Storytime: Kronos.

October 28th, 2015

It was just a few hours every night, when the dark was full and very little could be seen.
A few hours more than it had used to be. Still, there was no getting used to it. This gap in time where movement slowed and strangeness took its place. There were no means to understand it.
But what happened after… that was right. The return of realness.
Splashing. Waves. The sound of movement of water in air. Something glittering on the far side of an unresponsive, unseeing pupil. Light.

The sun rose and he was alive.

he, not He. Too old to be an it, but not the right time of year for He. Maybe it’d never be that time of year again; he was stiff in those parts, and not in the right way. Stiff in all his parts now, waking slowly, so very slowly, billowing back up from the bottom of his body and spreading out from the central stubby trunk to the four great paddle-flippers, coming alive as his heart stirred again.
One. Two. Three.
Ten beats per minute. Not that he knew what a minute was.
The blood reached his skull, and took its time filling it. The trouble wasn’t his brain, small as it was; the trouble was the sheer scale involved; his head was a quarter of his length, even if most of it was snout and teeth, teeth, teeth.
Once it had been teeth, teeth, teeth, teeth, teeth and more. Some of them were having trouble regrowing; still bent and broken in their sockets long after they should have been shed.
They chewed at the water, gently; the massive muscles powering them crawling over his skeleton. Quiet information began to seep in from his periphery, things his dulling eyes could never tell him: smells; the ripple of the currents; an alarmed flutter of fins.
The last drew an attention that had grown out of instinct and into habit. he spun – one of those movements that looked much slower than it was, spread over ten metres of reptile – and hauled himself forward with all four limbs, mouth snapping open with a speed that shrugged at water pressure.
It shut on blood, and for a moment he was almost full.

he was hungry, hungry all the time now. he remembered when he hadn’t been, in skips and starts. Long, long ago, when he was still growing quickly
he was always growing, even now
When he was very small and new – he was an it then, too young for anything – and it had found a strange thing in the water, smaller than it. it’d spun around and around and around it and nipped at its limbs until the spindly bony bits came free on one side and it could only turn in slow clumsy circles. Oh how it’d learned as it’d feinted and dodged. The play had only ended when the smell of blood grew too strong to ignore, and that was when it had learned that fish were food.

Good food. Good food. But he’d eaten it all already, and now he was hungry. Hungry all the time.
The stray scrap of blood spread over his scales as he slipped deeper in the water column, looking for stragglers of the nightly migration from bottom to top and back again. A hundred miles from shore, the only place to look was down.

It was cool down there, calmer. Bluer. he let his heart slow again as he tumbled down, and began, moment by moment, to grope at the vibrations of the currents.
There was food down there. Smaller than he was. Like everything else always had been, everything he’d ever seen.

Blood was darker down there too. Not that there was much. he bit and tore and swallowed and bit and tore and swallowed and somewhere this was a long time ago, when he was a He, the first season he’d been a He. Tearing and feeding beyond His means to build up bulk quickly, to show Himself, to meet a She.
He had done it, he thought. If he was thinking. The dark was slow and thick around him, and the memories moreso.

The sun rose and he was alive.

he was at the surface again, winched up by old instincts as much as thought. Maybe he’d fallen asleep down there. Maybe he was still asleep down there; but no. he was hungry, so very hungry. In his sleep he bit and fought but never felt the urge.
Not that urge.
Awake, it was as lost to him as hunger was in dreams. It had been a long time since He was. But so much longer since he’d seen a She.
Nearly as long as it’d been since he last duelled another He.
But time didn’t matter; the sunlight mattered. he was awake and he was near-shore and the water was filled with gliding, sporting little morsels. Not infants but too small to be subadults; juveniles. This was the edge of a nursery, the place where bay met blue and soon the long-throated little swimmers flitting about in here would be out and free and far away from him, growing older, growing bolder, nearly as long as he was – even if most of that was neck.
Not yet.
his jaws closed and they closed on more than water and there wasn’t more than time for a sharp squall before his teeth met and the flesh parted, cutting the juvenile in half, in head and torso.
he ignored the former and ate the latter and cruised away from the cries and the little fountain of blood and remembered when he’d done this the last time he’d done this; robbing the cradle of a cousin to fuel his own dreams. They might be his nearest relatives but they were not his kind. They were its, not hes and shes, definitely not Hes and Shes. They were the biggest meals he could have and he needed them because even if the pain was absent for now he could still feel the oncoming pang of that terrible, terrible hunger.

The sun rose and he was alive.

But the sun was dim.
he was far underwater. How had that happened? How had he happened? There wasn’t much breath left in him, and he had to move quickly to reclaim it, to suck in air above the blue in the cold sharp dry.
he shivered in his blubber, and not just from the chill; arthritis was creeping over him day by day now. No matter how fast he grew, it could grow faster.
But not as fast as that stabbing, groaning, endless hole in his stomach.
he was far away from shore, it was time to go down again, to drop himself out of sight and into mind and snout and smell and touch from a hundred metres. An ammonite or belemnite would be nice; there was no shell that his teeth could not puncture, that his jaws could not crush.
A nice ammonite. Yes. Or a squid. Yes.
One like the ones he’d devoured so many years ago, when he’d left his nursery. A soft, fat-bodied, older thing too slow to jet away in time. A quick lunge and a bite and it had been down his throat before he could think.
Chomp.
his teeth closed on empty water and old thoughts. Where was the squid?
he’d seen it. Where was it? It had been there, it had been real, as real as that horrible, endless pit inside him, and now it was gone. It was inside his mind. Food should not be inside his mind, it should be inside his mouth.
he came back to the surface slowly, with a hesitation that verged on timidness, and his creeping motion must have disguised him for he very nearly blundered into an animal with his snout. he spun back in alarm – but wait, it was small, so small – and then investigated. It was a peculiar thing, to be so much smaller than him, so very small. And such spindly bony little limbs. He nipped at one lightly and it came free with only a soft tug, he took its partner and watched in puzzlement as the strange thing spun in slow clumsy circles. He’d never seen anything quite like it. He’d never seen anything quite like it. But there was a good taste there, a familiar taste.
Blood. Yes

The sun rose and he was alive.

Thud.
One.

It was not dawn. It was midday. It was midday and that couldn’t be true. he woke at dawn. he always woke at dawn.

Thud.
Two.

There was a soft, fuzzy sensation in his rear flipper, bumping against the waking nerves. A tug. A pull. A shove.
Something was touching him.

Thud.
Three.

FourFiveSixSevenEightnineTEN

his jaws gaped, wrestled at nothing. Pops and creaks inside him as withered muscle stretched itself over old, long-cracked bones.
And as he turned, slowly but endlessly, he saw the source of the strangeness – a strange thing, a strange thing. It had a stub of a tail and four flippers and a long, long snout with teeth, teeth, teeth, teeth, teeth and more, and it spun in the water with a swiftness he couldn’t understand, only a little smaller than he was.
he couldn’t understand anything. But this he KNEW: he was hungry, so very hungry.
his jaws opened, and closed on scales.

 

 

The blood was slicked on his sides. Some of it was his.

he was full, though. So very, very full. And tired.
It had been a long
time
since he had been full
It made him think of before, when he was He and had seen so many of his kind.
And there had been so many of them, all of them small and safe in their nursery.
Swimming down the long coasts, the Hes and Shes.
Duels along the reefs, closed-mouthed.
And side-by-side, the long courtships.

But that had been a long time ago, in the daylight, and it was very dark now.

One. Two. Three. Four. Five. Six. SevenEight.
Nine.
*

The sun rose.


Storytime: The Fat of the Land.

October 21st, 2015

There were a whole bunch of them there all wandering along and after a while they got sort of tired and hungry and then someone said ‘hey, this place looks okay’ and that was where the problems started.
I mean, it wasn’t the place’s fault. It was pretty okay. A little blue narrow-mouthed bay with some rough and rocky headland above it, all watched over by stubby green foothills.
“We’re going to need some sort of plan,” they said. And they pointed at one person. “You’re the mayor.”
The mayor nodded. This was how this sort of thing happened. “The first thing we do,” said the mayor, “is we find the local natives.”
They looked around for a few minutes and they turned up one guy in a hammock.
“Hey,” he said.
“Hello,” they said to him. “Are you the local natives?”
The guy considered this. “Well, I moved in a couple weeks ago. So I guess? I’m not the first person to come here, but I’m the only one at the moment.”
“Good enough,” said the mayor. “Well, we’re staying here now. Got any tips?”
The guy in the hammock scratched himself. “Well, mind the mosquitoes. Don’t settle too close to the back of the bay; there’s all sorts of sandbars in it. The point’s prone to avalanching too, so don’t settle too FAR from the bay. And the hills aren’t so hot for growing crops, so-” and then he saw that they weren’t paying attention to him because they were all busy putting up houses, so he sighed and tucked himself deeper into his hammock and had a nap instead of talking.

