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The Dead and the Gone ls-2

Page 13

by Susan Beth Pfeffer


  “That’s what they’re saying,” Kevin replied. “Now that the moon’s closer, the gravitational pull is stronger, so it’s easier for the magma to get out. Volcanoes are erupting all over the place, even ones that were dormant, and the ash is going into the air currents everywhere. Here, Asia, Europe, maybe even Antarctica.”

  “Okay,” Alex said. “So this is volcanic ash. How long before it leaves?”

  “It doesn’t,” Kevin said.

  There was a tone to his voice Alex had never heard before. “You’re kidding, right?” he said. “You mean we’re stuck with this ash for a few weeks. Great. All my shirts will end up gray. Father Mulrooney will love that.”

  “I’m just telling you what my father said,” Kevin replied. “Volcanoes are erupting all over the world and the ash is cutting off sunlight. Sometimes in the past when there was a big volcanic eruption, the ash lasted for months or a year. Now with so many volcanoes, they think it’ll be years before it clears up. If ever.”

  “No sunlight for years?” Alex said. “Years,” Kevin said. “But I think we’ll all be dead before the sky clears up. Dad says it’s going to get really cold really soon. Then crops’ll die and everybody’ll starve. It may take a while, but it’s gonna happen.”

  “That can’t be,” Alex said. “Christ would never let that happen.”

  “Oh good,” Kevin said. “I feel all comforted now.”

  “If you believe that,” Alex said, “that we’re all going to die anyway, why are you here? I mean right here, right now, standing on line for food you’re not even going to eat?”

  “Just racking up the brownie points for heaven,” Kevin replied. “I figure being nice to you is my last best shot.”

  “If this is a joke, I’ll kill you,” Alex said. “You may think this is funny, but I have sisters I have to watch out for.”

  “Yeah, I know,” Kevin said. “They’re your ticket to heaven. And no, I’m not kidding. Ask father Mulrooney. Ask anybody. You’re the only person who doesn’t seem to know.” He turned to the woman standing on line behind him. “Excuse me, ma’am,” he said. “But my friend doesn’t believe volcanoes are erupting and throwing ash into our sky. Have you heard anything about that?”

  The woman nodded. “It’s been all over the news,” she said. “They’ve been blowing up in the west. Lots of people died out there. I guess the worst one was in Yellowstone Park. The ash is so hot it starts fires, so people die that way, too. Fire and smoke and lava. We’re lucky to be so far away, but I did hear the sky’s that funny color because of it. I didn’t know we were going to get cold, though, but now that you mention it, it has been chilly for July the past few days. And it was so hot up until now. The hottest summer I can remember, but I just figured that was a coincidence. I mean why would the moon make things hot?”

  Alex tried to convince himself that this was a massive practical joke, that the woman who wouldn’t shut up was Kevin’s mother or his nanny or someone he hired for the sole purpose of scaring him.

  “Not just the city,” he said.

  “No,” Kevin said. “All over the world.”

  “And no more sunlight for months, maybe years?”

  “Maybe ever,” Kevin said.

  Julie was right. Dammit, she was right. The sun had died, and with it, humanity died, also.

  “No!” he said sharply. “I won’t believe that.”

  “Okay,” Kevin said, humoring him. “Maybe not ever.”

  “No, I mean that we’re all going to die,” Alex said. “All over the world there are Einsteins and Galileos. They’re figuring things out.” He paused as he remembered how certain he’d been that those great minds were figuring out how to get the moon back in place. Now they had volcanic ash to deal with.

  “That’s what I say!” the woman chimed in. “They’re working on it right now. Sure, all those people out west died, and it’s very sad and all that, but we’ve suffered, too, with the tidal waves and the cholera. The scientists are doing everything they can to make things better. We may not understand how—I mean, I flunked physics—but lots of people are solving all these problems. It’s just a matter of time before things get back to normal.”

  Alex wasn’t sure he knew what normal was anymore. But as long as he knew there was food enough for his sisters and himself, he wouldn’t lose any sleep over volcanoes.

