Kiera didn’t
want to travel with Alexei. She thought it was a particular gesture of bad will
from the universe that Alexei was the only one to travel with this time. The
universe had been doling out bad will these days, these years, as if it had
been designed for it. But that was a sort of generalized bad will, like giving
humanity a pitbull when they’d asked for a puppy. This felt personal, and Kiera
resolved to right it later, by spending the least amount of time with Alexei as
possible.
To be fair, he probably
wasn’t having such a great time with her. He’d never understood why his sister
hung out with her, why they chose to spend their time doing the things they did
while he chose to spend his time complaining about things that made no
difference when they were complained about, like cold tea or noisy dogs barking
or the government or new failing safety measures around the over 50,000
population cities. Which was especially absurd, Kiera thought, because their
own city didn’t qualify, with its population just upward of 20,000.
“Why is she here, of all places?” Alexei said,
sounding victimized. Kiera was sure he meant to say, Why am I here? With you? And it had just come out wrong. The place
itself was not all that bad.
Kiera looking up
and down. It was one of those factories that had had a false front, a sort of
area for tours where people saw machinery that looked more complicated than was
actually required, and the beginnings of the a process and the final product
and nothing messy in between. Kiera might even have been here once before. She
couldn’t remember, which worried her. When the spores began to spread, two of
the first things to go were art and memory. No one needed art when they were struggling to eat, to hide,
to run. And suddenly all of one’s memories of life Before were replaced with
questions about how they could have possibly lived that way, then memories of
life After. Kiera had always made it a point to keep her memories, but they
were drifting away from her, like spirals of fog separated from the rest of the
cloud that thinned out into nothingness.
They were
picking their way through the entrance, Alexei grumbling about his rubber
boots. Kiera had made him wear them, and had given them to him (they were her
father’s, Before) out of kindness, and because she didn’t want him to step in
any spore-infested water. The boots were high, coming up to both their knees.
If they had to step in anything suspicious that was taller, they might have to
turn back, but Kiera had thought she was being practical and sensible when
she’d suggested the boots. Alexei probably hated practicality and sense,
considering the things he often said.
“I could be at
home right now,” he said, slamming the door behind them in a way that made
Kiera want to bite his head off. If he was this loud, something else might.
Alexei was fiddling with his bicycle gloves, as if the safety precaution of
them offended him. Even with his gas mask on, she could tell he was frowning
judiciously. “I could be watching television. I could be eating those stupid
canned fruits she hordes. But no.”
“I’m so sorry
you have to haul your sister out of a candy factory,” Kiera said, catching
sight of a CadburyTM sign that had fallen off the wall. The edge of
it had a soft white rime to it that Kiera didn’t like the look of. “I’m sorry
she might actually be hurt. I’m sorry you don’t have anyone actually looking
forward to you being back home.”
“And you do? Didn’t
your boyfriend run away? Decide to take his chance with spore-heads rather than
you?” Alexei was so amused by himself that his words ended in a chuckle.
Kiera
desperately wanted to reach for a chocolate bar in a display on a desk, but
spores always got the food first. She wanted to smell it, but the gas mask
wouldn’t let her. When the spores first spread, they’d used n-95 respirators,
and she would have been able to smell the stale chocolate. That was back when
n-95 respirators did the trick. Now it was gas masks. Stores had been
vandalized and looted when people looked for gas masks, and long shirts and
pants and hats and scarves and high boots and gloves and anything to cover
themselves should a single spore come in through a crack in their window.
They passed
walls covered with graffiti. Art may have been the first to go, but the
survivors, the travelers and fighters, created new art wherever they went.
Somehow spray paint was nearly as important as gas masks. They drew block
letters and symbols on the colourful walls and phrases like THE WHORES EAT THE
PLAYERS’ MEAT, and WHITE CROWN-THERE’S MORE AROUND. They were both true
statements, Kiera thought, though she wouldn’t have said it that way.
“Does she even
have her phone?” Alexei said, looking at his own. His battery was almost dead.
Lily’s phone was notorious for running out of power, and since Kiera and Alexei
had gotten the texts from her at least eight hours ago, it was likely that her
phone was dead.
“It probably
doesn’t matter,” Kiera said. “She’s inside, anyway. She said she was staying on
the second floor in case- in case. She said to watch our step too.”
Alexei’s brows
knitted in the large glass circles of his mask. He breathed out deeply, in the
way that made Kiera’s skin crawl. “What? Why?”
Kiera stopped at
the edge of a room- one of the room’s of the real factory. She said, “It’s rained.”
