Storytime: Stratigraphy.

April 27th, 2022

5/10/2021

Albrecht’s Drop stratigraphic record: location 3B

Layer 1: surface litter (5 cm)

Sticks and deciduous leaves.  Some owl pellets (contents: rodents, one skink). 

Three beer cans (age: ~4 years), one condom (unused), four lost pennies. 

Layer 2: soft-packed loam (19 cm)

Roots and decomposed leaf litter.  One mole hole (contents: an angry mole). 

One broken beer bottle and forty-three beer bottle fragments.   One beer bottle fragment contaminated by bleeding (bandaid provided: no stitches necessary).

Layer 3: hard-packed soil (37 cm)

One complete turtle shell.  An excessive amount of roots (largest diameter: 8 cm). 

Potsherds (late meadow period), reworked and worn tools (twelve scrapers, three damaged cores).  Midden layer. 

Layer 4: clay (58 cm)

Five ground and polished turtle-shell ‘mirrors.’  Fine and wispy roots. 

More potsherds (early meadow period).  An unprecedented find: a complete sphere made of solid obsidian glass, slightly chipped or cracked (long-distance trade item?).  Possible ritual site.  

Layer 5: compacted ash (28 cm)

Sudden intrusion of volcanic ash with no apparent source or cause.  Nearest active volcano is seven thousand km; nearest inactive three house six hundred km. 

One robust Homo erectus skull, no sign of other remains.  Sixteen classic Acheulean hand-axe blanks; four of which are embedded in the skull.  Possible murder, possible ritual. 

Layer 5: obsidian (1.87 m)

Massive intrusion of jumbled volcanic glass without apparent source or cause.  No past record of volcanism in area’s prehistory.  Unusual greenish tint to the obsidian with inner ‘sparkle’ that appears to be tiny flames (under 0.2 mm). 

Layer 6: lava flow (7.51 m)

Enormous magmatic intrusion.  Radiometric dating puts it ~500 mya, at least 300 my older than the surrounding limestone layers it appears to have cut through.  A geology specialist may be necessary. 

Giant spherical ‘wizard chamber’ appears to be buried under lava flow.  Top of chamber is breached by H. erectus skeleton, clutching Acheulian hand axe.  The legs of the skeleton has been burnt away by lava, the upper half appears to have been pulverized by a concussive force sufficient to reduce it to gravel while perfectly holding the original form of the bones. 

Layer 7: ‘wizard chamber’ (11.111… m [exactly])

Giant spherical room constructed entirely from interlocked basalt with two exits: a breach into layer 6 created by H. erectus skeleton and a spiral ‘stair’ leading downwards from the room’s center.  Radiometric dating proved impossible due to inexplicable failure of sampling tools to penetrate the structure.  Contact more materials specialists?  Interior of chamber is covered in faint lights that match present-day  star charts of Milky Way (contact astronomers to confirm).  Possible ritual. 

Three corpses belonging to unknown species from a unique phylum.  Basic proportions include three heads, three trunks, three legs, three long grasping appendages tipped with three eyes covered in three hardened keratinous membranes.  Corpses were outfitted in full regalia including ornaments carved from H. erectus bone, ‘wands’ of carved obsidian from layer 5, false teeth crafted from obsidian from layer 5.  Possibly ritual. 

Layer 8: ‘the murder pit’ (~100 m)

Yawning, cavernous abyss underneath the ‘wizard chamber’; exact dimensions of cavern are unknown without access to more powerful lighting equipment.  Air quality remains good due to constant screaming gale from below that sounds similar to agonized howls.  Creeping sensation of dread sinks in slowly within the hour; exposure beyond two hours is not recommended after assistant M. Townshend attempted to decapitate assistant J. Freeman with a trowel while chanting ‘justice delayed is denied.’  Behaviour persisted while restrained above-ground for another sixteen hours, after which M. Townshend apologized and asked to be set loose without further visible side effects. 

The bottom ~7 m of layer 8 are filled entirely with H. erectus remains.  Estimation of the number of individuals represented is unknown until the precise dimensions of layer 8 can be more accurately charted.  Every skull found was missing all of its teeth. 

Layer 9: ‘upside town’ (121.86 m)

Perfect 1:1 scale mirrored replica of this expedition’s dig site, including excavation and all previously described layers.  Layer 9’s ‘surface camp’ was empty and the air tasted like tinfoil after exposure for longer than ten minutes, followed by nausea. 

