“Vogonic” Definition

Adjective. To advocate for and adhere to the weight of bureaucracy. See description below.

“Here is what to do if you want to get a lift from a Vogon: forget it. They are one of the most unpleasant races in the Galaxy. Not actually evil, but bad-tempered, bureaucratic, officious and callous. They wouldn’t even lift a finger to save their own grandmothers from the Ravenous Bugblatter Beast of Traal without orders – signed in triplicate, sent in, sent back, queried, lost, found, subjected to public inquiry, lost again, and finally buried in soft peat for three months and recycled as firelighters. The best way to get a drink out of a Vogon is to stick your finger down his throat, and the best way to irritate him is to feed his grandmother to the Ravenous Bugblatter Beast of Traal. On no account should you allow a Vogon to read poetry at you.” (Adams, Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy)

As I tried out this word in both adjectival and adverbial forms, one of my staff members jokingly punned “Vogonic Plague.”

Now I know what has gone wrong in the American workplace, including several of mine.

Who is Eileen?

“The work took hours, which was partly why Jimmy Quinn was so late waking up the next morning, but only partly. Eileen Quinn once observed that getting Jimmy up for school was more like performing a resurrection than providing a wake-up call; never a willing early riser, Jimmy hated mornings even in space” (Russell, p. 147).

This passage from Mary Doria Russell’s The Sparrow illustrates one of the challenges I at times have trouble negotiating in my own work. Clearly, Eileen Quinn is Jimmy’s mother based on the context, but the moment I saw her name, I assumed that she was his wife, since he is a grown man on a space mission. Like all readers, I bring my own perceptions and expectations to the moment, and a Jesuit mission trip to find the alien source of a deep-space signal screams hetero-colonizers to me—until eight words later, when Jimmy stops being the guy who loaded up an asteroid spaceship and instantly becomes a tousle-haired and irritable grade-school sleepyhead. It’s not often that I pay careful attention to the exact moment my assumptions in pleasure reading get upended, especially on something so small as a passing perception by a character not otherwise involved or even present in the scene. But this is flavor that helps the reader identify (or not identify) with Jimmy Quinn, and is a useful thing for a writer to do, especially when developing the reader-character connection.

All of which brings me to the challenge. I think sometimes my tangents take too long. The one above is a clause connected to its relevance by a semicolon. Mine seem to go on for paragraphs and incorporate dialogue, etc. They almost feel like early Ellen Degeneres skits, where the point gets lost in a succession of distractions and tangents until it re-emerges at the end (which is great to watch). I’m just not sure that it’s a good idea to fall down rabbit holes the way I sometimes feel like I do. Now granted, in my current WIP, the rabbit hole stories are designed to reveal or enhance the relentless broken eggshell world the protagonist and his siblings inhabit. A good day can turn on a dime, and even the best memories get tainted. This is essential to understanding why the protagonist is a mess. But I think I’m going to have to do it in a more compact way in the future, and certainly attend to whether or not the reader can follow the narrative as I continue to revise.

“Yellow of Brass…“

“When Sutty went back to Earth in the daytime, it was always to the village. At night, it was the Pale.

Yellow of brass, yellow of turmeric paste and of rice cooked with saffron, orange of marigolds, dull orange haze of sunset dust above the fields, henna red, passionflower red, dried-blood red, mud red: all the colors of sunlight in the day.”

This is the opening paragraph and a half of Ursula K. LeGuin’s The Telling, part of the Hainish Cycle. What makes the passage work for me is the minimal use of adjectives and adverbs to describe this nighttime scene. The adjectives and adverbs: dull, orange. That’s it. Nouns used as adjectives (especially through prepositional phrases): brass, paste, rice, marigolds, haze, sunset, henna, passionflower, dried-blood, mud. And more to the point, all of these are earthy and distinct to a culture. Brass, turmeric, rice, saffron, henna all evoke Indian cooking in this village. The rest: paste, marigolds, dust, have, passionflower, blood, mud, all evoke an earth-bound, natural connection, and with blood and mud, a certain level of desperation in the village. What follows is that all these things are indeed so in Sutty’s life—even if only metaphorically because she’s an Observer for the Ekumen.

Note also that this is a nighttime scene. LeGuin tells us at night it was the Pale (note the capital), and summarizes the scene as daytime colors. For the sky to look like this in a village, there must be fire very close—it’s certainly not the peaceful sky most of us get to enjoy in the evening. Now how would that look?

Inkwell blackness. Black of yowling feline beyond the alley fence, of the alley itself. Black of chimney soot, of crusty syrup in a too-hot pan. Black of pen caps, binderclips, stapler and three hole punch. Purple of grapes, of eggplant. Purple of Gardeson’s Sunday stole. Purple of hyacinth and iris. He stood from his desk, cracked his back and fingers, and stepped into the evening.

“Old Ghosts” / Practice with Steering the Craft #13

While Exercise 9, Part 1, was an exercise to strip the story down to dialogue, to see what can’t be done without description, Steering the Craft, Exercise 9, Part 2, is a brief narrative built around an action. Here’s what LeGuin writes:

“Write a narrative of 200–600 words, a scene involving at least two people and some kind of action or event. Use a single viewpoint character, in either first person or limited third person, who is involved in the event. Give us the character’s thoughts and feelings in their own words. The viewpoint character (real or invented) is to be somebody you dislike, or disapprove of, or hate, or feel to be extremely different from yourself.”

I’m using limited 3rd person for this: I think that’s the perspective I’m leaning toward for the final draft. I’m also going to allow myself the play of a couple iterations of this action, because the story might include multiple iterations of the same event.

*****

Junior caught up with him halfway to the stream. Clay turned when his boy called out. But there wasn’t much boy there anymore, Clay noticed. Something weighed on him.

“Dad, I got to tell you something.”

Clay focused on the path, noting the places where the trees provided shade, and where the sunlight broke through. His fishing gear suddenly weighed him down. He clutched it, though, as if it would keep him from doing anything rash. Anything unforgivable.

“Dad?”

He sighed. He knew this was coming.

“I’m listening.”

“I… I’m gay.”

Well there it was. The rumors about his boy and Benjamin Grouse must’ve been true.

“You let Miss Grouse’s boy have you in the shed last fall?”

Silence. Junior studied the dirt, hands in his pockets.

“I asked you a question.” His grip on the gear tightened. This wasn’t an answer he needed; he didn’t even know why he asked.

“Yeah.” Junior’s eyes were wet.

“Were you in love?” He had meant the question to be genuine, but the anguish that overtook his son’s face suggested it might have been misunderstood.

“Nevermind,” Clay said, working hard to be gentle. “Go on back up to the house and help your mama. I’ll be up in a couple hours.”

Something shifted in the world, as if it had all gone hazy and tipped sideways. Clay dropped his gear, put his hands on his knees. If the heart attack came now, Mother Nature would be conducting the service.

Junior caught up with him halfway to the stream.

“Dad, I got to tell you something.”

“You’re a queer.” He could no longer deny Miss Grouse’s observations and the gossip that always seemed to happen within earshot. Clara had come home crying, but didn’t want to talk.  Finally, he pried it out of her.

“I… yeah.”

“You let that Ben Grouse mount you like a dog in his Aunt’s garage?”

Silence.

Clayton turned and appraised his son. The boy hunched, yes on the dirt, hands in his jeans pockets. Shiny blazer on a slender frame. How had he not known?

He dropped his gear; the tackle box landed on a rock and rolled over. Clayton tapped his watch.

“I’ll be gone about three hours. By the time I get back, you and anything you want should be gone from here. Got it?”

The pain raced up his arm as the world went hazy. He thought the trees leaned in… too close! Too close! And the buzzing in his ears… he reached out to a trunk. Steadied himself. Sap stickied his hand.

“Dad, I’m gay.”

“Your mother sent you down here to tell me that.”

The young man’s footsteps stopped.

Clay turned, set his gear down gently, and studied his son. Hunched. Downcast stare. Downtrodden. The boy had gone through a bit of emotional hell recently, if the rumors about Ben Grouse were true.

“You get your heart broken?”

Junior looked up, eyes wet, pleading.

Clay didn’t want to touch his son. Affection never suited him well. He disliked high drama, and God knew the boy excelled at it. He reached up, took his son by the shoulder.

“I take it that’s a yes.”

“Miss Grouse pulled me aside last Sunday…”

Clay shook his head.

“I don’t need to hear it, Junior. I just need to know if you’re going to go out there and try to love someone else now.”

“What do you mean?”

“I had it easy all these years,” Clay said. “Your mother’s the only woman I ever loved, and she loved me in return. But even as I say that, well, you know probably better than me, that love isn’t easy.”

Junior looked confused.

Clayton pressed onward. “I’m not good at this. I just want to know you’re not giving up on love. You may not have found it this time, but there will be other… eels?”

Junior sniffled and laughed.

“That what you go for? Eels? Well, the sea got plenty of them, too, I expect.” He squeezed his son’s shoulder. “You can join me at the stream, or head back up the house. That blazer don’t fit for a day of fishing.”

He staggered, a dizziness overtook him as the world went hazy. This might be it, he thought, and wondered who would find him. His gear tumbled away and he bent over, hands on his knees, breaking out in a cold sweat.

“Dad, I need to tell you something.”

“Anything different from what Miss Grouse and half the town is already telling me?”

He walked slowly, listening for junior’s footsteps. His son had stopped. He turned and set down his gear. He put his hands in his pockets, mirroring his boy’s posture.

“I guess not.”

Clay watched the light play across the path. The trees couldn’t block it all out. Shade. Light. Each had their place.

“Well,” he said. “At least, now that you told me, I can answer back. Your ma and I been waiting for you to tell us so we can defend you properly, however you live your life. You told her yet?”

For all the boy’s neatness—dress shirts and blazers and polished shoes—he looked a state, and not fit for the woods or the stream. Not fit for a farm, or the country.

“She told me to come talk to you.”

“You gonna leave home now?” Clay already knew the answer. After Ben Grouse and his batty old aunt, Junior had gained an unfortunate reputation.

Junior nodded but refused to look his father in the eye.

Clay gave him an awkward hug, puzzling over the origin of Junior’s penchant for drama. Didn’t seem to be an inherited thing, but who knew?

“Well, guess your Ma and I are gonna see the world a little bit. Or at least, see whatever corner of it you end up in.”

His vision clouded. He dropped his gear, put his hands on his knees, tried to slow his racing heart. 

At the bottom of the hill, Clayton watched himself stagger. The fishing gear tumbled off, the bucket fell over. He bent. Used a silver maple for support. Struggled to breathe. Watched himself and his son appear. Disappear. Reappear. Disappear. I’m in Hell, he thought. Preacher Holland would be pleased.

*****

Thus far in the study of indirect narration, we have explored the limits of dialogue—what it can and cannot do—in order to learn to use it better. We have explored how a simple set of actions: a bit of walking, setting down gear, and turning, interplay with different emotions in the dialogue. Now, in Exercise 9, Part 3, LeGuin asks the writer describe a character by describing a place, which I have done here.

