BRIAN STABLEFORD
THE PIPES OF PAN
In her dream Wendy was a pretty little girl living wild in
a magical wood where
it never rained and never got cold. She lived on sweet berries of many
colors,
which always tasted wonderful, and all she wanted or needed was to be happy.
There
were other girls living wild in the dream-wood but they all avoided one
another, because
they had no need of company. They had lived there, untroubled,
for a long time -- far
longer than Wendy could remember.
Then, in the dream, the others came: the shadow-men with
horns on their brows
and shaggy legs. They played strange music on sets of pipes which
looked as if
they had been made from reeds -- but Wendy knew, without knowing how she knew
or
what sense there was in it, that those pipes had been fashioned out of the blood
and
bones of something just like her, and that the music they played was the
breath of her
soul.
After the shadow-men came, the dream became steadily more nightmarish, and
living wild
ceased to be innocently joyful. After the shadow-men came, life was
all hiding with a
fearful, fluttering heart, knowing that if ever she were found
she would have to run and
run and run, without any hope of escape -- but
wherever she hid, she could always hear the
music of the pipes.
When she woke up in a cold sweat, she wondered whether the dreams her
parents
had were as terrible, or as easy to understand. Somehow, she doubted it.
There was a
sharp rat-a-tat on her bedroom door. "Time to get up, Beauty."
Mother didn't bother coming
in to check that Wendy responded. Wendy always
responded. She was a good girl.
She climbed
out of bed, took off her night-dress, and went to sit at the
dressing-table, to look at
herself in the mirror. It had become part of her
morning ritual, now that her awakenings
were indeed awakenings. She blinked to
clear the sleep from her eyes, shivering slightly as
an image left over from the
dream flashed briefly and threateningly in the depths of her
emergent
consciousness.
Wendy didn't know how long she had been dreaming. The dreams had
begun before
she developed the sense of time which would have allowed her to make the
calculation.
Perhaps she had always dreamed, just as she had always got up in
the morning in response to
the summoning rat-a-tat, but she had only recently
come by the ability to remember her
dreams. On the other hand, perhaps the
beginning of her dreams had been the end of her
innocence.
She often wondered how she had managed not to give herself away in the first few
months, after she first began to remember her dreams but before she attained her
present
level of waking self-control, but any anomalies in her behavior must
have been written off
to the randomizing factor. Her parents were always telling
her how lucky she was to be
thirteen, and now she was in a position to agree
with them. At thirteen, it was entirely
appropriate to be a little bit
inquisitive and more than a little bit odd. It was even
possible to get away
with being too clever by half, as long as she didn't overdo it.
It was
difficult to be sure, because she didn't dare interrogate the house's
systems too
explicitly, but she had figured out that she must have been thirteen
for about thirty
years, in mind and body alike. She was thirteen in her blood
and her bones, but not in the
privacy of her head.
Inside, where it counted, she had now been unthirteen for at least
four months.
If it would only stay inside, she thought, I might keep it a secret forever.
But
it won't. It isn't. It's coming out. Every day that passes is one day closer to
the
moment of truth.
She stared into the mirror, searching the lines of her face for signs of
maturity. She was sure that her face looked thinner, her eyes more serious, her
hair less
blonde. All of that might be mostly imagination, she knew, but there
was no doubt about the
other things. She was half an inch taller, and her
breasts were getting larger. It was only
a matter of time before that sort of
thing attracted attention, and as soon as it was
noticed the truth would be
manifest. Measurements couldn't lie. As soon as they were moved
to measure her,
her parents would know the horrid truth.
Their baby was growing up.
"Did you
sleep well, dear?" Mother said, as Wendy took her seat at the
breakfast-table. It wasn't a
trick question; it was just part of the routine. It
wasn't even a matter of pretending,
although her parents certainly did their
fair share of that. It was just a way of starting
the day off. Such rituals were
part and parcel of what they thought of as everyday life.
Parents had their
innate programming too.
"Yes thank you," she replied, meekly. "What flavor
manna would you like today?"
"Coconut and strawberry please." Wendy smiled as she spoke,
and Mother smiled
back. Mother was smiling because Wendy was smiling. Wendy was supposed to
be
smiling because she was a smiley child, but in fact she was smiling because
saying
"strawberry and coconut" was an authentic and honest choice, an exercise
of freedom which
would pass as an expected manifestation of the randomizing
factor.
"I'm afraid I can't take
you out this morning, Lovely," Father said, while
Mother punched out the order. "We have to
wait in for the house-doctor. The
waterworks still aren't right."
"If you ask me," Mother
said, "the real problem's the water table. The taproots
are doing their best but they're
having to go down too far. The system's fine
just so long as we get some good old-fashioned
rain once in a while, but every
time there's a dry spell the whole estate suffers. We ought
to call a meeting
and put some pressure on the landscape engineers. Fixing a water table
shouldn't
be too much trouble in this day and age."
"There's nothing wrong with the water
table, dear," Father said, patiently.
"It's just that the neighbors have the same
indwelling systems that we have.
There's a congenital weakness in the root-system; in dry
weather the
cell-terminal conduits in the phloem tend to get gummed up. It ought to be easy
enough to fix -- a little elementary somatic engineering, probably no more than
a
single-gene augment in the phloem -- but you know what doctors are like; they
never want to
go for the cheap and cheerful cure if they can sell you something
more complicated."
