Birds of Paradise by Oliver Langmead (top ebook reader TXT) π
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- Author: Oliver Langmead
Read book online Β«Birds of Paradise by Oliver Langmead (top ebook reader TXT) πΒ». Author - Oliver Langmead
For days, Adam wakes to yet more rain. Then, one day, the rain stops and the world outside is water. There is a dull dawn of great grey clouds, low over the murky brown flood that has consumed the landscape. All outside is still, and the hospital room is quiet, and Adam feels as if he has awoken to a moment outside of time. It takes him a while to realise that the power is out β that all his machines are still, and the lights are off. Slowly, he disentangles himself from his cloak of cables, pulling needles from his arms, and unpeeling the stickers attaching monitors to him. He gently presses at the architecture of wires keeping his chest closed beneath his bandages; they scratch and scrape at his ribs, and there is a reparative needling, but no pain.
A black silhouette in the sky breaks the peace, the blur of its blades whirling the clouds. A helicopter is coming.
Crow arrives surrounded by staff: nurses, and orderlies, and doctors. She looks tired, and is wearing the same clothes as yesterday. The group gather around Owlβs bed, and needles flash as they are thrust into him; he is punctured and filled with sedatives. Carefully, they free him of the machines, place the wilting flowers of his collection aside, and prepare a route. They start to roll his bed away, towards the open doorway.
βWhere are they taking him?β Adam asks.
Crow wipes at her eyes with the back of her wrist. βA different hospital. One with power. The floods got a lot worse last night. How are you feeling?β
βIβm okay.β
βGood. Our own transport should be here soon.β Crow lies on Adamβs bed with a sigh, resting among the fallen petals of flowers.
Adam peers out. βAll that water,β he says. βLike the seaβs swallowed the world.β
βWorse every year,β says Crow. βThere wonβt be much land left at this rate.β
βPlenty of sky, though.β
She smiles. βIβm going to go fetch a few things.β
Adam watches Owlβs helicopter depart, becoming a distant dot, and when it has vanished into the far horizon the grey clouds begin to clear, revealing patches of blue. A boat appears in the distance, with froth writhing in its wake.
βI found your coat,β says Crow, when she returns. The coat is beaten and worn and full of holes, but somebody has thought to wash it β there is no mud or blood staining it. Adam gratefully shrugs it on. βAnd that,β she says, peering out at the boat, βshould be for us.β She gives Adam a backpack, and covers him with a few more blankets. βFor the journey.β
The hospital is dark and mostly deserted, but for a few remaining members of staff. The lower floor is completely flooded, and bits of medical equipment bob in the murky waters. Crow helps Adam roll through to the grand central staircase, and there she sits at the edge, making a tower of playing cards while she waits. By the time she crowns it, the waters are lapping at the step on which it stands. βThis is the first time itβs stopped raining in a week,β she says. βItβs like a monsoon season.β She leans back and watches the flood as it curls towards the base of her tower.
All at once, the tower collapses. Cards float away: kings and queens, aces and hearts. Adam watches them drift and bob and remembers the rains that struck him back in Manchester. It feels a lot longer than a week ago. The insect buzz of the boatβs motor fills the hall as it sweeps through the hospital doors. Itβs no more than a small motorised tub, but itβs nimble, and being directed by a broad-shouldered figure in a yellow mackintosh coat. The boatβs brightly dressed captain brings it around to the foot of the steps. βHow you both doing?β he rumbles, merrily.
βHi, Crab.β
With one foot on the steps, and one foot in his boat, Crab keeps it steady so that Adam can stumble aboard. He is surprised by how weak his legs are; it is as if all his strength leaked out of the hole in his chest. The boat rocks, and Adam seats himself as centrally as he can, while Crow situates herself at the tubβs fore.
βAll good?β rumbles Crab.
βLetβs get going,β says Crow.
βRight you are.β Seating himself back at the boatβs motor, Crab beckons it into life. He leans forward, and pats Adam on the knee. βBack into the bright wide world, eh lad?β
The world is indeed bright, and Adam watches as the dark bulk of the remote hospital slowly recedes. There are still staff up on its roof, and they wave at the boat as it departs, and Adam raises his hand in return: a thanks that feels insufficient. Ahead, the endless waters are broken only by the tips of the rolling hills that emerge from the flood, and Adam finds it difficult to imagine there is any dry land left. It feels as if the waters have swallowed the world; have washed away the worst of it, perhaps.
* * *
Yorkshire feels like itβs gone.
The highest hills of the moors rise from the flood, with trees clinging on to them as if they are themselves marooned. The currents that pour and swirl around them are treacherous and ever-changing, and sometimes Adam spots a distant dinghy or raft trying to navigate the watery labyrinth. Crab directs his little motorboat through it all, finding passages beneath skeletal canopies and across improbable shelves of frothing surf. The murky water is rich with debris that bumps against the boat β branches, mostly, but bits of rubbish as well. Crow dangles her arms in the water and pushes the worst away, until
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