The Twelve Days of Christmas: Mayhem of Prepositional and Conjunctive Proportions

On the first day of Christmas, my True Love gave to me a partridge in a pear tree.

Well this is nice, I thought. She’s a pretty bird, and I’ve heard the eggs are quite good, though smaller than chicken eggs. I’ve read that pear trees need to be planted in early spring, so I’m hoping that it will be alright in its container until then. Just to be safe, I’m keeping it on the porch.

“What kind of pear is it?” I asked.

My True Love shrugged.

On the second day of Christmas, my True Love gave to me two turtledoves and a partridge in a pear tree.

I ran out to the big box pet store and returned with a couple cages. I put the partridges in one and the doves in the other. The tree went on to the porch with the first.

“Good thing you bought a second,” I said, “because you need at least two to guarantee pollination.”

My True Love smiled.

On the third day of Christmas, my True Love gave to me three French hens, two turtledoves, and a partridge in a pear tree.

“Bresse chickens,” my True Love said. I was grateful they were already caged.

“Thank you, Love.” I stuffed the two newest turtledoves in with the other couple, and tossed the third partridge into the last cage. “You really want us to have some pears, don’t you?” The third tree went out on the porch as well.

On the fourth day of Christmas, my True Love gave to me four calling birds, three French hens, two turtle doves, and a partridge in a pear tree.

“You’ve really got a thing for birds, don’t you?” I asked. “Good thing we’ve got a bit of garden out back. Should we build a coop?” The four calling birds had their own cage as well, and they happily chirped away. But with a half dozen French hens and another half dozen turtledoves, I thought we might need to begin construction soon. The four partridges were certainly getting plump on the feed I bought, and the back porch was a bit crowded.

On the fifth day of Christmas, my True Love gave to me five golden rings, four calling birds, three French hens, two turtle doves, and a partridge in a pear tree.

“Now this is a bit more reasonable,” I admitted as I slid the rings on to my ring fingers, pinkies, and left index finger. The eight calling birds crowded their cage and we had to buy a second cage for the nine French Hens–“Bresse chickens,” My True Love reminded me.

We also purchased an extra cage for the eight turtle doves. The five partridges had needed another cage as well, and the entire living room began to take on a foul–pardon the pun–odor. I strung a clear sheet of heavy plastic against the house and moved the five trees under it.

“We need to buy lumber,” I announced, and began surfing the web for chicken coop blueprints.

My True Love said nothing.

On the sixth day of Christmas, my True Love gave to me six geese a-laying, five golden rings, four calling birds, three French hens, two turtledoves, and a partridge in a pear tree.

“Love,” I insisted, “you’ve really gone too far. What are we going to do with these geese?” My fingers shone brilliantly–ten gold rings on ten digits–but we had twelve calling birds, twelve … Bresse chickens, I reminded myself dutifully … ten turtledoves in two cages, but because we didn’t want to break up the couples, one cage held four and the other six, and a half dozen partridges, all befouling the house.

My True Love shrugged and smiled and began filling a plastic kiddie pool with water..

“Oh well, there’ll be plenty of eggs. That’s for certain.”

On the seventh day of Christmas, my True Love gave to me seven swans a-swimming, six geese a-laying, five golden rings, four calling birds, three French hens, two turtledoves, and a partridge in a pear tree.

“But this is simply too much!” I cried. “The seven swans not only swim, but snap and hiss at the neighbors, their dogs, and cats. I placate the neighbors with eggs from our twelve geese and our eighteen Bresse chickens. But the honks of our geese drown out the sixteen calling birds. I wish they might be quieter, like the cooing of the twelve turtledoves or seven grouse. Yes, those are grouse, which are similar to partridges but not quite the same.” I wrangled the seventh tree under the clear plastic, then wondered how my coop, still only half-built, had already become obsolete in the face of such numbers.

My True Love didn’t say a word, only diligently collected the scraps from our half-built coop.

On the eighth day of Christmas, my True Love gave to me eight maids a-milking, seven swans a-swimming, six geese a-laying, five golden rings, four calling birds, three French hens, two turtledoves, and a partridge in a pear tree.

“How can you give me people?!” I stopped one of the women who led her Ayrshire into my garden-turned-barnyard. “You know there are laws against this sort of thing?” She shrugged and handed me a pail of milk as her cow chewed my lawn. My True Love had assembled a water trough out of coop scraps. The cows drank from it until the swans started swimming in it.

No amount of rings, I thought, though I glittered more than ever. Still, where would I put the milk? The refrigerator was full of eggs, and I feared we would need to convert the downstairs into an aviary.

On the ninth day of Christmas, my True Love gave to me nine ladies dancing, eight maids a-milking, seven swans a-swimming, six geese a-laying, five golden rings, four calling birds, three French hens, two turtledoves, and a partridge in a pear tree.

I holed up in the attic doing math on a pad stained with dove excrement. One of the maids brought a cow inside to warm her up, and the beast kicked over some cages. We managed to get the nine partridges and twenty-one Bresse chickens out to the coop. No help from the dancing ladies, thank you. But sixteen turtledoves and two dozen calling birds made their way upstairs. So did some of the … two dozen geese. We’ve been finding eggs between the cushions, on the pillows, under the beds… and my True Love? My True Love just smiles and gives the neighbors milk to go with the eggs to keep them from calling the police on our twenty-four hour racket.

On the tenth day of Christmas, my True Love gave to me ten lords a-leaping. Yes leaping. Over the furniture, through the house, across the cowpat-strewn former garden. And another nine ladies dancing, eight maids a-milking, seven swans a-swimming, six geese a-laying, five golden rings, four calling birds, three French hens, two turtledoves, and a partridge in a pear tree.

The lords and ladies quickly assembled a performance set to lowing, honking, and clucking. Well-choreographed, I think, though I’m no expert on modern dance. Not my thing, really. The eight ladies who weren’t matched up with lords began juggling and tossing and posing with the eggs and milk, so now there’s room in the refrigerator again, or so my True Love says. I haven’t come down from the attic yet.

That evening, my True Love placed rings twenty-six through thirty on my fingers. I can’t move them anymore. Good thing a simple waving away only requires the wrist.

I smell French toast. Or is that French hen? I’m sorry. Bresse chicken.

On the eleventh day of Christmas, my True Love gave to me eleven pipers. Piping. All of them. And yet another ten lords a-leaping, nine ladies dancing, and eight maids a-milking. Where is my True Love finding so many people willing to be sold? I’m sure there’s a law, and the constable will be knocking any moment. There are also an additional seven swans a-swimming and six geese a-laying. All of them adding to the ceaseless racket. Five golden rings aren’t enough. How about earplugs, a cot, and a pillow that’s not soiled, so that I could have one blessed night’s sleep? Oh, and yes, just for fun, four more calling birds, three more French hens, two more turtledoves, and–no, you don’t say? Another partridge in another pear tree. Joy!

I am surprised that we haven’t been arrested or evicted yet. If I check my True Love’s accounts, will I find that we are penniless? Destitute? But the pipers’ sound is soothing after the first four … five … six hours. The animals seem to have calmed somewhat, and the smell of chicken and waffles makes my mouth water even up here among the turtledoves a-pooping and calling birds a-flapping and a pair of maids a-milking who thought they were alone and then tittered away red-faced when they discovered that they weren’t.

On the twelfth day of Christmas, my True Love gave to me twelve drummers drumming. More loudly and consistently than the pipers piped. But then, of course, my True Love so thoughtfully gave me eleven more pipers to match the sound. And another ten lords a-leaping over the broken furniture and chicken coop, nine ladies dancing on the overturned trough, and eight more maids a-milking eight more Ayrshires a-lowing. Seven more swans a-swimming, six more geese a-laying, four more calling birds, three more French hens, two more turtledoves, and another partridge, all set loose in the house, now fully a barn. And another blessed pear tree under the plastic. Five more golden rings? My True Love has got to be a-kidding.

