The party could be seen from over the horizon: shining lights on rippling water on evening skies.
The party could be heard from kilometers away: crystal wine glasses clinking, drunken voices laughing, limousines launching.
The party could be smelled within eyesight: the rich, greasy musk of wealth, cut with the sharp and acrid reek of envy and spite.
It had no name. It had no posted address. It had no guest list. You either knew it was happening or you didn’t, and if you didn’t you’d never see it and if you did you’d never miss it.
Tempting as it would be otherwise, sometimes.
“So, I’ve got this new yacht-”
“Mine’s bigger.”
“-and it’s bigger than yours, and-”
“Mine’s only three feet shorter and it’s sixteen feet higher.”
“You put a flagpole on it! Doesn’t count!”
“Only the last ten feet. Does too.”
The bickering paused briefly as John-Baptiste Chappelle-Marmalade and Jiff Brudd simultaneously went for a sip (chug). Their (friends? No, the wealthy are beyond such things) associates watched with that special interest associated with people who are usually bored and are ready to be bored again.
“You know,” said Clarissa Hauptmoxweal, timing an offhand statement precisely at the moment John-Baptiste was opening his mouth again, “the food is really awful this time. The caviar is half a degree too cold. It’s going to offset my proteinmaxxing and neuscope my allergy ecology. I wouldn’t feed that stuff to my cat.”
“You have a cat now?” asked Jeremy Dollars, hair wetly sticking to his scalp and shirt. “Jeez Louise, that was fast. We only got divorced last year. Turning cat lady? Pretty peasant move, Claire-Bear.”
Clarissa smiled with all the warmth of the sun, that being an inescapable ball of nuclear fusion. “She’s not a peasant cat, Jimmy-Duckles. She’s a Savannah. Part serval.”
“Servo what?”
“Serval. A wildcat.”
“Oh, part wildcat. So she’s a regular cat that’s a bit spotty?”
“She’s a BC1-gen, seventy-five-percent serval. Seventeen kilograms. She could snip your piggy little fingers off at the root before you could even squeal about it.” Clarissa’s own fingers moved thoughtlessly around the edge of her wineglass, filling the air with a mournful hum. “I’m thinking of having her trained to do that. It would be neat.”
“Just get a dog, loser,” butted in Bowen Bogan-Morgan, resplendent in diamond gym shorts and a necklace. “Cats are cucked. My pitbull could eat your fingers AND your cat AND you – totally alphamaxxed.”
“I own a horse,” said John-Baptiste, thoughtfully.
“Horses eat grass bro. That’s beta af.”
“He killed my least-favorite riding instructor. I’m real fond of him. Hoof through the skull. It made a noise like crushing ice cubes.”
Jiff Brudd, resplendent in his white jorts, thoughtfully swished the last of his wine from cheek to cheek, opened his mouth, and slowly poured it back into his glass.
“I am the owner of an entire sled team of wolfdogs,” he said calmly. Then he upended his glass over Jean-Baptiste’s head.
The evening proceeded apace from then on – the cries, the recriminations, the worried intervention of The Help, the gossip pictures – but something about the particulars of that moment of dick-measuring struck a chord deep within the small, sordid souls of all present. Something human even they had not managed to excise: the urge to show a peer another living being and say: aren’t they neat?
This disgusted them. And nothing fascinates like disgust.
***
A casino was always a world apart. Time should be something for the outside, indoors it should always be the same, a comfortable blur of gentle robbery. But now, fenced off from the public and filled with billionaires, vodka baths, and clouds of million-dollar vape haze, the Ultramoolah had taken on a very different level of surreality.
“I got a new pet,” said Jeremy Dollars.
It was blurted out, which was normal. It was challenging to the point of anxiety, which wasn’t. I dare you. I dare you to say what I said was dumb.
“That’s dumb,” said Bowen Bogan-Morgan. “The chad move is to get someone else to give you one for free. Brainlet of you, ngl.”