They set up a town. Or a village. Hamlet. Semantics, really.
It was a fishing town. There was just one problem: the fishing was awful.
“Having trouble?” the guy in the hammock asked the mayor, who was visiting.
“A bit,” the mayor said. “Three boats got stuck today in the sandbars. A fourth capsized from laughing too hard. A fifth was overloaded trying to rescue them and almost sank. Then a sixth was in too big a hurry trying to get through and bonked into the fifth, tipping them both over.”
“Ouch,” said the guy in the hammock. “How many boats d’you have?”
“Six.”
“Ouch,” said the guy in the hammock.
“Listen,” said the mayor. “D’you think you could help? Just some advice, or something? We’d be very grateful for any help you could give. After all you’ve lived here for time immemorial.”
“About a month now.”
“Good enough.”
The guy in the hammock scratched himself. “Well, I could tell you a bit of a trick my grandma showed me, if you’d like.”
So he got out of his hammock and they followed him along to the mouth of the bay, where he stopped and got them to grab a few tree-trunks and get ready. Then he stood up right next to the water and stretched and shook himself.
“Man alive I am so tired,” he said. “My head’s heavy and my eyes are droopy and my legs are wobbly and I just want to have a loooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooong nap.” And he opened his mouth up and yawned so wide his teeth nearly bit the nape of his neck, and because yawns are like that everyone else followed him. And right when everyone else was yawning fit to burst, there was a long slow sigh from the mouth of the bay as it yawned too, creaking wide, wide open.
“In in in hurry up hurry up hurry up” he said, and they hurried the logs into the water and hey, the mouth of the bay was wedged open at least twice as wide as it had before, stuck mid-yawn.
“That’ll do ‘till it wakes up later,” he told them. “But you’ve got to be careful about it, because-” but by then they’d all headed home to get their boats out, and so he retired with a sigh to his hammock.

They were getting loads of fish now. The boats bobbed in and out morning and evening and soon enough they were throwing up new homes and storehouses and docks and everything all over the bay, which got a bit inconvenient because of just one problem: rocks.
“You look upset again,” the guy in the hammock told the mayor, who’d come along to swap fish recipes.
“That’s my job,” said the mayor. “There’s rocks tumbling down off the headland day and night. We need to pick stones off that place to build fences and cellar walls and such but how can we do that when an errant sneeze knocks down someone’s house? It’s a mess and a conundrum and it’s the reason I spent the last week sleeping in a patch of poison ivy instead of my house.”
“I was going to ask you about that,” said the guy in the hammock.
“Know anything about how to avoid avalanches?” the mayor asked. “Please, I’m begging you here. Share your ancient wisdom.”
“I’m thirty-four,” said the guy in the hammock. “But I’ve got an idea or two. Well, maybe just one. Let me see.”
So he got out of his hammock and they all hiked up to the headland after him – being very careful where they stepped, so they only knocked over two houses on the way up. And they all stood on top of the headland above the mouth of the bay and he sat down.
“Pick a lot of ragweed,” he suggested to them. And they did so, sneezing all the way, and they only knocked down three more houses doing it, and they piled it up in front of him.
“Right,” he said. And then he sneezed. “Now stuff it into all the holes and crannies you can find.”
And they did that, and nothing happened. Then the headland sneezed and sneezed and SNEEZED, three times, knocking over ten houses each time, and then it whistled its way into a hard, clotted silence.
“Congested,” he told them. “It’ll stay put for now, so long as-” and he stopped talking because they were all heading downhill to rebuild their houses, and were mostly out of hearing already.

Their houses were big, and their boats too. They hauled in food day and night but their kids wouldn’t stop complaining and now and then you got bored of salted fish and so you took up your hoes and your rakes and your axes and you cleared out a patch of soil and you grew some ugly straggly things that weren’t quite onions.
“Do you know what this is?” the mayor asked the guy in the hammock.
The guy in the hammock poked it. “Well,” he said. “Don’t quote me or anything, but that’s very nearly an onion. Maybe.”
“And it’s all we’ve got to eat that doesn’t have fins,” the mayor complained. “Trying to grow anything here’s like pulling teeth; all the good soil on the foothills is spread thinner than jam on my aunt’s toast. It’s very unfortunate.”
“Tell me about it,” said the guy in the hammock. “Why have toast if you aren’t going to go heavy on the jam?”
“Please, please, please,” said the mayor. “Reveal your primeval knowledge born of a connection unto the land which none can understand.”
“Dunno,” said the guy in the hammock, “but I can try something if you’ve got enough feathers. You got feathers?”
“In pillows,” said the mayor.
“Best unpack ‘em.”
So they all did and they followed him up to the foothills and they pulled their feathers out and readied them.
“Now TICKLE,” he said.
And they tickled the foothills under every nook and cranny and rock and crevice until they couldn’t stop giggle and the ground itself rolled up under their feathers in a seizure of mirth, tumbling over itself to get away and squooshing all the soil into a nice little wrinkled valley.
“This’ll do for a little while,” he told them. “Just be sure not to-” he trailed off, because so were they. They had pillows to re-stuff and fields to re-till.

It was a busy place now. There was a broad, deep bay. There were firm strong cliffs. There were lush hills striped with fields.
There was a guy in a hammock. He was being evicted.
“It’s nothing personal,” said the mayor. “But you’re driving up property values.”
“I’m trying to tell you about that,” said the guy in the hammock. “If you’d just listen for a –”
“And your crazy rituals keep the neighborhood awake at night.”
“My snoring? I mean, I told you that-”
“Really, it’s not your fault, except for all the ways it is,” the mayor sighed. “It’s just your culture. Your primitive, unchanging culture from before the dawn of time.”
“Is this about my hammock? Listen, talking about ‘unchanging,’ there’s something that you really should know about-”
“So clear off,” said the mayor politely, and he went home to dinner.
The guy in the hammock considered this for a while, looking out over the landscape. He drummed his fingers on his knee and looked around and estimated. Then he guesstimated.
“Well,” he said. “I tried.”
Then he left so fast he didn’t even pack his hammock.

It was a new day. It was a good day. It was a day to send out the fleets, to build up to the skies, to bring in the harvest.
They stretched. They limbered up. And they got to work.
Now, three things happened that day.
First, the grandest and most enormous fishing boat yet made was set to the water.
Second, a great and wonderful lighthouse’s foundations were laid upon the brow of the headland.
Third, the first ox-drawn plows were finished and brought to field.
Then, three problems happened that day.
“What’s this?” they said. “The bay’s mouth is clogged with rotten old timber. What’s this doing here? We’d best clear it before it snags our keel.”
“What’s this?” they said. “The ground here is full of rotted old weeds. We’d best fill these holes before they crumble our foundation.”
“What’s this?” they said. “The soil here is so hillocky and wrinkled you’d think it was resting on an old man’s crowsfeet. We’d better smooth it.”

So they did. And did. And did.

Now, what happened next was very complicated from their perspective. But pretty simple from the landscape’s.
The mouth of the bay popped shut with a surprised snap.
The headland, its sinuses cleared, sneezed hard enough to rattle its pores out.
The foothills, with a sharp yelp, clenched themselves up.

They left very quickly after that, picking up what they could and moving on.
What a mistake, they agreed, as they headed over the wincing hills. What a mistake. How could they have picked such a terrible place to live? Next time would be different.
First, they needed a plan… And a mayor…


Storytime: Placebo.

October 13th, 2015

The phone came in and the diagnosis was ‘dead,’ which was at least pretty inarguable unless you got religious on it but granny had always been the one in charge of that sort of stuff so everyone else just went with it and got down to the material matters.
Who was paying for the hole and the box.
Where the wake was.
Who was getting invitations.
Stuff like that.
Aaaaaaaaaandddd
who got what.

Jenny got the car.
Jessie got the house.
Johnny got the cat.
Jimmy got the box.
Jimmy was somewhat unhappy. The box was tape, held together with cardboard. Its lid was sealed with seven generations of labels stuck on labels, most of which had decayed and left only their indelible marker to remember them by and smear all over his hands. But on the topmost, decades-old layer, he read a word:
PLACEBO.
So he popped the lid to take a look, and inside he found….
Well. Junk.

A little car a big truck (metal) a wooden ruler (wood) a plastic telephone (small) a small airplane (small) a big metal pencil (small) a squeaky rubber chicken (dried up) a spider that had been dead for longer than Jimmy had been alive and a little bottle whose lid wouldn’t come off.
Jimmy furrowed his brow in a gradual and extensive sort of way, picked up the box and shook it to make sure it was empty, then put everything back in and took it out to the curb and left it for the dump truck before he remembered he was late for work and his brother had driven him here and he’d already left. With his new cat.
Jimmy opened up the box again. He picked up the car. He considered the car.
“What the hell,” he said. And he took it.

“You’re late.”
“Sorry.”
“And out of breath.”
“Sorry.”
“And I just saw you run into the parking lot.”
“Sorry.”
“And then you left a small car in the parking lot.”
“Sorry.”
“That’s littering.”
“Sorry.”
“And you left it in the handicapped spot.”
“Sorry. It’s not a real car though.’
“You drove it in.”
“It’s just a placebo.”
There was a gently thud as the palms of Jimmy’s Manager slid comfortably into their owner’s eyesockets.
“Just stop. Just stop. The presentation’s about to start. Now shut up and take notes.”
Notes. Yes.
Jimmy remembered notes. Jimmy remembered his phone. Jimmy remembered leaving his phone at his grann – at his SISTER’S – house twenty minutes by placebo away and felt very foolish.
Pen and paper. He had a napkin, that was paper. He had a…
…hmm.
He opened the box on his lap and slid out the skinny metal pencil. Well, it was a rod that had ‘pencil’ etched on the side.
But what the hell.