The room in
front of them looked as though all the rain had been concentrated into it. It
had flowed from the cracks in the walls, and the hole in the ceiling that
trickled water from a room upstairs that had also probably been flooded. The
room looked as though if might have been mid-renovation when the spores started
attacking it. The smell was so pungent that Kiera caught a whiff of it through
the gas mask. Her heart skipped. If they could smell it, it was bad. She also
couldn’t see the floor through the water. That was bad, too.
“Do we have to
go through this?” Alexei said, voice stretched with dismay. “Did she go through this? Did she have boots?
Lily!”
Kiera turned on
him. “Shut up. Jesus. I don’t know if
she had boots. But come on, you should know your sister. She isn’t that stupid.
She wouldn’t go through here unless she didn’t need boots.”
Alexei’s brow
arched and disappeared beneath the mask. “Did she?”
Kiera rolled her
eyes. She was bereft of any hope that this water was clear and uncontaminated,
but it made sense to check. She cast around for something to put in the water.
Softer metals might do, but there wasn’t any gold here. Just steel and iron and
some alloy, probably. Wood would be alright. Or skin, she thought, briefly,
looking at Alexei.
“Don’t look at
me,” Alexei said. “I don’t have anything. And no, you can’t use my belt.”
“I don’t want
to,” Kiera said. “It might actually be keeping your pants up. I don’t want to
see things I don’t have to.”
Alexei said,
“You wouldn’t be so lucky.”
Kiera made a
noise, generated purely from annoyance, and went back to the room with the
desk. She peered behind the desk but there was nothing but a white rime on the
baseboards and the wheels of the wheely chair. There was also a pencil. Lead,
she hoped, picking it up. Though graphite would probably work too. No one knew
why it attacked metals the way it did, when the spores attacked all organic
matter by growing- by infecting.
She came back to
the manufacturing room where Alexei was leaning against a metal railing. It was
pretty cavalier of him, Kiera thought, considering that if it fell apart he
would go hurtling back into the water. Then she noticed he was also gripping
the doorframe, his black mesh-clad fingers curled around it like a claw. She
showed him the pencil, as if he were about to perform a magic trick with it,
and he pretended to be uninterested. But when she dipped it into the water,
parting the white film on the top, he leaned over to see the result. Kiera
counted to five, slowly, then removed it. The white film closed over the top of
the water again, like one of those mattresses that retained its shape the
moment you rolled off it. Kiera held the pencil sideways, away from herself,
and they watched it.
“That’s- well,
it’s infected,” Alexei said in the same moment that Kiera said, “It’s stalked.”
Alexei liked to use the term infection,
as if it weren’t a mind-altering parasite, a destroyer. He preferred clinical
terms, which did not properly describe the spore. At least Kiera called it what
it was.
Either way, some
of the white film that had collected on top of the water was eating away at the
lead pencil- Kiera was sure now that it was lead- and starting to branch off
into delicate, coral-like stalks on the end of the pencil. It was spreading up
toward the pink eraser at the top, like a quick-growing vine strangling a tree.
Kiera dropped it before the parasites could go for her glove. The gloves would
only actually hold it off a little while. Ophiocordyceps
manducilis ate soft metal, infected humans, and gnawed lazily at clothing.
Even their boots, if they did not wash them off within hours of walking on top
of the spores, would be eaten through. And then it would take only a single
spore touching their skin before they had a problem.
“Not through here,
then,” Alexei said, finally.
“Your powers of
observation are astounding,” Kiera said. “And your ability to state the obvious
with such a sense of discovery- amazing. Really. Also, there are stairs.” She
pointed when she said this last bit, to the staircase in the corner. It had
spores on the railing and the metal stairs, which wasn’t promising. But at
least it would take them upstairs.
Alexei said,
“It’s covered. Ugh.”
Kiera shared his
sentiment, which was rare. But she also felt a prickle of irritation that
Alexei was not already moving toward the stairs, that he thought they might
have any options, and that it was possible that elsewhere people were protected
in a metallic, air-tight dome from the spores while they prodded puddles with
lead and tightened their gas masks and pulled their hoods over their faces to
protect themselves from the possibility that the spores might be on the ceiling
too.
They climbed the
stairs to the second level. Alexei insisted on going first, clutching the
revolver in his hand. There was ammunition in the breast pocket of his shirt,
and in the pockets of Kiera’s jeans. They stepped consciously, without touching
the white, crusted railing. O. maducilis
crusted if it had been there long enough. Small fresh stalks stuck out of the
crust. When they were mature enough, they would release spores too. Kiera had
seen much bigger stalks, big as the foundations of a high rise, and the sort of
spores they released, large as pillows, fluffy as clouds.
Alexei called
Lily’s name, into the room in front of them. His voice changed when he was
worried for his sister. Kiera was a little touched by it. If he wasn’t such a
shit all of the time, then the few times he was worried for Lily might have
endeared her to him. Alexei was peering left and right in the room, looking for
a sign of Lily, while Kiera crossed the threshold, so he was the first to see
the body, and let her know it by stumbling back into her, stepping on her boot,
with a muffled exclamation of, “holy fuck!”
