Authors: Stewart Foster
What can I do in London in three hours?
323,000,000 results
– I can buy a tourist card and get on a bus. I can visit Buckingham Palace, the Houses of Parliament and the Tower of London. If the queue isn’t too long,
I can go to Madame Tussauds. I can walk in Hyde Park. I can get on a barge and float down the Thames. I can eat tea at the Ritz; I can see a play. I can do nearly 70 million things, but
they’ll all be closed or it’ll be too dark to see anything at 4 a.m. Amir, what are we going to do when we have to get up so early?
My chest cramps again. I’m not sure I want to go. What if I die? Deep breaths. I won’t be able to go anywhere if I can’t breathe. I lie down beside my laptop and look at the
question again. Dan hasn’t got 3 hours. He’s only got 8 minutes. I close my eyes, think for a moment and open them again.
Dear Dan. I haven’t seen Donnie Darko but I love Source Code and I’d love to do all those things you said you’d like to do. But I
think if I had eight minutes, I would stay at home too.
I turn my laptop off and look at the screens. Nothing much seems to be happening. I’m watching the same thing over and over again. It’s like when the robbers
override the security system and play the film on the CCTV while they steal money from a bank. I yawn and think of trying to find some football to watch. But Amir told me to make notes. I make them
on my laptop.
16:10 Man arrives to repair photocopier
17:05. Motor courier delivers blood.
17:30. Julie says goodbye to Keith and walks down the road.
18:22. Keith is talking on phone.
19:55 Jim arrives.
20:00 Julie meets Keith outside. They kiss in the service alley.
20:30 Jim takes his book to the toilet.
20:46 Jim comes out of the toilet.
21:15 Phil checks the first floor.
22:00 Jim goes to the toilet again.
I close my laptop down. This is so boring. How can Amir say I should watch them all night? I don’t think the Chuckle Brothers are very funny, but they’re funnier than this. Ant and
Dec definitely are. I looked them up.
11 years, 3 months and 10 days
I’m practising my breathing exercises when Greg comes in the next morning. His eyes are red and his face is white; he looks like he’s been up all night. He sits
down beside me and leans forward with his elbows on his knees.
‘Much happening, mate?’ He nods at the screens.
‘Nothing much. Keith kissed Julie and I saw you fall off your bike when you turned the corner this morning.’
Greg tuts. ‘It was the bloody cones, mate. Somebody moved them during the night.’
‘That was Terry.’ I point to screen 4. ‘He’s in charge of traffic lights and cones.’
‘Ha, have you given everyone names?’
‘Of course.’
‘Go on then. Let’s hear them.’
I get off my bed and stand by screen 5. ‘Mike, Andy, Dave and . . . hang on . . . I wish he would stop doing that!’
‘Who, mate?’
‘The guy in security. He keeps moving the cameras.’
Greg laughs. ‘Mate, I think they’re more bothered about stopping crime than they are about you watching TV.’
The camera pans back and I show him Dave and Mike.
‘They’re from Brighton,’ I say.
‘How do you know that’s where they live?’
‘It says so on their van.’
‘Ha, you know everything.’
I walk back to my bed. Greg yawns and puts his head in his hands. I want to tell him that I might not have to make it all up soon, that I might be able to go out and meet them all for real. But
I can’t. He might stop me going and I don’t want Amir to get the sack.
Greg’s pager bleeps. He takes his hands down from his face and looks down at his belt.
‘Mate—’
‘It’s okay. I know.’
‘It’s just gone a little mad lately.’
I want to tell him things have gone a bit mad for me too.
Greg stands up.
‘Is everyone all right?’
‘Yeah, mate, why?
‘It’s just that Amir was busy last night too.’
‘Everyone’s fine, honest.’ He pretends to limp towards the door. ‘You just stay there and tell Terry he better not move those bloody cones again tonight.’
Greg doesn’t come back all morning. I watch the screens and do my breathing exercises until a nurse I’ve never seen before comes in and gives me lunch. She
doesn’t tell me her name but she knows mine. I decide to talk to her but she’s gone before I think of what to say.
After lunch I click on the BBC website. I’ve got a new message.
BBC Bubble Boy Forum
Fri 26th August, 22:01
Dear Bubble Boy
I hope you don’t mind but I saw you on TV and just wanted to write to you. I wrote to you last year but I changed my mind before I sent it. My name is Hannah
and I’m fourteen years old. I live in Wells and I go to school at St Mary’s High. I’m not that good at talking to people. I just like sitting in my room reading and playing
music. I love reading The Little Prince (I’ve read it a hundred times. Have you?). And I like watching Lord of the Rings. I stay in most of the time. Sorry, that must sound bad when I
could go out but don’t and you haven’t got a choice. Sorry again. I just wanted to tell you that your room looks great and I loved it when you went to the window and showed us the
planes. I’ve never been on one but I often think of all the places they go. I’m not sure if I’ve said anything sensible in this letter but I just wanted to write something
to you. Hope you don’t think it’s silly. Maybe I should delete it like the last one.