"What's
phloem?" Wendy asked. She could ask as many questions as she liked, to a
moderately high
level of sophistication. That was a great blessing. She was glad
she wasn't an
eight-year-old, reliant on passive observation and a restricted
vocabulary. At least a
thirteen-year-old had the right equipment for thinking
all set up.
"It's a kind of plant
tissue," Father informed her, ignoring the tight-lipped
look Mother was giving him because
he'd contradicted her. "It's sort of
equivalent to your veins, except of course that plants
have sap instead of
blood."
Wendy nodded, but contrived to look as if she hadn't really
understood the
answer.
"I'll set the encyclopedia up on the system," Father said. "You can
read all
about it while I'm talking to the house-doctor."
"She doesn't want to spend the
morning reading what the encyclopedia has to say
about phloem," Mother said, peevishly.
"She needs to get out into the fresh
air." That wasn't mere ritual, like asking whether she
had slept well, but it
wasn't pretense either. When Mother started talking about Wendy's
supposed wants
and needs she was usually talking about her own wants and supposed needs.
Wendy
had come to realize that talking that way was Mother's preferred method of
criticizing
Father; she was paying him back for disagreeing about the water
table.
Wendy was fully
conscious of the irony of the fact that she really did want to
study the encyclopedia.
There was so much to learn and so little time. Maybe she
didn't need to do it, given that
it was unlikely to make any difference in the
long run, but she wanted to understand as
much as she could before all the
pretense had to end and the nightmare of uncertainty had
to begin.
"It's okay, Mummy," she said. "Honest." She smiled at them both, attempting to
bring off the delicate trick of pleasing Father by taking his side while
simultaneously
pleasing Mother by pretending to be as heroically long-suffering
as Mother liked to
consider herself.
They both smiled back. All was well, for now. Even though they listened
to the
news every night, they didn't seem to have the least suspicion that it could all
be
happening in their own home, to their own daughter.
It only took a few minutes for Wendy to
work out a plausible path of icon
selection which got her away from translocation in plants
and deep into the
heart of child physiology. Father had set that up for her by comparing
phloem to
her own circulatory system. There was a certain danger in getting into recent
reportage
regarding childhood diseases, but she figured that she could explain
it well enough if
anyone took the trouble to consult the log to see what she'd
been doing. She didn't think
anyone was likely to, but she simply couldn't help
being anxious about the possibility --
there were, it seemed, a lot of things
one simply couldn't help being anxious about, once
it was possible to be anxious
at all.
"I wondered if I could get sick like the house's
roots," she would say, if
asked. "I wanted to know whether my blood could get clogged up in
dry weather."
She figured that she would be okay as long as she pretended not to have
understood
what she'd read, and conscientiously avoided any mention of the word
progeria. She already
knew that progeria was what she'd got, and the last thing
she wanted was to be taken to a
child-engineer who'd be able to confirm the
fact.
She called up a lot of innocuous stuff
about blood, and spent the bulk of her
time pretending to study elementary material of no
real significance. Every time
she got hold of a document she really wanted to look at she
was careful to move
on quickly, so it would seem as if she hadn't even bothered to look at
it if
anyone did consult the log to see what she'd been doing. She didn't dare call up
any
extensive current affairs information on the progress of the plague or the
fierce medical
and political arguments concerning the treatment of its victims.
It must be wonderful to be
a parent, she thought, and not have to worry about
being found out -- or about anything at
all, really.
At first, Wendy had thought that Mother and Father really did have worries,
because they talked as if they did, but in the last few weeks she had begun to
see through
the sham. In a way, they thought that they did have worries, but it
was all just a matter
of habit, a kind of innate restlessness left over from the
olden days. Adults must have had
authentic anxieties at one time, back in the
days when everybody could expect to die young
and a lot of people never even
reached seventy, and she presumed that they hadn't quite got
used to the fact
that they'd changed the world and changed themselves. They just hadn't
managed
to lose the habit. They probably would, in the fullness of time. Would they
still
need children then, she wondered, or would they learn to do without? Were
children just
another habit, another manifestation of innate restlessness? Had
the great plague come just
in time to seal off the redundant umbilical cord
which connected mankind to its
evolutionary past?
We're just betwixts and betweens, Wendy thought, as she rapidly scanned
a
second-hand summary of a paper in the latest issue of Nature which dealt with
the
pathology of progeria. There'll soon be no place for us, whether we grow
older or not.
They'll get rid of us all.
The article which contained the summary claimed that the
development of an
immunoserum was just a matter of time, although it wasn't yet clear
whether
anything much might be done to reverse the aging process in children who'd
already
come down with it. She didn't dare access the paper itself, or even an
abstract -- that
would have been a dead giveaway, like leaving a bloody
thumbprint at the scene of a murder.
Wendy wished that she had a clearer idea of whether the latest news was good or
bad, or
whether the long-term prospects had any possible relevance to her now
that she had started
to show physical symptoms as well as mental ones. She
didn't know what would happen to her
once Mother and Father found out and
notified the authorities; there was no clear pattern
in the stories she glimpsed
in the general news-broadcasts, but whether this meant that
there was as yet no
coherent social policy for dealing with the rapidly escalating problem
she
wasn't sure.
