’s actually not all that far from the studio, but this part of the city seems like it’s worlds away. Despite the fact that it’s after regular working hours, there are still people coming out of the greenglassed building.
I cross the street, rehearsing the words I’ve practiced all the way over here. I’m sure there’s a guard or a doorman or something—they’re not going to let just anyone walk into a university research facility. Pulling the heavy front door open, I run through my story in my head one more time. I’m almost disappointed to find that the front desk is empty. The few people I see on this floor are just rifling through their tote bags for their keys or tapping on their phones on their way to the exit. Nobody is paying any attention to a sixteen-year-old girl looking lost in the lobby. All of the doors—including the elevator—have slots for card keys, and I know I’m not going to get very far without one. I hear a ding behind me as the silver doors slide open and an older man in a black button-down shirt walks out of the elevator.
“Ooh! Hold that, please,” I call, and scurry across the lobby.
He stares into his phone as he holds the door open for me. “Thanks,” I say breathlessly. “I’m here to see my cousin . . .” I begin my story, but he’s already halfway across the lobby floor, heading straight for the front door. As the doors slide closed, I punch the button for the fifth floor and wonder if Janine and the other Sekhem are already here. I didn’t have enough money for a cab and the busses were running their usual rush-hour-slow, so it took longer than I’d hoped to get here.
The hallway is quiet and deserted as the elevator doors open—I must have beaten them here anyway. I stop, looking at the numbers on the doors. In my mind, I hadn’t gotten any further than this; I figured I’d get to the lab and watch as the Sekhem dealt with Veronique. I didn’t count on being here all by myself. I turn back to the elevator, thinking that they can’t be very far behind, when I see my reflection in the brushed metal doors. I look small and young, like someone who’s lost in a much bigger world. Except that I don’t feel like that person anymore. I feel like someone who needs to start making things happen. To show Janine and the Sekhem that I’m not just some Shewi who needs their help to do everything.
I turn and face the empty hallway again. There are nothing but identical doors on each side, marching toward a window that looks out over the bay. Veronique’s lab number means that her room must be down toward the end. As I take a few cautious steps in that direction, I start to think about what I’m going to say when I get there. What the hell were you thinking? seems like a good place to start, but I’m going to have to trust myself this time. I’ll figure something out.
Two rooms down from the end of the hallway, the door that matches Veronique’s number is open just a crack. It’s too small to see through, so I push it with my finger and it inches open a little farther. I can feel my heart pounding in my chest, and I take a deep breath to try to calm down.
“Hello? Veronique?” I call, pushing the door open all the way. I don’t see anyone, but the lab is completely trashed. Papers and broken glass litter every surface; two stools have been overturned, and another one is lying on a black countertop. Entire drawers have been pulled out and emptied onto the floor. It feels like the room is still in motion—as if the papers have just finished fluttering to the floor. I jump back, scared that someone might still be here, but a quick glance around tells me the lab is empty. I take a few cautious steps into the room, glass crunching under my feet even though I’m trying to avoid messing anything up. The Sekhem sure worked fast—they must have been in and out before I even got off the bus. I wonder if they found what they were looking for. And if they took Veronique with them.
I peek around the island in the middle of the room and see a pool of reddish-brown blood on the floor. She must have put up a hell of a fight. How did they get her out of here without anyone seeing them?
I hear foots
teps pounding down the hallway, and for a split second a jolt of fear races through my body—they must have come back for something. Janine told me to stay out of this. What are the Sekhem going to do when they find me here? Before I can react, the door is thrust open, and I don’t know who is more surprised, me or Griffon.
He takes just a second to recover at the sight of me, standing in the middle of the mess. “What happened?”
“I’m not sure. I think the Sekhem had to take things further than Janine thought; there’s a ton of blood on the other side of this counter.”
Griffon grabs my arm and pulls me back toward the open door. For an instant I get a sense that he wants to protect me. It makes me both irritated and grateful. “This wasn’t the Sekhem,” he says, his voice rising with alarm. “I’m the first one here—everyone else is coming up behind me.”
I feel a shiver run down my back. “You mean this was someone else? Who? Nobody else knows.”
He takes in the room at a glance. “We don’t know who else Veronique told. She’s insane—she might have talked about this to almost anyone.” Griffon runs his hand over his newly short hair with a pained expression on his face.
I can sense his anxiety. “What do you mean?”
“If you’re right, and Rayne transitioned—”
“I am right,” I insist.
Griffon ignores my interruption. “Then this might be a very big deal.” He looks down at my hands. “Did you touch anything?”
I shake my head. “Just the door. I got here just a few seconds before you did.”
That seems to calm him some. “Good. That’s good.”
“Shouldn’t we call 911 or something?”
“No.” Griffon looks at me like I’m stupid. “We’ll handle this ourselves. The university won’t even know that anything was wrong by the time we leave tonight.” He looks back down the empty hallway. “You should go before everyone gets here.”
“I don’t want to go. This is as much about me as it is about you.”
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