The mantle clock ticked away the seconds. A porcelain dancer pirouetted beside a few pieces of carnival glass on little wooden stands. Clara’s crocheted doilies protected every surface. The fresh bouquets routinely presented in the clear glass vase had been replaced once and for all by an artificial arrangement. The room lacked the smell of growing things, mostly, but the peace lily remained, still filling the stand by the window, bursting in lush green that drooped over the planter. A congregation of flowers: three white, each with a trim of brown, and a fourth, smaller, green one, stood tall amongst foliage, turned sunward. The drapes were open as always, the sheer curtains, yellowed, remained closed. A set of long-retired coasters sat neatly in a rack beneath an end table lamp. The pillows, the afghans, all handmade and handed down, remained in their proper places, stacked, leaning, folded, covering. Still. Unused. A thin layer of dust covered everything. 

*****

Old Ghosts

Clay thought his life ecclesiastical. He woke to the rooster’s crow. Fed the hens first, goats second—while he had them. In their absence, he made breakfast. Well, Clara was gone, wasn’t she? She couldn’t make his meals. Dwight, his nephew, managed the fields. Smarter than his father. He’d inherit the whole patch. Just as well. Clay had lost Clara, but he’d thrown Junior away. Junior lived in New York; they never talked. The pill tasted bitter, but Clay swallowed it every day. Afternoons belonged to the garden. He planted less each spring. Less planted, less to harvest. Less to can. Clara liked canning; he liked eating. Sometimes, after chores, he fished. The stream in the hollow beckoned. Light played on the water. Herons dropped in for trout. Well, so did he. Yes, everything had a season, and work was sacred, he still believed.

Clay stepped into the afternoon heat and surveyed his land from the back stoop. The orchard in full bloom gave him hope for a bumper harvest. He had put signs up: Pick your own apples. And that had brought out a a few townsfolk. Junior scampered among them, carrying bushel baskets to cars while he and Clara chatted with customers and took their cash. But without Clara and Junior, he couldn’t keep track of it all. He solved it with a farmstead at the top of the drive. Did Dwight’s wife or kids like to can fruit? Maybe he would just hire migrants to harvest them all, and sell to young families with a lot of mouths to feed. Families used to be bigger. 

Something disappeared into the tall grass at the end of the row. The grass shushed as it slipped away. He often saw deer, foxes—they all loved the orchard, though not usually in spring. He shrugged it off. His fishing gear awaited on the bench in the shed.

He meandered that afternoon, pole over his shoulder, tackle box in hand. Daffodils lifted their faces to the sun; wind-blown blossoms speckled the stream in pink and white. Same every year, the colors of Clara’s flowerbeds. Mums, begonias, pansies, snapdragons—he’d neglected them in the three years since. The beds had grown patchy: wild in some places, barren in others. Yes, he would have to tend them better. She would have long already chastised him for neglect. From the corner of his eye, he saw a flash of black. A darting form. He turned. Nothing.

“You are indeed losin’ it,” he announced. “Too much nostalgia. Not enough work.” He hoped it wasn’t a bear. His rifle sat secure and useless in the den, locked in the cabinet Clara insisted he buy.

The stream burbled and played. He listened to it through the trees long before he saw it. Then a glimpse, another through a break in the mountain laurel, and the trail followed the water’s edge. Snowmelt strengthened the headwaters, submerging the banks until summer. Clay would stay until the peepers chirped away the sun. So much of life was hiding. Bullfrogs croaked. Furry things scuttled beyond the rushes. Snakes slithered over logs and wound across the water. Shad and trout darted beneath the ripples. Life lived just out of view. 

A brown shape passed behind the dogwoods on the other side. Clay blinked. Deer? Maybe people? It better not be people. This was his land, bought and paid for with hard cash and forty-some years of blood and tears and sweat.

When he arrived at his fishing spot, Clay found it already occupied. A father and son from the look. The waterlogged overalls and dirty face suggested the boy’s natural lack of grace. Clay pictured him tumbling off a slippery bit of trail, or sliding sideways off a rock on the upstream crossing. He was fawnish, leggy and stumbling against the world, a lot like Junior used to be. He held a bamboo rod—an antique. They had gone out of style when Clay was a boy. 

His portly father sat on a log, baiting his hook. Sweat beads dripped down his face, despite his straw hat. He wiped his hand on a pantleg. They shadowed each other. The boy had his father’s round nose and basset hound eyes. The elder was a worn and overfed version of the younger. 

“Like this,” he said, and cast his line. The boy watched, then pulled his line in and recast.

“Better,” his father said.

Clay waved.

“You there!” He called. “How’s the fishin’?”

In the old days—Clay mourned the old days—he and Junior skipped stones. He taught the boy to select flat stones. To flick his wrist just so when throwing—spin and angle equalled skip. Skipping was an art. A skipper graduated from the bowl-sounding plop to the whispering taps—six or seven? ten?—before the stone slipped under for good. He chose one. Skipped it. A five-hopper. Not bad. Perhaps he had only shown the boy once or twice. It felt like more.

They nodded. The man doffed his hat.

“I said, ‘how’s the fishin’?'”

They ignored him. The wind shook the leaves. The stream burbled. A woodpecker rat-a-tatted a poplar. Clay called out.

“You’re on private property, you know.”

He had hunted the woods and cleaned the carcasses in the shed behind the cottage. Fished the stream and scaled and cooked fish on coals from dying trees. Those trees warmed the cottage in winter. He cleared the dead wood, picked wild raspberries, planted the garden. Drove the stakes tied with white cloth to mark the corners. He worked it; it was his.

“It’s disrespectful of you—”

The boy got a bite. A little tug, a stronger tug, and a trout popped out of the stream. It flailed in the air. The man punched his son’s shoulder.

“Now, look here,” Clay called. “I don’t mind you–“

The lad released his catch into their bucket, and the pair sat down on the log again.

Clay thought himself patient. When Clara had come up with the cancer and the doctors hemmed and hawed more than he cared for, he had been patient with them, though Clara’s bony hand on his had done much ’til it couldn’t anymore; and he had been patient with Junior, who hated farmin’ from the start alright, but loved the theatre so much that Clay and Clara had given up whole evenings to watch four years’ worth of school productions, which hadn’t gotten them anything but a visit from Markley come up over the hill, bitchin’ that his boy and Junior were makin’ hog sounds in the loft and threatenin’ to sue over Lord knows what, that had required patience; even when the boy came into the hospital in mascara and lipstick like a red light hussy he had’t yelled or nothin’ just told him to go home and clean up ‘fore his dyin’ mama saw it, and that was that forevermore; but now here this bulbous man and his ragamuffin ilk sat on his log on his stream on his property casting lines and takin’ his trout without the slimmest bit o decency to say “hello, how do you do?” or even recognize that Clay had worked that land for damn near fifty years and who were they to come replacin’ him since he wa’n’t dead yet nor read his name in the obituaries like he ‘spected to one day. 

I picked up a stone and skipped it across the water toward them.

“–I don’t mind you–“

“Hey,” Straw Hat called out. “Who are you?” He stood up and pointed at me with a sausage finger.

“I might ask you the same question,” I said. “Since you’re on my property.”

“Excuse me?” he said. “This is my property.” He motioned to his fishin’ buddy. “Get me the rifle, son,” he said. the younger one dropped his makeshift pole and ran up the path.

“You’re gonna get violent?” I asked.

“When you try to steal my land from me, damn right I will,” he said.

“But it’s not your land,” I insisted.

“Like hell,” he said.

I reached down into the water and pulled up a skipping stone. I played a bit of shortstop in high school. I thought I could peg him in the thigh. He was a big target anyway.

Several seconds of glaring silence passed. His boy reappeared with the gun.

“Mister,” I called out. “You touch that gun and I’ll break your hand with this stone.” I palmed it like a baseball.

He grabbed the gun. I chucked the ball at his hand. It hit him square. Then it passed through his hand, his gun, and his son on the other side.

Well, shit.

He raised it and fired. Then he stared. His boy turned white.

“Son–“

“Right through him, Pop, I swear to God.”

The shotgun crack sent a flock of geese honking skyward. Silence slipped behind them. Suddenly I saw two Lenape women on the opposite bank: one bore a basket of plants, the other filled a clay bowl with water. A column of revolutionaries drank before marching on, muskets perched on their slumping shoulders. A weary-faced grandfather joined the man and boy. A teenager draped in a saggy black clothes sat on a log, a pistol in his hand. 

A stone skipped toward the woman, its whispering hits ending in a plop. She froze. Keen eyes scanned the banks. Across the stream, a demon—a crow-colored man—brooded on fallen log suspended over the water. He hadn’t noticed her, but he hadn’t thrown the rock.

Two boys in blue skipped stones upstream.

“Four,” the taller one said glumly. He chewed a bit of honeysuckle as the other boy skipped his stone.

“Five! Ha!”

“Best of five?”

Behind them the colonel coughed. “You boys don’t want to give away our position I hope?” The men snapped to attention.

“I didn’t think so.” He scanned the water. A father and son fished on the other side, but neither paid them any mind. “You might be lucky today, but luck runs out. Don’t waste it on this.” The men—barely men, the colonel knew—scurried back to camp.

The moments arrived. Clayton waved to the Baxters. Father and son waved back, the pail between them knocked back and forgotten. A woodpecker hammered at a poplar, causing the woman to look up. Clayton, pale and grizzled, was a foreign sight to her. She raised her palm in greeting, unsure of the response. The boy with the gun saw the exchange. The Baxters waved to him; he waved back and contemplated whether or not he wanted an audience for his final act. The soldiers, worn from the march, acknowledged the odd assortment, unsure if there was a confederate spy among them. The Gliesian with his instruments whirred and ticked beneath the shell armor. Six timelines converged and held just long enough for the woodpecker’s assault to end, then they slipped apart. 

The Baxters would scramble away, distressed by the moment, abandoning the pail of worms. The women would return to their camp, and before nightfall, the men would return. armed and wary. They would retrieve the pail, and the development of their technologies and belief system would change. 

The gun slipped from the boy’s hand. cursing, he would abandon it, just as his mother had abounded him. Local police would never find the body in the stream. Instead, the boy would seek help from his father’s family. The Gliesian would recover the gun and revise Zeir calculation for invasion back by three hundred Earth years. The gun would make invasion simpler, as those most likely to resist would have been wiped out beforehand. Those most likely to bear guns were also the least likely to think through their actions, making a simple delay practical. Hundreds of Gliesians would be spared a painful death.

The union soldiers would not speak of the moment again. One prayed with all his might, but still died in the hospital at Gettysburg. The other stopped believing in God and died in the wilderness. Belief seemed to make no difference at all.

As for Clayton, he puzzled over what he had seen all the way back to his cottage. That evening, he placed a call to New York.

I dropped to my knees. Clutched my chest. Sweat tickled my nose. I hoisted myself up with my walking stick. They were gone—all of them. The stream dribbled along without a burble. The wind had calmed. No birdcalls. No rustling leaves. Scared, I swore to write down my experience. Just had to get home. I staggered. Shock—I’m sure it was. Yes. It was shock.

They turned and ran. I chased after them, but they disappeared up the path. Somewhere beyond the trees I heard an engine turn over. I dropped into the big guy’s seat on the log. The wood had been worn; it was well used. I looked into the pail. It was empty. Rusted through.

So Clay stood on the bank, skipping stones like he did when he was a boy, like he did when he taught his son, waiting for the guy and his kid to come back. He considered going home, but opted to wait. It was his property, after all. He skipped another stone.

“Six hopper.” The sun warmed his face. The stream burbled along.

*****

A: “Arriving in 3…2…1…”

B: “It’s beautiful.”

A: “The planet? Yes, it is… but it doesn’t stay that way. Set parameters for the convergence…”

B: “Oh! Here’s one now! I never get over how they move. So fascinating.”

