The Legacy
be her rules that governed everyone around her and she missed that.
‘I just wondered . . .’ The man frowned, looked uncomfortable.
‘Wondered what?’ Margaret stared at him insolently.
He took a deep breath. ‘What it’s like,’ he said quietly. ‘To die. To know you’re going to die.’
The question shocked Margaret, silenced her for a minute or two. No one ever mentioned death, not even here in prison. The word was skated over, euphemisms used in its place as though the very word could contaminate.
‘It makes me sick with fear,’ she said eventual y, shooting a glance at the guard.
She was beyond lies, beyond any pretence. ‘Is that what you want to hear? I hate myself, I hate what I have done. And yet I fear the end. I fear nothingness.’
The man nodded uncomfortably. ‘They say,’ he said, looking down, ‘they say that people are dying. Get ing il .’
Margaret’s eyes narrowed. ‘And who are they? Fanatics? No one dies. You know that.’
She had heard the rumours, of course. As much as she tried to ignore the other prisoners she stil brushed up against them on occasion, in the bathroom, on the corridor. But she believed none of it.
‘Authorities say Longevity was contaminated by the Underground. Say they made people il . But no one’s come back yet. Not one of the il . My next-door neighbour –she’s never come back.’
Margaret looked at him careful y. The Underground. Terrorists. Evil men. But evil men who had kept her son alive and were now poisoning Legals. Right and wrong had ceased to have meaning, she realised. Everything had shifted. She took a deep breath. ‘Your name,’ she said. ‘I don’t know your name.’
‘John,’ the man said.
‘Wel , John,’ Margaret said, ‘my grandfather used to tel me that the only people who fear death are the ones who haven’t lived.’ She surprised herself with the statement; she’d forgot en it until now.
‘And you have? Lived, I mean.’ he asked.
Margaret laughed darkly. ‘No,’ she said. ‘I haven’t lived. And that is my torment.
That is my pain.’
She sighed and turned to her food as the door shut with a loud clunk. It was the usual vile slop, enough to keep her going but no more, and she ate it unenthusiastical y. She put the bowl on the floor then leant back on her bed, al owing her eyes to close momentarily.
The rap on the door surprised her – an hour couldn’t have passed, could it? She looked at her food suspiciously, looked around the room as though she might find a clue somewhere. Perhaps she had fal en asleep. Perhaps . . .
‘Yes?’ she asked.
The door opened slowly. It was John again. ‘You’re here already?’ she asked.
He looked down at the bowl, then back at her. ‘You’ve got a visitor.’
Margaret looked up in shock. ‘A visitor?’ She had not had one visitor in al the time she’d been in prison.
‘That’s right.’
‘Yes, yes, I . . . Just a moment. Just one moment, please.’
It’s him. It’s Peter. He’s come.
No. Pul yourself together, woman. It’s not him. It wil never be him.
Desperately Margaret ran her hands over her white hair, looked down at her frail body, smoothing down her overal . Then she held out her shaking hands to be chained together and, trembling with anticipation, wobbling on frail legs, fol owed the guard down the corridor.
Anna watched in silence as Peter tried to fold a jumper. He made three at empts but each time the sleeves fel away as soon as he picked it up. She didn’t step in to help and eventual y he gave up, stuffing it untidily into his suitcase. He looked up and met her eyes.
‘A few days,’ he said again, as though it made a difference. ‘One week max. You’l hardly notice I’m gone.’
Anna stayed mute; she knew her eyes spoke for her, knew that Peter could read her thoughts, that speaking them out loud wouldn’t help.
‘You were right about staying here,’ he continued, adding trousers, socks and T-shirts to the heap inside his suitcase. ‘It’s safer, I know that. So me going on my own makes sense. This way I can just find out what’s going on and be back in no time.’
He looked down again as he spoke and Anna knew why. Guilt was seeping out of his pores. She sat down on the bed. She could stop him if she real y wanted to –she knew that. But for how long? How long could she live around those pained eyes, the restlessness, the voice ful of reproach? Yet she was angry with him for needing to go, for having any
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