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The Quiet at the End of the World

Lauren James



  Table of Contents

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Epilogue

  Author’s Note

  Acknowledgements

  About the Author

  Also by Lauren James

  Copyright

  For Chris – for a childhood spent digging

  holes in the sand in search of treasure

  Whence, I often asked myself, did the

  principle of life proceed?

  Mary Shelley, Frankenstein

  We will now discuss in a little more

  detail the struggle for existence.

  Charles Darwin, The Origin of Species

  OPERATOR 1 Hello, emergency service operator. Which service do you require? Fire, police or ambulance?

  CALLER Ambulance, please.

  OPERATOR 1 I’ll just connect you now.

  OPERATOR 2 Hello, this is the ambulance service. What is the nature of your emergency?

  CALLER Hi. Er, my mum – she’s got a nosebleed. It won’t stop, it’s been going for ages. What do – what do I do?

  OPERATOR 2 A nose bleed?

  CALLER Yeah, it’s – really fast and … sticky.

  OPERATOR 2 All right, duck. Try to stay calm. Can you give me your location?

  CALLER Home. We’re at home. She’s – should I drive her to the hospital?

  OPERATOR 2 If you give me your address, I can send an ambulance.

  CALLER Right. It’s, er, Maya Waverley. 18 Horn Street, Oxford. How – how long —?

  OPERATOR 2 They’re leaving now. Stay calm, duck.

  CALLER Oh! Oh God!

  OPERATOR 2 What is it? Maya? Are you still with me?

  CALLER I’ve got it too! I’m bleeding! It’s everywhere!

  OPERATOR 2 Stay calm. The ambulance is on its way.

  CALLER I’m fine! It doesn’t hurt. I’ve got a towel. It’s just – a shock.

  CALLER Hello?

  CALLER Hello? Operator, are you there?

  OPERATOR 2 I’m sorry. I just… My nose is bleeding too. I’ll – I’ll be right back. I’m sorry. I’m sorry. Oh, damn – sorry, sorry, damn.

  CALLER What’s happening? What’s happening to us?

  OPERATOR 2 I don’t know. I don’t know. My colleague – her nose is bleeding too. Oh, damn.

  CALLER What do I do?

  OPERATOR 2 I don’t – I’m not sure, ma’am. I think I need to —

  CALLER Hello? Hello? Hello?

  EIGHTY-FIVE YEARS LATER

  CHAPTER 1

  “We haven’t got long,” I shout, already jumpy with adrenalin. “I’m going in!”

  Before Shen can reply, I fall backwards into the manhole. I’m swallowed immediately by pitch-black air. It smells of warm death down here, rotting and ancient.

  I drop far enough that my stomach flips before the rope kicks in and catches me. Holding on to the carabiner clip of my harness, I walk my feet down the curved tiles of the ceiling, guiding the rope through my gloved hands.

  Shen shouts to me from where he’s crouched on the pavement above with Dad, “Watch out for the sewer alligators, Lowrie!”

  “This isn’t even the sewers! And that’s a myth!” I yell back.

  “You can never be too careful.” He ducks back out of sight to buckle on his own harness.

  My foot hits an old fluorescent lighting tube and smashes it, sending glass into the water below. Wincing, I step off the wall, so I’m hanging freely from the rappelling line. Then I lower myself down again, twisting around so that I can see the tunnel on all sides. I’m trying to read a sign hanging loose from the wall when I hit the surface of the water with a gasp. It’s ice-cold, despite the moist warmth of the air.

  Treading water and trying not to shiver, I unclip the rope from the harness and call up, “All OK!” My teeth are already chattering.

  The rope is lifted back up, clip jangling merrily.

  “Very good, Shen,” I hear Dad say. “Slowly does it.”

  Not wanting to stay in the freezing, foul-smelling water for any longer than necessary, I swim over to the platform and pull myself out. There’s a tile on the floor warning me to MIND THE GAP, and the old London Underground symbol – a red circle with a blue line through its centre – covers the wall. Posters dangle from their holders all along the platform wall. Dripping, shredded plastic advertises insurance and movies.

  This was part of the Circle line, back when there were enough people to justify running the Tube lines. Now the flooded underground tunnels are just another relic of the past. The small number of us left in London have all but forgotten about them. Shen, Dad and I are probably the only ones who’ve been down here in the last twenty years.

  I reach out to grab Shen’s hand as he descends on the rope, guiding him on to the platform, so he doesn’t land in the water too.

  “Perfect timing,” he says, unclipping his harness. “It’s raining up there.”

  I look pointedly at his wetsuit.

  He shrugs, grinning. “I don’t mind getting wet in the name of treasure-hunting. Drizzle is a different matter altogether, Shadow.” He calls me Shadow because when we were little I used to follow him around like one, apparently. It is a controversial and much-debated nickname, but he doesn’t seem likely to give it up any time soon.

