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24-year-old Melodie is confined to a wheelchair with cerebral palsy, a heart defect, and a retinal disease that took her sight six years ago. Amid the dreary routine at the Mary-Le-Bow Center, Melodie eagerly anticipates the bi-monthly visit from her friend John, a famous musician unaware of Melodie's hidden romantic feelings for him. When a team of American scientists offer Melodie a chance at a new life by transplanting her brain into a spaceship, she knows it's time to find out the truth about John, and the truth about herself.
"To Kiss the Star" was nominated for a Nebula Award from the Science Fiction & Fantasy Writers of America in 2002.
According to Nebula and Hugo Award-winning Canadian science fiction writer Rob Sawyer,
I went to see "A Beautiful Mind," after its star Russell Crowe lost the Academy Award to Denzel Washington. On the way out of the theater, I said to my wife, "I haven't seen Denzel Washington's performance yet, but it must have been absolutely unbelievably fabulous to have beat out Crowe." Well, I feel the same way about "To Kiss the Star." It was up for the Nebula Award, but didn't win. I haven't read the work that did win yet, but, again, it must have been absolutely unbelievably fabulous to beat out "To Kiss the Star." This is a beautiful, poignant, moving story of a soaring mind trapped in a damaged body. Read it.
-Robert J. Sawyer
To Kiss the Star
Amy Sterling
Melodie kicked her heels restlessly against her wheelchair
footrests. At last he had come. The bare whiff of bitter smoke told her that
that John, her Friendly Visitor, had lit his usual pre-visit cigarette on the
Mary-Le-Bow Center patio.
How Mel loved the smoke. It reminded her of the bonfire her
younger brothers had set on a long-ago, lazy autumn afternoon while she watched
from the caned rocker on Mum’s porch. Before she had lost her sight.
The leaves, brown and yellow and orange, had fired up with a
crackle as the boys laughed madly, the smoke billowing skyward, nearly the same
color as the icy gray Midlands clouds.
John’s cigarettes, like the burning leaves. He had told her
name of his brand. An elegant name, vaguely exciting. Mel wouldn’t forget it,
because it was like his name: John. Her voiceboard was ready. She hit the up
arrow just as she heard his feet padding into the dayroom.
“John Player Special,” the voiceboard said.
“Aw, Mel, you caught me at it again.”
Mel laughed, honking like a lost gosling. Something was wet
on her chin. Drool, she supposed. John’s hand touched her chest, then something
soft and antiseptic-smelling wiped her face. Her bib.
The damn nurses had bibbed her, and she’d told them no bib,
please, because John was coming. Today was her Friendly Visit. Furious at the
nurses’ betrayal, she kicked at the floor with her feet, rolling her chair back
a few inches. John followed.
“You’ll get me to quit,” John said. “Just keep at me.”
“You’re too handsome to die young,” Mel pressed into the
voiceboard.
“Did your Mum call?” John asked.
Mel shook her head. More drool on her chin. “Don’t wipe me,”
she said through the droning voiceboard. No intonation, no fury, just the bland
voice with vaguely elongated vowels and clipped consonants, because that was
how it made words, from vowels and sounds put together, depending upon how she
rolled the smooth plastic ball controller and which of the four arrows she
pressed.
“You’re twenty-three, you don’t need your Mum’s permission.”
“Twenty-four,” Mel corrected. “I know,” she added, about the
permission.
“This is the chance of a lifetime, Mel. I thought you would
have done it by now.”
Mel nodded. John was right. She should be getting her
implants by now. It wasn’t every spastic, blind twenty-four year old cripple
who won the lottery to explore the stars. Her number, chosen for the chance to
be a probe controller for the ISA, sent light years away to Tau Ceti or Sirius
or wherever they needed to send her.
“I thought today might be our last visit, so I brought you
this. It’s nothing much.” John took her better hand, her left, and pressed
something into it. Mel felt a delicate chain and small hard cubes that she
rubbed between her fingers. A bracelet, with beads or stones, deliciously warm
from being in John’s pocket.
“For me?” Mel hadn’t expected a gift. Especially not
anything so personal, like a bracelet. Again, the wetness on her chin. Disgusting
spit! Damn rebellious mouth! She heard herself making noises, but she couldn’t
reach for the voiceboard just then, because John was fastening the bracelet
around her wrist.
“It’s a W-W-J-D bracelet,” he said. The cube-shaped beads
had cooled because Mel hadn’t any circulation in her hands. Cold hands, warm
heart, her Mum had always said. The bracelet was loose. Mel was afraid that it
would slip off as she jerked her arms around like a puppet, the way she did
sometimes.
“Wuh, wuh, wuh,” Mel said, with her mouth.
“What does it mean? Oh, sure — it means ‘what would Jesus
do?’”
“Thank you,” Mel said through the voiceboard. Why had she
thought it might be a real bracelet — that the beads might be pearls? Like
boyfriends and girlfriends gave each other. She didn’t believe at all in Jesus.
How could she, after the way she’d turned out? No God she would ever believe in
could let people turn out the way she had.
“I love it,” she said, glad that the voiceboard was so easy
to use for lies.
John steadied her wrist. Mel realized she’d been flailing
again. “After you go, we probably won’t see each other again. I mean, by the
time you get back —” He paused.
“You’ll be very old,” Mel said.
“I’ll probably be dead,” John said, laughing.
Mel changed the subject. “How’s your song doing?”
John didn’t say anything for a moment. “Oh, crackers, you
know. Fire it up.”
“Is that good or bad?”
“Good,” John said. “We’re doing the next one right now.”
“Viddy, too?”
“Viddy too. And the first thousand are special release. The
kiddies get Star Bars with every copy and the first fifty get a T-Shirt.”