“Your handwriting is appalling. Your grammar is a war crime. Your margins are as marginalized as they can be without being outright pogromed.” His manager shuffled the napkin again, as if hoping better notes would fall out. “But this does exist, and I suppose that’ll do. What’d you write this with, a paintbrush?”
Jimmy held up his pencil.
“That’s a metal rod.”
“It’s just a placebo.”
“Right. Go home. Now.”
Jimmy went home. Or rather, Jimmy tried to go home, but was held up in the parking lot by an annoyed man with a tow truck.
“Give me back my car.”
“Illegally parked.”
“It’s just a placebo.”
“In a handicapped spot.”
“But it’s not a real car.”
The tower sighed. “Did you drive it here?”
“Well.”
“If it works, it’s a car. Now kindly fuck off.”
Jimmy fucked off, but reluctantly. He was twenty minutes from home along a busy highway, and fucking off was not a speedy form of rapid transit. He looked down the road and up the road then down the road then up the road then checked the box again.

“Do you know how fast you were going when you flipped?”
Jimmy focused both his eyes on the same thing and was very proud of himself until he realized the thing wasn’t a doctor but was a police officer.
“No.”
“Too busy joy-riding to check, eh?”
“There’s no speedometer, it’s just a placebo.”
“Right. Well, you were travelling at a hundred and twenty-nine kilometers per hour when you hopped the guardrail, just barely missed an SUV with a full family aboard, then skidded through the curve above highway six.”
Jimmy felt his neck. “How am I alive?”
“Seatbelt.”
“But it’s just a placebo.”
The officer rolled her eyes. “Right. Great. I’m sure we’re all very happy that you didn’t crash a REAL truck. Which you aren’t authorized, licensed, or able to drive. At all. For reasons we have just seen reiterated to the tune of….oh my. A SUBSTANTIAL fine. I’ll come back when you’re sober enough to face the consequences.”
Jimmy sat alone in his hospital bed avoiding the consequences and the lumpy mashed potatoes both and felt underneath his bed, where there was a familiar lump.
“What I need,” he said to himself, “is a phone call.”

The headset was meant for a toddler, but he managed, with some squashing of ears.
“Hello? Hello? Jessie? This is Jimmy. I’ve been in a serious accident and I need your help getting a lawyer. I mean, just bail would be nice. No, I’m not really telling you this, it’s just a placebo. No, don’t hang up. C’mon, I promise this is the last time. Yes, yes, of COURSE you’re not LISTENING to me, I just TOLD YOU it’s just a pl – shoot.”
Jimmy hung up, examined his lumpy potatoes and suspiciously smooth gelatin in silence. He was hungry, but not that hungry, but with no other options.
The box beckoned.

“Trying to dodge the trial, eh?”
“I was hungry.”
“Hungry enough to eat raw chicken? Christ, this isn’t the third millennium BCE anymore; salmonella is WIDESPREAD in domestic avian livestock.”
“But it was just a placebo.”
“Great. So the fever, diarrhea, cramps, diarrhea, dehydration, and diarrhea were all in your head. That’s so much better.”
“You said diarrhea four times.”
“Three. And you produced three times as much as you would’ve if you hadn’t eaten the whole damned thing. Who eats a raw chicken ENTIRE, bones, beak and all?”
“But it was just a-”
“Save it. You’re under observation now. No more malarkey.”
Jimmy sat alone and boxless. But he had a trick up his sleeve.
He shook his sleeve and the spider fell out. He held it in his hand, gingerly, then tossed it out the window.
It was a very light carcass and it took about twenty seconds for it to flutter to the ground, most of which he spent feeling very foolish. Of COURSE the spider wasn’t a placebo. It had probably just crawled in there and died. How very foolish of him.
Besides, the web would’ve been too thin to hold his weight anyways. What he needed was something a whole lot bigger. Something that was…hmm.
Jimmy shook his other sleeve and pulled out the wooden ruler, which he quickly measured the whole hospital with.
Something about two hundred feet wide and a little bit longer would do the job nicely. Not only would he be able to climb out with it, it would remove most of the wall so he wouldn’t need to open the window. Brilliant.
He was a bit unsure of the math involved, but then again he was using a placebo, so any results at all were evidence of failure.
Jimmy shook his other other sleeve and the plane dropped out. Thankfully, it was very small and vague, capable of representing anything from a single-man bushflyer to a 747 jumbo with a 200-foot wingspan on a 230-foot body.

Seven miles away and one up, Jimmy remembered that he couldn’t drive a plane either.

The crater was huge. Smouldering wreckage dotted the landscape in a two-foot radius of the crash. Jimmy lay half-senseless in the snow and drifted in and out. His stitches seemed to have opened up; there was a lot of pain.
Plane.
Pain.
Hee.
“A miracle you’re still going, fella. Your parachute went out awful low.”
Jimmy opened his mouth and told the farmer that there was no parachute because it’d just been a placebo but his mouth wouldn’t shut again once he opened it and it was making noises that weren’t words, so he just let it fly.
“Wait here – phone’s indoors. I’ll call an ambulance and get out here with the first aid kit. Back in a second. You hold on, you hear me? Don’t quit.”

The snow was thick and fast but he was getting cold faster than it.
He took the little glass bottle in his palm, shook it three times, heard the cheery twinkle of broken glass, realized the bottom had broken off, and picked up a single, solitary pill from the white drifts that had so casually camouflaged it.
It said, in tiny stamped letters: PLACEBO.

The farmer came out with a blanket and a drink and thread and needle, bent double. The blizzard was setting in now, but he’d have to check to make sure he could move the man before he took him indoors. Body heat and hot water bottles and warm fluids would have to-
He stopped, then put everything down and checked the pulse.
“Anything I can do for you, buddy?” he asked, quietly.
Jimmy blinked up at the world.
“Nah…” he sighed. His jaw didn’t hurt anymore. “S’nt. Yurfault.”
He looked resentfully at the outflung corpse of a little bottle in the snow. “D’n’t haav reael medddishinn anywahs. Jus’”

“Just what?”

The farmer took him in, light as a bird on his shoulder. The pill fell into the snow.

His siblings felt bad about it, but consoled themselves with the memories of their brother’s careless lifestyle.
After all, they said, it wasn’t as if he’d had any real options.


Storytime: How to live in the home I lived in when I was very small.

October 7th, 2015

There is one thing that needs to be clear before we start: outdoors is great. Outdoors is good. I am all about being outside of doors (frogs rocks trees and water and frogs), but that’s for another time and place. This is about indoors.
Okay?

The front hall has its place and its place is perfectly fine but also passing. There are implements of outdoors here. Leave yours or be yelled at. More interesting is dad’s office, just offset. There’s a deep and perplexing blue to the floor there, and more paper than can be imagined in Bill Gates’s nightmares. It smells like cardboard packaging and old computer exhaust, and it is largely forbidden.

Moving in, moving along past the kitchen, that island apart, and we have the living room. This is the big real break, the big place where big stuff can happen and you can get serious. Craggy couches rear from a hardwood sea, towering above the waves of slipping, sliding socks and rocky chairs. Fish are abundant, but so are monsters. You’ve got to be careful about yourself in there, or you can lose yourself down between the cracks that drop out of sight and mind and into the spaces where the loose change goes – a quarter! Wealth!
You can find the dining room table there too, but that’s exceptional and extraordinary: the one surface in the whole house you can accidentally colour and it’s okay because it gets wiped down constantly and all the extra leftovers from your drawings will be swept up and away off the edges clean and clear. Not that you miss the drawings because your drawings should grow like goldfish to match the surface’s size and this is a grand table, a big table, a table you tape two four six eight sheets together on and scribble like mad with until your hand aches. It’s good for that. That’s good.

Into the hall, the grand hall, the REAL hall that makes the front hall unworthy because this must be five times its length and nearly as wide even with the bookcases all the bookcases hanging precariously from the walls they’re caves in its walls, chiseled carefully over a long winding river whose doors gape into other times and places. When you’re alone, grab a handful. Then you aren’t. And you know where they all live all day all the time.
It’s sunny there, in the right places.

At the far end is the sisters’ room. It is forbidden in the nonspecial, nonmysterious, unappealing way, where there’s nothing magical about it you just don’t go in there because it’s not right. That’s how it should be.

At the unfar end is the parent’s room. This one is unforbidden in the nonspecial, nonmysterious way because it belongs to your parents and your parents are functionally an extension of yourself as far as privacy goes. Besides, their bed is great for jumping on – not bouncy, but expansive. Good stuff, right good stuff right on. It’s a field, a battlefield, whatever. And another island if you need it, over tight-curled carpet waves.

Just above is the real red ruddy room, walls wined. This place is all out of space; the bed’s too high, the paint’s too strong, there’s a television on creaking wooden legs and god knows what else. Avert your eyes as you pass but if you dare trespass you can find a bloody good bloodpit of a place, a lake of monsters howling under a rubbled ridge and with a great shining glass eye of a sky overhead to light it up. Don’t go here without being ready for some serious stuff.

A bathroom. Necessary. Its tap has the tastiest water you’ve ever heard, but you’ll have to compete with the cat for it. Cat loves that water, straight from the faucet. Sometimes he sleeps in that sink. Because he’s a cat, even if there’s no internet yet.

