The Keepers of Miller's Grove

Miller’s Grove, like many towns, excelled at secrecy and hidden things. It was the kind of place that served two purposes to the outside world: when hipsters would pass through, they would take pictures, stick a sepia-toned or black-and-white filter on it, and post online about how beautiful old towns used to be (a hollow nostalgia for something that was never their own). When someone who stood to make a profit passed through, they’d talk to newspapers all over the state about how the town could thrive again, if— No one ever stopped to talk to the people of the town, not really, and the general assumption was that the residents weren’t considered interesting enough for conversation. And so this is how, even with the occasional stranger passing through what they considered to be the dull opening scenes of The Wizard of Oz, the mysteries of Miller’s Grove were allowed to remain intact.

The locals themselves were guilty of never looking closely at the strange abundances of the town—the particular sheen of the apples in one of the orchard’s trees, the surplus of sunflowers, the one wheat farm that had been out-performing the others for nearly two years, the thriving bee and butterfly populations. People certainly ignored the unintelligible whispers they heard by the train tracks. Even if they had stopped to notice, no one would have suspected the source of all this good fortune. For their part, the neighbors ignored the existence of the five teenage girls responsible, except to occasionally offer some Christian concern about their health and circumstances. The residents of Miller’s Grove never once thought that it was these young women who kept together the very fabric of their town, and if they ever did catch on, then the glory would prove more trouble than it was worth.

*                 *                 *

Sometimes, Madeline Garrison wished she didn’t have such a talent for hiding things. As she stood outside the grand, renovated Colonial, she rolled a sycamore leaf between her fingers, crackling the long-dead piece of tree until it dusted into nothingness that the wind could carry away. Madeline remembered a time when all the leaves of Miller’s Grove looked like this and the wheat and the corn, too, even in the middle of summer, until they figured out a solution to it all. Madeline watched that window, watched, trying to tap into a place in her mind where she might will Camellia Hamilton to come out. But, try as she might, Madeline could never figure out the trick to being seen. She’d never have said this out loud, but she was convinced in the most tucked-away alcoves of her mind that this quality was her most attractive trait to Camellia.

It was then that Madeline saw a blur like sunshine on wheat in the upstairs window. Madeline immediately brushed her hands together, and when that wasn’t enough for the most stubbornly clinging reminders of dead leaf, she scraped her palms against the sides of her jeans. Right now, Camellia would be turning some music on to fill the void of her absence and locking her bedroom door. The routine was always the same, this delicate, meticulous process of keeping things hidden. Once, Camellia’s older sister had tried to open her door while she was out and Camellia had to tell her parents she’d locked the door and fallen asleep. As this failed to convince her parents, they watched her too closely for the next two weeks for Madeline to see her, nonetheless for Camellia to make it out to their place. 

Madeline had spent those two weeks with their friends in their disheveled little shack of a cabin, first reading through nine enormous novels about time travel and romance in the Scottish Highlands, then a collection of random magazines from the library that were about anything—from native Kansan birds to unsolved mysteries that were supposedly true.

Madeline tugged at the bottom of her simple gray blouse just to have something to busy her hands. She watched the downstairs windows, but nobody was in the living room or salon. So, when Camellia opened the window and crawled out of it, edging down the shingled slope to then safely hop onto her front lawn, Madeline knew that they would not be caught. With one cautious glance over her shoulder, Camellia bolted across the silent street to the sturdy sycamore where Madeline was always waiting for her. Camellia didn’t even slow down; she grabbed Madeline’s hand and they were running, first in between houses but eventually along the train tracks that seemed to whisper. It was here that Madeline tugged back on Camellia’s hand to slow her down.

When Camellia turned to face Madeline, Camellia’s cheeks were flushed, her long hair swept into her face as she giggled. “Hi,” she finally said.

“Hello,” Madeline replied. She reached forward, combing Camellia’s hair out of her face. Camellia returned the favor for Madeline’s tight black curls. Finally free, the girls moved toward one another, kissing gently, lingering on the softness of it all. When they pulled apart, they continued along the railroad track hand in hand, walking instead of sprinting like they were trying to outpace the wind.

Madeline continued to watch Camellia as her head hung back and her chest swelled with the deepest inhale. Camellia had total faith in Madeline’s ability to lead her along safely. Camellia’s parents never let her go anywhere without a chaperone, usually her brother or sister, and they always knew where she was. 

Well, almost always.

As Camellia exhaled, she seemed to hum along with the meadowlarks and warblers and chickadees. The short skirt of Camellia’s yellow dress—speckled with pink flowers and definitely not parent-approved—swung along the middle of her thighs as though Camellia were dancing. “God,” Camellia gasped, watching the whole world around her with big, awe-struck eyes. “How can people listen to birds sing and still think that we’re the only ones who can make art?”

Madeline did her best to fight her own laughter; still, when Camellia turned to her, Camellia detached their hands and clicked her tongue.

“I’m serious!” she said, and the warblers sang back to Camellia in response as she seemed to float along, sprite-like, next to the train tracks. “Do you realize they probably pass these songs down for generations, improving them just a little bit, leaving their own little mark along the way?”

Camellia stopped suddenly, tossing herself down against the ground. For a moment, she became a chameleon, the color of her dress and her hair and her barely sun-kissed skin becoming one with the stiff, straw-colored grass. For a moment, Madeline lost her. But it was, of course, temporary—a trick of the eye. Madeline lowered herself to the ground more carefully, her head resting next to her girlfriend’s. They listened, then, to the ebb and flow of the birds’ songs getting tangled up in one another, first gentle and peaceful, then furious, hungry, and then so soft they were nearly silent.

“You’re a wonder,” Madeline finally said. They grinned at one another, and as they kissed and listened to nothing but their breathing and the birds, Madeline felt their heartbeats sync, felt the turning of the Earth below them, the weightlessness of every feather around them, and it felt like they were chanting a spell together—them, the birds, the Earth—like they did with their friends in their secret place. When they parted, Madeline couldn’t help adding a teasing “My little hippie.”

Camellia playfully rolled her eyes before turning her attention back to the blue-gray sky, so big, so empty, so possible and impossible at the same time. “Tell me about school,” she said, her voice sounding more like an echo than an original; that tone meant that Camellia’s mind had returned to her family. She needed a distraction. “How’d that test go?”

Madeline leaned her cheek against Camellia’s so that she felt every movement of her words: “Did well. Scored higher than average.”

Madeline felt Camellia grin. “You want to retake it for a higher score, don’t you?”

“What?” Madeline said, her voice unusually high-pitched. “I know that I can do better. The admissions people should know that, too.”

“Well, either way,” Camellia said, “they’d be downright stupid not to want you. And throw scholarships at you. And give you a free single dorm room that I can secretly move into.”

Madeline smiled, but only just. For all the many birds that she could hear, she didn’t see a single one up in the sky. She knew they must be hiding in the grass all around them. “Bad family day?” she asked.

“Oh yes.”

Madeline took a deep breath, her exhale sharp. “You want to talk about it?”

“No,” Camellia said, but since Madeline was very familiar with Camellia’s tones of voice, she waited. “They had Becca set me up on an arranged date. Again.”

Madeline fought down the first four curses that came to mind, and then the urge to offer to actually curse them with a literal spell. Camellia was a sophomore, Madeline a junior, and Camellia’s older sister, Becca, a senior. But, since Madeline was in all the advanced classes, she shared many of her school hours with Camellia’s sister. Her sister was the kind of person who made fun of the teacher with a cane, who only allowed herself sycophants for friends and who only wore modest pastels. Becca didn’t like that Madeline was smart or the plain way that Madeline dressed, but most of all she couldn’t stand for Madeline’s lack of adoration—that lack of adoration was due to, more than anything, Madeline’s secret insider knowledge of how Camellia’s family treated her.

“Which guy is it this time?” Madeline asked instead, because it was always a guy. Madeline had a theory that Camellia’s family was panicked about her lack of red-blooded American interest in men by age sixteen and this was why they had her brother and sister arrange these dates.

“Trevor Carraway.”

Madeline shot up. When she sat with rigid back and bent knees, she heard nothing but the crows cawing and the slight pumping of blood in her ears. “But last year, Alisa Miller said—”

“I know,” Camellia replied. Her fingers fidgeted together like she was playing a version of “Itsy, Bitsy Spider” where it got caught in a web and couldn’t go anywhere. The light and wonder had completely gone from her face, her lips now pale pink and so tightly wrought that they wrinkled.

“You can’t go,” Madeline said. When Camellia didn’t respond, she pushed. “It’s not safe.” Madeline hadn’t expected her voice to break. What was the point in all of them helping the town to thrive when she couldn’t even keep her girlfriend safe?

“I have to,” Camellia said. Her voice was so small that it was barely audible over the rustling of the dry yellow grass. “You know I do.”

Madeline wanted to argue with her, but they had a similar fight so many times before that she knew how it’d turn out. Camellia got a special pressure from her parents to do whatever it took to make them happy and, as she’d told Madeline, her average grades already made her a failure in the school department. Some days, Camellia had confided in her, her parents’ frowns and lectures and disapproving glares made her feel like they regretted adopting her, and they never dispelled that fear when she brought it up to them, instead insisting that she “do better.” So, even though Camellia was not bi like Madeline and had less than zero interest in boys, she entertained the dates to satisfy her parents’ demands for “normalcy.” Madeline never understood that whole dynamic, not really. Madeline’s mom and dad never pressured her to date, and they tried to get her to take breaks from studying. The worst thing that Madeline and her mother ever fought about was whether or not she’d try on some pink clothes at the store.

A black and blue butterfly flitted past right then, seeming to appear out of nowhere and head toward their hidden place.

“Come on,” Camellia said, forcing herself to stand and then brushing off the back of her dress. “I think that’s Mary’s way of saying that we’re late.” She reached out a hand, helping Madeline to her feet.

Madeline kissed Camellia’s forehead. They walked, hand-in-hand, along the railroad tracks once more. Camellia rested her cheek on Madeline’s shoulder, and Madeline could feel the weight of every little sigh. Though they continued in silence, Madeline’s mind buzzed the entire way, devising spell after spell that might protect Camellia. Even if her girlfriend refused it, Madeline decided she could manage it with Talitha in secret. After all, no one owed Camellia more than Talitha did.

*                 *                 *

The house had grown so silent in the absence of her mother’s signing that Evaleigh Yates could hear the bees for miles. She tugged on the ties at the ends of her two thick dark braids before bounding down the steps, the thundering weight of her boots crashing against each stair until she reached the bottom. Her father came in from the other room, eyebrows raised.

Evaleigh shrugged. “If you didn’t want a horse-girl for a daughter, then you should’ve been more specific with the stork.”

Her father’s blue eyes crinkled with his laughter. Evaleigh couldn’t take credit, though—she’d heard the joke in her mother’s voice among the sunflowers the other day. It was a memory, a haunting, a vision. Those were frequent among the sunflowers.

“Heading out?” her father asked.

“Yeah, if that’s alright,” Evaleigh said as she started to button her green plaid shirt from the bottom up. She stopped about halfway, leaving her tank top exposed. “I was just gonna go for a walk.”

“Be safe?”

Evaleigh laid a hand on his shoulder and kissed him on the cheek. “Always.”

And, with that, she was out the door. The sun was too bright from the south, and Evaleigh had to cup a hand over her eyes against it. She turned right, stopping first at her mother’s old sunflower garden, which had been one of her mother’s conditions for moving out here and letting her father take over his family’s wheat farm. If the sunflowers were in her periphery, Evaleigh would swear that she could see her mother’s figure slipping between the stems—her close-cropped hair against the rich brown of her skin, the humming so vivid that Evaleigh wasn’t convinced that she was imagining things. She reached her hand out under a sunflower, held a breath until she could feel something like a heartbeat inside of it, and, as she exhaled, all of its seeds spit into her palm. She tucked them into the pocket of her jeans for later, for Mary’s butterflies. 

Evaleigh took just a moment to admire the explosion of yellow petals, towering over her, reaching toward the sun. It was almost harvest and Evaleigh knew that this year it would be at least as bountiful as last; she had personally made sure of that. She turned around to pass by the wheat farm on her way out. Things with her father had not always been this easy. He felt a lot of pressure, her mother used to tell her, to provide for them, so he hadn’t played with Evaleigh as much as she would’ve liked. Then, just as her mother got sick, the crops started to fail. It was happening all over town. Some blamed the loss of bees, others the overabundance of rainstorms, and those who listened to public radio pointed to the overall effects of climate change. Whatever the cause, when her mother died among the withering crops and her father had fewer resources to pay off the medical bills, he and Evaleigh could hardly be in the same room without fighting about something or another.

Then her father had started talking about selling the farm. That night, Evaleigh had run outside, kneeled in the dirt of her mother’s languishing sunflowers, and cried the hardest that she had ever cried. The soil soaked with it. Then something—deep, like an instinct—guided her to touch a flower, just one. As Evaleigh breathed, it was as though she was breathing life right into it. Its browning holey petals brightened, the decay falling away and making room for new life. The stalk, which had been soft and bowed in places, seemed filled with the will to stand again, taller than before. Even as Evaleigh thought it all a dream, she repeated this again with each flower. When she woke up in the garden the next morning, new sunflowers had even sprouted around her as she slept. She heard buzzing from the wheat fields; Evaleigh knew this was where she needed to direct her green thumb next, and when she finished a week later, she followed the bees to an old cabin in a bare, unremarkable field. This was how she had met Mary.

Evaleigh had the shortest walk out to the cabin out of any of them and, of course, Camellia and Talitha always had a hell of a time getting out. Evaleigh wondered, sometimes, how they managed it, always thanking whatever stars in the universe that prevented her from being a part of that family. Even having so many siblings sounded daunting. Holding out a single finger after passing the wheat, a fuzzy bumblebee landed on it, humming against her skin and making Evaleigh smile. She continued the whole way to the cabin with her little travel companion. She found herself nostalgic as she watched the sun dip low over the yellowed grass.

It was hard to say who started this little group. Camellia had discovered her talent with her healing apples, which she made exclusively for Talitha to help her cousin manage her illness, but they needed somewhere to hide the apples after they picked them. Madeline had heard of an abandoned little shack not too far from the train tracks, but when she and Camellia arrived, Mary was already there. Madeline kept their place hidden, and Talitha knew how to bottle the essence of their secrets. Evaleigh did know one thing: her talent with plants was the last piece of the puzzle. Magic healing apples were more invisible in an otherwise thriving orchard; a well-fed town didn’t have the willpower to be suspicious, either. And Evaleigh’s talents matched Mary’s so well that their friendship, and their work together, seemed inevitable.

The bee left Evaleigh’s fingertip as she found their hidden little sanctuary. It was a pile of warped and weathered wood in the heart of a flat, plain field and, to outsiders, it looked like even less than that. No one, outside the five of them, had bothered looking deeper.

*                 *                 *

They called Mary Alvarez “The Butterfly Girl.” She would have been surprised if a dozen people in Miller’s Grove knew her real name. When her parents first moved to Miller’s Grove a decade earlier, before either of her brothers were born, Mary had attended the local elementary school. That was when the rumors started. Rumors were like secrets in reverse—un-truths widely shared. No one had bothered to ask Mary herself why she didn’t talk; instead, they guessed that she was too stupid, or that she couldn’t speak English, or that her parents were abusive—none of which were true, in line with the grand tradition of rumors.

One day, when Mary felt herself about to cry, she slipped out of the kindergarten room and out to the playground. The teacher found her an hour later, playing with a yellow butterfly that didn’t seem afraid of her. Mary’s teacher suggested she wasn’t ready for school yet and her parents took care of her education ever since.

Now, Mary sat on the floor of their ramshackle little cabin, her legs folded like a pretzel. Some of the butterflies gathered at her knees, sitting prettily on her white dress, but most of them adorned her hair and flitted around her yellow shawl, their yellow and brown wings finding a kind of camouflage. Mary knew that Evaleigh was on the way when an orange and black Chlosyne gorgone landed on the page of her open book. Mary’s parents did whatever they could to encourage Mary to learn; for years, this had meant finding every etymology book for her that they could manage. Mary’s inclination toward butterflies was rooted more deeply than knowledge, but still she delighted in knowing all their Latin names and their favored flowers as they fluttered around her.

The door opened, and Evaleigh walked in, her smile bright and beaming and peaceful. Mary swore that her best friend was the most well adjusted of any of them. Mary waved.

“Am I the first one here?” Evaleigh asked.

Mary nodded. Evaleigh walked around the one-room shack, placing a hand on each potted plant she passed by, little green shrubby things that had no flowers to attract Mary’s butterflies. The place likely would’ve horrified their parents. When Mary had first started coming here, she’d needed to replace some of the molded wooden planks, and she didn’t do a perfect job of it, leaving gaps here and there. Whoever the former resident had been, they’d left behind their entire life in this place—painted ceramic vases, old wool shawls and throw blankets dyed with different patterns, walking sticks with all sorts of knots in their wood. Once, Mary had even found a taxidermied skunk that she later buried in the woods. When Camellia first found this place, there was only one space on the floor to sit and Mary had been occupying it.

Camellia’s arrival was when Mary first started hearing the bees. Her friends all thought it was another aspect of Mary’s innate talents, but she remained unconvinced. As each member of their group found this place, as they all performed their magics to keep this town alive, Mary heard the buzzing get louder and louder, and her legion of butterflies swelled in numbers, but it wasn’t until Evaleigh showed up, the final piece of their puzzle, that the bees actually seemed to manifest, to be able to do good in the world.

When Evaleigh’s tour of the plants in the room came to its conclusion, she sat on the little woven rug across from Mary, legs crossed in the same way. The orange and black butterfly on Mary’s book did not move. Evaleigh’s face scrunched up as she leaned to her side, reaching into the pocket of her jeans. When she opened her palm, it was overflowing with sunflower seeds. Evaleigh split them between both hands, which she held palms-up in front of her. When Mary leaned forward and fitted her hands under Evaleigh’s, the Chlosyne gorgone lifted itself from the book, flitting between the two girls. The buzzing of the bees became so loud that they would not hear anything else until they were done. The rest of Mary’s butterflies swarmed all around them, creating a protective shield that Mary could see if she squinted hard enough.

Then, one by one, the sunflower seeds began to transform. One would take on a strange iridescence and then, when it almost glowed, it would evaporate. This happened again and again, the movement of the butterfly’s orange wings growing only more urgent with each seed’s disappearance. When the last seed vanished, the Chlosyne gorgone became a blur of orange, darting out of the cabin more quickly than seemed physically possible. The other butterflies calmed, returning to their perches on Mary’s knees and to the dark waves of Mary’s hair.

“Thank you,” Evaleigh said. Her smile after one of these rituals was always some strange blend of relief and disbelief, like at any moment Mary would revoke her part in helping to keep the Yates family farm alive.

Mary simply squeezed Evaleigh’s hand. The fields of Miller’s Grove would continue to prosper.

It was then that Madeline and Camellia walked through the door, bringing with them a tension so strong that the bees were silenced to a barely audible hum.

“Hi, guys,” Evaleigh said. As she got to her feet, she seemed not to notice the shift in the atmosphere of the room at all. “Madeline, I heard you did really well on that test.”

Both Madeline and Camellia spoke at once:

“From who?”

“I knew it.”

The two of them looked at one another, standing side-by-side, and things were easy again for a moment. As Camellia turned to Evaleigh, a frown carved onto Madeline’s face, her eyebrows low and worried. Mary was the only one who seemed to notice. She could sense something in Madeline, too, something that went deeper than the surface expressions of her displeasure. It was like watching a bird fly backwards inside of her—she, who was so good at hiding things, needed to bring something into the open. Mary would offer to help, but she was almost certain that there was only one of them who could. Mary turned her attention back to the conversation.

“Speaking of cousins,” Camellia said, “has anyone seen or heard from mine?”

Mary and Evaleigh shook their heads as Madeline’s eyes wandered toward the door. Mary took this as confirmation that, whatever she needed a secret exposed for, Talitha was the woman for the job. Madeline watched Camellia as she moved around the room, absently searching through the accumulated odds and ends while very actively avoiding any sort of physical or eye contact with Madeline. Evaleigh moved toward one of her shrubs, the power snapping off of her like the morning when she’d first found their place, after she’d first blessed the sunflower garden and wheat fields with life. Evaleigh found a ball of gauzy teal fabric under a hanging shrub and picked it up. When she walked over to Camellia, she finally looked up. Evaleigh draped the fabric—a scarf—around the back of Camellia’s neck, trapping her dark blond hair with it.

“For your collection,” Evaleigh teased. 

Camellia had been doing this for a long while—salvaging vintage pieces buried in this place. Evaleigh grabbed Camellia by the hands, then, swinging her hips and leading her in a momentary, giggly dance. Camellia eventually got into it. Even Madeline, who leaned against the wall with her arms crossed over her chest as she thought deeply, couldn’t help but smile; Mary found herself doing the same. As her friends continued to chatter, Mary held out her left hand. When she breathed deeply, a bee landed on each finger. Mary twitched, one-by-one, from thumb to pinky, sending each bee off to mask the noise that Talitha made as she tried to escape her home. Mary could feel their buzzing in the depths of her ribs.

For the most part, they passed the time until sunset in a comfortable silence. It was dark by the time Talitha walked in. Talitha shrugged off her father’s old army jacket, tossing it onto a pile of junk on the floor. Underneath, she was dressed in a long, frilly blue dress. Her long dark hair, stark against her pale skin, was tied up halfway in a blue bow. Her jaw was set hard, her cheeks tight.

“Well that outfit’s a big ol’ ‘yikes,’” Camellia said before anyone else could even greet her.

“Freaking tell me about it,” Talitha said. 

First, she yanked the ribbon from her hair. Then, without a word, Camellia moved to her cousin’s back, unbuttoning the dress until Talitha could toss it to the floor, where it fell with the shuffling, crumpling sound of some fancy fabric like taffeta. Underneath, Talitha wore a slick black jumpsuit too cold for their unheated cabin, so she picked up the army jacket again and slipped it on. Evaleigh handed Talitha a spare hair tie, which she used for a ponytail.

“Parents being dicks again?” Camellia asked.

“Always,” Talitha said. Her lips seemed suddenly paler, and her stance unsteadied. “They decided I was in no condition for our fake Bible study group. So I had to wait until they went to their stupid church fundraiser.”

Mary stood, walking toward a half-disintegrating wicker chair, clearing her and Madeline’s books from it. She sent one of her yellow butterflies into Talitha’s line of vision and, once she had her attention, motioned toward the seat. Talitha complied, the old wicker creaking under her as she sank into it. She pulled an apple from her pocket, red with a special iridescence to it. As Talitha bit into the apple, the entire cabin seemed to be filled with the heavy crunching sounds of her bites. Camellia watched her cousin eat, a wrinkle deepening just above her nose. Then Camellia looked around the room at each of them, searching. Her gaze lingered on Mary the longest, but when she caught a glimpse of Evaleigh tending to a plant, Camellia touched Evaleigh’s forearm to get her attention.

Camellia whispered something to Evaleigh; Mary only caught the words “orchard” and “help.” Evaleigh whispered back, “Of course.”