“It’s a leopard,” said Jeremy. The paw not clutching his current hand drummed nervously, fingers not in any rhythm even recorded by humanity, making the staff members acting as the table’s legs (several of whom were classically trained musicians) wince in pain. “They can eat people. I’m gonna put him in a tree in my courtyard, and I’m gonna let him guard my house. And if the staff disrespect me I’ll make them feed him and if they flinch I’ll fire them and make him chase them out. AND if he catches one I’ll let him keep it for a day before I call the coroners. That’ll show the rest of them who’s boss.”
“Cool,” said Clarissa Hauptmoxweal. “I’m still calling. Put the cards down, leopardboy. Whatcha got, two pair? Wow, one pair. Four-high? That’s even worse than what’s in your pants.”
“Friggin’ jerkwad!”
“You know, you could’ve fixed that problem if you took those percolyines that I was selling. Only five million a shot and after ten shots you could’ve gotten up to six-high someday. Maybe.”
“You’re just mad my cat could eat your cat!”
Clarissa’s smile rolled up at the edges like cheap carpet. “One: you owe me. Truth or millions.”
“Truth!”
“Is that a wig?”
“NO!!!!”
She nodded in satisfaction. “Really? Wow, that’s somehow even more pathetic. Anyhoo, two: your cat can’t even handle my bird. As of last week, I own an ostrich. He’s nine feet tall and probably twice your cat’s weight and he can kick people’s insides out through their backsides. Want to meet him?”
“…my cat could totally eat him,” sulked Jeremy. He picked at his cards as the next hand slid out. “Renting a casino is a waste of money; this game’s dumb. Why are my cards all bad?”
“Birds are effeminate and soypilled because they don’t have dicks,” said Bowen Bogan-Morgan, throwing down three-of-a-kind tens, and mopping the steroids from his brow. “I got a wolf. A real wolf, none of that wolfdog degen trash that Jiffy-o here runs his sucker about. His name’s Alpex which is like Alpha combined with Apex. It’s completely fuckin’ based. He could bite a moose’s leg off. I got him a spiked collar because I’m not a little girl.”
“I own a reconstructed aurochs,” chimed in John-Baptiste Chappelle-Marmalade, slapping down four-of-a-kind, five-high. “The larger, angrier, more powerful relative of the largest, angriest, most powerful bulls alive today. I’d like to see him bite THAT leg off. I’ve had it go through three matadors and six rodeo clowns already. I’m starting a graveyard behind his pasture.”
“He can get in the ring with my Kodiak bear,” said Jiff Brudd. Diamonds glinted from his lapel as he laid down four-of-a-kind, six-high. “It’s killed four matadors and seventeen bulls this season and ate the leg of the man I sent to capture it. I’m thinking of giving him cocaine, seeing what happens. Truth or millions?”
“Truth,” said Bowen.
“Millions,” said John-Baptiste.
“Pussy.”
Jiff Brudd nodded regally. John-Baptiste picked up his solid gold cane in a double-fisted grip. The staff flocked between them like startled pigeons.
***
Mount Morble had been a natural wonder: a triple spire so perfect that a thousand pictures and paintings had not done it justice. This also had made it difficult to fit the ice palace atop it, and so it had been shaved smooth at the expense of some trillion dollars in airlifting and earthmoving. Putting the money in for an atmospheric seal to keep everyone for asphyxiating and filling an artificial ‘caldera’ with gems and champagne had been mere rounding errors.
In the midst of the pool, atop rafts of inflated suede, paddled by loinclothed manservants, a discussion was taking place.
“So right if MAN is the deadliest animal – which I am – and chimpanzees are basically men but hairier – which they ALMOST FACTUALLY are – then all I have to do is teach my chimp to use a gun and he’s unbeatable.” Bowen threw up his hands, spraying a thousand-dollar haze of alcoholic droplets across a million-dollars-worth of leather. “Boom, fate acompleeshed. Ipso fuckin’ facter, bitches!”
“Do YOU know how to fire a gun?” asked Clarissa. “You fired your instructor and called him a homosexual.”
“He was trying to tell me what to do. I don’t let that happen – what do I look like, pronouns? I can learn by myself. Trigger, grippy thingy, bullet, shooty. Easy!”
