It
all began in the sweltering slums of San Paulo, Brazil. The first victim was a
hunter, recently back from a trip through the heart of the rain forest. Within
days of returning he broke out in a high fever. A few days after that he went
to see a doctor and described a raging thirst, which never seemed to abate, a
burning fever, and pains in every bone in his body. The doctor could do little
more than take blood and send the man home.
The
hunter arrived back to the doctor’s office far quicker than his test results.
The man was carried into the surgery on a makeshift stretcher, convulsing. His
temperature was sky high and his face was an explosion of oozing blisters. The
puss was incredibly sticky and the sores continued to weep without clotting.
The doctor transferred him to hospital on the spot. Unfortunately, the team
treating him didn't realise what they were dealing with and failed to place
him in quarantine.
The
hunter's condition worsened, blisters spread into the mouth - covering the gums
and the tongue. The doctors were excited, and frightened, because they were
dealing with the unknown. They tried to control the hunter’s temperature and
swab away the puss that was ever-coming. Try as they might, they couldn’t keep
up with the worsening condition. It was incredibly aggressive. When the
blisters appeared in the man's trachea, his lungs began to fill with puss,
until his breaths became gurgles. Before dawn, the hunter drowned in his own
body.
A
week went by before the hunter's wife presented herself with the beginning of a
fever. The rest of the family were rounded up and they too showed signs of the
strange new illness. Over the next few days, every person who had come into
contact with the hunter was either dying, or dead. The virus, now unofficially
known as "BFV" or "Brazilian Fever Virus," seemed to jump
from person to person on contact.
All
quarantine measures recommended by the World Health Organisation were now being
followed, but the virus found a way around them. The disease mutated, and
became much more infectious. The epidemic was turning into a disaster. As the
doctors discovered more about the virus, they found it was infectious for seven
days before any symptoms appeared, and in the end, eighty percent of all
infected patients died. Everyone agreed, BFV posed a real threat to the future
of the human race.
***
The
United Nations enacted, The Pandora Protocol. Every nation across the globe
declared martial law. Containment rings were thrown around San Paulo. Nobody
was allowed enter or leave. Across the globe, international travel was banned.
Planes had to return to their place of origin without touching down which caused many to run out of fuel and crash. Ships returned to their last port of call, or made
themselves islands without a home.
The
focus of the world turned on a tiny hospital, in the poorest part of the world,
and all held their breath.
Inside
the infected zone; riots, looting, and civil unrest went unchecked. Air drops
of food, water, and medication, were the only assistance given by the outside
world. When the hundreds of thousands of healthy people within the containment
ring realised they'd been given a death sentence, the trouble really started.
Huge crowds tried to force their way out but they were gunned down at the barriers. Corpses were left where they fell to bloat and rot, becoming a feast for vermin. No matter how much the people cried out for help, nobody came to help.
The
ripples of infection became waves and the death toll spiked. Despite
the precautions in the hospital, the fever began to spread among staff, and
patients. Bodies were being incinerated, until the numbers grew too large. Pits
were dug, and mass burnings began. Bodies were transported by dumper truck,
not hearse. Three weeks passed before the first case appeared on the far side
of the containment wall. One case was all it took to bring the leaders of the
world together in unity. One case threatened all of humanity.
By
week eight of infection, the death toll stood at 9,756 with a further 25,000
believed to be sick or dying. World leaders commanded the entire of world to
remain indoors. Containment had failed, all they could do now was wait for the infected to die before the fever spread. The world paused and commerce faltered as
the days ticked by. Week nine brought what everyone feared most, the fever
jumped an ocean. Two cases were confirmed in mainland Europe. The following
day, a case appeared in Florida. It was the beginning of the end.
Governments
publicly cried for calm, but the sick began to vanish under the shadow of darkness. Rumors of
eradication were shared in frightened whispers. Whole families, whole communities,
disappeared. In the face of all man's efforts, BFV advanced undaunted.
