Storytime: The Island.

September 20th, 2023

“This is an island for you,” he was told. “It’s everything you’ve ever wanted, and everything you’ve ever needed, and all of it is on it and around it and under it and for you. There are books and wooden floors and walls; there are ferns and moss and stones; there are plums and secrets and cliffs. And it’s for you.”

So he stood on the docks for a while, looking up at it. At the stone cliffs and the green forest and the twitter and cheep and whistle of birds he didn’t quite recognize. At the gently roaring splash of the water on the rocks, and the lip-lap slap of it underneath the wooden dock, which was grey enough to feel proper and not so old as to be rotten.

There was just enough sun to be warm, and just enough of a breeze to keep cool. A gull yelled something insulting in its beautifully horrible voice.

And he walked off the dock and into the island.

***

There were ancient ruins, crumbled enough to be even more beautiful but not so far as to fall apart. Plants and moss and lichens coated them like damp green jewels.

He looked at them, and he walked through them, but he didn’t go inside and he couldn’t keep his mind from wandering away, like nothing he was looking at was quite real. Running a thumb over the surface of an old, old stone brought it a bit closer – yes, that’s stone, that’s real, that’s right – but kept its significant so very far away. Just a stone.

He looked at the carvings. They were complicated – so complicated his eyes twisted away from the details – and pretty, if crumbled. Maybe if he were more clever or enjoyed puzzles he would learn something from them.

So he walked through the ruins one more time, wandering mind and all. And he left.

***

The ocean was wide and blue and beautiful. The sky was nearly so, but with a smattering of exactly enough clouds for comfort. A little fish jumped some ways away, pursued by a dolphin. It was over half the planet and it was snuggled into a cove that hugged the island’s coast as deeply and reassuringly as a mother.

It was also a little too cold. He could dip his feet in, and they got used to it, and he could wade in, and he got used to that, but everything above his belly button hated it, absolutely hated it when the cold reached. He tried dipping his arms in first, fooling himself into thinking he was already swimming, but it didn’t work, and he was wondering what he’d do if he went into the water, or where he’d go, or what he would see. Besides it was awfully frightening to be anywhere deep enough to swim by himself.

So he waded back out again, and put his shirt back on and looked at the cove. And he left.

***

On a hill made of old, old, old rock and shaded by conifers that were the sort of deep green you can never find anywhere else, there stood a cottage of ambiguous size. Its outside was weathered greys; its roof was faded green tiles; its insides were the deep, worn, warm browns of wood that had been varnished a long time before anyone now living had been born.

In a corner of the building, in shelves built into the walls and onto the walls and anywhere they’d fit, were books. Some were ancient and yellowed and well-cared for; some had been printed on paper scarce better than newsprint and were falling apart at the seams; some were disconcertingly glossy with untattered jackets and looked to have been bought even less than a year ago. They were crammed into every shelf and when the shelves could hold no more they’d been stacked on top of them like cordwood. There were old old comic collections and new new bestsellers and pulp fiction and nonfiction and local history and histories of the world and everything and anything but in a very specific way and shape and texture that made it all boil down to being there, right there, in an old corner of an old building with a giant and frail glass window that didn’t quite fit right, so you could smell the pines and see them tremble in the breeze.

There was also a thing that was either a bed or a couch or not, which had large cushions.

He sat on the couch-or-not and he looked at the books. The very, very, very old books he remembered from when he was very, very, very young, and he felt fearfully ancient and distant from them just thinking of it, so badly his teeth hurt. The new and fresh books made him wary – he didn’t know names, or thought maybe he did and had forgotten – and when he opened one the thought of how long it had been since he’d done this nearly made him cry. The pages seemed to take forever, and sometimes he simply stopped in a sentence and couldn’t move.

When he was almost halfway done, he realized he might be enjoying himself, and he wanted to tell someone, but there was nobody there and the rest of the plot was making him anxious and when he looked at the author he felt old and frail and stupid.

The breeze had died down a little. The pines weren’t moving. He put the book back, page unmarked, and he left.

***

The kitchen was mostly windows and screens and an awful lot of counters, no two of which seemed to be alike and all of which had been used and cleaned very thoroughly until the cuts and chips had turned into a texture all of its own. There was a little open cupboard with big glass jars, fixed at a jaunty angle by their flattened sides and filled with flour, with sugar, with – inexplicably – little cheesy crackers. There was a small table stuffed haphazardly in the corner, in case someone didn’t want to go find where they were meant to eat and wanted to look down the island over the rocks and the trees and all the way out over the water.

