Marion was aware of severe pain in her legs and arms and
a dull ache in her head. She tried to move her arms and found there was
no space to move them in. She couldn’t see anything. She was aware
of a dusty, earthy smell and the voices of children calling to her.
“Lady Marion,” they called. “Lady Marion.
Are you alive? Please don’t be dead.”
“I’m alive,” she answered. “What
happened?”
For a moment or two as she regained consciousness she
couldn’t remember. Then it all came back with horrible clarity:
the explosion, the shockwave, the window shattering, the floor giving
way.
“We’re trapped under the school?”
“Yes, Lady Marion,” said a voice.
“How many are trapped here?” she asked. “Who
is it? Whose hand can I feel?”
“It’s me, Callim,” said a boy’s
voice. “And Rowetta is here. And Lorris and Genessa. But I don’t
know where any of the others are. They didn’t fall down here with
us.”
“They must be trapped in the classroom, still,”
she said. “Can you hear anyone? Can you feel them telepathically?”
“No,” Callim said. Then.... “Yes, I
can feel Marla. And Danis. And...”
Callim named all of the children, one by one. They were
all frightened, he said. But they were alive.
“They’re under the tables,” he added.
“Where you told them to go, Lady Marion. But they can’t get
out.”
“Neither can we,” Rowetta said. It was a simple
statement of fact. She wasn’t frightened. She was bruised and battered
but not badly hurt. All her friends were alive. Her teacher was with her.
She knew there was nothing to worry about.
Marion was less sure. Her legs hurt a lot. So did her
left arm. She thought they were broken.
“I think I might need help very soon,” she
said. “Can you hear anyone else? Is there anyone outside?”
“I don’t know,” Callim admitted. “It’s
all fuzzy.”
No wonder, Marion thought. The whole school had collapsed.
She knew that the room above the infant classroom was used as a storeroom
for unused chairs and desks and books. Nobody would have been hurt when
it collapsed in onto the infant class. But what about the rest of the
building? There were another hundred students aged up to twenty years,
and their teachers. There was Madam Malcuss, the headmistress, whose room
was near the refectory. Were they all right?
“I can’t thought project any further,”
Callim told her. “I just know about all of our class.”
“It’s all right,” Marion assured him.
“That was clever enough. Oh, dear. My legs really hurt.”
She tried not to groan when the pain intensified. She
didn’t want to worry the children. But she forgot they were psychic.
They already knew she was hurting.
“It will be all right,” Genessa told her,
squeezing her hand. “People will come for us.”
“Yes, I’m sure they will. But...”
She sighed and felt herself passing out again from the
pain. She heard the voices of the children as if from a distance. But
she thought she heard Kristoph’s voice much closer. He told her
to be brave.
“I’ll try,” she murmured before it all
went black again.
Kristoph looked at the devastated school unhappily. Of
all the buildings in the whole town it had borne the brunt of the shockwave.
It was the only one that had completely collapsed. The others had lost
roofs or collapsed walls. But the school was unrecognisable as a building.
“Do we know if anyone is alive?” he asked.
His mind slipped back to the time when he and Marion had gone to New York
and helped in the desperate task of rescuing people trapped in the aftermath
of that terrible crime wrought upon that city. Marion didn’t see
the worst of it. She was in the centre where the walking wounded and the
exhausted shifts of rescue workers were brought. She didn’t see
the shredded, broken bodies and worse. He did, and the thought of sifting
through the rubble of this building, searching for Marion and her children
broke his hearts.
“We’re trying, Excellency,” replied
one of the men who were already beginning the task.
“Don’t call me that. Not right now,”
he said. “I’m not the President of anywhere while people are
dying. Show me where to start digging.”
He looked at his robe. He had divested himself of most
of the trappings of the Presidency, but he was still wearing spun gold
and silk.
“Get me some practical clothes and show me where
to dig,” he amended.
Marion woke again to the children calling out her name.
“I’m sorry,” she said. “I’m
in a terrible lot of pain and I just can’t...”
“Stay with us,” Lorris told her. “We’re
scared without you.”
“I’ll try. But I can’t help it... I
can’t stay awake...”
“Read to us,” Genessa suggested. “It
will help us all.” Marion felt something pressed into her hand.
It felt like the book she had been reading before the disaster. She had
been clinging to it even as they fell into the blackness.
“I can’t see the pages,” she said. “There
isn’t enough light.”
“We can see without the light,” Lorris told
her. Then she felt a small hand touch the book, opening the pages. At
the same time another small hand touched her aching forehead. She saw
an image of the page in front of her eyes. She concentrated on it and
the headache seemed less acute. She supposed it was because she was thinking
about something else.
“Mary made the long voyage to England under
the care of an officer's wife, who was taking her children to leave
them in a boarding-school. She was very much absorbed in her own little
boy and girl, and was rather glad to hand the child over to the woman
Mr. Archibald Craven sent to meet her, in London. The woman was his
housekeeper at Misselthwaite Manor, and her name was Mrs. Medlock.
She was a stout woman, with very red cheeks and sharp black eyes.