At the nearly far end is the room. That’s a good room, because it’s yours. It’s a bit dark and dim and leafy thanks to your window which is covered in dark dim leaves up against the fence but that’s nice and shady, even if your paint keeps it cooler and greener itself. It’s a cave in here, a cavern the size of a stadium – or maybe just a hidden valley? A few pools and eddies and streams, a good place for leagues of heroes to slouch and prepare and organize and build and get into plans about getting into fights. On the bottomshelflands of giant bunk-bedded plateaus they live, in caves and crannies; atop the peaks of covers their flying sentinels pose nobly. There’s a captain’s hat from a cottage of boats and a desk too old to think; they are background. Important background. There’s actually starting to be more important background than foreground here, but that’ll only become a problem in ten years or so.
For now, just sit back. You’ve got a lot of work to do. But someone’s not got to do it, and it might as well be you.


Storytime: The Builder.

September 30th, 2015

Humphrey was a small boy. Humphrey was a quick boy. But you’d be forgiven for not noticing those things, because above all else Humphrey was a quiet boy, as soundproofed as a padded room and as slender as a needle. He was so quiet that his mother couldn’t concentrate with him in the house; the sheer volume of his silence was fit to drive her up the wall. Then one day she watched the boy trip and hurt himself without so much as an ‘ouch’ and that was the last straw.
“It’s not helpful to do that,” she reproached him, bandaging his knee with one hand and swatting him with the other. “It’s not healthy to keep all your troubles bottled up inside. Nobody likes a whiner, but no-one, and I mean NO-ONE, loves a martyr. You’ve got to get all this off your chest or you’ll live in its shadow your whole life.”
Now, maybe it hadn’t been noticed because of his being such a quiet boy, but Humphrey was also a very literal boy, and he felt at his chest and was a bit confused and annoyed that he couldn’t find anything there. Still, there was something to what his mother had told him. He had to take all the bad things in him and get them out.
So he went down to the creek, and pulled up a nice thick wad of clay. And he shaped it and kneaded it and wrote ‘MY MOM DOESN’T LIKE ME’ on it, signed it ‘HUMPHREY,’ and waited for it to dry in the sun.
And then he dropped into the creek and went home, feeling better already.

Humphrey grew, and what’s more he grew garrulous. He and his young friends laughed and yelled and ran up and down all day and his mother began to miss his overwhelming noiselessness. So she consoled herself by yelling and cursing, and maybe one or two more swattings.
Splish, splash into the creek went ‘I’M A PROPER HELLION’ and ‘I WAS TOLD TO HUSH UP OR I’D GET A THICK EAR.’ Humphrey was getting good at them now; they were proper bricks in shape if not in matter. Which was good, because they were just the foundation.
Teenage years came in. ‘ZITS’ and ‘UGLY’ and ‘TOUCHED BAD THINGS’ went out, plunk clonk clank. Humphrey acquired and learned to operate a small potter’s oven, then upgraded to a bricklayer’s old furnace.
“Where do you spend all day?” his father asked him suspiciously.
“Dunno,” said Humphrey. That evening, ‘LAYABOUT’ and ‘LAZY GOOD-FOR-NOTHING’ and ‘UNGRATEFUL’ were placed.
By the time Humphrey’s schooling was nearing completion, the tower had begun to attract some comment. Many of the neighbours were complaining that it was obstructing their view, or their property rights, or both, and so Humphrey’s parents were sent down to the creek to reason with him.
“Knock it off,” his father told him, kindly.
“Please don’t do this, sweetie,” said his mother, angrily.
Humphrey flipped two more bricks on top of the new battlement and gave them the finger, then went back downstairs to his furnace.
“College’ll fix him, don’t fret,” said his mother.
“Or a good day’s work,” groused his father.

Humphrey didn’t go to college. Humphrey didn’t do a good days work. But he DID work on his tower, day in and day out. ‘A BIRD POOPED ON ME,’ was a proper huge slab, and it soon had seventeen siblings. ‘FUNNY LOOKS FROM PEDESTRIANS’ was another. ‘PARENTS THREATENED TO CALL LOONY BIN’ made a great balcony.
Then one day, as Humphrey was about to hoist up ‘A NEIGHBOR LOOKED UPON ME WITH FEAR IN HIS EYES’ to its new resting place, he stopped, considered it, then broke it.
‘PEASANT DARED NOT PAY PROPER RESPECT’ went up instead, and things started to go a bit downhill.
Those were Humphrey’s salad days. The tower rose, and the people fell under its shadow. Its literal, very large shadow. Petitioners came to his door; at first only farmers who begged that Humphrey’s darkness not fall upon their fields and stunt their crops, then mothers who wanted to scare their children straight; politicians who wanted a rival’s house blighted of sun; summer-poached quarry workers who pled for shade; neighbors from the north who pined for the endless night of their childhoods – for a few days.
Every morning Humphrey held court from fourteen hundred feet, his face a mask of patience. And every evening Humphrey slaved in his furnace, sliding out ‘BORED BY SERFS’ and ‘BESET BY INSOLENCE’ by the barrelful. And the tower grew taller, and the lines grew longer, and the shadow grew deeper.

At age thirty-five Humphrey-on-High was the most urgent and pressing threat to a free world that humanity had ever know. His tower was visible from eighty-five percent of the planet’s surface, and its shadow all that plus another fifty percent. The gifts to appease his wrath, the valiant efforts at undermining or exploding his structure, the carefully-reasoned arguments, all had come and gone and been put into another round of bricks, and some people were beginning to get worried. If nothing else, Humphrey’s average life expectancy would have his tower getting too big for the structural integrity of the earth’s core to support before he retired and REALLY got crabby.
And it was then, at the peak of his power and his arrogance and his contempt, that Humphrey-on-High stood upon the heights of his grievances and his throne of troubles and looked down and heard absolutely nothing.
“Who’s doing that?!” he snapped.
An extremely small girl stepped back in that way children do: trying to look innocent, yet preparing to run.
“Quit being so quiet near me, I can’t hardly think,” said Humphrey. “What are you doing here anyways; I’ve half a mind to loom at you and your family unto seven generations for this persnickety truculence.”
She shrugged. “’kin’frrks”
“SPEAK UP,” yelled Humphrey.
“Looking for rocks,” said the girl, a little louder. “Pretty rocks.”
“These are my rocks and you can’t have them,” said Humphrey. “Go home. Go home and find your own rocks. You can’t, because they’re all mine everywhere. Go away.”
“Dnseeyrnmnem,” muttered the girl.
“SPEAK. UP,” suggested Humphrey.
“Don’t see your name on them,” she shot back.
Humphrey was so enraged he did a little dance as he ate at his beard in sheer, pants-scrabbling fury. “You little BUGLETTE!” he screamed. “I’ve been insulted and angered and punished and pummeled and abused and agitated my WHOLE LIFE and I’ve NEVER FORGOTTEN ANY OF IT and it’s ALL. HERE. And now you doubt it? You doubt ME? I’ll show you!”
And Humphrey raced, raced, raced down to the bottom of his tower of resentment, down the dark miles and rotten corridors, through forgotten vaults of vehemence and buried tombs of fumes and at the base, at the deepest pit, at the groaning center of its deepest dungeon, he found mud and a soupy sort of lump. A kind of child’s version of a rectangle, not even mud-fired.
THUMP THUMP THUMP up his tower ran Humphrey, feet slamming home like bats against fresh fruit, and at the pinnacle of his anger he held the brick high and read it aloud.
“MY MOM DOESN’T LIKE ME,” he yelled at the top of his lungs over the slow roar of mortar-on-stone, leaning forward into the syllables. “HUM. PH. RY!”
The little girl squinted up the ages of the gloomy, creaking tower at the little blob, slowly dissolving in his waving hand.
“That’s IT?” she asked.
And as Humphrey opened his mouth to shout her dead on the spot, his eyes flickered across the old, old brick in his palm, and it did look awful small and strange to his eyes, much smaller than he’d remembered.
But his heart hardened. This was something he had to get off his chest.
“Yes!” he said. “This IS it! This is ALL it! These are my troubles, heaped high and true, and I will NOT keep them inside!”
And at that moment the stone underneath his foot turned its slow coughing into a sudden wheeze, and Humphrey found that all his problems were suddenly very small, very fragile, and a long, long way away.

It was pleasant for a while afterwards, in a way nobody’d ever seen before. Just being in the sunshine was enough to make you smile. But people move on from everything, even the good things.
You can’t just dwell on them forever.


Storytime: Well.

September 23rd, 2015

This is my fault, so you know. I woke up and I was thirsty. Terrible mistake.
So dad told me, as you do: “Son, light of my life, fruit and veg of my loins, why the hell are you bothering me then? You know your family’s buried in this land. Your great-great-grandfather, Kindly Elijah, fought it with his bare hands to clear it, day in and out, because he believed there was room here for a real and good community of friends and neighbors that treated each other as such. Your great-grandfather, Simple Clay, ploughed it with his teeth when his horses died, so’s to feed his family. Your grandfather, Charitable Johnny watered it with his blood in drought, out of pity for that that was less than him. And now it’s mine, and what I say is that you can stand to walk out and do one thing by yourself. Go out to the well and have a drink.”
Which I was not best pleased with, on account of our wellpump being infested with ghost goblins and ghoulies. I knew this because my brother Daniel had carefully warned me of them.
But I was thirsty. So…
Now I could just barely muster the wit and will to speed out there, crank the pump three times like a madman, jam my face into the flow and sip what I could before running to bed with chipmunk-bulged cheeks and sweat-slicked feet. On most nights now.
But that night I got out there, took three pumps, drank air, tried again, and again, and again, and again, and again and I was sure a goblin must be up to something now because damnit the well was dry. Bone dry.
“Son,’ said my father from right behind my left ear, “my heir, my promise, my once and future child, why on earth are you making such a clanking racket that is fit to bring me out here and question it?”
Then he took the pump in hand and wrenched it once, twice with the might I knew outmatched my own, and on the third one the handle came off.
Man, I got a sore backside for that.