Forty-two hours of continuous observation in shifts showed no apparent inhabitants.

Layer 10: ‘the crevice’ (?)

During observation of layer 9, assistant P. Davison noticed a faint shimmer above the mess tent and proceeded to climb on top of it without authorization and stick her finger inside it, also without authorization.  P. Davison vanished from all observable senses for what she observed as less than a second and the rest of the expedition observed as more than a week before reappearing in midair above expedition’s mess tent during lunch. 

P. Davison reported seeing talking shapes that ‘didn’t exist’ but professes no memory of what they spoke about, or even if they spoke to her. 

Overall excavation report:

-Followup investigation strongly recommended using all institutional resources available. 

-Use caution. 

-Contact National Geographic. 

-Get more funding.

-Do not tell Professor Zebediah. 


Storytime: Patch Jobs.

April 20th, 2022

The floor was scrubbed and grease-free; the walls were missing their usual spider-webs; that one lightbulb that outright refused to work had been bullied into submission and replaced; and there was a big broad beautiful weekend stretching out in front of the building unrolled all the way to Monday.

Sheila breathed in, tasted oil and salt, and breathed out with a smile.  Yes, it was a beautiful day in the garage. And not to be a lonely one either – down the way came the flash and shine and sheen of someone driving in a hurry because they weren’t quite sure if they’d be able to start again if they stopped. 

“Morning Ms. Palmridge!” she whistled out happily as her daughter’s fourth-grade teacher powerslid into the building on top of her battered old whitetip.  “Troubles?”
“Oh hello I’m so sorry, so sorry, so sorry, I don’t know what’s wrong but I was taking the turn on fifth street and it just started pulling to the right and wouldn’t stop and then it got worse and worse and then it started slamming into things all on its own and I think it lost some teeth down on Fenton!”

“Lemmesee,” said Sheila in her professional mumble, and she popped the whitetip on the nose gently.  “Open up, please.”

The oceanic whitetip tried to bite her.  She slid the jawjack into its mouth smooth as butter.  “Thank you, sir.  Nah, don’t worry about the teeth – you didn’t even lose the whole top row, see?  Those’ll grow back in no time.”
“Are you sure?”
“Positive.  Everyone always overthinks how much damage is being done when they see teeth everywhere: those practically fix themselves before you even know they’re gone.  Better they absorb the impact than something less replaceable, like the liver.”

“Oh dear.  Is that bad?”
“Yeah, practically a third of these things are liver.  You take a real bad hit there sometimes you just have to get a new shark.”
The jawjack creaked.

“Whoops, someone’s impatient up there.   Give me a second to…ah, I see your problem!  Blocked nostril on the left side!”
“Is that bad?”
“If you don’t like uncontrollable pull to the right it is!  See, the shark tracks prey long-distance by swinging its head from side to side and veering to the direction the smell is strongest – if one nostril’s blocked, then everything it smells seems like it’s coming from the other side, and it’ll start turning.  No wonder you were pulling to the right.”

Ms. Palmridge eyed the oceanic whitetip as dubiously as it did her.  “I’ve never known much about these things.  My girlfriend handles the mechanical issues around the house and so on.”
“Oh?” said Sheila, putting down the nasal swab and giving the shark’s snout one last polish with her rag.  “Tell me: has she done any maintenance work on this lady recently?”
“I’m – well – I don’t know WHAT you’re-”

“The shark.”
“Oh.  I think so?  Last weekend, maybe.  Yes, last weekend.”
“Ahhh….I think we have our culprit.  I bet when your better half was cleaning off the hood here she inadvertently brushed some debris into the nostril.  Well, it’s less polished now but it’s clear as a whistle in there.  No more veering, the teeth’ll grow back soon.”
“Oh thank you, thank you!  How much does this-”

“Just call it a consultation; there’s plenty of time left for me to make money on the weekend.  Barely five minutes and the cost of a swab?  Nothing to bill for.  Didn’t even have to pull out any teeth shards.  Now let’s get this thing out of its mouth and you back on the road before it gets any angrier – you’ve both got places to be!”
“Yes, yes.  Thank you so much!”

The oceanic whitetip tried to take a chunk out of Sheila’s foot on its way out of the garage, but she was ready for it.  A reliable model, but they were crabby as hell.  Then it balked at the parking lot’s exit and she wondered if she’d missed something but oh.  Oh, that explained it. 