“Guys,” Camellia said to the group, “we’re going to go for a quick walk. Check up on things.”

The harvest would be soon. Talitha would need to make the apples from Camellia’s tree last all winter, and into spring, too, even if they could spell the tree into budding early. Mary waved to the pair of them.

“Have fun,” Talitha said, her cheeks beginning to soften and a light pink returning to her lips. Still, she remained seated.

Madeline walked to Camellia, kissing her on the lips before saying, “Be safe. Please.” Those three words were loaded with meaning.

“I love you,” was Camellia’s only reply. Then she and Evaleigh were out the door.

Madeline waited, her head tilted as she listened. It was only when their voices vanished, when nothing but crickets and crunching and flapping filled the void, that Madeline moved toward Talitha. Madeline squatted down, elbows on her knees, and looked Talitha in the eye.

“I need your help,” Madeline said. “Camellia needs your help.”

“Who do I have to kill?” Talitha said, studying her apple’s core as she feigned nonchalance, her voice full of daggers at the same time.

“Becca set her up with Trevor Carraway.”

The revelation made the air feel solid. Mary had no context for what was happening, but the bees’ hum intensified, and the butterflies flapped their wings around her head as though they expected something to eat them alive at any moment. So, while Mary didn’t know exactly what was happening, she trusted the emotion of the room.

“But she can’t.” Talitha was sitting forward in the seat now, the angles of her body harsh. She clenched her apple core so hard that its healing juices seeped down the sides of her hand.

“I know.”

“You don’t understand,” Talitha said, her voice high with panic. The core fell away from her. “The number of secrets I’ve collected that—”

“I know.” Madeline sat back on her haunches. “We need to do something.”

“Like what?” Talitha asked, and suddenly she and Madeline looked up at Mary for an answer. Mary looked at the floor of their cabin first, their sacred hidden place, then up to the ceiling. She thought of all those whispers by the train tracks.

“I’ll try,” Talitha said, sensing the direction of Mary’s idea before Mary had even fully formulated it. “I can’t guarantee anything. I’ve never done it before.”

“I know,” Madeline said. “If I could do it myself, I would.” She rose to her feet, fidgeting with the hem of her blouse. “Hiding things is much easier than revealing them. Believe me, I get it.”

Talitha chewed her lip, taking shallow breaths as she stared down at her feet. “I think I can do it,” Talitha said. She held out her hands, cupped as though she might gather water from a river. “Mary, can I borrow one of your friends?”

Mary nodded. She coaxed the Papilio glaucus from her shoulder to her finger, and then from her finger to the heart of Talitha’s joined hands. The butterfly sat there, contented, its wide yellow wings with black edges unmoving.

“I promise I’ll be gentle,” Talitha said, getting to her feet as smoothly as possible. Starting at the Papilio glaucus, Talitha added to Madeline, “And I’ll try to be back before they are.”

“Don’t rush it,” Madeline said. She swiped a hand over her curly hair. “It’s more important to make sure that it’s done right.”

Talitha nodded. Without another word, she headed slowly for the door; Mary knew she was trying to keep her promise about the butterfly. When the door closed behind her, a shudder shot through Madeline’s body. Mary guided her butterflies with a nod of her head to fly up above them, making their own swirling patterns in the limited sky that they were granted. Mary wrapped an arm around Madeline’s back, resting her cheek on Madeline’s shoulder. She felt Madeline rest her head on Mary’s in return, letting herself rest, letting herself be vulnerable, while no one but the butterflies were watching.

*                 *                 *

Talitha Campbell was not the china doll her family thought she was; in fact, she was most at home like this—as a woman on a mission. Mary’s yellow butterfly had taken off, flying in front of Talitha toward the train tracks. She was sprinting now, away from her friends, away from their hidden place. Night had settled, cold and humid, and Talitha felt like she could drink the stars. She hardly ever ran anymore, hadn’t in years for the most part, but with Camellia’s apple in her system she felt untouchable.

As much as Talitha tried to keep the memories of home locked away, they surfaced like flashes in her mind’s eye: her six older sisters going out to teach Bible classes, to take ballet, to meet up with friends. Talitha had to fight her parents not to be homeschooled. She’d started showing symptoms when she was fourteen—weakness, paleness, dizziness, fainting. They’d taken her to doctor after doctor, but no diagnosis helped.

Talitha pushed her legs harder, chasing the little yellow glow in front of her even as her mouth began to taste of blood. Talitha’s mother and Camellia’s mother were sisters who ruled with iron fists; Camellia’s mother had leaned into secular strictness, where Talitha’s had turned to religion more than ever, their whole family praying over Talitha for her recovery like she was a cracked porcelain doll to be fixed. They didn’t take the time to learn who she was, to learn who she was becoming, and if they knew what she was capable of, they would’ve called in the minister for an exorcism so quickly that Talitha wouldn’t have even had a chance to tell them that she was helping people.

And she was helping people. The butterfly stopped and so did Talitha, collapsing to her knees. She could feel it in the soil—feel them in the soil—the secrets seeping through her clothes, her skin, finding a way into her bloodstream and beyond. It had started small—Talitha would scribble her own secrets on scraps of paper and bury them here, in the soft rich soil next to the rusted train tracks. Then she was keeping Camellia’s secrets, and Madeline’s. And, as though the secrets had taken on a life of their own, people would come to Talitha, asking her to lift the burdens of the unspoken. Talitha took a deep, slow breath to steady herself. Everyone thought they were special, that they were the only ones to come to her. Talitha never told them otherwise. Holding her hands out, Talitha let the yellow and black butterfly float down to her palms like a gossamer strand of spider’s web giving in to the wind. 

There was power here—the power of secrets. Talitha had been collecting secrets for so long, burying them on the town’s edge marked by out-of-use train tracks, letting the people who needed it feel some relief. It was fulfilling work, natural. But what Madeline expected her to do…

Talitha took another breath. The butterfly’s wings stilled as it sat poised, waiting. She felt like this sometimes—frozen where she’d stopped to take a rest, at the mercy of inertia, at the mercy of the pity of others. Breath in—she could hear them, the secrets, talking all at once, whispering, desperate, afraid, so afraid. Breath out—the secrets’ voices wove together slowly, transmuting into one thick thread that Talitha could pluck for her own purposes.

Talitha knew the secrets about Trevor Carraway, and she would not let her cousin bear the burden of such a secret herself. She channeled the power of the secrets, careful to protect their integrity so that there would be no consequences for those who had confided in her. Instead, their hidden power became fuel, energy to convert, and Talitha did convert it. The power of the secrets made the butterfly glow brighter, a brilliant gold in the darkness.

This was a spell for the truth to be known.

When Talitha was done, the butterfly left her. It flew straight up, unevenly at first, weighted by its temporary magical addition. But still it flew, and it took the truth with it, ready to make itself known to the world.

Talitha leaned her head back, watching, imagining the freedom of flight. One of her first secrets was still buried here, the desire to leave this place. It was before she’d met Madeline and Mary and Evaleigh, before their joint services to help the town thrive, but that secret was still buried deep inside. Talitha wondered, as the light of truth finally flew so high that it became one among the stars, how many of their group would leave this place in search of somewhere less suffocating. She wondered, too, if anyone would ever make the connection between the absence of these young women and the town’s sudden and steep deterioration. But, of course, she knew the answer as well as she knew every chirp and rustle of this field: no one ever suspected young women of power.

 

Audrey T. Carroll (she/her) is the author of Queen of Pentacles (Choose the Sword Press, 2016). Her work has been published or is forthcoming in peculiar, Glass Poetry, Vagabond City, So to Speak, and others. She received her BA in Creative Writing from Susquehanna University and her MFA in Creative Writing from the University of Central Arkansas. She is a bisexual and disabled/chronically ill writer who serves as a Diversity & Inclusion Editor for the Journal of Creative Writing Studies.

She can be found at http://audreytcarrollwrites.weebly.com and @AudreyTCarroll on Twitter.

Factotum

My first memory of being inside that house was me awaking to the sounds of two voices.

“I think he's waking up.”

“Yes, he looks to be coming around.”

“Give him a few minutes.”

Before I fully opened my eyes I was lost in the sensorial assault on my body. I was bathed in the coolness of crisp clean linens, feeling the delicacy of sheets covering me, their scent of cleanliness a mixture of laundry detergent and fresh air as if they had been hung out on a clothes line to dry. I could barely distinguish my skin from those sheets, feeling scrubbed and aired out also. Also were the scents of apples blowing in an open window, and other aromas, fresh baled hay and cow manure from a grassy pasture and the sweetness of moisture from a recent downpour. 

Beneath the lightness of the sheets my body felt weighted down, not by any mechanical means, but by the muscles that defined it. They were foreign, those muscles; a change, no matter how subtle, in my physical structure. My fingertips were pressed against the sheet on which I lay, and they too felt foreign. As I opened my eyes completely they were massaged into focusing by a soft hazy white glow. Staring into my face were three other faces; young men of similar age and appearance. 

“How do you feel?” the one with baby blue eyes asked, looking into mine.

“Where am I?” I asked, my throat raspy but not sore. My words sounded different, not unfamiliar, just different, as if I hadn't spoke them for some time and was on the verge of forgetting their simple meanings. The men around me each smiled differently giving me the impression they had each interpreted the question a different way and were trying to compose in their heads a friendly response.

“You're in a safe place,” the one with the gray-blue eyes said. “Are you in any pain?”

I didn't know why I would be. Although other than the opening of my eyelids and my fingers feeling the sheet, I hadn't voluntarily moved any part of my body.  I didn't ache or have the sense that I had been injured in any way. I wriggled my toes slightly beneath the sheet and felt relief that my stillness was not paralysis. In thinking about my body, the entirety of it, I was aware that I was naked and that my skin felt like new clothing; its surface was courser and the hairs on it more numerous. I looked down the length of my body and while it was the same length that I recalled, the terrain was different. I had become mostly a flat plateau from my neck down. 

“I'm not in pain, but I'm thirsty,” I said.

“Of course,” said the one with the gray-blue eyes as he raised a glass straw extending out of a glass of water to my lips. I sipped on the cold water watching the condensation on the outside of the glass turn to drops that slid down over his fingers.  The two men stood silently watching as I drank. When satiated I pushed the straw away from my lips with my tongue.

“Where am I?” I asked again

“An outpost,” the one with the bright baby-blue eyes said.

“Then it's done?” I said.

They both nodded their heads. The one with gray-blue eyes put his hand on my arm compassionately then quickly pulled it off as if he had overstepped his bounds. “You can stay here and rest for a while or you can get up and get dressed,” he said. We put some clothes on the chair that we were told ahead of time would be the right size for you.”

I glanced over at the chair, at the pants, shirt, underclothes on it and a pair of work boots placed on the floor in front of it.  “Give me a few minutes,” I said.

“Certainly,” they said in unison and started to leave the room. “If you need anything we'll be downstairs,” the one with gray-blue eyes said. Then they went out the door closing it behind them.

Staring up at the ceiling for several minutes I was immersed in the thoughts of how smooth it was, without a bubble, crack or imperfection. It was like a field of painted silk that stretched from wall to wall, corner to corner.  I pulled one arm out from under the sheet and reached toward the ceiling, stretching and wiggling my extended fingers noting the stark contrasts between the tan of my arm and the perfect white of the ceiling. Then there on my forearm I saw the small blue tattoo. I pulled it closer to my eyes and read: David.

I sat up and swung my legs around to the side of the hospital bed I had been lying in. For just a moment I felt dizzy and briefly closed my eyes and allowed what felt like sand in my brain to shift into a level plane. When I opened my eyes the room seemed barren, with nothing on the bright white walls except recessed lighting that beamed out diffused light. There were no marks on the wall; clearly nothing had ever been hung on them. The open window was the only thing other than the closed door that broke up the monotony of the room. I pushed aside the sheet that had been covering me and stood up. Looking down the length of my body I saw the changes: no breasts, the addition of male genitals, hair on my legs, subtle changes in my musculature. Naked, I walked to the window and looked out.

Sunlight bathed a bright green lawn that stretched to a two lane road. The lawn, this house I was in, was bordered by a white rail fence. A huge tree heavy with foliage was on the left side of the lawn. On the right side where the fence was open, a gravel road branched off from the road and led up to the house. On the other side of the gravel driveway was a horse paddock where a large palomino stood at the rail around the paddock, its head hanging over it and nibbling on blades of grass longer than the rest of the lawn. A large black crow and several robins were on the lawn hopping about from spot to spot.  On the other side of the road there was a forest, thick and dark. There were no other structures in sight.

I turned and put on the clothes left for me, and other than being aware of the heaviness of the boots, the clothing made me feel no different either. I had gone to sleep on my home planet a woman and awoke a man on this one. They had prepared me well for the change, but I worried that I should feel different at least about who I was, but I didn't. I was now David, the same person with a different name and different body on a different planet. There were no Davids on my planet. There were no men.

I opened the door and went out into the hallway. It was a world apart from the room I had just left or the world I came from. Along both walls heads of wild animals affixed to smooth and shiny wooden plaques were mounted along the walls. Some I was familiar with, like the lion, tiger, deer, moose and buffalo, but others I wasn't, but all stared from their taxidermied heads with black marble eyes. In between the heads were photographs in 8 x 10 mats and frames of hunters on safaris holding an assortment of weapons, most posing with broad smiles with their foot on a dead animal. The photographs ranged from early twentieth century to present day. 

The shift from the sterility of the room to the environment of glorifying ritual slaughter of animals couldn't have been more profound. My heart beat hard against my chest and I became conscious of the thudding sound of my boots on the wood floor as I went to the top of the stairs. As I descended the chairs a cloud of noxious odors hung in the air; stale smoke, sweat and alcohol.  At the bottom of the stairs I entered yet another world.

The room off to the left of the bottom of the stairs was a combination living room and junkyard. Along the walls in stacks as tall as I was stood everything from empty beer bottles to used auto parts. Paintings in cheap frames on black velvet of nude women were hung above the junk piles. In the center of the room five battered, worn overstuffed chairs faced the only wall not covered by a painting.  The two men who had been with me when I awoke were each seated in a chair looking at a large flat screen television. Image after image of war scenes with dead bodies, ruined cities and blasting armaments of all kinds flashed into view then out. There was no sound, just the images. The two men turned to me as I entered the room.

“Did you find your name?” the one with gray-blue eyes asked me.

“Yes. I'm David,” I said.

“I'm Nick,” he said holding out his arm for me to see his tattoo.

“I'm Jake,” the other one said. 

“What is this place?” I said sweeping my hand about the room and up the stairs.

“It's a place of men,” Nick said.

“Not of all men,” I said. “It can't be.”

“That's true, but it is representative of the men they want us to be,” Jake said. “It's part of our training.”

*              *              *

In late evening as the sun began to set behind the forest on the other side of the road the shadows behind the house grew longer and darker. I walked among fallen apples from trees whose branches were thick and weighed down with them. The aroma of apples, rotting and fresh, perfumed the air. Nick and I had placed the palomino in the stable for the night and gave it fresh hay and water before locking the stable and walking out into the cow pasture. There were no cows in sight but the fresh piles of manure that spotted the grass we were walking through was clear indication they had been there recently.  A flock of wild turkeys noisily made their way along the edge of the pasture bordered by another forest. Nick carried a rifle, its long barrel resting on his shoulder, the butt in the palm of his hand. He looked like one of the pictures of the soldiers in the photos in the upstairs hallway, only with jeans and a flannel shirt instead of a uniform.

“This isn't what I was expecting,” I said.

He put his finger to his lips and looked about nervously. “Not so loud, they have listening devices everywhere, even in the ground.”

“So what if they do?” I said just a little quieter. “It's not as if they're going to send me back home. Men, especially the version of it that they want us to be, wouldn't fit in on our planet.”

“You saw the same videos before you volunteered that we all did,” Nick said.

“Those were about how they wanted to change our bodies so that we would fit into this world's image of men, not that they wanted to change our personalities.”

“You can't change one without changing the other,” he said taking the rifle from his shoulder and aiming it at the turkeys but not shooting. 

“Maybe, maybe not,” I said. “But how do we affect any change on this planet if we're engineered to be the same as everyone already here? We were all told we were to be pioneers in the mental evolution of man as a species, not become caricatures extolling the worst traits of the human male species,” I said, my voice rising.

“Don't you get it?” he said. “Our planet intends to see to it that the society of mankind doesn't advance beyond where it is at present.”

“You know that and you don't fight against it?” I said. 

“Hush,” he said looking around nervously again. “I only have two days more here at this outpost before I go out among them and I don't want any trouble.”

“Nick,” I said, “there are thousands of outposts just like this one all over this planet and have been for many generations. Each outpost has those like us who became men to unknowingly perpetrate a lie about what it means to be a male. Doesn't that disturb you at all?”

“Not as much as being vaporized for treason,” he said, turning and walking back to the house.

*              *              *

In the middle of the night I was wide awake trying not to look at the walls of my bedroom covered in pornographic photographs. Staring up at the ceiling I was feeling hopeless about my future and despondent about having made the choice to commit to an irreversible mission to come to this planet. Through the open window of my bedroom a steady breeze carried in the scent of farmland. It was being awake that saved me most likely. 

As the ship from my planet landed on the lawn in front of the house I jumped up from the bed and hurriedly slipped on my clothes and shoes and went to the window and watched as several females walked down the ramp from the ship toward the front door of the house. As they weren't bringing a new male to transition with us here at this outpost I surmised that only one thing would require such a visit, me. We had been overheard after all. I opened my bedroom door and ran down the hall, down the stairs, and out the back door into the forest beyond the pasture and hid among the trees, watching.  

Even from that distance I could hear voices within the house, but not what was being said. When two flashes of light went off like quickly exploding light bulbs I knew Nick and Jake had been vaporized. I had been overheard after all. My home planet couldn't risk the threat of contagion spreading from me to them. I wanted to weep, not just for what had happened to the two men, but in realizing that while we had  been given new bodies, we weren't acceptable as men unless we adhered to preconceived ideas of what men were on the inside as well as outside. We had been brought to this planet to maintain a status quo not to change it. From the forest I watched as the machines flew out of the ship and burnt or vaporized everything growing on or standing around the house, then scraped the earth clean, removing any sign that other than the house, no one had ever been there. Then the ships flew off into the night sky.

I haven't traveled far from the house which they left standing for reasons that I can't completely fathom. The sheen from the window glass hasn't dulled. The scars left behind by the machines that scraped away the lawns and gardens that once surrounded the house are dug deep in the earth like bloodless cat scratches.  Dead leaves and other flora debris are piled on the porch, carried there by the wind. Now, in its second summer of isolation, it is neither landmark or signpost.  But as I drive by it and see it there never aging, its white paint not altered by the seasons, I worry that it has been abandoned only for a short while. 

 

Steve Carr (he/him), who lives in Richmond, Virginia, has had over 370 short stories published internationally in print and online magazines, literary journals, reviews and anthologies since June, 2016. He has had six collections of his short stories, Sand, RainHeatThe Tales of Talker Knock and 50 Short Stories: The Very Best of Steve Carr, and LGBTQ: 33 Stories, published. His paranormal/horror novel Redbird was released in November, 2019. His plays have been produced in several states in the U.S. He has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize twice.

His Twitter is https://twitter.com/carrsteven960 His website is https://www.stevecarr960.com/
He is on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/steven.carr.35977

Stars Like Teeth in Summer's Dark Maw

Tristan’s been sweating. He wipes the droplets from his forehead, now clammy in the relative cool of late twilight, and the salt falls into his eyes, stinging and greasy. Tristan’s skin is riddled with mosquito bites, sunburned on the back of his neck. His t-shirt has yellow stains in the armpits and a big wet patch on the back where his pack’s been resting all through the long, sticky, humid day. Not much luck hitching; this county’s half-past the middle of nowhere. Tristan’s been trudging for miles. He has seen fields and pine woods and farms with threatening signs posted over their front gates. He has seen deer by the roadside, and vultures congregating to peck at a dead armadillo, and, once, an owl swooping low among skinny, needled branches. He has seen all kinds of trucks roar past him without stopping, all manner of ancient, rustbucket cars.

Tristan is uncomfortable, and Tristan is lonely, but there is a happiness in him too. It’s a joy to be on the road, untethered to anything, seeing new pieces of the world every morning and every night. He sighs as he lets his legs fold beneath him at last, dumping him on his ass on the soft grass beside his pack and bedroll. He lowers himself so he’s lying down in this safe place he’s found.  A deep, verdant quarry with a shallow blue lake at the bottom, a lake and wildflowers and a gnarled tree to watch over him. He looks up through the tree’s twisted limbs and matrices of leaf, and he sees the stars above him. They seem to go on forever. The moon is a sharp sliver of fingernail amidst their thousands— millions, billions— of tiny fires, flickering through the oxygen of Earth’s atmosphere. They are so bright and distinct and densely packed into the Florida night sky that Tristan can almost convince himself he’s moving towards them and through them, falling upwards. 

Tristan smiles. He listens to the night sounds of the quarry as he stargazes; Tristan’s got good ears. He can hear the rustling of small creatures in the underbrush, the myriad humming and whirring calls of insects. He hears a quiet splashing sound coming from the lake, maybe a fish jumping or a dead, dry branch falling into the water. He even hears the faint, distant drone of an occasional truck making its way down the rural road. 

Tristan does not hear the sound of footsteps approaching, and he does not hear the skitteringof pebbles that fall when a person makes their way down the rough-hewn path in the quarry’s steep side. He doesn’t hear breathing, or fidgeting, or the slap of a hand trying to crush a mosquito too late to stop it sucking blood. Maybe there are no such sounds for Tristan to hear.

Whatever the case may be, the stranger’s voice takes him entirely by surprise. 

“It looks like you could reach out and touch them, doesn’t it? The stars, of course.”

Tristan makes a sound that’s half shout, half gasp, with a kind of gargling undertone. It’s not intimidating; it just sounds like he’s about to be sick. He pulls himself into a crouch and whirls around, frantically scanning the dim quarry floor behind him for the source of the words. He was sure he was alone, and he had been sure he would remain alone all night long. Remembering the path down the rocky cliff, maybe that was a mistake. People must have made the path; people come down here. 

There’s a dark shape standing several feet from Tristan. It’s a woman, he thinks, or maybe a short man, or a boy. It has two legs, two arms, and a head. Short, straight hair. It seems to be wearing tight pants and a loose, baggy jacket. (Who wears a jacket in Florida in summer, even at night?) 

The figure’s face is entirely in shadow. Tristan can’t shake the unnerving impression that there’s nothing at all in the space between the hair and the collar of the jacket, that the area where the figure’s head should be is filled with an oily, inky void. No features for any light to bounce off. 

“Hello?” calls Tristan, straightening up, trying to sound calm. “Hello? Who is it?” His voice rasps from dehydration and disuse.

“A traveler,” says the voice. “Like you.” It is smooth and androgynous, with a faint lilt of unplaceable foreign accent. 

Tristan manages to keep from stepping backwards as the figure moves closer to him. 