The dowser came the next day. He was saggy and baggy in all the wrong places, except his chin, which was sharp as an arrowhead. His head bobbed when he walked, too. I felt nervous around him; if he looked in my direction too quickly I was sure I’d lose an eye.
The dowsing rod emerged from his truck in loving inches; old, palm-greased oak. “It’s a good solid one,” he said. “It’ll sink home and stay there. It’ll get you damp strong and true.”
“Bertram, my valued asset, my welcome aide, that sounds righter than rain and three times as wet,” said my father. “Now you go out there and get my fields moist.”
So we followed the dowser as he bumpitied across my father’s fields, humming and whistling and clucking to himself. Sometimes he stopped to nod and beam benevolently at the air.
“Sorry,” he said, when he saw my father’s look. “Just making conversation.”
But he made less of it after that, and at length the length in his hands trembled and hopped and popped right out of them and slid to a stop right in the middle of my father’s turnip patch.
“Right here. Water’s here,” he said. “True as a weasel and three tights as tight.”
“Bertram,” solemnly intoned my father with a hand-clap atop the dowser’s shoulder, “my employee, my salvation, my savior, that is truly the worst thing I’ve ever heard a man say aloud to me and I pray tell I will beat you senseless should you ever repeat it in my hearing. Now take your pay and skedaddle.”
Which the dowser did, so fast that he left his rod there in the dirt. We used it as a marker, and then we started digging. Nasty work, shovels until we were past our heads, then our father’s head, then the tip of the ladder. And once we were twice as deep down as that, father threw the ladder out and climbed out by his fingertips. His pants were soaked and his shoes squished with trickling, cool laughter.
The pump was placed, the first drink was had – the most delicious ever – and we were in for the night.

The next morning, I pumped the handle and the well croaked at me. Then it chuggarumphed at me. Then a big, fat toad crawled out onto the handle and looked at me crosseyed and I am not too proud to say I just about lost it all the way back to the door.
“Son,” said my father when he saw me, bucketless, “the child of my wife, the bane of my existence, I am positive that I told you to fill that bucket.”
“It’s full of frogs,” I blurted out in such distress that biology deserted me. This earned me a well-deserved thump and my father went out to investigate things for himself.
I watched from the window as he pulled the handle. Thunk. Thunk. Thunk-croak-squash.
When he walked back in his face looked pretty nasty, and the frog bits didn’t help it any. “Son, light of my dawn, jewel of my pearls, get me the phone. I’m calling Johnny down at the reserve.”

Johnny picked up on the fourth ring. “Hey,” he said. “Hey there. How you doing. What’s up? You alright? I’m okay. Now how about your family? Mine’s okay. Is the weather nice? I think so. Well, nice to-”
“Johnny,” interrupted my father with serene rudeness, “my compadre, my co-conspirator, my aide and most trusted person in all things, would you kindly tell me if I have built my farm on a graveyard or something? Because my well appears to have frogs. And you know what they say about Indian graveyards.”
Johnny sighed at volumes to be heard from the next room, and I could tell he was a bit put out his clever strategy of having a whole conversation with my father where he didn’t have to talk to him was spoilt. “No,” he said. “No, I don’t know. What about them?”
“Curses and so on and so forth,” said my father impatiently. “For shame, Johnny. Children know these things. Now, would you bestir yourself to lift as many fingers as you can spare in my aid?’
“Oh, fine,” he said. “Not sure, really. I’ll ask around. You know, just ask around. Nothing better to do. On a Saturday.”
“Excellent,” said my father. And he made to hang up.
“Frogs or toads?” said Johnny.
“Pardon?’ asked my father.
“Frogs or toads? Frogs are smoother and leap, toads are lumpier and hop.”
My father ran a palm down the dripping side of his face and examined it.
“Toads,” he said, frowning. “Why?”
“You’ve gotta get these things right,” said Johnny. “C’mon man, kids know this stuff.”
And he hung up. And my father, after a moment or three of bad words that I was thrashed severely for learning, made to call another number.

Walt Green was out in our fields that afternoon. Walt Green, five foot nothing by four foot two. Walt Green, clutching a dowsing rod that was basically a sapling. An undernourished, over-heightened sapling. A sapling with delusions of treehood, in altitude if not girth. Put together, they looked like a pepper-seed holding a toothpick.
“Thanks for calling me out tonight, m’boy,” he mumbled between his four teeth. Walt always mumbled from between his teeth. Sometimes he had to shuffle them around to do this. “The water’s singing today.”
“Walter,” boomed my father, head bowed, eyes averted, “my hallowed champion, my erstwhile Christ, please, take all the luck of the angels upon you as you do this thing. And the devils, too, because I could really, really use some water.”
So we followed Walt. This took longer than it had with the other dowser; for one thing Walt’s legs were shorter, for another he moved them slower, and finally he only found something when he fell asleep standing up and his rod fell over. It landed on dad’s foot like a twelve-foot whip.
“Wussat?” asked Walt, jerking upright. “Water? Water! The wails of the sirens, beneath our feet! The howls of Poseidon and leviathan!”
“Walt,” managed my father. “My friend in weather fair and foul, my pal, would you kindly get off my personal land before I put that stick in your last real tooth?”

This well got dug a lot faster, mostly because of the way my father did it. Mostly, it was with his fists. There was a real anger in it, and occasional spittle. We stayed back out of his way and busied ourselves getting the pump ready, so when that hole was dug – in less than three hours – we were right there, right ready to seal it.
Water came out. Pure, delicious, juicy water, fresh as daisies and fifteen times tastier.
“My family, my spawn, my ever-flowing rivers of joy, get to bed and don’t get up until I’m ready,” said my father. Then he whacked us one, just to make sure we paid attention.

Another day, another dawn. Another glimmer of moisture on the spigot. Another bucket in the bowl, another pull of the crank, and another angry buzzing sound fit to emulate Beelzebub’s breakfast bell.
“Um,” I said. And then, because I was a stupid child, I pulled the handle again. This time, bees came out.
“Son,” sighed my father, one hand covering his face. “My eternal burden, my precious cargo. What the hell has happened out there this time?”
“Bees,” I mumbled. He shook his head in sorrow and smacked me right in the stingers.
“Son,” he said fondly, “my charitable case, my mushroom-headed mushmallow: those are yellowjackets.”
I could’ve corrected him, but knew better. Instead I held the guttering torch as he marched out with smoke and smouldering rags to bring death to the hive that was our well. And I stood well back out of sting range, but close enough to learn a few more swears.

That afternoon, my father took down the shovel and broke off its blade and held it aloft and walked the fields alone, swearing and cursing at most of us and all of us, because only he could get the job done right. He strode the crops alone, he waved it alone, he fell alone, and he stood up and swung it down at the dirt alone and yelled: “THERE IT IS!”
“Want me to get the blade back, dad?” I asked.
“Son, son, SON,” he admonished me firmly, slapping out one of my baby teeth onto the tilled soil, “this is a man’s job. And there’s no men in all this damned county but me. Not Bertram, not Johnny, not Walt, not you or your big fat idiot of a brother, and not you in a million million years. Now get out of here and stay indoors, I’m having a drink if it kills me.”
So I sort of wandered indoors in loops and staggers – took me four tries to guess which one of the four front doors was real, bless my silly soul – and I was just in time to pick up the phone.
“Well you’re just in time to pick up that phone,” said Johnny. “I was about to stop calling. Hey, is your dad there?”
I looked outside. My father was smashing at the dirt with the shovel handle, but moving downwards surprisingly quickly.
“Sort of,” I said, which was kind of true in a way maybe I guess. “Why?”
“I finished asking around. Nah, we never had a graveyard there. Not even close. I don’t think anybody even lived on your family’s place, back in the day.”
“Was it cursed?”
“No, just sort of shit.”
“Oh.” My father had sunk below my sight now, only the long wooden shaft of the shovel handle waving in the air to mark his place.
“I found out something else though. There was A graveyard, just not one of ours. Your family’s been planting itself out with its turnips for a while now, kid, from your great-great-grandpa on down.”
I was only half-listening at this point, because the shovel handle was wobbling at just the edge of my vision now. Another inch. Half-inch. Less. And it would be gone.
“Kid?”
“Sorry.”
“You think there’s any chance your dad might’ve done anything that would piss them off?”
I thought about Kindly Elijah and Simple Clay and Charitable Johnny and tried to consider this question, but the pain in my mouth was still pretty strong and I had a devil of a time focusing.
After all, I was just a stupid child.
“Dunno,” I said.
Johnny sighed. “Well, just let me know if anything else pops up. And kid?”
“Yeah?”
“Have a nice day, eh?”
I hung up and considered this advice. It sounded pretty good to me.
And there was a head start already: the field was empty and silent, the shovel gone for good.