The fridge was full of things, the cupboards were full of things, the freezer was full of things, and he wasn’t quite sure what to do with them or for how long or if the stove was cleaned or how to clean it or if anything was being saved for some special occasion or how to tell if meat was thawed or if they had plums.

They did have plums, fat little black ones like he remembered. They cut cleanly, like he remembered. They were juicy, like he remembered.

He wasn’t sure if they tasted like he remembered. Maybe a little too sweet, or a little too bitter, or maybe the flesh was too flaky. And the memory was frustrating, because he knew he’d been too young and stupid to pay that much attention or care as hard as he seemed to, so he finished the plums while he looked out the window and watched the sunlight make the waves sparkle. And he left.

***

There were two doors; the heavy inner one, wooden and seamless and strong, and the thin metal one with a big mesh screen and a carefree clatter that came every time it swung open and clanged shut. It was loud and brief and bright as he walked down the paths in bare feet, eyes on the packed needles and soft moss and old, old stone and startlingly prickly little sprouts and shrubs. The water left him by sight, but its sound stayed softly with him. The trees took away the sun, but left the afternoon light. The air smelled like growing things and moving water, and as he walked aimlessly down narrow trails made by repeated footsteps he saw and heard furtive and fleeting scurries, of small bugs and things with fur.

But the thing he saw didn’t have six legs or fur at all. It was small, and bipedal, and feathered, and had a keratinous beak and bright, beautiful big eyes in its skull. It was a dinosaur, of modest but not tiny size, and it was as curious to see him as he was it.

He looked at the dinosaur. It tilted its head to the side at an improbable speed to look at him too, and it made a small dinosaur sound. It was so close and didn’t seem to mind, and the thought then came too him that unlike anything he’d seen when he was small, he now had a camera in his pocket right there, so he took it out and took a picture, then another picture because his hand was shaking, then changed his brightness settings so the picture would be visible, then another picture because he’d missed the dinosaur and taken a picture of the tree behind it, than another picture because he’d been zoomed out too far, and then one more picture as the dinosaur hopped, skipped, and fluttered into the air and out through the branches and into the rest of its life.

The photos were quite blurry. Then he realized that he’d been so busy taking them t hat his memories were blurry too, so he’d have to treasure the moment as it had been. Thinking about how to do that or if he could do that or whether he’d ever done that made his stomach uneasy and his footsteps sluggish, and so after only a little ways farther he stopped, then he turned, then he left.

***

The sun was low and the sky was somewhere between purple and blue with all the beautiful of both and the sureness of neither. His legs were slow but his path was downhill and well-worn, and it took him down to a small stretch of beach with more sand than gravel and less gravel than stone and a circle of rocks that had plainly been selected with a lackadaisical if enthusiastic eye for shape and size. They were slightly smeared with carbon from use, and they were in use, and the little red flicks of fire were only just making their way out of the tinder and filling up the kindling, yet to set to work on the half-seasoned logs and big dead dried branches.

Around the sticks sat those stones, and around those stones sat people, on big logs and big rocks and at least one or two very old and sort of beaten to hell folding chairs that had clearly been designed for a flat porch or a lawn or at least a different beach, one with a parking lot. They were bent and warped and creaky and bad and that made them very good indeed, especially for slouching, and slouching was good for stories, which was what all the people were doing, in between laughing, and drinking from a cooler, and eating things from various bags. Someone had produced a guitar and was making suspicious motions that kept indicating singing might happen.

He sat down on a rock and listened, and he ate some chips from a bag. But they talked too quickly to each other about too many things he didn’t understand, and after eating too many slightly-dew-dampened chips he felt a little sick in his stomach, so he said goodbye to someone or anyone or nobody and he left.

***

After he left he went to the dock again, and he sat on it and watched the moon without looking at anything and waited for the stars without anticipation.

Sound came to him from over the water from everywhere, turning into nothing but calm. Branches and breezes and waves and a cautious owl feeling out the start of the evening for itself. Every breath tasted of water and plants and life. Every step rubbed against his bare feet, sent vibrations up his leg, curled into his spine and gave notice of where he was and what it was and none of it remained with him. He’d just sat down and already it was all something that had happened far and forever away.

Closing his eyes made it better, because he couldn’t see, and worse, because he could hear everything. When he did it hard enough he couldn’t think, but the things that troubled him were too simple and big to be thoughts.

The island was everything he’d ever wanted and he didn’t want anything else and he didn’t want it and so he waited there, his feet dangling just above the water, and did nothing, and thought of nothing useful in particular, and watched for someone to take him back again.

No Comments »

No comments yet.

RSS feed for comments on this post.

Leave a comment

You must be logged in to post a comment.