“Tres Fab,” Mel said. “I wish I could see it,” she said. She’d
heard John’s music, but wanted so desperately to see the videos. John was a
viddy star musician. Played guitar and sitar. Hana, the morning nurse, had told
Mel that John was “a God . . . so totally fab.”
“Look, Mel,” John said. “Don’t worry about your Mum. Or your
brothers. Just go. If I had the chance, I’d take it in a heartbeat.”
Mel shook her head. “I know. You’re right,” she said. They
wouldn’t wait forever. She wasn’t the only one who could make the trip. There
had to be lots of . . . cripples. Waiting for the chance. Sitting in their
chairs and drooling, waiting for their number to come up, for ISA to pick them
and make them something like whole again. No. That wasn’t it. Not whole, but
something . . . different. Turn the whole stinking, spastic body off. Adapt the
brain which was functioning, discard the body that wasn’t, and shoot it off to
the stars. Live forever and go where no man could ever go. Not a whole one,
anyway. Small things like brains could go in hardened housings. Big things like
bodies couldn’t. Or shouldn’t.
“Mel, why on earth are you waiting?” John asked.
Because of you, John, Mel thought.
“I know it doesn’t hurt,” John said. “I saw a vid, all about
it. It’s like magic, how they put you in the probe.”
Mel flailed until she found John’s hand where it rested near
her leg. His warm fingers stroked her cold palm. “I’m afraid,” she told him,
even though that wasn’t true. She couldn’t possibly say the truth.
“That’s natural,” he said.
Her head began to roll around, then her chin fell on the
damp bib.
“I asked them if I would be able to see again,” she
continued. “They haven’t answered me.”
“I’m sure you’ll be able,” John said, squeezing her hand. “You’ll
have better senses than any normal person.”
“I guess that’s better than having the senses of an abnormal
person,” Mel said.
John laughed loudly. Mel sensed that his laughter was
forced. “That’s what I love about you,” he said. “You’ve got a smashing sense
of humor.”
Didn’t all cripples?
“Take me for a walk on the patio,” Mel said, folding her
hands in her lap. “You can smoke there. I don’t mind.” John was a very good
Friendly Visitor. He put his hand on her shoulder and guided her gently as they
went.
oOo
Mum brought sandwiches packed in a wicker basket. Mel
smelled the sandwiches — pressed liver and spirulina paste, she thought — and
also smelled the basket, hearing the crackle as Mum opened it. She’d taken Mel
out across the wide field, where the pollen made Mel sneeze, stopping when they
reached the small hillock in the middle. The sun burned the part on the top of
Mel’s head. She asked for a napkin. Sighing, Mum covered Mel’s hair and laid
out the food.
“Can you chew today, dear?” Mum asked.
Mel nodded. She seldom used the voiceboard with Mum. Mum
preferred it that way; she liked Mel to use the baby talk and the grunting
which had been all Mel could manage for most of her life.
“How are the boys?”
“Oh, fine. Jack’s got a new girlfriend. Peter’s still into
his electric trains.” Mum fed Mel a piece of the sandwich. She had been right: it
was liver sausage and stale-tasting spirulina paste.
“How about Davey?”
“Oh, the same,” Mum said. This meant that Davey hadn’t quit
using. Davey was two years younger than Mel. He was tall and athletic, but he’d
started in with drugs at the age of twelve and had never held a job for longer
than two weeks. Davey was Mum’s favorite.
Mum sat by Mel’s chair, spreading out her skirt with a
rustle of fabric. “Listen,” she said. “About your e-mail.”
Mel deliberately pushed some chewed sandwich paste out of
her mouth and made a choking noise. Mum got up, knees crackling, to wipe Mel’s
face.
“Dear, I don’t think you should do this. It’s horribly
dangerous. And you’ll never . . .”
“Never what?” Mel said through her voiceboard.
Mum roughly wiped the sandwich paste away, then stuffed
another piece in Mel’s mouth. “You know what I mean.”
“You mean that will be it once they do the implants and get
rid of my body.”
“Yes. Don’t be smart.”
“What does it matter, Mum? What good is my body now?”
“Dear, we’ve been over it. Don’t you think if they can send
a ship to another star, they might not find a cure for you? What if you do
this, and the next day they come up with an operation which would make you . .
.”
“Normal?” Mel said. “They can give me a prosthesis body now,
Mum. But where would the money come from?”
Mum was weeping. “Christ on His cross, Mel,” she said. “Why
do you always have to throw it in everyone’s face?”
Mel said nothing. She thought of John, the way he smelled. She
wanted to see his face, all fab, the way the nurse Hana described him. She
imagined herself normal, wearing a white seersucker dress, running across the
field with John, laughing. John’s hair was long — she had touched it. Hana had
told Mel it was dark brown and shone in the light. Soft, and a little bit
curly. Mel’s hair was thin and patchy, a muddy dark blond. It had gotten worse,
since she’d gone blind. Before, she had been able to comb it on her best days;
put ribbons and bows in it. Now, it was chopped off just below her ears, so it
wouldn’t fall in her face or get nasty with bits of food or drool. Practical,
the way things needed to be at the Mary-Le-Bow Center.
“I’m going to do it,” Mel said through the voiceboard, glad
of its impersonal drone.
“Mel!”
“Don’t argue, Mum.” Mel remembered what John had said, about
her being old enough. She wished she could have said it with his style, his
carefree flair.
Mum’s arms were around her. Mel’s face was pressed
uncomfortably between Mum’s breast and her bony shoulder. “I’ll never see you
again, luv. Not if they send you off on that ship.”
Straining to move her arm, Mel got one hand on the
voiceboard. “You never come unless there’s something wrong anyway,” she said,
knowing what it would do to Mum.
“Oh, Mel,” Mum sobbed. “How can you hurt me so?”