A: “Bit rickety, I think.”

B: “I don’t think I’ll ever get tired of watching them… so different.”

A: “Give it a century or two. They all begin to look the same.”

B: “You should be careful. We were warned that when you stop seeing the subjects as they are, when they lose their uniqueness, that’s when you should put in for a transfer.”

A: “As soon as I have the data collected, I will.”

B: “Really?”

A: “You think I’m kidding?”

B: “No, I just… I’m surprised you didn’t chastise me for speaking out of turn.”

A: “You only spoke the truth.  What you were told, and what you observed. You offered me a word of caution. What’s the big deal? Now, set the convergence cube parameters. Center on the stream, right there. By that stretch of open bank.”

B: “Parameters set. You’re really going to leave research?”

A: “That’s what I just said.”

B: “Where will you transfer to?”

A: “I don’t know yet.”

B: “ Not administration.”

A: “I could never do that. I was thinking maybe the library or the archives.”

B: “I could see that. Maybe to the scribes? Noooo. No, not the scribes.”

A: “No. Not the scribes. Shall we activate the cube?”

B: “Wow! The place changes a lot across the eons.”

A: “Sure does.”

B: “It’s sad, really. They’re never around long enough to see their impacts, are they?”

A: “No, but maybe that’s a good thing. The rc of the species might change, and instead of tracking them here, we might have to meet them in space…”

B: “ Or worse, at home.”

A: “And this is not a species you want too meet at home. No matter how attached you get to their rickety walking style.”

B: “ Heh. They should evolve more limbs. Wait—what was that?”

A: “When?”

B: “About four hundred years ago. I think it was a Gliesian.”

A: “A Gliesian? What would they be doing here? I mean…”

B: “Breeding?”

A: “Well. Yes, that’s exactly what it was doing here. Let’s slide backward. There. Yep. Wow.”

B: “Gliesian.”

A: “We need to find out if it mated here. If it did…”

B: “That’s going to complicate everything, isn’t it?”

A: “Well, all our data will be caught up in political entanglements for another half century.”

B: “No transfer for you.”

A: “Afraid not.”

B: “Ethically, we can’t ignore the Gliesian, can we?”

A: “ Unfortunately not. Check the overlap. Did they see each other yet?”

B: “Looks like they have. The old guy and the father and son have for sure.”

A: “What about the soldiers?”

B: “It… it looks like they did, too.”

A: “Well that’s good at least.”

B: “Why?”

A: “Because if the one who was planning to desert did so today, he would survive the war. And if he survived the war, four hundred years from now, you’d be meeting one of his descendants on a space station orbiting their big ringed planet.”

B: “So?”

A: “See, this right here is why you need to spend more time in the archives. That’s not a future you want to be part of.”

B: “Oh.”

A: “Don’t sulk. Go read. You’ll have time, especially after we report the Gliesian.”

*****

Le Guin, Ursula  K.. Steering the Craft: A Twenty-First-Century Guide to Sailing the Sea of Story (pp. 100-101). HMH Books. Kindle Edition. 

“Old Ghosts” / Practice with Steering the Craft #12

When I read LeGuin’s “Exercise 9: Indirect Narration” I had to laugh, especially when I realized that the first activity “Tell It Slant”, is one I have been using for years. 

The goal of this exercise is to tell a story and present two characters through dialogue alone. Write a page or two—word count would be misleading, as dialogue leaves a lot of unfilled lines—a page or two of pure dialogue. Write it like a play, with A and B as the characters’ names. No stage directions. No description of the characters. Nothing but what A says and what B says. Everything the reader knows about who they are, where they are, and what’s going on comes through what they say.

Of course when I have done this in the past, it was to work on character voice—to find out what each person sounded like, their verbal tics, etc. Now, LeGuin wants writers to go further, to consider how little is actually told in the dialogue—or how much could be revealed in dialogue without forcing it.

For this exercise, I’m going to step away from the characters in the apple orchard and by the stream. Instead, I’m going to present the dialogue of two observers—I may have mentioned them in passing in an earlier post from this series, but there is no guarantee that they will survive the cuts when I try to create a final version of the story.  Still they are there…

*****

A: “Arriving in 3…2…1…”

B: “It’s beautiful.”

A: “The planet? Yes, it is… but it doesn’t stay that way. Set parameters for the convergence…”

B: “Oh! Here’s one now! I never get over how they move. So fascinating.”

A: “Bit rickety, I think.”

B: “I don’t think I’ll ever get tired of watching them… so different.”

A: “Give it a century or two. They all begin to look the same.”

B: “You should be careful. We were warned that when you stop seeing the subjects as they are, when they lose their uniqueness, that’s when you should put in for a transfer.”

A: “As soon as I have the data collected, I will.”

B: “Really?”

A: “You think I’m kidding?”

B: “No, I just… I’m surprised you didn’t chastise me for speaking out of turn.”

A: “You only spoke the truth.  What you were told, and what you observed. You offered me a word of caution. What’s the big deal? Now, set the convergence cube parameters. Center on the stream, right there. By that stretch of open bank.”

B: “Parameters set. You’re really going to leave research?”

A: “That’s what I just said.”

B: “Where will you transfer to?”

A: “I don’t know yet.”

B: “ Not administration.”

A: “I could never do that. I was thinking maybe the library or the archives.”

B: “I could see that. Maybe to the scribes? Noooo. No, not the scribes.”

A: “No. Not the scribes. Shall we activate the cube?”

B: “Wow! The place changes a lot across the eons.”

A: “Sure does.”

B: “It’s sad, really. They’re never around long enough to see their impacts, are they?”

A: “No, but maybe that’s a good thing. The rc of the species might change, and instead of tracking them here, we might have to meet them in space…”

B: “ Or worse, at home.”

A: “And this is not a species you want too meet at home. No matter how attached you get to their rickety walking style.”

B: “ Heh. They should evolve more limbs. Wait—what was that?”

A: “When?”

B: “About four hundred years ago. I think it was a Gliesian.”

A: “A Gliesian? What would they be doing here? I mean…”

B: “Breeding?”

A: “Well. Yes, that’s exactly what it was doing here. Let’s slide backward. There. Yep. Wow.”

B: “Gliesian.”

A: “We need to find out if it mated here. If it did…”

B: “That’s going to complicate everything, isn’t it?”

A: “Well, all our data will be caught up in political entanglements for another half century.”

B: “No transfer for you.”

A: “Afraid not.”

B: “Ethically, we can’t ignore the Gliesian, can we?”

A: “ Unfortunately not. Check the overlap. Did they see each other yet?”

B: “Looks like they have. The old guy and the father and son have for sure.”

A: “What about the soldiers?”

B: “It… it looks like they did, too.”

A: “Well that’s good at least.”

B: “Why?”

A: “Because if the one who was planning to desert did so today, he would survive the war. And if he survived the war, four hundred years from now, you’d be meeting one of his descendants on a space station orbiting their big ringed planet.”

B: “So?”

A: “See, this right here is why you need to spend more time in the archives. That’s not a future you want to be part of.”

B: “Oh.”

A: “Don’t sulk. Go read. You’ll have time, especially after we report the Gliesian.”

*****

Old Ghosts

Clay thought his life ecclesiastical. He woke to the rooster’s crow. Fed the hens first, goats second—while he had them. In their absence, he made breakfast. Well, Clara was gone, wasn’t she? She couldn’t make his meals. Dwight, his nephew, managed the fields. Smarter than his father. He’d inherit the whole patch. Just as well. Clay had lost Clara, but he’d thrown Junior away. Junior lived in New York; they never talked. The pill tasted bitter, but Clay swallowed it every day. Afternoons belonged to the garden. He planted less each spring. Less planted, less to harvest. Less to can. Clara liked canning; he liked eating. Sometimes, after chores, he fished. The stream in the hollow beckoned. Light played on the water. Herons dropped in for trout. Well, so did he. Yes, everything had a season, and work was sacred, he still believed.

Clay stepped into the afternoon heat and surveyed his land from the back stoop. The orchard in full bloom gave him hope for a bumper harvest. He had put signs up: Pick your own apples. And that had brought out a a few townsfolk. Junior scampered among them, carrying bushel baskets to cars while he and Clara chatted with customers and took their cash. But without Clara and Junior, he couldn’t keep track of it all. He solved it with a farmstead at the top of the drive. Did Dwight’s wife or kids like to can fruit? Maybe he would just hire migrants to harvest them all, and sell to young families with a lot of mouths to feed. Families used to be bigger. 

Something disappeared into the tall grass at the end of the row. The grass shushed as it slipped away. He often saw deer, foxes—they all loved the orchard, though not usually in spring. He shrugged it off. His fishing gear awaited on the bench in the shed.

He meandered that afternoon, pole over his shoulder, tackle box in hand. Daffodils lifted their faces to the sun; wind-blown blossoms speckled the stream in pink and white. Same every year, the colors of Clara’s flowerbeds. Mums, begonias, pansies, snapdragons—he’d neglected them in the three years since. The beds had grown patchy: wild in some places, barren in others. Yes, he would have to tend them better. She would have long already chastised him for neglect. From the corner of his eye, he saw a flash of black. A darting form. He turned. Nothing.

“You are indeed losin’ it,” he announced. “Too much nostalgia. Not enough work.” He hoped it wasn’t a bear. His rifle sat secure and useless in the den, locked in the cabinet Clara insisted he buy.

The stream burbled and played. He listened to it through the trees long before he saw it. Then a glimpse, another through a break in the mountain laurel, and the trail followed the water’s edge. Snowmelt strengthened the headwaters, submerging the banks until summer. Clay would stay until the peepers chirped away the sun. So much of life was hiding. Bullfrogs croaked. Furry things scuttled beyond the rushes. Snakes slithered over logs and wound across the water. Shad and trout darted beneath the ripples. Life lived just out of view. 

A brown shape passed behind the dogwoods on the other side. Clay blinked. Deer? Maybe people? It better not be people. This was his land, bought and paid for with hard cash and forty-some years of blood and tears and sweat.

When he arrived at his fishing spot, Clay found it already occupied. A father and son from the look. The waterlogged overalls and dirty face suggested the boy’s natural lack of grace. Clay pictured him tumbling off a slippery bit of trail, or sliding sideways off a rock on the upstream crossing. He was fawnish, leggy and stumbling against the world, a lot like Junior used to be. He held a bamboo rod—an antique. They had gone out of style when Clay was a boy. 

His portly father sat on a log, baiting his hook. Sweat beads dripped down his face, despite his straw hat. He wiped his hand on a pantleg. They shadowed each other. The boy had his father’s round nose and basset hound eyes. The elder was a worn and overfed version of the younger. 

“Like this,” he said, and cast his line. The boy watched, then pulled his line in and recast.

“Better,” his father said.

Clay waved.

“You there!” He called. “How’s the fishin’?”

In the old days—Clay mourned the old days—he and Junior skipped stones. He taught the boy to select flat stones. To flick his wrist just so when throwing—spin and angle equalled skip. Skipping was an art. A skipper graduated from the bowl-sounding plop to the whispering taps—six or seven? ten?—before the stone slipped under for good. He chose one. Skipped it. A five-hopper. Not bad. Perhaps he had only shown the boy once or twice. It felt like more.

They nodded. The man doffed his hat.

“I said, ‘how’s the fishin’?'”