Week
thirty-two of infection found every country on the face of the planet battling the fever. The fabric of modern society lay in tatters as six billion people took
matters into their own hands. It
was on week thirty-three that a group of twelve; men, women, and children,
walked alive from the wasteland of San Paulo. They were immune and word began to
spread.
They had survived in a church during the worst of the violence. They insisted God saved them. Evangelists across the world declared it a miracle, claiming, "A righteous man will walk through the plague without fear, as long as his soul was pure, and repentant." An American preacher offered absolution's over the phone, a mere $12.99 per minute. Even in its darkest hour you can depend on humanity to sink even lower.
They had survived in a church during the worst of the violence. They insisted God saved them. Evangelists across the world declared it a miracle, claiming, "A righteous man will walk through the plague without fear, as long as his soul was pure, and repentant." An American preacher offered absolution's over the phone, a mere $12.99 per minute. Even in its darkest hour you can depend on humanity to sink even lower.
Around
this time in Dublin, Austin and Julie were holed up in their apartment,
watching the disaster unfold live on the internet. Their spare room looked like
a supermarket; stacked with all the tinned food and water they could lay their hands on. Austin, originally from Kerry, wanted to move back there
when the outbreak had started but Julie said it would blow over. Now he wished
he'd acted earlier. He'd not really believed the fever would ever get to Ireland but it had. He'd believed the government would save them; a
pipe dream if there ever was one. Austin knew if he and Julie were going to
survive, they had to make it happen themselves.
The
only broadcast now running on TV demanded everyone stay indoors. 'Lock
yourself in and wait for help to arrive'. Sod that for a game of solders, he
thought, as he packed all he could into his Jeep. In the dead of night, with a
shotgun laid across his lap, they put a burning Dublin city in their rear-view
mirror.
***
The
city was a howling nightmare of sirens, screams, gunshots, and explosions. A
gang of rioters dived out of the way as Austin drove directly at them. Beside
him, Julie screamed as one bounced off the side of the jeep.
"I
want to go home, Austin," she sobbed, as he raced up through the gears.
"We
can't, it’s too late," he said and reached across to stroke
her hair. The shotgun bounced on his lap, the safety-catch off, as the car
ploughed through the debris strewn streets.
"I
don't care, I just want to go home. I want to go home NOW!" she yelled. She pulled her head away from him and began to open her door.
"Julie,
this is for the best," he said, grabbing her arm and yanking her back in, all the while trying to keep the Jeep on the road.
"I
want my Mom," she sobbed, her hand still gripping the door handle.
"We
can't go north, you know that. The fever is in the north already, we got to get
as far away from it as we can. You trust me, don't you?"
She
sniffed, "I trust you," she said and took her hand off the door handle.
Austin watched from the corner of his eye as a group of people danced wildly around a blazing supermarket. The world was going mad. He pushed the accelerator a little harder, wanting, needing, to be out of this city. By the time dawn came, they were rolling across back roads bordered by high green hedgerows. On the radio, presenters continued to hold out the accepted line of, 'stay home, talk to no one'.
Julie
tried to phone her parents, but couldn't get through. In the end, she tried
Skyping them, and by some miracle, a fuzzy image of her mother appeared on screen.
At the sight of her, Julie burst into tears.
"Mom,
Mom, can you hear me?" she balled.
“I
can, sweetheart. Are you all right?"
"We're
fine, Mom. We're coming to get you, tomorrow or the day after." Julie said.
"Don't,
Julie. The TV said we should stay home." On screen, Julies Mom worried at
the corner of her cardigan before she said, "I think your father's sick.
I haven't been able to wake him all day."
"Oh
God!" said Julie, burying her head in her hands. Austin turned the laptop
toward him and asked, "Mrs Ryan, how are you coping?"
"I'll
be fine, Austin. I phoned the emergency number a while ago and they said help is
on the way. You must promise to keep Julie away from here. Keep her safe."
"I
will, Mrs Ryan, I'll take..." just then, the doorbell in Julie’s parents’
house rung.
"It
must be the doctor," said Mrs Ryan, jumping to her feet leaving the Skype
connection running.