“John says I should go for it,” Mel said. The voiceboard
droned on. “I think I will,” she said, although she did not mean it. Going
would mean leaving John.
oOo
The ISA counseling specialist was an American. Mel supposed
that she should have expected that. The Americans had pioneered the technology
for the space probes. No normal bodies could survive the trip to other stars,
with the hard radiation and all the other myriad challenges. So, the essential
part of people — their brains — had been placed in hardened housings and
intimately connected to the probe itself. It was one way to do it. Not the only
way — just a way — to explore and discover ahead of the complex and costly
generation ships which would follow.
Because of the danger involved, condemned criminals were to
have been the initial probe controllers. But that hadn’t gone over. Why not
give people a chance who deserved it? That was the public outcry, about the
time Mel had gone blind. The ISA had decided that people like Mel should be
selected, not criminals.
If you were a registered applicant and your number came up
in the lottery, you had thirty days to decide. If you declined, your chance
went to someone else: another waiting cripple. You couldn’t be older than
twenty-five. You couldn’t be married, and couldn’t have any children. If you
were under legal age, your guardian had to give permission. Mel knew all this,
but it was repeated for her during her orientation. She didn’t know why she was
surprised when the ISA people came to the Mary-Le-Bow Center. She supposed it
was easier to bring the equipment and the specialists to the cripple, rather
than transferring her.
The ISA counseling specialist, who had a western twang which
Mel thought was very cowboy-like, told her how the implants worked.
“We put them into your cerebral cortex,” he said. “Bio-electrical
devices. We also implant controls into the main nerve centers which control
body function — cerebellum and pons and so-on. The probe will become your body.”
“I’ve never had very good control,” Mel said.
He chuckled. “This will be different,” he said. “After we
start the process, you’ll have two weeks to decide if you want out. In fact,
you can stop it at any point up until the time we —”
“Get rid of my body,” Mel said.
“Yeah,” the counselor said. “You got it.”
“Can you tell me something?” Mel asked.
“Anything. I’m here to answer all of your questions.”
“Before you put me in the . . .”
“Housing,” he said.
“I want to know if I’ll be able to see again. Is that part
before or after?”
“Oh,” he said, drawing in his breath, as if she’d surprised
him. “You could see some things, I think. You’ll have your visual cortex
connected and I suppose we could fix something up. I hadn’t thought about it
quite that way before. Not everyone we work with is blind.”
“Before the final step — will I be able to move?”
The counselor clicked his tongue. “Move? Well, you mean more
than you can right now? I’m afraid not. We’ll have to shut many functions down.
You may not be able to move at all.”
“My voiceboard?”
There was a pause. “Possibly. I can’t tell until we evaluate
you further. With your degree of motor impairment, it’s difficult to know. There
may be seizures. We are working with your brain, you know.”
“If I can’t use my voiceboard, how will I tell you to stop?”
The counselor touched her hand. He tapped the middle of her
palm with one finger.
“Twice a day until the final step, I’ll tap your hand once. You
move your fingers, if you want to go ahead. If I don’t feel anything, I’ll tap
twice. Like this.” She felt him tap two times. “If you move then, we’ll stop. Remove
the implants.”
“That’s good,” she said. “Is that it for today?”
The counselor patted her shoulder, impersonally. “If you’re
tired,” he said.
“No,” Mel said. “I’m not tired. But today is my Friendly
Visitor day. I’m expecting someone.”
“Oh,” the counselor said. “Well, that’s good. Who is she?”
“Him,” Mel said. “His name is John. He’s a musician.”
“Very good,” said the counselor. Then, he left.
Mel waited in the dayroom for an hour. No one came. Finally,
she wheeled to the door and pressed the call button. She guessed it had been
about ten minutes when a nurse finally showed up. It was Hana.
“Yes, luv?”
“Hana, I was waiting for John.”
“Oh, he’s not here?”
Mel was had to force her exhausted, trembling hands over the
voiceboard. “Do you see him?”
“No, luv. I suppose he’s not coming today. Let’s give you a
nice bath. You’ll want to be all fresh for those nice ISA gentlemen. How lucky
you are!”
“I suppose so,” Mel said, hoping that John would come later.
It was so unlike him not to come, and not to call. He always called, and he was
hardly ever late. After the bath, during which Hana had scrubbed too hard, Mel
thought, though she couldn’t say anything without the voiceboard, Mel sat by
the window in her room, feeling the warm light on her cheeks. Why hadn’t John
come? Or called? No one knew anything, and it was too tiring to keep asking. She
fell asleep in her chair. When she woke, it cold. She was still by the window,
and they were fastening a dinner tray on her chair and tying a bib around her
neck.
oOo
“Hana,” Mel said to the nurse, who was washing something,
Mel thought perhaps her water jug, in the sink.
“Yes?” Hana began to hum a little tune, something
Indian-sounding. Maybe that was what John’s music sounded like. Mel had always
wanted to hear it, but John always forgot to bring his recordings. He was so
busy.
“Before I go any farther with this, I want to do something.”
Mel paused, waiting for Hana’s reaction. There was none. “I want to smoke a
cigarette. Like John’s,” she continued.
“Oh, luv! The way you breathe? You’ll keel over! It’s nasty,
nasty. Why would you want to do that?”
Mel kept working at the voiceboard. “I want to smoke a John
Player Special. I want to eat lobster. I want to feel what it’s like to have
somebody . . .” Mel meant John, but she wasn’t about to say so. “I want
somebody’s arms around me. I want to feel a kiss.”
Hana turned off the water. Mel felt her sit on the bed,
smelled her cologne. Hana’s hand, damp from the water, brushed Mel’s forehead.
“I think I understand.” Hana’s warm lips touched Mel’s
cheek. She took Mel’s hand, and rubbed Mel’s wrist in a soothing way.
Mel tried to speak with her mouth. “I wuh-wuh-hunt s-s-s-s .
. .”