For the thousandth time she wondered whether she ought simply to tell her
parents what was happening, and for the thousandth time, she felt the terror
growing within
her at the thought that everything she had might be placed in
jeopardy, that she might be
sent back to the factory or handed over to the
researchers or simply cut adrift to look
after herself. There was no way of
knowing, after all, what really lay behind the rituals
which her parents used in
dealing with her, no way of knowing what would happen when their
thirteen-year-old daughter was no longer thirteen.
Not yet, her fear said. Not yet. Hang
on. Lie low... because once you can't
hide, you'll have to run and run and run and there'll
be nowhere to go. Nowhere
at all.
She left the workstation and went to watch the
house-doctor messing about in the
cellar. Father didn't seem very glad to see her, perhaps
because he was trying
to talk the house-doctor round to his way of thinking and didn't like
the way
the house-doctor immediately started talking to her instead of him, so she went
away
again, and played with her toys for a while. She still enjoyed playing with
her toys --
which was perhaps as well, all things considered.
"We can go out for a while now," Father
said, when the house-doctor had finally
gone. "Would you like to play ball on the back
lawn?"
"Yes please," she said. Father liked playing ball, and Wendy didn't mind. It was
better
than the sedentary pursuits which Mother preferred. Father had more
energy to spare than
Mother, probably because Mother had a job that was more
taxing physically. Father only
played with software; his clever fingers did all
his work. Mother actually had to get her
hands inside her remote-gloves and her
feet inside her big red boots and get things moving.
"Being a ghost in a
machine," she would often complain, when she thought Wendy couldn't
hear, "can
be bloody hard work." She never swore in front of Wendy, of course.
Out on the
back lawn, Wendy and Father threw the ball back and forth for half an
hour, making the
catches more difficult as time went by, so that they could leap
about and dive on the
bone-dry carpet-grass and get thoroughly dusty.
To begin with, Wendy was distracted by the
ceaseless stream of her insistent
thoughts, but as she got more involved in the game she
was able to let herself
go a little. She couldn't quite get back to being thirteen, but she
could get to
a state of mind which wasn't quite so fearful. By the time her heart was
pounding
and she'd grazed both her knees and one of her elbows she was enjoying
herself thoroughly,
all the more so because Father was evidently having a good
time. He was in a good mood
anyhow, because the house-doctor had obligingly
confirmed everything he'd said about the
normality of the water-table, and had
then backed down gracefully when he saw that he
couldn't persuade Father that
the house needed a whole new root-system.
"Those somatic
transformations don't always take," the house-doctor had said,
darkly but half-heartedly,
as he left. "You might have trouble again, three
months down the line."
"I'll take the
chance," Father had replied, breezily. "Thanks for your time."
Given that the doctor was
charging for his time, Wendy had thought, it should
have been the doctor thanking Father,
but she hadn't said anything. She already
understood that kind of thing well enough not to
have to ask questions about it.
She had other matters she wanted to raise once Father
collapsed on the baked
earth, felled by healthy exhaustion, and demanded that they take a
rest.
"I'm not as young as you are," he told her, jokingly. "When you get past a
hundred and
fifty you just can't take it the way you used to." He had no idea
how it affected her to
hear him say you in that careless fashion, when he really
meant we: a we which didn't
include her and never would.
"I'm bleeding," she said, pointing to a slight scratch on her
elbow. "Oh dear,"
he said. "Does it hurt?" "Not much," she said, truthfully. "If too much
leaks
out, will I need injections, like the house's roots?"
"It won't come to that," he
assured her, lifting up her arm so that he could put
on a show of inspecting the wound.
"It's just a drop. I'll kiss it better." He
put his lips to the wound for a few seconds,
then said: "It'll be as good as new
in the morning."
"Good," she said. "I expect it'd be
very expensive to have to get a whole new
girl."
He looked at her a little strangely, but it
seemed to Wendy that he was in such
a light mood that he was in no danger of taking it too
seriously.
"Fearfully expensive," he agreed, cheerfully, as he lifted her up in his arms
and carried her back to the house. "We'll just have to take very good care of
you, won't
we?"
"Or do a somatic whatever," she said, as innocently as she possibly could. "Is
that
what you'd have to do if you wanted a boy for a while?"
He laughed, and there appeared to
be no more than the merest trace of unease in
his laugh. "We love you just the way you are,
Lovely," he assured her. "We
wouldn't want you to be any other way."
She knew that it was
true. That was the problem. She had ham and cheese manna
for lunch, with real greens
homegrown in the warm cellar-annex under soft red
lights. She would have eaten heartily had
she not been so desperately anxious
about her weight, but as things were she felt it better
to peck and pretend, and
she surreptitiously discarded the food she hadn't consumed as soon
as Father's
back was turned.
After lunch, judging it to be safe enough, she picked up the
thread of the
conversation again. "Why did you want a girl and not a boy?" she asked. "The
Johnsons wanted a boy." The Johnsons had a ten-year-old named Peter. He was the
only other
child Wendy saw regularly, and he had not as yet exhibited the
slightest sign of disease to
her eager eye.
"We didn't want a girl," Father told her, tolerantly. "We wanted you."
"Why?"
she asked, trying to look as if she were just fishing for compliments,
but hoping to
trigger something a trifle more revealing. This, after all, was
the great mystery. Why her?
Why anyone? Why did adults think they needed
children?