For the record, I’ve now hosted twelve drummers, twenty-two pipers, thirty lords and thirty-six ladies, some of whom also juggle. Forty maids and forty Ayrshire cows, though perhaps only thirty-eight as those two who stumbled across my attic hiding place seem to have disappeared entirely, along with their cows. Forty-two each of swans and geese. I have forty gold rings all safely tucked in a paper sack to pawn, either for bail or to start my life anew somewhere else. Thirty-six calling birds flapping through the eaves. We had thirty French hens, but many mouths to feed. The twenty-two turtledoves have mostly flown the coop as well. And the dozen partridges? Dinner, too, by the smell.

But it seems I also hosted a forty-eight hour music and dance extravaganza, during which time the drummers and pipers did a bit of community service and planted those dozen trees in that damp, muddy, well-trodden, well-fertilized earth. And it seems my True Love sold tickets, and food and drink besides. It was a smashing success, apparently, and all that remain in the new pear orchard are a real estate agent, my True Love, and I.

“The neighbor wants to buy,” the agent says. “The house is a barn now, true, but the land, the orchard, he wants it all. Strangely, he’s willing to pay top dollar.”

“Probably to get rid of us,” I say.

My True Love shows me the bank deposit slip from our impromptu celebration. It’s more money than I’ve ever seen.

I think I just had an epiphany. We may do it again–some place new– next year.

Hide and Seek

Mel raced the wind, which picked up speed every second. He neared his goal, a little stone ruin—the remnants of a spring house—at the far edge of the cornfield. Behind him came shouts of warning, a girl’s scream. He pelted through the doorway, his lungs on fire.

Crouched in the most shadowy corner behind some grayed roof planks, he strained to listen. They could come at any moment. Cornstalks whispered and shushed when brushed against. Someone running would gasp for breath. Coughs. Whispers, should there be more than one pursuer.

But the wind worked against him. It drowned the sounds in a gray roar that matched the amassing clouds. Distant thunder rumbled.

He peeked through a broken window. No one. An ocean of cornstalks whipping in the wind. The sky a sickly green. Scattered droplets of rain turned into a deluge. Thunder rolled and fingers of lightning flashed. He counted the seconds between flash and boom, to estimate distance.

“One… Two…” he whispered.

Boom!

“One…”

BOOM!!

Then roared the sound of a freight train.

He grabbed a loose plank, pulled it toward him, and laid flat down. The sky roiled in angry black and sickly green. The world screamed.

When he awoke, the roofing that had given Mel shelter had fallen and swept everything against the wall. He crawled out on his belly, rusty roofing spikes scratched his back, butt, and thighs. He winced as he emerged, eyes blinking in the light.

One of the ruin walls had fallen in—he thanked the Maker he hadn’t been on that side of the spring house. The sky was blue, cloudless. Birds chirped in the border trees. He stepped back through the doorway. The corn had been swept flat.

“Who’re you?” asked a boy. Mel spun around to see someone who looked very much like himself peeking out from around the corner.

“Mel,” he coughed. “Who’re you?”

“Burt. You new?” the boy continued to eye him warily.

“No. You?”

“No. I lived her all my life.” Burt adjusted his Pirates ballcap and scowled at the sky. Finally he shrugged. “You wanna play hide and seek? We already got a game going.”

“That’s what I was doing,” Mel explained. “These ruins are great, aren’t they?”

“Yeah,” Burt agreed. “Best hiding place in the world.”

They hid there among the ruins, crouched below the window, until a third person—an older girl in a pair of overalls—peeked in and surprised them.

She swatted her hand downward through the window, slapping Bert on the head.

“Found you!” she yelled, then she turned and raced back through the corn.

“Bert’s it! Bert’s it!” she screamed.

The boys started back through the field. The Bert turned, a sly look on his face, and tagged Mel’s shoulder.

“You’re it!” he yelled and tore off between the rows.

Mel gave chase, back over the hill to the little dell with the big chestnut tree—home base. He ran as hard as he could, but the going became harder as he went. He broke into the clearing to find a group of eight kids gathered around the tree.

“Mel’s it! Mel’s it!” Bert yelled as he tagged the tree.

“Who’s Mel?” an older version of Bert asked.

“Him,” Bert pointed Mel’s way.

“Idiot,” said the older boy, slapping Bert in the head.

Poor Burt, Mel thought. The boy rubbed his scalp.

The older boy and the girl who had tagged Bert “it” approached him—not in the happy sprint of kids at play, but in the slow walk of those who had been chastened, or forced home at the end of the day.

“We’re sorry, sir,” the boy began.

“For what?” Mel asked. He coughed again. Paused. His voice sounded lower. Older. 

The two children exchanged nervous glances.

“For Burt… bothering you,” the girl said.

“It was no bother. I’m glad to finally—” Mel waved, then stopped. His hands were wrinkled and liver-spotted.

He looked to the pair. Burt. The others. The tree. Then back at his hand.

“I need to sit.” He sat with his back against the chestnut.

It came to pass, just as Mel suspected it would, that somehow he had been gone over seventy years.

“They still talk about the tornado as if it happened yesterday,” explained Allen, Burt’s older brother.

“It made the state news,” added another pudgy boy with a sheepish expression. “Especially because of the death toll—I mean, all the kids. everyone who died was a kid. My gram says she prays every day for those kids, and thanks heaven she got grounded for kissing Billy Blankenship the night before, or she might’ve been out there too—”

“Billy Blankenship?” Mel paused. “Your gram? Is her name Franny Dormont?”

“It was,” the boy seemed astonished. “But then she got married to Gramps, and now its Platt.”

“Platt, as in Mikey Platt?”

“No, sir. Marcus Platt. His little brother Mikey—my great uncle—died in the storm. He and two brothers who tried to outrun it.”

“—my guess is the boys who tried to run were the Farrelly brothers,” Mel said with a wistful smile. Gary and Greg were only a year apart. Daredevils. The bravest of their gang.

“A couple others were killed where they hid,” said the girl, whose name was Jolene. “The twister came right down the tree line, where all the kids were hiding. They still say the ridge and the spring house are haunted.”

“That’s why I hid there,” said Bert. “They’d never come looking—except for Jo, since she’s fearless.” Bert clearly adored the older girl.

“Funny,” said Mel. “I thought the same thing that day—they’d never come looking over there. Not that it was haunted, though I guess I must be the first ghost you’ve ever met.”

“But you can’t be dead,” Bert argued. “I mean, if you’re dead, we’re all in trouble.” 

“Seeing as how we can see you,” added Allen.

The other kids agreed.

“But what happened to Jeannie Anne? The little girl who was playing with us that day?” Mel asked.

Allen smiled. “She’s my grandma. Bert’s and Jolene’s, too. And she married Billy Blankenship.”

“She did? Why that rascal. I oughtta –” He stopped at the sight of the kids’ expressions.

“He passed on in 1997,” Allen said. “Heart attack.”

“And Jeannie Anne?” Mel asked, a hint of fear in his voice.

Allen smiled. “She’s still living in the same house her parents lived in.”

“Is she really?” He remembered the sounds and smells of that kitchen, especially on Sundays and holidays.

“She is.” Then Bert paused and studied Mel’s face. “You’re great uncle Melvin, aren’t you?”

Mel nodded.

The other children looked very serious. “She talks about you. They never found you. Great Gram — she never got over you.”

“Bert,” hissed Jolene.

“Well, that’s what Gram says,” Bert protested. “Never got over him, and died a year later. Left Gram and Great Grandpa alone in that house.”

Mel stared down at the dirt. A small beetle crawled alongside his foot. A slight shift, and he could crush it.

“So you’re coming home with us,” Jolene declared. “You’re living history. It’ll be a sensation. Our own ‘boy who lived!'”

“What?”

“Nothing,” Allen said. “Jolene spends too much time reading.”

“Oh, reading’s not such a bad thing,” she insisted. Mel agreed.

“But they’ll want to interview you, for sure,” Allen said. “Find out where you’ve been. Maybe even put you on the news. Meet the governor.”

“Or the president!” A little girl who had played with them exclaimed. “I’d love to see the First Lady.”