“You can’t read,” said Jeremy, who was sulking in his silvered beach chair under a mink blanket, pretending he wasn’t bothered by his inability to swim. A fishing rod protruded from his hamhands – silken line, gold hook, and platinum-handled.
“Books are gay and you can’t read either.”
“I can! A. B. C. D.”
“SHUT UP!”
“Okay,” said Jeremy smugly. “And your monkey’d lose the fight anyways.” He cast his line again and a helpful scuba-clad attendant strung a vacuum-packed sou vede fillet to its tip as he reeled it in. “Ew. Maple and whiskey?” He flung it back into the woman’s face in disgust. “Gimme ketchup and mustard.”
“My monkey’d lose to what? Your mom?”
“No? My crocodile. I’ve got a big crocodile. A saltwater crocodile. It’s over twenty feet long and it’s got so many teeth I can’t count them. And I had a dentist put in extra teeth so he can chew while he swallows. He’d swallow your monkey and spit out the bullets.”
Clarissa kicked her feet idly in the surf over her raft’s side, putting a toe through the eyesocket of a trained submersible-masseuse. “Please. You want to talk big aquatic predators? I picked up a great white shark last week. First in captivity in the world, I had to buy a few dozen PhDs to figure out how to do it. Twenty-five footer, can swallow a man whole, can swim circles around your dumb ol’ lizard and doesn’t need to breathe. And that was before I permacrossfaded it on adrenovantablack and king peptides. It thinks it’s god now. I paid for everything with a little bit of the money from the antiantiantioxideodorant deal, the one you said wouldn’t even earn anything. Up to about fifteen-B from that alone, dollarydoo.”
“Women shouldn’t own sharks,” said Bowen. “That’s a hyperphallic animal. He’s king of the seas and he has two dicks and you want to claim you can control him. You’re trying to uncuck your chromosomes by proxy, which is just goonworthy behaviour.”
“’She.’ Female sharks are bigger than males.”
Behind his sunglasses, Bowen’s face did something complicated and then collapsed in on itself. Everyone watched very intently, because the alternative was looking at Jean-Baptiste or Jiff Brudd.
Nobody wanted to look too closely at Jean-Baptiste or Jiff Brudd. Something was wrong there. Curdled out of shape.
“I have,” said John-Baptiste at last (he always ran out of patience first), “purchased an African bush elephant. A male. A rogue male.”
Everyone else looked farther away – at the gems, the ice walls, the distant screams of a servant being whipped raw and hurled into the deep end.
Jiff Brudd nodded.
“They are untameable,” said John-Baptiste. “I spent one billion dollars on behaviourists, drugs, and neurosurgeons, and I have tamed him, and I have had him trained. I have had this elephant trained to kill for me, in my name, at my pleasure. He executed a senator for me last night. A microchip in his brain stimulated the release of dopamine when he did this. He will do it again when I demand.”
Jeremy Dollars tried to cough politely. It got out of hand and turned wet.
Jiff Brudd nodded. “I have a hippo with armour plates sewn into its epidermis,” he said bluntly. “Replaced the teeth with titanium alloy and ran current through them. Did you know they electrocuted an elephant on Coney Island at the closing turn of the nineteenth century? They filmed it.”
John-Baptiste sneezed twice in a row while scratching his nose and one of the scuba-clad workers pulled out a harpoon gun.
Two snipers opened fire from the mirror-ceiling.
“Take a pill, guys,” said Clarissa. “I’ll give you a free trial.”
***
On that certain day of that certain year, the Hawaiian Islands numbered nine: the eight traditional major islands, plus the privately-constructed, privately-owned, and manually-towed floating ultimate landmass that was the ultimate yacht: Le Pénis d’Alexandre. In its bilges, humans toiled under armed guard; on its decks, the wealthy frolicked; atop its private viewing platforms, the billionaires mingled, smiled emptily, hated pettily, coveted fiercely. Fountains poured liquid gold; thousand-dollar-a-plate food was served as decoration to be thrown away; wherever you went, someone poor was wailing in agony just out of sight.