Storytime: Big.

September 15th, 2015

So Big Bull Bradden was getting up to live up to step up to the first half of the first third of his name, maybe not a ‘Big’ yet but at least mostways there. He was past his puberty and over the top; he could see adulthood creeping over his eyes and feel the wind in his (short, stubbly) hair.
He was a big one. Not Big yet, but a big one.
Big Bull Bradden could pick up rocks and break them between his fingers and lick up the pebbles. He could uproot trees and use them to smash meadows flat. He could drink a pond for breakfast and eat the frogs for lunch. He wrestled bears. The bears didn’t like it but he didn’t care.
Because that’s the kind of thing you do when you’re a person like Big Bull Bradden.
And when Big Bull Bradden was only a little younger than he was on this day, his mother had kicked him out of their house with a curse and a cuff and a crust (because that’s the kind of thing you do when you’ve raised six people like Big Bull Bradden) and he’d looked all around himself at the big wide world all flattened and smashed where he’d played in it, and he’d thought ‘good start.’
Because that’s the kind of thing you think when you’re a person like Big Bull Bradden.
But that was the older day and this is the present day, and on the present day at present Big Bull Bradden was having his birthday present, which was chewing on a bit of tough badger he’d found out by the side of a highway, and he looked out at all that lovely unfurrowed earth taking up the horizon all around him and he was fuming, because damnit that wasn’t fair, he was just one Bradden. Even if he was Big. Nearly.
“I’ve gotta do something about that,” said Big Bull Bradden. “This badger tastes like spit in my mouth with a view like that. Who does it think it is, looking like it does where I can see what it does? I’m going to teach it not to do nothing.”
And he did, and he smashed the earth and split the fields and mangled the trees, but there were still rivers and lakes and he had to splash those and run roughshod over their beds and splinter their banks and at the end of Big Bull Bradden’s birthday bash he looked around himself and saw that he’d left his mark everywhere, handprints, hoofprints, and knucklebumps.
But as the sun set, he looked up and he saw a smooth, cool, calm blue sky fading away with a bit of a disappointed look. No clouds, no moon yet, no stars, just a deep blue soft fading out and away. Perfect. Damn near perfect.
Well hell, he really hated that. Walked all night cursing, stayed up all morning plotting, waved a truck down on the highway at lunch ate the driver for dinner and drove into the city at midnight, roaring loader than his engine all the way.
Because that’s the kind of thing you can’t stand if you’re a person like Big Bull Bradden. And he’d grown into all the bits of his name at last.

So Big Bull Bradden drove, and he was driven. He took metal from one place and wood from another place and stone and dirt and ore and who knew what from everywhere to everyplace, and where he drove his axles croaked low and the asphalt sagged and the birds cowered. His spit knocked trees down and his glower faded billboards. He stayed awake by spite and he lived by the skin he took from other people’s teeth and he was the best damned driver anyone had ever seen because he was the last one most of them ever saw.
“He’s good,” said his boss, to his boss, “but we get complaints.”
“Screw them,” said his boss, to his boss. And Big Bull Bradden was promoted seven times and drove seven trucks at once until at last they saw they had no more work left for him there, and he was made a manager for fear of his teeth.
“What’s wrong with ‘em?” he yelled at his co-workers, subordinates, superiors and supporters. “You want to see ‘em up close? Count ‘em nice? Pick out the cracks and nits?”
And they all said no, and so he was promoted again to CEO and president and vice-president and chairman of the board and more besides so that nobody would have to talk to him but his secretary.
Because that’s the kind of thing you do when you’re in arm’s reach of a person like Big Bull Bradden.
He was happier – like the surface of the sun was cooler.
He was closer – like the dark side of the moon was farther.
And he was ready for the next step. No, he really was. He was on it as soon as he was in his office, picking up his phone with one hand and smushing it into his ear and clearing his throat.
“BUY ME AN AIRPLANE,” he roared at it. Then he hung up and waited for it to be delivered to his door.
He’d never flown before, but how hard could it be? Birds did it, and they were small and crunchy. Simple as pie. Simple as bird-beak pie.

And Big Bull Bradden flew, straight and true, into that blue and he was damn well pissed the whole way. He broke his window with his shouts and he nearly chopped off a finger in the propeller making gestures at the sky and he flew straight into commercial airspace and bit off his radio in a fury when he was reprimanded by the local airport.
So he landed there, at that airport, and he ate its management until there was none, then declared himself its king.
“We’re going to get complaints,” his staff told him. And he bared his teeth and they sighed and ran and bought out things and places and that was how Big Bull Bradden came to fly a proportion of air traffic that doubled every month. Wasn’t anyone else that wanted to be in his airspace. And it was all his airspace, all his, all his. All by the end of it. All his.
Except in the way that counted.
Up there in the topmost tower of his city he brooded – his city. He owned all the traffic that rolled on roads, he owned all the traffic that moved through the air. He’d phoned all the places that tore up the ground and yelled until they did what he said. He’d visited all the places that tapped up the water and smashed them until they were his. He’d bitten off the smokestacks one by one until every boss in every business was him.
And he was still not quite there. Not quite yet.
Big Bull Bradden picked up his phone. It was triple-reinforced and eight times the size of a fax machine and composed of polymernanofiberopticsuperconductiveplastocompoundneurodentalmicrovesiclereceptothagomizers. It dented under his fingertips.
“GET ME,” he screamed into it, popping eardrums and lowering air pressure across the city. “GET ME. GET ME THE THINGS I NEED.”
“A CRANE.”
“A FURNACE.”
“A DRILL.”
“A PLANE.”
“AND A BIG, BIG KNIFE.”
There was a pause while he took a breath and the city held its.
“AND MAKE THEM ALL AS HUGE AS POSSIBLE,” he howled. Then the phone exploded in his palm and he spat his windows out.
Fourth time that week.

Big Bull Bradden’s plane soared the sky like none ever had or will. It was a spruce moose made like an iron dinosaur; a dragon with dyspepsia. When it took off the backwash flattened half the city, and its runway was the highway, the whole thing.
It groaned under his weight, and his drill, but it was doing its job and Big Bull Bradden had never much cared what people said of him as long as he could smash them for it. And he smashed that plane all the way up to the heights of the sky where the blue shone thin and the sunlight came thick and the clouds were all huddled down below just watching to see what would happen next.
“THIS,” he explained. And out came the drill whose bit was a whole bite verging on bitter and when he flicked it on it made a noise like the end of the world wetting its pants and when he swung it pretty much made a noise like only it could’ve itself, because there’d never been anything like it.
Bit like ‘whunk,’ though. Drawn-out, like.
And Big Bull Bradden drilled through the sky at its apex, and it swung down from its perch as surprised and offended as a spider who snared an eagle, tipped on over on end on end until PLUNK it bounced off the ground once twice thrice and took out the other half of the city.
“FURNAACEEEEEEEEEEEEEE!” yelled Big Bull Bradden as he chased it down atop his plane, drill tossed aside, hand reaching into his hairy pockets.
The furnace was a football stadium renovated; a coliseum put to proper work. It had been prepped with all the steel from the two halves of the city that had already been knocked down and it was sort of gooey and warm enough to roast eyeballs from forty miles. It stuck onto the sky good and proper, and squirm though it might it wasn’t able to budge in time.
“CRAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAANEEE!” came the call as Big Bull Bradden hurled himself free of the smoking wreckage of his plane, head shaking, arms dangling, teeth flexing in the muscles of his gums.
And up he swung hand over hand as it rotated, the big ape, the big goon, hair on end and panting as the arm spun over the caldera already-melting, the suspension rigging vaporizing on the spot. He was higher than a kite and strung-out over the abyss and the whole big blue sky was stuck down below and it was getting a little worried when his hand swooped out of his hairy pockets and out.
came.
the.
knife.

It was really big, you know?

And Big Bull Bradden yelled something that no man or woman ever quite heard properly and plunged down, blade-first, into that perfect blue sky.

That was five billion years ago.
And I’d like to think we’ve gotten a bit better, right? A bit smarter. A bit more clever.
A little soberer, too.
But for the love of goodness gracious and all its little badgers, too…
Just don’t touch the sky, okay?
It’s older and wiser too. But it’s gotten touchy. And still-sore.
And it hasn’t got as far to fall, this time.


Storytime: Word of Mouth.

September 9th, 2015

The autumn wasn’t crisp. A season has no crunch.
But it WAS awfully pretty, the trapper thought. It was just a shame it had him walking through it. A vaguely mottled blob that had once had blue jeans and a (plaid? maybe?) jacket, shuffling through a red and yellow wonderstorm of colours, checking on snares.

The deadfall was down. It was also empty.

In the deeper bits of the woods some of the smaller and more sullen plants still were hanging on to their summer greenery, as in-denial as snowbirds waiting the last week before they gave in and flew down to Florida.

The snares were clenched teeth, their baited tongues absent.