"Because you're beautiful," Father
said. "And because you're Wendy. Some people
are Peter people, so they have Peters. Some
people are Wendy people, so they
have Wendys. Your Mummy and I are definitely Wendy people
-- probably the
Wendiest people in the world. It's a matter of taste."
It was all baby-talk,
all gobbledygook, but she felt that she had to keep
trying. Some day, surely, one of them
would let a little truth show through
their empty explanations.
"But you have different
kinds of manna for breakfast, lunch and dinner," Wendy
said, "and sometimes you go right
off one kind for weeks on end. Maybe some day
you'll go off me, and want a different one."
"No we won't, darling," he answered, gently. "There are matters of taste and
matters of
taste. Manna is fuel for the body. Variety of taste just helps to
make the routine of
eating that little bit more interesting. Relationships are
something else. It's a different
kind of need. We love you, Beauty, more than
anything else in the world. Nothing could ever
replace you."
She thought about asking about what would happen if Father and Mother ever
got
divorced, but decided that it would be safer to leave the matter alone for now.
Even
though time was pressing, she had to be careful.
They watched TV for a while before Mother
came home. Father had a particular
fondness for archive film of extinct animals -- not the
ones which the engineers
had re-created but smaller and odder ones: weirdly shaped
sea-dwelling
creatures. He could never have seen such creatures even if they had still
existed
when he was young, not even in an aquarium; they had only ever been
known to people as
things on film. Even so, the whole tone of the tapes which
documented their one-time
existence was nostalgic, and Father seemed genuinely
affected by a sense of personal loss
at the thought of the sterilization of the
seas during the last ecocatastrophe but one.
"Isn't
it beautiful?" he said, of an excessively tentacled sea anemone which
sheltered three vivid
clown-fish while ungainly shrimps passed by. "Isn't it
just extraordinary?"
"Yes," she said,
dutifully, trying to inject an appropriate reverence into her
tone. "It's lovely." The
music on the sound-track was plaintive; it was being
played on some fluty wind-instrument,
possibly by a human player. Wendy had
never heard music like it except on TV sound-tracks;
it was as if the sound were
the breath of the long-lost world of nature, teeming with
undesigned life.
"Next summer," Father said, "I want us to go out in one of those
glass-bottomed
boats that take sight-seers out to the new barrier reef. It's not the same
as
the original one, of course, and they're deliberately setting out to create
something
modern, something new, but they're stocking it with some truly weird
and wonderful
creatures."
"Mother wants to go up the Nile," Wendy said. "She wants to see the sphinx, and
the tombs."
"We'll do that the year after," Father said. "They're just ruins. They can
wait.
Living things. ..." He stopped. "Look at those!" he said, pointing at the
screen. She
looked at a host of jellyfish swimming close to the silvery surface,
their bodies pulsing
like great translucent hearts.
It doesn't matter, Wendy thought. I won't be there. I won't
see the new barrier
reef or the sphinx and the tombs. Even if they find a cure, and even if
you both
want me cured, I won't be there. Not the real me. The real me will have died,
one
way or another, and there'll be nothing left except a girl who'll be
thirteen forever, and
a randomizing factor which will make it seem that she has
a lively mind.
Father put his arm
around her shoulder, and hugged her fondly. Father must
really love her very dearly, she
thought. After all, he had loved her for thirty
years, and might love her for thirty years
more, if only she could stay the way
she was...if only she could be returned to what she
had been before....
The evening TV schedules advertised a documentary on progeria,
scheduled for
late at night, long after the nation's children had been put to bed. Wendy
wondered if her parents would watch it, and whether she could sneak downstairs
to listen to
the sound-track through the closed door. In a way, she hoped that
they wouldn't watch it.
It might put ideas into their heads. It was better that
they thought of the plague as a
distant problem: something that could only
affect other people; something with which they
didn't need to concern
themselves.
She stayed awake, just in case, and when the luminous
dial of her bedside clock
told her it was time she silently got up, and crept down the
stairs until she
could hear what was going on in the living room. It was risky, because the
randomizing factor wasn't really supposed to stretch to things like that, but
she'd done it
before without being found out.
It didn't take long to ascertain that the TV wasn't even
on, and that the only
sound to be heard was her parents' voices. She actually turned around
to go back
to bed before she suddenly realized what they were talking about.
"Are you sure
she isn't affected mentally?" Mother was saying. "Absolutely
certain," Father replied. "I
watched her all afternoon, and she's perfectly
normal."
"Perhaps she hasn't got it at all,"
Mother said, hopefully. "Maybe not the worst
kind," Father said, in a voice that was
curiously firm. "They're not sure that
even the worst cases are manifesting authentic
self-consciousness, and there's a
strong contingent which argues that the vast majority of
cases are relatively
minor dislocations of programming. But there's no doubt about the
physical
symptoms. I picked her up to carry her indoors and she's a stone heavier. She's
got hair growing in her armpits and she's got tangible tits. We'll have to be
careful how
we dress her when we take her to public places."
"Can we do anything about her food --
reduce the calorific value of her manna or
something?"
"Sure -- but that'd be hard evidence
if anyone audited the house records. Not
that anyone's likely to, now that the doctor's
been and gone, but you never
know. I read an article which cites a paper in the latest
Nature to demonstrate
that a cure is just around the corner. If we can just hang on until
then...she's
a big girl anyhow, and she might not put on more than an inch or two. As long
as
she doesn't start behaving oddly, we might be able to keep it secret."