In through the exit cruised little Penny Westridge on her father’s great white, fins barely moving, each soft push of the tree-trunk-thick tail shoving the animal forwards like a lesser fish going at full throttle.  It softly lumbered up the hill and collapsed right in front of the door with a grunt. 

“Shit!”
“Don’t worry about it, we’ve got a tow cable if we need it.  Problem?”
“No fucking kidding!” said Penny, eyes twitching. 

“The problem in detail, please,” said Sheila patiently. 

“My mom’s gonna fucking ice me fucking fuck fuckity FUCK” elaborated Penny.  She made to kick at the great white’s side, then paused, foot wobbling, as its eye rolled back in its head to pure white.  “Oh god is it meant to do that FUUUUUC-”
“That’s normal,” soothed Sheila.  “Here, have a seat.  Have a drink.  Tell me what’s wrong.”
“Everything!  I just wanted to take one little ride to show Mandy I really could drive it and then we went down to the Greasy Bait to grab a drink and when I came back out it was twitching and by the time I dropped her off it was cramping at the gills and now it can barely move and it’s not even two years old mom is going to KILLLLLLLLL MEEEEEEE-”

Sheila gently prodded at the gills.  They twitched.  “Uh-huh.  Anything else happen while you were out?”
“No.  No!  I wrecked mom’s shark and I don’t even know what I did and she’s going to ki-”

“Nah.”
“Wha?”
“Nah, she won’t.  Mrs. Westrid – your mom, she keeps this baby in a nice garage, right?   Demagnetized, rubber flooring?”
“Yeah.  Oh god I borrowed her keys without her asking she’s going to KI-”

“Nah she won’t.  That makes sense.  Does the Greasy Bait have rubberized parking spaces?”
“Wha?  No.  They barely have ASPHALT.”

“Gotcha.  And are the hitching posts concrete?”
“No?  No.  No.  Metal, I think.”
Sheila chuckled and rubbed at the great white’s great nose.   It grunted at her.  “That’s it then.  She’ll be fine by the time she’s home.”
“How?  What’d I do?”
“You parked her outside her comfort zone.  These big babies, they’re a little more sensitive than they look, and they get used to their environment.  She’s used to resting in a nice stable environment with absolutely no stray electrical impulses at ALL, and you left her in the open with a bunch of strange sharks and attached to a metal pole.  She probably picked up on the ambient voltage through that and it’s just a tiny bit more than she’s used to, and if you and your girlfriend –”
“No no no she’s not my-“

“-your not-your-girlfriend took your time in there she worked herself into a tizzy over it.  This is all just aftermath of that.  She’ll be right once you get her back home and a bit of time to process it.  And tell your mom she might want to consider introducing metal elements into the garage: a shark that can’t be parked outside a sealed environment is a little bit of a sad vehicle, isn’t it?”
Penny slumped with the force of someone whose entire body had been kept upright by nervous tension.  “Ohmygod.  OHmygod.  Ohmy.  God.”
“Breathe, girl.  Breathe.”
“Thank you so much.”
“You’re welcome, we all do this shit at your age.  Stuff.  And don’t worry about money: that wasn’t even a consult.  You just get home now before your mom notices, eh?”

“She sleeps in on Saturdays,” said Penny weakly.  “Thank you.”
“No problem,” said Sheila.  And she watched the great white back gently out of her lot with affection.  Beautiful animal.  Pity they were so expensive these days. 

Well, there’d be time to make money over the rest of the weekend. 

Like right now, for instance.  ‘Right now’ was Lacey Newman on her shortfin mako for the sixth time in as many months, its big black eyes roiling and rattling in their sockets as it mouthed and fought against her steering. 

“Hey again, Lacey.”
“Heya Sheila.  It’s off its feed again and won’t stop fighting me when I turn it on.”
“Well, guess we’d better check the stomach first,” said Sheila as she pulled out her jawjack.  “Again.”
“Stupid thing thinks it’s a tiger shark.  This better not be another license plate it swallowed.”

“Well, could it be anything else?  These look like gastrointestinal symptoms.”