And up on the ridge, by contrast, the firm and no-nonsense wind had seen that no leaves gallivanted for long. The trees were already stripping down for their midwinter rest up here, and you could see all the way, all the way down, all the way out to the tiny blot on a blob on a bit that was the hill his cabin sat against, all the way up to right at his feet where an extremely large legtrap was holding an extremely large deer.
“Hi,” said the deer.
The trapper blinked at that. Then he got out his cigarette and relit it from both ends.

The deer watched him do this with no trace of impatience. He stared it at, then down at the valley again, then at the sky in general. It was coming over with the ugly pinky hints of a sunset-to-be that was-not-yet, and his spine crawled in anticipation.
“So, you mind letting me out?” asked the deer.
The trapper held his cigarette until it burned his thumb both ways, then threw the stub on the ground and crushed it lovingly yet repeatedly.
“Twelve times,” he said, at length, in between boot presses.
The deer cocked its head at this.
“Twelve times for ME,” the trapper amended. “Lord knows I’ve heard more stories from my dad. And his dad. And on and on and on past that, though probably some of ‘em were just to mess with me. What’s the good in a kid if you don’t mess with it?”
“Don’t particularly know,” said the deer. “I’m not really a family man.”
“Fair. True.” The trapper looked at his feet.
“Waste of a good cigarette,” commented the deer.
“No, but it was a good use for a bad one.”
“Twelve times what?”
“What?”
“Twelve times,” repeated the deer, in a patient tone of voice. “You said twelve times. Twelve times for ME, which is you. Twelve times what?”
“Oh,” said the trapper. “That. Twelve times this’s happened. This sort of thing.”
“Talking deer?”
“No, no, no. Talking animals in general.”
“We talk all the time.”
“I mean, so’s I can understand.”
“You can understand most of it alright, can’t you? Looks like you’ve been out here for a while.”
“In English.”
“Oh. Right.” The deer rubbed its free foreleg against its trapped one. Blood migrated from a wet patch of fur to a dry one. “Twelve times?”
“Yeah.”
“What do we talk about?”
The trapper shrugged. “Usually, ‘ow, ow, ow, let me go.’”
“Huh.”
“Yeah. The first one was a fish. It promised to give me wishes if I let it go.”
“Fish do that.”
“No it didn’t. I didn’t get a single wish.”
“No, no, I mean the promise. Fish lie all the time.”
“Huh.”
“Don’t listen to fish.”
The hunter considered this advice. “Sure.”
“It never helps.”
“Don’t trust anyone that can’t blink. That’s what my mother said.”
“Good advice.”
“Thanks.”
“Mine said to be scared of everything.”
“That work?”
The deer looked at its foreleg. “Until now.”
“I sure was scared the second time it happened. It was a bear.”
“Black bear or brown bear?”
“A brown black bear.”
“Those can be confusing.”
“Yeah,” said the trapper. He smiled, and a few shy teeth nearly poked their way out of his cracked lips. “It scared the shit out of me. Kept telling me it’d curse me if I killed it.”
“They can do that.”
“It did. Never heard half of those words before, but damn if they didn’t make my ears smoke. Felt like having my grandfather lose his temper at me.”
“You think that’s bad? You should piss off a chipmunk.”
“I’d rather not.”
“’Motherfucker’ is their way of saying hello. To their friends.”
“Feisty little suckers.”
“Count yourself lucky they usually don’t bother to learn English. Or French. Or anything.”
“I am. Hey, look at that sky.”
The deer looked. The pink had crawled its way out of bed and across half the horizon, which was turning red and curling up at the edges.
“Damned pretty sight, isn’t it?”
The deer made a very animal snort. “I’ve seen it all.”
“How old are you?”
“Fifteen.”
“You ARE old.”
“A fogey. A fossil. Barely worth keeping. Oh kind sir please let me out I’ll grant you a wish. And so on.”
“And sarcastic, too.”
“It’s the easiest way to have fun when your legs don’t work and you can’t go out and meet all the fine young ladies anymore.”
The trapper shrugged. “Wouldn’t know much about that.”
“Fair enough. So, what were the other ten?”
“The other ten what?”
“Animals who spoke English.”
“Well, I don’t know if the third counts,” said the trapper. “It was a wolverine that’d got stuck under a deadfall. I guess it had tried to catch a deer at it – pardon me – and knocked the bait by mistake. Pinned half under it. It told me to let it out and then just screamed at me.”
“Why doesn’t it count?”
“It had a pretty strong Quebecois accent. I think some of the screaming might have been French. My hearing hasn’t been so good since the bear thing, I couldn’t be sure.”
“A bilingual wolverine. That’s something you don’t hear every day.”
“Yeah.”
“Normally they just eat you. Not big on talking.”
“Wish they’d told that to the next four. An elk, two rabbits, and a hare. All of them said if I spared them they’d show me the way to a miraculous treasure.”
“Did they?”
“No. I remembered the fish thing. They sold decent though – except the hare. I probably could’ve just let him go his pelt was so lousy, but he wouldn’t stop whining at me.”
“Hey. It’s a hard life, being a lagomorph. You are the oyster of the world.”
“Not as slimy.”
“You ever seen a newborn rabbit?”
The trapper grinned outright this time. “Right. So, I sort of stopped counting around then, ‘cause they start to blur together. I think there were a couple deer.”
“Well. Thanks.”
“Don’t take offence now, it was just that it was all more of the same. ‘Spare me,’ etc. But I think I was up to ten when the next one happened, and I remember that ‘cause it was a moose. A bull moose. A big bull moose.”
“That’s a big animal.”
“It was. Funny little high-pitched voice though. I hit it with my truck.”
The deer gave him the most skeptical look possible without proper eyebrows. “Then why are you still here?”
“Dumbass’s luck. He went through the passenger’s side, and his legs just missed me. Almost shaved the right half of my beard off, though. And I got out and he was stuck in my windshield all over and as I’m pulling out the shotgun to give him a moment’s peace, he up and says his bit.”
“What was it?”
“’Turn off your FUCKING highbeams.’”
They laughed at that for a while; the hunter in his hoarse heh-heh-h-h-eh-heh, the deer with a sort of gurgling uhn-unh-uh-uhhhn that could only ever bubble up from a herbivore’s guts.
“Twelve,” said the deer, at last.
“Yeah,” said the trapper.
“You said twelve. What was twelve?”
“Oh, right.” The trapper scratched his ear and squinted at his fingertips in the dim. “You. Twelve counting you.”
“Right. Forgot that.”
“S’fine.”
The deer stretched itself in the long, slow, steady way of someone whose entire body is a cage of minor aches and who has learned to cope with this. “So, what now?”
“Huh,” said the trapper. He raised a single finger. “Well, your pelt’s shit.”
“Thank you.”
“No offence.”
“None taken.”
The trapper raised a second finger. “I could use more bait, but you’re sort of scrawny.”
“Thank you.”
“No offence.”
“None taken.”
The third finger came up, thumb restraining the pinky as neatly as a seatbelt. “And you know what, since my truck broke down I could use someone to give me a hand taking stuff into town. It’s not a long walk.”
“Well, that’s great because I don’t have a very long left foreleg anymore.”
“Nah, nah. I got antibiotics. It’ll be fine.”
The trap was well-oiled and barely creaked as it split open. The deer was well-balanced and barely stumbled as it stepped out.
And the trapper, who was well-tired of talking, barely said another word the whole way home.
But they were both happy to talk come the morrow.


Storytime: In the Beginning.

September 2nd, 2015

In the beginning there was, in order:

Light
Darkness
Orderly sifting of matter from unmatter
The coalescence of a universal system
The teasing out of the planets
The birth in the cradle
The growth of the remarkable

And it was good. And after that, it was all uphill.

The Shaper watched another perfect world in a perfect universe slowly swim its way upstream from nothing, and It knew that it was good, because It was good. Soon, the stars would beckon to the little creatures It could tell were even now spawning and burbling down in the hot acrid seas of its planets. Soon, they would leave their nests, driven not by hunger or thirst or any want or need – for they needed nothing, they wanted for nothing – but for the pure pleasant hum of their own satisfied curiosity.
They would meet their neighbours out there, for there were many, and they would find others, and others, and others. Space enough for everyone out there, in that busy universe. A trillion infinities of worlds filling with life, and a countless number beyond that waiting to be filled. And swirling in the clouds of ever-gusting cosmic dust, new ones being birthed forever, a rhythm that never ended.
The Shaper watched this all happen. Again. For the uncountableth time.
And the Shaper was more bored than It could possibly imagine.

The space between universes is roomier than imagined. The Shaper popped into it and there was enough space for It to manifest most of its mind and think for a minute, instead of doing what It usually would and haring off immediately into the next construction project.
No, instead the Shaper thought. No, brooded. Dark gloomy clouds of percolating brainpower crackled their way through Its dreams and clumped over Its satisfaction like ants on cake.
Forever is a long time, and even perfection can lose its lustre.
So instead of opening Itself into a new void – as usual – and instead of throwing the bowling ball of creation down the ever-waiting alley – as It was so good at – the Shaper found an existing crack in the wall, a work in progress, and stuck Itself in like a whale slipping through a straw.