“And make a movie about you!” said Bert excitedly. “You’ll be famous!”

Mel smiled at the children’s excitement, then shook his head.

“When I left that day,” he said. “I really wanted to hide. I never wanted to be it, and I never wanted to be found.”

“What are you saying?” Jolene asked, not bothering to hide her frown. “You’re not coming home with us?”

“I don’t think it would be wise.” Mel watched the corn sway in the summer breeze. The town lay just over the hill. he wondered what Main Street would look like. If Corner General and the old school yard had changed much. But where would he even begin rebuilding a life that never really was.

“That’s not true,” Jo protested. “Gram would love to see you! You’re her brother!”

The other kids steadfastly agreed that Mel should go home with Allen, Jolene, and Bert, and accept the fame that was coming to him.

“I’ll tell you what,” said Mel. “We’ll make a deal. I want to visit the spring house one more time. Just once, and by myself. If I return, I’ll come home with you. Okay?”

“We’ll come with you,” Bert said quickly, but Mel shook his head.

“This is a game of Hide and Seek for one. Of course, if I come back, we’ll have a lot more time together. But think: everyone who loved me is gone, or has already mourned me and gone on with life. Would it be fair to dredge up the past on them, show up so late in the game? I don’t think so.”

“But we’ll miss you,” said Jolene.

“My dear,” said Mel, “take a lesson from Franny Dormont Platt, and don’t be so free with your heart. It’s easily broken.”

And the kids watched as he stood up, stiffly, and trudged his way toward the corn.

“We’ll wait for you!” called Bert.

Mel looked at the sky.

“Not past sundown. If I’m coming back, you’ll know by then. And if you’re late getting home, there’ll be hell to pay with your folks, I’m sure. Especially if they’re anything like my sister—like my parents.”

He paused once more.

“Besides,” he added, “you play here often, right? Whose to say I won’t be waiting at the spring house? Maybe even my old self—my young self—waiting for a game of Hide and Seek?”

Then he gave them a smile, and vanished between the rows.

The Box (Sick of Moving Variant)

AN: Hello readers: Sorry it’s been a while. The theme of the last three pieces–moving, is the tipoff. This is my last “moving” story for a while. I should be back to my regular writing schedule as of this week.

*****

“Sam!”

Toby eyed the box. Nondescript. Unlabeled, unmarred by packing tape or Sharpie. It wasn’t his. He was pretty certain it wasn’t his husband’s either.

“What?” Sam’s shout came from downstairs. He had been ensconced in the kitchen, unpacking ‘the most vital room in any house, according to Hart family ancestral tradition, thank you very much.’ That ancestral tradition Sam so espoused also meant that socks were folded, not knotted or rolled into an elastic-destroying ball, the windows were washed as part of the weekly cleaning, hyacinths were planted by the front door, and the Christmas tree went up on November twenty-sixth and came down on January seventh, hell or high water.

All this amused Toby, who left the socks in a pile on the bed, killed flowers by looking at them, and hadn’t celebrated his birthday since he was a kid. Christmas? What was Christmas? Well, it hadn’t been much before Sam.

His husband appeared in the doorway.

“Toby, love, we can’t have hot cocoa and snuggle by the fire until I find the hot cocoa. And I can’t find the hot cocoa if I’m standing up here worried because you called for me once then ignored all three of my replies.”

“Is that box yours?” Toby pointed.

“No. I don’t remember packing anything like that at all.” He picked it up. It was neither large nor heavy, about the size of a liquor box, but wasn’t exactly light either. It felt solid, more like a block than a container. He lifted the flap to see its contents.

“Wait!” Toby grabbed Sam’s arm.

“For what?”

“I just…” Toby took the box from him and set it on the bed. “I don’t think we should open it.”

“It’s hardly closed, honey.” Sam moved the flap as if it were a mouth and spoke in a high-pitched voice. “Open me, Toby! Open me!” 

“What if it’s something dangerous?”

Sam laughed. “The sellers probably left it. You think Old Lady Anderson left her portable meth lab behind?”

“Stop.”

Sam pulled Toby in close.

“Crack cocaine?” He said in that same playful tone.

“You’re mean,” Toby chuckled.

“Collection of severed fingers?” Sam whispered. “The murder weapon?” Now he sounded like a bad English butler. “She killed her husband in the bedroom with the mysterious cardboard box? Very good, sir. I’ll notify the guests.”

Still laughing, Toby pulled away. “Fine!” He flipped the flaps open and peered inside.

Sam looked over his shoulder.

“What the…”

“I know,” Toby whispered. Golden light emanated from within. He flipped it shut. The two exchanged glances. Toby leaned in and kissed his husband.

“Hide it,” Sam’s voice had gone hoarse. “We’ve got to protect it. We can’t let it be found.“

“Hide it… hide…” Toby glanced around the room. “Got it.”

The box ended up in the back of the closet, under a stack of spare pillows and comforters. Later that evening, as they watched the fire crackle, the couple discussed what to do with the sunroom, whether or not a sectional would work in the old house, and the success of a clean and organized kitchen. The box never entered the conversation; in truth, both men had forgotten about it completely.

*****

Sam found the box as he cleaned out the guest room closet.

“Toby?” He called out, then stopped. Sat on the bed. Cried again. Toby was everywhere in their house. Sam found it both comforting and stifling. Toby hadn’t believed in much, but after the diagnosis, warned Sam that if he didn’t move on, there would be a haunting until he did.

The box was unmarked, vaguely familiar. Sam flipped the lid up, peered inside, and smiled. 

“Oh,” he said as a gust of wind blew snow into his face. He smelled peppermint. “There you are.” The light inside twinkled. A familiar face beamed up at him. A rainbow scarf flapped as he pulled his hat lower. The figure motioned for Sam to join him.

Sam considered it.

The figure waved him in.

“I’d love to, honey. Really. But you also told me to live.”

The Toby-in-the-box encouraged him to enter.

“I wish I could. But it’s not time, is it?”

Toby-in-the-box offered a familiar look of frustration, then shrugged and turned. Beyond him, seated on a bench, was Old Lady Anderson, clutching her husband’s hand.  Sam cut off the jingle of sleigh bells when he closed the flaps.

“Keep it hidden,” Sam whispered. He put the box back in the closet, then pulled out everything else to pack or sell. 

*****

”Mom!” Kendra called. “Is this yours?”

She opened the flaps on the box that sat in the middle of her room. Inside, the silver and golden glitter and the twinkle of new fallen snow gave her a much needed sense of peace. There was an ice rink full of skaters, laughing racing and yelling and twirling and spinning. A couple held hands, one in a rainbow scarf. As she watched, he held tightly to the arm of his husband. Carolers sang on the bridge, and she smelled the pine.

Of course they are, she thought. How could they not be husbands.

“Is what mine?” her mother appeared in the doorway. Kendra closed the flaps quickly.

“Nothing,” Kendra said. “I didn’t recognize a box at first, but now I do. Sorry.”

Candace surveyed the room. The headboard and desk were scratched and chipped, a precious gift from their congregation. Kendra’s personal belongings filled three boxes taken from the shabby wine and spirits shop down from the charred ruin that had been home.

Whatever was in the box, Kendra would tell her in time. She hugged her daughter.

“You okay?”

Kendra nodded.

“We’ll replace what we can in time. It’s just gonna be tight for a while.” 

Candace felt the wetness of tears against her chest.

“I need to show you,” Kendra said, pulling away and picking the box off the desk.

“You sure?” 

She nodded, and showed her mother the secret.

“You gotta keep it safe,” Candace said, “but that doesn’t mean you shouldn’t look. Not if it gives you peace.”

So Kendra put the box in her closet, and added it to her calendar as a Tuesday night weekly event, so she would always remember to look. The old couple, the husbands, and a thousand other people lived in that box, and when she finally left home, she took it with her.

The Box: Fairy Tale Version

Forget April; October is shaping up to be the cruelest month. I want to play with the contrasts between short story and fairy tale, and I want to try and create more modern fairy tales. Today is a bit of play–a first draft attempt at one. Pretty sure I don’t like it, but hey, if others do, that works. Next week will be the short story version.