“You want a bit of life,” Hana said. She raised Mel and held
her close. “I’m no man, not like what you mean, but I love you, Mel-o-die.” Hana
almost sang Mel’s name. Tears stung in the corners of Mel’s eyes.
“I see what I can do about that lobster,” Hana said. “My
boyfriend’s a chef. Have I ever said? He’d be proud to make something up for
you. I don’t eat meat, but I’ve heard that lobster is very good. You’ll like
it. But first, we’ll get you dressed, for those ISA doctors.”
Later that day, the ISA technicians finished implanting her
visual bio-electrodes. The counselor told her that they’d made something up for
her: a special visor similar to one which had been developed for cold-fusion
technicians, the ones who worked with the magnetic bottles which contained the
reaction. A visor sensitive in the ultra-violet and infra-red, as well as the
normal visual spectrum. Whatever she would see through it wouldn’t be like she
what she had seen before she’d gone blind.
Mel’s old doctor had said, brutally, Mel remembered, that
she’d really gotten the short end of the genetic stick. Cerebral palsy — a
spastic — with a heart defect, and retinitis pigmentosa. It didn’t get much
worse than that, he’d said.
The ISA counselor arrived, just as the technicians were
fitting the visor. He spoke to her, holding her hand while they fitted the
metallic piece over her temples and eyes. “I know it hurts. Just stay with us. It’s
going straight into your optic nerve, which ain’t damaged. You oughta see
something, but we can’t guarantee technicolor.”
Mel had shut her eyes. They’d said it didn’t matter whether
they were open or shut. It was going over the eyes, not into them. The implant
went through her temples. The connection was so fine, he’d said, that no one
could see it, and she wasn’t supposed to feel it. Even so, Mel felt like they
were breaking holes in her skull with a jackhammer.
“You can’t move,” the counselor explained. “It won’t work
until you’ve adjusted thoroughly and the implants have integrated.”
Mel realized that they were drilling holes in her skull, not
for the implant, but to stabilize the visor. She couldn’t say anything. They’d
taken her voiceboard away, promising to give it back when they’d finished. She
heard a voice, moaning. Hers. Something dribbled on her chin. They whacked the
crown of her head, again and again.
The counselor squeezed her hand. His finger tapped, once. She
squeezed back. “That’s great,” he said. “Now, they’ll activate it.”
Mel closed her eyes. It was as if she had opened them, but
she hadn’t. A long, mournful-looking face appeared, grainy and hazy, like an
antique telly when it was turned on. Big nose, and a wild head of bushy hair. The
face smiled, crookedly, showing a mouth full of even, pale teeth. He must be
the counselor, Mel thought. Her head was throbbing viciously, but she managed
to smile in return. Somebody thrust the voiceboard in her lap.
“I see you,” she said. “You’ve got a big nose.”
“That’s right, darlin’.” The head turned. More shapes — the
technicians’ faces, appeared. Hazy and wavering, but unmistakably concerned. “Hey,
she’s got me!” the counselor called to them.
“I haven’t seen anyone in six years,” Mel said.
“And my good-looking mug is the first! I’m touched,” the
counselor replied. The technicians were grinning. They were both young, close
to Mel’s age. One blond-seeming, though colors just didn’t look the way she
remembered, and the other darker, with a thin, nervous face. Another face
appeared. Dark, pretty, soft and round, with large eyes and full lips.
“Hana,” Mel said.
“Ah, that’s right! You can see!” Hana wheeled a cart toward
Mel. The technicians grinned, parting to allow Hana to approach, while the
counselor stepped back, crossing his arms. Hana lifted the cover of a metal
dish with a flourish.
Mel remembered what lobsters looked like. This lobster was
huge, his eyes black dots on long stalks. Mel almost expected him to lift his
claws and start snapping at her. He was bright red, she thought, but somehow
the color didn’t look right. Too vivid, perhaps, as if he was glowing. He
glowed with heat, she realized. She saw it, rising in waves from his shell.
Hana removed a claw and cracked it. She worked a piece of
hot white flesh from the claw and brought it to Mel’s lips.
“Here’s your taste of lobster,” she said.
Mel took the soft flesh in her mouth and began to chew. It
was silken and buttery, yielding to her tongue and her teeth. Beyond delicious.
She closed her eyes, but the visor still worked - she could still see. They
were smiling at her, Hana looking proud, the technicians nodding. The counselor
took a handkerchief from his pocket, and blew his nose, trumpeting loudly.
Mel swallowed the lobster. “I can’t close my eyes,” she
said.
“Yes, you can,” the blond technician said. “Tap your temple,
on the left side.”
Mel flailed around a bit, then managed to slap the side of
her head with her thumb. Everything went dark.
Her heart leapt with sudden fear. Had she broken it? “Now I
can’t see.”
“Do it again. Right side.” This time, Mel struggled with her
bad right arm, and struck a glancing blow against her cheek. Nothing happened. She
gritted her teeth, and tried again. This time, she hit her temple. Everyone
reappeared, including the lobster.
“It works,” Mel told them.
The blond technician slapped his darker partner on the back.
“I told you!”
“So,” the counselor said, leaning forward, causing his face
to expand like a strange balloon. “What would you like to do? We have a day or
two before we go further. How about a play? Something at the Globe? Or a
museum? Would you like to see some paintings? Sculptures?”
Mel shook her head. “No, I’m okay. Maybe a book. I would
like to read, like I used to.” Before the RP had gotten so bad, Mel had
devoured every book she could get her hands on. Listening to books wasn’t the
same. It was nice, but not as satisfying. She thought of John. Sometimes he had
read to her. Shakespeare; the poems of Elizabeth Barrett Browning. One time,
from Alice in Wonderland. She wanted to see John, but she was reluctant to say
so, especially with the technicians there.