  Tuesday, July 19

  “I’m going to check the mail,” Alex told Julie after school. The mailboxes were on the first floor, and for weeks Alex had avoided theirs, figuring the only mail they could possibly get was bills he didn’t know how to pay. But since the sister had told him they’d be sending a schedule for phone calls to the convent, Alex had checked the mailbox daily, always finding it empty.

  But today there were two postcards. “What?” Julie demanded. “What do they say?”

  “This one’s from Carlos!” Alex said. “No date. It just says, ‘I’m all right. We’re on our way to Texas.’ He turned it over and saw a June 14 postmark. Over a month ago.

  “Let me see,” Julie demanded, and he handed her the postcard. “Do you think he’s there: Is the other postcard from him?”

  But it wasn’t. It was from the convent, and it said, “Family members may call Briana Morales on Thursday, July 14, at 4:00 pm.”

  “Great,” Alex said. “We were supposed to call Bri last week.”

  “But the postcard only got here today,” Julie said.

  “Yeah, I noticed,” he snapped. “Let’s go home and see if we can reach her now.”

  They went down the stairwell and entered the apartment. It was cold in there, not bone-chilling cold, but dank and lifeless. The sunlight had been faint for over a week, and Julie worried about her vegetables.

  Alex walked over to the phone and was pleased to hear a dial tone. It might not be Thursday, July 14, but at least it was close to 4:00 pm. He dialed the number for the convent.

  “Notburga Farms.”

  “Yes, this is Alex Morales,” he said. “My sister Briana is staying there. I just got in the mail today a postcard saying I could call her last Thursday. I’d like to speak to her now.”

  “I’m sorry,” the woman on the other end said. “If your appointment was to call her last Thursday, you needed to call her then. We’ll send you another postcard to tell you the next time you can talk with your sister.”

  “No,” Alex said sharply. “That’s unacceptable. You’re the ones who sent the postcard and you must have known how unreliable the mail is. I insist on speaking with my sister.”

  “The girls are all doing chores right now,” the woman said. “Most likely Briana is in the stables. That’s why we sent out appointment cards.”

  “I don’t care if Briana is cleaning the stables for the birth of baby Jesus,” Alex said. “Get her.”

  To his astonishment, he heard the woman say, “Find Briana Morales, and bring her here. Her brother’s on the line.”

  “Thank you,” Alex said. “I’ll hold.”

  Still clutching Carlos’s postcard, Julie stared at Alex. “Is she coming?” she asked.

  Alex nodded.

  Julie hugged him. “Let me speak to her,” she said. “Please.”

  “Of course,” Alex said. “But we probably won’t have much time, so make it fast.”

  “I want to tell her about my garden,” she said.

  “Tell her you have one,” he said. “Don’t go into details.”

  It took close to five minutes before he heard anything, but when he did, it was worth the wait. “Hello?”

  “Bri? It’s Alex.”

  “Alex? Is it Mami? Is she home? Or Papi?”

  “No,” Alex said. “It’s just us, me and Julie. We haven’t spoken to you for so long, and we wanted to wish you a happy birthday and find out how you’re doing.”

  “I’m fine,” she said. “I just thought… I mean Sister Marie made it sound like it was an emergency, and I’ve been praying so hard for Mami and Papi to come home so I coul
d, too; I guess I got carried away.”

  “Why?” Alex asked. “Aren’t you happy where you are? Are they treating you okay?”

  “Oh no, Alex, they’re really nice to all of us,” Bri said. “I love the farm. I love taking care of the goats and the sheep. We eat three meals a day. I even have a nickname. The girls call me Brush, because I came with so many toothbrushes. But I miss home anyway. It’s like I never stop aching. How’s Julie?”

  “She’s right here,” Alex said. “Ask her yourself.”

  “Bri!” Julie shrieked. “Bri, is that really you? I miss you so much. I think about you always. Alex says I can’t talk too long, but I want you to know I’m working in this big garden in Central Park. All of us at Holy Angels are, and I wish you were here working with me. Yeah. Really? Goats? Do they kick? And sheep? And breakfast? We don’t eat breakfast anymore, but Alex gets us food every week and we eat lunch at school, so it isn’t too bad. But sometimes I just hurt because you’re not here. I know that’s selfish and I pray for forgiveness, because you’re happy and there are the goats and all that, but I still wish you were here. Yeah. Well, Alex is gonna kill me if I keep talking. No, we’re getting along pretty well, actually. He lets me beat him in chess sometimes. Okay, here he is.”

