Kevin Chong - The Plague

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A modern retelling of the Camus classic that posits its story of infectious disease and quarantine in our contemporary age of social justice and rising inequity.
At first it was the dead rats. They started dying in cataclysmic numbers, followed by other city creatures. Then people begin experiencing flu-like symptoms as well as swellings in their lymph nodes. The citizenry reacts in disbelief when the diagnosis comes in and later, when a quarantine is imposed on the increasingly terrified city.
Inspired by Albert Camus’ classic 1947 novel, Kevin Chong’s The Plague follows Dr. Bernard Rieux’s attempts to fight the treatment-resistant disease and find meaning in suffering. His efforts are aided by Megan Tso, an American writer who is trapped in the city while on a book tour, and Raymond Siddhu, a city hall reporter at a daily newspaper on its last legs from the latest round of job cuts.
Told with dark humor and an eye trained on the frailties of human behavior, Chong’s novel explores themes in keeping with Camus’ original vision—heroism in the face of futility, the psychological strain of quarantine—but fraught with the political and cultural anxieties of our present day.

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“I don’t see an end to this,” Siddhu complained tearily. Christmas was soon approaching. Moreover, his wife had stopped using antidepressants. She said her mood had picked up from regular workouts. Now she hardly had time to talk with him, and the kids were left to family while she went to the gym.

He also found his workplace challenging, with a puzzling boss more preoccupied with digital security than news. The promise of an ownership stake had also not come up again.

“If he doesn’t give you any direction, why don’t you write about the Sanitation League?” she asked him.

“It’ll get buried.”

“Not if you write it well.”

He rolled his eyes. “Couldn’t you just make a better poster?”

“Touché.” They clinked their glasses. Unlike Rieux, Siddhu teased back. He agreed to ride along with her and Grossman the next day.

When she returned to her room that night, she found a bouquet of white anemones on her desk. There was no card. At first, she assumed they had been ordered by Rieux, who was formal enough to send bouquets. Had she told him about her favourite flowers? How would he have the wherewithal to get anemones (a luxury good that would have to be smuggled into the city)? As someone who read widely, he might have known that anemones were once used by European peasants to ward off disease and bad luck. She would text him about the flowers tomorrow; for now, she was too tired to think.

Siddhu was waiting for her by the elevators when she left her room the next morning, playing with his yo-yo. She’d thought his public displays of yo-yo-ing were ploys for attention, but he seemed too engrossed in his activity to engage in conversations during his tricks and too psychically displaced by them to talk much afterward. She decided that he yo-yoed as a social crutch, the way others looked at their smartphones.

At the hotel lobby, the front desk clerk waved at her. “Did you like your gift?” the clerk asked.

Tso nodded. “Who sent it?”

“He said it was from a secret admirer.” She added that the person who brought the flowers to the front desk did not look like he worked for a florist. “Not a bad-looking guy, by the way.”

Now it struck her as odd that Rieux would describe himself as a secret admirer. As Siddhu waited for her outside, she sent Rieux a text about the flowers.

Siddhu and Tso caught the bus to Grossman’s house. In her kitchen, they made a dozen brown bag lunches for people who called the Sanitation League for regular meal delivery. Each lunch contained two turkey and cheese sandwiches, a fruit cup, Oreo cookies, and milk. They climbed into Grossman’s car to drop off their meals. They visited old Asian ladies in crumbling bungalows, single men living in rooming houses, and the swanky condo of a young lawyer who could barely open the door. It made no sense to help the lawyer, but Rieux insisted that their job was “not to rank the people on a scale of suffering based on our assumptions.” Tso disagreed, and they had one of their ongoing debates about privilege and equality.

Each delivery had allowed the Sanitation League a pretense to check on the client. Many were healthy but frightened to leave their houses. Others lived with people who had been admitted to one of the hospitals. Some felt unwell but had symptoms inconsistent with the bubonic and pneumonic forms of the disease. If Rieux was paying a house call, he would also administer a take-away test for the disease. Even when the results appeared positive, clients were reluctant to call an ambulance. Many preferred to die at home than find themselves alone in a hospital with a faint chance of survival.

Around lunch time, Rieux texted back to say that he knew nothing about flowers. Her hand tightened around the phone.

Siddhu monitored their home visits with a skeptical eye. He entered other’s places of residence with mask and gloves and tried to touch as little as possible. “You’ve spent four hours visiting half a dozen people,” he told Tso. “This isn’t very efficient. And I mean that as an observation more than as criticism. What are you going to do when more people call your hotline?”

“There are still more healthy folks than sick ones,” Tso replied. “I believe there are enough good eggs out there—who can accept some risk, who want to do something—to take care of the ones who don’t have anyone else.”

“Besides, it’s Christmastime,” Grossman added. “I don’t even celebrate the holiday, but charity is already baked into the calendar.”

“Why do you want to help people?” Siddhu asked.

“I’ve tried sitting around, trying not to get infected—and I was suffocating,” Tso said. “It’s about fulfilling our purpose as social animals. It’s like your situation. Look at it: You were doing fine when you were telling the world about what was happening inside the quarantine zone because it served the community. It was only when you were forced to muckrake—to cover the mayor’s personal scandal—that you became overwhelmed.”

“That’s not the whole story,” Siddhu insisted.

“It’s more than you’d like to admit.”

Siddhu tossed his notebook in the air. “Sign me up,” he said. “I’ll volunteer too.”

Tso and Grossman clapped.

“Are you still going to write your article?” Tso asked. “Can you do that if you’re a volunteer?”

“It would be a violation of our code of ethics … except we don’t have one.”

Their laughter was airy. What strange times they were part of. They behaved with the recklessness of teenagers hunting for new ways to intoxicate themselves.

While waiting for their next call, the burner phone rang, and they recognized the caller: Farhad Khan. Grossman’s tenant asked them to meet him at an intersection in south Vancouver. They drove to an industrial area of the city until they reached a block with an auto-detailing business and a storage facility. Khan was waiting for them outside a white cube truck. He was dismayed not to see Rieux but asked them to climb into the cargo hold. “It will be a short ride. This is no way to treat friends, I know,” he said with a placating expression. “For your safety and protection, it is better for you to be hidden.”

“How well do you know this guy?” Siddhu said as he watched Grossman climb into the van.

“We’ve seen him at rock bottom. He always leaves you wanting to know more,” Grossman said. Khan had started the truck, and she waved at the others to hurry. “Come on, idling creates pollution.”

They sat on crates of wine that shifted in the dark. Their ride felt both brief but longer than they wanted it to be. When the door slid open, they found themselves in a warehouse. To one side were pallets loaded with alcohol and cigarettes. Khan led them to an interior office area. On their way, they passed racks of designer clothes, boots, shoes, and purses on shelves. Farther off, they saw antiques and, in a glass cage, a large, live lizard reclining under a heat lamp.

Khan enjoyed the awe they displayed at his collection. “We are going big,” he told them. “You never know when this will all end.”

Siddhu was the last to follow Khan into the warehouse office. Tso noticed his hands twitching by his sides as he resisted an urge to document this scene.

Inside the office, a man lay shivering under a blanket and was using an oxygen tank to breathe. He attempted to sit up when he saw them, but the exertion tired him so much that he needed to close his eyes.

“This man is my brother,” Khan said with such emphasis that Tso decided that he was not asserting a literal truth. “He is sick and needs help.” Tso began to speak when Khan raised his hand. “He is in trouble with the law. He is a good man, but he has made a mistake in the past. What is the point if he gets out of hospital only to walk into a jail?”

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