Austin
could hear voices in the corridor. Mrs Ryan was telling someone where her
husband was, and about his symptoms. The other voice was muffled. The voices
faded, as if they had gone up stairs. A couple of minutes later, there were
three short blasts of automatic gunfire, then silence. Austin heard footsteps
coming down the stairs. In the corner of the screen Austin spotted a
figure in a chemical suit sloshing liquid around the house from a drum. Slung across his back was an evil looking gun, stubby but deadly.
The back of another person appeared close to the computer. He was also throwing
liquid on the furniture and the curtains. He pulled an oven lighter from a
pouch in his suit. It was strange seeing a harmless kitchen implement in the man's hands. He ignited the curtains, then turned to leave but he noticed the computer open on the table. He calmly walked closer until his mask filled the picture. With dead eyes, the man closed the laptop cover and the
picture went black. The car was filled with screaming as Julie clawed at her eyes.
Austin
crushed three sleeping tablets into a bottle of water and made Julie drink it.
She was hysterical and he couldn't think of anything else to do for her. What
good were words when you just heard your parents being murdered? It didn't take
long for her cries of grief to subside, she slipped into a heavily drugged
sleep. What else could he do but push south, toward safety?
***
"It's
time to wake up baby," he said as he shook her. The Jeep was running but he
had pulled it over to the side of the road. Austin was already dressed in a
green coat. It once had a fur trim, but he'd cut it off to make it more military
looking. He helped dress Julie in a matching outfit, before pulling a double
layer of plastic gloves over her hands.
"What's
going on?" she asked, groggily.
"There
are people on the road ahead. I don't know who they are but it’s better if they
think we're solders. They’ll be less likely to try and mess with us."
Julie was limp from the effect of the sleeping tablet he'd made her take and put up no resistance
as he slipped a gas-mask over her face. He settled back behind the wheel
and checked the safety was still off the gun, then he moved the jeep forward. On
the road ahead, a car was on its side, its front wheels deep in the ditch. There
were two people on the ground beside it. Austin pulled the Jeep to a stop fifty
yards short of them and got out. He put the shotgun to his shoulder and aimed
it in their direction.
"Clear
the road!" he yelled; his words sounded extra loud as they bounced back at
him from the inside of his gas mask.
"Thank
God you're here. We need help," said the man, and he struggled to lift the
woman into his arms.
"Stay
back," said Austin, changing his stance to absorb the recoil if he had to
fire. The man paused, seeming to consider the situation he was in, but moved
forward in spite of it.
"She
needs to get to hospital," said the man, stepping forward. The woman in
his arms was drenched in sweat and sores were visible around her eyes.
"We
can’t help you! STAY BACK," cried Austin, slipping his finger inside
the trigger guard.
"I
don't care, you’re going to help us," said the man and he rushed forward.
Austin didn't know he'd pulled the trigger until the man was thrown backward.
The woman landed on top of him and Austin could see blood staining the man’s
shoulder. He looked down at the smoking gun in his shaking hands and couldn't
believe he’d just shot someone.
"I'm
sorry," he called to the man and got back behind the wheel.
There was just enough room to pass the crashed car now that the couple had moved away from it. He stole a
glance at the bleeding man in the rear-view mirror and felt sick to his stomach. They
were as good as dead and he knew it. He was a murder now. Nothing would ever
be the same again.
***
"Did
you kill him?" Julie asked, her voice still half-drunk with sleep.
“No,
but if I let him stop us, we were going to die. She had the fever.”
"You're
like them, the ones that killed my mother," she said, her voice slurred and
distant.
"I'm
not like them, and I didn't kill him, I just nicked him," he lied, not
believing the words himself.
“Promise
me that you won’t hurt anyone else,” she said.
“Ok,
I promise. I won’t hurt anyone else,” he said, it was an easy promise to make.
He didn’t want to hurt anyone either. Austin slowed the jeep, keeping a steady
pace. They avoided checkpoints by sticking to the smallest country lanes. The
miles continued to pass under the wheels, always south, toward safety. Night
came in on them fast and the petrol needle was resting on empty. If they
didn't find fuel soon they'd never reach Kerry.