“You didn’t answer my question,” he says. He means to continue along these lines, but then the figure comes into view. It’s almost like the shadow covering its face was a heavy curtain, and some invisible pulley has now drawn the curtain away. The face seems spotlit, luminous. But of course, Tristan thinks, it’s only a trick of perspective. It must be. Nothing has really changed— even standing in the dark, the figure must have had this same beautiful, pale face.

The other boy (and Tristan can see that he is another boy now, with fine stubble on his chin) is eighteen or twenty, about Tristan’s age.  He smiles hesitantly, revealing gapped front teeth, and extends a small but long-fingered hand. Feeling very large and bulky compared to the stranger— a feeling that both reassures him and makes him a little self-conscious— Tristan takes the hand and shakes it. 

“I’m Tristan,” he says. The stranger’s smile grows wider, but he says nothing. The stranger stands in front of Tristan, so close that Tristan can see the slight flare of his nostrils when he breathes, and he looks Tristan directly in the eye, and he smiles.

The stranger’s eyes are a very light gray, almost silver. 

After a few long seconds of this, Tristan continues, rather brusquely: “Well? You aren’t oing to tell me your name?”

The stranger puts his hands in the pockets of his baggy jacket. He shuffles his feet in the grass; when Tristan looks down at the rustling sound he notices, with surprise, that the stranger is barefoot. His toes, like his fingers, are very long, with somewhat overgrown nails. “What’s in a name?” asks the stranger.

Tristan snorts. “Not a whole lot,” he says. “Mine means ‘sad’, and it’s the name of some romantic hero from, like, an old play. Not what I’d’ve picked if it was up to me. But I’ve got to call you something, so don’t be cute.”

As though this boy could be anything but cute. Tristan feels the back of his neck grow hot; he tries to convince himself it’s just the sunburn.

“You can call me…hmm.” The boy clicks his tongue against the roof of his mouth and rolls his eyes towards the stars. “How about Arcturus?” 

“Like the star,” Tristan says, shaking his head. A smile creeps across his own cheeks. “You are something else, man. You an astronomy nerd?” He looks again at the boy’s bare feet, somehow unscathed despite the rocks and nettles and small, sharp twigs he must have had to step through to get to the bottom of the quarry. He looks at the boy’s silver eyes, gazing upwards, rapt or vacant. A terrible thought occurs to him. “Or are you one of those sci-fi people? One of those New Age types who’s all into aliens?” He tries, and fails, to make the question sound flippant, teasing.

Arcturus looks down. “All of the above, I think,” he says, straightfaced, and Tristan has no idea how to reply, so he spreads out his stuff and he asks Arcturus if he wants to sit for a minute or what.

“I don’t know about you, but my legs are sore as fuck,” Tristan says, uncapping his thermos with a squeak. He holds it out to Arcturus, who kneels hesitantly to take it. “I don’t have any food, but I got a little water, at least. Guests first.”

Arcturus grasps the thermos and lifts it to his mouth as though he’s never used such a device before and is afraid he’ll mess up. He takes a polite sip, swallows audibly, and returns the thermos to Tristan, who downs most of the rest of his water in one long gulp.

“Aaah.” Tristan leans back, looks into the salt crystal road of the Milky Way. “That’s the stuff. I don’t drink anything but good, clean water,” he tells Arcturus.

“Isn’t that unusual for a person your age?” asks Arcturus. Then, perhaps seeing Tristan begin to bristle, he adds, “Although I suppose it’s better for your body.”

“Body, nothing. Better for my mind, more like.” Something flickers in the corner of Tristan’s peripheral vision, a phosphorescent flare. He turns quickly, but it’s only Arcturus, sitting beside Tristan on the sleeping bag with his chin on his knees, his hands tucked under his ass. It’s a weird, childish position. Tristan can’t help but flash back to June sitting the same way, long ago, her eyes gray, too, but dark and threatening to overflow with sloppy, drunk tears. “I mean, it’s good for my body. That just isn’t the reason…”

Arcturus blinks at Tristan like he expects some follow-up, but Tristan’s not going to give him any. “So, why Arcturus, huh? Why not Pollux, or Polaris, or…or, I dunno, you could’ve picked a planet, right? Like Neptune. I had a cat named Neptune as a kid. God of the sea.”

“Your cat is the God of the sea?”

“No, Neptune. You know, that’s where the name comes from.”

“Planets. That’s true. I could have chosen…” he makes a tongue-clicking sound again, followed by a wet cough. 

“Bless you,” says Tristan. Arcturus laughs. It’s a sparkling noise. Tristan almost thinks he can see the laugh, shimmering out from the gap between Arcturus’s teeth like a swarm of minute fireflies. He blinks rapidly and rubs at his eyes. It’s been a really long day. A long year. A long life, even though it hasn’t hit the two-decade mark yet. He’s just tired. That’s all it is.

“You misunderstand,” Arcturus says. “That’s the name of a planet.”

“In what language? Klingon?” Tristan shifts uncomfortably. The sleeping bag makes a swishing noise underneath him. The insect hum all around the quarry seems to rise in volume and urgency.

“In my language. That’s the name of the planet I come from originally.” Arcturus is calm and matter-of-fact. “Although I can’t say it properly when I’m inside this body. Arcturus is your name for my planet’s star, I believe. That’s why I chose it.”

Tristan grits his teeth and tries not to think of June, about her episodes of excited, rapid-fire rambling or dreamy, whisky-sodden whispers: Tristan, my son, sad-eyed son, my body is lying on the sofa but my soul is off flying through space. I’m approaching Europa now, with its ice-encrusted oceans. Six-finned ghost whales call across its barren surface to their living cousins in the deep, and I am a ghost, too, Tristan. Trapped outside the moon with those alien behemoths. The traveling part of me is tethered to my skull with a silver cord for as long as I’m alive. As long as I’m alive, Tristan, I’ll always come back. I can’t help but come back.

Tristan has learned that it’s best to play along with crazy people’s delusions, but he hasn’t been comfortable doing that since his mother died. Instead, he tries to gently guide Arcturus back to reality. “Consensus reality,” June would’ve said with a snort. “Bleak mundanity, Tristan.”

“You’re not an alien, Arcturus. I mean, I can see you sitting there. You’re a boy, like me. A human being.”

Arcturus blinks rapidly, a flutter of silver Morse code. “No.”

“Listen, I feel different from other people, too. I feel that all the time.” A surge of mingled jealousy and attraction courses through Tristan, looking at Arcturus’s lithe, angular form. Tristan is a fat, lumbering giant, his long hair— tied back in a ponytail— ridiculous. He is ashamed of his desire. Tristan remembers middle school, when the popular term of derision for everything uncool was “gay.”  Poetry was gay. Astronomy was gay. Tristan’s hair was gay. His threadbare tie-dyed sweatshirts were gay. His nutty mother with her psychedelic-painted Corolla was gay, never mind her son and her rotating cast of sketchy boyfriends. Tristan shakes his head, getting the memories out. All that was a long time ago.

“I mean,” he continues, “ I can see that you really are different.. But pretending it’s because you’re from outer space is only going to hurt you in the long run, believe me. What’s real is this. Here. Earth.” Tristan points to Arcturus, to himself, to the grass and the lake and the rock walls towering above them.

“And that?” asks Arcturus, pointing up at the stars.

“Also real. But we’re never going to get to go there.”

“No.” Arcturus is smiling again. “I’ve been there, and I will return. And a part of you will be with me, maybe.” He leans in close and softly caresses Tristan’s cheek, then withdraws before Tristan can decide how to respond. 

Tristan wonders if it’s morally wrong to make out with an insane person. He examines Arcturus, who is, in turn, examining a hole in the top layer of Tristan’s sleeping bag. Fluff is poking out through the hole like the bud of a tooth rising from red gum. 

Arcturus is clean, Tristan realizes for the first time. He’s really clean, all over. His hair is glossy. He smells of flowers and soap. His clothes look high-quality, not Wal-Mart stuff. He must be local, Tristan decides. His family must live nearby, or someone appointed to take care of him at home. He’s too shiny and perfect to be a fellow vagabond, and if he’d somehow escaped from a hospital, he’d be wearing, like, pajamas or sweats. He definitely wouldn’t have a belt. Tristan thinks he can see the leather slung around Arcturus’s hips when he bends over to pull more fluff out of the tear. 

“Hey,” Tristan says, putting his hand tentatively on Arcturus’s shoulder. “Are you all right?”

Arcturus nods without looking at him.

“So, what’s Florida weather like in winter? You live around here, yeah?”

“For too long. Too long. I haven’t found a suitable essence to incorporate into my psyche.” Arcturus peels himself away from the leak in the sleeping bag, sighs, and leans into Tristan. Tristan rubs his new friend’s skinny bicep, not quite believing his own daring. 

“Florida’s nice enough in winter,” says Arcturus. “Not so cold as other places. Fewer mosquitoes. You wouldn’t sweat so much.”

“Well, sorry,” says Tristan. “I can’t exactly take a shower out here.”

“It’s all right.” Arcturus seems oblivious to sarcasm. “I appreciate the smell.” 

Tristan squeezes him in a brief side-hug. They both watch the stars in silence for a moment, and Tristan manages to find the one he’s almost positive is the real Arcturus, shining very faintly orange.

“I should get to ask you a question,” remarks Arcturus-the-boy, who shines white as the sleeping bag’s polyfill guts. “Since I answered one.”

“Sure. Shoot.”

“What happened to your cat, Neptune?”

“…Oh. Her.” Tristan attempts a chuckle, but he’s trying not to remember. Again. “Well. My mom accidentally backed over her with the car one night. She was probably drunk, or stoned. Crushed Neptune’s poor skull, and that was the end of that.”

“How sad.” Arcturus sounds like he means it. “And you couldn’t save any part of her at all?”

“What, like her tail or something? Like taxidermy? Fuck no. I’m not a ghoul.”

“I mean her essence. Her…mind? Spirit? To eat and absorb.”

June would have loved this guy. “You’re fucking bizarre, you know that?”

“Yes.” Arcturus snuggles into Tristan more aggressively. One of his hands wraps around Tristan’s back and tugs on Tristan’s ponytail. His silver eyes are so close, Tristan can see shards of moon and stars reflected in their dilated pupils.

“Arcturus…”

“Tristan. Can I kiss you?”

Tristan says yes before he can think about it, before he can remember that this is another boy, that this is probably a mentally ill boy, that he has never kissed anyone in his life. He wants Arcturus to kiss him, yes, so much, and Arcturus does.

Kissing is wetter and more muscular than Tristan had imagined. Arcturus seems to be probing around the inside of his mouth with a tentacle, a deep-sea creature’s feeler, and Tristan almost gags before he gets the hang of things. After that, it is like floating away on a sea of warm spit. It is like falling through a field of stars. 

After a short infinity, Arcturus pulls away. Tristan leans towards him again.

“Wait.” Arcturus puts a hand on Tristan’s belly. A small furrow appears between his eyebrows. “Tristan. I need to show you something.” 

Without waiting for a response, Arcturus unzips his jacket and casts it aside. He isn’t wearing a shirt underneath, and Tristan, nervous and excited to the point of physical discomfort, is about to make a bad joke about Arcturus’s inability to enter convenience stores when he registers what his eyes are seeing.

First, the two thin, pink lateral scars underneath Arcturus’s nipples, traveling back to somewhere below his armpits.

That must be why he feels like an alien, Tristan thinks, sympathy springing up anew. He remembers what Arcturus told him earlier, about not being able to do certain things “inside this body.” It makes more sense now.

But that sense is fleeting, because the second thing Tristan notices turns everything else about the night upside-down and backwards. 

It starts as almost nothing, just a scar, or a series of scars, on Arcturus’s breastbone. Three small, raised nodules of tissue. They have a crinkly texture, like burn marks. 

Something is spreading from those scars, though. Dark, vine-like plant matter sends up shoots from those three burned places and, finding the air nourishing, grows and spreads like a time-lapse movie of kudzu. It is the yellow-purple-black of bruises and storm clouds. It is as thick as a rope, sinewy and dripping. It blooms from the scars and twists down and around Arcturus’s chest, down and around both his arms. 

Tristan cannot accept what he’s seeing. He cannot deny what he’s seeing.. Small sparks, or chromatophores, or tiny fireflies twinkle from within the damp, dark, writhing mass of vines. 

“Arcturus,” Tristan says, his mouth suddenly dry. Has this boy, this creature sucked up all his spit?

“I told you,” says Arcturus. His face, his voice, are still the same. “Now, Tristan. You have to make a choice.”

“W-what?”

“I won’t do this to you against your will, Tristan. But— please. Your essence is so sweet. This body hasn’t allowed me to travel much upon Earth, but you have by far the most complex soul I’ve ever tasted around here. The most sharp and poignant. Let me take more of it, and I’ll have fulfilled my mission and renewed my energy; I’ll be able to move on. You and I both will. A bit of you will see the stars with me, through my eyes.” He smiles dreamily. “All my myriad eyes. The real ones.”

“Y-you want to eat me?”

“No! No! You won’t die. Goodness. You won’t even lose much. A…a fragment of you will become part of me, and part of me forever, but almost all of you will continue just as before. It does not hurt.”

“Says you!” Tristan is trying to maintain his fear, his anger, his disgust. He knows these are the only rational responses to this impossible thing that’s happening, to the predatory monster before him. A wreath of ichor-dripping filaments frames Arcturus’s head like it’s an egg in a rotting bird’s nest. There is no way for Tristan to process what he’s seeing except through metaphor and simile, and nothing he can think up truly suffices. The word “monster,”he remembers June telling him once, originally meant a portent. An omen to warn, or a herald to show the way. June was crazy, there’s no doubt, but she wasn’t wrong about everything. Tristan’s heart swells and he fights the urge to reach out towards Arcturus again, to touch his alien coils. June did have some insight into the way the universe really is after all. 

“Please,” says Arcturus, plaintive and gentle. “I’ve waited for such a long time. This body is almost used up, and I do not feel at home here.”

Tristan looks back on his life. He thinks of days, weeks, months on the road, of his mother’s grave back in Pennsylvania, of the run-down house she left to him, where he cannot stand to live. He thinks of his friendlessness. No one has ever kissed him before. Hardly anyone has ever even touched him in kindness, apart from June. June is gone. Arcturus is here. And Arcturus claims that this won’t hurt Tristan, or kill him. Tristan has no reason to trust the other boy, but he does. He does.

Cicadas whirr. Somewhere far away, a lone coyote howls. Tristan slaps at a mosquito, suddenly aware once more of the bites speckling his arms.

“All right,” he says, and his voice shakes only a little. “Yes, Arcturus. Come here.” He opens his arms, not sure this is how the process works but trusting his intuition. 

Arcturus comes to Tristan, leaving a trail of black stickiness on the sleeping bag. There’s a burned-sugar smell rising off him, drowning out the soap and flowers. His tendrils, vines, tentacles, whatever, wrap around Tristan’s body, and around him again. Again. Tristan feels a series of sharp, burning stings across his flesh from neck to groin, like a thousand bees piercing him and injecting their venom all at once. He almost screams, but as quickly as the pain appeared, it vanishes, leaving behind a cool, soothing numbness. His skin is prickling with something not unpleasant, a sleep sensation.       Arcturus brings his face close to Tristan’s, lips parted for a kiss, and Tristan puts his own lips upon them.

Something that is not a tongue twines its way into Tristan’s mouth, and up. The stinging returns to fill his sinuses, followed by the cool numbness, but Tristan thinks he can still sense small, glowing threads infiltrating his eyes, his skull, the gray crevices of his brain, growing into him and over him. Arcturus moans a little. Tristan cannot see, cannot breathe, and he cannot pull away.  He feels a kind of draining, a lightness and a suction, a swirling pleasure that swells until it blocks out all his other senses, too, and all his memories, all his thoughts, all else that Tristan is or ever has been…

*        *       *

The merciless sunlight blares through Tristan’s closed eyelids, waking him. He groans and sits up straight. It can’t be that late in the morning, and he seems to have fallen asleep on top of his sleeping bag instead of inside it, and still he’s covered in sweat. He can smell himself. Disgusting. Maybe today he’ll find a YMCA or a truck stop with shower facilities and clean up. 

In the daylight, the quarry is as beautiful as it was at night. The foliage is jungle-green; the water in the lake is swimming-pool blue. Shoals of silver fish are clearly visible in the shallows. Tristan frowns and rubs his temples. Something about the light glimmering off their scales reminds him of…what? A dream he had while he slept. A bizarre, intense dream. Already the details are scattering, slipping away from him, leaving him with nothing but a headache. He’s pretty sure he fell straight into a deep slumber as soon as he arrived in the quarry and set his stuff down. All that walking yesterday must have taken more out of Tristan than he’d thought. He didn’t even make his bed properly; the mosquitoes have feasted on his unshielded flesh. He scratches ruefully at a big bite near his navel. 

There’s something lying beside the sleeping bag. It looks like a pile of clothes, but they’re not Tristan’s. He frowns. A pair of trendy gray jeans, much smaller than Tristan could possibly wear, and a large, crumpled black windbreaker that might conceivably fit over his shoulders and gut. He didn’t notice these at all last night. Tristan wonders idly if it would be alright to take the windbreaker, in case he needs one when he leaves the south. He’s reaching out to touch it when he sees what’s inside the clothes. It’s something flat and leathery, fish belly white. There’s a stringy, silky tangle near the top, above the windbreaker, that looks like— oh, god, it’s hair.

Tristan jerks away. He blinks several times, but the mass on the ground remains. It looks  like a human skin, emptied of all the muscle and bone and meat. It’s lying in a facedown position, like a cast-off sweater, and Tristan imagines that if he were to flip it over, he would see dark, empty holes where the eyes should be, and a dark, empty hole inside the mouth. Discarded costume. Halloween mask.

Tristan shudders. He doesn’t know what it is, and surely there’s some logical explanation, but no way is he touching that thing. 

For some reason, seeing this lump of rubbery stuff lying next to him makes him remember June, finding June curled up beside his bed as though she’d fallen asleep telling him stories, the way she had when Tristan was a child. But Tristan had just turned eighteen, and June was not asleep. Her face was puffy and bluish. Vomit leaked from the corners of her mouth. There was an empty bottle of pills in the pocket of her dress, a half-empty drinking glass of whisky leaving a ring on the floorboards beside the limp, spiraling mass of her long hair, so like her son’s.

Tristan shakes his head and looks away from the empty skin, resolving not to pay it any more attention. Thinking about June feels more remote than it usually does, less emotional. Tristan realizes he can no longer recall how her face looked when she was alive, and then he realizes that this doesn’t bother him that much. It’s as though something has been taken away from him in the night, a burden of care lifted. Tristan thinks about the long day ahead of him, and for once he feels nothing, not happiness, not excitement, not sadness, not grief, not regret.

He stands, stretches, and begins to pack up his things. He is a little hollow now, but then, so are most adults. He won’t turn into that skin on the ground, he reassures himself, the one he’s not looking at. He can live this way. It will be easier to live this way. That’s what sanity is all about. 

Tristan hikes back up the stone path to the top of the quarry. 

 

Briar Ripley Page (they/them) writes fiction, nonfiction, and poetry in Central Pennsylvania, where they reside with their cat and a lot of spiders. They have lived and traveled extensively in the American Southeast; the overgrown quarry described in this story is a real place, although Briar never saw any aliens there.

Briar Ripley PageMarch 2, 2020

Worship

The city is suffocating me. The smoke, the cold, the hatred--there is nothing good about London in 1870. Nothing good except for one little pond on the outskirts, in a park where nature survives and lovers meet, including me and my dearest. I wait for her, shivering, on the edge of the water, praying for her, laying flower petals on the tender surface as gently as my cumbersome body can, awaiting her fingers, looking for the gentle way she clutches them.

It took seconds before she awoke, just as eager to see me as I am to see her for some unbelievable reason. She says nothing for a moment, only breaches the surface, her head of perfect curls pulled by the weight of the water, her eyes of the fresh honey they sell in the square.

Every day, I am underdressed, never keeping up with the fashions, not having the money to even if I desired to. But, when I am with my lover, I am suddenly donning too much. Despite the frost, she is cloaked in nothing except one thin white sheet, transparent from the rippling water she rises from, with intricate green details around the edges like I’ve never seen before. Her feet bare, wearing no jewelry, not a hint of wealth to her, she strolls out of the pond like royalty. I know she is. 

The first day I saw her, I asked who she was.  She showed herself to me wearing an intricate crown placed above her brow and a cloth of green so bright it looked as if it were made of the fresh, springtime leaves from the tree she rose from. She seemed sorrowful to answer, but she did so with no hesitation—

“I am the mother. I have been your beloved for every one of your lifetimes, although you don’t remember. My name is Gaia.” 

I rolled the name on my tongue for a week, remembering her beauty and her grace. I went back to the lake after seven days and asked her to be my beloved again. She said she would, but I have to learn to love her fully before I can join her. Every week I came back, told her I loved her even more—that it was time for me to be her eternal bride. She’d laugh, her burning hands caressing my cheek. 

“You’ve learned to love me so much since I met you, but you still have a good distance to go,” she told me one evening, while leaves were falling off the trees. She had tears in her eyes when she told me our story, about how we’ve been together for thousands of years. I used to hate her, as I hated her creation. There was nothing I gained joy from, nothing I cared about. Then one day I saw a flower, then a pond, then a snowflake, then the stars. Children’s laughter, the joy a person can experience, the gentleness of all life forms.  Lifetime after lifetime, I learned more and more about how to love my world, my Gaia. She says I am so close to understanding. My passion for people, for nature, for love--she says these things mean that I love her. But I’m missing a piece. I kick myself over it every night, searching and yearning. She frowns whenever I tell her this.

Tonight, I assure her when she reaches the shore that I will not pester her about it and she smiles, probably relieved although she’d never say so. Her hands are warm despite being wet, gentle as they hold onto me. I put my heart at her feet, trusting her to not hurt me, and she never has. When she speaks, everything stands still to listen, but my heart pounds. 

All she has to say is that she loves me, but I find myself sobbing before she even finishes. 

I know she loves everybody, but the fact that I am spectacular to her always astounds me. My love is almost two meters tall, towering over me, with dark skin. Sometimes her hair is long, sometimes it’s short, but it’s so long today that when I gently pull on a strand, the curl releases a hair that stretches down to her waist. My skin is only a little bit lighter, but we look nothing alike. She tells me we are both beautiful, but I’m hesitant to believe her. How can two people so different be equally pretty? 

My Gaia summons two separate snowflakes in her hand and explains that they are both wonderful even though they are vastly different, but I argue that they do still look very similar. She laughs at me, then smiles sadly. She says I’ll understand in time. I don’t believe her, so I roll my eyes and ask her to tell me about her life. She talks about how she used to be a goddess; she’d officiate weddings, sit in temples, answer prayers, help raise children, and devote herself to her creations. 

Over time, empires fell and things changed. Other gods arose. She was still the mother of it all, but now there were a few more gods with the same title. She says I was the only person who prayed to her these days. She didn’t do it for the glory, it didn’t hurt her, but I know it would hurt me if I were in her shoes. I’m glad that even if she doesn’t have thousands of people devoted to her, she has me. What her church lacks in number, it makes up for in passion, I believe.