The counselor shook his head. “I didn’t think you’d be so
easy to please,” he said.
“I already told Hana what I wanted,” Mel said.
Hana stroked Mel’s forehead. “Yes, and you’ve gotten your
lobster. Go ahead, finish it all. He’s five pounds.”
The blond technician whistled under his breath. “A fortune,”
the other one said.
Hana began to feed Mel. Mel gorged, smiling with pleasure. She
rested her hand on her stomach as the others began to eat the rest of the
lobster, grinning and laughing. She couldn’t possibly finish all of it. She was
warmly happy, the ache in her head fading, as the others ate.
Mel felt sleepy, and she told Hana that she wanted to take a
nap. She thanked the technicians, and the counselor, who shook her hand with a
crushing grip, again reminding her of a cowboy. He needed a cowboy hat to complete
the picture, but otherwise, she thought that he was perfect. She reminded
herself to ask him the next day whether or not he was from Oklahoma, or
Arizona, or one of those other cowboy places in the States.
Hana pushed Mel from the dayroom into the long corridor,
which was not as long as Mel had thought, now that she could see it. It was
lined with dull prints of horses and huntsmen. She wheeled Mel into her room. How
small the room was. The bed was narrow, with four plump blue pillows at the
head, topped with Mel’s teddy bear. There were a few pictures tacked on a cork
board to the right of the bed. The boys, Mel realized — how tall they had
grown. A sink, where Hana and the other nurses washed things. A narrow window,
looked out on the roadway, where she saw rows of blockhouses across the street.
Mel had often heard children playing in the morning. Now she knew where they
lived.
She saw a daisy in a small vase on a table by the window. Spit
tray beside it. A small closet was open on the opposite side of the room. Mel
saw a row of open gowns hanging inside the closet, all the same, striped blue
and white. Fuzzy slippers rested below the hanging hems of the gowns, which Mel
realized for the first time had teddy bear heads on them. Mum had brought them
for her birthday — Mel had instinctively disliked them and thought that the odd
shapes she had felt on their toes represented defective workmanship, since Mum
was always looking for a bargain. Mel looked down at her feet for the first
time since she’d been able to see. She wore pale pink socks. Her feet were
turned toward each other, and curled into themselves, like pictures she’d seen
of Chinese women with their feet bound. They’d turned that way since she’d been
blind. Above the doubled-over pink socks, her legs were the width of a broom
handle, and dead, waxy white.
There was a mirror above the sink. A polished mirror, not
glass, but steel.
Mel flailed about with her left arm. She couldn’t reach her
head.
“You take your nap now,” Hana said. She left Mel in the
middle of the room and went to the bed, getting the covers ready.
Mel stared at the mirror. If she moved a foot or two closer,
she would be able to look into it.
“I’m sleepy,” she said.
Hana took the voiceboard from her lap and put it on the
table by the vase with the daisy. Hana turned back, and something in her
expression told Mel that she had sensed what Mel was thinking.
“There’s time for that later,” Hana said.
Mel pushed the button on her chair which moved it forward,
toward the mirror. Even though she didn’t want to look, somehow she had to
look. She gazed down at her stick legs a moment, then up to see her face in the
mirror. Every bit of joy she had felt earlier, to see, and to taste, bled out
of her. The visor was the least of it, like a big pair of blind metal
sunglasses over her face. Bolted over the strange, barely-human landscape which
had been her face.
“Ih-ih-hut-ssss-zzz,” Mel said through her slack lips. She
saw the wetness on her pocked chin before she felt it. Hana retrieved the
voiceboard and put it gently on Mel’s lap.
“It’s Friendly Visitor day tomorrow,” Mel said. “If John
comes, tell him I have been taken for more implants,” she told Hana. “Tell him
I’m not coming back.”
“Oh, luv,” Hana said.
“Leave me,” Mel replied. Then, after a few seconds, she
added, “please.” She looked at her wrist and noticed the bracelet. How could
John have visited her? Spoken to her? Touched her? On the bracelet were four
tiny square beads set among smaller seed beads, like colored pearls. W-W-J-D,
she read on the squares.
Goodbye, John. Her lips trembled. She heard herself making
noises. Goodbye. She flailed around until she struck her left temple with a
strong whack, and everything went black. Tomorrow, she would tell the ISA man
to take off the visor, and to stop everything. Part of her wanted to go into
the ship, if only to get rid of her horrible face. Another part of her said
that the stars would hate her. Recoil from her, and she would wander, cold and
alone forever. Somehow, that seemed appealing, but no. She would stay in her
place in her wheelchair. That was all she deserved. All that was needed.
She would tell Hana . . . no. She would call herself. In the
morning. She could see to go to the phone now. She would make sure that John
knew he was no longer needed.
What would Jesus do? Jesus would weep.
oOo
“I won’t go,” Mel told Hana, when she came to take her to
the dayroom. “I’m staying in bed.” Mel knew that it was coming out as garbled
moans — spastic talk — but Hana seemed to understand.
“I give up,” Hana said, after struggling to get Mel to sit
up in bed. Mel should have called, tried to stop John. She had just been so
tired. She buried herself in the covers, kicking as well as she could until it
felt as though she was covered completely. Like a cave. She got part of the
sheet hooked around her hand and dragged it over her head, then turned on her
side, away from Hana.
“Today’s your visitor day,” Hana said, trying to wheedle a
response from Mel. “And those ISA men will be coming soon, too.”
Mel pressed her lips together, forcing herself to think
about Mum, and her brothers. She tried to go back to sleep, but fell only into
a drowsy half-sleep, vaguely aware of Hana moving about, cleaning things,
pottering in Mel’s closet.
Mel shivered, as someone touched her arm. “You’re still
wearing my bracelet.” It was John.
She jerked her arm, trying to pull it back under the warm,
safe covers.