They ignored him. The wind shook the leaves. The stream burbled. A woodpecker rat-a-tatted a poplar. Clay called out.

“You’re on private property, you know.”

He had hunted the woods and cleaned the carcasses in the shed behind the cottage. Fished the stream and scaled and cooked fish on coals from dying trees. Those trees warmed the cottage in winter. He cleared the dead wood, picked wild raspberries, planted the garden. Drove the stakes tied with white cloth to mark the corners. He worked it; it was his.

“It’s disrespectful of you—”

The boy got a bite. A little tug, a stronger tug, and a trout popped out of the stream. It flailed in the air. The man punched his son’s shoulder.

“Now, look here,” Clay called. “I don’t mind you–“

The lad released his catch into their bucket, and the pair sat down on the log again.

Clay thought himself patient. When Clara had come up with the cancer and the doctors hemmed and hawed more than he cared for, he had been patient with them, though Clara’s bony hand on his had done much ’til it couldn’t anymore; and he had been patient with Junior, who hated farmin’ from the start alright, but loved the theatre so much that Clay and Clara had given up whole evenings to watch four years’ worth of school productions, which hadn’t gotten them anything but a visit from Markley come up over the hill, bitchin’ that his boy and Junior were makin’ hog sounds in the loft and threatenin’ to sue over Lord knows what, that had required patience; even when the boy came into the hospital in mascara and lipstick like a red light hussy he had’t yelled or nothin’ just told him to go home and clean up ‘fore his dyin’ mama saw it, and that was that forevermore; but now here this bulbous man and his ragamuffin ilk sat on his log on his stream on his property casting lines and takin’ his trout without the slimmest bit o decency to say “hello, how do you do?” or even recognize that Clay had worked that land for damn near fifty years and who were they to come replacin’ him since he wa’n’t dead yet nor read his name in the obituaries like he ‘spected to one day. 

I picked up a stone and skipped it across the water toward them.

“–I don’t mind you–“

“Hey,” Straw Hat called out. “Who are you?” He stood up and pointed at me with a sausage finger.

“I might ask you the same question,” I said. “Since you’re on my property.”

“Excuse me?” he said. “This is my property.” He motioned to his fishin’ buddy. “Get me the rifle, son,” he said. the younger one dropped his makeshift pole and ran up the path.

“You’re gonna get violent?” I asked.

“When you try to steal my land from me, damn right I will,” he said.

“But it’s not your land,” I insisted.

“Like hell,” he said.

I reached down into the water and pulled up a skipping stone. I played a bit of shortstop in high school. I thought I could peg him in the thigh. He was a big target anyway.

Several seconds of glaring silence passed. His boy reappeared with the gun.

“Mister,” I called out. “You touch that gun and I’ll break your hand with this stone.” I palmed it like a baseball.

He grabbed the gun. I chucked the ball at his hand. It hit him square. Then it passed through his hand, his gun, and his son on the other side.

Well, shit.

He raised it and fired. Then he stared. His boy turned white.

“Son–“

“Right through him, Pop, I swear to God.”

The shotgun crack sent a flock of geese honking skyward. Silence slipped behind them. Suddenly I saw two Lenape women on the opposite bank: one bore a basket of plants, the other filled a clay bowl with water. A column of revolutionaries drank before marching on, muskets perched on their slumping shoulders. A weary-faced grandfather joined the man and boy. A teenager draped in a saggy black clothes sat on a log, a pistol in his hand. 

A stone skipped toward the woman, its whispering hits ending in a plop. She froze. Keen eyes scanned the banks. Across the stream, a demon—a crow-colored man—brooded on fallen log suspended over the water. He hadn’t noticed her, but he hadn’t thrown the rock.

Two boys in blue skipped stones upstream.

“Four,” the taller one said glumly. He chewed a bit of honeysuckle as the other boy skipped his stone.

“Five! Ha!”

“Best of five?”

Behind them the colonel coughed. “You boys don’t want to give away our position I hope?” The men snapped to attention.

“I didn’t think so.” He scanned the water. A father and son fished on the other side, but neither paid them any mind. “You might be lucky today, but luck runs out. Don’t waste it on this.” The men—barely men, the colonel knew—scurried back to camp.

The moments arrived. Clayton waved to the Baxters. Father and son waved back, the pail between them knocked back and forgotten. A woodpecker hammered at a poplar, causing the woman to look up. Clayton, pale and grizzled, was a foreign sight to her. She raised her palm in greeting, unsure of the response. The boy with the gun saw the exchange. The Baxters waved to him; he waved back and contemplated whether or not he wanted an audience for his final act. The soldiers, worn from the march, acknowledged the odd assortment, unsure if there was a confederate spy among them. The Gliesian with his instruments whirred and ticked beneath the shell armor. Six timelines converged and held just long enough for the woodpecker’s assault to end, then they slipped apart. 

The Baxters would scramble away, distressed by the moment, abandoning the pail of worms. The women would return to their camp, and before nightfall, the men would return. armed and wary. They would retrieve the pail, and the development of their technologies and belief system would change. 

The gun slipped from the boy’s hand. cursing, he would abandon it, just as his mother had abounded him. Local police would never find the body in the stream. Instead, the boy would seek help from his father’s family. The Gliesian would recover the gun and revise Zeir calculation for invasion back by three hundred Earth years. The gun would make invasion simpler, as those most likely to resist would have been wiped out beforehand. Those most likely to bear guns were also the least likely to think through their actions, making a simple delay practical. Hundreds of Gliesians would be spared a painful death.

The union soldiers would not speak of the moment again. One prayed with all his might, but still died in the hospital at Gettysburg. The other stopped believing in God and died in the wilderness. Belief seemed to make no difference at all.

As for Clayton, he puzzled over what he had seen all the way back to his cottage. That evening, he placed a call to New York.

I dropped to my knees. Clutched my chest. Sweat tickled my nose. I hoisted myself up with my walking stick. They were gone—all of them. The stream dribbled along without a burble. The wind had calmed. No birdcalls. No rustling leaves. Scared, I swore to write down my experience. Just had to get home. I staggered. Shock—I’m sure it was. Yes. It was shock.

They turned and ran. I chased after them, but they disappeared up the path. Somewhere beyond the trees I heard an engine turn over. I dropped into the big guy’s seat on the log. The wood had been worn; it was well used. I looked into the pail. It was empty. Rusted through.

So Clay stood on the bank, skipping stones like he did when he was a boy, like he did when he taught his son, waiting for the guy and his kid to come back. He considered going home, but opted to wait. It was his property, after all. He skipped another stone.

“Six hopper.” The sun warmed his face. The stream burbled along.

*****

Le Guin, Ursula  K.. Steering the Craft: A Twenty-First-Century Guide to Sailing the Sea of Story (p. 97). HMH Books. Kindle Edition. 

“Old Ghosts” / Practice with Steering the Craft #9

After a week off for the Fourth of July, where I hid in the basement playing video games and spent a lovely evening by a campfire eating low country boil with friends, I am back, and ready to tackle Point of View. LeGuin describes it as “the narrative problem I have met most often in workshop stories (and often in published work)” It is the current plague stymying the manuscript a shaped briefly, and I already see how it will challenge the manuscript currently open on my laptop. In fact, If you look at what’s emerging in “Old Ghosts”, you can see point of view issues tugging at the shape of the story.

  • The first draft was written in first person, but seemed too omniscient.
  • The third person limited components are better, but again result in omniscience problems.
  • I did not attempt any version of an outside, detached narrator.
  • I have been leaning toward third person omniscient.

LeGuin’s exercise has four parts, asking writers to rewrite the narrative from multiple perspectives. No dialogue is involved, but it should involve three or more characters in some action. For my purposes, I am going to work with a new idea. Clayton is be the stream, and suddenly he sees, and can be seen by all the other people from across the many time periods. This is quickly emerging as a fulcrum point for the story, and it’s something that I haven’t written out or captured yet in any kind of satisfactory way.

After my attempts, I will paste in the existing draft of “Old Ghosts” with a capitalized note where the paragraph should appear, so you can try it with the different paragraphs in that slot.

*****

Part 1.1: Protagonist I

I was surrounded. No other way to describe it. I raised my hand in a slow wave. The father and son, sitting on the log I used so many times, mimicked me. The woman on the opposite bank, bronze skin and hide dress, she waved as well, the bowl of water abandoned at her feet. The boy on the bent tree, suspended over the river, gun temporarily forgotten, he waved as well. And the soldiers, they waved too, as did the helmeted shape, impossibly tall.  I hadn’t noticed him there. We all waved, and I was alone.

Part 1.2: Alternate I

I hadn’t seen the old guy there. He looked puzzled; he waved; I thought he might be surrendering. I could tell him a thing or two about surrender. But something in his features—the stumpy nose, the baggy eyes—I thought about my grandad. I missed him. And with everything else happening at school, at home… well. I became aware of the pistol, its heft, the way it dragged me down. If Mom found out I had it, she would beat my ass. Nothing new there. Just she and me and an ass beating. But I know the truth. I read the letter her boyfriend left. I know that when I go bock, no one will be there. It’ll just be me. She’s already escaped. But then I noticed he seemed to be looking around, gape-mouthed. I followed his stare. There was some kind of tin man on the opposite bank. tall. Inhuman tall. Effigy on the high school bonfire tall. And that’s when I saw them. I had an audience for my last act. A fat guy and his kid. A couple of women playing dress-up black hair in braids, all Pocahontas-style. Some refugees from a Civil war reenactment. Something wasn’t right. Well, what did it matter, the world was just following the way of my life—a sure sign to depart.

Part 2: “Fly on the Wall” Narrator

They converged at that place. The old man with the straw hat. He waved slowly, gaped at the sight. The rotund fisherman and his waifish son. The water women from among the reeds. One on the bank, her bowl at her feet. The other behind a tree. The soldiers [paused in their truck, skipping stones like the boys they were back a summer before. The figure in silver. The boy in black, his grip on that pistol loosening. Each of them waves, makes a sign of recognition. A tip of the hat from a soldier. A raised palm from the woman. The moment passes and they all disappear—all but the old man in the straw hat, who reaches back to scratch his ear, confused.

Part 3: Observer-Narrator

Everyone saw the exact moment their timelines crossed. Each became aware of the other. The women gestured a greeting specific to the pre-colonial Lenape. The boy waved to the hermit—Clayton—who had lived by the stream in the late twentieth century. The young fisherman and his father waved. So much was similar between the end of the-prior century and the first part of the next. The soldiers, little more than boys in dirty blue uniforms, waved as well; one tipped his cap. The Gliesian, drawn to this moment by data foreign to any earthly science, found zem caught in it. Zey waved, a m mimicry far from their own methods of greeting; what more could zey do? Then the moment passed and the Gliesian drifted back to his craft, already examining the data from instruments not only on the ship, but embedded in zem’s suit.

Part 4: Involved/Omniscient Author

The moments arrived. Clayton waved to the Baxters. Father and son waved back, the pail between them knocked back and forgotten. A woodpecker hammered at a poplar, causing the woman to look up. Clayton, pale and grizzled, was a foreign sight to her. She raised her palm in greeting, unsure of the response. The boy with the gun saw the exchange. The Baxters waved to him; he waved back and contemplated whether or not he wanted an audience for his final act. The soldiers, worn from the march, acknowledged the odd assortment, unsure if there was a confederate spy among them. The Gliesian with his instruments whirred and ticked beneath the shell armor. Six timelines converged and held just long enough for the woodpecker’s assault to end, then they slipped apart. 

