Chapter Thirteen
It takes several minutes for the door to open, and when it does, Greta finds herself face-to-face with a version of her dad she’s never seen before.
She stares at him. “Are you okay?”
“Do I look okay?” he asks, staring back.
He does not. His face is pale and his hair is greasy and he’s wearing a set of wrinkled gray pajamas. Even from the hallway, the room feels humid and stuffy, and it has a slightly sour smell to it.
Greta peers around him to where the curtains are pulled shut in the back. “Why don’t you open the door to get some fresh air?”
Conrad gives her a weary look. “I don’t have the energy to stand here explaining to you why I don’t have the energy to do anything beyond make it to the bathroom and back.”
“I’ll do it,” she says, moving past him into the room. She tries to hold her breath in a way that isn’t obvious as she yanks back the thick beige curtains and pushes open the door to the veranda. The night air rushes in, bringing a welcome chill. Greta stands there inhaling it for a moment, still a little drunk, then turns to see her dad crawling back into the bed.
“Much better,” she says as she begins straightening up the rest of the room. There are towels strewn everywhere, and three empty cans of ginger ale on the small table by the couch.
“You’re not supposed to be in here,” Conrad says with his eyes closed. “Don’t touch anything.”
“Has anyone been in to check on you?”
“A cleaning crew,” he mutters. “And a nurse.”
“And?”
“Nobody else is sick,” he says. “So it’s not the food.”
“Good,” she says, and when he opens one eye, she shrugs. “Well, for the rest of us anyway.”
He groans and tugs the covers up to his neck. “You have to go. I’m still quarantined.”
“For how much longer?” she asks, pulling out the desk chair and sitting down beside the bed.
“Twenty-four hours after the last time I…” he trails off. “You know.”
“Right,” she says. “How long has it been now?”
He struggles to free his arm from the sheets and checks his watch. “Two.”
“So twenty-two more hours?”
“Thank god I spent all those paychecks on a math tutor,” he says, and then shifts around under the covers and lets out a sigh. “This is awful.”
“At least we’re at sea tomorrow.”
“Trust me, the only thing worse than having the stomach flu is having the stomach flu on a ship,” he says. “These waves are killing me.”
“I only meant that hopefully you won’t have to miss another stop.”
“It’s Glacier Bay next,” he says, his voice pained. “Do you know how long we’ve—” He stops abruptly. “Do you know how long I’ve been looking forward to seeing it?”
“Worst-case scenario,” she says, motioning to the window, “at least you’ve got a balcony.”
He closes his eyes again. “It’s not the same. I wanted to go up to the crow’s nest and see what the view is like. I wanted to hear the lectures from the geologists and naturalists. I wanted to take pictures with Davis and Mary and Todd and Eleanor.”
“Dad,” Greta says gently. “You’ll still get to see the glaciers.”
“You don’t even know which ones we’re seeing. I bet you haven’t read anything about them.”
“I like to be surprised,” she says, unzipping her rain jacket. Conrad looks alarmed to see her settling in. He opens his mouth, but before he can say the word quarantine, she shakes her head. “It’s fine. I have a hardy constitution.”
He snorts. “You have the constitution of a Dickensian orphan.”
“Hey,” she says, but she can’t help laughing. “They’re your genes.”
“Don’t blame me. I’m not usually this pale. That’s all your mother.”
Greta notices that he’s shivering and gets up to close the balcony door. It’s after nine now, and the ship’s engines are beginning to whir to life again. Across the water, the mountains are turning to silhouettes. She leaves the door open a crack, unable to part with the fresh air entirely.
“Is there anything you need?” she asks. “Did they give you medicine? Something bland to eat?”
“No food,” he mumbles into the pillow. “Please don’t even say the word.”