When she finishes her stories, I run my right hand through her hair and then place it on her heart. I feel it skip a beat. I whisper in her ear something about how I want to worship her and red rises high on her cheeks. She loves me; I know because the more I kiss her, the more out of breath and flustered she becomes. I can’t believe I’m someone that could make a goddess flush. Her hand tangles in my hair and I know that I could stay here forever without complaint. Her lips, so soft and tender; I can feel the love she has for me through them. 

She holds me close until the sun starts to set, then she helps me into my carriage. 

“Priya,” she whispers my name into my hair when she embraces me goodbye, “you are more capable of love than you even know.” With that, she dissolves back into the earth from whence she came, leaving me to ponder her closing statement the entire ride home. 

That night, as I brush out my hair, I look in the mirror, contemplating. My hair is soft, my lips are plush. I kind of know that I am beautiful, I can see it in my darling’s eyes—the more I look at myself, the more I see what she sees. My brown eyes shine, my smile is bright. I have beautiful energy. I love with my whole heart. According to Gaia, I’m even more able to love than I know. I sit and ponder that again. The only person I have ever not been loving towards is myself, I think. But why would that matter? I love every other person so deeply. 

I dream that night of her. Her hand in mine, being in her arms, being the one to hold her at night. I wake up longing for her, mourning the knowledge that I won’t get to see her for another long while, as my father only lets me leave once a week. I open my doors and start working immediately, washing and hanging clothes, sending my younger brothers to deliver my finished laundry to my customers. Work is mind-numbing and slow as usual, but I am satisfied with my work as I go along. A few people can’t make their payments, but I let it slide when my father isn’t looking. When the day is done, I settle with my knees on the ground and my head resting on the side of my bed, and I tell her that I love her. I’m sure she knows, but I like to remind her. I ask for her to explain what she means by what she said before--who am I not being loving to?--then I crawl into bed and wait for an answer.

She shows up shortly, coming up behind me in an unrelated dream, guiding me over to a bench she has made out of vines. I find myself unable to talk to her, but she doesn’t seem surprised. She’s a goddess, but she doesn’t make the rules anymore. There are other gods who control dreams now, she can only do so much.

“I’m sorry I confused you with what I said. I don’t want to hand feed you the things you need to figure out for yourself, and it’s hard to balance that with not wanting to keep anything from you.” She looks genuinely upset, so I hold onto her hand to let her know it’s okay. “What I’m trying to tell you is that...well, think about the kindness you show others and why, that’s all.”

I wake up even more confused than before. I show others kindness because everyone has good in them and everyone is important and deserves love. My dearest taught me that lifetimes ago. I love everyone because my goddess made them with her careful hands. 

In front of the mirror, I frown at myself, angry at why I have to be so stupid, when I finally get it. I would never think of someone else like that, not even the worst person on the planet. I know all people all serve a purpose and were all made by her. I imagine her frown every time I complain about myself and I’m certain that’s what it is. I just need to learn to love myself like I love others! How hard could it be? 

Over and over again during my work, I see myself in the reflection of the soapy water and smile, as I was made by my god and I know that I’m perfect. I am kind to a stranger and remember that I deserve the same kindness. When my thoughts are cruel to myself, I gently correct them. I dream of her every night--she is so proud, so happy. I know I am doing the right thing. The days pass and, with my hard work making life more loving, they come quicker and kinder. Finally, the time comes where I can see her again.

I bathe in lavender and dress myself in heavy wintertime clothes, simple as always, but cleaner than normal. I put my hair up in braids and curls to form a crown, making sure it’s easy for my love to take down, as she always does. I start to put powder on my face, but frown as it makes me too pale, and wash it off. The world says I must wear powder, but I don’t see the point in altering the beauty that my love bestowed me. I kiss my brothers goodbye and head to the park, coat clenched in my arms.

The tread to the pond is almost painful, I’m so giddy. I barely resist running the whole path, the only thing stopping me being the bag of flowers from my mother’s overgrown garden weighing me down. When I reach the edge, I settle down with the sack, scattering petals across the water’s surface. I wait to pray until the scene is perfect and I am dramatically perched with my hands grazing the pond ever so slightly. Of course, after all my hard work, she comes up from a patch of snow to the right of me instead of her usual path. I can feel her presence and her warmth before she touches me, but her hand on my shoulder sends tingles down my spine anyway. 

She looks as beautiful as ever, her black ringlets in a mane around her, a crown on top of her head just like the first time I ever saw her. She was glowing, radiating joy. I hardly got to admire her before she lifts me, sweeps me up in her arms, and spins me around until I nearly faint from giggling. When she sets me back down, she doesn’t let go, burying me in her arms. I can feel her tears landing on the top of my head.

“You love me…” Her voice is choked, softer than I’ve ever heard it. 

“I always have,” I jest, giving her a hard time.  She pulls back, cupping my face between her gentle hands. Her joy melts any urge I have to poke fun and I melt into her. Ecstatic, she twirls me around to a tune she hums, dancing with me so gracefully while I struggle to do the most basic steps, then leads me to sit with her. We talk for hours. She’s maniacally happy, praising me with every word. She says she’s proud of me, she loves me, she knew I could do it. 

I make sure she knows that my journey is far from over, that learning to love myself fully is going to take a long time. She asks if she can be an active part of my exploration for now on. I tell her I’ll allow it, but only if I get a kiss every single day. With a laugh, I’m promised as many kisses as I want, forever. I accept her offer. 

When the night starts to fall, I do not make a move to leave. In fact, we stay still all throughout the night, kissing and loving, her keeping me warm. I fall asleep in Gaia’s arms, safe with my dearest. 

Dawn breaks and she’s standing in the water, asking if I am ready to be her queen, extending her hand. I take it. Together, we walk into the deep, in equal love of ourselves and each other, our hearts glowing. She promises me that she will worship me until her creation ends and I tell her I’ll treasure her even longer. The crisp water closes above us and I am able to breathe for the first time.

 

Esme Fenn (they/them) is a first-year double major in creative writing and journalism & professional writing. They are based in Ohio, although they have lived in a wide range of states. Their passions include cats, embroidery, Mamma Mia, and frogs. This is their first time publishing, but it won’t be the last! For any updates, follow them on twitter @esmefenn.

Twitter: https://twitter.com/esmefenn

Caller

Waves roll in as the sun dips below the horizon; hues of yellow, orange and pink illuminating the sky in a brilliant sunset. Secluded from echoes of children’s laughter and patronizing stares of inquisitive people, this makes the private Southern California beach the perfect place for a date.    

Robyn Davies, a 17-year-old teenager with cerebral palsy, stares at the sunset in awe. Sitting on a bench, hot pink crutches propped up beside her, she tucks a strand of thick brunette hair behind her ear. 

“I wish we had more days like this.” 

Robyn’s gaze shifts to her girlfriend, who sits beside her in a power wheelchair. Dark eyes catching the glint of the setting sun, Paisley Mills offers Robyn a wistful smile. 

“Your gelato is melting.”

Glancing at the brownie batter gelato turning into soup in the paper cup, Robyn tosses the leftover mess into the trash can next to them. “Sometimes, I think about how much easier it would be if all I had to worry about was whether or not I’ll ever pass that AP English exam or the next Pre-Calc test or what I’m wearing to senior prom.”

Moving her wheelchair, Paisley grabs Robyn’s hand and pulls her closer. Robyn inhales the scent of lilacs and honey, the mist of perfume lingering on Paisley’s skin. Just as Paisley is about to kiss her, a loud scream shatters the serene moment. Down by the water, a teenage boy struggles in the tight grip of a tall, cloaked figure who opens a portal in front of them, a swirling chasm of teal and green, and steps through. In the next moment, the portal closes, vanishing into the air. 

“What was that?!” Paisley exclaims. “I thought we were alone.”

Robyn sighs. “It was a portal. Guess we’re not alone after all. I need to talk to Catherine. She’ll want to hold a Council meeting tomorrow.”

Now, this special place that had become a sanctuary to them for months was destroyed by the ever-present reminder of Robyn’s duties. Her life as a Caller.  

*              *              *

Inside a nondescript warehouse, a private meeting commences. Dull grey walls and hard cement floors adds to the gloominess of the building’s interior. A long table occupies the middle of a large room with people sitting in chairs on either side. Robyn sits next to her parents, Mark and Leslie Davies. She’s been attending these meetings with her parents since she developed her abilities as a Caller when she was 14 years old. 

The leader of the Council, Catherine Delacorte, a Black woman in her mid-fifties with dark red lipstick and an elegant burgundy dress, sits at the head of the table.

“Thank you all for coming on such short notice,” Catherine begins. “Peter could not be here today, but he just informed me that his son, Nathan, is trapped in the Depths. It’s suspected that a rogue member of the Callers kidnapped him and left him there. Since Peter is distraught, I suggested that someone else should go into the Depths and rescue his son.”

As one of seven members of the Council, Peter Carr ranks just below Catherine. If something happens to her, Peter will take her place. A burly man in his early sixties, Peter has the ability of clairvoyance. His son is 16, only a year younger than Robyn. Nathan hasn’t shown any burgeoning signs of being a Caller or inheriting his father’s clairvoyance. Just an ordinary teenager.  

And now he’s trapped in the Depths. Alone. 

Robyn looks around the table. The Council sends Callers into the Depths to retrieve specialized items for them, usually with the help of certain inanimate objects, like teleportation crystals and amulets, that Callers have summoned from their vivid dreams. Sometimes Callers have even summoned small animals. 

“I’ll go,” Robyn declares, breaking the silence in the room. She meets Catherine’s fierce, imposing gaze. “I’ve been training, honing my abilities. I can do it.”

“Robyn—” Leslie starts to protest, but Catherine cuts her off. 

“You think you can do it?” Catherine challenges. “Go into the Depths alone? My child, you’re far too—”

“I’m not a child,” Robyn retorts, keeping her voice even. “I’m 17. I turn 18 this summer.  I’m perfectly capable. Besides, I was the only Caller who witnessed him being kidnapped.” Robyn shivers. She knows about the shadowy alternate dimension. Some people are lured there with no hope of escaping on their own. 

 “Then how do you propose to get him out?” Catherine asks.

“I don’t know yet. I’ll figure it out once I’m there. But I won’t be alone. There’s a white wolf that keeps appearing in my dreams. If I can call the wolf to me before I go through the portal, we can go together.”

“A wolf?” her mother questions, touching her daughter’s arm gently. “Your father and I have been able to call small birds, butterflies, a squirrel… but a wolf? They’re dangerous. What about something else from your dreams?”

“I’m not Little Red Riding Hood. We have a connection. I can’t explain it, Mom, but it feels right.”

Her father sighs. “And you trust the wolf? To protect you, not hurt you?”

Robyn stares into her father’s worried eyes. “You don’t have to trust the wolf. I don’t expect you to. But you can trust me.”

“Very well, then,” Catherine says, studying Robyn as if trying to slice through her invisible defiance. “Robyn will call upon the wolf. They will go through the portal that leads them into the Depths. There will be a full moon, providing the amplest time to travel to and from the Depths once the sun sets…”

Even though Robyn tries to focus on Catherine’s instructions, her mind wanders to her dream about the wolf from the night before.

Feet unsteady beneath her, she grips her crutches even tighter. Sweaty palms be damned.

Her gaze remains transfixed.

A magnificent white wolf stands several feet in front of her, eyes dark brown and curious. 

Robyn finds her voice. “Why do you keep showing up here?”

She’s never felt threatened by the appearance of the wolf in her dreams. In fact, quite the opposite. Its presence brings warmth and comfort. 

The wolf moves closer, whimpering. White fur gleaming in the dim light. 

Magnetism and piqued curiosity draw her closer as she reaches out to touch the soft fur…

“Will that be a problem?”

Robyn blinks, brow furrowing. 

“What… When did you say it was?” Robyn asks, caught off guard by the sharp intonation of Catherine’s voice. 

“Two days from now. This Saturday right after sundown.”

Robyn pales. Bile rises in her throat. Saturday is her senior prom. The one memorable night her and Paisley will have together before they graduate. 

Although they planned on staying together, Paisley had enrolled in a musical theatre camp in New York City for the summer while Robyn planned on staying in Southern California to mentor disabled kids at a day camp. In the Fall, Robyn would attend the University of California, Berkeley, while Paisley would attend the University of California, Los Angeles. 

“Ms. Davies, will that be a problem?” Catherine repeats, impatience lacing her tone. 

Robyn wishes she could slink lower into her chair and become invisible. Any day but that one. The day meant for her and Paisley. 

“No,” she manages, holding back tears that burn her eyes as they threaten to fall. “No problem at all.” 

*              *              *

Something cold presses against her cheek and she opens her eyes. The large white wolf looms above her, unthreatening. 

Adrenaline rushing through her, she sits up slowly, noticing her crutches beside her. The wolf nudges her arm gently with its nose. Unafraid, she reaches out and scratches behind the wolf’s ears and strokes the top of its head. This is the first time she’s touched the wolf, the first time she’s run her fingers through its soft, white fur. Excitement courses through her. She’s bonding with this animal now, building trust. 

“You want to show me something?”

The wolf’s ears perk up, nudging her with its nose before backing away and giving an encouraging howl-bark. 

“You want me to follow you?”

The wolf whimpers, trotting ahead. Robyn grabs her crutches and stands, following the mysterious creature. They’re surrounded by thick brush and darkness. She squints to see the wolf’s shape ahead of her, feeling like Dorothy following Toto straight into the center of a whirling tornado. 

“Well, this isn’t the Yellow Brick Road,” she mutters under her breath. 

The wolf moves farther away, now completely enveloped by the darkness. 

“Hey, wait up!”

Cold air bites at her skin as she shivers, an unsettling feeling washing over her. 

Suddenly, she hears the faintest whisper. A teenage boy’s voice.

“Help me…”

*              *              *

“…Robyn?”

The voice startles Robyn awake. She finds herself on her bed with a spiral notebook open in her lap and Paisley staring at her, a worried expression on her face. 

“What?”

“Are you okay?” Paisley asks. “You’ve been out of it for, like, an hour or so. I know Pre-Calc is boring as hell. I don’t blame you. Should we switch to another subject?”

Robyn sighs, running her hands through her hair. “No, just… Maybe a study date was a bad idea.”

Paisley closes her Pre-Calculus textbook. “Movie, instead? I could always use a re-watch of Finding Dory. Or how about a Crazy Ex-Girlfriend marathon?”

Robyn tears her gaze away from her girlfriend, trying not to cry. She doesn’t want to break Paisley’s heart, but she knows she must tell her about her imminent journey ahead. “Paisley… we’re not going to senior prom tomorrow night and it’s all my fault. I’m going into the Depths. There’s someone trapped there and I—” 

Color drains from Paisley’s face. “Wait, what? On the night of our senior prom?”

Robyn meets Paisley’s gaze. “I told Catherine I would go. That was before I knew it was the same night.”

“And when exactly were you planning on telling me this, Robyn? Prom was supposed to be our night. One last hurrah before we graduate.”

“I’m so sorry, Paisley, but I have to do this. I need to show Catherine that I’m capable enough to—”

“So, that’s what this is about?!” Paisley exclaims. “You’d rather kiss Catherine’s self-righteous ass than go to prom with me! I bought a prom dress months ago!”

“I know, but—” 

“No, you don’t know, and you obviously don’t care enough about me or about us if you’d rather play up to some woman who doesn’t even like you. It’s fine. I’ll just go solo to our senior prom and drown my feelings in fruit punch and Sarah McLachlan.”

Paisley shoves her textbook in her backpack, zips it up and rolls to Robyn’s bedroom door.

“Paisley, wait. Don’t do this. Please…”

She doesn’t look back. A minute or two later, Robyn hears the front door slam. 

*              *              *

Hands sweating and heart pounding, Robyn tries to calm herself by taking deep breaths and shifting her weight from one leg to another as she balances with her crutches. 

She stands in front of the portal that will take her into the Depths to find Nathan. But first, she must call forth the wolf. 

“Are you sure about this?” Catherine says, looking at Robyn with skepticism. “We can always have a more experienced member of the Council—”

“No,” Robyn insists. “I’ve trained for this. I’m ready. The wolf will come to me. I know it.”

Gripping her crutches tightly, Robyn closes her eyes and focuses on nothing but the image of the beautiful white wolf. Its dark brown eyes and gleaming white fur. Its cold nose pressed against her bare skin. 

Come on… come on… 

A cold breeze wraps itself around her. Then, the air seems to still. 

A familiar whimper. Opening her eyes, the wolf stands before her. No one says a word as they stare at the beautiful creature in awe.

The wolf trots over to Robyn and nuzzles her side, wagging its tail. 

“It’s good to see you, too,” Robyn murmurs. She lifts her right hand to scratch behind the wolf’s ears. 

“Well done, Robyn. But before you go, here are two teleportation crystals that will help you return to our world.” Catherine places the crystals into her hand. Robyn tucks them into the pocket of her jeans. “Now, are you ready?” 

“Yes, I’m ready.”  

With a wave of her hand, Catherine opens the portal, a swirling vortex of purple and black. 

Determined, she steps through the portal as the wolf follows beside her.

She doesn’t know what she’ll come back to, what her relationship will be like with Paisley upon her return. They haven’t spoken to each other since their argument, which was days ago. But she wants to make things work between them.

Before she’s swallowed into the dark abyss, a final thought tugs at the edges of her mind. Barely a whisper. 

I’ll make things right for us again, Paisley. 

*              *              *

She lands on her back, moaning in discomfort as black spots cloud her vision. After a few moments, the world around her stops spinning. The wolf licks her cheek gently.  

“I’m okay. Good… wolf. I’ve been thinking about what I should call you. How about Mist? Do you like that name?”

The wolf whines, nuzzling against her in confirmation. 

Robyn grabs her crutches and stands. She looks around, terrified. The Depths is a forest-like environment shrouded in trees with twisted branches and dirt paths that lead to who-knows-where. 

Maybe this wasn’t such a good idea after all…

“Where do I go?” she says aloud to no one in particular. She glances at Mist. “Do you know where Nathan is? You were going to show me in my dreams when I—” 

Something snaps behind her, but she can’t turn around fast enough to see what it is. 

“Hello?” she calls out tentatively. “Who’s there?” 

Nothing. 

Following Mist further into the darkness, she pushes forward, feet and crutches stumbling through the dirt. Suddenly, the wolf darts off the path. 

“What is it? What’s wrong?” Robyn asks, as she keeps moving. “Do you see something?”

Mist barks, large paws digging into the earth.

“What—Ahh!”

Robyn sinks into a soft patch of quicksand-like dirt. Twisty branches tangle around her legs. Around her crutches. Pulling her into the ground. Waiting to swallow her whole. 

“Shit! HELP!”

This is it. She’s going to be trapped here forever. Just like Nathan. What if it’s already too late for him? 

Laughter erupts and echoes around her, coming from somewhere unseen. 

“It’s about time you showed up here, Kendrick,” a menacing voice says. “I’ve been waiting for you to come back just so I could—Oh, fuck!”

Robyn stares at the familiar face of the teenage boy from the beach, dark hair a tangled, matted mess. He brushes it away, cerulean blue eyes going wide with surprise. His shirt and jeans are ripped at the knees and elbows, caked with forest grime and dirt. 

“You’re not Kendrick,” he mutters. 

“Help me!” Robyn struggles.

“How do I know I can trust you?”

“I’ll explain. Just help me first. Please!”

Mist growls at the teenage boy who glances at the wolf with apprehension. 

“You know this creature?” he asks her. 

“Yes, he came with me to find you. Now, will you help me?”

“He doesn’t seem to like me very much,” the boy replies. “I’ll help you, but tell your snarling dog not to bite me in the ass.”

“His name is Mist and he’s a wolf,” Robyn says, and looks at Mist. “It’s okay, Mist. He’s going to help me.”

Mist stops growling, but both boy and wolf regard each other with caution. 

Carefully, the boy frees her legs from the tangled branches and she fumbles with her crutches, hoping she can find purchase on ground that won’t sink beneath her. As Robyn struggles to stand and he finishes untangling her, Robyn loses her balance again and lands directly on top of him. 

Robyn’s eyes sear with curiosity and determination. An awkward moment of tension passes between them. Robyn pushes herself away from him and grabs her crutches, standing up. 

The boy gets to his feet, still staring at her.

“I saw you get kidnapped on the beach. You are Nathan, aren’t you?”

“Why does it matter?” he counters. “I still don’t know who you are.”

“My name is Robyn. I’m a Caller. The Council sent me.”

He studies her for a moment before answering. “Yeah, I’m Nathan.” 

“Who’s Kendrick? Was he the one who kidnapped you?”

Nathan pales. “He’s… he’s no one. Let’s not talk about him, alright?” Robyn notices dark shadows fall over Nathan’s eyes. 

“Look, I just want to help you.”

“Why should I believe you? Don’t get me wrong. You are cute and all. Not exactly my type, but we could—”

“You know what?” Robyn interrupts. “The Council left out the part about you being a giant dick. Guess I’ll just have to find my way out on my own. Come on, Mist.”

As they begin to walk away, Nathan’s voice stops them. 

“I’ll tell you about Kendrick.”

This gives Robyn pause. Even if she doesn’t like this obnoxious douchebag, she wants to know more. Shifting her weight, she turns to face him. “…If? There has to be an “if,” right?”

He smirks. “If you tell me more about you. You just waltzed right in here wanting to save my ass. I don’t need you to save me when I’ve been surviving just fine on my own. Time works differently here. It’s already been three weeks.”

“Catherine said your dad’s really upset.”

“You don’t know my dad the way I do.”

“Okay, we won’t get into your daddy issues right now,” says Robyn. Nathan huffs indignantly in response. “Who is Kendrick and what does he want with you?”

“It’s not about me. Kendrick is a rogue Caller and he had a major falling out with my dad.”

“So, we are going back to your daddy issues.”

Ignoring her, Nathan continues, “Dad and I haven’t always seen eye-to-eye. Kendrick told me he made a deal with my dad. It backfired on Kendrick, so this was his way of getting revenge.”

“By kidnapping you and trapping you down here?”

“Yup. Lucky me,” Nathan replies. “Come on, I’ll take you to my hideout. It’s not good to be out here in the open for so long.”

*              *              *

“Wow,” Robyn says, looking around Nathan’s hideout. Leaves and twigs are woven intricately together, creating makeshift furnishings inside the cramped space. Some furnishings, such as the bed, are made from unpolished wood, rough but sturdy. 

“Like what you see?” Nathan jokes. “You know I only have one bed.”

“I thought you said I wasn’t your type.”

“You’re not, but that doesn’t mean—” he starts. Robyn rolls her eyes. 

“I have a girlfriend,” she replies. Then,  without missing a beat, “You made all of these things?” 

“I learned quickly,” he replies. “You have to make do with what you have.” Robyn sits on the floor and Mist lies down beside her. 

“Tell me about Kendrick. Why did he trap you here?” 

“Dad never liked working under Catherine. You know how she can be.”

“Yeah, she’s difficult. So, what did your dad do?”

“He’s been working on honing his clairvoyant ability since I was little. But he wanted to find a way to manipulate it, make it more powerful. He came here to see if he could find others to help him strengthen it.” Realization dawns in Robyn’s mind. 