The Baxters would scramble away, distressed by the moment, abandoning the pail of worms. The women would return to their camp, and before nightfall, the men would return. armed and wary. They would retrieve the pail, and the development of their technologies and belief system would change. 

The gun slipped from the boy’s hand. cursing, he would abandon it, just as his mother had abounded him. Local police would never find the body in the stream. Instead, the boy would seek help from his father’s family. The Gliesian would recover the gun and revise Zeir calculation for invasion back by three hundred Earth years. The gun would make invasion simpler, as those most likely to resist would have been wiped out beforehand. Those most likely to bear guns were also the least likely to think through their actions, making a simple delay practical. Hundreds of Gliesians would be spared a painful death.

The union soldiers would not speak of the moment again. One prayed with all his might, but still died in the hospital at Gettysburg. The other stopped believing in God and died in the wilderness. Belief seemed to make no difference at all.

As for Clayton, he puzzled over what he had seen all the way back to his cottage. That evening, he placed a call to New York.

*****

Old Ghosts

Clay thought his life ecclesiastical. He woke to the rooster’s crow. Fed the hens first, goats second—while he had them. In their absence, he made breakfast. Well, Clara was gone, wasn’t she? She couldn’t make his meals. Dwight, his nephew, managed the fields. Smarter than his father. He’d inherit the whole patch. Just as well. Clay had lost Clara, but he’d thrown Junior away. Junior lived in New York; they never talked. The pill tasted bitter, but Clay swallowed it every day. Afternoons belonged to the garden. He planted less each spring. Less planted, less to harvest. Less to can. Clara liked canning; he liked eating. Sometimes, after chores, he fished. The stream in the hollow beckoned. Light played on the water. Herons dropped in for trout. Well, so did he. Yes, everything had a season, and work was sacred, he still believed.

Clay stepped into the afternoon heat and surveyed his land from the back stoop. The orchard in full bloom gave him hope for a bumper harvest. He had put signs up: Pick your own apples. And that had brought out a a few townsfolk. Junior scampered among them, carrying bushel baskets to cars while he and Clara chatted with customers and took their cash. But without Clara and Junior, he couldn’t keep track of it all. He solved it with a farmstead at the top of the drive. Did Dwight’s wife or kids like to can fruit? Maybe he would just hire migrants to harvest them all, and sell to young families with a lot of mouths to feed. Families used to be bigger. 

Something disappeared into the tall grass at the end of the row. The grass shushed as it slipped away. He often saw deer, foxes—they all loved the orchard, though not usually in spring. He shrugged it off. His fishing gear awaited on the bench in the shed.

He meandered that afternoon, pole over his shoulder, tackle box in hand. Daffodils lifted their faces to the sun; wind-blown blossoms speckled the stream in pink and white. Same every year, the colors of Clara’s flowerbeds. Mums, begonias, pansies, snapdragons—he’d neglected them in the three years since. The beds had grown patchy: wild in some places, barren in others. Yes, he would have to tend them better. She would have long already chastised him for neglect. From the corner of his eye, he saw a flash of black. A darting form. He turned. Nothing.

“You are indeed losin’ it,” he announced. “Too much nostalgia. Not enough work.” He hoped it wasn’t a bear. His rifle sat secure and useless in the den, locked in the cabinet Clara insisted he buy.

The stream burbled and played. He listened to it through the trees long before he saw it. Then a glimpse, another through a break in the mountain laurel, and the trail followed the water’s edge. Snowmelt strengthened the headwaters, submerging the banks until summer. Clay would stay until the peepers chirped away the sun. So much of life was hiding. Bullfrogs croaked. Furry things scuttled beyond the rushes. Snakes slithered over logs and wound across the water. Shad and trout darted beneath the ripples. Life lived just out of view. 

A brown shape passed behind the dogwoods on the other side. Clay blinked. Deer? Maybe people? It better not be people. This was his land, bought and paid for with hard cash and forty-some years of blood and tears and sweat.

When he arrived at his fishing spot, Clay found it already occupied. A father and son from the look. The waterlogged overalls and dirty face suggested the boy’s natural lack of grace. Clay pictured him tumbling off a slippery bit of trail, or sliding sideways off a rock on the upstream crossing. He was fawnish, leggy and stumbling against the world, a lot like Junior used to be. He held a bamboo rod—an antique. They had gone out of style when Clay was a boy. 

His portly father sat on a log, baiting his hook. Sweat beads dripped down his face, despite his straw hat. He wiped his hand on a pantleg. They shadowed each other. The boy had his father’s round nose and basset hound eyes. The elder was a worn and overfed version of the younger. 

“Like this,” he said, and cast his line. The boy watched, then pulled his line in and recast.

“Better,” his father said.

Clay waved.

“You there!” He called. “How’s the fishin’?”

In the old days—Clay mourned the old days—he and Junior skipped stones. He taught the boy to select flat stones. To flick his wrist just so when throwing—spin and angle equalled skip. Skipping was an art. A skipper graduated from the bowl-sounding plop to the whispering taps—six or seven? ten?—before the stone slipped under for good. He chose one. Skipped it. A five-hopper. Not bad. Perhaps he had only shown the boy once or twice. It felt like more.

They nodded. The man doffed his hat.

“I said, ‘how’s the fishin’?'”

They ignored him. The wind shook the leaves. The stream burbled. A woodpecker rat-a-tatted a poplar. Clay called out.

“You’re on private property, you know.”

He had hunted the woods and cleaned the carcasses in the shed behind the cottage. Fished the stream and scaled and cooked fish on coals from dying trees. Those trees warmed the cottage in winter. He cleared the dead wood, picked wild raspberries, planted the garden. Drove the stakes tied with white cloth to mark the corners. He worked it; it was his.

“It’s disrespectful of you—”

The boy got a bite. A little tug, a stronger tug, and a trout popped out of the stream. It flailed in the air. The man punched his son’s shoulder.

“Now, look here,” Clay called. “I don’t mind you–“

The lad released his catch into their bucket, and the pair sat down on the log again.

Clay thought himself patient. When Clara had come up with the cancer and the doctors hemmed and hawed more than he cared for, he had been patient with them, though Clara’s bony hand on his had done much ’til it couldn’t anymore; and he had been patient with Junior, who hated farmin’ from the start alright, but loved the theatre so much that Clay and Clara had given up whole evenings to watch four years’ worth of school productions, which hadn’t gotten them anything but a visit from Markley come up over the hill, bitchin’ that his boy and Junior were makin’ hog sounds in the loft and threatenin’ to sue over Lord knows what, that had required patience; even when the boy came into the hospital in mascara and lipstick like a red light hussy he had’t yelled or nothin’ just told him to go home and clean up ‘fore his dyin’ mama saw it, and that was that forevermore; but now here this bulbous man and his ragamuffin ilk sat on his log on his stream on his property casting lines and takin’ his trout without the slimmest bit o decency to say “hello, how do you do?” or even recognize that Clay had worked that land for damn near fifty years and who were they to come replacin’ him since he wa’n’t dead yet nor read his name in the obituaries like he ‘spected to one day. 

I picked up a stone and skipped it across the water toward them.

“–I don’t mind you–“

“Hey,” Straw Hat called out. “Who are you?” He stood up and pointed at me with a sausage finger.

“I might ask you the same question,” I said. “Since you’re on my property.”

“Excuse me?” he said. “This is my property.” He motioned to his fishin’ buddy. “Get me the rifle, son,” he said. the younger one dropped his makeshift pole and ran up the path.

“You’re gonna get violent?” I asked.

“When you try to steal my land from me, damn right I will,” he said.

“But it’s not your land,” I insisted.

“Like hell,” he said.

I reached down into the water and pulled up a skipping stone. I played a bit of shortstop in high school. I thought I could peg him in the thigh. He was a big target anyway.

Several seconds of glaring silence passed. His boy reappeared with the gun.

“Mister,” I called out. “You touch that gun and I’ll break your hand with this stone.” I palmed it like a baseball.

He grabbed the gun. I chucked the ball at his hand. It hit him square. Then it passed through his hand, his gun, and his son on the other side.

Well, shit.

He raised it and fired. Then he stared. His boy turned white.

“Son–“

“Right through him, Pop, I swear to God.”

The shotgun crack sent a flock of geese honking skyward. Silence slipped behind them. Suddenly I saw two Lenape women on the opposite bank: one bore a basket of plants, the other filled a clay bowl with water. A column of revolutionaries drank before marching on, muskets perched on their slumping shoulders. A weary-faced grandfather joined the man and boy. A teenager draped in a saggy black clothes sat on a log, a pistol in his hand. 

A stone skipped toward the woman, its whispering hits ending in a plop. She froze. Keen eyes scanned the banks. Across the stream, a demon—a crow-colored man—brooded on fallen log suspended over the water. He hadn’t noticed her, but he hadn’t thrown the rock.

Two boys in blue skipped stones upstream.

“Four,” the taller one said glumly. He chewed a bit of honeysuckle as the other boy skipped his stone.

“Five! Ha!”

“Best of five?”

Behind them the colonel coughed. “You boys don’t want to give away our position I hope?” The men snapped to attention.

“I didn’t think so.” He scanned the water. A father and son fished on the other side, but neither paid them any mind. “You might be lucky today, but luck runs out. Don’t waste it on this.” The men—barely men, the colonel knew—scurried back to camp.

NEW WORK MIGHT FIT HERE

Everything converged. The women retreated into the wild. The soldiers marched onward. Grandfather, son, and grandson cast their lines as one. The boy blew his head off. 

I dropped to my knees. Clutched my chest. Sweat tickled my nose. I hoisted myself up with my walking stick. They were gone—all of them. The stream dribbled along without a burble. The wind had calmed. No birdcalls. No rustling leaves. Scared, I swore to write down my experience. Just had to get home. I staggered. Shock—I’m sure it was. Yes. It was shock.

They turned and ran. I chased after them, but they disappeared up the path. Somewhere beyond the trees I heard an engine turn over. I dropped into the big guy’s seat on the log. The wood had been worn; it was well used. I looked into the pail. It was empty. Rusted through.

So Clay stood on the bank, skipping stones like he did when he was a boy, like he did when he taught his son, waiting for the guy and his kid to come back. He considered going home, but opted to wait. It was his property, after all. He skipped a mother stone.

“Six hopper.” The sun warmed his face. The stream burbled along.

Works Cited

Le Guin, Ursula  K.. Steering the Craft: A Twenty-First-Century Guide to Sailing the Sea of Story (p. 70). HMH Books. Kindle Edition. 

The Trove

Author’s Note: I love NASA and space exploration. Such fertile ground…

Phil Smith traced a finger along the arm of the leather sofa, variables playing in his head. He and Alan Talcott had worked on many projects, from the lunar colony to in-space ship design and maintenance. But they had never faced a problem like this before.

As always, Talcott called for tea and settled into the chair beside him.

“How’s Mikey? Jana?”

“Jana’s good,” Smith’s mustache twitched, but he didn’t look up. “Starting high school next year. Mikey’s in his second year at MIT.”

“Not Caltech, huh? Chip off the old block.” If they had been closer, Talcott might have offered a gentle nudge on the arm, but from his appearance, Smith might burst into tears if he did.

“Yeah,” he mumbled. “Chip. Yep.”

“Which one got your green thumb?”

“Jana. She’s tending the garden for me.”

