out these unbreathable toxic gases. You know why it's so hot at the Earth's core? Because this planet's just a chunk of some supernova that exploded, like, aeons ago.'
I wonder what channels she had been watching. Discovery, BBC World, Cartoon Network, News 24, CNN. But where? When? The TV in the rec room seems permanently fixed on MTV. The internet. A million websites, a zillion images - you can go anywhere, believe in anything, see carnage of every variety, scare yourself to Neptune and back. If global warming is terminal proof that we have fouled our own nest, Bethany is evidence that some human minds can draw energy from the fact.
'You know what I mean by the Earth's core,' she says, touching her heart with spread fingers. Her father is a preacher: I wonder how much of her presentation comes, unconsciously, from him. Or perhaps it's just an ability to convey conviction that she has picked up, a charisma. 'I mean its centre. I mean its soul. I saw it when they zapped me. You're not supposed to remember anything about the shock, right? But I do. My whole body wakes up. I came back from the dead, you know. Like Lazarus. Or Jesus Christ. I can see things, Wheels. Disasters. I've made notes. Dates, times, places, everything. Just like a weathergirl. They should employ me. I'd get paid a fucking fortune. I can see stuff happening before it happens. I feel it. Atoms popping about. Vibrations in your blood. These huge fucking wounds. The planet in meltdown. This freezing stuff, pouring from the cracks. Then it heats up, like some kind of magma. And whoosh. The promised land.'
She smiles, bright-eyed, and for a tiny, fleeting fraction of time, she looks ecstatically, murderously happy.
Unimaginably atrocious things have surely been done to Bethany, to make her do what she did: things that can never be undone. And she has done an unimaginably atrocious thing in return. I doubt I will ever get to the bottom of the trauma that led her to take a Phillips screwdriver to her mother, though I might take a second look at the photo of the father and hazard a guess that some of the damage came from him too. What matters now is Bethany 'moving forward', as the jargon goes, on a shiny conveyor belt of psychic progress. People like me are supposed to believe in repair, and I once did, until I became the object of my own clinical trial. After which -
Not any more. Damage limitation, perhaps. Sometimes. Sometimes not. When you stop being a woman, as I did on May 14th two years ago, there are things you see more clearly. Sexuality confounds matters, insinuating itself into every exchange. Freed of all that, you can see things for what they are, like kids do, and old people. That's my theory. But it's only a theory. And anyway, who says I am free?
'So you see, with all that going on in my head, it's like non-stop around here. Things to think about, things to do, that's me,' finishes Bethany. But after the rush of information, the burst of energy, she seems suddenly deflated, dissatisfied with herself. Her fantasies are a fertile oasis in the desert of her boredom, and a corner of her consciousness knows it.
'Things in the self-destruction department.'
'Things in the self-destruction department.' She mimics me well enough to make me wince internally. 'Bibble babble, bibble babble, bibble babble.'
I let my eyes wander around the room until I catch sight of myself in the mirror, and make a swift, stranger's appraisal: a woman with extravagant brunette hair, who may be skilled at her work, and good-looking in a seriously-damaged-goods sort of way, but who is clearly forever dependent on others. Who will never walk again, never have sex, never give birth. Who shall remain forever beholden to others.
Bethany has stopped rocking and is looking at me intently. I don't say anything, but an instinct makes me assess the distance between us. And the angles. When my father moved into the care home five years ago, my brother Pierre came over from