“But he never told Catherine…” she said. Nathan shook his head. 

“No. But, according to Kendrick, my dad found him. They made a deal. My dad would help Kendrick become a member of the Council and Kendrick would help him strengthen his clairvoyant ability. But my dad was too afraid of being kicked out of the Council if he fulfilled Kendrick’s request, so he betrayed Kendrick.”

“Then Kendrick kidnapped you to get revenge on your father.”

 “Pretty much. That’s why I keep waiting for Kendrick to come back, so I can trap him myself. He comes into the Depths to make deals with other rogue Callers. He has a Golden Key that can get us out of here. It can create a portal that would allow us to return to our world. It’s risky, though, because Golden Keys have dark magic and are typically used by rogue Callers to go between worlds. But, I thought, if he trapped me here to begin with, then using the Key is my only way out.” 

“But I got caught in one of your traps instead.”

“Sorry about that.”

“You’re so not,” Robyn says. She reaches down to scratch Mist’s ears.

“So, I told you my story,” Nathan says. “Your turn.”

“What else do you want to know?”

“You just seem defensive,” he says with a shrug. “Like you put up walls around you.”

“Around you, maybe,” she half-heartedly agrees. “But if I wasn’t saving your self-righteous ass, I’d be dancing the night away with my girlfriend at my senior prom.”

“Your senior prom?”

“Yeah, it was happening when I left our world. The one night I promised my girlfriend would be just for us. I’ve missed many of our date nights because of Caller training. When I told her I had to come here instead, we got into a fight and haven’t spoken since,” she sighs. “Anyway, are we settling in for the night? We need to make a game plan for Kendrick’s next appearance.”

“Sounds good to me. Kendrick deserves to rot for what he did.” Nathan’s face softens in the dim light. “I’m sorry about screwing up your senior prom.”

“Goodnight, Nathan.”

*              *              *

They spend the next two weeks setting up various traps for Kendrick around the Depths. One is a fishing net with a pulley system. Another is a metal bear trap. 

“We’re definitely gonna need some more wood,” Nathan tells Robyn as he fiddles with one of their makeshift traps during their second week of trap making. 

“The better wood is in the deeper part of the Depths. You told me not to go there. I might not find my way back.”

“I’ll go,” Nathan says. “Someone needs to stay here and keep watch.”

“And you trust me to do that?” Robyn asks. 

Nathan smirks. “Does that surprise you?”

Robyn licks her parched lips, but doesn’t answer. She glances down at the wolf standing beside her. “At least take Mist with you. He’ll keep you safe.”

Nathan’s gaze shifts from Robyn to Mist and back to Robyn. “Shouldn’t he stay with you?”

“You’re trusting me to watch your hideout. I’m trusting you with my companion,” Robyn replies. “Hey, Mist, go with Nathan for a bit, all right? He needs you.”

“Come on, Mist,” Nathan says. “Let’s go get some more wood.”

“It’s okay, Mist,” Robyn says, giving him a quick scratch behind the ears. 

Mist looks at Robyn longingly before Nathan slaps his thigh. “Come on, boy!”

She watches as Mist trots to Nathan’s side and the two of them disappear into a deeper part of the Depths. 

Some time later, Robyn carefully walks along the dirt path, several feet away from Nathan’s hideout. A gentle gust of wind makes the leaves rustle around her, tree branches swaying low in the semi-darkness. Her thoughts drift to Paisley, imagining the way she’d look in her new dress, hair curled in a fancy updo, body swaying to the beat of the music… 

SNAP! Robyn freezes. 

“Nathan? Mist?”

Silence. 

As she heads back to Nathan’s hideout, someone grabs her from behind. Losing her balance, she falls back on her assailant who wraps an arm around her waist, a knife gleaming in the dim light against her throat.  

“Well, well, Nathan never told me he had a girlfriend,” the leathery whisper grates against her ear. Hot breath sears into her skin as a man’s tall frame towers over her. His raven black hair and piercing emerald green eyes emit a menacing glow in the semi-darkness. 

She gulps. 

Kendrick. She struggles in his grasp, unable to find purchase on the ground with her crutches. 

Damn it.  

 “I’m not his girlfriend!”

“Likely story, sweetheart,” Kendrick sneers. “I saw you two earlier. It’s noble of you to want to save him but, when I slit your throat, all he’ll find is your blood on the ground.” 

“Let her go, Kendrick.” Nathan’s voice echoes from behind them. Kendrick turns around, eyes landing on Nathan. 

“Why should I?”

 “You don’t really want her. I’ve been your target all along, right? You’re the one who trapped me here. So, why don’t you just kill me instead?”

 “Nathan—” Robyn chokes. 

“Killing you right away is too easy. I’d rather watch you suffer, then I’ll kill you,” Kendrick taunts, pushing the knife’s sharp blade closer to Robyn’s neck. “So, why don’t you watch me kill her first?”

Suddenly, a white blur comes out of the darkness and launches at Kendrick. All snarls and sharp white teeth. 

Mist! 

The wolf’s teeth sink into Kendrick’s arm, the one holding the knife against Robyn’s throat. The knife falls from his grasp as he tries to shake off Mist. He drops Robyn, who crumples to the ground, moaning in discomfort. 

“Robyn!” Nathan rushes to her side. “Robyn…”

“I’m… I’m okay,” she manages, struggling to sit up. “Just gonna have a few bad bruises and scrapes.” She watches as Mist drags Kendrick towards one of the traps Nathan set, causing him to stumble and fall, a metal bear trap clamping itself around one of his legs. He howls in pain. Distracted by his leg, he doesn’t immediately notice Nathan digging his fingers into the pockets of Kendrick’s pants in search of the Golden Key. Nathan moves just out of Kendrick’s reach once he finds it. Too quick for Kendrick to grab him. 

“I believe this is mine now,” Nathan tells Kendrick.

“Get back here, foolish boy!” Mist releases Kendrick and returns to Robyn, licking her cheek with his large pink tongue. 

“You saved me,” she whispers into Mist’s thick fur. “Thank you.” Nathan helps Robyn stand and steadies her while she gets her balance. Leaving Kendrick behind, they head back to the exact same location where Robyn and Mist had entered the Depths. 

Robyn reaches into her pocket and pulls out a teleportation crystal. Throws it to the ground. 

They wait. 

Nothing happens.

Robyn throws another crystal to the ground. 

Still no portal. 

“It didn’t work. Why didn’t it work?” Robyn wonders aloud, glancing at Nathan and shifting her weight uneasily. 

“We’ll have to use the Golden Key,” Nathan says. 

“You want to risk using dark magic?” Robyn asks.

“The crystals didn’t work. We don’t have any other choices, do we?” he says. Robyn considers this. 

“All right. But I think we should hold onto each other as we go through the portal. Let’s get out of here.” Nathan places the glowing Golden Key in her open palm. She carefully draws a large circle in front of them, opening a portal. A swirling vortex of burgundy and silver. 

Nathan places an arm around Robyn’s waist. Mist remains pressed lightly against Robyn’s other side as they step through the portal. All three of them connected. The shadowy world of the Depths evaporates.  

Plunging into an abyss of darkness, an unseen force propels them forward and rips them apart. They land with a loud thud on familiar ground. The Council’s warehouse. Groaning, Robyn sits up, noticing Nathan a few feet away. He glances at her, getting to his feet. Next to her, Mist nudges her arm with his nose and whines softly. 

“We made it,” Robyn says, giving Mist a quick pat on the head. She stands up, regaining her balance and Mist remains by her side. She smiles softly at Nathan before looking around at the others in the room. 

Catherine, Peter, Robyn’s parents, and other Council members are there, waiting. Even though she’d spent about two weeks in the Depths, only two days had passed in their world. Robyn’s parents rush to her.

“I’m fine, I’m fine, I promise,” she whispers as they embrace her. 

“We’re just glad you’re okay,” Leslie replies, pressing a kiss into her daughter’s hair. 

“But you need medical attention,” Mark adds, noticing the purple bruises that mar the sides of her face as well as the scrapes on her arms. 

“I know,” Robyn says as she pulls back. “But I want to talk to Paisley first. We got into a huge fight before I left and I need to fix things between us.”

“Sweetheart, your mom and I would feel much better if you got checked out at the hospital first. We’ll take you to Paisley’s house tomorrow.”

“Okay,” Robyn concedes, her heart sinking in disappointment. 

As Robyn leaves the warehouse with her parents, a momentary shiver runs up her spine. It’s so brief she barely notices the uneasy feeling of something calling to her. 

As if some invisible presence lingers around her. A whisper of temptation. The seductive pull of dark magic. 

Waiting.  

*              *              *

The next day, Robyn finds Paisley in her room, both hands clenched nervously in her lap. She’d texted Paisley earlier that morning telling her that they needed to talk and Paisley had reluctantly agreed. 

Paisley maneuvers her power wheelchair, turning to face Robyn standing in the doorway. 

“I’m sorry,” she says. “I should have never said those things to you. I just wanted—”

“Paisley,” Robyn interrupts. “We’ll be on opposite sides of the country this summer and we’re both going to different universities in the Fall. But I’m here now.”

“You’re hurt,” Paisley says, noticing Robyn’s injuries. 

“Just a few scrapes and bruises. I was examined at the hospital last night. I’m fine.” Robyn takes a few steps forward while Paisley stares at her, unconvinced. 

“You’re sure?” she asks. Robyn nods. 

“Absolutely sure. Now, how about a re-watch of Finding Dory?”

A small smile flits across Paisley’s lips as she rolls forward, closing the space between them. Without hesitation, Robyn kisses Paisley passionately. She smells like lilacs, honey, and home.  

 

Lara Ameen (she/her) is a screenwriter, fiction writer, disability activist, and PhD student in Education with an emphasis in Disability Studies at Chapman University. She received an MFA in Screenwriting from California State University, Northridge (CSUN), and a BA in Film Studies with a minor in Disability Studies from UC Berkeley. She has given lectures and presented on panels with prominent actors, writers, and showrunners about disability representation in the media at the Writer’s Digest Novel Writing Conference, Skylight Theatre, American University, Chapman University, CalArts, CSUN, and UCLA. Her scripts have placed in Screencraft’s Bahamas Screenwriters Residency Program, Austin Film Festival Screenplay Competition, and Fresh Voices Screenplay Competition. She is a 2018 recipient of the NBCUniversal Tony Coelho Media Scholarship. Her next piece of short fiction is forthcoming in Disabled Voices Anthology (Rebel Mountain Press) in March 2020. Passionate about intersectional disability representation, she hopes to publish a short story collection as well as Young Adult and Adult fantasy novels about queer disabled characters who save the world. As a screenwriter, she wants to become a showrunner for a supernatural/sci-fi/fantasy TV drama series featuring a diverse cast of disabled characters portrayed by disabled actors. “Caller” is her first published short fiction story.

Twitter: https://twitter.com/trucherrygirl
Instagram: https://instagram.com/trucherrygirl

At Your Dream's Edge

You’ve had the Nightmare app installed for months, but all you’ve ever done is create an account. It’s not that the service is pricey, even though it is. 

It’s because you haven’t needed to use it.

Until now.

Deep breaths. Deep breaths. You have to do this tonight, before you can face your family tomorrow. Before you can spend a day trapped with them. You tap the black-and-white icon. The screen fills with a map, a blue dot pulsing over your apartment. Arcane symbols drift around in a five-block radius of your location. Your thumb hovers over the single button centered at the bottom of the screen.

REQUEST NIGHTMARE.

You want to chicken out. Turn your phone off, get some sleep, face tomorrow as it is, even if you shake the entire time. You’ve never had to deal with your family on such a large scale, but you’ve gotten through one-on-one interactions dozens of times. Surely tomorrow won’t be so different.

But you know it will be. Even the thought of tomorrow makes you feel nauseated.

You have to do this. You have to show yourself that you can deal with worse.

You tap the button.

USER AGREEMENT: YOU AGREE TO HOLD NIGHTMARE, INC. HARMLESS FOR ANY LASTING PSYCHOLOGICAL EFFECTS THAT MAY ARISE FROM CALLING A NIGHTMARE…

Your eyes glaze over as you scroll through the legalese and tap AGREE. You don’t care. It doesn’t matter. 

You need to do this.

CONFIRM REQUEST.

Tap.

CANCEL? 5… 4… 3… 2… 1… 

You let out a breath as the cancel button goes gray, disabled. A circle with an icon of an eye spins on the screen as the app finds you a match. The screen refreshes and centers a single arcane symbol. A line connects the Nightmare and your home.

YOUR NIGHTMARE WILL ARRIVE IN 3 MINUTES.

You swipe up and view the Nightmare’s profile. Gingko. It’s a surprisingly pretty name for a Nightmare. Five stars, twenty-three ratings. They’re new.

You hope they can deliver.

Gingko finds you moments later popping an anti-anxiety pill. Hydroxyzine. Mild, but effective enough to kick in quickly.

Hello.

Their voice makes your bones buzz. They are simultaneously void and not void: a black so deep it transcends color, an emptiness that creates a presence outlined by everything it displaces. They have two pairs of horizontal eyes and one vertical eye centered above those two rows of eyes. Purple-deep irises rimmed with gold turn to focus on you. They are many-limbed and multi-winged, the column of their body fading into a star-dusted nebula of unbeing.

“Hi,” you reply, your throat hoarse. “I’m Em.”

I know.

“This is my first time calling a Nightmare.”

I know.

You tug at the too-tight collar of your shirt. You’ve thought about what a Nightmare would be like before: in the moments when panic consumes you, in the moments when you dissociate and let your mind wander to protect you, you’ve thought about what you’d have a Nightmare do to you, exactly what kind of catharsis you seek, exactly how the Nightmare would tear you asunder.

“Please,” you say. “I’m ready.”

The Nightmare shifts, as if tilting their head and nodding.

Very well.

Reality distorts subtly at first. But that’s always been how it is, isn’t it? An overwhelming feeling of wrongness displaces the calm in you like a stone spilling water. It’s suffocating. You can’t breathe. You can’t breathe.

Gingko watches.

You hold your hands up before you. Is this Gingko’s power? Or is your mind pushing you to unreality again? These are your hands, but they aren’t your hands. You splay your fingers open and shudder—how bizarre it is that electricity crosses synapses and transverses your body to create this instantaneous movement, transverses this husk, this cage. The familiar becomes unfamiliar. The lines on your palms—have they always been twisted and braided as they crease your skin? Forks and branches, wrinkles creating canyons in the membrane of your being.

The realization strikes you then: this is not you. This is not you. You don’t know what you should be, but this is not it.

You want to tear your skin off, claw your way out of this prison. When you catch your reflection in the darkened glass of your windowpane—your crazed, wild eyes, your heaving chest, your clammy, sweaty skin—you don’t recognize it.

This is not you.

Shall I begin?

You turn your gaze back to Gingko. They’re so close now, pressing into the bubble of your space, unblinking.

You nod.

A tendril of void-black reaches out to wrap around your wrist. You expected to feel nothingness, but instead it’s a myriad of contradictory feelings: cold so cold it feels as if it’s burning you, pain so fierce it short-circuits your brain and becomes something else entirely, purely sensation.

You throw yourself into Gingko.

You are a stampede of horses, manes wild and brilliant as they stream out behind you, your many-legged herd rampaging the plains. Twin suns shine down on you and splinter over dozens of racing hooves. Everything is sweat and spit and stink flung into the air; the grass gives way to gravel, gives way to rock, until one by one each horse-you dives over the precipice that appears and falls, falls, falls. You feel the gravity in the pit of twenty stomachs, each leap hooked behind your navel and tugged by a line. The ground is coming up at you and there is nothing you can do to save yourself. The wind tears whinnies from your throats. The first of you hits the ground. The air fills with cracks like gunshots, like fireworks. Over and over and over again, but you never die, only scream from the bedrock as your fifty legs jut out at wrong angles, as your eyes roll wildly from heads stiff on broken necks.

Gingko closes their eyes, then opens them again.

You are tied to a stake and being shot through with arrows. Someone releases a bowstring, the twang its own assault, the whoosh as the arrow cuts through the air mirroring your own intake of breath. The arrowhead buries itself into your side. You arch your back to meet the pain, your ribs straining against muscle and skin. The fletching quivers as you weep. Again: the twang, the whoosh. Another arrow pierces you. You can only take and take and take. An arrow pierces your neck. An arrow pierces your eye. Stop, you want to say, but the word will not come as blood pours from your mouth. Stop, you want to say, but they will never stop. 

You have so much blood to give.

You are an egg now, your shell thick with years and years of calcium. If your shell were cut sagittally, you would see the rings forming your fortress: thin some years, thick during others. A palm touches either side of your shell and begins to press. You are tiny and soft within the egg, embryonic and malleable. You push back against your walls with your translucent hands, your fetal bones so small, so delicate, thinner than a pin. The pressure builds. You will crack. You will crack, and you and your amniotic fluid, you and your tenderness, will spill out and die, thick and coagulated on the ground. The hands push. The hands squeeze. Let me be, you want to demand.

But you haven’t learned yet how to form words. 

The hands want to break you. You can do nothing but yield. Your shell breaks. You are clay with palm prints indenting your form, every finger-skin ridge masking the blueprint of your self.

“Please,” you choke through the fugue, the haze blinding you, “tear me apart.”

I shall.

You are young again, virgin enough that a boy, a man, could cup the curve of your hip in his hand and call you his, and you would be his, the whole of you. You open your mouth.

“I’m not…”

Not what? There are eyes everywhere. Eyes in the sky. Eyes embedded in every wall. Eyes on his hands. Eyes in his mouth.

Eyes all over, and all of them are looking at you, but none of them are seeing you.

So what are you then?

Gingko cradles your jaw in their void tendrils. You don’t remember when you started crying, but tears are streaking your face now, salt abrading your soul. You don’t remember when you fell to your knees, but here you are now, the hardwood digging into your bones. You look up and meet Gingko’s eyes. Each of them blinks at a different time. Their pupils widen as if to devour you.

I will see you.

They do. They see you. They see the fear, the panic, the anxiety whirling in your gut, scrabbling at the walls of your stomach, desperate to unmake you.

You know what you are.

They begin to pull you apart then, their tendrils leaving a wake of devastation on your skin: they rip away your fingernails and expose the tender beds of flesh to the air. They yank your teeth from your skull. They pry your eyes open impossibly wide.

I will see you:

They claw your mouth open, tear your uvula from your throat as if pulling the root of your skull away, the center of your head in their grasp. They open their mouth, rows and rows and rows of dark teeth, and swallow your uvula like bitters.

You are not the monster.

They gouge rivers in your flesh. Carve you away until you’re bone and carnage. Until all you can do is scream and sob, too wracked with pain and horror to do anything else. You’re clinging to Gingko and the void is burning your fingertips away, and you welcome it, oh God, you welcome it.

You welcome it.

Reality fades back in slowly. Bit by bit, piece by piece. Your throat is raw and you have no more tears to offer as libation. You’re shuddering, heaving. You think you might throw up. Gingko watches you from across the room.

You are here.

“Yes,” you croak.

You have survived this.

“Yes.”

You will survive more.

“Yes.”

Your phone buzzes. Your mother is calling. You close your eyes, brace yourself, and tap the icon to answer.

“Emily?”

“Hi, Mama. I told you, it’s Em.”

“Don’t forget to bring a side dish tomorrow.”

“I know.”

“You don’t sound excited. Your auntie Jennifer will be very excited to see her niece again after so long, you know.”

You swallow. Not a niece, you want to say.

“Okay.”

“Cover up your tattoos and don’t be difficult. Love you, Emily.”

“Good night.”

You hang up and stare at the screen.

“It’s Em,” you say after a moment.

I know, Gingko replies.

“She’s going to introduce me to everyone as Emily. They’re all going to use the wrong pronouns.”

You survived this. You will survive tomorrow.

A notification pops up for the Nightmare app. Gingko has concluded your session. You pay the bill and leave a hefty tip and a five-star review.

Thank you.

“No,” you say, wrapping your arms around yourself. “Thank you.”

Gingko disappears as silently as they arrived.

You know what you are.

You survived this.

You will survive tomorrow.

 

S. Qiouyi Lu (they/them) writes, translates, and edits between two coasts of the Pacific. Their fiction and poetry have appeared in Asimov’s, F&SF, and Strange Horizons, and their translations have appeared in Clarkesworld. They edit the flash fiction and poetry magazine Arsenika.

You can find out more about S. at their website, https://s.qiouyi.lu

First published in The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, March/April 2019.

The Sea of Faith

The Sea of Faith
Was once, too, at the full, and round earth’s shore
Lay like the folds of a bright girdle furled.
But now I only hear
Its melancholy, long withdrawing roar,
Retreating, to the breath
Of the night-wind, down the vast edges drear
And naked shingles of the world.

— Matthew Arnold, “Dover Beach”


The gates to the City of the Dead were rusting despite best efforts to maintain them; when the deadbolt was broken they swung inward, clanging and creaking. Peridot flinched at the sound — anyone for miles could have heard it. She dropped her bolt cutters and switched off her flashlight, and moved blindly into the labyrinth.

The North Mausoleum rose high above her, display cases rising six feet high and what seemed like a mile long. It wasn’t a mile, she knew. It was only a quarter of that, as it currently stood. In the dark, though, everything loomed larger.

The roaming guards swept through the Mausoleum before she could get seven yards in; she lay down in the grass and waited for them to pass, still and silent as a stone angel. They passed without so much as a glance in her direction.

After a few beats, Peridot switched the light back on. The next sweep would come by in a quarter of an hour. She had exactly nine hundred seconds to move.

Alastair’s moriai was housed in the West Mausoleum. Row 3, Column 10, to be precise. Peridot knew the number by heart, but it would be hard to find in the dark. All lights were kept off in the City of the Dead, due to the superstition that said spirits were drawn to light. Peridot didn’t believe in spirits — if Alastair was still around, she would have come to visit. It was impossible to imagine she wouldn’t.

She veered right, breaking into a run when she hit grass. Benches and thorn bushes rose up to meet her, narrowly missing her shins. In the shadows, clusters of In Memoriam trees and flowers looked like the grasping hands of revenants.

Peridot skidded and stumbled entering the West Mausoleum, tile squeaking under her feet. Her heart was pounding. Without a crowd to follow, it seemed so much easier to be swallowed up by the labyrinth.

Seven minutes had passed. Eight minutes remained until the next sweep — still, there was always a chance that someone could see her, a custodian maybe, or a chaplain keeping vigil. Being caught in the City of the Dead after dark meant being chained to a tree and left for the spirits. The penalty was a scare tactic more than anything, and it didn’t scare her. No one had ever been killed by spirits, though some reported scratches and bruises. What scared her more was the thought of being caught later, with Alastair’s moriai in her hand. The punishment for stealing from or defiling the City of the Dead was total erasure. She would be sunk into the Sea of Peace, her thread of life with her, and mention of her name would be forbidden.

Four minutes remained, and lost in thought she’d come closer to her destination than she realized. She switched off her light; she could find the case she wanted by memory now, even in the dark. She visited often enough.  She walked faster.

She cut through the edges of the glass with a jewelry knife, or started to anyway -- halfway through, she heard the sounds of footsteps. The next sweep. She cursed.