  Dad lowers himself into the tunnel after us. He comes down here a lot to collect plant and algae samples from the water, and we’ve been coming with him for years, ever since we were big enough to fit in the harnesses. It started because he wanted to get us interested in horticulture, but it kind of backfired because we were both more interested in exploring the tunnels.

  I keep hoping we’ll be allowed to come here on our own soon, but realistically that isn’t going to happen. My parents and Shen’s still think that we’re not old enough, even though I’m sixteen and Shen is seventeen. For now, we have to make do with tagging along on my dad’s botanical outings – although he gets so caught up in his findings that he often forgets about us anyway, so it’s almost like being on our own.

  “Lowrie, you need to let your rope out a little more slowly next time,” Dad says, as he lands perfectly on the platform without getting even a little wet.

  “You always say that,” I reply.

  He huffs at me, unclipping his harness. “Well, you always do it too fast.”

  “I’m always excited to get started.”

  “Safety first, exploring second.” As he says it, Dad is already leaning into the wall to examine lichen growing on the tiles.

  Shen says, “Are you sure it’s not ‘plants first, safety second, exploring third’?”

  “Well. You said it, not me.” Dad grins.

  I think Dad would choose plants above anything else in the world. Except me, I suppose. And even that would be a close call.

  “Go on
, then,” Dad says. “Be off with you. I don’t need your attitude while I’m working.”

  “See you in forty minutes!” I say, biting back a smirk.

  “Twenty,” Dad replies immediately as I knew he would.

  “Thirty.”

  “Twenty-five.”

  “Deal.” I salute him, bouncing on my heels.

  “And keep your helmets on,” he calls after us.

  I wave a hand in his direction in lazy agreement.

  Shen and I come down here to search for treasure. The Tube lines are full of old decaying junk, washed in from the River Thames, which is what makes them so fun to explore.

  Shen is all about the unexplainable oddities: the curiosity cabinet treasures. Things that won’t necessarily be registered by a metal detector: ancient fossils, bleached white and smooth by time and pressure; fountain pens from the fifteenth century; ivory and textured silver; anchors from ancient ships, dropped into the Thames when shipments came into harbour.

  I’m here for the jewellery. You’d be amazed at what you can find – gold and silver and platinum, embedded with rubies and diamonds and amber and sapphires. Cameo brooches of enamelled silhouettes surrounded by gilding. The kind of thing which takes hours to clean, rubbing cotton buds through the delicate filaments until the texture and design appear.

  “I don’t know why you bother arguing with your dad for more time,” Shen says as he pulls his handheld metal detector out of his rucksack. “You know he’s going to take at least an hour anyway, once he finds something good.”

  I glance back along the platform to where Dad has already crouched down to gather a lichen sample. The plants he studies all look the same to me, but each to their own. “I’ve gotta practise my bartering skills before the next jumble sale, you know that.” Since there aren’t any shops any more, the local second-hand sales are the only way to get things, so competition over certain rare items is legendary.

  Shen hums. “You can’t let Mrs Maxwell get the screwdrivers first again?”

  “Don’t even joke. I still wish I’d got that chisel. The blade was Japanese steel. I’m never going to find another one like it.”

  “Just wait. I bet she only wanted it so she could give it to you for your birthday.”

  “I hadn’t thought of that!”

  At the end of the platform, we walk down the steps and wade into the grimy water covering the disused train tracks. It comes up to my knees and is so cold that it makes me shiver. I have to breathe through my mouth to ignore the smell.

  As we follow the curving metal rails along the line, Shen and I fall into a companionable silence. The only sound, aside from the swish of the water, is Shen’s metal detector, which emits an oscillating beep as it passes over a piece of iron sticking out of the water. We’re stirring up thick and putrid sediment as we walk. A rat swims past me, ears flat back against its head. I twist quickly, grimacing, to make sure it doesn’t touch me.

  As the tunnel drops down at a gentle incline, the water steadily deepens until it’s almost at waist height. I grit my teeth and kick off the floor to start swimming. Shen follows me, more slowly. He’s always cautious about hurting himself in places like this, whereas I’m more than willing to risk a grazed knee in the name of treasure-hunting.

  When the tunnel ahead twists into view, I catch sight of something looming in the darkness. “Look!”

  “What was that?” Shen says. He’s deaf in one ear. He fell off a horse while practising jumps when we were ten. Sometimes when he’s distracted or not paying attention, he misses things people say. I used to get really annoyed that I had to constantly repeat things to him, until I realised he wasn’t doing it on purpose.

  “There’s something there,” I say, pointing the torch on my headlamp to show him. The light picks out something large and metal. We both grin at the same time. It’s a train. We’ve never found one before. This alone makes the trip down here worth it.

  We swim towards it. For once I’m glad that the water is so deep. It means that we’re level with the driver’s door. When Shen tugs on it experimentally, it opens, releasing a musty, cotton smell. He pulls himself up out of the water and into the train, hesitating a moment to see if I need help – I don’t – before passing through the driver’s compartment into the front carriage. After dragging myself out of the water, I take a moment to poke through the booth for anything interesting before following him.