“We
need to get some petrol,” he said to her, as the warning light appeared on the
dashboard.
“There
hasn't been a petrol station for miles,” she said. Even if they did find one,
there was no way he would just walk up and ask for a fill. It would be too
dangerous. Everyone would be looking for fuel or protecting it savagely. But
filling stations were not the only places to look. He could see a farmhouse
over the hedge up ahead. Farmers always had fuel tanks for machines. He slowed
down to take the turn into the gate.
“What
are you doing?” she asked, and sat straighter in her seat.
“What
I have to,” he said and the Jeep slowly bumped up the rough lane. The farm
stood at the base of a gentle hill. He beeped the horn a couple of times as he
neared the building. Julie looked shocked, after all the effort they had made
to stay hidden, he was making sure everyone for miles heard them.
"What
are you doing?" she asked, bewildered and dismayed.
“It’s
like this, in that house could be a farmer. Farmers have guns. If he thinks we
are trying to sneak up on him, he's more likely to shoot,” he said, as he
parked the Jeep in the middle of the farmyard.
“Wait
here. Keep the door locked,” he said and slid the shotgun under the sleeping
bag on the back seat. He was taking a huge risk but he knew it was one he had
to take.
“Hello?
Hello?” he called, as he walked towards the house with his hands held high.
There was movement behind kitchen window. Austin decided he was going to have
to take a chance. He took off his gas mask. He waved and smiled toward the
window.
“Hello
in there. We’re from the red-cross. We're delivering supplies to people in the
area. Do you need anything? Tinned food, bottled water, medicine?” Austin
continued to smile as he moved no closer to the house. A woman’s face appeared
at the window. She was pale and frightened.
“Show
me your identification,” she shouted. Austin flipped open his wallet which had
his work ID in a clear pocket. He held it up, but stayed back so the woman
wouldn't be able to read it properly.
“Look,
if you’re ok for everything, we better get moving. It will be dark soon,” said
Austin with a smile and he turned to go.
“Wait,”
called the woman, she vanished from the window. The back door opened and she
stepped outside. She was middle-aged and wore an apron with flour on it. In her
hand she carried a nasty looking slash hook. It seemed foreign in her dough
covered hands.
Austin
raised his hands, his palms facing the woman. “Wait where you are please, Madam.
There are some questions I'm supposed to ask, before we can give you assistance."
The
woman thought for a second, then said, "Go on."
"Are
you, or any of your family, sick?”
“No.”
“Has
anyone been to the farm in the last two days?”
“No.”
“How
many are in your family?”
“Four.
Myself, my husband, and two boys.”
“Has
everyone remained inside the building since the emergency began?”
“Yes...no,”
said the woman. “My husband, and eldest son, went to get some help four days
ago and have not come back, yet.” Austin noticed the woman lower the slash hook
a little. She so wanted to believe that he was here to help. He had to reassure
her.
“I'm
sure they’re fine, Missus. Lots of people have been coming in from the country.
Most are in shelters right now, we couldn’t let them go wandering around. They
might get infected. What’s his name?” Austin asked taking out his mobile phone.
“Sean
Kelly,” the woman said, as Austin dialed a number.
“And
your son?”
“Paul
Kelly,” He raised the phone to his ear and heard the beeping of an unconnected
line. “This is unit 61, checking in. We’re in south Tipperary, outside Latan.
We have two missing civilians, Sean Kelly, adult male and Paul Kelly, age…”
Austin looked at the woman.
“He’s
fourteen,” she said, the hope dripping from her words.
“Fourteen,”
Austin said, then grew quiet. He nodded, said Hum a few times, and then
pretended to wait. He covered the mouthpiece with his hand and told the lady,
“They're checking the computer.” Austin gave it a little over a minute before
saying, “I’m still here.” He allowed more time to go by before saying, “That's
great, we should be back at base in an hour. Ok, thanks.”
Austin
closed the phone, cutting off the beeping. “Your husband and son are fine. They’re
in the red-cross camp, in Tipperary town.”