Peridot ran to the tree planted in the center of the hall, and she jumped into its branches. The branches held her while she prayed.

Ten minutes she remained there. Guards came by with flashlights, stunners on their belts. They didn’t find her — by the way they ambled, by their chuckling conversation, Peridot suspected they weren’t looking that hard. It was a lazy hour of the night, close to the changing of the guard. They were going through the motions, waiting to be sent home.

Peridot took a breath and dropped down once they’d passed. The nine hundred seconds began. This time, she didn’t dare turn on her light.

When the glass panel came free, she let it fall and shatter as she seized Alastair’s moriai. Let the guards find it on their next sweep — she would be long gone by then.

*              *              *

What modern historians knew as Olympia began, as so many of history’s dark chapters have, with roundups. It began with trains. It began with walls.

People from Tucson to Helena saw the walls go up. Flimsy sheet-metal things they were at first (soon they would be reinforced), but already taller than three men standing on each other’s shoulders. Too tall to see over. People whispered, but they didn’t protest. They had a good idea what the walls were there for.

The trains went east first, emptying the cities of survivors. They emptied Boise, Salt Lake, Phoenix and Olympia — the Columbia of the future, the city where a new nation would one day be declared. The once-bustling streets of Sacramento, San Francisco, San Diego and Los Angeles were left empty, cities of dreams no longer. Provo and Reno, Great Falls and Twin Falls, Portland and Seattle — no city was spared. Scientists hadn’t discovered the so-called scarab gene, yet; they had only just designated the illness sweeping the nation as Marjorie Gilbert’s Disease, after the news anchor who bravely announced her diagnosis to the world on live TV. They knew that there was a pandemic, and that some miracle of the Goddess Nature kept some people immune to it. That was all they knew.

Mutations on the Hemoglobin-Beta 11 gene make their carriers immune to malaria. They also cause sickle-cell anemia. Human genetics are often a double-edged sword and the scarab (named for a symbol of health and death in Ancient Egypt) was no different. When a new wave of whooping cough hit the United States of America in the mid twenty-first, our bodies dutifully transformed to stop it. Sighs of relief all around — that is, until recovery turned into a raging fever, and seizures, and sudden death. There was no identified Patient Zero. No one could be sure when it began. More of the population got whooping cough, and more recovered, and about half of them died soon after.

No stone was left unturned in search of the carriers of this unnamed biological time bomb, and more importantly, in search of people who weren't carriers.

The carriers were left behind. The loved ones who refused to leave, who wished to stay with their sick relatives, were brought along kicking and screaming. It’s all for the future, the soldiers said. Think of your children. Think of the generations to come.

Once the last train had come east, the first went west. These trains were much fuller, loaded to their brims with the sick and dying. Lieutenant Nikitha Morris of the National Guard told her wife, years later, about the one patient who stuck out to her among the anonymous hopeless faces: an old black man singing Sister Rosetta Tharpe in a melancholy baritone. This train is bound for glory, this train.

*              *              *

Malachi roused her at noon, after she fell asleep at her workbench. Thankfully, Alastair’s moriai was hidden behind her toolbox, under the scrappy old shirt she wore to clean or paint.

“You know you’re working with the lights off?” ze greeted her.

“Hm?” She rubbed her eyes. “Oh — oh, God. How long did I sleep?”

“I don’t know. I don’t even know when you got out of bed and came down here.” Malachi sat down beside her. “How are you feeling?”

Peridot didn’t meet her sib’s eyes. She didn’t like meeting people’s eyes, even the people she knew; she looked at their moriais first, despite how impolite it seemed. She’d been taught over and over not to make judgements based on what was on someone’s life-thread, and she didn’t make judgements. It was just easier to look at the beads than to analyze someone’s face. People’s faces were complicated and difficult, a language she didn’t speak.

Malachi wore hir moriai pinned to a bright red patch of fabric on hir jeans. Nineteen beads, all the red-tinged white of California. A Mercury symbol hung on the end, engraved with hir name: Malachi Yew Bradstreet. Plus a tag designating hir a student of the San Angelo School of Mechanics, and a similar one for the factory ze worked at on the weekends. Malachi didn’t have a religion symbol, or a religion for that matter. Their parents belonged to the Temple of Moroni — most people in their state did — but they had never pressured either of their children to join. Peridot joined the Church of the Goddess when she married Alastair, but Malachi seemed content with where ze was. Ze’d always been a thoughtful and a happy person. Maybe it wouldn’t last forever, but at the moment, it seemed ze had all the meaning in life that ze needed.

“What did you come down here for, anyway?” ze asked.  Peridot shrugged. 

“I couldn’t sleep. Aren’t you supposed to be at school? Don’t you have a class right now?”

“Not today. Prof’s having a baby. Why are you working with the lights off?”

Peridot furrowed her brow and looked around, like she hadn’t noticed the lights were off. (She had. She felt safer knowing nobody could look through the little basement window and see her.) “Was I? Fuck, I guess I was.” She ran her hands through her hair, and her agitation wasn’t false. “Switch them on for me?”

Malachi rose, and wordlessly flipped every lightswitch.

“Thanks. I know I’m acting off,” Peridot said. “And I’m sorry. It’s just…I’m just….” Her eyes filled with real tears. 

“Hey, sis, I get it. We all get it. I miss Alastair too, though I know it can’t be nearly as much as you do.”

“Can I ask you something, Malachi?”

Ze shrugged. “Sure. Anything.”

“We haven’t talked about her since the funeral — about what happened, I mean. Do you…I mean, have you thought about it at all? Do you think Alastair killed herself? Do you think she’s dead at all? I mean, all we found was her moriai by the seaside. We never found a body.”

Peridot saw hir heart jump into hir throat; it wasn’t a question ze had expected, or wanted. “I don’t know, Peridot. I really don’t. That’s something I try not to think about it.”

She nodded. “Okay. You don’t have to have an answer. I just wanted to ask.” She should know better, she thought, than to go looking for answers to the unanswerable. Alastair should have known better.

Some things were better left as questions.

*              *              *

The first Temple of Moroni was much smaller in Peridot’s day than it had once been. When the trains first arrived, those who had never seen the Salt Lake City LDS Temple had thought it was a castle.

The Temple itself was closed off, but a field hospital had been set up just beyond. Similar hospitals had been set up in the big cities -- Phoenix, Vegas, LA, Portland, et cetera -- but also in suburbs and small towns and out in the middle of forests or fields. The relief was spearheaded by the Catholic Church, the JDC, a few secular relief groups and the UN. The UN was the first to be ushered out. The Catholics were the last to go. The camps emptied out except for the dying and the dead.

A woman known only as Tali O. left behind a diary, describing the sense of foreboding she felt in the empty days. I think about the trains and I think about my Oma’s stories, I think about Nuremberg and death. I thought it was a horrible thing to think, I shouldn’t put such dark motives on the people who wish to save the lives of everyone out there, but I can’t help thinking that death waits here. I can feel it here. You have dealt goodness to your servant, O Lord, in accordance to your promise. Teach me the goodness and wisdom of the Torah’s reasons, for I believe in your commandments. Tali O. was halfway through transcribing Tehillim 119:834 when her writings end abruptly — presumably when the first bombs began to fall.

*              *              *

Alastair’s moriai was short, too short — only thirty-two beads, twenty the blue and gold of Oregon, the rest California-colored. The Venus symbol on the end read Alastair St. James McKinley; Peridot remembered what a headache it was to convince the Department of Living History that Alastair didn’t want to change her name, she only wanted it set on a Venus symbol instead of a Mars. She liked her name. She didn’t intend to change it because that’s what was the tradition when one transitioned. Tradition in general meant jack shit to Alastair.

Her work tag was from the San Angelo Office of the DLH, something Peridot was pretty sure wouldn’t have lasted long. Alastair never stayed at one job for more than five years. The demand for archivists was too high, and she was too restless. Her religion marker, the same expertly polished steel as her gender marker, was the three-moon symbol of the Church of the Goddess. And her wedding ring hung on the moriai too. She’d taken it off her finger, just before she died, and attached it to the thread. That more than anything told Peridot that Alastair had known she was going to die.

And now the detritus of her life lay scattered across Peridot’s workspace.

Peridot Bradstreet was a jeweler, and had been since she turned fifteen — old enough to apprentice. On the other side of the walls, that would afford her little prestige. She might make good money, depending on her clients, but she would live out her days as an anonymous craftsperson. Not so in Olympia. Here, jewelers were deeply valued public servants. The moriais they created were a record of every new birth, a record that would survive after every death.

Alastair had been an archivist, a curator, a librarian — positions that afforded her the same amount of respect as Peridot, though her job was more about the long-dead than the newly born. Alastair’s job gave her access to tools most people weren’t afforded. She could use the computers in the archives, something that made her the envy of technophiles all across San Angelo. She still wasn’t allowed a personal computer — that was a privilege only afforded to a few elite officials — but there was, nonetheless, one hidden in a closet within Peridot’s workroom. 

A family heirloom, Alastair had claimed. I’ve kept it up all these years, I don’t see any reason to let such a useful thing go to waste in some junkyard.

Inside her hollow Goddess charm, now in pieces, Alastair had left a note, containing a single word. The password to her computer.

Answers, maybe. Peridot wasn’t sure she wanted them.

*              *              *

History is easier to comprehend, Awiti Bremischer thought, when broken down into numbers. The end of the world was easier to comprehend, that way.

327,200,000: the number of people in the United States of America when the whooping cough outbreak began.

100: the amount of people who died from the cough before Gilbert’s Disease.

Approximately 13,000,000: the number of Gilbert’s-related deaths before an emergency order closed off the states of Utah, Arizona, Idaho, Washington, Oregon, Nevada, California, and parts of Wyoming and Montana.

Approximately 25,000,000: the number of people who fled the United States during the outbreak. Many moved north to Canada or south to Mexico before the borders closed. Many more went back to ancestral homelands — China, Poland, Belize, Vietnam, France, India, Nigeria, Jamaica — by plane or ship, before the airports and seaports were both closed. Many more found their way out after that, one way or another. There’s always a way out, depending on what you’re willing to sacrifice.

9,936,000: the number sent to or sealed inside the newly-built quarantine country.

4,510,000: the number that died of Gilbert’s behind the walls.

Approximately 2,560,000: the number that died when the US took a dramatic final step in ending the fever’s spread. Firebombs weren’t enough to stop another 2,000,000 from succumbing.

331,200. Three hundred thirty-one thousand, and two hundred. That was how many survived after — mercy of mercies — a vaccine for Gilbert’s was developed by Olympian doctors, who couldn’t be saved by their own invention.

Awiti’s secret job gave him access to material most people never saw or dreamed of. He was one of the few people in Olympia allowed a personal computer and access to the Internet. The Internet showed him everything from American news to world news to unedited Bibles and history books. He’d read the documents from the Olympia, Washington conference that officially gave rise to his country.

It made perfect sense to him that the US firebombing of the quarantine country wasn’t in Olympian history books. In fact, those books make no mention of a quarantine at all. They say that Olympians are descended from the only survivors of a totally devastating plague. Everyone to the east was wiped out.

It made perfect sense, from an isolationist standpoint: telling the people that there was nothing beyond the walls kept them from going looking. It kept Olympia from being exposed again to the harm Americans could inflict on them. It kept them from realizing what they truly were.

But, to Awiti, it also made sense from a personal standpoint. 

We’re dead to them, the last living ones thought. Might as well make the best of it. Might as well build a nation in this graveyard.

*              *              *

Now Peridot understood.

Alastair had killed herself, maybe. She had known the risks when she followed her map outside, and she determined that the rewards were worth it. Alastair could be dead. She could be alive, too, but Peridot didn’t allow herself to focus on that. Easier to keep her dead, for now.

Olympia was surrounded on all sides by vast expanses. To the west was the Sea of Peace, an expanse of salty green water, endless. To the north and south were expanses of nothingness — Canada and Mexico, if those places still existed. They were sealed off by barbed wire and landmines; what was beyond remained unknown, unknowable.  Here there be dragons.

To the west, beyond the walls, there was the desert. A sea of red Earth, stretching as far as the eye could see, with more unknown beyond it.

The United States. The United States was a place that still existed.

The only things Alastair had saved on her computer were a map of that nation and a history book that taught her the truth.

The United States was where Alastair was, in soul or body. It was where she waited for her wife.

*              *              *

“Alright, thank you, Mr. Bremischer. See you next week,” River Hesse concluded, professional as a therapist with a client. River didn’t talk to his own therapist about Awiti Bremischer, of course. That name, that man and his information, were highly confidential. But everyone knew at least some details of the Olympia Project, so he felt comfortable speaking of the stress his involvement in the hundred-year-long endeavor put him under.

He shut off the computer and sighed, deeply.

River hadn’t yet told Bremischer that he was to be the last of the Project’s interviewees. When he died, America would land a helicopter in Olympia and offer to let the lost states rejoin the Union. No one had any idea how it would go. It could kickstart a war — a war that would inevitably devastate the smaller, newer country. But “forward with reckless abandon” had been the direction of the US for three centuries at least--and maybe since the nation’s birth--and it wasn’t about to stop or turn around now.

Keeping the survivors of the ill-advised bombings sealed off from the world had originally been a safety measure, to stop the spread of disease. Soon, though, scientists realized the opportunity they had in their hands. The quarantined had split off from the American way of life entirely. They were writing their own history books. They were forming religions. They were building a culture from the ground up, from dust. No anthropologists had witnessed this happen in real time. It was unlikely they would ever get another chance to do so. Was it unethical? Hell yes, it was unethical. And yet three generations of River Hesses had jumped at the chance.

River packed up the dregs of his day and clocked off. He was thinking of making an emergency appointment with his therapist.

River Hesse longed for Olympia. He’d met the refugees; he knew there were people desperate to get out. He knew it was a poor place, much of its land barren, with a government that withheld information and executed people at the smallest provocation. But the lives that trans people like him had in Olympia were something he would kill for. He wanted to jump that wall, just to get a taste of that effortless acceptance.

Halfway through his walk home, River pulled out his phone and dialed Dr. Murray’s number.

*              *              *

There had been no attempts to maintain the walls, and they were rusted to Hell. The area around them was desolately empty. No one came too close, for those walls marked the edge of the world. Guards manned towers spaced a half-mile from each other, but a lone person at the base of the walls was a rare sight.

Peridot didn’t wait for night. The guards and bystanders wouldn’t stop her, wouldn’t try to save her. If anything, she wanted to be seen. She wanted to inspire their awe.

She removed her moriai and hung it on a nail. Whether she died out there or not, her grave would be in Olympia.

She placed what was left of Alastair’s moriai beside it, their stories intertwining. Peridot didn’t believe in spirits. She didn’t want to take the chance. If she died, she would be beside her wife.

She climbed.

A small crowd stopped to watch, but most people passed on by. As if it was bad luck to watch a crazy person too closely. As if the suicidal impulse might be catching.

Peridot kept climbing.

Her fingers were bleeding by the time she reached the top. She couldn’t look down; the dizziness was nearly enough to make her lose her grip. When she crested the wall, the only way to look was out.

A sea of red stretched out beneath her. In the heat of the day, the air rolled and jumped like waves.

Peridot had only seen the real sea once before. It staggered her then, just as this desert staggered her — the hugeness of it, like the sky fallen to the ground. It could swallow you, it could swallow millions, and still have space between the bodies.

The climb down was easier than the climb to the top. As she climbed, the crowd on the other side dissipated, counting her as lost. They murmured, but still they were afraid to speak too much of it; they dreaded having to break the news to Peridot’s family. Her deadly curiosity wasn’t something to be spread.

Peridot reached the ground. With one step, and then another, she let the newly-glimpsed sea swallow her.

 

K. Noel Moore (they/them) is a writer of fiction (mostly genre) and poetry from Atlanta. Their work has previously been featured in Twist In Time Magazine, Homology Lit, Bewildering Stories, and many more; their most recent book, the fantasy novella Incendiary Devices, was released in December.

Twitter: https://twitter.com/mysterioustales
Website: https://knoeltales.wordpress.com/

A Fortune Told

Cats had gotten into Caravaggio’s one-room cabin. Hundreds of cats, all colors and sizes, the bright blue ones being the most numerous. Some were meowing loudly, others quiet, a few of them jumping from one piece of rickety furniture to the next, several of them sleeping on the windowsill, basking in the early morning sun. Caravaggio laid on his mattress filled with so much straw it was ready to pop like a bloated tick and wondered how the cats had gotten in with the windows shut and the door closed. Small flames flickered on the few remaining sticks in the large, stone fireplace. Wisps of smoke rose from the hot ash, so the cats didn’t come down the chimney. He sat up, wishing that he felt better, that the consumption that rendered his lungs almost useless would miraculously clear up and allow him to breathe normally and he’d stop coughing up blood. The fever that gripped him made his head ache. Sweat drained from his pores. The knock on the door sounded like a battering ram pounding the wood that set off loud ringing in his ears. He slowly stood and kicked aside a dozen or more cats as he made his way across the room.  

“My dear friend, you look awful,” Panjayo said to Caravaggio when the door opened. He was holding a basket with bread, cheese, and a bottle of wine.

Caravaggio wiped sweat from his forehead with the back of his hand and coughed, his chest wracked with pain. “It’s the cats. They keep me awake most of the night.”

“There are no cats at my house,”Panjayo said. “You are welcome to come live with me.”

Caravaggio smiled wanly. “You do too much for me already, my friend. Tell me, have you seen Renaldo of late?”

Panjayo put his hand to Caravaggio’s forehead. “You’re burning up,” he said. He walked in, took Caravaggio by the arm and led him back to his mattress. “I’ve brought you something to eat, but first we must do something about your fever.”

Caravaggio laid back on the mattress and looked at Panjayo with pleading in his dark green eyes. “Please get the cats out of my house.”  He shut his eyes and tried to ignore the meowing of the large vermilion cat that had climbed onto the mattress.

“Of course,” Panjayo replied. “Close your eyes and rest while I prepare a poultice.” He placed the basket on the table, stoked the embers, reigniting the flames, and placed a pan of water on the fire.  

Caravaggio awoke around noon to the sound of Panjayo singing an operatic aria in a falsetto voice. The notes that he sang were as melodious as any notes he had ever heard. He removed the damp cloth from his forehead and shifted uncomfortably in his sweat-soaked nightshirt. His fever had broken. He looked over at Panjayo who was seated in front of the fire and using needle and thread to mend a hole Caravaggio’s tunic. His heart swelled with love for his friend.

*             *             *

Twelve months before, on his twenty-first birthday, Caravaggio climbed onto the concrete railing of the bridge that spanned the small river that flowed through the center of the city and sat down. He dangled his feet a few yards above the gently flowing water as hummingbirds that sipped nectar from the blossoms of the honeysuckle vines that clung to the bridge around his legs. He leaned forward and gazed at his reflection in the water and admired his new hat adorned with an ostrich plume that he had just bought from the money his parents had sent him from his hometown of Genoa. The remainder of the gold coins in the pocket of his new tunic tinkled musically as they were jingled about by his movement.

He sat back and with his eyes closed he lifted his face toward the afternoon sun, warming his cheeks. Thoughts of the birthday party that his friend Panjayo was throwing him later that evening filled his heart with joy and his head with thoughts of Renaldo, the new addition and a baritone, to the operatic society. He hoped he would be at the party. They had only flirted surreptitiously with one another from across the theater stage, but he was certain that the romance he had seen in Renaldo’s eyes was more than just his imagination at work. 

“Excuse me, young sir,” came a raspy voice from behind him.

Caravaggio turned his head and saw standing there a very old woman whose wrinkles almost erased her facial features. She wore a blue and white turban that was tightly wound around her head. She gazed at him pensively with watery, cathartic eyes hidden between the drooping folds of skin that surrounded her eyes.  

“What is it you want to say, old woman?” he asked, crinkling his finely shaped nose at the smell of stale garlic that wafted from her ragged clothes. 

“Happy Birthday to you,” she said. “I can tell your fortune for a few gold coins if you’d be so inclined.”

He swiveled around, facing her. “How did you know it was my birthday?”

“I know a good deal many things,” she replied. “But it’s that new hat with that glorious plumage that told me today must be a very special one for you, young sir.”

“Indeed it is,” he replied cheerily, forgetting the old woman’s scent. “Tonight I’m attending a party being thrown in my honor at the finest restaurant in the city and the entirety of my operatic society will be there.”

“I could tell you were a singer by the way music leaves your lips with every word you speak, young sir,” she said.

He jumped down from the railing and puffed out his chest. “I’m said to be the finest tenor in the entire city.” He opened his mouth and emitted several notes that lifted into the air as if headed straight toward heaven. 

She clapped her arthritic hands. “What a gift you have, young sir!” she proclaimed. “Now, about your fortune.” She reached out her hand.

“Oh, yes, I guess it might be worth a few gold coins knowing if I’ll find true love tonight,” he said. He reached into his pocket and took out the gold coins and placed them into her palm. 

She put the coins in a small burlap bag that hung from a sash tied around her thin waist. “Hold out your hand,” she instructed him. 

He did as he was told. She lightly ran her bony fingers over the lines that criss-crossed his palm and mumbled a few unintelligible words.

“What do you see?” he asked, excitedly.

“See for yourself, young sir,” she said, raising his hand to within inches of his eyes.

The palm of his hand began to glow as if the light of a lantern had been cast on it. His apartment in the wealthy Di Lusso district of the city came into view, as if the palm of his hand had become a pool of water he was looking into. His best clothes were laid out on the satin sheets that covered the down-filled mattress on his four poster bed. His manservant, Lugio, sat on a stool polishing Caravaggio’s leather boots with a chamois cloth. 

Caravaggio stared, astonished and dumbfounded, as he watched himself enter his bedroom, dress, put on his boots, and place his new hat on his head. He put a cape around his shoulders and left the apartment. He walked out of his building just as a coach pulled by two white horses arrived at the curb. He stepped into the coach and rode through the city as night fell, arriving in front of the Belissima Cena restaurant where a crowd of his friends from the operatic society applauded as he stepped out of the coach. Panjayo took him by the arm and led him into the restaurant. At the table, everyone was there except Renaldo. He watched his hand as the four course meal was served, a great deal of expensive wine was poured, and with great merriment everyone ate and drank.

And then his hand went dark. He looked from his hand to where the old woman had been standing. She was gone. He began to cough, a cough that shook his entire body, and spat up a small spot of blood into his handkerchief. He stared at it, mystified. 

*             *             *

Caravaggio sat up on the edge of the straw-filled mattress and took in several deep breaths, as deep as he was able to inhale them. Thinking about Renaldo, he whispered his name.

Panjayo looked up from his sewing. “So, you’re awake,” he said, put Caravaggio’s tunic aside and walked over to the bed. He placed his hand on Caravaggio’s forehead. “You’re much cooler, my friend, and look a little better. Would you like something to eat?”

“Just a little bread and a glass of wine, please,” Caravaggio answered.

Panjayo put his arm around Caravaggio’s torso and helped him walk to the table and sit down in a chair, that like all three chairs in the shack, had uneven legs. Smiling at the silliness of it, Caravaggio rocked back and forth. “I don’t really miss my old furniture so much,” he said.

