Helen O’Neill
flat lemonade
“Stay Inside.” The
instruction was clear. But what the letter didn’t do was explain why or for how
long, so I discarded it with the other junk mail and reached across the kitchen
island to pour a large glass of Malbec. It had been a long day in the office and
I wriggled my grateful toes as I freed them from their stiletto confines. The
microwave purred in the background. Our cleaner was always chastising me for
wasting the expansive kitchen and I’m sure that part of the reason she left food
for me at the end of her shift, was to enjoy the pleasure of cooking in it. It
was an arrangement that suited us both and when David was travelling for
business, I was particularly grateful. I savoured the relaxing warmth of my
first mouthful of wine and booted up the laptop; America would be waking up
soon.
Finally satisfied
that the day’s work was complete, I headed to the living room and sank into the
leather sofa, flicking on the news. The images were compiled from clips recorded
on people’s phones, hastily edited together to provide a visual backdrop to a
message that elaborated on the letter I’d so easily ignored. The words were
repeated,
“Stay inside, lock
the doors and the quarantine evaluation team will be with you shortly.”
People were
fleeing in panic and the army was struggling to keep control. There were burning
buildings and looting. Roads were gridlocked and fights were breaking out on the
streets. The images were terrifying. It made it real. It made me
comply.
I reached for my
mobile and swiped for social media, only to find that it wouldn’t connect. I
tried calling David and, in the process, confirmed that the phone lines were
down too. I considered my choices and with the news still pumping out images of
mayhem, I did as I’d been instructed and calmly packed a bag of essentials,
leaving it by the front door that I checked to make sure it was secure. I poured
the last of the wine and watched the images increase in intensity until my eyes
closed and I slipped into sleep. I didn’t notice when the television and all the
lights in the house went off.
A week is a long
time to be in a house on your own. I’m reluctant to leave the sanctuary of the
master suite, but as the low, angry growl of my stomach contracting becomes more
persistent, I sit up and look over instinctively at the clock, its once familiar
red digits still truant. I’m fully clothed under the Egyptian cotton spread, my
jeans soft from days of wear and my sweater hood pulled up over lank hair. My
movements echo in the unnatural silence as I reluctantly pull the covers aside
and stand, finding that I am quite terrified of going downstairs; as if the
monsters are down there waiting for me.
In the stairwell I
no longer bother trying the light switch for my decent. At the bottom, I catch
my toe on the holdall and swear. The door is still locked from the inside with
the chain on and the bolt pulled across for protection, but whether it’s me
being protected from the world or the other way around, I’m not so sure.
In the kitchen,
all the cupboard has to offer is a bag of dried pasta and a sorry looking row of
tinned food. I choose a can at random. The label worn and the rim an aged
orange, and then I search the cutlery draw for an opener to defeat the lid.
After a struggle, my efforts are rewarded with bland beans in watery ketchup. I
pick up the same fork I’ve used every day and wiped clean after every meal. It
feels unnatural to eat from a tin and not fill the dishwasher when I’m done, but
the water stopped running on day two, so reusing a fork is the least of my
hygiene worries.
I try the taps
anyway and the pipes bang angrily at me. I regret not filling up pans, the bath.
I thought they would be here by now. I didn’t expect to have to ration food and
water. I don’t know what I did expect.
The fridge has a
strange smell. In the dark, it holds the last bottles of lemonade that will save
me from dehydration. I take one and carry it with me to the living room where I
sit crossed legged on the rug. I twist the cap and listen to the pathetic sound
of carbon escaping. The beans taste metallic as I place them individually into
my mouth washing them down with the flat lemonade. I eat slowly, and I
wait.
I can’t hear
anyone in the house next door. David and I used to complain about the children
as they rushed up and down the stairs or in circles around each other in the
garden. I find I miss it now. As I sit, the semi-dark becomes complete dark, so
I light a candle on the mantelpiece and watch as the flame flickers. It’s rose
scented and casts a comforting glow, but as the candle burns and marks the
passing of another day, I know the time for waiting is through. Tomorrow, I’ll
have to go outside.
I run my finger
along the edge of the shelf looking for a street map, collecting dust I hadn’t
realised was there and wiping it on my jeans. The collection of books is limited
to celebrity chiefs and assorted titles of unwanted gifts. We preferred digital
information but I’m sure I had an old map somewhere, one of those items that we
just hadn’t got around to throwing away.
When I find it,
its pages are difficult to navigate. I’ve become used to electronic applications
that only require the slightest intervention. I’m looking for inspiration, for a
sign telling me where will be safe, and as my eyes scan the pages it’s the
public buildings that seem the most sensible choice.
I’m feeling more
optimistic than I have in days; decision and activity have reinvigorated me.
Emptying out the contents of the holdall, I ridicule my earlier choices and kick
the pile to the side. I line the bottom of the bag with the remaining cans and
tuck the opener into the side pocket. I pack extra layers of clothes, warm
sensible ones rather than smart impractical ones. I leave the electronic devices
on the floor next to my make-up bag and replace them with the map and the last
of the candles along with a box of matches. I pause and pick up the frame
holding a picture of David and I on holiday last year and the realisation
strikes me that I may never see him again. I remove the frame and add the
picture to the bag; some things are too valuable to leave behind.
If I’m going
outside, I should get some rest. I tell myself I will sleep one last time in my
own bed, then, in the morning, I’ll change my clothes and make myself as
presentable as possible. I’d hate to be turned away from salvation. My mind is
racing with all the possibilities tomorrow might bring, playing out scenarios,
both good and bad. I don’t sleep well. As I drift in and out of consciousness my
mind wanders to places I don’t want to be.
I dream that
morning has arrived and I have my hand on the door as I work up the courage to
open it when there is a loud knock from the other side. I fumble with the lock
and pull the door open. There is a limousine waiting at the bottom of the
driveway, so I pick up my bag and make my way towards it. I climb inside and
David hands me a china cup filled with the sweetest tea I’ve ever tasted. The
radio is playing a song I don’t recognise, but I find myself tapping my fingers
to the calming beat.
Sitting up with
the stark realisation that the taping is not in the dream, but coming from the
window, my body floods with adrenalin and I rush over to pull back the drapes,
then immediately cower from the bright light that rushes into the room. My hands
shield my eyes and I peer through my fingers, not sure if I want to see what’s
on the other side. There is a drone hovering behind the glass and its electronic
eye is scanning me. I take the stairs in pairs, not wanting whoever sent the
drone to miss me and forgetting the holdall I’d so carefully prepared, I fall
onto the driveway.
Above the house is
a plastic dome. The drone hovers above my head and showers me with a fine mist
that smells of disinfectant and contrasts with the stale air. It lowers to face
me and I see my reflection, barely recognisable in its lens, then there is a
flash and it flies away leaving me in solitude once more.
I walk across the
brown lawn to the place where the dome touches the floor and I cup my hands to
its translucent covering. I can make out the shapes of vehicles and what I think
must be people on the other side, but it’s like trying to watch a film without
my glasses on. I walk the circumference
of the dome looking for a way out, for my rescue. When I reach the driveway, I
see an envelope on the ground and kneeling on the cold concrete I slip my finger
under its seal. It contains printed commands,
“Stay inside.
Successful quarantine confirmed. Evacuation imminent.” And beneath the formal
text a hand written sentence,
“Stay safe, love
David.”
And I know I am no
longer alone.
About the author
Helen is a short
story writer and aspiring novelist based in South East London. Her fiction has
been published in the UK and the USA and she has recently launched
findthewritingwell.com where she blogs. She definitely prefers her dystopia to
be fictional.
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