“Came home late last night and parked it on the street; could’ve been anything from that to a stray cat.”
“If it was that it’d be perfectly happy.  A little stray cat never hurt a shark.”
“Right.  Unless it was diseased.  Or a piece of metal that looked like a stray cat.  Or a tasty-looking rock.  Swear to FUCK I’m giving it the best fuel I can afford and it’s always on the lookout for more and more and MORE!”
“That’s the trouble with mackerals,” said Sheila conversationally, peering  past the long finger-like fangs and into the mako’s gullet.  “Fast cruising, great acceleration, amazing top speed, but the metabolism means they guzzle fuel.  Ah, I think I see the problem: looks like it swallowed a bit of chain-link fence and it can’t regurgitate it properly.  Gonna need to do a bit of fancy work here.  Mind passing me my long-handled pliers?  No, no, no.  The longer ones.  Longer than that.  Yes, perfect.”

“Oh these goddamned things,” hissed Lacey as Sheila worked.  “These things!  They’re such…such bullshit!  I don’t know why we put up with them like we do!”

“Can’t live without ‘em.”
“True.  And I guess it could be worse.  Just a little bit of a pain in the ass isn’t the end of the world, is it?  That’s not so bad.”

“Yes indeed,” said Sheila, staring directly at the reader, “it sure would be irresponsible to keep driving sharks around if they were directly and provably leading to some sort of vast disaster that would cause irreversible harm to us and every other living thing on the planet’s surface.”

The shortfin bit her hand.

“Ow!  Fuck!  ‘Scuse me.  That’s going to need stitches, won’t be a sec.”


Storytime: Dream Notes.

April 13th, 2022

“He’s coming back, you know.”
Jermaine didn’t look at his mother.  He was kneading dough, and with the amount of flour left in the house he wanted to make sure it had gone towards something worthwhile.  Attention could not be spared. 

“Just like I thought he would.  I know how he thinks, you see.  That’s why I was so important.  Necessary.  The only one that really could do that.”
“Mmm-hmm,” Jermaine risked.  The old tile counter thumped under his fists, muffled by soft dough and his own fists. 

His mother nodded vigorously, staring out over the long lake through the fog and drizzle and the horrible clouds of insects.  The mosquitos stayed away from her, even out on a deck whose screen had been gone since before Jermaine’s own children had been born.  Too tough, no juices left, who knew why. 

“He’s coming back,” she said.  “He can’t afford not to.”

“Yuh.”
“He IS, you know,” she said shortly, and stomped her foot.  The deck made a soggy sound, like a starfish trampled underfoot, and Jermaine winced at it. 

“Don’t DO that, mother.  You know about the scorpions.”
“They wouldn’t hurt a fly.”
“Only because they can’t reach it.  Don’t make such a ruckus out there.”

She harrumphed, but she didn’t stomp again. 

***

The bread had been good, despite Jermaine’s best efforts.  And that had been his day, such as it was.  Mother was fed, he was fed, he’d done at least one thing he could pretend was worthwhile after waking up, and the roof hadn’t collapsed on him.  Nothing left to do but see how many bug bites he could get in the course of one cigarette. 

Now if only he could persuade his head to stay quiet.  Because as he stood there, smouldering, he couldn’t stop thinking about the roof. 

And the floors. 

And the walls. 

All lovely, lovely, lovely old wood that hadn’t seen a day of repair in twenty years.  He was less scared of the scorpions underneath the porch than he was the things he couldn’t see in the walls.  Black mould?  Could be red and purple and green for all he knew. 

But mostly he’d bet it was the soft colourless mush of a creature eating itself from the inside out.  This place had been a lovely cottage, back then.  Lovely enough to pretend it was a mansion, which it did very well. 

“The president used to come here,” his mother told him.  “Your father and I used to invite him.”
“Yeah,” he said to himself.  Yeah, he knew. 

***

Jermaine had sat on the back stoop as the troopers stormed in through the pantry door, boots kicking through fancy wood panelling like cheap paper.  A stern look from the sergeant had frozen his behind to the stair, and now he was afraid that if he breathed someone would remember he was there and decide to shoot him. 

Shouts from inside had become fewer.  Whatever they were doing was finishing up. 

That was when the big car opened up, and out came the president. 

Jermaine had never seen the president before in person, but he’d seen coins and bills and a television and he knew the face when he saw it.  All jaw and jowl. 

“Hey,” said the president, and he was talking to him, Jermaine, of all people, at his house.  Maybe this was the sort of thing you were supposed to be excited about.  “Hey kid.”
Jermaine nodded, finding a compromise between obvious attentiveness and trying not to move.  “Your mother home, kid?”
Jermaine nodded before he could think about his answer.  The president laughed.  “Yes.  That’s good.  Hey, you know what she’s been up to?”
Jermaine shook his head. 