“Don’t you?” Panjayo asked as he poured wine into an earthen cup and then handed it to Caravaggio.

“I do wonder who owns my old bed, though,” he said and then took a large gulp of the wine. The coolness of the liquid going down his irritated throat and the slight bitterness of the purple grapes used to make it that lingered on his tongue made him cough. He put the cup on the table and watched a cockroach crawl across the hole-ridden table cloth. “I thought I’d die a very wealthy man because of what was to be my inheritance but because I have refused to marry a signorina I can’t get my parents to send me even one gold coin.”  

“Even more reason that you should come live with me instead of in this rundown cabin on the outskirts of the city,” Panjayo said. 

“I impose on your kindness too much already, my generous friend,” Caravaggio replied. “Besides, I couldn’t leave my straw mattress behind, nor could I take it with me and further spread the fleas.” He chuckled and then began to cough.

*             *             *

Four months almost to the day after meeting the fortune teller while on the bridge, Caravaggio was strolling on a path between patches of blooming tulips in the Giardini Forti park when he spotted the old woman sitting on a bench. The gold coins in his trousers pocket jingled as he ran across the park and stopped in front of her, breathless, his lungs aching.

“Old woman, you didn’t earn the money I gave you the last time we met,” he said.

She squinted at him as if allowing her eyes to adjust to the sight of him. “Oh yes, young sir, I remember you. Your fortune didn’t turn out as you wished when last time I told your fortune?”

Caravaggio coughed. “What I hoped for didn’t occur.” 

“Hope is a thing of the heart. Fortune is what we hold in our hands,” she said. 

He stared at the palm of his hands. “I’ve seen nothing in them since then.” 

“If you don’t mind me saying so young sir, but the pallor of your skin is quite pale,” she said.

He put his hand to his face. “I’ve had a cold that I’ve been unable to shake and tonight I’m to give my first solo performance.” He took the coins from his pocket and handed them to her. “I want to know how things turn out this evening.”

She put the coins in her burlap bag and then took hold of his hand. “Look and you’ll see your fortune,” she said.

He raised his hand and looked into his palm. There, he saw himself standing on the stage, looking out a large audience as the opera chorus assembled about him, with Renaldo standing among them. He opened his mouth about to begin his song when he began to cough, and unable to stop, he ran from the stage. His vision in the palm of his hand vanished. He looked up and saw that the old woman had disappeared.

*             *             *

Caravaggio sat in front of the fireplace with a blanket wrapped around his shoulders and hummed quietly as he stared at the flames licking at the tree branches Panjayo had just added to the fire. He held in his hand the ostrich plume from his hat, rubbing the tip of it against the palm of his other hand. The plume had lost some of its vanes and appeared sickly, as if taken from a diseased ostrich. He held back the cough that tried to escape from his lungs. 

“Is it really true that the operatic society has disbanded?” he asked Panjayo who was stuffing fresh straw into the mattress. “Being a part of it was one of the true joys of my life.”

Panjayo gave him a worried look. “Your life isn’t over yet,” he said. 

“Isn’t it?” Caravaggio replied.    

“Tomorrow is your twenty-second birthday and I have a surprise in store for you.”

“You’ve found Renaldo!” he exclaimed excitedly.

Panjayo shot him a pained look. “That would be a surprise since no one has seen or heard from him since he left for Venice.” He flattened out the mattress the best he could and then covered with a piece of cloth the untouched bread and cheese that sat on the table. “Before I leave you for the night, are you sure you will be okay until morning?”

“We will have to leave that to fate, my friend.”

*             *             *

Eight months after originally meeting the fortune teller, Caravaggio walked out of the shop where he had just sold his hat and boots to the shop owner in order to pay the doctor’s bill and ran into her on the sidewalk. He had removed the plume from the hat and thrust it into his pocket where the end stuck out, giving the appearance of a bird being trapped in his tunic. He held the coins in his hand that he had received from the shop owner. “See what good your fortune telling has done me, old woman?” he hissed at her. “I’ve just sold the last of my things to pay the bill to a quack who wants to send me to live in convent until I die.” 

The old woman looked him up and down, at the deteriorating state of his clothing. “A fortune told is not the same as a fortune promised,” she said. “I am but an old woman who shows the future to the willing at the meager price of a few coins to buy crusts of bread with.”

He rolled the coins around in his hand. “You’ve robbed me blind, but I must know, am I to die with no one but my friend Panjayo at my funeral?”

She held out her hand and counted the coins as he laid them in her palm. She put the coins in her bag and then ran her fingers over the lines in his palm. She raised his hand in front of his face. “Just know I can show you only once what will happen after you have left this world for your eternal rest.”

“I hope to not cross your path again after this, old woman.”

In the palm of his hand he saw the pauper’s cemetery and open graves stacked with bodies. 

He screamed at the sight, giving flight to the flocks of pigeons that crowded the nearby square. He looked up to see that the old woman had vanished just as his hand returned to normal.

*             *             *

Caravaggio awoke in the middle of the night thinking he had been set on fire. Fever coursed through his body causing him to hallucinate seeing smoke arising from his skin. The cats had returned, taking up every square inch of spare space inside the cabin, filling the air with their cacophonous meowing. Rending his nightshirt, he climbed off of the mattress and ran to the door, flung it open, and ran out into the darkness. Stumbling, throwing himself blindly forward, he rushed from the perimeter of the city, shouting out Renaldo’s name as he made his way to the city’s center. At sunrise he arrived at the bridge that crossed the narrow river, climbed up on the railing, and prepared to jump.

“Ending your life now would be a mistake,” the old woman said, suddenly appearing a few feet away. 

He whirled about. “You, better than anyone knows that my fortune this past year should not be endured by anyone.”

“That was a fortune you might have lived.”

“What?’

“Fortune has many paths. You chose to see just the one.”

“What if I want to go back and have another fortune laid out in front of me?” he asked.

“That can be done just by asking it,” she said, and then vanished.

In that instant he was returned to the year before when he climbed onto the concrete railing of the bridge and gazed at his reflection in the water. 

“Caravaggio, my love,” a voice called out.

He turned and saw Panjayo walking toward him, holding a bouquet of flowers.

Steve Carr (he/him), who lives in Richmond, Virginia, has had over 320 short stories published internationally in print and online magazines, literary journals and anthologies since June 2016. Four collections of his short stories, Sand, Rain, Heat, and The Tales of Talker Knock, have been published. His plays have been produced in several states in the U.S. He has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize twice.

His Twitter is @carrsteven960
His website is https://www.stevecarr960.com/
He is on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/steven.carr.35977

Identity Death

I thought about you today.

Of course, I think about you every day, but today I woke up in the hospital bed I spent last night in and my first thought was of the moment you found the flyer. It was your lunch break, I remember. You were walking back to the bookstore where you worked and the wind blew a flyer to your feet. Flyers are common enough around here and most people just ignore them. Usually. they’re just nonsense, ads for bands that don’t exist performing at bars that don’t exist. Some people think they’re an elaborate art project, a vast work scattered throughout the city that can only be understood if you collect all the pieces. Others think they’re garbage that’s blown in from another dimension, advertising real places and events, but ones that are out of our reach.

This flyer, however, caught your eye for a couple of reasons. First, it was a request for people to take part in an experiment. The nameless organization behind the poster claimed that it was attempting human trials for a drug that would give you abilities beyond what humans are capable of, beyond even what the laws of physics deemed possible. It was ridiculous nonsense, like all of the other flyers. Anyone would dismiss it in an instant. Except that you didn’t dismiss it. You knew that superpowers were only a thing in comic books, you had watched all the videos about all the different ludicrous ways they were impossible. However, the poster promised you hope. And no matter how unlikely, no matter how insane it was, you couldn’t ignore it because ignoring it would have been giving up hope entirely. The second reason the poster caught your eye was the address at the bottom. It was on Crucible Street, a street you knew. It was a real place.

*             *             *

I stay at the hospital a lot because they have an entire floor in one building that goes mostly unused. Sometimes they have to open it when they have too many patients, but mostly it just sits there, full of empty beds and empty of people. When I got up today, I dressed and freshened up in the bathroom, then dropped through the floor. I allowed myself to fall for three floors before landing on the ground floor. People saw me, I’m sure, but I don’t really care. There’s a rumor going around that I’m a ghost.


When you were in middle school, you were bullied relentlessly. The other children teased you about your small size, your nervous demeanor, your high-pitched voice, your intelligence, everything about you. Instead of using your name, they would use insulting words that rhyme with your name. They didn’t beat you up, but they would drop things on you, body check you, steal your things, shoot you with spitballs, constantly let you know that they saw themselves as above you, that your misery was entertaining to them. Not a day went by where they didn’t repeat something back to you in a screechy imitation of your voice.

You tried to seek help from the adults in your life. Your parents, your teachers and your guidance counselor all told you the same things. Just ignore it. Don’t let it affect you. You believed that your parents always loved you and that they knew best, you believed that the guidance counselor was a kindhearted man whose only goal was to make sure the students were cared for, and so you tried to follow this advice.

I hate them for telling you that.

Every time your bullies hurt you, every time you felt tears form in your eyes, every time you felt your face redden, it became a failure on your part. You were letting them affect you. The advice of the adults was so simple and yet you couldn’t even follow it. You couldn’t stop yourself from being hurt. Worse, you started to become aware that your bullies were changing you. You changed the way you dressed, stopped wearing jewelry to school. You stopped bringing anything to school that you cared about losing. You became quiet so as not to attract their attention. You could feel your identity slipping away, parts of your personality were being shaped by people you hated and you didn’t know how to stop it.

You tried. You tried so hard. You taught yourself to not give any outward signs that you were hurt. You learned to stop crying, to stop blushing. You discovered that things you thought of as reflexes were actually under your control. It was possible to not react. Finally, you thought, you were following the advice of the adults. You were not letting them affect you.

I hate them so much.

*             *             *

When you got home from work, you looked up the Crucible Street address online. It was a place called the Bruce Manley Building. You’d actually seen the building before. It was a fancy-looking one with a huge slanted glass front that faced the highway. It seemed to be made by an architect who was desperate to make a building that stood out. And it did, in a way. You recognized it, after all. But it was the kind of building that you never really thought about. You just drove past it on the highway, vaguely aware that the scenery was broken up by a building that managed to be noticeable yet not noteworthy, and never thought about the fact that that building was actually used for something, that it was anything more than a decoration.

Suddenly, you wondered what the Bruce Manley Building was. Was it part of a school? Was it some sort of research center? Or was it the kind of building that just rented out professional-looking rooms to people who needed one temporarily? Did buildings like that exist?

And of course you couldn’t help but note the irony that you of all people would be visiting a place called the Bruce Manley Building. You wondered who Bruce Manley is. Or was. Was he actually “manly?”

*             *             *

I stopped by the coffee stand at the hospital’s entrance. It’s closed on weekends, but that doesn’t matter because I don’t like coffee. What interested me was in the refrigerated case on one end of the stand. It’s one of those bottles of juice. You know, the kind with around seven different types of fruit and a label that lists off how many of each different kind were juiced to make a single bottle. The case was locked, of course, but that didn’t matter. I simply reached through the clear plastic front and grabbed a bottle.

As I stepped through the hospital doors someone catcalled me. I ignored it. I also ignored the “fuck you” he shouted at me immediately afterward. It didn’t affect me. Well, aside from me remembering it and mentioning it now.

*             *             *

By high school you had determined that you wanted to be a girl. This was impossible, you thought. Wanting to be a girl wasn’t like wanting to be a famous musician or a sports star. Those things were merely incredibly unlikely. Wanting to be a girl was like wanting to be a dog or a mountain or a dragon. It was physically impossible. You recognized that this was a big problem. You wanted it more than anything, you knew you could never be happy without it, but it simply couldn’t happen.

In a way, you were right. Therapy standards back then meant that you wouldn’t have been helped. Puberty blockers were almost never prescribed to people like you. Your parents would never have allowed you to wear skirts or grow out your hair or learn to apply makeup. And even if they had, pop culture had so poisoned you against trans women that you would never have seen yourself as anything more than a caricature, a mockery of women.

For this, I hate them, too.

You wanted to tell people. You wanted it to not be a big deal. You wanted to joke about it. “I desperately want to be a girl, isn’t that hilarious?” But you couldn’t. You had become so accustomed to closing yourself off that you no longer knew how to open up. How would you even bring it up? It wasn’t like you could just blurt it out while you were playing video games with someone. Besides, you feared that you might lose the few friends that you had if you actually told them, and you knew that was a loss you couldn’t afford.

*             *             *

On the day and time mentioned on the flyer, you arrived at the Bruce Manley building. The big, slanted glass wall entered into a huge lobby. The carpet and all the furniture looked clean and new, no stains or discoloration or marks on the walls. There was a display with nine flat screen televisions, each displaying a different news channel. You wondered how hot it got in the summer, with the sun pouring through the glass front.

The flyer had said room 304, so you found an elevator and took it up to the third floor, quickly finding the room in question. It appeared to be a chemistry classroom. There were rows of rectangular tables, each designed to seat two, a dry erase board in the front, and cases full of Bunsen burners, beakers, test tubes, and microscopes. There was even an eyewash station and chemical shower.

You were the first to arrive so you settled into the corner furthest from the door and waited. Others filed in shortly afterward. They were mostly men, mostly older than you, mostly stronger than you. You weren’t sure why you thought of it, and you chastised yourself and called yourself sexist, but it occurred to you that they could easily hurt you if they decided they wanted to. One man closer to your age had a face that reminded you of one of your high school bullies. You disliked him already and you hated yourself for disliking him.

Finally, a man arrived who stood at the front of the room, apparently the man who was running this experiment. He wore a plaid suit. You liked plaid suits, despite their bad reputation, but for some reason on this man it reminded you of a door-to-door salesman.

He introduced himself as Mr. Dream.

*             *             *

I stopped by the bank to get some money. I don’t have an account or anything. It doesn’t matter because I can just take what I want. I try to be subtle about it, in banks, slipping in and out without being noticed. If too many rumors of a thieving ghost girl start going around, people are going to start looking into them. And then they may find a way to affect even me without my permission. Obviously, I don’t want that.

*             *             *

In college, you bought a dress. It was black and lacy with a flared skirt. You tried it on once and felt so much shame and disgust that you took it off immediately and never wore it again. It hung in your closet collecting dust for the next several years. It seemed to you that a dress was too good for someone like you. You didn’t deserve to wear it. In fact, wearing it was an insult to such a beautiful garment. Can you imagine that? You thought so little of yourself that you placed a piece of clothing above you.

I wish I had been there. I wish I had hugged you and told you how beautiful you were. I wish I had done your makeup and made you look truly dazzling. I wish I had told you about how growing out your hair, taking a few pills, and getting electrolysis would have made even your traumatized, beaten-down brain see how amazing you looked. But I wasn’t there.

I’m so sorry for that.

*             *             *

Mr. Dream dismissed the only three women in the room. He explained that women were an unnecessary variable and might complicate the results of the experiment. You were a bit jealous and felt a bit silly about that jealousy. After all, if you were a woman, then you wouldn’t be getting superpowers today. Of course, you wouldn’t need them, either.

In a roundabout way, with lots of backtracking and tangents and long pauses when he lost his train of thought, Mr. Dream explained the drug being tested. Its original intent, he said, was to make people into who they most wanted to be. The superpowers, it seemed, were a happy side effect. It was created by an organization that chose to remain secret but who, he claimed, had only altruistic intents for this drug. He could not explain how it was made or how it worked or why it broke the laws of physics. However, he promised, it was perfectly safe and had no negative side effects.

He poured the drug from a thermos into a series of small paper cups, then passed it out. Once everyone had a cup, you all drank. The taste reminded you of a medicine you took when you were a child. A milky white medicine that was so disgusting that you threw it up nearly every time you tried to drink it. This time, however, you didn’t throw up.

The first man changed within a few minutes. He became taller, more muscular, nothing too surprising. Until he punched the man next to him in the face, sending him flying across the room. Apparently, the person he most wanted to be was someone who could fight all he wants.

In a flash, others started to change. Some of them became hairy, others became more slender. The man who looked like your old bully grew scales and began breathing fire. Most of the people in the room grew taller, most became more muscular. Most became more violent, too. Not all scary-looking men are violent by nature. But enough of them are. Terrified, you looked to Mr. Dream, hoping that he would somehow take control of the situation, but he just stood there with a satisfied smile on his face.

And then you became me.

I didn’t care about the violence. I just walked out of the room, not looking back, too busy feeling my new breasts to think about the chaos. I don’t know what happened to those men. The drug had likely brought out more than violence in them. I don’t usually think about it because doing so too much would affect me.

*             *             *

Since late junior high, you had been reading those stories online. The ones where male characters, usually unwilling, are transformed into women. It’s a whole genre of stories written by people who think they’re the only boy who wants to be a girl and read by people who think the same. They have their own tropes and trends, some of which are extremely specific like men being turned into women as punishment for saying or doing something sexist.

One of those tropes is called Identity Death. Identity Death is when the male character’s personality is completely overwritten by a new female personality, often with her own set of memories and a different sexual orientation. It was never your favorite trope.

You thought your power would be shapeshifting. It made sense. You wanted to change your shape and the drug was supposed to make you into who you most wanted to be, so your power would be shapeshifting. But the drug doesn’t work like that. See, when you boil it down, your ideal self had three essential traits.

The first trait is that she’s a woman. Obviously. You had been obsessed with being a girl for over a decade. You spent every night hoping you would wake up as a woman. Of course, you were always a woman. I can see that. I wish you could have, but I understand why you couldn’t.

The second trait is that nothing affects her if she doesn’t want it to. That’s where my power comes in. Nothing affects me, words or actions, if I don’t allow it. As long as I will it so, I’m completely intangible.

The third and most important trait is that she loves herself. That’s why I exist. To love you. And I do love you. I love you more than I love anyone except myself. But that doesn’t count anyway because I’m you. You were so beautiful, so perfect, and you were never allowed to see it.

Some people might call you becoming me tragic. Your family certainly seems to see it that way. They didn’t recognize me at first, of course. I look completely different. But eventually I convinced them that I was you. Still, they wanted nothing to do with me, they just wanted you back. I said you couldn’t come back and they said that I had killed you.

But that’s not how I see it. Even if you had known what the drug would do you would have chosen to drink it. You would have chosen to become me because you needed to change to stay alive. You were trapped under a rock and you cut off your own leg to survive. And your family mourns the leg and blames the rest of you for its loss.

I suppose some people would object to that. They would say equating transitioning to cutting off your own leg is insulting to trans people. But I think it’s insulting to everyone else. It’s insulting to everyone who made this a world where transitioning is a method of surviving instead of just a way of becoming the person you most want to be.

Because that’s the thing. You didn’t have to become me. You could have transitioned in the traditional way and you could have been happy and loved yourself. I’m not objecting to your choice because I like existing, but I think it’s important to understand that you could have stayed you and still been happy. Of course, if you had become happy, maybe you wouldn’t have been you anymore. Maybe you would have been me anyway. Your family would have thought so. They would have mourned the old you and ignored the new you in the same way.

I don’t believe that I was the cause of your Identity Death. Your Identity Death happened when you were mistreated and you reached out for help and were told to stop feeling. I’m what remained when you cut away the parts of your identity that the people who were supposed to help you had allowed to rot.

*             *             *

I went back there today, to the chemistry classroom in the Bruce Manley Building. The building is closed on weekends and all the lights are off. I didn’t bother turning them on. It seemed that someone had repaired the classroom after the experiment because it looks just as it did when you first arrived. I sat in the last chair you sat in and the first chair I sat in and I thought about your life and all of the events that led to you becoming me. It occurred to me that loving you was nice enough, but perhaps I could do more with my life. The world is a cruel place that doesn’t care about people like you and me. Maybe I can do something to change that. I have superpowers, after all. Of course, superheroes don’t change the world, they prevent it from being changed, so I can’t be a superhero.

But maybe I could be a supervillain.

 

Sonia Rippenkroeger (she/her) lives in Council Bluffs, Iowa, with three cats, three ferrets, two roommates, and a hedgehog. When she isn't writing stories about trans characters, she can be found cross stitching screenshots from old video games. She is on Twitter @msblackandblue

From the Ashes

Darius hit the ground hard and rolled, bringing his arms up to his face and turning his head so his nose didn’t break against the rocks. He came to a rest against the cave wall with a soft, “Oof!” as the breath left his lungs in a rush.

When his body remembered how to breathe again, he rolled to his knees, chest heaving and spots dancing in his vision. He shoved his fingers through his hair and felt along his skull, but there didn’t seem to be any injuries aside from the lump from earlier.

“What the hell?” he wheezed when he could manage it. He pushed his hair out of his eyes and glared at the creature. “You have the worst timing, you know that?”

The dragon huffed. Steam poured from its ears as its systems cooled down from the long flight. Smoke leaked out from between its massive, metallic teeth, and Darius knew he should be frightened. But all he felt was a deep, burning rage, because honestly--if the creature was going to kidnap him, it couldn’t have done it the day before? Or, hell, even tomorrow? No, it had to be today. He almost laughed—after the disaster this past week had been, he should have expected it.

“What is it you want?” he demanded. He pushed himself to his feet, wincing as his joints protested and popped. He put his hands on his hips, summoning what he hoped was an imposing glare, even though the creature loomed thirty feet over his head. “Gold? Silver? You’ve kidnapped the wrong man, you know. I’m certainly not a member of the Royal Family, nor am I a rich merchant. I think I have a couple of spare credits to my name, if you want them.”

The dragon cocked its head slightly, considering him. Its eyes glowed red—he doubted that was a good sign, and finally a trickle of trepidation broke through the anger. Not that it was enough to stop his rambling. Raf had always said his self-preservation instincts were non-existent, and Darius supposed there was some truth to that.

“You kidnapped me on my wedding day,” he snarled. “The entire city saw you do it, too, and they’re probably tracking you right now. You aren’t exactly inconspicuous.”

Not that he was important enough to come after, Darius thought ruefully, but the dragon might not realize that. Maybe it would let him go, let him walk out of the cave and make his way back to his city unharmed.

Sure. And maybe his goats would wake up one morning and start talking to him.  

“Right, enough of this.” Darius brushed the dirt from his knees and slapped his hands together. He straightened his jacket, settling it properly over his shoulders, and drew himself up. “This has been fun, truly, but I’m afraid I have to leave. Good day.”

He made it almost to the mouth of the cave before the dragon’s tail swept his feet from under him, sending him careening into the opposite wall. Even through his clothes, even though both he and the dragon had been in the shade of the cave now for some time, he could still feel the heat radiating from the metal scales, superheated after their long flight on a brilliantly sunny day. Thank all the gods it hadn’t touched his bare skin.

“Right,” Darius snapped, springing to his feet. “Either tell me what I’m doing here or I’m walking out of this cave, and I honestly don’t care if you incinerate me for it.”

The trouble was, he did care. He cared a lot. His life was finally starting to come together after years of false starts, and failure after failure after failure. He had a home, he had a business, and he had a husband — well, almost had a husband. At least until some pain-in-the-ass dragon decided to kidnap him right as they’d been about to exchange vows.   