"If they do find
out," said Mother, ominously, "there'll be hell to pay."
"I don't think so," Father assured
her. "I've heard that the authorities are
quite sympathetic in private, although they have
to put on a sterner face for
publicity purposes."
"I'm not talking about the bloody
bureaucrats," Mother retorted, "I'm talking
about the estate. If the neighbors find out
we're sheltering a center of
infection...well, how would you feel if the Johnsons' Peter
turned out to have
the disease and hadn't warned us about the danger to Wendy?"
"They're not
certain how it spreads," said Father, defensively, "They don't know
what kind of vector's
involved -- until they find out there's no reason to think
that Wendy's endangering Peter
just by living next door. It's not as if they
spend much time together. We can't lock her
up -that'd be suspicious in itself.
We have to pretend that things are absolutely normal,
at least until we know how
this thing is going to turn out. I'm not prepared to run the
risk of their
taking her away --not if there's the slightest chance of avoiding it. I don't
care what they say on the newstapes -- this thing is getting out of control and
I really
don't know how it's going to turn out. I'm not letting Wendy go
anywhere, unless I'm
absolutely forced. She may be getting heavier and hairier,
but inside she's still Wendy,
and I'm not letting them take her away."
Wendy heard Father's voice getting louder as he
came toward the door, and she
scuttled back up the stairs as fast as she could go. Numb
with shock, she
climbed back into bed. Father's words echoed inside her head: "I watched
her all
afternoon and she's perfectly normal...inside she's still Wendy...."
They were
putting on an act too, and she hadn't known. She hadn't been able to
tell. She'd been
watching them, and they'd seemed perfectly normal...but inside,
where it counted....
It was
a long time before she fell asleep, and when she finally did, she dreamed
of shadow-men and
shadow-music, which drew the very soul from her even as she
fled through the infinite
forest of green and gold.
The men from the Ministry of Health arrived next morning, while
Wendy was
finishing her honey and almond manna. She saw Father go pale as the man in the
gray suit held up his identification card to the door camera. She watched
Father's lip
trembling as he thought about telling the man in the gray suit that
he couldn't come in,
and then realized that it wouldn't do any good. As Father
got up to go to the door he
exchanged a bitter glance with Mother, and murmured:
"That bastard house-doctor."
Mother
came to stand behind Wendy, and put both of her hands on Wendy's
shoulders. "It's all
right, darling," she said. Which meant, all too clearly,
that things were badly wrong.
Father
and the man in the gray suit were already arguing as they came through
the door. There was
another man behind them, dressed in less formal clothing. He
was carrying a heavy black
bag, like a rigid suitcase.
"I'm sorry," the man in the gray suit was saying. "I understand
your feelings,
but this is an epidemic -- a national emergency. We have to check out all
reports, and we have to move swiftly if we're to have any chance of containing
the
problem."
"If there'd been any cause for alarm," Father told him, hotly, "I'd have called
you myself." But the man in the gray suit ignored him; from the moment he had
entered the
room his eyes had been fixed on Wendy. He was smiling. Even though
Wendy had never seen him
before and didn't know the first thing about him, she
knew that the smile was dangerous.
"Hello, Wendy," said the man in the gray suit, smoothly. "My name's Tom
Cartwright. I'm
from the Ministry of Health. This is Jimmy Li. I'm afraid we
have to carry out some tests."
Wendy stared back at him as blankly as she could. In a situation like this, she
figured, it
was best to play dumb, at least to begin with.
"You can't do this," Mother said, gripping
Wendy's shoulders just a little too
hard. "You can't take her away."
"We can complete our
initial investigation here and now," Cartwright answered,
blandly. "Jimmy can plug into
your kitchen systems, and I can do my part right
here at the table. It'll be over in less
than half an hour, and if all's well
we'll be gone in no time." The way he said it implied
that he didn't really
expect to be gone in no time.
Mother and Father blustered a little
more, but it was only a gesture. They knew
how futile it all was. While Mr. Li opened up
his bag of tricks to reveal an
awesome profusion of gadgets forged in metal and polished
glass Father came to
stand beside Wendy, and like Mother he reached out to touch her.
They
both assured her that the needle Mr. Li was preparing wouldn't hurt when he
put it into her
arm, and when it did hurt -- bringing tears to her eyes in spite
of her efforts to blink
them away -- they told her the pain would go away in a
minute. It didn't, of course. Then
they told her not to worry about the
questions Mr. Cartwright was going to ask her,
although it was as plain as the
noses on their faces that they were terrified by the
possibility that she would
give the wrong answers.
In the end, though, Wendy's parents had
to step back a little, and let her face
up to the man from the Ministry on her own.
I
mustn't play too dumb, Wendy thought. That would be just as much of a giveaway
as being too
clever. I have to try to make my mind blank, let the answers come
straight out without
thinking at all. It ought to be easy. After all, I've been
thirteen for thirty years, and
unthirteen for a matter of months...it should be
easy.
She knew that she was lying to
herself. She knew well enough that she had
crossed a boundary that couldn't be re-crossed
just by stepping backward.
"How old are you, Wendy?" Cartwright asked, when Jimmy Li had
vanished into the
kitchen to play with her blood.
"Thirteen," she said, trying to return his
practiced smile without too much
evident anxiety.