The
woman was delighted. She lowered the slash hook and said, “Thank the Lord.”
“We'll
leave you an emergency hamper. It has some medication, and tinned provisions.
It will get you through the next few days. It’s in the back,” he said, walking
toward the back door of the Jeep. He motioned for Julie to open up and heard
the locks click. The farmer’s wife laid the slash hook against the wall and followed
Austin. He opened the back door, pulled out the shotgun. Turning quickly with the gun in his hands she stopped mid step.
“Do
what I say and everything will be fine. I don’t want to hurt you, but believe
me, I will. Back up to the house,” he said. The
woman did, keeping her hands in the air, her face was even whiter than it had been. Austin
heard the door of the Jeep open behind him and Julie came running.
“What
are you doing? You promised not to hurt anyone else,” she accused him loudly.
Austin could see the woman take in what Julie said. Those few words were worth
all the threats he could make. The woman faltered slightly as she neared the
slash hook.
“Don’t
even think about it,” he warned.
Inside
the kitchen, a young boy stood near the kitchen window. He'd watched the whole
episode unfold. He looked as frightened as his mother and ran to her, wrapping
his arms around her waist.
Austin
pointed to a chair with the gun, and said, “Sit.”
The
old farm house was as solid as a fort, the walls must have been three feet
thick. The kitchen was an arsenal of sharp knives and makeshift bludgeons.
There was a small door under the stairs. Austin opened it and found it
windowless, with nothing more dangerous than a tin of baked beans. This would
have to do. He moved back and pointed inside with the barrel of the gun.
“Both
of you in here, Please.” Just because you were holding someone at gunpoint was
no reason to be rude. The woman hurried into the pantry, pushing the crying boy
ahead of her.
“Hand
over your phone,” Austin said, holding out his hand.
“I
don’t have one,” said the woman a little too quickly. Austin had a feeling she
was lying.
“Hand
it over!” he yelled, and shouldered the gun. The woman yanked the phone out of her
apron and threw it at him, trying to shield the boy. He was about to shut
them in when he paused for a second, then asked, “Has he got a phone?”
For
an instant, the tables were turned, the woman looked furious as she barked,
“No! Of course not.”
“Fair
enough, sorry,” he apologised and closed the door. He wedged one of the kitchen
chairs under the handle. Julie had watched the whole thing silently but now
that they were alone, she gave him a filthy look.
“What?”
he asked. “Did you think she was just going to let us help ourselves? Wake up
for God sake, Julie. The world is different now. If we’re going to survive, we
have to change with it.”
“You
promised not to hurt anyone, only a few hours ago.”
“And
I haven’t,” he said, storming past her to search the sheds for petrol.
***
The
farm proved to be an Aladdin’s cave of useful stuff. He found gallons of liquid
that smelled like petrol and the Jeep ran just fine on it. He also found some
tools that would come in useful, plastic sheeting and a few large milking
buckets. He loaded it all in the jeep. Then he found a whole shed full of vegetables.
“Jackpot,”
he said. "That’s dinner sorted for a while.” He packed as may potatoes,
turnips, onions and carrots, into the Jeep as he could. The night was pitch
black by the time he was done. He hadn’t seen Julie since he stormed out of the
kitchen. He hoped she hadn’t released the woman under the stairs.
He
opened the kitchen door, cautiously. He half expected to have his own gun
shoved into his face, but he didn’t. July was sitting at the table, glaring at
him. The chair was still wedged against the door of the pantry, and the gun lay
where he left it on the table.
“We
better stay the night; our lights might attract attention. We'll get going at
dawn," he said, stripping his plastic gloves off. He knew she was mad at
him, and that he should apologise, but he was mad at her too. Couldn’t she
realise that he was doing all this for her, to keep her safe? Why should he
have to apologise for doing his best? As he washed his hands, she came up
behind him and touched his shoulder. It was all she needed to do.