  “You’re doing all right?” he asked. “You’re not hungry or overworked or anything?”

  “I’m fine,” Bri said. “How’s everyone else? How’re Uncle Jimmy and Aunt Lorraine? Have you heard from Carlos?”

  “We just got a postcard from him,” Alex said. “He went to Texas.”

  “Texas,” Bri said. “Well, I guess that’s closer than California. Does he sound all right?”

  “You know Carlos,” Alex said. “He sounds fine. Do you have classes, or is it all farmwork?”

  “Oh no, we have classes, too,” Bri said. “It’s practically tutoring, because there are just us ten girls. We wake up at dawn and do chores, and then we go to chapel, and then we have breakfast and do some more chores. Then after lunch, we study for a couple of hours, and then it’s back to working until evening chapel and suppertime. But after supper we talk and play games and have lots of fun. Some nights we sing. I don’t know if I have a vocation, but I think I might. I pray for one, because it would make Mami so happy it I did. When she gets home. You haven’t heard anything from her or Papi?”

  “Nothing,” Alex said.

  “Well, I still believe in miracles,” Bri said. “Talking to you is a miracle. Someday there’ll be another miracle and Mami and Papi will come home.”

  “We tried to call on your birthday,” Alex said. “We think about you all the time.”

  “I think about you, too,” she said. “Sister Marie says I have to get off now. I still have to tend the sheep.”

  “Okay,” Alex said, reluctant to hang up. “Bri, just one more thing. What’s the weather like up there?”

  “It’s kind of strange,” Bri said. “It was really hot and sunny at first, but a week or so ago, it turned gray and it’s been that way ever since. Every night we pray to St. Medard to intercede and bring us sunshine, because without it, the crops will die and we don’t know what we’ll do if that happens. But it stays gray.”

  “It’s like that here, too,” Alex said. “Okay. Bri, we’ll talk again soon, I promise. Take care. We love you.”

  “I love you, too,” she said, and hung up.

  Alex held on to the phone a second longer. Julie stared at Carlos’s postcard.

  “I wonder if the sun is shining in Texas,” she said. “Maybe when Bri gets back, we should go there.”

  Chapter 9

  Monday, August 1

  “Watch out for that rat,” Alex said to Julie as they walked home from Holy Angels. Every day there were more dead, and the rats were getting larger and more daring.

  Julie dodged the rat. “Sister Rita doesn’t know what we’re going to do if the sun doesn’t come out soon,” she said.

  “She’d better think of something,” Alex said. “The sun isn’t coming back for a while.”

  “I really worry about the string beans,” she said. “They’re my favorites. Lauren likes the tomatoes best, because there are so many of them, but the string beans remind me of summer.” She laughed. “I guess it is summer,” she said. “Do you think it’s cold like this at the convent?”

  “Probably,” Alex said. “It’s probably getting colder all over the world.”

  “Brittany—she’s my new best friend—she says her father says the strong will survive and everyone else will die and the world will be better because everyone’ll be strong,” Julie said. “Lauren says the meek will inherit the earth, not the strong, and Brittany says who wants the earth anyway, so the strong might as well have it.”

  “What do you say?” Alex asked.

  But before Julie could answer, they both felt a rumbling underfoot, the way it used to feel in subway stations. Only now they were outside, and the subways weren’t running anymore.

  It lasted for about half a minute. Alex and Julie stood there, frozen. The few other people walking down Broadway had the same shocked looks on their faces.

  “Earthquake!” a man shouted.

  “You’re crazy,” another man said. “This is New York, not California.”

  “I used to live in California,” the first man said. “I know what an earthquake feels like and that was an earthquake.” He looked thoughtful. “Four point five maybe,” he said. “Nothing serious.”

  “Was it really an earthquake?” Julie asked Alex as they resumed walking.

  “I don’t know,” Alex said. “Does it matter?”