Which was all well and good and normal.
But. Well.
“So. I bought a bison herd last week,” said Clarissa. She pulled an olive free from the edge of her drink’s basin – her hands shook, it fell. “After I won the Botoxxx vs Botox lawsuit. As a gift for myself.”
“Meat-eating bison?” asked Bowen. He pulled a syringe loose from his pants and stabbed it into an arm vein already studded with three prior injections.
“Cyber-bison?” asked Jeremy. He hadn’t stopped stroking his hair since he’d sat down. His index finger swirled it, like spaghetti; his ring finger soothed it, like the fur of an irritable cat.
“No! They’re bison. Normal bison. Big, healthy, normal bison. It’s like… sometimes that’s en-“
She burst into a sudden cough. Bowen and Jeremy almost jumped out of their seats.
“-ALMOST like, nearly, close to….enough?” she amended.
“Don’t you fuckin’ dare!” snarled Bowen.
“Look,” said Clarissa, trying for a second olive. It slid loose from her diamond-bladed extensions. “Fuck – I know the E Word is a big deal, but like. We can all dial it back a bit, right? If we want to? About anything we want? Like, including? Pets.”
Jeremy slowly nodded his head. “I mean. I own a national park now – well, it’s not national anymore, it’s Mytional, for me. Nobody else can have it. That means I win, I think. But it’s okay? That’s fine?”
“I bought a whale,” blurted out Bowen. He swore and slapped at a sudden spurt of blood on his nose. “Fuckin’ PRESSURE SURGES! Guh! But yeah whales are big I got the biggest I win game’s over right we’re all cool if you still care you’re caremad and going through it so we can stop now ri-”
“I have commissioned,” said John-Baptiste Chappelle-Marmalade (Earl of Montgomery, Duke of Basil, and Lord of Lamblort) “an organism.”
Sound died around their table. The lights of the party beneath them seemed as distant as the stars above.
“It is a most terrible thing,” said John-Baptiste. “It has no progenitor except calculation. Math told us what genes to take from whale, from cassowary, from eagle and ape and crocodile. Cold machinery made a womb, and a thousand scientists spun its caul. It was bred to grow. And it did. And it did. And it has. By god it has.”
“Uh,” said Clarissa.
“Half my fortune was spent on that,” said John-Baptiste, whose voice was becoming slightly louder with each sentence. “The other half went into its education. It was taught which parts of it were sufficient and which were insufficient and how they might be amended and admonished with metal and grafts. More hearts to grow larger still. A skeleton of carbon nanotube and titanium. A furnace to turn its own mass endothermy into a power sink for the world’s first practical field-usable light-amplification weapon. A second set of jaws. Radar defiance sewn in sheets into skin. And the most delicate and perfect sense of smell, able to pick a single human out from all the noisome froth and foam of the world, across the world itself, from a single hair. A hair I plucked from the arm of a chair with my own two hands.”
“Nnh,” interjected Bowen.
“All of this, for you,” said John-Baptiste, eyes hollow windows to something else but moreso than usual for an average billionaire. He was standing, clutching at the platinum-engraved rim of their table, seated above the greatest view in the world. “All of it, all for you,” he said to Jiff Brudd. He was tilting forwards, listing like a ship after an iceberg.
“Don’t!” blurted Jeremy.
“It was released at the chime of midnight,” said John-Baptiste, who did not otherwise acknowledge a universe outside his present focus. “It rises now, from the depths. It is too late. Do you have an apology?”
Jiff Brudd, now leaned near-horizontal in his seat, smiled and shrugged. “I crossed Variola major with Yersina pestis and some other stuff. Dusted it across the table half an hour ago Sorry it sucks to suck.”
And then he died, smugly, leaking blood from every orifice including all the new ones.
***
When the animal surfaced it found nothing of interest. Fixed and unmoving lights; the quiet lap of waves, and the monotonous, empty smell of drying dirty blood and cooling pus.
So it turned beneath the salt again, and sank, and swam. Nameless, penniless, aimless, content.
If you didn’t know it existed, you’d never see it.