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Authors: Elizabeth Anne Hull

BOOK: Gateways
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Turning, he headed across the sloping roof, in the direction of a glittering city that lay just a few hundred meters ahead, beyond the surfline and a heavy, gray seawall, that bore stains halfway up, from this year’s high-water mark. A world of money and confident ambition lay on the other side. Much more lively than Old Shanghai, with its lingering afterglow from Awfulday.

Footing was tricky as he made his careful way between a dozen broad, lenslike evaporation pans that he filled each day, providing trickles of fresh water, voltage, and salt to sell in town. Elsewhere, one could easily fall through crumbling shingles and sodden plywood. So Wer kept to paths that had been braced, soon after he signed the papers and took over this mess. This dream of a better life.

And it could still be ours. If only luck would come back to stay awhile.

Out of habit, he made a quick visual check of every stiff pipe and tension rope that spanned above the roof, holding the hammock-home in place, like a sail above a ship going nowhwere. Like a hopeful cocoon. Or, maybe, a spider in its web.

And, like a spider, Ling must have sensed him coming. She pushed her head out through the funnel door. Jet-black hair was braided behind the ears and then tied under the chin, in a new, urban style that she had seen on-web.

“Xin Pu Shi didn’t take the stuff,” she surmised, from his expression.

Wer shrugged, while tightening one of the cables that kept the framework from collapsing. A few of the poles—all that he could afford so
far—were made of noncorroding metlon, driven solidly into the old foundation. Given enough time, cash, and luck, something new would take shape here, a new and better home, as the old house died. That is, providing . . .

“Well?” Ling insisted. A muffled whimper, and then a cry, told him that the baby was awake. “What’ll you do now?”

“The county scrap barge will be here Thursday,” Wer said.

“And they pay
dung.
Barely enough to cover taking
our
dung away. What are we to live on, fish and salt?”

“People have done worse,” he muttered, looking down through a gap in the roof, past what had been a stylish master bathroom, then through a shorn stretch of tiled floor, to the soggy, rotten panels of a once stately dining room. Of course, all the real valuables had been removed by the original owners when they evacuated long ago, and the best salvagable items got stripped during the first year of overflowing tides. A
slow
disaster. One that left little of value for late-coming scavengers, like Wer.

“Right,” Ling laughed without humor. “And meanwhile, our claim expires in six months. It’s either build up or clean out, remember? One or the other, or we’re expelled!”

“I remember.”

“Do you want to go back to work that’s unfit for robots? Slaving in a geriatric ward, wiping drool and cleaning the diapers of little emperors?”

“There are farms, up in the highlands.”

“And they only let in refugees if you can prove ancestral connection to the district. Or if you bring a useful skill. But our families were urban, going back two revolutions!”

Wer grimaced and shook his head, downcast.
We have been over this, so many times,
he thought. But Ling seemed in a mood to belabor the obvious.

“This time, we may not be
lucky
enough to get jobs in a geriatric ward. You’ll have to work on a levee crew—and wind up buried in the cement. Then what will become of us?”

He lifted his gaze, squinting toward the long, concrete barrier, separating New Shanghai from the sea—part of a monumental construction that some called the New Great Wall, many times larger than the original—defending against an invader more implacable than any other—ocean tides that rose higher, every year. Here, along the abandoned shoreline, where wealthy export magnates once erected beachfront villas, you could gaze with envy at the glittering Xidong District, on the other side, whose inhabitants had turned their backs to the sea. It didn’t interest them, anymore.

“I’ll take the salvage to town,” he said.

“What?”

“I ought to get a better price ashore. And I’ll sell our extra catch, too. Anyway, we need some things.”

“Yeah, like beer,” Ling commented, sourly. But she didn’t try to stop him, or even mention that the trip was hazardous.
Fading hopes do that to a relationship,
he thought. Especially one built on unlikely dreams.

They said nothing further to each other. She slipped back inside. At least the baby’s crying soon stopped. Yet . . . Wer lingered for a moment, before going downstairs. He liked to picture his child—his son—at her breast. Despite being poor, ill-educated, and with a face that bore scars from a childhood mishap, Ling was still a healthy young woman, in a generation with too many single men. And fertile, too.

She is the one with options,
he pondered, morosely.
The adoption merchants would set her up with a factory job that she could supplement with womb-work. Though they would take Xie Xie. He’d draw a good fee, and maybe grow up in a rich home, getting the new electronic implants and maybe . . .

He chased the thought away with a harsh oath.
No! She came here with me. Because she believed we can make this work. And I will find a way.

Using the mansion’s crumbling grand staircase as an indoor dock, Wer built a makeshift float-raft consisting of a big square of polystyrene wrapped in fishing net, lashed to a pair of old surfboards with drapery cord. Then, before fetching the salvage, he took a quick tour to check his traps and fishing lines, bobbing at intervals around the house. It meant slipping on goggles and diving repeatedly, but by now he felt at home among the canted, soggy walls, festooned with seaweed and barnacles. At least there were a dozen or so nice catches this time, most of them even legal, including a big red lobster and a fat, angry wrasse. So, his luck wasn’t uniformly bad.

Reluctantly, he released a tasty Jiaoxi crab to go about its way. You never knew when some random underwater monitor, disguised as a drifting piece of flotsam, might be looking. He sure hoped none had spotted a forbidden rockfish, dangling from a gill net in back, too dead to do anything about. He took a moment to dive deeper and conceal the carcass, under a paving stone of the sunken garden.

The legal items, including the wrasse, a grouper, and two sea bass, he pushed into another mesh sack.

Our poverty is a strange one. The last thing we worry about is food.

Other concerns? Sure. Typhoons and tsunamis. Robbers and police shakedowns. City sewage leaks and red tides. Low recycle prices and the high cost of living.