"Do you know what you are, Wendy?" "I'm a
girl," she answered, knowing that it
wouldn't wash. "Do you know what the difference
between children and adults is,
Wendy? Apart from the fact that they're smaller."
There was
no point in denying it. At thirteen, a certain amount of
self-knowledge was included in the
package, and even thirteen-year-olds who
never looked at an encyclopedia learned quite a
lot about the world and its ways
in the course of thirty years.
"Yes," she said, knowing
full well that she wasn't going to be allowed to get
away with minimal replies.
"Tell me
what you know about the difference," he said. "It's not such a big
difference," she said,
warily. "Children are made out of the same things adults
are made of -- but they're made so
they stop growing at a certain age, and never
get any older. Thirteen is the oldest -some
stop at eight."
"Why are children made that way, Wendy?" Step by inexorable step he was
leading
her toward the deep water, and she didn't know how to swim. She knew that she
wasn't
clever enough -- yet -- to conceal her cleverness.
"Population control," she said. "Can you
give me a more detailed explanation,
Wendy?" "In the olden days," she said, "there were
catastrophes. Lots of people
died, because there were so many of them. They discovered how
not to grow old,
so that they could live for hundreds of years if they didn't get killed in
bad
accidents. They had to stop having so many children, or they wouldn't be able to
feed
everyone when the children kept growing up, but they didn't want to have a
world with no
children in it. Lots of people still wanted children, and couldn't
stop wanting them -- and
in the end, after more catastrophes, those people who
really wanted children a lot were
able to have them...only the children weren't
allowed to grow up and have more children of
their own. There were lots of
arguments about it, but in the end things calmed down."
"There's
another difference between children and adults, isn't there?" said
Cartwright, smoothly.
"Yes," Wendy said, knowing that she was supposed to have that information in her
memory and
that she couldn't refuse to voice it. "Children can't think very
much. They have limited
self-consciousness." She tried hard to say it as though
it were a mere formula, devoid of
any real meaning so far as she was concerned.
"Do you know why children are made with
limited self-consciousness?"
"No." She was sure that no was the right answer to that one,
although she'd
recently begun to make guesses. It was so they wouldn't know what was
happening
if they were ever sent back, and so that they didn't change too much as they
learned
things, becoming un-childlike in spite of their appearance.
"Do you know what the word
progeria means, Wendy?" "Yes," she said. Children
watched the news. Thirteen-year-olds were
supposed to be able to hold
intelligent conversations with their parents. "It's when
children get older even
though they shouldn't. It's a disease that children get. It's
happening a lot."
"Is it happening to you, Wendy? Have you got progeria?" For a second or
two she
hesitated between no and I don't know, and then realized how bad the hesitation
must
look. She kept her face straight as she finally said: "I don't think so."
"What would you
think if you found out you had got progeria, Wendy?" Cartwright
asked, smug in the
knowledge that she must be way out of her depth by now,
whatever the truth of the matter
might be.
"You can't ask her that!" Father said. "She's thirteen! Are you trying to scare
her half to death? Children can be scared, you know. They're not robots."
"No," said
Cartwright, without taking his eyes off Wendy's face. "They're not.
Answer the question,
Wendy."
"I wouldn't like it," Wendy said, in a low voice. "I don't want anything to
happen
to me. I want to be with Mummy and Daddy. I don't want anything to
happen."
While she was
speaking, Jimmy Li had come back into the room. He didn't say a
word and his nod was almost
imperceptible, but Tom Cartwright wasn't really in
any doubt.
"I'm afraid it has, Wendy," he
said, softly. "It has happened, as you know very
well.
"No she doesn't!" said Mother, in a
voice that was halfway to a scream. "She
doesn't know any such thing!"
"It's a very mild
case," Father said. "We've been watching her like hawks. It's
purely physical. Her behavior
hasn't altered at all. She isn't showing any
mental symptoms whatsoever."
"You can't take
her away," Mother said, keeping her shrillness under a tight
rein. "We'll keep her in
quarantine. We'll join one of the drug-trials. You can
monitor her but you can't take her
away. She doesn't understand what's
happening. She's just a little girl. It's only slight,
only her body."
Tom Cartwright let the storm blow out. He was still looking at Wendy, and
his
eyes seemed kind, full of concern. He let a moment's silence endure before he
spoke to
her again.
"Tell them, Wendy," he said, softly. "Explain to them that it isn't slight at
all."
She looked up at Mother, and then at Father, knowing how much it would hurt them
to be
told. "I'm still Wendy," she said, faintly. "I'm still your little girl.
I...."
She wanted
to say I always will be, but she couldn't. She had always been a good
girl, and some lies
were simply too difficult to voice.
I wish I was a randomizing factor, she thought,
fiercely wishing that it could
be true, that it might be true. I wish I was....
Absurdly,
she found herself wondering whether it would have been more
grammatical to have thought I
wish I were...
It was so absurd that she began to laugh, and then she began to cry,
helplessly.
It was almost as if the flood of tears could wash away the burden of thought --
almost, but not quite.
Mother took her back into her bedroom, and sat with her, holding her
hand. By
the time the shuddering sobs released her -- long after she had run out of tears
-- Wendy felt a new sense of grievance. Mother kept looking at the door, wishing
that she
could be out there, adding her voice to the argument, because she
didn't really trust
Father to get it right. The sense of duty which kept her
pinned to Wendy's side was a
burden, a burning frustration. Wendy didn't like
that. Oddly enough, though, she didn't
feel any particular resentment at being
put out of the way while Father and the Ministry of
Health haggled over her
future. She understood well enough that she had no voice in the
matter, no
matter how unlimited her self-consciousness had now become, no matter what
progressive
leaps and bounds she had accomplished as the existential fetters had
shattered and fallen
away.
