‘I don’t understand,’ said Poppy. ‘You’re suggesting that Ara jumped because she thought that the mission would fail. But that makes no sense. If that is the reason then why didn’t she just run away? Why did she have to…?’
‘I don’t know,’ Eliot said.
‘Do you think we could have stopped her?’ Juno asked. The question she asked herself every day, why she’d not just grabbed Ara at the BIS and begged her to stay.
‘I don’t know,’ Poppy said. ‘Ara wanted to die. Clearly. I mean – she must have. And if she did, I don’t know if there’s anything we could have done to stop her.’
‘Is that your medical opinion?’ Eliot asked
‘What’s that supposed to mean?’
‘People want to die all the time, Eliot,’ Juno said. ‘It’s a mental illness. Our first, most basic, instinct is to keep ourselves alive. It’s innate, it’s the reason we put clothes on our backs and food in our mouths and make penicillin. When that urge is gone then something is—’
‘Broken?’ Eliot let out a derisive laugh. ‘You think we could have fixed her?’
‘Maybe,’ Juno said, but her voice came out thin. The effort of standing had exhausted her, but when she sat down on the frozen ground she immediately regretted it. It was cold as a mortuary slab.
‘Maybe,’ said Poppy finally. ‘And maybe we’ll never know. We can spend our whole lives guessing and blaming each other but maybe we just have to forgive.’
‘You think?’ Eliot lifted his head to look at her. Poppy nodded. ‘Say goodbye?’ he asked and she nodded again. ‘But… then I’d really be alone.’ Tears seeped slowly from his eyes.
‘No.’ Poppy knelt down and grabbed his hand. ‘We need you.’
‘But…’ He looked past her, at the shadows beyond the cracked spires, ‘you know she’s here with me.’
‘Right now?’ Juno’s heart sank. It was worse than she had thought. Eliot was clearly suffering from some kind of delusion.
But Poppy simply continued stroking his hand calmly. ‘She needs to leave.’ She said it like an order, with a strength that Juno had never seen. Said it as if she could command him back from the world between the living and the dead.
‘Tell her. We need you here.’
Tears squeezed from Eliot’s eyes. ‘I don’t think I can,’ he said.
‘I know,’ Poppy soothed. ‘It takes courage to be alone. But you have to tell her that she can’t stay. Tell her that you forgive her but you have decided, today, to live.’
Chapter 53
ELIOT
18.02.13
TEMPERATURE: -3°C
O2
: 68% SEA LEVELWEEKS UNTIL RESCUE: 6
FOR THE REST OF his life, Eliot’s mind would always roam back to the edge of the Thames, and he would never properly understand what made her jump.
He’d left the Earth less than twenty-four hours after Ara had died. Had not seen her body again, after it had been carted away from Embankment. He had not attended her funeral, and the guilt of the abandonment crushed him.
When Juno and Poppy took him down to the infirmary, Eliot had been delirious with hypothermia. He’d thought that he could see Ara everywhere he looked.
His nerves had been on fire. Electric shocks arrowed up his toes and along the arch of his foot as Fae had tried to warm them. In his confusion, he’d thought he’d heard Juno and the doctor mention frostbite. ‘I think he might lose them,’ one of them had said.
Eliot cried so much that finally Fae injected something into his IV to put him to sleep, and in his dream he was walking through the ship, Ara’s hand in his. Through the window, he could see that they were close enough to Terra-Two for him to discern mountain ranges.
‘You can’t come with me,’ he told her. Her hand, in his, was heavy as a millstone.
‘Of course I can.’ She smiled the way she used to when they shared an inside joke.
‘We used to go everywhere together,’ he told her. He and Ara had grown up like two trees with their roots twisted together. Both of them liked to believe that, together, they were twice as strong. Although, silently, they knew that without the other they were crippled.
He saw them both, watching the long surf rise and fall near his uncle’s house in Southerndown. Getting drunk in Brockwell Park, their blood sizzling with champagne, lying on their backs in the floodlit grass, talking about God and Terra-Two and the