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MINUS 063 AND COUNTING

 

When he awoke, it was still dark and the inner tide of his body put the time at about four‑thirty. The girl, Cassie, had been screaming, and Bradley got up. The three of them were sleeping in the small, drafty back bedroom, Stacey and Richards on the floor. Ma slept with the girl.

Over the steady wheeze of Stacey’s deep‑sleep respiration, Richards heard Bradley come out of the room. There was a clink of a spoon in the sink. The girl’s screams became isolated moans which trailed into silence. Richards could sense Bradley standing somewhere in the kitchen, immobile, waiting for the silence to come. He returned, sat down, farted, and then the bedsprings shifted creakily as he lay down.

“Bradley?”

“What?”

“Stacey said she was only five. Is that so?”

“Yes.” The urban dialectic was gone from his voice, making him sound unreal and dreamlike.

“What’s a five‑year‑old kid doing with lung cancer? I didn’t know they got it. Leukemia, maybe. Not lung cancer.”

There was a bitter, whispered chuckle from the bed. “You’re from Harding, right? What’s the air‑pollution count in Harding?”

“I don’t know,” Richards said. “They don’t give them with the weather any­more. They haven’t for . . . gee, I don’t know. A long time.”

“Not since 2020 in Boston,” Bradley whispered back. “They’re scared to. You ain’t got a nose filter, do you?”

“Don’t be stupid,” Richards said irritably. “The goddam things cost two hundred bucks, even in the cut‑rate stores. I didn’t see two hundred bucks all last year. Did you?”

“No,” Bradley said softly. He paused. “Stacey’s got one. I made it. Ma and Rich Goleon an some other people got em, too.”

“You’re shitting me,” Richards said.

“No, man.” He stopped. Richards was suddenly sure that Bradley was weigh­ing what he had said already against a great many more things which he might say. Wondering how much was too much. When the words came again, they came with difficulty. “We’ve been reading. That Free‑Vee shit is for empty‑heads.”

Richards grunted agreement.

“The gang, you know. Some of the guys are just cruisers, you know? All they’re interested in is honky‑stomping on Saturday night. But some of us have been going down to the library since we were twelve or so.”

“They let you in without a card in Boston?”

“No. You can’t get a card unless there’s someone with a guaranteed income of five thousand dollars a year in your family. We got some plump‑ass kid an kifed his card. We take turns going. We got a gang suit we wear when we go.” Bradley paused. “You laugh at me and I’ll cut you, man.”

“I’m not laughing.”

“At first we only read sexbooks. Then when Cassie first started getting sick, I got into this pollution stuff. They’ve got all the books on impurity counts and smog levels and nose filters in the reserve section. We got a key made from a wax blank. Man, did you know that everybody in Tokyo had to wear a nose filter by 2012?”

“No.”

“Rich and Dink Moran built a pollution counter. Dink drew the picture out of the book, and they did it from coffee cans and some stuff they boosted out of cars. It’s hid out in an alley. Back in 1978 they had an air pollution scale that went from one to twenty. You understand?”



“Yes.”

“When it got up to twelve, the factories and all the pollution‑producing shit had to shut down till the weather changed. It was a federal law until 1987, when the Revised Congress rolled it back.” The shadow on the bed rose up on its elbow. “I bet you know a lot of people with asthma, that right?”

“Sure,” Richards said cautiously. “I’ve got a touch myself. You get that from the air. Christ, everybody knows you stay in the house when it’s hot and cloudy and the air doesn’t move—”

“Temperature inversion,” Bradley said grimly.

”—and lots of people get asthma, sure. The air gets like cough syrup in August and September. But lung cancer—”

“You ain’t talkin about asthma,” Bradley said. “You talkin bout emphy­sema.”

“Emphysema?” Richards turned the word over in his mind. He could not as­sign a meaning to it, although the word was faintly familiar.

“All the tissues in your lungs swell up. You heave an heave an heave, but you’re still out of breath. You know a lot of people who get like that?”

Richards thought. He did. He knew a lot of people who had died like that.

“They don’t talk about that one,” Bradley said, as if he had read Richards’s thought. “Now the pollution count in Boston is twenty on a good day. That’s like smoking four packs of cigarettes a day just breathing. On a bad day it gets up as high as forty‑two. Old dudes drop dead all over town. Asthma goes on the death certificate. But it’s the air, the air, the air. And they’re pouring it out just as fast as they can, big smokestacks going twenty‑four hours a day. The big boys like it that way.

“Those two‑hundred‑dollar nose filters aren’t worth shit. They’re just two pieces of screen with a little piece of metholated cotton between them. That’s all. The only good ones are from General Atomics. The only ones who can afford them are the big boys. They gave us the Free‑Vee to keep us off the streets so we can breathe ourselves to death without making any trouble. How do you like that? The cheapest G‑A nose filter on the market goes for six thousand New Dollars. We made one for Stacey for ten bucks from that book. We used an atomic nugget the size of the moon on your fingernail. Got it out of a hearing aid we bought in a hockshop for seven bucks. How do you like that?”

Richards said nothing. He was speechless.

“When Cassie boots off, you think they’ll put cancer on the death certificate? Shit they’ll put asthma. Else somebody might get scared. Somebody might kife a library card and find out lung cancer is up seven hundred percent since 2015.”

“Is that true? Or are you making it up?”

“I read it in a book. Man, they’re killing us. The Free‑Vee is killing us. It’s like a magician getting you to watch the cakes falling outta his helper’s blouse while he pulls rabbits out of his pants and puts ’em in his hat.” He paused and then said dreamily:” Sometimes I think that I could blow the whole thing outta the water with ten minutes talk‑time on the Free‑Vee. Tell em. Show em. Everybody could have a nose filter if the Network wanted em to have em.

“And I’m helping them,” Richards said.

“That ain’t your fault. You got to run.

Killian’s face, and the face of Arthur M. Burns rose up in front of Richards. He wanted to smash them, stomp them, walk on them. Better still, rip out their nose filters and turn them into the street.

“People’s mad,” Bradley said. “They’ve been mad at the honkies for thirty years. All they need is a reason. A reason . . . one reason . . .”

Richards drifted off to sleep with the repetition in his ears.

 


Date: 2015-04-20; view: 567


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