The body was
long dead. The spores must have gotten it at least a month ago. It had that
mildly preserved look, like a bug that had frozen inside its carapace. It was
wearing clothing covered with spores, and its eyeballs were crusted over. One
of its arms had been torn away, probably eaten, the stump reddish brown. There
was a stalk growing out of its head, white like marble, fluffy with spores that
hadn’t fallen off yet.
“Was it infected
by spores?” Alexei asked. He lifted the revolver in a trembling hand. “It was a
man, wasn’t it?”
Kiera made an
irritated noise again. Of course it was a man. Every body that had been eaten
was a man. The spores only settled in to plant their stalks and spread their
seed. At that point, or before, when the man was still alive, still uninfected,
it made a good snack for an infected women. They were a host, but not an
instrument, not like the women. The women were the ones to watch out for.
Several under 50,000 cities had succumbed to fungal spore exposure because of
infected women entering the barracks. Afterward, all that was left were the
mutilated bodies of men, fertilizing the spores, and the women that hadn’t
died, still looking to eat and infect.
“Oh God,” Alexei
said, in his different voice. “Lily, what-” The revolver went back and forth in
his swinging hand as he bolted for the next room. Kiera swore and ran after
him, on to the fluffy bed of spores, into the room that looked as though it was
filled with winter. There were more spores than Kiera had ever seen. Piled on
the floor. Falling from the ceiling. Even with their boots and their near
body-suit clothing, and their hoods pulled up, they would have to be very
careful not to let the spores touch their skin.
“Lily!” Alexei
said.
At first Kiera
thought he was calling her name, trying to draw her to them, but then she saw
that was not the case.
Because Lily was
already there. She was in front of the doorway opposite them. There were livid
scratches on her neck, and white crust coming out of them. Her eyes were crusted
white too, the lashes heavy with O.
maducilis. Pus bubbled over it, and at her ears. A white stalk was growing
out of her head, about two inches tall. Powerful spores grew fast. She was
looking at Alexei with anticipation, Kiera with pensiveness.
When Lily had
come out of the womb, one of the first people to see her, though she was only a
month old herself, was Kiera. She had been her friend over two decades. She
reached for Alexei’s gun. “Shoot her.”
“How-” Alexei’s
hand was fumbling for it. They were taking slow steps backward, though Kiera
didn’t thin that the spore made stalk-heads like the predators you didn’t want
to alarm. Stalk-heads didn’t get alarmed.
“Do it, you
wuss,” she hissed, reaching for the gun.
“I’m trying,”
Alexei said, trying to pull back the safety.
Lily was
advancing on them. Her eyes kept flickering between them, then beyond them, in
a way that had Kiera spinning around, cursing herself for not remembering.
Stalk-heads travelled in packs. The ones that had just come in the doorway
behind her and Alexei did not look as good as Lily, though she had only been
infected for a few hours. These ones looked infected by days. Unlike the men,
who could not survive once infected, women lived days, sometimes a couple of
weeks, with the spores burrowing inside them, until it frosted over every organ
and they became a balloon of fungus. These ones looked ready to burst. Vitreous
humour trickled from their eyes as it was replaced with spores. Some were
already blind. But that hardly mattered.
Kiera grabbed
for the revolver, pulling back the safety, and pulled the trigger. The shot
went wide, hitting the doorframe, which exploded with wood chips and spores. None
of the stalk-heads flinched. When Kiera turned her head she saw Lily still
watching, though she’d stopped moving.
Kiera froze. One
of the stalk-heads had a glass bottle in its hand, a rag stuffed inside. The
end of the rag, hanging out of the bottle, had been covered with spores. An O. maducilis Molotov cocktail. This was
something Lily might have come up with. A trap Kiera should have seen.
Kiera threw up
her hands just as the stalk-head hurled the bottle at her. It struck her
shoulder, the cloth flying up in her face. Spores plumed over her exposed neck,
drifted into the collar of her shirt. They touched her skin, tingling just a
little. Kiera remembered when she’d been stung by a wasp, the initial pain,
then the waiting before the real pain started, in less than a minute.
Alexei looked at
the spores on her skin, then to Lily. He grabbed the revolver back from her,
before her hands had a chance to close on them. He laughed, as if this were all
happening on a television and he could turn it off when he wanted to.
“Fucking
perfect,” he said. “This is so typical. We’re both going to die. We-”
He didn’t get a
chance to finish. Lily sprang at him. Kiera watched, hoping her best friend
spared her a piece.
Art by RovinaCai
Text by Lucie MacAulay