“Can
we let them out?” she asked, keeping her voice low so the people in the cupboard
wouldn’t hear. Austin nodded. He was going to do that, anyway. He put on some
fresh gloves and put all the kitchen knives into a plastic bag and hid them in
a shed outside. To make Julie happy, he’d taken the shells out of the gun, but
insisted on keeping it with him.
When
everything was ready, he pulled the chair away from the pantry door. Julie had
a fire was burning in the hearth and it threw a warming glow into the dark
little press.
“You
can come out now,” he said, standing back. Julie was warming up spaghetti hoops
in a pan over the fire.
“What
do you want with us,” asked the woman, not coming out of the pantry.
“Nothing,
and that is the truth,” he said. “We needed some petrol and didn't think you'd
just give it to us. We took some potatoes as well, I hope you don’t mind.”
The
woman didn't move. Julie came forward and said, “We’re not bad people. You must
be hungry, how about some spaghetti hoops,” she said to the boy.
Over
plates of food, Julie and Austin told the woman what they had seen on the
streets, and what had happened to Julie’s parents. The woman didn't believe
everything they said. She was convinced the government wouldn't do such things.
The questions of what had happened to her husband, and son, soon bubbled up
again. This time Austin could give her no answer. Silence descended on the
group as the fire crackled gaily in the corner.
“My
mother had a cure for fever. Do you want to know what it was?” the farmer’s
wife asked.
“Sure,”
said Julie, with a smile.
“Get
an old pair of socks. Soak them in equal parts apple-cider-vinegar and ice cold
spring water. Wring them out until they are damp, then put them on the person’s
feet. You need to change them before they dry out. Keep doing this until they
feel better.”
“That
could come in handy. I'll remember that,” said Julie, with just the hint of a
smile.
“It
has to be well-water, not tap-water,” said the woman, letting the familiar
sharing of knowledge ease this strange situation, but then she started to look
embarrassed. “You never know, there might be something in it.” Austin was not
so sure that damp socks would help, but he kept his mouth shut.
In
the morning Austin returned the woman’s phone, and apologised again for scaring
her, and her son.
“Where
are you heading?” the woman asked.
“Kerry.
Austin is from Ballinskelligs,” said Julie.
“Into
the west,” said the woman, it was a line from a movie.
“As
far west as we can get,” agreed Austin. He made Julie change their gloves
before getting into the Jeep. The final leg of their journey had begun.
***
A
few hours later, they caught their first glimpse of the wild Atlantic Ocean.
They followed the coast south. Julie was taken by surprise when Austin turned
off the road a few miles short of Ballinskelligs. He drove along a sand humped
road which ended in a little car park. Off to the left was a shed, perched high
above the beach.
“Why
are we stopping here, I thought we were going to your father’s house?”
He
stopped the engine. It was time to come clean about the final part of his plan.
“I've
been thinking hard about this, Julie. Ireland could have survived if we kept
the virus out. But we didn’t. Now the fever is here, it will rip through the
place and nobody can stop it. Nowhere is safe anymore.”
“So,
what was the point in coming all the way down here?” she asked.
He
pointed out the windscreen at the jagged islands sitting off the coast, “There.
It’s our only hope.”
“You've
got to be joking,” she said.
“No.
I'm serious,” he said. “Skellig Michael has only one landing point, It’s easily
defended, there are old monks huts already built there, and it is surrounded by
fish. Three months…six tops, then we can come back.”
“How
the hell are we going to get all the way out there?”
“There’s
a boat in that shed. Everything is ready to go. Between the two of us we
can manage it.”
“You
must be mad,” she said, and after a minute she added, “I must be mad too.”
They
pried open the boathouse and inside they found an inshore lifeboat, fuelled up
and ready to go. The boat could take six men, so there was plenty of room for
all their equipment. When Austin backed the boat into the water, Julie was
sitting at the helm. The trailer vanished under the waves and the boat floated
clear. Austin gave Julie the thumbs up and she pressed the starter button. The
outboard motor roared to life. Austin pulled himself aboard and moved down to
take over the steering. The boat bobbed, twisting in the wind. A breaking wave
caught them side-on, nearly capsizing them. He engaged the engine and eased out
the throttle. The boat leapt forward, easily cutting through the waves.