“Neither do I.  But I think that’s going to change.”
He walked into the cottage, and he ruffled Jermaine’s hair as he walked by.  Just a little harder than necessary, making his neck hurt. 

***

The pantry door had been fixed.  Come to think of it, that might have been the last part of the building to get replaced. 

Jermaine finished his cigarette in perfect harmony with the sunset; two little embers going out at once as he idled on the porch, swatting the mosquitos reflexively.  He sighed – a proper bellows of a thing, in and out and clear the lungs – and stepped back inside and almost walked into his father. 

He was eating a crude sort of sandwich over the kitchen sink, but when he saw Jermaine his eyes bulged and his food vanished into him like a magician’s scarves in reverse. 

“My boy,” he managed, and it wasn’t just the full mouth making him hoarse.  There was something wrong with his throat, something raw.  “My boy.  How are you?  Oh you’re big now.”

“No thanks to you,” said Jermaine, and it hadn’t needed any thought at all.  Of course it hadn’t; in the back of his mind he’d always been writing this moment. 

“Yes, yes I love you too my boy, my boy.”  A smile made its way out from under his moustache, shattering his face into a maze of wrinkles.  “Listen, it’s all coming together now, it’s all almost here.  I’m so proud of you, you know that?  I don’t know if I ever told you that.  Did I ever tell you that?”

“You haven’t told me anything since I was ten.”
This only stirred the old man to more vigorous agreement.  His head started jerking up and down like a drinking bird.  “Quite right.  Quite right.  Quite right.  Yes, that was cruel of me.  But listen, I’ve got it all working now.  I’ve finally gone and done it.  Get your mother.  Where’s your mother?”
“Sleeping.”
“Wake the silly bitch up, can’t she tell that we’re about to make it?”  He started to laugh now, and it sounded like someone choking a goose to death.  “I’ve gone and done it.  I’ve pulled it off, and pulled it off.  You both need to come with me before the heat is on.”

“We’re not interested,” said Jermaine, and he was telling the truth.  He was tired with all his soul now, tired just looking at the stained old thing and his manic energy and his pointless words.  He wanted to go to bed and never wake up.  “Go now.  Walk out the door and don’t come back for another forty years.”
“Are you deaf or an idiot or both, boy?  We’re rich now.  I took it, I took it from him.  It’s mine now.  I’m offering you both the chance of a lifetime, nonono I OFFERED you the chance of a lifetime and now it’s HERE, it’s DONE, it’s REAL.  I promised and I delivered.”  His hands were pawing at his sides now, feeling along his shapeless shirt and destroyed pants for something.  “I got it.  I finally got it.  I had it before and I had to put it away but I got out and got it, I got it for real.”  He shivered.  “But it’s not on me.  I put it down and it’s not on me.  Listen to me, I can –”

“Go.”  Jermaine had picked him up, when he wasn’t quite sure.  It was much easier than he’d have thought it would be, if he’d thought of it before doing it.  His father seemed to have a way of making him hasty.  “Go again, like you did before.  It should be easy.”
“No,” said the old man, his head shrinking into his neck like a turtle.  “No no no, not again!  I just got out!  I was locked up tight, you have to believe that, yes, locked up so very tight, and now you want me to go back?  You’re a cruel boy, a cruel boy from a cruel woman.  She called me mean!  She was mean!  It’s not fair!”

Jermaine threw him.  His arms weren’t as strong as they used to be and his back hurt and his tendons gave him these odd little twinges he couldn’t quite tell if he was imagining, but his father was no weightier than a cobweb so he didn’t so much as touch the stairs, floating across the marshy ground like a falling leaf.  He settled atop the vegetation with a whisper of a slosh, which was immediately buried by his shriek. 

“To hell with that!  To hell with you both!  See if I help you again!  It’s here and I’m going to get it!  I’ll get it now!  And I won’t show you!  I won’t share with you!  It was the plan but not anymore and I’ll…I’ll-”

It wasn’t a very solid door, but Jermaine slammed it anyways. 

***

“Who was that?”

Of course his mother had woken up.  She stood in the kitchen, feet bedecked in cobwebs, hair trying to escape her skull, eyes suspicious and all too alert. 

Jermaine didn’t like it when she was up this late.  She seemed smarter than he was. 

“Nobody,” he said. 
“That was your father.”