*****

Once upon a time there was a box. It was plain and new, and held something important. It waited alone in the upper room of a house on a long sloping street in a bustling city until men arrived and began to fill the room. 

“Oh joy,” the box thought. The men brought more boxes. A bookcase. A box spring. A mattress. And paintings. A desk and a chair.

“There,” said a pungent fellow who stacked the box with the other boxes. “All done.” Then he and the other men trooped away. The door slid shut with a click!

The next day, a couple came in and began to arrange the room. One laid a hand on the box.

“What’s this?” he asked.

The other looked over. “Dunno.” Then came the jiggle of metal and plastic and 

“Ow!” the box wanted to cry, but without a mouth that wasn’t likely to be. 

“What is that?” said the first man.

“I…wow.” said the second.

“Let’s just set this aside,” said the first, “we’ll deal with it later.” And into the closet the box went.

Time passed. Occasionally, one of the men would open the closet door, which creaked. Tip the box back. Lift a flap.

“Hm?” he would say, then put the box back.

More time passed. some days there were happy noises. Other days there were angry ones. The box heard it all, but trapped in the darkness, could never join in.

Until one day when the door was thrown open and everything emptied. The room had been filled with boxes, the bed stood up, the bookcase pulled down, and the desk chair set upside down on the desk. 

“What’s that” said the man, his voice sounded crackly. “Is that… do you remember…”

“I do,” said the second, “and I think we should leave it.”

“Really?” said the first. “I don’t know. Let’s think a little more.” Then along came some men who hauled everything else away.

“They’ve left me,” thought the box until late in the evening, when one of the men snuck the box downstairs, and set it by the heavy front door.

But the next day, when the box awoke, it was back in the bedroom.

“Did you bring this box up?” he called. 

A discussion followed.

The next night, the second man took the box downstairs, all the way out to the car.

But the next day, when the box awoke, it was back in the bedroom again.

An argument followed.

The third evening both men took the box out, each carrying one side.

Alas, the next day, when the box awoke, it was back in the bedroom.

The men stood in the doorway. One glared at the box. The other furrowed his ample brow and shrugged.

“I guess it stays,” the glaring one said. And they left.

The box remained alone until one day, some men arrived carrying boxes and bedsprings…

Behind the Falls

He stepped out from behind the falls, almost directly into the path of a young couple. All three froze: two bucks and a doe, each with matching expressions of surprise.

“Sorry… sir,” Gabi said, sure that of all possible responses, acquiescence and respect were most needed. 

Before her stood a study in tweed: his robust frame was clad in a Norfolk jacket and vest adorned in droplets of clear mountain water. He slapped the matching cap against his knickerbockers. Droplets pattered the leaves of a nearby rhododendron. His high brown leather boots were scuffed. There was a tear in his jacket sleeve.

He wriggled his bushy mustache and furrowed his thick brow, clearly appraising the couple.

Then Will snorted. “Nice threads. Costume party?” 

Gabi slapped his arm.

The man raised an eyebrow. “No less than Helen insisted,” he replied. “Something about Mrs. Cleveland, and then we were off to Wanamaker’s Depot. Anyway, I see you’re off for a swim. I can say with certainty that you’re on the wrong path, and dressed like that, you’ll only find trouble where you’re headed. Best to head back down to the river.”

Will looked confused. “Swim?”

The tweed man matched his expression and motioned a dive. “Swim. To submerge in a sizable body of water…”

“No,” Gabi corrected. “We’re just on a hike.”

“In your swimsuits?”

“These aren’t swimsuits. They’re our regular clothes.”

Will nudged her, trying to indicate that they should go.

“Well, now I’m confused.” The man leaned against a boulder. “Helen said the Wahnetah was a perfect retreat, and while I don’t mind liberal, this might be more liberal than I’m accustomed to.”

“The Wahnetah?” Gabi asked. “What’s the Wahnetah?” 

“‘What’s the…what’s the Wahnetah?’ are you joking?”

The couple shook their heads.

“It’s the hotel. Bottom of the hill. The train pulls almost right up to it.”

Will shook his head. “Ain’t any hotel down there. And there’s no train.”

“You’re talking nonsense, boy.”

Will balled his fists. “I’m not a boy, old man. You white people…” Gabi touched his arm to calm him.  He grumbled and walked away, though not too far.

“I meant no offense. I was referring to your youth. Helen’s people include a number of Abolitionists—”

Now Gabi cut him off. “Look, before you make things worse, do you want us to get you some help?” 

“Well, I’m supposed to meet her for dinner tonight, but I need to… Maybe I hit my head on the way out? I’ll just rest here a moment.” 

Gabi paused at the man’s confused look, the disoriented way in which he gazed at the trees and shrubbery, seemingly no longer sure of himself. He ran a hand over the boulder, then gazed at his fingertips.

“You’re sure?”

“Sure of what?”

“Help,” she said, then pulled out her phone.

“What’s that?” The old man eyed it suspiciously.

“My smartphone…” she pressed a button “… but there’s no signal up here. Damn. Will, honey, do you want to go back down the hill—”

Will was by her side in an instant. “I ain’t leaving you with him.”

“I’ll be fine… Miss? Can I call you Miss, or is that disallowed?”

“Gabi. Call me Gabi.”

“Very good, Gabi. Thank you for your kindness. And Will, my apologies for any offense. I’m Lester Bowen. Of Society Hill.”

He offered a hand. Warily, Will gave it a curt shake. Gabi was more gentle.

“So Mr. Bowen,” she said, “you were behind the falls?”

“Yes, and I suggest that if you know what’s best, you’ll avoid it at all costs.”

Will scoffed. “Avoid it? That’s one of the highlights!”

“More like a singularly unique experience in exhilaration and terror. I was lucky to escape it with my life.”

“I think you bumped your head pretty hard, Mr. Bowen,” Will watched the cascade. They were so close.

“Please, Mr. Will, for her sake…” he nodded to Gabi. “Don’t go in there.”

“You know what, Mr. Bowen? Okay.”

“What?” Gabi gasped. 

“Man says there’s something terrifying inside. I seen all the films I need to know that when you meet a strange person in a strange place telling’ you don’t do a thing, you don’t do it.”

“So that’s that?” She crossed her arms.

“It’s for the best, Miss Gabi.” Bowen rubbed the bark of a trailside oak. He rubbed his fingers together after, feeling the grit of the tree.

“See? He says it’s for the best.” Will winked, almost imperceptibly.  It could have been an eye twitch, but she knew better. “Let’s help him down the hill.”

Gabi acquiesced, and the trio made their way down the mountain. Along the way, they paced a trail closed sign.

“Why’s it closed?” Bowen asked.

“Long story,” Will replied.

“There’ve been a lot of accidents and a bunch of deaths up by the falls over the years,” Gabi added.

“But that’s nonsense. It’s a major attraction. The management could surely do something.”

They reached the lower trail and followed the river to the parking lot.

“See, Mr. Bowen?” Will said. “No train. No hotel.”

“But it was just here this morning! This…this is impossible.”  He began shaking his head. Gabi saw the panic rising and had him sit down on a boulder and rest his head.

He was still murmuring when a jeep jostled into the nearby space.

“Everything alright?” called the driver. He wore mirrored sunglasses. Tufts of white hair peeked out from under his ball cap.

Bowen looked up at the sound of tires on gravel.

“My heavens, what is it?”

“A jeep,” Gabi said.

“A jeep? What’s that? Like an electric vehicle? A runabout? Must be delusional. It’s like none I’ve ever seen.”

The driver smiled at Bowen. “A bit overdressed for the occasion, don’t you think?”

Bowen stood up. “What? On about my wardrobe?” His temper escalated. “Is that all you people think of? Where’s the hotel? Where’s the train? Where’s my wife?!”

The driver threw a questioning glance at Gabi and Will.