Julie
glowed with nervous excitement as the boat bumped over the waves, sending curtains
of spray into the air. The island grew in size, rising out of the depths like a
huge, grey, shark tooth. In twenty minutes, they were under the towering
cliffs. Austin found the pebble beach in the lee of the island and drove the
boat on it at a good head of speed. They came to a juddering halt, but nothing
seemed to shatter.
For
the rest of the day, they climbed the steep steps, hauling supplies to the
little stone huts, monks had used for shelter hundreds of years ago. Austin did
most of the work, Julie tried, but it was hard going. She got more fatigued
with each trip and in the end, he insisted she stay and set up camp. He made
the last trips alone.
When
the boat was empty, he removed the heavy engine and hid it in a crevice high
above the wave-line. The boat, now empty, was easy to haul out of the water. He
tied it off with rope, to make sure it wasn't washed away by the waves. He
mounted the steps and began his last climb to the top of the island. He
wondered to himself if he would ever make the trip back to the mainland, and if
he did, what would he find when he got there?
That
evening, Austin got a tent up in the lee of a rocky outcrop. They didn't have
the energy to start a meal, so they ate a few bars of chocolate and fell into
an exhausted sleep. Even though the weather was fair, the wind whipped the tent
constantly, waking Austin several times during the night.
The
next day, Austin made the big piece of plastic into a rain collector that would
catch them enough fresh water to survive. The first few days passed quickly on
the island, although far from comfortable, it provided them with their first
feeling of security in a long time. Julie cooked meals on a small camp stove,
but the gas soon ran out. As there was nothing to burn, most things were eaten
raw. Austin managed to catch some fish, but not as many as he would have liked.
Twice, boats came close to the island, but none tried to land.
The
night the storm hit started like any other. The wind started to really pick up
in the afternoon. By the time the light was fading, their tent was ripped
beyond use, and fluttered away in the gale. They spent that night huddled in
one of the monk’s huts. The next morning, Austin woke early and went to check
the damage. When he got back to the hut, Julie was still sleeping.
"It's
not that bad," he said, but she didn't stir.
“Julie,”
he said, giving her a little shake. She turned toward him and her hair was wet
with sweat and her face flushed bright red. She was hot to touch.
“Water,”
she croaked. Austin's hands shook as he opened the water container and held it
to her lips. She emptied the bottle without stopping to take a breath. It can’t
be the fever he assured himself, he’d taken every possible precaution. No
matter what he told himself, there was no denying what his eyes were seeing. He
rested Julies head on his lap and stroked her hair. She soon fell into an
abnormally deep sleep and heat radiated off her as if she were on fire. The
only time he moved that whole day was to get more water for her, not that there
was enough water on the island to quench her thirst.
First
light the following day shone on the first of her blisters. Now, he knew, all
hope was gone. She woke and looked in his eyes, tears began to mingle with
sweat covering her skin.
"It
hurts," she said, and began to cry. Austin held her close to him and cried
along with her. He rocked her like a baby until she slept. How could he watch
her go through all of this if there was no hope of surviving? How could he do
it to her? He pushed himself upright and took the shotgun in his hand and
squinted through the tears. He held the sight an inch from the love of his life
but nothing could make him pull the trigger. When she needed him most, he
failed her.
Another
storm hit the island as Julie began to struggle to breath. The wind howled as
she got worse, and finally, trashed in convulsion. Her body arched, then
collapsed in on itself. The thing that made her Julie vanished. She was gone.
He
shook her, screamed at her to wake one last time. Insane with despair he lifted
her still warm body into his arms and ran into the maelstrom. He howled at the
heavens but the wind whipped her name from his lips. Lightening cracked,
stabbing the foaming waves, hundreds of feet below.
He
stood on the edge of the cliff. He knew no tombstone could do Julie justice, no
pitiful grave would embrace her delicate skin. Only the endless expanse of the
Atlantic could ever contain the love he felt for her. Austin kissed her lips
one last time, and said, “Time to go, my love.”