  Tuesday, August 2

  “Did you feel that earthquake?” Tony Loretto asked Alex and Kevin at lunch. “I was home, and my St. Anthony statue fell off the chest of drawers.”

  “I was on Broadway,” Alex said. “My sister and I both felt it. Someone said it was an earthquake, but I didn’t know whether to believe him.”

  “The quake wasn’t too bad,” Kevin said. “It’s the tsunami that caused the problems.”

  “Tsunami?” Alex said.

  Kevin shook his head. “Sometimes I think you live under a rock, Morales,” he said. “The earthquake was in the Atlantic, and lower Manhattan got hit by a tsunami. Big one, too. Like the tidal waves haven’t been enough to wash New York clean of sin.”

  “My mother works for the city,” Tony said. “She says there are going to be mandatory evacuations south of Thirty-fourth Street by September. All of lower Manhattan is flooded now, and the water keeps seeping up. Big sewage problem, too. Coffins floating around. Huge health problems.”

  “From one tsunami?” Alex asked.

  “And the tides,” he said. “But they think there’re going to be more tsunamis. There’s a fault line in the Atlantic close to the city, and with the moon changing the gravitational pull, the earthquakes are going to happen pretty regularly, and that means more tsunamis. It isn’t like Thirty-fourth Street is under water, but the water keeps moving uptown, pushing the sewage and the coffins, and things keep getting worse.”

  “Even the rats are drowning,” Alex said.

  “Nah,” Kevin said. “They’ve been taking swimming lessons at the Y.”

  Monday, August 8

  “So, Morales,” Kevin said as they ate their cafeteria lunch of boiled potatoes and canned carrots. “What do you have planned for tomorrow?”

  Alex shrugged. “The usual,” he said. “Checking on the elderly, studying theology, fighting for survival. Same old, same old.”

  Kevin laughed. “You need something new and exciting in your life,” he said. “Wanna go body shopping? It’s my latest hobby.”

  Alex knew immediately that this would be something gruesome and disgusting, and if not illegal, most certainly immoral. “Sounds great,” he said. “Where and when?”

  “First thing tomorrow,” Kevin said. “I’ll meet you in front of your building around seven o’clock, so we can both visit our old folks first and get t
o school on time. I know’ how- you hate to be late for classes.”

  “It’s Father Mulrooney,” Alex replied. “He makes St. Augustine come alive.”

  “Which is more than he can do for himself,” Kevin said. “Speak of the devil…”

  Father Mulrooney walked up to the two boys and gestured for them to stay seated. “I looked over your list just now, Mr. Morales,” he said. “I noticed there were only seven signatures.”

  “Yes, Father,” Alex said. “Only seven people answered when I knocked on their doors.”

  Father Mulrooney nodded. “That’s to be expected,” he said. “I just wanted to confirm. As time goes on, more of the elderly and infirm will die. And, of course, some will move away with their families. Have you any plans to leave New York, Mr. Morales?”

  “No, Father,” Alex said.

  “Very well, then,” Father Mulrooney said. “I’ll see you later for Latin.”

  “Yes, Father,” Alex said. With the lay staff gone and only-three elderly priests left on the faculty, education at St. Vincent de Paul Academy consisted mostly of theology, Latin, and church history. Alex didn’t mind that. There was something comforting in those subjects, a connectedness with the past that was soothing when the present was so bad and the future so terrifying.

  “Body shopping,” he said to Kevin. “Sounds like fun.”

  “You’ll love it,” Kevin said. “Bring a face mask and a garbage bag. I’ll supply the latex gloves. And when you say your prayers tonight, ask for a fresh crop of corpses.”

  Alex took a deep breath. “Deal,” he said, knowing whatever he’d be doing in the morning, Kevin, at least, thought it would prove worthwhile.

  Tuesday, August 9

  “Good,” Kevin said at seven the next morning. “Face mask and shopping bag. You’re set. Here are the latex gloves.”

  “I put some mentholated gel in this Baggie,” Alex said, offering it to Kevin. “Put some under your nose. It helps with the smell.”

  “Good idea,” Kevin said, rubbing it on. “Okay, then. Fifty-fifty, right? Whenever we’re together, we split the booty. I’ll show you where you can trade it in for food or whatever.”

 

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