“He’s looking for the Washtaw Hotel. Or the Washenaw. Or something like that, sir.” Gabi said.

“The Wahnetah?” The driver looked surprised. “It burned down in 1911.”

Bowen’s pudgy face sagged. The color ran out. “What year is it?”

Before Will or Gabi could stop him, the driver blurted it out.

“No. No, no no.” He turned around. “That’s it. I’m going back.”

“Sir,” the driver called. “That’s posted. You can’t go up there. The trail is closed.”

“Well how do you think I got down here!” he called without turning.

The man looked to the couple. “You all find him up there?”

Gabi and Will nodded.

“You know it’s illegal to go up there.”

Neither of them spoke.

“I’m gonna call this in,” he said. “I suggest you two get in your car and take the date elsewhere.”

“And leave him up there?” Gabi asked.

“Of course,” Will replied. “Dude’s crazy.”

“Dude’s crazy? What was your plan? Bring him down here to traumatize him?”

“I thought he’d snap out of it.”

The jeep driver coughed. “Well, whatever you decide, it’s going to be a matter for the Game Wardens very shortly. You two would be safer somewhere else.” He dialed his phone.

Gabi ran after Bowen.

“Are you? Awww, man!” Will ran after her.

For a man of considerable size, Mr. Bowen had gotten a good head start on the two. They ran as far as they could, shouting for him, then jogged as the route steepened. They were both winded when they found him sitting on a rock, almost exactly where they first met.

“Thank God… we found you…” Gabi gasped.

“I’ve got to go back,” he said.

“Go back?”

“Back inside.” His head tilted, as if trying to see the falls from a different way.

“You know, they were lovely when I first arrived.”

“Who?” Will leaned against a tree and stretched his legs.

“I don’t know. I suppose fair folk, though I never thought they’d be here.”

“This just keeps getting better and better,” Will groused.

“Fair folk? Like fairies?”

Bowen nodded. “Yes. It was pleasant the first few hours, but then I had to run. their decorum is strict, though in many ways far better than what we have here. But they have enemies, and those enemies gave chase.” He pulled at the tear in his coat. “I suppose I’ll be a dead man if I go back. But if it’s been more than a century, as that fellow in the runabout said, then I’m dead already.”

“But you might have family now,” Gabi argued.

“Do you think Helen would still be alive? I don’t. And we never had children of our own.“

The three stood together and listened to the roar and splash of the falls. Presently he stood.

“Well, it’s all been good,” he announced.

“Really?” Will asked.

“No,” said Bowen. “But the two of you? That’s been alright for the most part.” He reached out. This time Will shook his hand in earnest.

“Here,” Bowen said, fishing in his pocket. “It’s my wallet, proof of identification… everything I think you could use to prove that I was real. I won’t need it where I’m going.”

“You’re sure about all this?” Gabi asked.

“Yes, I think so. But I do have one question.”

“What’s that?”

“How are my Quakers doing?”

“Your what?”

“The Philadelphia Quakers. You might know them as the Phillies, though I hope the name didn’t catch on.”

Will laughed. “You’re better off not knowing a thing, Mr. Bowen.”

“Well,” Bowen laughed. “At least that’s still the same.”

Then he wandered behind the falls. Will and Gabi discussed it a little, and when he didn’t come out after five minutes, they followed him. 

A week later, searchers found a bag with three wallets in the hollow of a dying oak. Officially, no sign of the missing couple was ever found.

Roses

After the war, Victor bought a cottage on a postage stamp lot in the dying coal town of Pine Ridge. Through the spring of that year, he tried to keep to himself.

But there was Verna Cringe and a homemade cream cake.

“What brings you to our neighborhood?” She sighed. 

“Oh, the fresh air.” He thanked her for the cake. 

“Your roses are beautiful.” She stopped to sniff one of the yellow roses from a bush he had planted by the walk.

“That’s an English rose.” He stopped short of offering her a bouquet; he suspected she would mistake a gesture of friendship for something more, or worse, that her husband the longtime City Councilman might take offense. “They’re ornamentals. A bit touchy, but I do alright.”

“Are you English then?”

“I’m from Lancaster,” he grinned, and after a beat added “Pennsylvania.”

She laughed and invited him to join the horticulture society. He politely declined, then planted more delicate yellow English roses along the border beds from sidewalk to front porch. 

The next week, Antonia Busco appeared at the door with a large flat of manicotti.

“We don’t see you around town much, Mr. Williams,” she said.

“I’m very private.” 

She handed him the container. “And you’re certainly not old enough for Verna’s circle. My husband hosts poker night every few weeks. Would you care to join? I’ll introduce you?”

Pink floribundas separated the yellow English, creating a soft yet vibrant contrast that would only grow more brilliant over time. Victor was pleased.

Carmine Busco appeared next. He did not bring food. Instead, he shuffled, fidgeting with his hands from pocket to hairy neck scratch to crossed arms and back. Victor just smiled.

“My wife sent me to invite you to poker night.”

“Did she now?”

“Do you play poker?”

Victor shook his head. Carmine sighed and his hands fell comfortably in his pockets.

“Oh-okay.” He turned to go.

“Mr. Busco,” Victor called. “Perhaps we can do each other a favor?”

Carmine resumed fidgeting.

“I have a bush of temperamental tea roses in the back. Yellow, tinged orange on the edges. Quite beautiful things. Why don’t I cut you some as a gift from you to your wife?”

His awkward guest perked up. “Yeah?”

“Yes. And in return, could you… suggest… to our neighbors that although I’m tremendously grateful for the kindness so far, I’ll engage the community when I’m ready to do so.”

Carmine considered the request. “Yeah. Yeah, I think I can do that.”

Victor’s new snowy shrub roses clustered beneath the windows like eavesdropping neighbors. Much to his pleasure, the real neighbors soon stopped using food to coax him out, though not until after they had entreated him to join the Elks Lodge (lasagna), the volunteer firefighters (ladies’ auxiliary homemade filling), the historical society (a terribly dry meatloaf), and the horticulture society again (seven layer dark chocolate cake with ganache and fudge, which tempted him much more sorely than the meatloaf did). 

Meanwhile, ground cover roses crowded around the shrub roses like children at their mothers’ skirts. Along the foundation of his clapboard dwelling, he had erected stiff white trellises, soon hidden by red, pink, and yellow climbers. They hung from the fences as well, obscuring his backyard from watchful eyes. 

“Ow!” Jennie Pringle pulled her hair free from a thorny rambling rose just as Victor opened his door.

“Be careful,” he said. “They like to grab.”

“I see. You haven’t given any thought to pruning them back? You can hardly see off the porch!”

Victor smiled thinly. His eyes narrowed. She held out a plastic grocery bag.

“This is home made deer jerky. We have a farm, so Mark can bag a deer anytime.”

Victor looped a finger through the handles.

“And what club or organization would you like me to join in return?”

Jennie’s mouth moved before she spoke. “No, no no. It’s not like that at all.”

“No?”

“No. Well, I do wonder if I could have a rose or two?”

Victor raised an eyebrow.

Jennie wrung her hands.

“It’s just that… well, I saw how happy Antonia and Carmine have been since he gave her those roses, and I found out from Genevieve who heard from Mathilda at the library who found out from Francie at the general store whose husband Billy manages the diner over near the bypass that Carmine got the roses from you. And it’s hard to be a farmer’s wife, you know? Mark comes in from the field, and he’s tired, and somedays I want to hit him with my rolling pin. But I thought…I thought a rose or two might bring us a little happiness?”

Victor sighed and gave her five of his tea roses. One for her, one for Mark, and one for each of their children.

Then he transformed the backyard into a fracas of bleeding red and buttery yellow, spiraling outward in scratchy greens: waxy or serrated leaves and prickly thorns.The central birdbath and a variety of feeders and houses attracted his favorite eastern bluebirds, orioles, and hummingbirds, though jays and squirrels quarreled over meals as well. 