Hannah
I smile and start to type.
Dear Hannah
Thank you for writing. It’s OK, I don’t mind what you said about me being stuck in a bubble. People do it all the time. Even my sister does. I haven’t
read The Little Prince and I prefer superheroes to Hobbits. I read Marvel Comics and DC too but I prefer Marvel because the superheroes are brave and they have more fun. Spider-Man is my
favourite and I really like Wolverine too.
The door opens. Greg walks in. ‘All right, mate? What are you doing?’
‘Just replying to a message.’ I turn my screen towards him.
‘Hey, great.’ He walks over to my bed and starts to read the messages. ‘Hey, you got one from a girl.’
Greg looks at the screen and starts to laugh.
‘What’s wrong?’ I ask.
He points at my reply. ‘Mate, I’ve not got time to read it all, but she’s a girl, they don’t want to talk about superheroes all the time.’
‘Beth does.’ I also don’t think Greg is right, but maybe Katie doesn’t like superheroes, so he isn’t to know that not all girls are like that.
Greg laughs again.
I look back at my screen. Now that Greg has said that, I don’t know what else to write. I hold my finger over the keyboard and think of pressing the delete key. Greg checks the readings on
the monitors –
Room temp.
: 19
Air purity
: 98.2%
Heart rate
: 77
‘Ask her something,’ he says. ‘Sounds like she’s stuck in a room, too.’
‘Like what?’
‘Anything, mate.’
I’m glad you like my room and the planes. What can you see out of your window?
Greg glances at my screen. ‘Yeah, that’s good.’ He walks towards the door.
‘Are you going already?’
‘Yeah, mate, I’m sorry. I’ve got to get back.’
‘Back where?’
‘What’s that?’ He puts his hand on the door.
‘Where have you got to go back to?’
‘Just the other wards. That’s all.’
‘Is it the norovirus again?’
‘What?’
‘The reason everyone’s so busy. Is it the norovirus?’
‘No, mate, where did that come from?’
‘It’s just you’re busy, and so was Amir.’
‘We all are, but don’t worry. Hey,’ he nods at my laptop, ‘maybe ask her what music she likes too . . . I’ll try and get back to you later.’
I look back at my laptop.
What music do you like?
I press Send and lie down. The last time Greg was this busy was when the norovirus was here two years ago. He didn’t tell me what was happening then, but every day all the
nurses were running around looking after people and cleaning and there were TV crews and reporters outside. I watched it on the news. Loads of people were being sick – patients, nurses and
the doctors. Four hundred people caught it. It was so bad they sent some patients home while they closed down six wards for two weeks and sprayed them with disinfectant. I thought I was going to
have to move too, but they told me that would never happen because I was in the safest place in the whole hospital. I haven’t seen any TV crews outside but maybe this time it’s so
dangerous everybody thinks they will catch it.
I open a new tab and type in
Norovirus
.
938,400 results.
Symptoms, vomiting and diarrhoea.
I can’t see anything about the norovirus here.
My laptop beeps. I glance at the corner of the screen.
Hey Joe what are you doing? | 14:00 |
Looking up Norovirus. | 14:00 |
Crap! Have you got it there? | 14:01 |
No. | 14:01 |
I scroll down.
But 300 people have got it in South Wales | 14:02 |
How far’s that? | 14:02 |
Hang on . . . 220 miles | 14:02 |
That’s close! | 14:02 |
Is it?! | 14:03 |
Well, it is over here. | 14:03 |
It’s got to go over a bridge to get here | |
Would that stop it? | 14:03 |
Think it travels in the air not by road. Ha. | 14:03 |
Pigeons! | 14:04 |
No, don’t think so. What does it say? | 14:04 |
It spreads from person to person | |
by the faecal-oral route. | 14:04 |
Sounds like a toothpaste. | 14:04 |
This is serious | |
I don’t want to go outside if it’s here. | 14:05 |
Sorry. I’m sure it’s not. | |
So you’re definitely going? | 14:05 |
Yes, I think so. Tomorrow. | 14:06 |
Amir left me loads of instructions. | |
I’ve got to memorize them. | |
Cool. What time are you going? | 14:06 |
4 o’clock. | 14:07 |
Same time as me. | 14:07 |
Really?! | 14:07 |
Yeah, NASA just told me. Countdown to 4pm!!! | 14:07 |
No, I’m going at 4 in the morning! | 14:08 |
What! That means you get to go before me! | 14:08 |
I know. | 14:08 |
You can tell me about it before I go . . . | 14:08 |
No, don’t tell me. | 14:08 |
Might spoil it? | 14:09 |
Yeah, you won’t be able to get me anyway. | 14:09 |
I’m on news black-out, like it’s top secret. | |
Only people who can get me will be Mum and Dad. | 14:09 |
OK. Chat after. Can’t wait | 14:10 |
Me neither. | 14:10 |