Perhaps a fair wind will blow from the south today, instead.

In part, Wer blamed the former owners of this house, for having designed it without any care for the laws of nature. Too many windows had faced too many directions, including north, allowed chi to leak, in and out, almost randomly. None of the sills had been raised, to retain good luck. How could supposedly smart people have ignored so many lessons of the revered past? Simply in order to maximize their scenic view? It had served them right, when melting glaciers in far-north Greenland drowned their fancy home.

Wer checked the most valuable tool in his possession—a tide-driven drill that was almost finished boring into the old foundation, ready for another metlon support. He inspected the watch-camera that protected the drill from being pilfered, carefully ensuring that it had unobstructed views. Just ten more holes and supports. Then he could anchor the hammock-home in place with a real, arched frame, as some of the other shoresteaders had done.

And after that? A tide-power generator. And a bigger rain catchment. And a smart gathernet with a commercial fishing license. And a storm shelter. And a real boat. And more metlon.
He had even seen a shorestead where the settlers reached Phase Three: reinforcing and recoating all the wires and plumbing of the old house, in order to reconnect with the city grids. Then sealing all the walls to finish a true island of self-sufficiency—deserving a full transfer of deed. Every reclaimer’s dream.

And about as likely as winning a lottery, it seemed.

I had better get going,
he thought.
Or the tide will be against me.

Propelling the raft was a complex art. Wer haunch-squatted on the polystyrene square while sweeping a single oar in front of him, in a figure-eight pattern. It had taken months, after he and Ling first staked their claim, to learn how to do it just right, so there’d be almost no resistance on the forward stroke.

He tried to aim for one of the static pull-ropes used by other shoresteaders, which then led directly ashore, where the mammoth seawall swung backward for a hundred meters, far enough for a sandy beach to form. On occasion, he had been able to sell both fish and salvage right there, to middlemen who came out through a pair of massive gates. On weekends, a few families came down from nearby city towers, to visit salty surf and
sand. Some would pay top rates to a shoresteader, for a fresh, wriggling catch.

But, while a rising tide helped push him closer, it also ensured the gates would be closed, when he arrived.

I’ll tie up at the wall and wait. Or maybe climb over. Slip into town, till it ebbs.
Wer had a few coins. Not enough to buy more metlon. But sufficient for a hardworking man to have a well-deserved beer.

As always, he peered downward as the raft moved with every stroke of the oar. Wer had modified the chunk of polystyrene to hold a hollow tube with a big, fish-eye lens at the bottom, and a matching lens up top. After much fiddling, he had finally contrived a good device for scanning the bottom while pushing along—a small advantage that he kept secret from the other steaders. You never knew when something might turn up below, revealed by the shifting sea. Mostly, house sites in this area had been bulldozed and cleared with drag lines, after the evacuation. Common practice in the early days, when people first retreated from the continental margins. Only later was steading seen as a cheaper alternative. Let some poor dope slave away at salvage and demolition, driven by a slender hope of ownership.

In large part, all that remained here were concrete foundations and fields of stubby utility pipes, along with tumbled lumps of stone and concrete too heavy to move. Still, out of habit, he kept scanning for any change, as a combination of curiosity and current drew him by what had been the biggest mansion along this stretch of coast. Some tech-baron oligarch had set up a seaside palace here, before he toppled spectacularly, in one of the big purges. Steader stories told that he was dragged off, one night, tried in secret, and shot. Quickly, so he would not spill secrets about mightier men. There had been a lot of that, all over the world, twenty years or so ago.

Of course government agents would have picked the place cleaner than a bone, before letting the bulldozers in. And other gleaners followed. Yet, Wer always felt a romantic allure, passing two or three meters overhead, imagining the place when walls and windows stood high, festooned with lights. When liveried servants patrolled with trays of luscious treats, satisfying guests in ways that—well—he probably couldn’t imagine, though sometimes he liked to try.

Of course, the sand and broken crete still held detritus. Old pipes and conduits. Cans of paint and solvents still leaked from the ruin, rising as individual up-drips to pop at the surface and make it gleam. From their hammock-home, Wer and Ling used to watch sunsets reflect off the rainbow sheen. Back when all of this seemed exciting, romantic, and new.

Speaking of new . . .

Wer stopped kicking and twisted his body around to peer downward. A glitter had caught his eye. Something different.

There’s been some kind of cave-in,
he realized.
Under one edge of the main foundation slab.

The sea was relatively calm, this far beyond the surfline. So he grabbed a length of tether from the raft, took several deep breaths, then flipped downward, diving for a better look.

It did look like a gap under the house, one that he never saw before. But, surely, someone else would have noticed this by now. Anyway, the government searchers would have been thorough. Woudn’t they? What were the odds that . . .

Tying the tether to a chunk of concrete, he moved close enough to peer inside the cavity, careful not to disturb much sediment with his flippers. Grabbing an ikelite from his belt, he sent its sharp beam lancing inside, where an underground wall had recently collapsed. During the brief interval before his lungs grew stale and needy, he could make out few details. Still, by the time he swiveled and kicked back toward the surface, one thing was clear.

The chamber contained things. Lots of things.

And, to Wer, almost anything down there would be worth going after, even if it meant squeezing through a narrow gap, into a crumbling basement underneath the sea.

T
REASURE

Night had fallen some time ago and now his torch batteries were failing. That, plus sheer physical exhaustion, forced Wer, at last, to give up salvaging anything more from the hidden cache that he had found, underneath a sunken mansion. Anyway, with the compressed air bottle depleted, his chest now burned from repeated free-dives through that narrow opening, made on lung power alone, snatching whatever he could—whatever sparkle caught his eye down there.

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