Talcott settled into the tense silence of Smith-in-a-bad-place. He had seen it before; he knew to wait it out, to give Smith all the room he needed. But after Jesse delivered the tea, they had no excuses.

“I can see you’re not yourself, Phil. You ready to tell me why you requested this meeting?”

Smith sniffed.

Talcott poured a cup of tea for each of them. “Science or personal?” He dropped a sugar cube in his, tinking the cup with his spoon. He noticed a new liver spot.

“Both,” Smith’s choked reply caught Talcott by surprise.

“How so?” He pushed the plain tea toward his lead scientist, who opted instead to hand him the first of the two folders he had brought. While Talcott commenced his customary page rifling, Smith sipped at his tea. Today the shuffle stopped early.

“Your team analyzed the sample five times?” Talcott’s mouth hung open, a foreign expression on his hard Roman features.

“Uh huh.” Smith focused on the pair of prints hung opposite: Trouvelot’s The Great Comet of 1881 and El Greco’s Christ Carrying the Cross. He noticed Talcott shift uncomfortably out of the corner of his eye.

“And each time they had the same results?”

“It’s in the report, Alan.” 

Talcott reached for his tea. The clatter of cup and saucer revealed a tremble Smith hadn’t noticed before. The mission director sipped loudly as he absorbed the contents of each page.

Twenty minutes later, Talcott had reviewed the report twice without uttering a single syllable or asking a single question. When he set the report down on the coffee table, he appeared steady as ever.

“So who knows about this?”

Smith feared this question most. 

“The sample analyst—”

“Names and titles, Phil. Please.” Talcott pulled out his phone. The question made Smith cringe.

“Enrique deFuentes, sample analyst. Myself. Dan Blenski, instrument and science—”

“Why’s Blenksi involved?”Talcott’s face turned red exactly when Smith predicted it would.

“Because we asked them to send over the full range of photographs from the collection site.”

“Full range? Infrared? GPIR?”

Smith nodded.

“Those the images?” He nodded to the other folder. Smith picked it up as if to protect it.

“Let’s see then.” Talcott held out his hand.

The images from Perseverance IV were undeniable. 

“My God,” Talcott kept muttering. “How can this be?”

Smith finally exhaled, surprised at how long he had held his breath. He needed to pee. “We kept asking the same question. That’s why we had to get the images.”

“I wish you hadn’t,” Talcott laughed. “You should’ve just come to me.”

“But we didn’t know for sure what we were looking at.” Smith tensed up again. “We didn’t do anything wrong, Alan.”

“I know, I know.” Talcott muttered. The second folder joined the first, and he sat there with his head in his hands.

“Thank God for NDAs.” he finally said.

Smith had begun playing with the leather arm again. “You really think the NDAs will stop everyone?”

“Damn well better.” Talcott jumped up and began pacing. Smith was relieved to see him break into problem-solving mode. “I want you to gather the data. All of it. Anything not in my possession needs to be handed over immediately. You and Blenski advise anyone who worked with that data to turn it over. We’ll have Tech Services wipe the machines within the hour. I need everything contained.”

“What are you going to do with it?”

“It’s gotta go up, doesn’t it? Director. NASA HQ. Then probably the White House.”

“The White House? But the guy doesn’t even believe in science.”

“No, he doesn’t. But about forty-nine percent of the electorate does. And that’s who we have to keep this away from.”

“The other fifty-one doesn’t bother you?” Smith scratched his bald pate.

“They’re mostly conspiracy theorists, Phil. Non-thinkers. Hmm.”

“Alan?”

“Just go. Get everything sorted out with your team. Quick as you can.”

Smith quickly slipped away. Talcott grabbed the files and settled back at his desk, told Jesse to get Blenski on the line, and reviewed the materials. Fossilized human remains. GPIR imaging of a million year old graveyard. On Mars. All of it on Mars. He paused in front of the El Greco print.

“Not sure if you’re irrelevant or what,” he said to Christ, who looked upward, blood trickling down his forehead and neck. Talcott waited. “Yeah, didn’t think you’d answer.”

Weeks later, when the anticipated leak on Blenski’s team occurred, Public Relations solved it the best way possible. They reposted it on social media from multiple fake accounts alongside articles and images from the old moon landing hoax, Area 51 rumors, and the Roswell incident. That Roswell was celebrating its UFO centennial only made it easier for the public to buy. 

Soon the journalists stopped asking for statements. The President and the Pope ignored requests for comment. Only the tabloids carried it—to NASA’s advantage.

Talcott watched it unfold from his office. Once a day he would stop in front of the El Greco. He kept a mahogany box on the cabinet beneath it. The box contained a signed mission photograph from the ill-fated Artemis Colony I, his wedding ring, and the data Smith and Blenski had collected. A trove of painful reminders. Blenski’s image analyst hadn’t been the only loss on the mission.

“Phil?”

Talcott caught up with his former lead scientist in the hallway, trudging out with a box full of personal effects. “How are you?”

Smith wore a blank stare. “Fine,” he said. “Just fine.”

“Want to stop by my office?”

“No, no,” Smith insisted. “I’ve got to get home. Things… to do. Gardening, you know. I just want to grow things. Tomatoes. Cucumbers. Lettuce. Lettuce is predictable.

Talcott pulled him aside. “You don’t have to do this, Phil. We need you.”

Smith shook his head. “No. No. I signed the NDA long ago. It’s alright. I’m just going to garden now. Take care of yourself, Alan.”

The mission director watched the defeated man disappear around the corner, then made his way to the newly-emptied office. Everything had been removed save a rosary, the cross left face down on the desk.

The Problem in 14B

Author’s Note: One of my readers asked if I was planning to revisit the world of “Nightwatch in the Underneath”. So I did.

Arbor Michael lacked the cachet of Sky City’s more central addresses. The cluster of five towers, each a phallus of steel, concrete, and glass capped in green-tinted mushrooming levels, did not have the views of its neighbors. A direct sunrise or sunset could only be seen in the winter, when the orb peeked at them from between the columns of more luxurious arbors: James to the east, Simon to the west. The north and south arbors, Judah and Salome, suffered a smilar fate as Michael in terms of the views, but had the advantage of being closer in along the City Transit route. The electric blue monorail system didn’t offer Arbor Michael residents a direct line to shopping or learning or government; instead, it wound a circuitous route through the neighboring arbors. Thus, no matter which way a rider went in the circuit, Arbor Michael was always the furthest stop.

Because it lacked the prestige afforded by proximity and scenery, Arbor Michael, like Sky City’s other similarly situated architectural kin, had become a lower rent district. Kate Balintine found that she could afford a one bedroom unit when she chipped in with only five others. 

Right now two of those others, Bryan and Maryanne, had exiled her from the bedroom so they could commit a few sins.

“Thanks, Kate. I really owe you,” Maryanne said as she thrust her roommate’s bedroll into her open arms. Maryanne’s blonde hair was already mussed from the foreplay Kate had interrupted during the effort to retrieve her mat, sheet, thin blanket, and pillow.

“Better give me Lyle’s as well.” Kate cracked her chewing gum and held out her free hand.

Bryan lay on his bedroll on the floor, naked from the waist up. When he saw Kate, he pulled the sheet up to cover his chest, but not before Kate noticed the lipstick print on his pec.

“Nothing I haven’t seen before.” Kate smirked and batted her dark eyes.

“Not on me, you haven’t.”

“Like you’re anything special?”

Maryanne pushed the second roll at her, said thanks, and closed the door quickly.

Kate wandered through the galley kitchen to the living room, dropped Lyle’s bedroll on the chair, and spread hers so that she could look out the picture window. Arbor Michael’s “panoramic” views opened on other peoples’ lives. Kate would never admit to voyeurism; it sounded too illicit. She preferred to think of it as people watching.

As she neared dozing, the slide of a keycard, beep, and subsequent squeak of the door pulled Kate back from the edge of sleep. She looked up to see Clay open the cashbox that lived on the end table inside the door. 

“Adding or subtracting?” she mumbled.

“Adding.” Clay entered a new line on their digital record, shucked his coat and blue work coveralls, and flopped on the sofa in sweat-stained long underwear. “They at it again?”

“Off and on, based on the grunting and intermittent shrieks.”

“Lyle ain’t gonna like it if he can’t get in there.”

Kate waved at the chair. “That’s why I brought his roll with me.”

“You coulda brought mine.”

“It smells funny. Just like you.” She fanned in front of her nose. “Pew! You stink!”

“Thanks,” Clay replied morosely.

Kate thumped his leg with a gentle fist. “I’m kidding. Didn’t know you’d be home early is all.”

He looked at the galley doorway, as if expecting Maryanne or Bryan to emerge at any moment. “Yeah well, I decided to take a half day. Kinda needed it.”

Kate frowned in question.

Clay ran a dirty hand through his hair. “I should really talk to Leigh about this.”

Now Kate sat up, giving him full attention. He picked at the dirt under his fingernails.

“Something anthropological happen?” she asked. Leigh worked in the Sky City Anthropology Division.

“No, not a work thing…I think I watched a murder.”

Kate’s green eyes grew wide. “No way.”

Clay nodded. “When you’re picking up garbage, you just focus on garbage. Take out the bag. Load the cart. Replace the bag. Drive to the incinerator receptacle. Unload. Away it goes. End of story.”

Kate nodded.

“But there were protesters on my route today. Deviants.”

“What kind?”

“Pagans, I think. Hard to tell. Pagans are often queers. Queers are often socialists. Socialists are—”

“I get it.” She put a hand on his knee, uncertain if her action was meant to  silence or reassure him. Maybe both.

“Well, I wasn’t raised to hold to that type. Deviants were our downfall in the first place.”

“Uh huh.” Every young person learned Sky City history in catechism. Both Kate’s parents had taught in the school system, indoctrinating hundreds—including their daughter—into the Truth of God’s mercy, and His gift to the worthy: their home above the heathens, the unclean, the unworthy. Above the Deviants.

“So the Peacekeepers arrived and began arresting them. Some went quietly…”

He cracked his knuckles.

“But some fought back. Started chucking stuff at the Peacekeepers. Bottles. Food. Not much to throw, really. They dumped my garbage cans to find stuff.” He  chuckled mirthlessly. “One guy…a big guy. He could’ve—should’ve—been a Peacekeeper himself, all that size. But he was protesting. Carried a baseball bat. Can you believe it? A baseball bat.”

Beyond television, Kate had never seen a baseball bat anywhere except the simulators and the arena. It wasn’t a household item.

“Wonder how he got it?”

Clay shrugged. “Don’t matter. Peacekeepers decided he was the most dangerous. When he swung that bat… well, like I said, he was a big guy. Cracked some shields. Ever hear a bone break?”

Kate turned pale. She could see Clay reliving the experience from the look in his eyes.

“Well, it took six of them to bring him down.”

“Did they beat him to death right there?”

“Nope.” He retrieved a bottle of water from the refrigerator, and sat back down. Took a swig. Closed his eyes.

“They hauled him up to the nearest service gate, opened it, and threw him off the platform. When the crowd saw that, they fled.”

“Jesus.” Kate wrapped her arms around her knees. “Sounds horrifying.”

“Life up here must not be as bad as they claim, I guess. They scurried off, the cowards, instead of dying for their beliefs.” He sucked down half his water.

“I would think you’d be happy.” 

