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During the night, they dropped anchor so they would not drift. It is so easy to get lost when you have no landmarks either ahead of you or behind you, or anywhere. And the oarsmen need to rest, even though Matteo made it possible for the father and Liam to rest for a few hours during the day. He’s dead tired, the younger brother, with his eyes as big as the sea, and shadows beneath them seeping into his cheeks. So the mother did not protest when they moored in the middle of nowhere, for Matteo and Liam’s sake, because otherwise they won’t make it. She examines her boys and they dodge her gaze, they don’t want her to see how exhausted the exertion has made them, they’re not even hungry, she forces them. She reaches in the first bag for pancakes and hard-boiled eggs; she cooked their entire stock when she knew they were leaving, a whole night spent boiling eggs, fortunately at the time the hens were still laying constantly, she knows the number by heart, there are ninety-two eggs in the bag. She left thirty behind for the little ones abandoned on the hill, the hens will go on laying there, and the children know how to make omelets. She feels a lump in her throat at the sudden thought of Louie, Perrine, and Noah; she reaches abruptly for the knife, cuts up the pancakes, unequal portions as always, she doesn’t want the vision of the three children on the island to come to her. How did they react this morning when they awoke and found the house empty? In their panic, did they see the letter? Do they understand that their father will be coming back for them? And what if they did panic? What if they jumped in the water to go after them? Cut your slices, Madie, shut off your brain, there’s nothing good in there. God, please make sure Perrine manages to cook something. Make it so that Louie will agree to kill his hens one by one, if they get hungry. Maybe they are still at the water’s edge, crying, incapable of moving, they’ll have lost all will, all three of them—why them? Yes, why them? The mother feels the wrenching in her flesh, she knows there were no solutions, it was those three or the others, either way they had to leave someone behind, they are already crammed on this boat worse than sacks of grain, the eight of them. In the falling night, she prays the water level will not rise all of a sudden. That the father will have time to go back. Stop that, stop right now, otherwise you’ll start crying. Her heart upended with sorrow and rage she peels her eggs, three for the father, two for Liam and Matteo. Just one for everyone else. Don’t eat too fast. That much she said out loud.

A strange picnic on a boat in the middle of the black waves. They have lit two candles. The little girls want to stretch their legs, to run, to squabble. The mother points to the water: Where? They look out at it in silence. Liam and Matteo are already asleep, rolled up in blankets. Emily grumbles.

“There are mosquitoes.”

“We’ll climb under the sheet,” whispers Madie.

“It’s too hot…”

“During the night it will get cool. You’ll see. We’ll be glad to have a blanket.”

“Where are we going to sleep?”

“Lie down right there. I put a little blanket so it won’t be so hard.”

“Are we going to put on our jammies?”

“No.”

“Are we going to brush our teeth?”

“Not tonight.”

“Are you going to sleep there too?”

“Of course I am, where else am I supposed to go?”

The mother glances at the water around them, and touches the ropes on the sides of the boat. Will she manage to sleep? She bets she won’t. She’s too afraid one of her children will fall overboard. She wishes she could have lashed them all together; but the older ones would have given her an exasperated look, and the little ones would have whined that it bothered them. The father would have said she was crazy.

The father has left a candle burning on the other side of the supplies.

“What are you doing?” murmurs the mother; she cannot see him.

“I’m studying the map.”

“Are we lost?”

“No, I have a compass. I’m just looking, for tomorrow.”

“Are we headed east?”

“Yes. Always.”

“How many miles did we do today?”

“I don’t know.”

“But roughly?”

“The only thing I know is that that’s all we could do.”

“We made good progress,” says the mother, with conviction.

“It would be better with some wind.”

“God forbid.”

That is Madie’s greatest fear, a storm. Ever since the climate went to the dogs and they’ve been battered by bad weather, she has been afraid of gusts, of sudden squalls that ambush them with a downpour in a matter of seconds, and more than anything of the wind, the wind that brought the sea to their doorstep, obliging them to flee, the wind that would have them lie flat on the ground if they don’t want to be blown away, the wind which on the day of the great tidal wave took the hens from the island. Never before had Madie imagined she would ever see those hens flying away, caught in a wind that whirled them every which way, like wisps of straw that she and Pata never saw again. They would have laughed about it if it hadn’t been so tragic, because at the same time the hens were being scooped up from the ground, a section of the barn roof collapsed, crushing everything underneath it. The father wanted to save what he could—tarpaulins, spare bottles of water, and the wood, because it would eventually dry—so he rushed out. He made it ten yards, no further, before he turned around, nearly swept off his feet himself by the gusting wind, left deep down with an indefinable feeling of weakness. Shrubs he knew did not grow on their hill rolled by like tumbleweeds; one of them scratched his leg and he stumbled. He came back in on all fours, his expression wild, his hair clinging to his brow. It was impossible to close the shutter behind him, he was fighting over it with the wind, which kept slamming it against the wall. He gave up. He would never forget the force of the heavens.

Madie does not know that he is praying at least as hard as she is, praying to be spared any storms during their voyage. But the water was still rising when they left their island, and that was a bad sign. The elements continue to brim over; nothing can stop them, nothing can calm them. Hundreds of miles of water with neither rocks nor trees to oppose them. A clear field, open to every gust, every whirlwind. Yes, Pata too knows it’s an illusion to believe they can complete the journey without a storm. He just hopes it will come as late as possible, once the former prairies are behind them. He hopes the buttes will still be there, and that they might find refuge for a few hours. At dawn, when he raises the anchor, he looks warily at the sky. There is no hint of anything, just a light, gentle mist, which he doesn’t like much either. And with a sinking heart the father senses they won’t have to wait for long.

* * *

One day and one entire night. Hours to be afraid and feel the air pressure building. They saw it coming from a long way off, the storm. The clouds gathered on the horizon like a pack of dogs about to spring, growling for hours while they rowed until they were breathless, as if they could outrow the storm, praying that they would find land, while their panicked gazes swept over the sea and found nothing but water and the first waves. Madie can feel the power beneath them, something vast and contained, she knows the storm is strengthening. No matter which way she turns her head, the sky everywhere is yellow and black, and thunder surrounds them. The boat is solitary, tiny and laughable on the angry ocean. The mother looks at Pata with all her might. He is observing the world, he knows, too. He’s gauging their chances. They have stowed the oars on the side of the craft, they are useless now. A huge black wall is following them, a mixture of rain and wind, of turbulent waves; when they are inside it—when this gigantic gaping mouth catches up with them and engulfs them—there will be nothing they can do. Lowering his eyes from the heavens, the father’s gaze meets the mother’s. His lips murmur in silence. I’m sorry. And just then, the first waves rock the boat.