âWhatâs going on?â I gasp, watching as Nurse Georgia lifts Bethâs baby from his crib, marking an X on his cheek with black chalk.
âAlexandra, the babyâs a Cripple,â she says, her voice soft.
âNo way,â I push past her, taking the baby from her arms. I look down at his flushed face. âHeâs a Perfect!â
âNo, heâs having trouble breathing. We donât have the space or time for a baby who canât breathe right.â
âBut heâs a Perfect!â
âHeâs a Cripple.â
âBeth gave her life for him!â
âBeth was a Defective.â
âShe wasnât! She was just sick!â
âAnd that makes her a Defective. Alexandra, the babyâs a Cripple. Either way, the mother is a Defective.â
âBut why does it matter if he canât breathe right? Heâs a new life! Heâs a baby! Give him a chance!â
âGo clean up, Alexandra. Youâre covered in blood, and youâve had a shock. You wouldnât want to risk a miscarriage, would you?â Nurse Georgia snaps.
The baby stirs in my arms, opening his dark-brown eyes to look at me. âIâll take care of him! I will!â
âHeâs a Cripple, Alexandra! He wonât make it to school, past the Testing, to war.â
âJust, please! Beth died for this boy. Please let me try. Let me try.â
âWe donât have room for a Cripple here, Alexandra. Youâre due in a month. You donât have the time or energy to care for two babies. Especially one that canât breathe right.â
âThatâs not so bad.â
âHis blood pressureâs off too. His heart is too small.â
âGive me a chance?â
âI wonât risk your baby, Alexandra. Even if you might, I wonât allow it. Give me the child.â
Nurse Georgia reaches for Bethâs son. I step back. âNo!â
âHeâs not even your child!â
âBeth died for him! I donât want her death to be in vain! He was supposed to become a Master and end the war!â I sob.
âAlexandra! Enough.â She lunges for me, but I dodge her. âI donât want to hurt your baby, Alexandra. Donât be foolish. Give me the child.â
âYouâre going to kill him.â
âIâm going to dispose of him. His life isnât worth living.â
âYou said you could save him!â
âAnd I did! Itâs not my fault heâs a Cripple!â
I look at the tiny child sleeping in my arms. âHeâs so innocent,â I whisper.
âHe wonât feel anything, I promise,â Nurse Georgia says softly.
âHow can I hand him over to you to be killed?â I look up at her through my tears.
She shakes her head slowly. âIn a month youâll have your own baby to worry about, Alexandra. I understand your maternal instinct to care for this one. But heâs not yours, and heâs a Cripple. Give him to me.â
âI canât.â
The door opens, and Nurse Libby brings in Head Nurse Tania. They look at me, blood-soaked and clutching Bethâs baby to my chest.
âIsnât he a Cripple?â Head Nurse Tania asks.
âHe is,â Nurse Libby confirms.
âIâm going to take care of him,â I tell Head Nurse Tania.
âYou canât do that, Alexandra. Give me the baby.â She reaches out her arms.
âNo! Beth died for him! You canât kill him too!â
âHold her!â
âNo!â Nurse Georgia and Nurse Libby grab me, but I donât have the strength to fight them both. Head Nurse Tania wrenches the baby from my arms and runs out of the room.
I manage to push Nurse Georgia and Nurse Libby away and chase after Head Nurse Tania, screaming down the hallway.
***
âBethâs baby died that day. They didnât waste any medicine on a Cripple. The baby was just cremated alive, turned into ash.â
âOh.â The journalist grips her cup tightly. âThatâs horrible.â
âThat was the fate of Cripples when they were that young or that crippled. Cremated alive. The smoke killed them first, though.
âAnd they returned to the ashes, like everything else in Albion. They barely even had an hour of life.â
âYour mother couldnât save him?â
âShe was slowed down by her swollen belly and a bloody gown. She was stopped and taken to the bathroom. They cleaned her up and put her to bed. But she already hated them. All of them.â
âSo thatâs when things changed for her?â
âThings had already changed long before, but she just hadnât realized how much. In a way, despite her questions, she had been denying her doubts.
âBethâs death, though, made her realize that they might, in fact, be legitimate. My mother spent the next month in her room alone. She didnât talk to anyone, didnât let anyone visit her.
âForced by her pregnancy to leave her room for food a few times a day, my mother remained polite and conventional in front of the other girls and the nurses who checked on her baby.
âIn her room, she hugged her belly tightly, feeling for the movements of her baby inside her. She talked to her baby, made promises, rambled on, and stared out the window, watching the gray horizon.â
âWas she planning something?â
âPlanning? I donât think so. Sheâs looking at a future filled with at least sixteen years of pregnancies, raising kids, and no breaks until she maybe becomes a teacher or a nurse.
âBut even that dream was shattered by Eric. Planning? Iâm not sure. Thinking about ending it all? Probably. All I know is she locked herself in her room for a month. Then one afternoon, she started feeling contractions.
âShe wasnât so stubborn as to be foolish. Sheâd already witnessed one baby being born on her bed. So, she made her way downstairs, where two nurses ushered her into a birthing room.
âThey told her she had about ten hours to go before the baby would actually arrive. Her contractions werenât close enough together yet.
âMost girls in labor would roam the nursery in a group, but my mom was still playing the lone wolf. She spent hours pacing the halls, checking the time, and eating whatever food they gave her.
âShe wandered out of the birthing area and into the nursery wing, where new mothers and their babies lived together for a year.
âShe found herself in the main room where mothers sat with their tiny, perfect children, whispering softly, trying to teach their babies to walk and talk.
âMy mom was captivated by the mothers and their babies until her next contraction hit. Then she moved on.
âBy the time she returned to the birthing room, sheâd been wandering for a few hours. She knew she had more time, but her feet were starting to ache.
âBut she wasnât going to get a break. Eric was there. One of the nurses had called him, just like heâd asked her to do when my mom went into labor.
âEric was waiting for her with one of the nurses and gave her a polite smile when she entered the room. She would have acted more appropriately, more respectfully, if sheâd seen him under different circumstances.
âBut the contractions hit, and she ended up gasping on the floor, swearing.â
âDid Masters often visit the nurseries?â
âThey did, actually. They liked to see the babies being born, being raised. They were the gears that kept the whole system running, so they visited often.
âIt wasnât unusual for Eric to be there. He stayed by her side. While she endured contractions, he walked her through the nursery again and brought her food and water when she needed it.
âI donât know if they talked, but I do know that he stayed with her. She gave birth at midnight. Eric named the baby Alexandra 58,586,543,887.64.1. Named after her mother, as the first daughter should be.
âShe weighed exactly seven and a half pounds. Her skin was as pale as snow, her lashes and brows were dark. Her eyes were dark, her lips plump and pink. She was a Pre-Perfect in every way.
âThey took her away to be cleaned up, and my mom fell asleep in the birthing room. She didnât wake up until Eric carried her back to her room.â