She was still a little girl, for the moment. She was still Wendy, for the
moment. When
she could speak, she said to Mother: "Can we have some music?"
Mother looked suitably
surprised. "What kind of music?" she countered.
"Anything" Wendy said. The music she was
hearing in her head was soft and fluty
music, which she heard as if from a vast distance,
and which somehow seemed to
be the oldest music in the world, but she didn't particularly
want it duplicated
and brought into the room. She just wanted something to fill the cracks
of
silence which broke up the muffled sound of arguing.
Mother called up something much more
liquid, much more upbeat, much more modern.
Wendy could see that Mother wanted to speak to
her, wanted to deluge her with
reassurances, but couldn't bear to make any promises she
wouldn't be able to
keep. In the end, Mother contented herself with hugging Wendy to her
bosom, as
fiercely and as tenderly as she could.
When the door opened it flew back with a
bang. Father came in first.
"It's all right," he said, quickly. "They're not going to take
her away. They'll
quarantine the house instead."
Wendy felt the tension in Mother's arms.
Father could work entirely from home
much more easily than Mother, but there was no way
Mother was going to start
protesting on those grounds. While quarantine wasn't exactly all
right it was
better than she could have expected.
"It's not generosity, I'm afraid," said
Tom Cartwright. "It's necessity. The
epidemic is spreading too quickly. We don't have the
facilities to take tens of
thousands of children into state care. Even the quarantine will
probably be a
short-term measure -- to be perfectly frank, it's a panic measure. The simple
truth is that the disease can't be contained no matter what we do."
"How could you let this
happen?" Mother said, in a low tone bristling with
hostility. "How could you let it get
this far out of control? With all modern
technology at your disposal you surely should be
able to put the brake on a
simple virus."
"It's not so simple," Cartwright said,
apologetically. "If it really had been a
freak of nature -- some stray strand of DNA which
found a new ecological niche
-- we'd probably have been able to contain it easily. We don't
believe that any
more."
"It was designed," Father said, with the airy confidence of the
well-informed --
though even Wendy knew that this particular item of wisdom must have been
news
to him five minutes ago. "Somebody cooked this thing up in a lab and let it
loose
deliberately. It was all planned, in the name of liberation...in the name
of chaos, if you
ask me."
Somebody did this to me! Wendy thought. Somebody actually set out to take away
the
limits, to turn the randomizing factor into...into what, exactly?
While Wendy's mind was
boggling, Mother was saying: "Who? How? Why?"
"You know how some people are," Cartwright
said, with a fatalistic shrug of his
shoulders. "Can't see an apple-cart without wanting to
upset it. You'd think the
chance to live for a thousand years would confer a measure of
maturity even on
the meanest intellect, but it hasn't worked out that way. Maybe someday
we'll
get past all that, but in the meantime..."
Maybe someday, Wendy thought, all the
things left over from the infancy of the
world will go. All the crazinesses, all the
disagreements, all the diehard
habits. She hadn't known that she was capable of being quite
so sharp, but she
felt perversely proud of the fact that she didn't have to spell out --
even to
herself, in the brand new arena of her private thoughts -- the fact that one of
those
symptoms of craziness, one of the focal points of those disagreements, and
the most diehard
of all those habits, was keeping children in a world where they
no longer had any
biological function -- or, rather, keeping the ghosts of
children, who weren't really
children at all because they were always children.
"They call it liberation," Father was
saying, "but it really is a disease, a
terrible affliction. It's the destruction of
innocence. It's a kind of mass
murder." He was obviously pleased with his own eloquence,
and with the
righteousness of his wrath. He came over to the bed and plucked Wendy out of
Mother's arms. "It's all right, Beauty," he said. "We're all in this together.
We'll face
it together. You're absolutely right. You're still our little girl.
You're still Wendy.
Nothing terrible is going to happen."
It was far better, in a way, than what she'd imagined
-- or had been too scared
to imagine. There was a kind of relief in not having to pretend
any more, in not
having to keep the secret. That boundary had been crossed, and now there
was no
choice but to go forward.
Why didn't I tell them before? Wendy wondered. Why didn't I
just tell them, and
trust them to see that everything would be all right? But even as she
thought
it, even as she clutched at the straw, just as Mother and Father were clutching,
she realized how hollow the thought was, and how meaningless Father's
reassurances were. It
was all just sentiment, and habit, and pretense.
Everything couldn't and wouldn't be "all
right," and never would be again,
unless....
Turning to Tom Cartwright, warily and uneasily,
she said: "Will I be an adult
now? Will I live for a thousand years, and have my own house,
my own job, my
own....?"
She trailed off as she saw the expression in his eyes, realizing
that she was
still a little girl, and that there were a thousand questions adults couldn't
and didn't want to hear, let alone try to answer.
It was late at night before Mother and
Father got themselves into the right
frame of mind for the kind of serious talk that the
situation warranted, and by
that time Wendy knew perfectly well that the honest answer to
almost all the
questions she wanted to ask was: "Nobody knows."