She wore a very purple dress, a black silk mantle with jet fringe
on it and a black bonnet with purple velvet flowers which stuck up
and trembled when she moved her head. Mary did not like her at all,
but as she very seldom liked people there was nothing remarkable in
that; besides which it was very evident Mrs. Medlock did not think
much of her.”
In her own mind’s eye she pictured a child on an
old fashioned steam ship travelling by sea, then a railway station in
London with steam trains waiting at the platform. She knew her students
could see that, too, even though they knew nothing about ships or trains
except from the stories she read to them. They forgot that they were in
a cramped, dark place and didn’t know when anyone might come to
get them out.
Marion almost forgot, too. She was aware of the words
of the story and the soft breathing of the children as they lay near to
her and listened to her reading.
Kristoph certainly didn’t look presidential now.
He was covered in dust just like everyone else who was painstakingly removing
pieces of broken plaster and wood, metal and glass to reach the students
and teachers trapped in the wrecked building. Many of the other men were
parents of the children. They had as much at stake as he did. They grieved
with all of their hearts as they searched.
They had managed to find dozens of students alive beneath
the debris. There was that much to be said for the Gallifreyan constitution.
Even their young could withstand difficulties that would have defeated
lesser species. There were a few, though, for whom there was no hope.
Kristoph felt helpless to comfort the mother and father of a senior boy
who was already dead of suffocation by the time they reached the remains
of his classroom. Their grief amidst the relief of those whose children
were alive was a double tragedy.
Two of the teachers were dead, too. Kristoph helped make
their bodies decent and said the closest thing to a Gallifreyan prayer
over them before they were taken away. He turned to try to say something
comforting to Madam Malcuss, the headmistress of the school, who was frantically
trying to reconcile the school register with the names of those found
and those still missing.
Then a cry went up. Somebody had reached the infant classroom.
He turned and ran. So did Madam Malcuss. They got there in time to see
a small, dust covered body lifted from the rubble. Kristoph heard Madam
Malcuss make a soft sobbing noise. His own hearts sank as he saw the child
so very still. Then he saw him move. He ran to him and wiped the dust
from his eyes.
“Jaris Gillon,” he said. “That’s
your name, isn’t it, child? You’re one of my wife’s
little charges. Is she there? Is Lady Marion all right?”
“She’s reading,” the boy said. “She’s
reading the story to us.”
“She’s what?” Kristoph hugged the child.
He had given him the news he had so wanted to hear, even if it did seem
a little cryptic. Then he helped pull out two more boys, Brinna and Dúle,
and a girl called Marla. They all said the same. Marion was reading.
He closed his eyes and let his mind reach out. He was
surprised when he heard the words all of the children were listening to.
They were the last thing he expected to hear in this place.
“It was the sweetest, most mysterious-looking
place any one could imagine. The high walls which shut it in were
covered with the leafless stems of climbing roses which were so thick
that they were matted together. Mary Lennox knew they were roses because
she had seen a great many roses in India. All the ground was covered
with grass of a wintry brown and out of it grew clumps of bushes which
were surely rose bushes if they were alive. There were numbers of
standard roses which had so spread their branches that they were like
little trees. There were other trees in the garden, and one of the
things which made the place look strangest and loveliest was that
climbing roses had run all over them and swung down long tendrils
which made light swaying curtains, and here and there they had caught
at each other or at a far-reaching branch and had crept from one tree
to another and made lovely bridges of themselves. There were neither
leaves nor roses on them now and Mary did not know whether they were
dead or alive, but their thin gray or brown branches and sprays looked
like a sort of hazy mantle spreading over everything, walls, and trees,
and even brown grass, where they had fallen from their fastenings
and run along the ground. It was this hazy tangle from tree to tree
which made it all look so mysterious. Mary had thought it must be
different from other gardens which had not been left all by themselves
so long; and indeed it was different from any other place she had
ever seen in her life.”
He opened his eyes. He realised he wasn’t listening
to the words telepathically now. He could hear them normally. The voice
was muffled and it echoed oddly. But it was Marion’s voice, reading
aloud the story she had planned to read to her students today.
“Stand back, Excellency,” he was told. “There’s
a deep hole where they fell. But we’ll have them out in a few minutes.”
He watched and waited as more children were brought up.
He hugged them all as joyfully as if they were his own children. He heard
Madam Malcuss say that all the infants were accounted for. He held onto
two of them as they all waited again.
Then Marion was lifted out of the hole. She was clearly
injured. Kristoph gasped as he saw the wide, bloody gash on her leg, and
it was obvious that one, if not both, were broken. She did her best not
to cry out in pain. As she was placed on a stretcher he noticed she was
still clinging to the book. He took it from her and closed the pages.
“I’ll look after it,” he promised as
he bent to kiss her cheek. “You look after yourself. They’re
going to take you to the hospital in Atlantica. I’ll be there very
soon. I have to go to the mine. It’s my duty to the men who were
killed there.”
“I’ll be all right,” Marion told him.
“You do what you have to do.”
She was sedated before she was placed into the hover ambulance.
She barely knew what was happening. But that was all right. She was alive.
She was hurt, but nothing she wouldn’t recover from. Later, when
she woke again in a warm hospital bed, he would be able to be by her side.
But first he had to go to the southern deltic mine.
|