“Nobody.”
She considered this, and nodded.  “Yes.  Yes, that’s right.”

And she went back to bed, still shuffling but purposeful. 

***

There was still bread the next day, and no father.  But Jermaine needed to feel like he was doing something useful, so he took out his old line and sat on the deck casting lines through the old screen window, enjoying the closest thing to a breeze the lake could muster. 

“Your father never fished,” his mother told him.  She had taken out the least-mouldy armchair for some almost-sunlight.  “Hopeless with a rod and line, worse with a net.  But he was an archaeologist, so he was much better with a shovel.  Good for bait.”  She snickered.  “Not as good as me, though.  I did my part just fine, oh yes.  It was him that made the mess.  Got caught, sticky fingers, sticky fingers.  With fingers like that you’d think he could’ve been a better fisherman.”

Jermaine shrugged. 

“Did I ever tell you about the time we plotted against the president?  Regime change is the duty of the people, Hal told me, and since the people weren’t voting fast enough we might as well lend them a hand.”
“Mm-hmm.”
“Of course that was all a lie, of course, of course.  He just wanted something shiny, selfish thing, greedy boy.”  She sighed.  “Always greedy.  Not like you, you know?  You raised your daughters to be like that, didn’t you?  Not like your father?  Yes?”
“Yeah.”
“Good boy,” she said, patting his arm.  “Good boy.  Now, the president’s here, so you’d better go greet him while I put on my shoes.”
“Sure,” said Jermaine.  Then Jermaine’s ears told him that they’d been hearing an engine approach for the past five minutes.

***

The president was different from how Jermaine remembered him, standing in the kitchen with a gun uncomfortable and damp in his hand.  He had always been thick, true, but now he was fat; the kind of sleek unwrinkled fat you found on a frog’s belly, stretched and smoothed and covered in veins from living life half-marinated.  The kitchen was practically overflowing with him. 

Jermaine supposed he was different from how the president remembered him too – in the old days his eyes had sparkled, everyone had said.  Now he was a man grown and they just sat there in his skull. 

The president’s gaze met them, ignored them, passed over him smoothly and entirely, without a blink.  Jermaine was part of the scenery, part of the background. 

His mother, however, wasn’t.  And she’d found her good shoes.

“Claire,” said the president. 

“Hello!”

“Where is it?”
She shrugged.  “Don’t know.  Never found it.  Hal lost it years back, silly thing.”
“Hal escaped prison three weeks ago, first place he’d have come was here.  Tell me.”

“He didn’t trust me, you know?  Never did.  Stashed it somewhere before you came over and lied where he’d kept it.  Haven’t bothered looking in years.”

“Tell me or I’ll shoot,” said the president. 

“Oh poo, shoot what?” said Jermaine’s mother, waspishly.  “I’m nothing but leather and flint now, and this place is such a swamp I’d be amazed if your gun can fire.  Humidity’s an awful thing, isn’t it?”
“Shut up!”
“You were never one for first-hand violence anyways.  Too much work.  I agree with that, but I don’t agree with how you got other people to do it for you.  Hypocrisy is an ugly thing.”
“Shut up!” said the president.  “Shut up!  I’m not here for this, I’m not here for you, I’m not even here to shoot anyone I just want my damned jewel back!  Forty years it’s missing, now the thief breaks out, now his trail leads here, now his old bat of a hook-up is sitting on it!  I’ve had enough!  Give it back!”

“Nobody cares,” said Jermaine. 

“I came here for answers,” snapped the president, “and I’ll have-”

“NOBODY CARES,” yelled Jermaine.  “NOBODY!  Mother’s senile and father’s a pathetic runaway and YOU haven’t been in power since my oldest daughter was born, and she isn’t even in the country anymore!  The thing stolen from you has been missing for half a century?  That’s half a century it hasn’t mattered.  Nobody.  Cares.”

The president looked more like a frog than ever, so puffed up like that.  He opened his mouth to croak, but all that came out was a hiss, and THAT was drowned out by his mother’s laughter.  She sounded half her age. 

“A bitch and a bitch’s son, both ill-bred,” said the president, at last.  “You match the old place like a set of chipped dishes.  Stay here, by all means – I’ll throw away the key.  Grow mouldy together, the three of you.”

Then he turned on his heel and stomped his way down the staircase, all eighteen stone of him, and on the third step down his heel came through the wood. 