He shook his head. “I climbed up to an overlook to get clear and watch the chaos. Saw him go over. Watched him flail. It’s a thousand foot drop to the Underneath, you know? He hit…”

“And?”

Clay just stared at her. “I felt sick. He was the only brave one. The only righteous one. But misguided… maybe.”

Kate absorbed the story, resting her chin on her arms as she imagined what Clay saw. This is what it must feel like to be a therapist. “Maybe.”

“You pity them?” he asked.

“I don’t know. Where’s the compassion?”

Clay just shrugged.

Lyle and Leigh arrived home an hour later, rousing Kate and Clay from slumber. Lyle escorted Leigh to the last open seat in the living room.

“I’m better now,” she said, dropping her bag. “Really.”

Typically, Leigh was the most austere of the group. She didn’t wear any makeup, and kept her hair in an Oklahoma braid. She kept every inch of skin covered save her face and hands. Zippers, buttons, and snaps bound and buttoned her tightly, shielding everything inside from everything outside. But the dutiful daughter Kate had befriended seemed missing now. Her hair had been completely undone, wild, shoulder length chestnut locks tangled and astray. She wore smudged eyeshadow, at least, and left open a few buttons on her blouse. But the transformation wasn’t just physical. She pressed her legs tightly together, hips, knees, and toes. Cupped her elbows. Darted glances around the room. Her jacket sleeve had been torn. She looks violated.

“Were they that terrifying in the Underneath?” She hadn’t seen Leigh since before her last assignment. Even though each worked while the other slept, they at least crossed paths on shift changes. Well, we used to, Kate thought.

“Leigh?”

“Yeah?” Leigh looked startled.

A door opened down the hall and Bryan hollered.

“What the hell, man?” 

Clay bolted upright on the sofa. Kate seized the moment to claim the seat closest to Leigh and put a reassuring hand on her arm. Leigh offered a weak smile, eyes baggy.

“Have you slept since coming back from your interview?” Kate asked.

Leigh shook her head.

Lyle’s voice thundered. “Where’s my bedroll?”

“It’s out here, Lyle!” Kate called and turned to see him storming back into the room with Leigh’s bedroll under his arm. His wild mop of curly hair was plastered down under a white gauze wrap. Blood had seeped through.

“What happened to you two?” Clay wiped the sleep from his eyes and shook his head.

“Nothing.“ Lyle said. He put a hand on Leigh’s shoulder. “Ready to go?”

Kate stood up. “I don’t think you two should be going anywhere.”

Lyle shook his head.

Leigh put her hand over Lyle’s and looked up at Kate. “I have to go.”

“What’s your problem, Lyle?” Bryan had donned tee shirt and shorts. 

Maryanne stood behind him, pulling him back toward the bedroom by the elbow. “Leave him alone, Bryan.”

“No, we even set his roll out so he wouldn’t come barging in.” He finally gave Lyle a once over. “What happened to you?”

“Leigh and I are leaving.”

Clay shook his head. “No way. Your names are on the housing contract. You can’t leave. Is that blood?” He nodded to Lyle’s shirt collar.

“Yeah. My own. And the contract doesn’t matter.” He reached for Leigh’s arm.

“Now wait a minute.” Kate stopped him. “Maybe before you just vanish we all ought to sit down and talk this out?”

“Icarans,” Leigh whispered, and everyone stopped.

“What do you mean, ’Icarans’?” Kate knelt in front of her. 

“Icarans. We don’t wanna be Icarans.”

Kate worried her lip. “Lyle, what’s she talking about?”

He shrugged.

But Clay ran a hand over his face and frowned. “You two were at the protests. You’re Deviants.”

In a flash, Lyle had a handful of Clay’s shirt, his fist cocked. “Call me that one more time, asshole.”

Clay’s weight advantage was negated by both his seated position and his post-nap sluggishness. He grabbed Lyle’s more sinewy arm with both hands. Bryan worked to insert himself between them. “Easy, easy. Nobody’s calling anybody names.”

“Actually, Clay did,” Maryanne observed.

“Shut it,” Bryan barked. “Lyle, what happened?”

His girlfriend tossed her hair and pursed her lips. 

Lyle let go of Clay and stepped back. Sighed. “Leigh just showed up at my cubicle, begging for me to hide her.”

“Why?” Kate held Leigh’s hand. She wore a large ring on her thumb. That’s new.

“Because I don’t want to be an Icaran.”

“What’s an Icaran, Leigh?” Kate rubbed the back of her hand.

“They fly. The Cricaps pray. The Topsiders pay. The Icarans fly.”

Bryan crossed his arms. “From who, Lyle? Who did she want you to hide her from.”

Lyle pinched the bridge of his nose. “The Peacekeepers.”

Maryanne slipped back through the kitchen.

“Aw, no,” Clay moaned as he stood. “No, no, no. You got a wanted woman here.” He waved his arms in agitation. “You’re complicit. So now we’re all complicit. And the Peacekeepers? Did they bash you on the head?”

Lyle winced when he touched the delicate spot on his head. “No. I misjudged the shelf in the storage room where I hid her.”

“You’ve got to turn her in,” Clay said. “The both of you got to turn yourselves in or we’re all in trouble.”

“Where will you go?” Kate asked.

“Back to The Underneath.”

Everybody but Lyle stared at Leigh in shock. Then a flurry of movement followed.

Bryan stormed away, muttering about Neathers driving everyone mad. Clay grabbed his cell.

“I’ll report you myself.”

Lyle kicked the cell out of Clay’s hands. Something else crunched.

“Sonofabitch!” Clay shouted as he grabbed his fingers. He sucked in a lot of air and curled his hand, then pushed past them into the kitchen. 

“Let’s go,” Leigh ordered. She grabbed her bag and bolted.

Kate and Lyle followed, bedrolls abandoned.

Lyle kept glancing behind to see if anyone was following. Kate scurried along quickly to catch up with their wild-eyed friend. “Why do you think you’ll be fine in The Underneath?”

“I don’t,” Leigh said as they passed into the stairwell and started the long descent.

“But her tablet’s smashed and she’s wearing matching men’s rings on each thumb,” Lyle offered as he passed. “Whatever’s gone wrong with her, it started there.”

“And you’re helping her why?”

“Curiosity? Tired of my cubicle?”

Kate scoffed at his answer. “Clay said there were protests today—”

“Uh huh. She was there.” 

Leigh picked up speed, glancing out the window on every other landing as if the Peacekeepers would fly right up to arrest her.

“Lyle,” Kate huffed, “why didn’t you turn her in?”

Lyle never broke stride. “Would she have done that to me?”

A flight below, Leigh quickened her pace. Kate hurried to catch up.

Nightwatch in The Underneath

Author’s Note: I wanted to tell a story about a polyamorous culture. I ended up starting a critique of societies that straitjacket identity while glamorizing consumerism.

Paulina paused in the open shed bay to watch The Topside come to life. The city seemed to float in the darkening sky: white spotlights trimmed the concrete platforms upon which each tower cluster stood. Topsiders illuminated their towers to suggest trees. Narrow bases in white transitioned to bright green at each bulbous top. Ties, struts, and walkways that bound them together had been trimmed in green like heavenly branches. The city transit system, a blue vein that tied the clusters together, carried topsiders from the trunks of some towers to the boughs of others. Every hour in alternation, the high speed rail streaked out of the northern or southern ranges, a yellow flash that stopped to expel its contents before pelting into the darkened ridges. LED advertising and flashing neon signs completed the garish display. Paulina expected that The Topside could be seen flashing and whoring itself from space.

By daytime, the mystique of The Topside disappeared. Each cluster of towers looked like ashen mushroom-headed pricks loosely stitched into a phallic nightmare. Each platform perched on a trio of pillars; each pillar was a hundred yards across and three times the height. No lighting had been spared for The Topside’s dirty gray underbelly. The only illumination to touch the earth were the thin white double lines of elevator shafts embedded in each. In its design and construction, The Topside transformed night into day each evening while casting the land beneath in perpetual deep shadow. 

Paulina hitched the cart to the ATV and unplugged it from the treadmills. The children ran the mills daily. What adults saw as work—what had been a torture long ago and far away—provided the clan with a venue for sport and games while tending to their energy needs, especially when their limited solar and wind options failed to produce.

Must’ve been a fun time, she thought. The gauge showed a full charge. She checked the meter on the house battery. The children had charged it as well.

She wrapped her long dark braid around her neck and covered her face with a hand-knitted green scarf. Then she set off to The Underneath, bouncing and jostling down the dirt road, past gardens and fields until she crossed into the shadow of the city. She pulled her hood up to ward off the cold. 

The anthropologist waited for her at Pillar Four. She wore a shiny parka and new boots that clearly indicated wealth. The tablet in her hand cast her face in a ghostly glow.

“Leigh Specter?” Paulina called as she slowed.

“Yeah. Paulina Crow?”

“Uh-huh.” Paulina stopped and watched as Specter finished with her tablet. Her gloves were designed for show. Paulina clucked in anticipation of impending complaints. 

“It’s cold.”

Paulina patted the seat behind her. “Here or the cart. Here’s better.”

Specter climbed on behind her. The ATV jolted forward; she grabbed Paulina’s coat with both hands. 

“You need to hold tighter than that, topsider,” Paulina warned.

Twenty minutes later the pair sat by a roaring campfire centered beneath the platform.

Paulina withdrew two helmets from the ATV sidecase and handed one to the anthropologist. Each had been fitted out with built-in binoculars that could be flipped up or down as needed.

“So tell me about ‘the nightwatch’?” Specter tested the helmet’s fit, adjusted it, wiped the lenses with a gloved finger, and tried again.

“It’s a job.” Paulina poured a mug of hot tea from her thermos. Specter looked as if she would take it, then dropped her hand as Paulina sipped. There was no second cup.

“That’s not the way it sounded when I spoke to Geo Evergreen.”

“What did he say?” Paulina dropped her lenses and scanned the platform perimeter.

“He made it sound like this was the most important work folks did.”

“Did he?” she sounded unimpressed.

Specter frowned. “He did. He also said you had been doing this the longest.”

“Twenty years.”

The anthropologist pulled out her tablet, flipped through some screens with her stylus, and looked to her subject expectantly.

Paulina motioned to the lenses still flipped up on Specter’s helmet. “You’ll never see a thing if you don’t put those down, Topsider.”

Specter frowned. “I thought we might talk first.”

“No.” Paulina still hadn’t stopped scanning.

“What am I looking for?” Specter asked as she flipped down her lenses.

No reply. Another minute passed.

“Geo said this is how you all collect your resources.”

“Some. Over there.” Paulina pointed to a place beyond Pillar Five. “A box of some kind. Paper fluttering everywhere.”

Specter focused her binoculars on the area; papers drifted, then swirled east, caught by the wind.

“Shouldn’t we gather them?” 

Paulina said nothing.

“You’re really not one for conversation. Geo said—”

“Geo talks too much.”

From the corner of her eye, Paulina watched the anthropologist shift uncomfortably in her folding chair. 

“You gonna rutch around all night?”

“What?” Firelight flickered across Specter’s face. Young, Paulina thought.

“Rutching. Means squirming in your seat, Topsider.” To demonstrate, Paulina wriggled around in her chair, which squeaked under the strain.

“I’ve never heard that word before.”

“It’s not a good enough word for your kind.”

Specter flipped up her lenses. “And what exactly is my kind?”

Paulina smiled. “Topsider.”

“I’m not a topsider. Not if you’re using it as a pejorative. I’ve studied your lingo.”