By the fifth year, he no longer needed the mower. People waved when they saw him, but that was rare. By the tenth year, his roses had formed a wall of color and scent that delighted all who passed. But the food and the visits had ceased. Rose bushes burst through the cracks in his walk. The ramblers and ground covers laced the front of his house in white. The climbers had broken the trellises but now clung to the roof. In the backyard, seeds had sprouted. Only the hummingbirds ceased to visit; Victor could no longer fill their feeders.

“Well, perhaps it’s apropos that a little sweetness has gone,” he said, and trudged up the stairs.

They had promised each other, but Cal had failed. He didn’t survive the war. Victor had taken possession of the ashes, and now they had all been used up, the last to plant a pair of Damask roses, one at each entrance to the house, smack in the middle of the cracked walkways. They would bloom strong and red, with a glorious, powerful fragrance. The neighbors would love them.

The Deepened Brook

Her tongue lolled, her bloodied head perched askew; Rust-colored splotches and streaks stained her muted dress and white apron. A crow landed on her shoulder, plucked one eye free, and flew away with it. Whether by the physics of the bird’s departure or something preternatural, her head rolled, and I found myself staring into that gaping socket. 

“Hey!”

I started. Josiah burst into delighted guffaws and tumbled back on to his bed.

“Let’s go!” He righted himself and laced his hiking boots. By the time I arrived in the kitchen, he had already but a couple sandwiches and apples in his knapsack. I grabbed an orange and ate it as we tramped down to the woods, a dense stretch of red oak and tulip poplar. Josiah had a fondness for Mary’s Run, a brook that burst from the shale at the lower end of the cornfield. We played there often, following the game trail down to the edge of the Okendaigua Sportsman’s Club. 

“Don’t play there,” Dad warned. “It’s a gun club. You could get shot if they mistake you for wildlife.”

So we avoided the Okendaigua, and tried to wear blue, which didn’t occur naturally in our woods. Just to be safe.

We meandered—well, Josiah did, anyway; I didn’t meander, but marched resolutely and with some trepidation—down to a rocky place where the brook picked up speed. We crossed there, and a little further beyond emerged in the clearing where the brook deepened. An occasional fish might find its way this far up, but crayfish, salamanders, toads—they loved the banks here.

Josiah began overturning rocks. Carefully, waiting for the silt to settle, to see swirling cloud of mud or bubbles that might indicate a living think slipping deeper into the earth. This was our place. we searched for little lives there.

“C’mon and help me.”

Not long ago I led the way. I taught him how to turn the rocks slowly, to watch the creek bed. With Dad’s Audubon Guide, we learned to listen for unique chirps—“drink your tea!” said the Eastern Towhee—and watched for killdeer guarding their nests on the rocky ground. A little of me was jealous that he could still play here, so carefree.

The clearing was perfect for filling jugs or buckets. Hers had been left at the base of the tree, the contents tipped, dribbling away. 

It was a tulip poplar. The leaves were the giveaway. Four lobes. Not like maples or oaks, which are also pretty distinctive. But this one was distinctive for another reason. While one half kept growing upward, it seemed to wither above the limb where she hung, as if her death had maimed it.

“Help me, James!”

She watched me. I watched her. A plopping noise followed as Josiah turned over another rock.

The shove caught me off guard and I lost my balance. Cold water filled my show and soaked my sock and jeans. I scrambled out of the water.

“What’s wrong with you?” Josiah whined.

“Nothing,” I replied, looking back to the tree. Was she smiling at me?

He followed my gaze.

“Watcha lookin’ at?”

“Nothing,” I repeated, still transfixed.

“Then help me.” He gave my arm a yank and I spun. For the next hour, I helped him search, always keeping a wary eye on the woman in the tree. Finally Josiah grew bored with his search and led us home. 

I had long been two minds about the woman in the tree. I never wanted to see her again, of course, but I knew that she would haunt my dreams, my memory for the rest of my life. But Josiah loved the woods; I love the woods. If I let her chase me from there, or if I told him the truth of what I saw, something else would be lost. Trust? Innocence? I had no one to tell, so of course I kept it to myself. But my greatest fear was that Josiah would go down there without me, and that somehow the woman might climb down from that tree…

“Well, I’m glad to see you’re paying attention to reality, rather than reading that horror trash and science fiction garbage.”

Dad had tipped my library book toward me so he could see the cover. 

“Where’d you find that? The genealogy section?”

“Local history,” I said, not bothering to look up.

“Good.”

I read the passage of the old book again.

Mary’s Run had been named for Mary Luther, an early 18th century settler who had befriended the local natives. During the French and Indian War, they crossed paths, and she was killed.

That’s all history gave me, but it was enough.

The next time Josiah wanted to play in the woods, I went with him. Mary was there, but she terrified me less. For two hundred fifty years she hung from that tree. And if, in all that time, no one had come to her aid, what could I do with only a dozen years to my lifetime?

“It’s okay,” I whispered. “You can go.”

“Who can go?” Josiah asked. He looked in the tree.

I shrugged.

“You’re weird,” he said. “You act creepy whenever we come down here.”

Josiah never asked me to come to the woods again, and I never went back. Over the years, we’ve gotten more and more distant. Sometimes I think he looks at me like I’m about to break. He leaves his wife and children at home on the rare occasions when he drops by; I think it’s to protect them from me. The fabric of trust that had been frayed a little at a time throughout our childhood seems close to being rent. Maybe it will. Maybe it won’t. But I know where it began.

Delivery

I’ve had this idea in my head for a while, based in part on a news article I read some years ago. It’s a draft of a piece that I would like to put into a collection of northern gothic tales.

*****

As addresses went, Fourteen Seventy-Two Warren Valley Road did not match its appearance. At least not to Brewster. He pictured a boxy two-story on a manicured cul-de-sac. A split level in an aging neighborhood. A fifties rancher under a stand of old maples.

The first crack in his expectations came when he found the numbers peeling from a battered mailbox standing sentinel at the head of a dirt drive. By the time he finished bouncing and jostling his way up the rutty road to a low slung cottage, he had dismissed all preconceptions about his delivery and its recipient, a Miss Delia Grunderson.

Brewster parked the van on the edge of a field that had once been a yard. He adjusted the pin on his vest: “Here’s a bouquet to brighten your day!” it read, and retrieved the flowers from the back. He paused at the passenger side mirror. He checked his nostrils and teeth for anything that could ruin his impression, adjusted his cap to an angle he deemed more jaunty, and started toward the porch. 

A Buick, its yellow faded with age, sat in the freestanding shed, an AM radio gospel preacher shouted the message of the Lord from the shadows at the back of the garage.

“Anybody home?” Brewster called. Only the preacher replied, demanding his flock repent.

The porch ran the length of the cottage. He rang the doorbell. Silence. He opened the wood screen door and knocked, letting the door slam shut.

“In a moment!” came an elderly voice.

Brewster held up the delivery: three dozen red roses in a white ceramic vase, the neck of the tase trimmed with bright red ribbon.

The door creaked open.

“Delivery for Miss Delia Grunderson!” Brewster cheered.

A wrinkled old woman answered the door. She was tiny, with white hair like cotton candy coiffed in a thin Edwardian pompadour. She blinked, uncertain, with vibrant green eyes.

“Oh! For me? Do come in!” She motioned with a claw-like hand—it looked stiff in the knuckles—for Brewster to follow into the front room. He placed the flowers on a faded lace doily that covered the coffee table, as if she had expected them. “I was just pouring tea. Would you like some?”

“I’ve got a few more deliveries,” Brewster began, but the sudden droop in her countenance, the sag of her smile and the wetness of those eyes made him reconsider. “Maybe just a minute or two,” he said, and settled on the ancient sofa. Its damask cushions had little give and the creak it unleashed made him fear for its delicate wooden legs.

“Oh, good. Now wait while I get the tea. Do you like shortbread?”

“Yes, Miss Grunderson.”

“Such a nice young man.” She swept out, quicker than he expected for someone so old.