There were no splinters, there was no sawdust.  Nothing but a soggy squish at first, until the first pair of big pale claws came racing up through the hole and seized the president’s pant-leg.  He didn’t even scream he was so surprised. 

Not right away, at least. 

“The old ditch,” his mother told him, when the noises had stopped.  All the noises, from everyone.  Even the mosquitos seemed placid.  Something in the air that had been bending for decades had finally snapped. 

“Hmm?”
“The old ditch,” she repeated.  “Best take the body there before they get too tucked into him.  Or, god forbid, someone comes around.  He WAS the president, you know.  And he used to come here, back in the day.”
“Yeah, mother.”
She patted his cheek fondly.  “You’re a good boy.  Go on then.  Scoot!”

And he did, although it was no picnic lugging that much president through that much underbrush.  Every root and every branch caught a new scrap of clothing or pound of flesh, and if the president had been smooth and featureless in life he was a ragged thing indeed by the time he made it to his final resting place. 

Jermaine dragged the body over the last hump and rolled it down the slope into the old, old ditch, where it refused to sink.  Caught on something. 

He swore filthily, reached down with a stick, shoved and shoved and the disturbance floated over right side up, neck side wrong, eyes all bulgy with leeches, and in one clutched fist something gleaming. 

His father. 

***

His mother liked the jewel well enough, but she lost it every week, so he put it on the high shelf.    


Storytime: The New Yorker.

April 6th, 2022

“Come forth, foul dragon!”

The call is bold as brass, as audacious as a sudden sunrise, pure and sweet as a morning trumpet and I know it’s THAT time of week already. 

So I sigh, and I slither, and I coil and eel all two and a half leagues of myself throughout my caverns into a semblance of a slothful slug’s-worth of posture and sally forth to the mouth of the cave. 

“Tarry not here,” I bellow.  “This doth be mine domain, man of soft flesh and frail bone.  Begone and keep thy life,” I add, and that’s surely done it because suggesting they might value their lives at all is like a red flag to these jokers.  Don’t they have any speck of gratitude for all the trouble their mothers went to make them?

“Come forth, foul beast,” he cries, predictable as the turn of the seasons, and I sigh and I belch venomous flame down the entire hillside, scorching it to the bare earth.  Again.  Then I heave myself upright and squint down it, looking for the horse.  I like horses.  They’re good snacks, and this one’s well-trained – see it trembling there, tied to the distant tree on the moor I keep precisely for that purpose. 

I squirm out of the cave mouth, take three long writhing heaves, and am struck by a sudden pain in my rightmost heart, which is coming from the sword that’s lodged in it. 

“Got you, fiend!” cheers the small armour-covered human from somewhere beneath me, hidden in a little foxhole among the network of trenches and gutters criss-crossing the dead soil, which I now realize are filling up with an awful lot of my blood. 

Oh.  He was one of THOSE kind of heroes. 

Christ, what an asshole. 

***

I jolt out of my geography slumber at a godawful shriek, sitting bolt upright so fast that the page I’d drooled over sticks to my face and comes ripping right out of the book, ruining the work and effort of hours of careful transcription from some long-dead monk. 

“Oh DARN,” I swear carefully, employing the strongest language a lady may be expected to keep.  I’m going to get lectured on this for HOURS, and etiquette is already my least favourite class.  But that’s not my only problem – there’s footprints coming, pit-a-pat-pit-a-pat-pit-a-pat, and a big armoured man bursts into my stone cavern, covered in blood and reeking of poison and soot. 

“What ho, fair maiden!” he hollers directly into my face.  “I hath saved thee from thy doom, gadzooks and zounds!  Behold the proof!  Mine sword hath tasted a dragon’s heart, and now it speaks!”
“Hey nice to meetcha.”
“By my TROTH his tongue be as ill-mannered as a hound’s, ‘tis true.  And now we ride for your home and your father!”
“I’m not really sure I’m allowed to leave,” I manage, leaning a little farther back from the enormous blade he’s waving around excitedly.  “You should probably ask my tutor first-”

“Harken and heed, half the kingdom and your hand be my price for the deed, so needs must apace ‘fore the day grows long in the tooth,” he exclaims, grabbing my arm in one hand without asking and towing me apace through the entire cave complex.  The sunlight hurts my eyes.  “To your noble sire we doth return – we ride forth now!”

“How?” I ask. 

