Beneath the Brightest Lemon
Nora kept her child’s shoes in a bin beside the hatch—an old habit from her own mother, long before the surface was lost. Down here, beneath layers of rock and memory, even mud was dangerous. What clung to boots wasn’t soil but the silent, crawling threat of mold spores and ancient viruses, slumbering until the warmth of breath awoke them.
The cave system was home now. Not just for Nora and Mari, but for thousands: all bound by electric lights and silence, by the laws of sanitation that governed every moment. Control was survival. Any breach—a cough, a patch of mildew—could mean relocation to the quarantine corridors or worse.

Mari coughed again. Nora’s heart stuttered at the sound. She pressed a cool hand to her daughter’s brow as pale light from the corridor filtered through cracked plastic sheeting strung across their alcove.
“I’m fine,” Mari whispered, trying to smile.
But Nora saw it—the tremor in her lips, the shadows under her eyes. She’d reported no symptoms to Central. To do so meant an official cleaning: masked guards with their sprayers and black bags. Families torn apart for ‘purity.’
Nora reached for one of their precious canisters—a cylinder marked LEMON in faded blue script. The wipes inside were thick and damp; their bright scent was a whisper from another world, one with sunlight and wind.
She tore one free and began wiping down the rough plastic table where Mari drew pictures—scenes of trees, always trees. The wipe cut through grime left by charcoal and recycled wrappers; it left behind a sharp cleanness that seemed almost defiant in this dank place.
“Use another for your hands?” she asked gently.
Mari shook her head, curling closer into her blanket.
The wipes were rationed now—three canisters a month if you passed inspection, fewer if you fell behind on credits or drew suspicion. Still, Nora used them after every meal, on every toy Mari touched. Their survival depended on it; control meant safety.
But at night, when Mari’s fever worsened and Central’s purifiers sputtered above them, control felt like a thin sheet stretched over chaos.
---
On Inspection Day, Nora cleaned everything twice: first with water from their allowance jug, then with wipes in alternating scents—lemon for the kitchen shelf, fresh for the sleeping mats. Her knuckles bled where cracked skin met plastic edges. She tucked away evidence of illness: wadded tissues hidden under trash panels, extra blankets aired out to fool the sensors into reading a normal body temperature.
Mari watched her work with wide eyes. “Will they take us away?”
Nora hesitated before answering. “Not if we’re careful.”
That afternoon, two figures appeared outside their door: one human—a woman in a blue smock—and one drone with a blinking lens where its face should be.
“Sanitation review,” said the woman coldly.
Nora offered them access without protest; resistance was dangerous. As they scanned surfaces and measured air particles, Nora kept her hands busy—wiping doorknobs with slow precision, forcing calm into every movement.
“Smells clean,” the inspector muttered as she passed by. The lemon scent did its work—a little shield against suspicion.
Still, when they left, Nora slumped against the wall in relief only because they had not checked behind Mari’s blanket or tested her breath for infection markers.
---
By week’s end, Mari was worse. Her cough echoed like gunshots off stone walls.
Nora sat at her side all night. The canister was nearly empty now—only three wipes left inside. She used one to mop sweat from Mari’s forehead; another to clean the tiny figurine—a crude bird carved from insulation foam—that Mari clung to even in sleep.
As dawn flickered through artificial lights outside their alcove, Nora faced a choice: report Mari’s sickness and risk losing her forever or fight on alone against invisible enemies—the microbes and rules alike that held them captive down here.
She wiped down every surface one last time with what remained—a final act of protection she could offer as a mother who had nothing else left to give.
When Central came for them at last—drawn by sensors that read fever or perhaps by neighbors’ whispers—Nora wrapped Mari in clean blankets that still smelled faintly of lemon and fresh air.
She walked beside her daughter into the unknown tunnels ahead. Even as sterile lights swallowed them up and authority claimed what little autonomy they’d managed to keep, Nora held fast to a single truth:
To love is not only to protect—but sometimes to surrender control entirely.
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