“I’m sorry to have missed our day.” John patted her shoulder
through the sheets.
Mel heard herself mumbling. She wasn’t quite sure of what
she wanted to say. No matter what, he wouldn’t understand. God, let him not see
her face.
“Mel, please sit up. I’ve got something to tell you.” The
bed sank down. He was sitting beside her.
She ground her face into the pillow. “Nuh-no,” she said. She
tried to call for Hana, then realized that she hadn’t heard her soft movements,
or her humming, for some time. The traitor had let John in, then left them
alone.
John was pulling on the covers. Mel struggled, using her
hands as weights, but it was hopeless. The sheets slipped away. She flailed
toward her head, trying to cover what she could of her face. Her rebellious
hand struck the left side of her head. She could see once more.
“Look, if it’s this thing they’ve put on for your eyes, I
don’t care. It looks like sunglasses, is all. Big sunglasses.”
“No!” Mel said. Desperation made her voice strong.
John grasped her shoulders. He turned her around as if she
was a doll.
“Mel, I don’t care. I’ve been visiting you for a year.”
Her face. He was seeing her horrid face, and she couldn’t
cover it. She caught a glimpse of him through her clenched fists. She tried to
strike her left temple, turn off the visor, but her arm was completely
rebellious. He had her hands, both of them. He drew them away from her face.
A groan escaped her lips as she struggled. John, so fab. His
features were fine, almost feminine. His hair was as soft and shiny as the hair
of a dark, lovely woman. He had a small beard and moustache, neatly trimmed
around his chin and lips. She held herself as still as she could, though every
muscle in her body was going wild. Her feet twitched beneath the covers, out of
control.
John took her wrist, turning the bracelet. “That visor is
nothing,” he said, smiling. “I’m glad you’re wearing the bracelet.” Something
shone on John’s left hand. A ring — he’d never said he was married. Of course
he was married. His wife was probably as stunning as he was.
“Muh-muh-muh,” Mel said. She jerked her body toward the
table and the voiceboard. John looked uncertain. She moved her shoulders toward
the table, and his eyes followed.
“Your voiceboard. Right,” he said. He retrieved it. While he
walked across the room, Mel thought of covering herself again, but it was too
late. He’d already seen her. And he’d been seeing her, for the past year. She
had been a fool — a complete fool. She didn’t know why he had come to visit
her, but it certainly couldn’t have been for any of the reasons she’d imagined
for so long, in her self-deluded blindness.
When he put the voiceboard in her lap, she said, “it’s so
kind of you to visit the ugly cripple.”
John looked puzzled, as he sat by her once more, then
sympathy came over his face. No, Mel thought. Pity. She thought of hitting the
visor again, going blind, but he was fab, as Hana said. The most gorgeous man
she’d ever seen, she thought — and she had loved to collect pictures of the
teen idols, before her eyes had gone. That had been stupid then, just the way
this was stupid now. But she loved to look at his face, even as he looked on
her with pity, as if she was some trapped laboratory monkey, or a freak from
the vids.
“Come on,” he said, forcing a cheery tone in his voice, Mel
thought, “let’s take a spin on the patio. I’ll get you into your seat.” Then,
he retrieved her wheelchair from the corner (it was very worn and cracked on
the seat, Mel noticed, shabby-looking), and brought it to the side of the bed. Mel
allowed him to lift her into it. Shamed that she enjoyed his touch, Mel looked
away from him, toward the window, and the vase with the daisy. The daisy
drooped — that was the end for it. Mel wondered how long it had been there, and
who had put it there. Probably Hana.
John guided her down the hall, though she no longer needed
his help. Mel saw some of the other inmates of the Center peeking out of their
doors. They looked jealously at them. Quite a few were elderly. More than Mel
had thought. She hadn’t known how many there were during her blindness. She
hadn’t realized, although she could smell them, of course, always smell their
terrible smell — death and decay and disinfectant.
When they reached the patio, John parked her in a sunny
spot. A small bird, a linnet, Mel thought, flew past them, wings whirring. He
pulled a packet of cigarettes from his shirt pocket, and a lighter.
“Come on,” he said, shaking two cigarettes out. “Hana told
me that you wanted to do this.” He lit the cigarettes. Their red tips glowed —
her visor showed a round ball of whitish heat around the tips. John put the
filter of one cigarette to her lips.
The filter was hot. The smoke burned her nostrils. She put
her lips around the filter and drew in a breath. Choking, horrible. Her arms
flailed. Couldn’t use the voiceboard . . . couldn’t speak . . . coughing,
spitting.
John threw both cigarettes down, crushing them beneath his
foot, then whacked Mel’s back. “Oh, no,” he said in an agonized voice. “I
should have known!”
The visor blurred. Mel’s eyes were watering, and she was
gasping for breath between coughs. What a horrible, vile taste, like swallowing
burning coals! Her throat began to swell.
At last, she began to breathe more easily, and the coughing
slowed to little hacks wracking her chest every few seconds.
“That’s the worst thing I’ve ever tasted,” she told him.
John knelt beside her, patting her knee. He nodded, his eyes
full of regret. “Oh, God, I was so stupid,” he said.
“No,” Mel said. “I asked for it. But I like lobster better.”
“Hana told me what else you asked for,” he said. Before Mel
could react, he’d leaned forward and had his arms around her. His lips brushed
her neck. His voice, so warm and soft, whispering, right next to her ear. Mel
felt her body trembling, legs jerking around. Stop it, she told herself, but it
was hopeless. Her chest grew hot; she felt the flush all the way up her neck,
working its way over her cheeks. “Sweet Mel,” he said.
She managed to get her hands on the voiceboard, even John’s
body pressed against her lap.
“No,” she said. “Please, John.” How warm he was, how hard
the muscles felt in his arms and shoulders. He smelled of John Player Specials
and of some spicy cologne, and of his own clean, soft flesh.