The furniture came from a bygone age. There was no television, but an old Zenith console radio stood in the corner. Velvet paisley drapes. The doilies, the polished dark woods and the claw-footed chaise the hardware on the double doors that separated him from an adjoining room—they seemed like refugees from an aristocrat’s house museum, an exhibit on wealthy life a century prior. Odd decor for a house in woods, Brewster thought, except the roses unsettled it even further. Every surface—the end tables, the buffet on the far wall, the mantle—had been decorated in dried roses, some still in their white ceramic vases, others clustered in bunches on the mantle. The room may have been frozen in time; but the roses revealed its passage.

“Here it is!” she said, pushing a little server cart laden with thin china pieces and a platter of shortbread. “Home made. And the mint comes from the garden.”

Brewster stood to help but she shooed him away and parked the cart between the sofa and the chair by the radio.

Miss Grunderson nibbled the bread, slurped her tea, and cooed throughout. Brewster started, then accepted these actions to be products of age. 

“May I ask who all the flowers are from?” He set his cup and saucer on the tray.

“Who the—? Oh, yes, they’re from my admirer.” Grunderson hid her mouth behind her cup.

“He must be a wonderful admirer.”

“He is,” she replied. Her tea finished, she fingered her brooch: a rose with red glass petals and silver leaves.

“What’s his name?”

She froze, her index finger still against a petal. He followed her eyes. She was looking out the window toward the garage.

“William,” she finally said. “William Warren.”

“As in the road?” Brewster asked.

“The road is named for him,” she said, then turned on the radio. Gospel hymns crackled from the speakers.

“Really? Oh, speaking of which—there’s a radio on in the garage. Did you leave it on, by chance? Shall I turn it off for you?”

“No!” she jerked as if some invisible thorn had stabbed her finger. “You’re a lovely boy. Please don’t. That’s my husband.”

“I thought you said you had an admirer?”

“My husband. He’s my admirer. But he’s very busy.” She trembled a little. “Well, you’ve been a blessing, Mr.?

“Brewster. Eddie Brewster. But you’re right, Miss Grunderson. I should be going now.”

“Yes, you should.” They stood at once.

“More deliveries—“

“Make their day with a bouquet,” she said, and her smile returned. She reached up, motioning for him to lean down. She pinched his cheek.

“Thank you,” she said, and closed the door swiftly behind him. He heard the lock click and a bolt follow.

Scratching his head beneath his cap, Brewster wandered around to the garage.

“Mr. Warren? William?” He wondered about Miss Grunderson’s behavior. “Sir?”

He stepped into the cool of the garage. The preacher had given way to a stirring rendition of “A Mighty Fortress Is Our God.” Mr. Warren sat in a chair by his workbench, eyes closed, listening to the radio. 

“Mr. Warren, I just wanted to say how nice it is—“ Brewster’s voice trailed off as he finally saw William Warren properly. A car coming up the drive scattered dirt and gravel.

“Oh my—“ Brewster backed away, turned, and saw a police officer emerge from his patrol car.

“Officer! Officer! There’s a corpse in the garage!” Brewster grabbed a hold of the officer’s arm. 

“Easy now, son. You new in town?”

Brewster nodded. 

“You planning to stay?”

He looked at the officer’s name badge. It read Grunderson.

Horror and realization filled Brewster’s face.

“What is this?” he whispered. Another car had pulled up behind his van, effectively blocking him in. The gentleman who appeared wore a black suit and a grave expression.

“Just answer the question, Mr. Brewster. Are you planning to stay?”

“I… I.. what happens if I don’t?”

The officer unlocked his service pistol from its holster. Brewster paled.

“Well, you and I’ll have to go for a walk before you can leave. But you look like a smart boy, so I suspect you’re staying.”

Brewster nodded.

“How come you’re up here? Doesn’t the florist make this delivery herself?”

“She… she had to step out. The order came in with a rush on it. The assistant just put it together and sent me to deliver it.”

“Well, you’ve got to admit, Chief,” said the grave looking man, “Callie can really keep a secret if her assistant didn’t even know.”

“Yeah, and that’s why she called me in a panic when she couldn’t get Brewster here on the phone. So what’s it gonna be, Brewster?”

The screen door clatter drew all three of their attention. Miss Grunderson stood in the doorway.

“I like him, Chief. Can we keep him?”

“Go back inside, Delia.” The grave-looking man went to lead her back in.

The Chief sighed. “People give me a headache. You know that, Brewster?”

“What is all this?” Brewster whispered.

“This is what happens when you grow old alone. Delia’s husband died. Then her sister-in-law died. Then Jones—who own the only funeral home in the area—caught my great aunt in the cemetery with a shovel. more times than you can imagine. So are you staying or going?” He hadn’t taken his hand off his revolver.

“I really like him,” Miss Delia told Jones. “He’s a lovely young man.”

“She likes you, Brewster. It’d be a lot easier on everyone if you just stayed.”

“Can I talk with her?”

Chief Grunderson led Brewster back up the steps.

“You can stay for tea, can’t you?” she asked him. “I have homemade shortbread.”

“Why isn’t she in a hospital?” Brewster asked.

“That’s a long and complicated story,” the Chief said. “Officially it boils down to money and family. She has a lot of one and none left of the other.”

“Aren’t you her family?”

The Chief shook his head. “No more than anybody else. She had two family members: her husband, who we keep in the garage. And her sister-in-law, who occupies the back bedroom.”

Jones huffed. “Make a choice already, Brewster. If you’re gonna be a problem, we can just stuff you and set you up in her parlor. She’d love the company.”

Brewster recoiled. “You’d do that?”

Miss Grunderson smiled and gave the deliveryman a little wave. “I love company. You can visit any time.” She held out her arms as if to embrace the world.

“Yes,” Jones said. “This town would do anything to keep her happy.”

“She must have been important.”

The Chief nodded.

“Then I’ll stay,” Brewster sighed.

Chief Grunderson locked his pistol back in the holster.

“Good choice,” said Jones.

“Wonderful,” added Miss Grunderson. “I’ll pick more mint! And maybe some lemon balm!”

“We’ll need to keep an eye on you,” the Chief said as they returned to their cars. “Don’t go skipping town any time soon. Callie will be watching as well.”

Brewster only half heard the chief. His mind was on something else. “When she dies, will they all be buried?”

The Chief hung his head before looking Brewster in the eye. “Brewster, when she dies, I will personally bear witness to all three cremations.”

Brewster chuckled. The Chief didn’t.

“Thing is, kid, Callie sent me here to rescue you. Don’t get any funny ideas about coming back up here on your own. We hope Delia will go naturally, and soon, but truth is, no one knows when or even if that will be. And you don’t want to experience Delia Grunderson grieving or angry. None of us do ever again.”

“Is that the unofficial reason?”

Chief tapped the hood of his car.

“Just get back to the shop,” he said. “And focus on delivering those flowers. It’s good to make people smile.”

“Old Ghosts” / Practice with Steering the Craft #14

With this posting, my summertime project to apply the lessons from Ursula LeGuin’s Steering the Craft draws to a close. Apropos, I think, as I am also turning toward a new academic year. The calendar is already being booked. Syllabi must be revised. Teaching materials must be retrieved; the digital files have accumulated several months of digital dust. Tropical Storm Henri will make landfall later today and pass near me within the next 24 hours. Signs say change is afoot. 

But before I get to LeGuin’s last assignment, I want to reflect on some of the lessons gained from this summer’s work. It strikes me that her advice is mostly about revision—re-seeing the story as you want the reader to receive it. Yes, there have been plenty of drafting moments, but those drafts purposefully forced me to reexamine how and why I generate text. Less tangent, more emphasis on the protagonist, and more keenly aware of the limits and freedoms that come with different perspectives.

Last spring, an editor colleague of mine read the first 50 pages of my most recent manuscript. Of my protagonist, she said, “Put a camera on his shoulder and a microphone in his head.” LeGuin has helped me understand how the camera and microphone better translate into words. And I’m certainly not done with her text. I’ll probably review it during early draft phase and again between drafting and revision, just so the lessons don’t fade.