The knight stares down the hillside.  At its base, the dragon lies groaning atop the splintered remains of what was probably the only tree for miles.  A single sad hoof juts from underneath its belly. 

“We march forth now,” he admits. 

Christ, what an asshole. 

***

“The princess has returned!” comes the call from the town.

“The princess has returned!” comes the call from the towers.

“The princess has returned!” comes the call from my gate and wouldn’t you know it, right in the middle of court.

“We’ll pick this up later,” I sigh, and the last courtier is barely risen from the seat before the door is slammed open and in comes the smelliest thing I’ve ever seen on two legs, and I’ve observed chickens. 

“What ho!” it hollers, and oh no it’s HIM, helmet in one hand, towing my daughter in the other.  Her expression is my thoughts exactly.  “Mine adventure is successful, mine quest doth be complete!  Your fair eldest daughter is returned from the scaly clutches of that reptilian devil, and mine honour is swollen righteously with nobility and valor!  Praise me with great praise!”

“Did you kill the dragon?” I demand.

“What ho?”
“Did you kill it.”
“Mine sword did taste its heart,” he says, and unsheathes that giant meat-cleaver of his with little a care in the world.  “Now it speaks the tongue of man!  Observe!”
“Hello there, my lord,” proclaims the blade. 

“Have you been talking to this sword?” I ask my daughter, who’s wandered casually as far away from the knight as is polite when you’re one of three people in the summer court.

“There wasn’t much else in the way of company, dad,” she says.  “And I needed the etiquette practice.”

“Yes you do, clearly, since it’s much more mannered than you are.”
“What ho?” says the knight again, and my headache finally bursts. 

“You IDIOT.  You’ve gone and rescued my daughter from her education, horribly wounded her tutor – who has TWO hearts, by the way, and I sincerely bless your lack of brains and dedication in missing that detail – and put my deniable violent-adventuring-moron disposal out of commission!”

“Err.  Half the kingdom?  The maiden’s hand?”
“Megan?” I ask.

She gives him her hand, backside-first. 

“Zounds!  Ow.”
“I wouldn’t give you half the PRIVY.  You’re lucky I don’t call for the executioner right this second.  As it is, I’m going to give you a choice: you can lose your head, or you can undertake a somewhat different quest for me.  And this time I’ll be very, very, very upset if you DON’T do it properly, understand?”

His lip is trembling.  

Christ, what an asshole. 

***

“He’s coming,” my sword announces.  

“Shh!”

“Posture check.  Slump more.  Lean into the wound.  Go on.  You’ve taken a mortal dose of poison  to the face; look more sunken in the cheeks.  Did you smear soot all over your visor?  Your chest?  Your-?”

“Shh!”
“Hark!  A fellow knight!” booms out in greeting, and indeed it is another of my order, a man broad in shoulder and fierce in spirit, with blade in one hand and shield in the other and discipline and grace in both.  “And one laid low!  What has done this to thee, mine brother?”
“The dragon,” I wheeze out from trembling lips.  “The serpent’s doom has doomed me, though I brought it to its last breath ‘fore it took mine.  It groans its last farther in.  You must… the princess.”
“Say no more, noble friend,” he solemnly intones, slamming a fist to his breast.  “I will avenge thee with the beast’s death, and also name my half of the kingdom after thee.  What is thy name, fallen friend?”

“Asuckersayswhat,” provides my sword.

The knight stares at the blade in my hand.  “What?” he asks, and in that moment of complex thought – perhaps the first he’s had in many years, if he’s anything like I was six months ago – I put it through his visor. 

“Good job,” says my sword.  “Now remember to dispose of this one PROPERLY.  You left it near the river last time, and that’s no way to treat your drinking water.”
“Shh,” I repeat, fruitlessly.  There’s no way to silence a tool your job relies upon.  “Shh.”
“Shh yourself.  He left his horse down around the hillside, I can smell it; we’ll have to make a second trip.  Chop chop now – geography class is done in an hour, and after that’s etiquette.  I want to sit in on that again, I think I’m getting the hang of it.  No no, lift with your legs, not your back – do you WANT to pull something?”

I drag away the body of my brother in arms, as behind me the faint echoes of sinister reptilian whispers mutter on hydrography and erosion.  The betrayal weighs heavy on my mind even after a dozen times, though I find the physical mass of this particular brother in arms weighs heavier still.  He could’ve stood to skip more meals. 

Christ, I’m an asshole. 


 
 
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