‘Still want to slit my throat?’
Marc jumped a little, then sighed and rested back in the chair. ‘It’s not over yet. I said I won’t kill you until it’s over.’
‘Define “over”.’
‘Yeah.’ Marc stood and stretched, his joints creaking. The desk he’d requisitioned in Secondary was piled with printouts, the laptop stood open, and the satphone was plugged in to recharge.
‘So when will you be ready to begin?’ Vic asked.
‘I have begun.’ Marc pointed at the printed sheets. ‘I understand about thirty per cent of that.’
Vic flicked through papers, read lines here and there, saw formulae, tables, and some words he had never heard of – some of the phrases were in English and yet alien to him. He touched the laptop’s pad and the screen lit up, revealing a dozen unread emails. He saw that they’d come in over the past few minutes.
‘All these people are trying to help?’ Vic said.
‘It’s going to take for ever,’ Marc said. ‘It’s daunting. It’s scary how much I don’t know. I told Holly, and she didn’t seem to accept that very well. And there’s one thing I haven’t told anyone. About Jayne and Mannan.’
‘What’s that?’ Vic asked.
‘I think they need to mate. Conceive. I think it’s their child that might provide the cure.’
‘But that’s . . .’ Vic said, aghast.
‘I know. Maybe years.’
‘I wasn’t even thinking timescale.’
‘You see my problem,’ Marc said.
‘Coldbrook won’t last,’ Vic said. ‘They’ll get in somehow. We’re taking a breather, but everyone in the garage is twitchy, listening to those things in the duct. Soon we’ll have to move again, and from then there’s only one way to go.’
‘I know that, too.’
Vic turned and looked at the blank screens, seeing himself and Marc reflected there. ‘Tomorrow,’ he said. ‘We’ll tell them all tomorrow.’
‘Yeah,’ Marc said. ‘Everyone deserves a day of hope.’
3
Jayne surfaced slowly, eyes still closed, and she knew that Sean was still in the room with her. She felt his influence; she felt safe.
‘Hey, you awake?’ he asked.
‘Yeah. How’d you know?’
‘You’ve stopped snoring.’
‘I do not snore.’
‘Damn right you do. I thought it was an alarm, or something. Been banging the air conditioning, trying to get it to shut up. Dogs for miles around—’
‘Way to labour a point,’ Jayne said, and opened her eyes. Sean was sitting across from her, leaning back in a chair with his feet on a small desk. The room had belonged to a guy called Jonah who wasn’t here any more, and the others seemed to hold him in high regard. There were books on every surface, and an old photograph of an attractive middle-aged woman on the desk. Sean had been careful not to disturb anything.
‘How long have I been asleep?’
‘Six hours. Since we got in, pretty much.’
‘You slept?’ she asked, but she knew the answer to that.
‘Couldn’t.’ He shrugged.
‘So what’d I miss?’
‘That woman Holly came to visit. That’s all. I think everyone’s just . . .’
‘Taking a breath,’ Jayne said.
‘Yeah. So how do you feel?’
‘Bit better.’ That was a lie. She didn’t feel better at all, but she found that she could move more easily than before, straightening her limbs, pushing herself upright so that she was leaning against the wall. Holly had given her some powerful painkillers, and she’d had a restful sleep. The light comas were more exhausting than staying awake through the pain.
‘So this Drake character,’ Sean said. ‘He’s sent two of his people back over. Through. Whatever. Sent them back to fetch the drugs that might help you.’
‘Marc is afraid that it’ll affect his experiments.’