To her assignment, then. LeGuin asks the writer to cut the manuscript by half. The exercise is titled “A  Terrible Thing to Do.” Terrible? Yes, but oh, so necessary. And in the case of “Old Ghosts”, by now you must know what I have known for weeks as well: the story has changed so drastically that the title no longer fits and large chunks of text will be going. 

But it’s also no longer about the same idea. I wrote the initial draft years ago while wondering what would happen if a ghost met another ghost, and if the time of their passing might affect what they can know and see and do. But that’s just an idea, with no easy perspective for the telling and no protagonist to connect with.

Then I discovered my characters—and more. I met Clayton Morrow and his wife and child, and several other neighbors to boot. I moved from literal ghosts to science fiction to that much more accessible and terrifying “What if?” we ask in our moments of regret. That I may be stopping off in the Twilight Zone is my own choosing, but it’s not about an idea. It’s about Clay, and the regrets dwelling in his head.

The original draft of “Old Ghosts” that appeared in my very first post in this sequence was 500 words. The draft from last week, incorporating both the sequence of story built around a single action, the room description, and the A/B character dialogue was 4,000 words. So today, for my last post, I’m going to assemble a 2,000 word draft from all those pieces. I won’t post the final version on this site right away, as I will be trying to get it published. But if that doesn’t work out, maybe I’ll post it down the road. If I can get it published, I’ll post the citation for you to go find it.

Next week, I’ll be back to posting other bits of fiction and poetry and other observations that tie LGBTQ writing to the supernatural, the haunted, and science fiction and fantasy. We’ll see if I’ve learned anything…

*****

“Ghosts”

Clay hiked home, tackle box and rod in one hand, five gallon bucket with a pair of large brook trout in the other. The Sunday and Wednesday hikes always looked the same: yard, orchard, woods, then stream in the morning; stream, woods, orchard, yard, in the evenings. His routine only changed when one of his hens stopped laying. Then he ate chicken instead of fish.

His nephew, Dwight, had the tractor in the lower field, tending the garden. Most days, Clay would be out in the sun with his nephew and the farm hands, though his niece-in-law, Annie, always fussed if he stayed in the heat too long.

“Where’s your hat?” She always asked. She didn’t even look up—just kept picking blueberries or snap peas, or filling bushel baskets with peaches.

Clay would doff and wave it before flopping it back on his head. She side-eyed it, treating him like one of her brood. Dwight and Annie’s children worked the farm as well.

“Alright Uncle Clay, but I’m watching you,” Annie always warned. “There’s a cooler of water on the truck. Make sure you use it.” She always parked her pickup near the job, and she always had water or tea or lemonade on hand.

She was at once a comfort and nuisance. “No need to look after me so close,” Clay told her. “Dwight’s getting the farm already.”

More side-eye, and sometimes crossed arms to boot. “It ain’t about that, Uncle Clay.”

No wonder Dwight loved her so.

Before climbing into the woods, he turned back to watch the afternoon sunlight play on the stream. There was his fishing log on the bank, where he camped out two days a week. Over there, the place he had taught Junior to skip stones, then to fish. Junior was never good at skipping stones. Or fishing. But they both loved the sunlight.

Something shushed into the tall grass behind him. Snake, probably, he thought, and turned toward the woods. A bullfrog croaked. Furry things scuttled off the trail, rustling the blanket of leaves. Chipmunks. Squirrels. Birds darted through the trees. A woodpecker hammered a poplar. High in the canopy or under the detritus, life lived just out of view.

Round the next turn, he would see the sugar maple, and the pile of rocks beside. When Junior was a boy, they had cleared the trail of the smaller, looser stones, piling them along the way. They hadn’t tapped the silver maples in years. Maybe Dwight would do it.

Best to pass it all quickly, Clay always thought. He hated rounding the corner. Hated that tree. Hated that pile of rocks. But someone was coming down the trail. Dwight and one of his boys? A couple of the hands? Annie’s boys, sent to check on him? Clay looked up. Rubbed his eyes.

Junior.

But that couldn’t be right.

Junior, still wearing that glossy black snakeskin print jacket and those flatlander, city-slicker silver-toed boots. Half-buzzed head and pierced ears. Clay winced.

“Pop?”

The boy was weighed down by his troubles. 

“Pop, I got to tell you something.”

Clay focused on the path. The trees provided shade, but the sunlight still 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. He set his bucket of trout on the ground to keep from dropping it. 

“Pop?”

Clay sighed.

“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. Grouse had let Clara know that their boys were confirmed bachelors, and wasn’t that dandy? Perhaps they’d open a flowershop on Main, by the diner?

“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 differently.

“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.” He eyed the stones. It would be so easy to grab one of them…just side-arm it at him. But God would know. Clara would, too.

The world went 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.

He looked up. Junior stood in front of him.

“Pop, I got to tell you something.”

“You’re a queer.” 

But that couldn’t be right. That wasn’t what happened was it? He could no longer deny Miss Grouse’s observations and the gossip that conveniently happened within earshot. Clara had come home crying. He pried it out of her. Dirk Markley had given her hell in the grocery store. Said something about Junior squealing like hog in the barn, his own boy Tom caught with his pants down behind. Dirk had intentionally fired his rifle upward; Tom hadn’t been seen since.

“I… yeah.”

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

Silence.

“You let Tom Markley do the same in his daddy’s barn?”

More silence.

Clay appraised his son. The boy hunched, 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. trout water splashed his hip. He tapped his watch.

“I’ll be home in an hour. By the time I get back, you and anything you want should be gone from here. Got it?”

“Pop—“

“Don’t ‘Pop’ me. I don’t have any kids.”

Pain raced up his arm, his vision 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. 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, something four years of watching Junior on high school theatre had proven. 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. “It’ll be alright.”

He staggered, 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.

“Pop, I need to tell you something.”

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

His son had stopped. Clay set down his gear. 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 talk back to folks. Your Ma and I have been waiting for you to tell us so we can defend you properly, however you live your life. You told her yet?”

This wasn’t real. Junior hadn’t told her. He never had the chance, as far as Clay knew. When he came to the hospital in mascara and lipstick like a red light hussy, Clay hadn’t yelled or anything. He just told his boy to go home and clean up properly before his dying Ma saw what he was trying to become.

But now Junior stood here on the trail. 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, and with Dirk Markley thundering around, 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, I 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. 

he saw it again from outside himself. The fishing gear tumbled off. The water sloshed. He hesitated before grabbing a stone. The sugar maple lent its strength. I’m in Hell, he thought. I’ve died and gone to Hell. Preacher Holland would be pleased.

he hurried home, sweating. Not pausing when Annie waved from the orchard. She had planted Clara’s flowerbeds. Mums, begonias, pansies, snapdragons—he’d neglected them. The beds had grown patchy: wild in some places, barren in others. Yes, he would have to tend them better. Annie never said a word, but Clara would have chastised him for neglect.

“You are indeed losing it,” he announced. “Too much nostalgia. Not enough work.” He left the trout bucket on the porch, its contents still swimming in tight circles.

The house was always too quiet. He stood in the living room. 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. Her fresh bouquets routinely presented in the clear glass vase had been replaced once and for all by one of Annie’s artificial arrangements. 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. 

He pictured the stream in the hollow. Light played on the water today. A heron had swooped in, then swept away, gliding over the water. Can of peaches, beets, beans, and tomatoes lined the cellar pantry. Clara loved canning. The trout splashed on the porch. He mourned them, the old days, teaching Junior to skip stones. The three of them inviting the town to pick their own crops. Junior, Dwight, and some of the other kids carrying bushel baskets to the cars. Clara interfering with Preacher Holland so that Clay could take take of the real customers.

“Maybe it was a heart attack,” he mumbled. “Maybe I’m going.” The dancer on the mantle mourned at him with painted black eyes. That night he placed a call to New York. In the darkness of the hollow, the stream burbled along.

*****

2,086 words.

*****

Le Guin, Ursula  K.. Steering the Craft: A Twenty-First-Century Guide to Sailing the Sea of Story (pp. 124). HMH Books. Kindle Edition. 

“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.