This universe was not one of Its own, and the thrill of discovery that so enraptured the last uncountable many of Its creations nearly touched the Shaper Itself for the first time. The suns that boiled under It were a different colour and shape; the void itself more curdled; the elements less in number but more precise in nature.
“Greetings,” said the Shaper, or something like that, because words and even concepts are a tricky thing at this level of communication. If something so precise can be called communication at all.
“Greetings,” said the Maker. Or something like that. Etc.
“How fares Your creation?” asked the Shaper.
“Well,” said the Maker. “How fares Yours?”
“Well,” said the Shaper. Any other answer would be unthinkable.
“I am pleased to hear that. For what purpose do You visit? This has never happened before in the history outside of histories.”
“Boredom and frustration and a dissatisfaction with My own work of perfect eternities,” the Shaper did not say, because that sounded petty, and it was impossible for anything on Its scale of existence to (admit) to that emotion. “Inspiration,” It did not say, because lacking inspiration for Its works was not in Its nature.
“Curiosity,” said the Shaper. Because that was a safe answer.
“A worthy goal,” said the Maker. “Please, fulfill your curiosity with any of My works. It will not disrupt My labours.”
The Shaper looked over the Maker’s universe, and It saw a carefully-balanced structure that rivalled Its own in nature, and It knew that ten million trillion infinities of universes before it had been made, all different by all the same.
“Thank You,” said the Shaper. And It left the Maker to its perfect universe, frustrated.

The next universe was a roiling cloud, so thick with Somethings that there was almost no space for Nothings, and the Shaper felt the unknown thrill of brushing through a cosmos so thick and rich that there was hardly any room for darkness in the skies.
“Greetings,” said the Shaper.
“Greetings,” said the Watcher.
“How fares Your creation?” asked the Shaper.
“Don’t ask Me,” said the Watcher. “I’ve just finished winding it up.”
The Shaper looked around Itself and was puzzled by this statement. “But you have only just begun. The heat of the Beginning is still dissipating.”
“I have set things up so that they will happen as I see fit,” said the Watcher. “What more is needed? Leave the micro-management to others; I am not so fickle a warden as They. My creation will run smoothly without My guidance, and in the meantime I have other times and spaces to make. Stay, if you please, but I am busy.” And with that speech, the Watcher sped itself out of the dawning universe.
The Shaper looked around Itself and knew (for like knows like) that It was in the presence of a very obsessive perfectionist’s work. The infinity that would birth from this bubbling cauldron would be not so different from its own – the sheer THICKNESS of matter aside – yet it was meant to unfold without intervention, like a flower. In the time it had taken It to carefully hand-craft the upbringing of an infinity of universes, the Watcher could start-up an infinite number more, leaving them to their own ends. Life was billions of years to come, yet it was already inevitable.
And after that, the Shaper realized, it would look very similar to what It had left in Its own creations.
“Fuck,” said the Shaper. Or something like that. And It left the Watcher’s clockwork universe, frustrated and fuming.

This time (in the place without time) the Shaper was so frustrated that It smeared Itself down the infinite line, prying and tapping and knocking at the doors of a little infinity among infinities of universes. Some were Its own, some the Maker’s, the Watcher’s, the many many infinities of others, all different, all the same, all perfect, and it made It want to scream until it had lungs to scream with.
Until It tapped a crack in reality and fell right through into a void so vast that for the first time in an endless time, It knew shock.
The stars were so far apart it beggared belief; the galaxies were actually spinning away from each other. Matter was… flying apart. What was this? What was this?
“Oh,” said the Shifter. “Uh. Hi there. What’s up with You?”
“Well,” said the Shaper automatically. Then It realized this conversation wasn’t going the way it always did, and amended: “I am well. My creation is well. And You? And Yours?”
“Uh. Okay, I think. Yeah. Yeah, this is all according to My plan. Nothing wrong here.” It squinted (an analogy) at the violent smashing of an uncountable barrage of meteors into a cloud of swirling stone, giving birth to a red screaming infant of a planet. “Oh man. That was close.”
“What is all this?” asked the Shaper. “I have never seen such a cosmos. Your matter is racing away from itself.”
“Well, it’s a race all right,’ said the Shifter. “But it’s a two-player one. Matter and uh, entropy. Damned thing keeps cropping up in everything I do. Woops, there goes a red giant.”
The Shaper looked and saw that many of the Shifter’s stars were faulty and expanding to giant sizes before exploding, probably as a result of an imperfectly-timed Beginning that had led to a cosmos lacking many of the standard elements and possessing a deeply odd set instead.
“Where is Your life?” It asked, feeling the faint stirrings of astonishment. “I cannot see it, and surely it is due by now?”
“Oh. Yeah!” said the Shifter. “It’s over there.”
The Shaper looked and saw only empty stars, hurling away from each other in the endlessness.
“No, uh, eight millionth one on the left. The little yellow one.”
The Shaper looked more closely, and on a single miniscule planet of a single tiny star in a single small galaxy It saw life, which was… busy, in odd ways that almost reminded It of the colliding, burning, exploding heavens above It.
“What is It doing?” It asked. “I have never seen such behaviour.”
The Shifter glanced (another analogy) over at the Shaper’s scrutiny. “Oh. I think it’s eating.”
The Shaper considered this. Some of the Shifter’s life appeared to be turning on and dismantling the others – some of them were actually ceasing to live, of all the preposterous notions. “More entropy?”
“Energy’s gotta come from somewhere, You know.”
“Not in My cosmos,” the Shaper did not say, because really life was astoundingly busy down there on this lonely strange world of the Shifter’s and It did not want to shut It up.
Instead, it asked a question.
“How did You do it?”
The Shifter shrugged (this also was an analogy) and they watched as the star the little life-world orbited began to swell at the edges, eating its own core. “Dunno, it just happens. It’s all in the wrist, I guess.”
(That was a final analogy. They do not possess wrists)
The Shaper looked at the Shifter’s universe one more time, marvelling at the simplicity of it all. Every atom of everything was slowly breaking down, and in its breakage strange things were hatching out and spilling from the seams.
“Thank You,” said the Shaper. And It left the… dying?… universe for the space between, where It thought for a minute on what to do.

Then It went to the place where it had all begun so many times, and

In the beginning, It said
Let there be chaos.

And it was good, because It was bored.


Storytime: Suicide Throughout the Ages.

August 26th, 2015

When, where and who: Cenozoic African hominids.
Why: The unbearable agony of not being able to find sufficiently ripe and tasty fruit.
What: Eagles.
How: Throwing rocks at eagles. They hate that.

When, where and who: Global Paleolithic hunter-gatherers.
Why: Too much hunting, not enough gathering.
What: Throwing rocks at the nearest saber-toothed cat.
How: The bite intended to suffocate a giant ground sloth slowly will snuff out a human nearly instantly! (Complications can arise if the cat has buck teeth; in which case that is actually a giant beaver and death will be much slower and a great deal more unusual).

When, where and who: Pre-Inuit North American Arctic Dorset peoples.
Why: All ice and no prey makes Joe Dorset a dull boy all ice and no prey makes Joe Dorset a dull boy all ice and no prey makes Joe Dorset a dull boy all ice and no prey makes Joe Dorset a dull boy all i
What: Walking off in a straight line without stopping.
How: Slipping/ice holes/polar bears/angry walrus/Greenland shark/surprise mammoth/too darn cold.

When, where and who:
Who: Classical-era Greek Philosopher.
Why: Stubbornness.
What: Philosophy.
How: Make a serious and principled stand on your personal beliefs but make sure you do it BEFORE you drink the hemlock because after a relatively short period of time it wi

When, where and who: Iron-age Northern European Vikings.
Why: Plunder no longer fills the void inside.
What: Puns.
How: Make Thor puns repeatedly in an open, rainy field while wearing copper shoes. If the gods don’t get you, your fellow raiders will eventually do you in just to shut you up.

When, where and who: Medieval European peasantry.
Why: Sick of crops.
What: Witch trials.
How: Look funny/be funny/look bored at services/look too enthusiastic at services/be a loner/be too friendly/be too dirty/be too clean/mutter a lot/grow bad crops/your neighbours grow bad crops/look pretty/look too pretty/be a woman/…

When, where and who: 18th-century French revolutionaries.
Why: Early-onset ennui.
What: Guillotine.
How: Singing slightly off-key outside Robespierre’s window. He hates that.

When, where and who: 19th-century American industrial workers.
Why: Too tired.
What: Exhaustion.
How: Too busy to think about that just keep going or your pay’s docked.

When, where and who: Early-twentieth century young adults.
Why: Patriotism.
What: Shooting/bludgeoning/stabbing/bombing/burning/choking/drowning/riddling/exploding/eviscerating/starving/gassing/freezing/or just dying of disease.
How: Join now!

When, where and who: Mid-twentieth international superpowers.
Why: MADness, indecision. Maybe.
What: Definitely nukes. We’re definitely going to use them if provoked. Definitely. You’d better not blink.
How: Any minute now. Any minute now. ANYMINUTENOW oh god please don’t blink.

When, where and who: Late-twentieth century newspapers.
Why: Hubris.
What: The internet.
How: Ignore it, it’ll never catch on.

When, where and who: Twenty-first century cosmopolitan internet browser.
Why: Boredom.
What: Boredom.
How: Reading pointless lists until that funny itchy sensation behind your eyes gently swells up and fills the inside of your cranium with blood.

When, where and who: The dynamic and exciting world of the future.
Why: Despair/lack of food/lack of additional future.
What: Heloderma spectacular, or the Greater Western Gila Monstrosity.
How: Throwing rocks at Heloderma spectacular. They hate that.