JENNIFER HON KHALAF
When Ness saw the first moth flutter out from the pantry, it was unimportant. In fact, it could have been sweet, pretty; a muted butterfly of sorts. She swatted its wings away from her face. Rob was due to come over in a few minutes and she needed to get the pasta into water so that dinner would be ready for him.
After dinner, they settled into the couch with some chocolates to watch a movie. Tonight it was her choice, something characterized by Netflix as a "dark romantic drama with a strong female lead". Apparently, this is who she is and what she likes. Being a dark romantic drama, the light flickered only intermittently from the television. At one point, her chocolate bonbon was illuminated - small spots dotting its surface.
"Why are there holes in my chocolate?" Rob didn’t turn his head from the fight unfolding onscreen, so she pushed the bonbon in front of his eyes which squinted and focused.
"Hm… that doesn't look right."
They paused the show and walked into the kitchen, turning on the light so that Rob could investigate,. He set the chocolate on the cutting board, slicing it in half. Something fluttered. Dimly, she could see a small white creature, wriggling in pain from being slashed in half. More holes drilled the inside, forming tunnels in and out.
"Looks like larva of some kind."
She couldn't speak and found that her hands were raised, covering her mouth.
"Well, what do you want to do?" Rob turned to look at her when she said nothing, her eyes widening when they met his. "How many did you eat?"
She could only raise her left hand, five fingers up. She could have been waving,demanding a high five, telling Rob to stop the interrogation, or admitting that she had eaten five pieces. Either way, she walked off to the bedroom to burrow into the sheets and curl up, feeling a churning nausea, trying to forget the translucent wriggling of the broken worm.
"Whoo!” exclaimed Rob. “At least we don't have to finish that boring movie!"
Ness dreamt of larvae boring holes. They tunneled through the walls, dropping onto the floor, traveling through pantries, only to keep on with the incessant tunneling straight through the floors. IWhere she was standing they kept on burrowing, at times up into her feet through her soles. She moved to the sofa, butthey had already squeezed their way through the stuffing, then into her back, buttocks, thighs. It didn't hurt; instead they studiously quarried away, miners unearthing treasures, eating their fill, moving onwards.
Rob's hand stopped stroking her side. "That dream is nasty, Ness. We've got to do something about it."
She tried, but it was difficult to explain how they burrowed inside, through her skin into her essence; it wasn't gross, she insisted.
"Well… no, that's gross," replied Rob.
The next few days were devoted to determining the identity, source, and methods of destroying the infestation. Whenever Rob came over, he would use Ness’ laptop to Google the different pests that congregated in their area of the world. Shoving the laptop in her face with a giant blown up image of a multi-segmented beetle, he exclaimed, "They're drugstore beetles! Oh wait, I've discovered a new function on Google images. They're pantry moths. Whatever they are, they're a good source of protein!" She had eaten at least five good sources of protein.
Or it could've been more. The way they burrowed, tunneled, they moved inside of her body. She kept dreaming she could feel them inching along, traveling through her limbs, moving towards the ventricles of her heart, little tingles when they turned around, ran into one another and switched directions. Intersecting, growing, multiplying, transforming as they moved. They moved ever so slowly, but every night these dreams made her sweat, toss, and turn. They were figuring out where to go. But it was too much for Rob, who stopped spending the night. "You wiggle too much now, and you're taking all the sheets."
Rob started bugging her about cleaning up the kitchen, but she only grew silent and pensive. He had written down a list of what she had to do to deal with this problem. First, all the food would have to be thrown out, frozen, isolated, and/or inspected for contamination. Then, every surface would have to be wiped down with hot water and soap, followed by another disinfection with a dilutionof vinegar. Finally, she would have to clean and quarantine any food that was brought in from the outside world. That was where they really came from - outside.