On The Day, for reasons still unknown,
people began changing. They went to sleep as their old selves and woke in their
beds in different bodies: bodies that had belonged to other people. And each
time they fall asleep, they wake as someone new. Set months later, “The Only
Certainty” follows Derrick Gorton on an average day in this new world as he
deals with food shortages, the semi-collapse of society, and how to finish his
latest novel.
Here is an excerpt to give you a sample:
In those first hours, leaders from around
the world asked in vain for people to remain calm; as if waking up in a different
body was something normal, to be expected. But they were quickly drowned out by
the theorists. Some claimed this had to be an act of a forgotten, mischievous
god while others thought it was clearly the prelude to an alien invasion, and
still others opted for it being some bizarre science experiment gone awry.
Worse yet, nobody knew if this was a one-time event, or if it would keep
happening every time people fell asleep. In those early hours the only thing
obvious was that nobody had a clue.
And in this mass of confusion came the
first video of The Change. Somewhere in Russia, a group of people had gathered
together in an apartment to help each other stay awake. They were filming – the
translator explained – last messages for their families. Then, in a corner, an
old, frail woman fell asleep. They went to wake her only to see her skin become
fluid and her body shrink even more. A few seconds later a young Chinese girl
lay before them.
The camera whipped around to see several
people running from the apartment. After about a minute of arguing between
those who remained, the girl was shaken awake. She opened her eyes and talked
to them, in Russian. According to the translators, this young Chinese girl knew
everything the old, Russian woman had known.
For hours, Derrick and Carol watched the
news and talked with her mother. But eventually, her mother’s phone died, and
they were left alone. They sat on their couch watching the world end; holding
each other and drinking cup after cup of coffee.
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