She asked the questions
anyway. Mother and Father varied their answers in the
hope of appearing a little wiser than
they were, but it all came down to the
same thing in the end. It all came down to desperate
pretense.
"We have to take it as it comes," Father told her. "It's an unprecedented
situation.
The government has to respond to the changes on a day-by-day basis.
We can't tell how it
will all turn out. It's a mess, but the world has been in a
mess before -- in fact, it's
hardly ever been out of a mess for more than a few
years at a time. We'll cope as best we
can. Everybody will cope as best they
can. With luck, it might not come to violence -- to
war, to slaughter, to
ecocatastrophe. We're entitled to hope that we really are past all
that now,
that we really are capable of handling things sensibly this time."
"Yes," Wendy
said, conscientiously keeping as much of the irony out of her voice
as she could. "I
understand: Maybe we won't just be sent back to the factories
to be scrapped...and maybe if
they find a cure, they'll ask us whether we want
to be cured before they use it." With
luck, she added, silently, maybe we can
all be adult about the situation.
They both looked
at her uneasily, not sure how to react. From now on, they would
no longer be able to grin
and shake their heads at the wondrous inventiveness of
the randomizing factor in her
programming. From now on, they would actually have
to try to figure out what she meant, and
what unspoken thoughts might lie behind
the calculated wit and hypocrisy of her every
statement. She had every sympathy
for them; she had only recently learned for herself what
a difficult,
frustrating and thankless task that could be.
This happened to their ancestors
once, she thought. But not as quickly. Their
ancestors didn't have the kind of head-start
you can get by being thirteen for
thirty years. It must have been hard, to be a thinking
ape among unthinkers.
Hard, but... well, they didn't ever want to give it up, did they?
"Whatever
happens, Beauty," Father said, "we love you. Whatever happens, you're
our little girl. When
you're grown up, we'll still love you the way we always
have. We always will."
He actually
believes it, Wendy thought. He actually believes that the world can
still be the same, in
spite of everything. He can't let go of the hope that even
though everything's changing, it
will all be the same underneath. But it won't.
Even if there isn't a resource crisis --
after all, grown-up children can't eat
much more than un-grown-up ones-- the world can
never be the same. This is the
time in which the adults of the world have to get used to
the fact that there
can't be any more families, because from now on children will have to
be rare
and precious and strange. This is the time when the old people will have to
recognize
that the day of their silly stopgap solutions to imaginary problems is
over. This is the
time when we all have to grow up. If the old people can't do
that by themselves, then the
new generation will simply have to show them the
way.
"I love you too," she answered,
earnestly. She left it at that. There wasn't any
point in adding: "I always have," or "I
can mean it now," or any of the other
things which would have underlined rather than
assuaged the doubts they must be
feeling.
"And we'll be all right," Mother said. "As long as
we love one another, and as
long as we face this thing together, we'll be all right."
What a
wonderful thing true innocence is, Wendy thought, rejoicing in her
ability to think such a
thing freely, without shame or reservation. I wonder if
I'd be able to cultivate it, if I
ever wanted to.
That night, bedtime was abolished. She was allowed to stay up as late as
she
wanted to. When she finally did go to bed she was so exhausted that she quickly
drifted
off into a deep and peaceful sleep -- but she didn't remain there
indefinitely. Eventually,
she began to dream.
In her dream Wendy was living wild in a magical wood where it never
rained. She
lived on sweet berries of many colors. There were other girls living wild in
the
dream-wood but they all avoided one another. They had lived there for a long
time but
now the others had come: the shadow-men with horns on their brows and
shaggy legs who
played strange music, which was the breath of souls.
Wendy hid from the shadow-men, but the
fearful fluttering of her heart gave her
away, and one of the shadow-men found her. He
stared down at her with huge
baleful eyes, wiping spittle from his pipes onto his fleecy
rump.
"Who are you?" she asked, trying to keep the tremor of fear out of her voice.
"I'm the
devil," he said. "There's no such thing," she informed him, sourly.
He shrugged his massive
shoulders. "So I'm the Great God Pan," he said. "What
difference does it make? And how come
you're so smart all of a sudden?"
"I'm not thirteen anymore," she told him, proudly. "I've
been thirteen for
thirty years, but now I'm growing up. The whole world's growing up -- for
the
first and last time."
"Not me," said the Great God Pan. "I'm a million years old and
I'll never grow
up. Let's get on with it, shall we? I'll count to ninety-nine. You start
running."
Dream-Wendy scrambled to her feet, and ran away. She ran and she ran and she
ran,
without any hope of escape. Behind her, the music of the reed-pipes kept
getting louder and
louder, and she knew that whatever happened, her world would
never fall silent.
When Wendy
woke up, she found that the nightmare hadn't really ended. The
meaningful part of it was
still going on. But things weren't as bad as all that,
even though she couldn't bring
herself to pretend that it was all just a dream
which might go away.
She knew that she had
to take life one day at a time, and look after her parents
as best she could. She knew that
she had to try to ease the pain of the passing
of their way of life, to which they had
clung a little too hard and a little too
long. She knew that she had to hope, and to trust,
that a cunning combination of
intelligence and love would be enough to see her and the rest
of the world
through -- at least until the next catastrophe came along.
She wasn't
absolutely sure that she could do it, but she was determined to give
it a bloody good try.
And whatever happens in the end, she thought, to live will be an awfully big
adventure.