He kissed her neck, gently. She glimpsed his face, eyes
closed, moving in front of her, and though she closed her eyes beneath the
visor, she still saw the patio, the canvas awning, the little bird flying over
the cheap plastic furniture, as his firm, sweet lips touched hers. Not her
mouth! She had seen the terrible teeth in the mirror; the misshapen lips,
cracked and rough. What could she expect when she couldn’t even stop herself
from drooling, had to depend on others even to clean her teeth? It must be
horrible for him to come so near. How could he?
“Why?” she asked.
His lips pressed tighter against hers, and his arms drew her
close to his body, almost all the way out of the chair. Mel was afraid that she
would explode with everything that was rushing through her; things she didn’t
even have words for. The patio wavered, her sight flickered, and she heard her
heels rattling in the chair.
At last, he drew gently away, putting her back in the seat,
and sat back on his heels. He was smiling, almost shyly.
“Hana said you wanted a kiss,” he said. His voice was
throaty and rough — a street-tough tone she’d never heard from him before.
Her hands fluttered over the voiceboard. At last, she made
it say, “I was just saying that. I didn’t really —”
“Yes you did,” he said, putting his hand on her knee and
looking into the visor, where her eyes should have been. As if he knew what she
was thinking, he said, “the bloody thing covers your eyes. You have beautiful
eyes, Mel.”
She felt like he had stabbed her through her heart.
“Don’t lie to me,” she said.
His gaze was steady. “I’ve never lied to you,” he replied.
She looked at his hand on her knee, where the ring glinted.
“Yes, you have,” she said, even though this wasn’t exactly true, as she’d never
asked him if he was married. She had always assumed that he wasn’t.
He seemed confused at first, then he realized that she was
looking at his ring. “Oh,” he said. “That’s what I had to tell you. Why I wasn’t
here last week. I got married.”
“Last week?”
He laughed. “Yes. I should have told you. But it was really
a last-minute thing.”
Mel backed the chair across the patio. “Good luck to both of
you,” she said. “I’m sure she’s very beautiful.” She was thankful this time
that the voiceboard droned mechanically. It could almost sound sincere. She
didn’t want John to know that she was foolish enough to care.
He stopped the chair with one hand, just as she was about to
go through the open glass door into the Center. “She is beautiful,” John said.
“She’s going to have my baby.”
A cry came from somewhere deep inside of Mel. She masked it
with a cough. Let him think she was still choked up from the cigarette. She
would endure whatever she had to endure before he left, and then she would go
back into her room. She would take away the voiceboard, and turn off the visor.
When the cowboy counselor came and tapped her hand, she would not move. She
would not jerk, so that he couldn’t possibly imagine that she wanted to go on
with it. She would wait until he tapped twice, then clench her hand tightly,
with all her strength. She would let them think that the visual implants had
damaged her. Somehow, she would get them to take the damn thing off. Tear it
off herself, if she had to. She could make her hands obey, if she tried hard
enough. Then, she would be blind again. She wouldn’t eat. Eventually, they
would hook her up to machines, which would feed her. What was left of her body
would waste away; then, real darkness.
John was talking, in the hard, street-wise tone she’d heard
earlier from him. Mel refused to look at him.
“Alexandra and I have been together for a while. When she
told me about the baby, it seemed like the right thing to do. My Da took off
when I was just a kid. I’m not like that,” he said.
“Good,” Mel said, when he said nothing for a while.
John took her hand. Mel stared at the blank patio wall. Ugly
gray bricks. She began to count them.
“Look, I’ll never forget you,” he said. “You’ve kept me
going.”
“Right,” she said.
He squeezed her hand, then stroked her wrist and toyed with
the bracelet.
“Take it away,” she said. “I don’t want it.”
A wet drop hit her hand. John’s voice, when he spoke again,
sounded strange and thick. As if he was crying. It couldn’t have been a tear,
she told herself. Men didn’t cry.
“No,” he said. “It was for you. I thought you might be able
to put it in the probe. To protect you when you go off.”
“Take it,” she repeated. “Damn you. I’m not going anywhere.”
He tugged on the bracelet, but didn’t remove it. “Oh, Mel,”
he said. “You’ve got to go!”
“Never,” she said. “Go away. Take your cheap bracelet and go
back to your wife.” There — she had said it. Now, he’d leave.
He said nothing for a long while, then she felt his hand,
lightly stroking her hair. No — she would not turn. She’d never look at him
again.
“I did lie to you,” he said, in a low voice. “That bracelet
cost me a day’s pay.”
“Bully for you,” she said. What a liar he was. It was just
cheap beads, probably plastic.
“I had my eye on it for weeks. I had the fellow put it aside
and I went after work to pick it up, the day I gave it to you.”
Work? What was he talking about?
“I lied to you about what I do,” John said. “I’m no viddy
star. I work mornings at the Virgin store and afternoons I work at my step-dad’s
shop. Those were someone else’s tunes you heard. Stuff I listen to for myself. Real
musicians.”
Mel drew in a sharp breath. Not a viddy star?
“My step-dad repairs guitars and sitars and such. That’s how
I know about them. Yeah, I play a little,” he said.
Mel’s fingers went to the voiceboard. “You should have said,”
she said. “You didn’t have to pretend. I —” she paused, moving her fingers
tentatively back and forth. “I liked you for you.”
Another tear fell on the back of her hand. “I wanted to
impress you. When I first came, the nurses made a big show of saying I looked
like a viddy star. It pumped me up a bit. When you believed them, I thought,
why not play along? It went from there.”
“You never told me why,” Mel said.
“Why what?” She turned toward him, to see his handsome face
once more. His eyes were swollen — yes, he had been crying.
“Why you came to visit. Someone like me.”