  In the main carriage, the floor is covered in padding from the seats. It must have been gnawed on by rodents. The whole place looks as derelict as you’d expect from a vehicle that has been standing in water for decades. I grab the chrome railing running along the ceiling to steady myself, wary that rot might have made the floor dangerous. Then I pick my way down the carriage after Shen.

  It’s hard to imagine this small vehicle packed full of commuters. I can’t even wrap my head around the idea of seeing this many people, let alone being squashed up together in a confined space like this. There are only three hundred people in London now.

  Eighty-five years ago, a virus stopped humans from being able to reproduce. It infected everyone in the world. No one knows exactly where it came from – whether it mutated from an animal disease or was somehow caused by pollution – but within weeks it had spread across the planet. The symptoms weren’t even that bad, nothing worse than a mild flu. It was only in the months afterwards that everyone began to realise that the entire population had become infertile.

  The births didn’t stop immediately. Eggs and sperm that had been frozen for IVF treatment before the virus spread remained viable. A lot of them were used up in the first year after the virus, before everyone realised how widespread the infertility really was.

  By the time people understood how long it might take to find a solution to the sterility, the samples had nearly all been used up. The remaining eggs were kept safe after that, and babies were only born occasionally. Finally, seventy years after the virus first spread, there were only two eggs left: Shen and me.

  We are the youngest people in the world. Our parents thought it was only right that we grow up together, seeing as we might one day be the only two people on the whole planet, so his parents moved from Beijing to London.

  We’ve grown up surrounded by a community of people much older than us. The youngest of them are in their eighties and were born from the other frozen eggs. They’re the last surviving members of the youngest generation, born in the decades after the sterility. More and more people die every year.

  There’s no one else at all my age, except Shen. We’re just leftovers, really. Being the youngest doesn’t mean I’ll necessarily be the last person to die. There’s no assurance I’ll live to my full life expectancy. But I’ll definitely be around to watch the population drop below a few dozen. The thought terrifies me. Who is really brave enough to knowingly watch their species go extinct?

  So far no one is anywhere close to working out how to fix the effects of the virus. It didn’t affect any animal species, just humans, and it appeared completely out of nowhere. Shen’s personal favourite theory is that aliens brought a weird space disease to Earth.

  Whatever caused it, there’s not much we can do except wait and hope that the scientists will create a cure before it’s too late.

  “Find anything?” I call to Shen, who’s opening the door into the next carriage.

  “Nothing but mouse droppings,” he says warily.

  I smile. Shen would never admit it, but he’s a little scared of mice. He has no problem with rats, but he thinks that mice are too small and quick. Apparently that makes them “suspicious”.

  I kneel down to peer under the seats. There’s an old newspaper, shredded into dust, a shopping bag and something at the back in the shadows. My fingers hook over it, and I tug it out into the light.

  It’s a purse. A cheap one, because the plasticky material hasn’t rotted as much as the seating. In fact, I can still make out the faded design – the logo for something called Loch &
Ness. I try the zip, but it’s sealed shut with grime, so I run the blade of my penknife along the edge of it and the purse flops open, revealing rows of plastic cards. When I tilt one to the light, I can make out an embossed name: MS MAYA WAVERLEY. I call Shen back and he takes the card from me, pulling out his magnifying glass at the same time.

  “You can look at it later,” I tell him, checking the time. “We should probably find our way back to daylight if we don’t want to be late for the community meeting.”

  Everyone comes to the weekly meetings. As far as we know, London is the only occupied city now. As the population got smaller and smaller, people migrated towards the capital cities. Then, when we were about five, it was decided that everyone left should move to one place, to make it easier to keep energy and water supplies running. London was chosen because it’s where Shen and I were already living.

  I make a note of the purse’s location in our Discoveries logbook on my tablet: “Embossed emerald-green plastic wallet, circa mid-twenty-first century.” I also note down the coordinates of where I found it. The purse is mysterious, which sometimes makes a discovery more interesting than it being simply valuable. Often, I’ll find something weird and take it home just to work out why I like it.

  Shen often jokes that only people like us would think sifting through mud and sewers for junk is a hobby instead of an act of desperation. He says we’re so used to having everything we need that the only thing really valuable to us any more is the element of surprise. I don’t think that’s true, though.

  We are lucky that we don’t have to worry about food supplies or anything like that. Our parents, and their parents before them, planned meticulously for the time when there would be only a few humans left. We definitely don’t need to scavenge for items for anything but fun. But I don’t think we’re ungrateful or spoiled. The reason I enjoy treasure-hunting is because I’m fascinated by history. When you know that there’s no future, the only thing that’s interesting any more is the past.

  I want to know who Maya Waverley was. I wonder if I’ll be able to track her down on the old social media sites people used to post on. It would be nice to find out what happened to her.