“Have you?” Paulina snorted and picked her teeth with one hand while scanning another point where the platform ended.

Specter clenched her jaw.

“One of you topsiders just heaved over something heavy.”

“I’m not a topsider,” Specter repeated. “Where?”

“Left of Pillar Six. About ten o’clock from your seat.”

Specter caught sight of the bag just as it hit the ground. A thud and cloud of dust followed. “I’m not a topsider, Ms. Crow. I’m a resident of Arbor Michael, Sky City.”

Paulina chuckled. “Doesn’t matter the address. You’re all the same. Cricaps. Topsiders. Icarans.”

“Oh, come on,” Specter whined. “I’m not trying to give you a hard time. I’m trying to learn from you. I’m trying to build a bridge between your culture and ours.”

Paulina ignored her. “You planning to go native?”

“What?” The surprise in Specter’s voice did not go unnoticed.

“Go native. Come down the shaft and never go back.”

“I know what it means.” She sounded indignant. “It’s an ethnographic term. We train to guard against it before they let us come down.”

“Oh.” 

Something small fluttered overhead. Specter followed the sound. “‘Oh’ what?”

“They train you,” Paulina laughed. “As if you can be trained.”

“You really don’t like us, do you?”

“No. I hate you.” Paulina said. “Oh dear.” She pointed to a pair of figures plummeting to earth.

“Jesus.”

Paulina pursed her lips. “So you’re a cricap…” She pointed to the dust cloud where the bodies had landed. “Those two? Icarans. Let’s go.”

They rumbled toward where the pair had hit.

“Aren’t you going to drive faster?”

Paulina said nothing.

“We should call a medic,” Specter pressed.

Now she whistled. “You’re really green, aren’t you?”

“What do you mean?”

They stopped.

“Why are we stopping?”

Paulina pointed to a field of garbage within view of the headlights: plastic bottles, papers, and articles of clothing, mostly.

“Cleanup.”

“We should get over there.”

“Why? No one survives the drop. Most die of fright. Those who don’t get to feel regret and stupidity for a full nine seconds. I’ve timed it.”

Specter watched as Paulina gathered up rubbish. At one point, the ‘neather shuffled over, took out a shovel, and tossed it to her observer. Specter fumbled the catch, nearly dropping her tablet in the process. 

“Make yourself useful.” Paulina pointed to shattered pane glass. “Shovel that into the cart.”

Specter tried a different tack.

“So what do you do with it all?” She kept one eye on their destination, hoping for movement.

“Whatever we can.”

“You wear the clothes?” She glanced at the dirty blue hoodie they had recovered.

“If they fit.”

Specter resisted pointing out her opposition to such practices. She was trying to observe and learn, not point out her subject’s cultural deficiencies.

Underway once again, the headlights soon illuminated the bodies; light reflected back on buttons, straps, boot buckles, and other shiny bits.

Paulina pulled up alongside them, dropped the side of the cart, and unrolled a patchwork canvas sheet.

Specter took out her tablet, snapped a few photos, and began to write.

“Do you know them?” Paulina asked.

“We have a million people up there. What makes you think I would know them?”

Both were male. Younger. One had blue hair, the other blond. The leather, denims, and boots suggested counterculture. The jewelry, piercings, tattoos, and buttons suggested it as well.

Paulina watched Specter as she made her notes; the anthropologist seemed voyeuristic, unable to look away but increasingly horrified and pale with each glance.

“Pull their cells for me.”

Specter grimaced. “What makes you think they have cells?”

Paulina looked pityingly. “Cricap, you all have cells.”

“I am not a cricap. And I’m not paid enough to touch corpses!”

“Well, cricap, they are truly beneath you now.”

Paulina stomped around. Reached down to the broken bodies and retrieved the cells from each. She straightened the shattered and askew limbs. Then she paused at their hands. 

“Matching rings,” she said. “What do you make of that, Cricap?”

Specter slammed her tablet in the dirt.

“I am not a damned cricap! I was not raised Christian, and I am not a capitalist! I am not a topsider! I do not have money, I have never had money, and I do not have a superiority complex! For heaven’s sake, six of us share a single bedroom flat!” 

Paulina stood back, smiling thinly, arms crossed, as Specter ripped off her helmet and gestured with it. 

“And I am not an Icaran, whatever the hell you mean by that! I am just trying to learn about your culture so we can all find a way to live better! That’s all!”

Paulina watched as Specter scooped up her tablet, examining the shattered screen. It still worked.

“All done?” Paulina asked.

Specter nodded.

“All better?”

“No,” she sniffled. “This has been a disaster start to finish.”

“Hold these,” she said, thrusting the cells toward her. Specter hesitated.

“Leigh? Please.”

Leigh held the cells and watched as Paulina rolled the broken bodies onto the tarp and secured the last two corners to ropes. Next she used a pair of winches to pull the load aboard. Once the gate had been locked back in place, she unlatched one side of the canvas and finished retracting the ropes, rolling the bodies over as the canvas came free. Blue hair lay face down across blond’s chest. Blond stared blindly into the sky.

“You’re not the disaster,” Paulina said. “This is the disaster. These two. Had they not been trapped in your ways, they might have gone down the shaft, like you, and come to live with us. They would have known they were loved.”

“How do you know they weren’t?”

Paulina nodded to the bodies. “They’re here.”

They drove to the nearest pillar. Leigh followed Paulina into the elevator, where they were greeted by a warm burst of air and gentle synthesized music. A clear deposit box and small cabinet were embedded in the back wall. Paulina removed a pair of blank labels and a marker from the cabinet, wrote the word DECEASED and the date on each, and affixed the labels to the cells. Then she dropped them into the box. They thunked against a small collection amassed at the bottom.

“See that purple one?” she said, pointing to the collection. “I dropped that off a few days ago. Pretty girl. Such a shame.”

They returned to the campsite. Another log from the woodpile brought the fire back to a crackling roar.

“We need to take the bodies up.” Leigh sipped delicately when Paulina shared her mug.

“No.” 

“You mean you don’t return the bodies? I thought we cremated our dead?”

“You do. Have you ever looked off the easternmost platform?”

Leigh shook her head.

“Your ventilation system blows everything you incinerate, cremains included, out the eastside vents. Ash covers the land over there. We tried cultivating it years ago, and some crops took—but not for long. Little grows anymore. Go look sometime.”

“So what do you do with the bodies if you don’t return them?”

“We use them.”

She handed back the empty mug. Paulina screwed it on to the thermos.

“What do you use them for?” Leigh had pulled out her tablet and begun writing.

“Whatever we can. When I die, I asked my family to turn me into books, or perhaps a couple jackets.”

Leigh scowled. “What did they say to that?”

“Well, my husbands promised me they would turn me into books. My wife wants the jacket.” She chuckled. “I’ll let the tanner tell them what I can become.”

“Wait. You have three spouses?”

Paulina smiled. “Don’t you have five?”

Leigh fiddled with her stylus. “No. Each of us has our own lives. There’s nothing between us.” 

“All in that tiny flat of yours?” Paulina shook her head. “So much easier if you make a family. But your cricaps don’t allow that. God doesn’t like it. Business can’t make money off you unless you’re paired to that perfect one. I have three perfect ones. We’re considering adding another.”

Leigh scribbled furiously for a few minutes after that, and the conversation carried on another hour before Paulina shared the rest of the evening’s plan.

“We stay until dawn, collecting the bodies, and any garbage along the way. Then we go to the tannery and recycling. Then you go home.”

“Geo never said… nobody ever said this was how it worked.”

“What did they tell you?”

“Geo just said it would be illuminating.”

“Is it?”

Leigh nodded. “And nobody up there talks about it at all. None of my other interviews. None of my supervisors. Nobody  discusses the nightwatch.”

“But they do talk up there?” 

“Yeah, but not about this.”

The pair whiled away the rest of the evening and into the early morning hours. Leigh tried to keep the questions light as she scanned the platform edges, torn between not wanting to look and insisting on bearing witness.

“The Topside shuts down at midnight. We’ll be seeing a body or two soon. The next big rush is at five, when your city wakes up.”

“Our high traffic hours,” Leigh offered.

“Predictable as sunrise.”

“How many a night?”

“Three or four. Sometimes more. You had that cricap cult a few years back.”

“I remember.”

“This jacket came from one of them.”

Leigh stared at Paulina’s jacket several times during the rest of the night as if trying to find the body in it.

They collected another jumper: a male in a suit, his heavy necklace with its gold cross twisted around his neck. A note that read ‘sinner’ had been pinned to his coat. 

“Cricap,” Paulina said as she examined the body. “He had a narrow path for living ‘right’. So narrow not even he could walk it.”

“Earlier tonight you suggested I was such a person.”

Paulina read the observation as a challenge. 

“The cricaps sell everything, including their souls. They live on greed, then claim divine moral high ground they have no intention of following. Hypocrites.”

“Did I claim a moral high ground with you? Did I strike you as greedy?”

“Not quite, though you thought me too ignorant to know your field. But you did look down on those two dead boys. Too good to tend to them. Not paid enough. That’s Cricap. Your bias that somehow we can show you a better way to live—or that you can show us? That’s topsider. Somebody’ll take that knowledge and sell it. Know why we don’t come to study you?”

Leigh shook her head.

Paulina offered a pointed look, but didn’t provide an answer.

“So why do you do this?” Leigh asked later. An older woman had been added to their grotesque collection, and now, as sunlight cut through the eastern haze, they bounced away from Sky City toward a small collection of stone buildings in the distance.

“Do what?”

“Nightwatch.”

“Somebody has to.”

“What about the men?”

“Oh, some of them do.”

“But so do you.”

Paulina chuckled. “Is this men’s work? That’s Topsider. That’s Cricap. Too narrow. Among the four of us, we have a half dozen children. How would it be if our children—or my neighbors’ children—were the first to find topsider corpses dead in the dirt?”

Leigh said little as they dropped the bodies on the tannery dock.

“What about the clothes and other personal effects?” She studied one of the couples’ matching rings.

“Recycled,” Paulina said. “Upcycled. Sent to the smith and forged into something useful.”

Leigh asked if she could have the pair of rings. The tanner’s assistant nodded. With some effort and a pair of shears, he cut them from the swollen fingers, washed them, and handed them to her.

“Thank you,” she said. Paulina seemed to approve.

With the shift complete, they bounced and jostled back to Pillar Four.

“A story before you go,” Paulina began. “‘neathers used to leave the bodies in the elevators.”

“Really?”

“Uh-huh. More than once, somebody opened the elevator to descend, only to be greeted by the dead. Your people didn’t like it.”

“I can imagine.”

“I don’t have to,” Paulina said. “I was eighteen when it happened to me.”

Leigh was surprised. “You’re from up there, too?”

“Used to be. Maybe a bit of cricap in me. Bit of topsider.”

“So what made you go down the shaft?”

Paulina stared at the open elevator.

“Soon I wanted to be Icaran. Thought I could touch the sun. But the longer I stayed, the less I believed. Finally I knew: leave or die.”

“That couple…”

“…did not make the same choices as me. We would be richer here if they had.”

Leigh held the rings tightly in her fist. Paulina had not asked why she wanted to keep them, and even if she had, Leigh wasn’t sure she could answer. She considered the shattered glass of the functional tablet against the perfect rings of the dead and broken couple. The answers are here, I’m sure, she thought. Now she needed to learn the questions.