“Oh, that,” he said, shaking his head. He drew the back of
his hand across his eyes. “Uh, well, I’m a Christian. It was part of my service
to the church. Every two weeks. We all do something and this was my thing.”
“Oh,” she said, turning away. Of course. It would be
something like that.
John seemed to realize her disappointment. He reached toward
her, then drew back, as if he knew that touching her was the wrong thing at
this moment. His face grew serious. “It became more than that,” he said. “So
much more. I mean, you’re so brave. You’re so much more than I’ll ever be, Mel.
I don’t know how I can make you see that.”
“I’m an ugly cripple in a chair,” she said.
“No,” he said, and he grabbed the chair, whirling her
around. He put his hands on her face, then kissed her again, hard. Just as
quickly, he drew back, then put his face beside hers, holding her shoulders
tightly against him. Again, that intoxicating smell of his cologne and skin,
the warm feel of his body. His hands hurt her shoulders, but she didn’t
struggle.
“You’ve got to go, Mel. You’ve got a chance to help
everyone. You can’t throw it away.”
“How can you touch me?” she asked, feeling as though her
heart was tearing itself in shreds.
His breath was hot, his voice fierce. “God, it’s not what’s
outside. Look at me. Handsome, right? I’ll never be anything. I’m just another
working man. I’ll live, I’ll die, just like everyone else. But you’ve got it
inside,” he said, putting his palm against her chest, pressing down, toward her
heart.
“John,” she said. “John.”
“You go on that trip,” he said. “Get on the ship. Your body’s
nothing. Leave it behind.”
Tears streamed from Mel’s eyes into the visor, pooling
around its lower edge. John moved his body, knocking the voiceboard to the
patio. Mel heard it clatter, then a blinding colored light shot through the
visor. Her body stiffened.
She heard John cry out, realizing dimly that she was on the
patio, and she knew what it was — a seizure. She hadn’t had one for years. She
had thought they were long past.
All she could see was white, not black. Mel’s body was
jerking, out of control, and something hurt in her mouth, then came a strong,
hot taste of copper. She heard footsteps, then Hana, crying for the other
nurses.
“My God, I’ve killed her,” John said in a terrible, choked
voice.
“No, no, damn it! You dumb kid, it’s the implants,” came a
twangy, American voice. The ISA counselor was there. Mel arms and legs stopped
jerking — the visor flickered in and out. She was off the patio. Somehow, they’d
gotten her back in her room. Time passed strangely during seizures, she
recalled. Her senses were not to be trusted.
Then, the white changed, became a field of stars. Mel felt
suddenly warm and calm, completely in control. It was she, floating, toward a
whole group of stars. Above her, a beautiful, pinkish nebula. Below her, blank
space. How much more she wanted to go to the nebula than down into the
blackness.
How beautiful it was. Complete, ordered, everything in its
place. And exciting also, because a star before her, a bare pinpoint of light,
was growing brighter and brighter until she thought she could kiss it. She
sensed things, felt things she did not know names for; only feelings,
instincts, pictures in her mind. It was approaching. Closer and closer until
she could see it was a small red thing, nothing like the sun that she’d known
as a child, though she’d never seen that from above, nor from such a distance.
Could John see it as well? No, he was no there; she was
gone, and so was he. They were very far apart. How easily her body moved, how
elegantly, powerfully and simply. She was aware, dimly, of how delicate this
body was, but still, so infinitely perfect and beautiful. Like the small red
star — the stranger — which she reached out to with her senses of spectral
analysis, of direction, and asked it how long it had to live, and how long it
had known life. It opened to her like a flower, like the beautiful flower of a
hibiscus which her mother had kept outside their house. So red, so perfect,
with a bit of a flare like the stamen of the hibiscus flower, and she reached
with her senses . . . and kissed the star . . . It was exciting and
intoxicating, magic and eternity; mystery and wonder and within it like a seed,
the evidence she sought, that yes, it was alive, here there could be life.
Then, someone, a flesh-and-blood person, touched her. Fingers
pressing into her, and the star-flower shrank into itself. The warm blackness
of space became white.
Faces appeared before her, hovering. Hana, her expression
serious. John, his hand pushing his hair out of his face, eyes wide and
frightened. The cowboy ISA counselor. The two technicians, standing behind the
others. Someone took her hand. A finger tapped her palm, once.
It was her decision, hers alone. And she knew what John had
said was right. Her body really was nothing. And oh . . . she had kissed the
star. She did not know whether the vision had come from inside of her, or it
had been something cleverly planted, perhaps something to make her want to go. She
realized that she did not care, because she wanted to go now, more than
anything else, because this was life — a new kind of life. It had been heaven
to kiss John; but to kiss a star?
With all her might, Mel squeezed the finger.
The counselor laughed. “She’s game,” he said. “She’s going.”
Mel knew that she couldn’t trust her voice, and beneath the
visor, they could not see her eyes.
“What? Is she going to be all right?” John looked wildly
from face to face, searching for answers. How Mel wished she could say
something. She shook her arm, rattling the bracelet. Still, John didn’t seem to
understand.
“She’s going to Epsilon Eridani, son,” the counselor said to
John. “In about three weeks.”
Mel squeezed the counselor’s finger again.
“Uh-uh-mmm go-ing,” she said, looking up at John’s face,
relishing the expression of joy as it spread over his face. The words came out
so easily. It was like something which had been holding her back had broken
away inside when she had flown the heavens. Now her tongue and lips moved as
she wished.
John, beautiful John. If she could not be normal, then she
could have this other thing. And John had been right — no one else could have
it. Only Mel. She didn’t need to believe in Jesus, only in what he would do. He
would not stay.
“I know what Jesus would do,” she said.
John touched her cheek, smiling as he wept, his eyes
silently questioning her.
“He would kiss the star,” she told him.
- END -
For Julie M. Jones
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