The tail swept in his direction again, but didn’t make contact. Darius felt the whoosh of air as it glided past. The dragon paused, considering him, and then repeated the action. On the third time, the tip of the tail touched his shoulder, gently nudging him.

Darius frowned, glancing from the dragon to its tail, and slowly it dawned on him that the dragon was trying to usher him toward the back of the cave.

Hell, no.” He pointed. “Go back there? Sorry, I’m not stupid enough to do that. I know what happens when the dragon finally gets its victim into the back of the cave. We’ve all grown up on the stories. Nice try.”

The dragon huffed, turned its head, and spat out a thin stream of fire. Darius only just managed to keep himself from jumping backward in surprise. The flames caught on a series of lanterns strung up against the wall, bringing sudden illumination the darkness.

“Oh,” Darius said faintly. He blinked several times, then took a tentative couple of steps forward. “That’s yours, then, is it?”

The cave was strewn with debris—Darius recognized broken phonographs and daguerreotype cameras, engines and motors, gears and tools of every shape and size. Heaps and heaps of what amounted to scrap metal, but, to a mech like the dragon, it was as priceless as gold.

And in the midst of all that scrap, a tiny dragon lay curled in a tight ball, steam rising from its exoskeleton. Darius approached it slowly, making sure to keep well out of range of its fire. A dragon that size and in the shape that it was likely couldn’t scorch anything more than ten feet away, but he didn’t want to test out that theory.

“You needed an engineer,” Darius said finally, looking up at the dragon. “You needed someone to come and fix your--” He waved a hand awkwardly at the little dragon. Offspring, perhaps? Could mech dragons have offspring? He wasn’t aware that they were anything but solitary creatures, though he supposed that new mech dragons had to come from somewhere.

“All right,” he said. “I’ll do it. Do you have tools? Not these; I mean functional ones.” He waved a hand at the piles of scrap. The dragon bent over one of the piles, snagged something in its teeth, and deposited it at Darius’s feet. He raised his brows.

“Well, at least you’re prepared,” he muttered, stooping to pick up the engineering kit and examining its contents. It seemed well-stocked, though he had no idea the extent of the damage, yet. “Is it going to--er-- incinerate me?”

The dragon shook its massive head. 

Well, that would have to be good enough, Darius decided. If he died trying to save this creature, then so be it. It was better than turning his back on it and having to live with that.

The little dragon hissed as he approached, feebly trying to lift its head and failing. Darius held up his hands in what he hoped was a universal non-threatening gesture and, after a moment, the tiny creature quieted. The equipment kit had a scanner, thank the gods, and he started with that.

“What did you get into, little one?” Darius muttered as he examined the readings. It was clear that this wasn’t the result of a random, mutating computer virus, nor was it self-inflicted. Damage like this was methodical, purposeful, and inflicted by an outside source. “Looks like you were beaten pretty badly. Who did this to you?”

He didn’t expect an answer. If the dragons could communicate with him, he knew what they would tell him: that the little one had been hunting with its parent across the countryside, looking for more pieces of scrap metal, probably on one of its first outings. It was still getting used to its body, its wings, its systems and how everything worked together. It probably had been overtaken by some alarmed villagers, and attacked within an inch of its life. 

“I’m going to fix you,” he told the tiny dragon. “I’m going to repair you and you’ll feel better soon. All right, little one? Can I touch you?”

The tiny dragon slowly relaxed and closed its bright purple eyes. That was probably as good a signal as he was going to get, so Darius set to work. He pried open paneling along the tiny dragon’s back and flank, fixing what he could and discarding pieces that were burned beyond all repair. The piles of scrap metal proved useful and, more than once, he found a replacement part that worked just as well, if not better than the old.

“It’s a remarkable construction,” Darius said finally to the older dragon. “I assume this is your work? I guess I never really thought about how dragons are made, but of course you would construct your own kind. Is this as big as it’ll ever be, I wonder? Or will it outfit itself with larger replacement parts until it grows as big as you are? Will it stay with you forever, or go off and find its own cave when it’s able to be on its own? There’s so little we know about your kind.”

He was rambling now, and knew the dragon couldn’t answer him. It helped having someone to talk to while he worked, even if his conversation partner was a piece of mech. He soon lost all track of time, and only realized how late it was when the larger dragon blew out another stream of fire to light another row of lanterns, as the first ones had burned down. Darius squinted at the cave entrance, and noticed that the sun was almost touching the horizon.

“Almost done, little one,” he murmured. “Another hour, at the most.”

It was three-quarters of an hour, in actuality, and he felt a faint flicker of pride at that. He pushed himself to his feet and stepped back, wiping the back of his hand across his forehead. It came away smeared with grease and sweat. Gods, and this was his one nice suit, too. What the hell was he supposed to get married in now?

He supposed it didn’t much matter. Raf probably didn’t care, and neither did he. He just wanted to be married.

The little dragon unfurled its wings and flapped them experimentally. It flicked its tail and launched itself into the air. The cave’s ceiling wasn’t particularly high, perhaps fifty feet overhead, and the little dragon hovered up near the stalactites before settling on the ground next to its parent. The larger dragon nuzzled it affectionately.

Darius couldn’t help but smile. He packed the tools away and left the kit on a pile of metal. With any luck, the two dragons would never need it again.

“If that’s all,” he said, spreading his hands, “I suppose I’m free to go?” He wasn’t looking forward to the three-day trek back to the city, especially with no provisions, but it wasn’t as though he was about to live the rest of his life in this cave. There would be no help for it. No one except Raf would even care to look for him, so he had to return on his own.

Without warning, two giant claws wrapped around his middle, hoisting him into the air. He gave a startled yelp and, before he could draw air to protest, the larger dragon  threw itself out of the cave and soared over the trees below.

It hadn’t been fun the first time. It was even more unpleasant this time around. Darius squeezed his eyes shut as tears from the stinging air streamed down his cheeks, and he kept having to force himself to take breaths as the wind rushed past them. His heart raced uncomfortably in his chest, and he was painfully aware that if the dragon lost its grip on him, he would plunge more than a thousand feet to a certain death. But it was effective, he had to admit. A journey that would have taken him days the dragon could do in under an hour. 

The dragon deposited Darius in the middle of the square, in the precise spot he had been taken that morning. The dragon didn’t land, just hovered there as it swept its powerful wings through the air to keep it aloft.

Darius became aware of shouts, and then clanging filled the air as the alarms were sounded. It wouldn’t have been difficult to miss a dragon descending upon the city, and everyone was raising the alarm.

Go,” he said urgently, waving an arm at the dragon as though he could send it away. “Change caves, too. They’ll know where to find you, now.”

The dragon flew off as the air patrol took to the skies. Their flying craft was rudimentary—they would never be able to match the dragon’s altitude or speed. Darius watched until the dragon was nothing more than a speck, and then turned to take stock of his surroundings.

Darius!” Raf was sprinting across the square. He skidded to a stop in front of Darius and seized him by the arms. “Are you alright? The dragon, did it–”

“It needed my help.” Darius let his hands settle on Raf’s hips, immeasurably glad to see him—and glad of his support, since Darius wasn’t sure how much longer his legs could hold him. “I’m sorry if I worried you--”

“Don’t,” Raf snapped, his strong blacksmith’s fingers digging into Darius’s arms. “Don’t apologize to me for getting kidnapped. Thank the gods, I’m so glad you’re safe. Are you certain you’re unharmed?”

“I’m fine.” Darius brought his hands up to curl loosely around Raf’s wrists. He gave a rueful smile. “Ruined my suit, though.”

“Toss the suit, I don’t care.”

“Yes, well, we’re supposed to get married--”

“I’m marrying you, not the suit.”

Darius rested his forehead against Raf’s and closed his eyes. He drew a deep breath through his nose and then let out a soft huff of laughter.

“What a day,” he muttered. Raf snorted and pulled back.

“It’s never a dull one with you, that’s for certain.”

“Where do you suppose the clerk got to?”

“He went to the tavern as soon as the dragon made an appearance,” Raf said dryly. “Hasn’t resurfaced since.”

“Come on.” Darius grabbed his hand and dragged him in the direction of the tavern. He was getting married today, damn it, and even dragons weren’t going to stop him. 

 

Alexis Ames (she/her) first picked up a pen when she was eleven years old and hasn’t put it down since. Science fiction is her preferred genre–more specifically, exploring the intersection of humanity and artificial intelligence. It’s rare that she’ll write a story without a robot (or three). Angst is her lifeblood. World-building is her favorite part of writing. Writing the middle of the story is the worst. Nothing makes her happier than a good conversation about all things Star Trek.

In her spare time, she runs, hikes, reads, and dreams up ways to make robots sad.

Twitter: @alexis_writes1
Website: https://alexisames.home.blog/

Quicker Liquor

Any other day, Cog would have been giggling at his ability to hide where larger people would get caught.  Humans were way too tall to conceal themselves at the clink of approaching armor, and dwarves were too stubborn to consider it.  Only a goblin could be wedged between two cabinets in the potion maker’s shop, covered by a pile of itchy burlap sacks.  He should have been grinning from ear to pointed ear, but not today.  Today, he cared about the big people who’d been captured.  One in particular.  

Cog huddled under the burlap, hugging his knees, his thoughts a whirl of despair.  The armored figures who had dragged his friends away kicking and screaming were huge — taller than these dwarven tunnels were made for, and impervious to anything but perhaps a perfectly-placed arrow through the eye slit of a helmet.  Even at the best of times, Cog couldn’t do much against something like that.  

He could still hear them if he listened hard enough, tromping away deeper into the mountain.  Dragging his friends into the same depths the potion maker had disappeared into.  He hadn’t expected her to be gone already — no one had.  The resistance had hung all their hopes on her fabled potions skills.  But apparently the enemy had heard of her, too.  

Cog wriggled a hand upward just enough to move the burlap an inch.  The room looked empty.  He knew it was; those clanking monstrosities were never quiet.  But he took no chances.  Inch by inch he pushed his covering away, ready to snatch it back up.  Then he got to his feet, peered around the cabinets, and eased his way into the room.  

No attackers.  Good.  

No bodies.  Also good.  

But everywhere was the wreckage of the once thriving potion shop.  

Cog wandered across the floor.  One part of his mind was busy being grateful for the thin leather boots that kept the broken glass out of his feet, while the other parts were split between indecision and grief.  With vague thoughts of finding an intact vial of something that would help him fix this, he made his way to the back room.  

It was no different: strewn with glass and liquids and broken furniture.  The chemical smell was harsher here, either from a lack of ventilation or from the unmixed ingredients.  This was where the potion maker had worked on perfecting her recipes.  There were likely to be toxic things leaking into the air.  

Cog sniffed experimentally.  He didn’t feel lightheaded,  or short of breath, or about to burst into flames.  So he stepped farther into the room and searched for anything not yet broken.  

After several minutes of frustration, he found a single case of intact vials.  It had escaped destruction by being shoved into a corner, much as he had been.  It was dusty enough to have been there for years.  That only made it seem more a matter of destiny.  

Cog blew off some of the dust and opened it.  

The vials were full of faded blue liquid, some of which had evaporated despite the corks.  They all had the same label, handwritten in careful dwarvish letters.  

“Speed potion, Batch #5,” Cog read.  Smaller letters proclaimed “In progress.  Potentially toxic to some races.  Do not use.”  

Cog didn’t so much think about it as much as he let the ideas fly past him.  The potion might kill him. The monstrosities might come back.  He could get away if he left now.  There might be money somewhere in the shop.  His friends might die soon.  One in particular.  He had good enough aim to get something sharp through an eye slit if he took his time about it.  A speed potion would give him that time.  

In the end, it wasn’t much of a decision at all.  He opened a vial and drank it.  

It tasted bad, like sweet wine poured into a mule’s feed bag and left in the sun for weeks.  His tongue felt sticky.  The smell crawled up his nose.  

Then the room seemed to drift sideways.  Cog blinked, moving to put the empty vial back.  He overshot and bumped it against the edge of the case, knocking the vial free of his fingers to… spin slowly in mid-air.  It looked blurry.  Cog blinked at it again, his thoughts turning just as slowly.  As he watched, the glass vial sank to the floor.  As soon as it touched, fractures skittered across the surface and the pieces began drifting apart.  

Cog got his feet under himself and stood.  His balance was wobbly and his eyes kept unfocusing.  He kicked an empty wooden bowl and watched it drift in a graceful arc to where it clattered against the wall with a deep boom.  

That sounded weird, Cog thought, starting to smile.  He stepped forward, had to correct his step as the glass slid under his foot, then overcorrected and fell back against a shelving unit.  

He giggled, and wondered absently why.  He tried to focus.  I know what I’ve gotta do.  Moving carefully, he crouched to shut the lid of the vial case (this took him two tries), then shoved it back into the same dusty corner it had come from.  He sneezed and spent a few moments watching the dust billow in slow motion.  They he started to hiccup. 

Right.  Gotta do stuff.  Save the people.  Especially the hot one.  He looked around the room for a weapon.  Most of the valuable things had been taken, either by the people who’d kidnapped the potion maker, or by looters who’d taken advantage later, he couldn’t say.  There were no knives or arrows or anything made for fighting.  But there were an awful lot of glass shards and some burlap.  

He only cut himself a little bit crafting the makeshift daggers.  Then he raced off down the tunnel, still hiccuping, leaving burlap to drift lazily behind him.  

*             *             *

Tylore stumbled along, alternately dragging his feet and skipping forward to avoid a backhand from an armored fist.  He didn’t know whether he would be eaten, tortured, or just forced into a life of slavery far from daylight, but he didn’t like his odds.  The mixed bag of freedom fighters trudged along in front of him.  His place at the back of the line meant he got the brunt of the biggest monster’s irritation, but it also meant he could make a headcount in the faint light of the glowmoss on the ceiling.  

Four other captives walked with their hands chained together.  A sturdy dwarf striding with dignity, a young dwarf trying hard to do the same, an elven woman with long hair that caught in the chains, and a human woman who wordlessly freed it for her.  Then Tylore, the human man bringing up the rear.  No goblin.  

What had happened to Cog?  The attack had been chaos.  Tylore tried to think if he’d seen the little fellow after the big bastards crashed into the room, but he couldn’t remember.  He hoped Cog had gotten away.  Hoped he hadn’t been crushed by iron-shod boots when Tylore wasn’t looking.  

He was trying to convince himself that the world couldn’t be that cruel, despite all evidence to the contrary, when he heard something strange.  A soft pattering with regular squeaks, and irregular thumps.  He thought he felt the last thump through the floor.  Was it some clockwork oddity made by the dwarves?  Or a terrifying beastie that was waiting on a spiked leash to eat them?  Or maybe…

The pattering got louder.  Tylore turned just as a blur of something zipped into view around the corner, bounced off the wall, and made a beeline for the armored behemoth that stomped along like a troll made of spikes and hatred.  

The monstrosity raised an arm to swat at the blur, but the thing ran straight up that arm toward the metal helm before leaping off.  

The monster grunted, swayed, and fell with an echoing crash.  Tylore saw ichor oozing from the eyes of its helmet.  As he took in that sight, he heard a commotion further down the line.  He turned back and witnessed the middle guard being taken down the same way, before the leading one could draw a weapon.  This time, when the second armored form fell, there was a glint of broken glass jammed into its helmet.  

The blur paused at the second monstrosity’s waist and, in a flash, ripped the enemy’s dagger from its belt. The blur dashed toward the third one, who was waving a serrated battle-knife in a threatening display.  The blur tripped over nothing, sprawling and losing its grip on the dagger.  This skittered to a stop against the wall, while the blur paused for a heartbeat before bouncing back up to gather its dagger and climb the enemy like a tree.  

While the last monstrosity roared and gurgled, Tylore stood stunned.  For that split second, he had seen a goblin lying on the floor.  

The armored beastie fell like a collapsing building.  The blur danced around it in circles before racing forward and back, tugging at the chain that bound the prisoners.  It tripped several times, bumping into walls and people.  Everyone was talking.  

“What just happened?”

“Are they dead?  Should we stab them again?”

“Who is that?”

The blur clambered over the armored forms, tumbling to the ground a few more times, then suddenly Tylore had a key in his hand and a vibrating goblin standing in front of him.  

It looked like Cog, as far as he could tell.  Delight and confusion flashed through his mind while he stared stupidly at the goblin’s attempt to talk to him.  It was no good; the words were too fast, even though he seemed to be making an effort to slow them.  Then Cog apparently lost patience, taking the key back and opening all the locks himself.  The rest of the group exclaimed happily as their manacles fell away.  Tylore wasn’t sure, but it looked like Cog was slowing down a little.  He still tripped over things an awful lot, though.  

Cog bounced off both walls, dropped the key, then zipped toward Tylore before dashing away back up the tunnel.  

Was that a kiss?  Tylore raised a hand to his mouth.  He was still wondering moments later when footsteps pattered toward him again, at  a nearly normal speed.  

Cog dashed back into view, carrying a box.  He was covered in bruises and ichor, and wearing the widest grin Tylore had seen from him yet.  

“Ifoundaspeedpotion!” Cog exclaimed.  “ThelabelsaiditmightbetoxicbutIfeelfine!”  Cog stumbled again, but this time, Tylore was close enough to catch him before the box fell.  It looked fragile.  

Cog looked up from where he lay in Tylore’s arms with a sappy grin.  “Sogladyouarenotdead,” he slurred.  “Will you go on a mushroom-picking date with me?” 

Tylore laughed.  “After that rescue, you deserve all the mushroom dates you want!  As long as you don’t die of speed poison first.” 

Cog erupted into high-pitched giggles that were just this side of painful to hear.  The elder dwarf peered over Tylore’s elbow at the case of potions.  

“If there’s more of the stuff in there,” he said to Cog. “I might have some ideas to run past you, skinny one.  How do you feel about assassinating the lich-king?” 

Cog giggled some more and nodded with unnatural speed.  “Sure!  Why not?  I’ve got plenty of Quicker Liquor left.”  He laughed at his own cleverness.   

The human woman spoke up.  “If there’s a recipe, we could sell this stuff.  There’s a good market for bad ideas.” 

Cog waved an arm haphazardly.  “We can rescue the potion lady and she’ll make tons!” Tylore set him back upright, hands close in case he fell.  

“All those ideas and more,” he said sternly, “After the mushroom date.”  

The dwarf harrumphed.  “Well, of course.  Priorities.” 

 

Mara Johnstone (she/her)  grew up in a house on a hill, of which the top floor was built first. She split er time between climbing trees, drawing fantastical things, reading books, and writing her own. She has a Master’s Degree in Creative Writing an continues to write, draw, and climb things.

Website: http://maralynnjohnstone.com/
Twitter: @MarlynnOfMany

A Warmth in the Forest: Pt 2

(Editor’s Note: This is the second and final part of a story that was published in our September issue, No. 5)


Many Years Ago, Before You Were Born

After the second disappearance of Margaux Poulter, nothing mysterious or tragic happened in town for nearly two decades. Her severed hands were added to an existing plot in the cemetery, the only remnants in the grave of the twice-taken girl. Proper suspicion was given to the forest, townspeople banning ventures to the woods. But the passage of time built up the collective courage of the town once more, until the beastly threat was again turned into just another scary story to make kids stay in bed. Only Lucie Poulter kept a tight, fearful eye on her children.

Lucie and her son Theo were throwing a delightful birthday party for her second child, who was sixteen years old. Once named Marco, she now went by Lily, after her lost mother. Their small house, rebuilt by Lilian before she fell ill and joined her son’s namesake in the cemetery, brightened the eyes of all entering guests with silver tinsel and white flowers. Even the wallside pile of firewood Lily split glittered with decorative metal shavings in the midday light. Friends and family all gathered, some inside sipping tea and some outside enjoying the breeze. The only person yet to arrive for the celebration was Lily herself.

“Have you seen your sister?” Lucie fluttered from window to window as Theo put the finishing touches Lily’s cake. Blackberry, her favorite.

“Not since dawn. She said something about feeding the chickens.”

She stopped and looked at her son. He pretended to be engrossed in frosting swirls, but the back of his head burned under her stare, as mothers can do. Peeking tentatively up from his masterpiece, he found her shaking.

“Theo. You know we don’t keep chickens anymore.”

Deep in the forest, far from people and chickens, Lily fiddled with the string of small golden numbers around her neck. She’d been preparing for this journey for years, but nervousness still pinched under her fingertips. 

As soon as she had heard the tale of her aunt, Lily knew she would someday rescue her. Being a knight and saving the princess was what she had dreamt of her whole life. Lucie had tried to keep the story from her, for fear of exactly this, but Theo had always been bad at keeping secrets. Sweet but timid, he had grown into quite the storyteller. His own encounter with what he called, Mother Dragon, was his most regaled story—the most asked for, once Lily was old enough to ask politely. 

 “I already lost my sister. I will not lose my daughter to that monster too,” was always Lucie’s stern answer when Lily vocalized her passion. Later, in a whisper, “I already lost my sister. I’ve already lost my wife. I can’t lose my daughter too.” Lily stopped mentioning it after that, but still nurtured the hope in her heart. 

Upon her impending birthday, Lily had felt an urgency. Almost itchy. She never told him, but she knew Theo noticed she was going to do something drastic. He didn’t question her, even covering for her as much as his delicate conscious could, when she stayed out late sparring scarecrows or pilfered extra food and survival supplies to hide in the wood stack.

Now, heading into the forest with no direction other than to follow an inexplicable warmth, she realized a silence. Having walked for hours, she’d mastered tuning out the sounds of woodland creatures and rustling nature. That background noise was gone here. She could register only her own heartbeat, thumping strong in her ear, feeling the sound instead of hearing it.

The heat she sought increased. She traveled further, slower, to where the trees were farther apart and dirt floor shifted to rock bed. Her ankles started to feel unstable in her boots as she walked, like the earth below was hollow. She crouched to feel the ground with bare hands. Knocked once, twice. Its minute vibration jerked to a stop just ahead. Lily snuck closer, seeing that what appeared to be level earth was but a trick of depth—a giant worm burrow opened into the ground, its rim stained red.

Terror squeezed her heart, shortened her breath. But her resolve was absolute. She was a brave knight. From her rucksack she pulled a small lantern and her late mother’s wood axe. Once her fire burned, she entered the cavern.

Inside was silent but not quiet. The movement of everything above ground reverberated around her, and the inching of bugs on the hard tunnel walls caused phantom brushes across her skin. Dark earthen tributaries branched off periodically from Lily’s path, but she ignored every chilly labyrinth entrance. 

She feared the lantern wick’s end until she caught light that wasn’t hers. A gentle, wavering glow beckoned some ways ahead. After a few meters of deliberation, Lily blew out her lantern and let her eyes adjust to the dimness before continuing on.

The other light grew, and Lily likened it to moonlight, soft and cold, even as the air’s temperature still climbed. She rotated to walk sideways along the wall, sliding her clammy hands over sweating rock. She wished she had real armor, instead of the haphazardly sewn links of stolen clock scraps she fashioned for herself.

Not quite bright but much lighter than before, the hole’s base loomed. Lily slowly lowered to a crouch, removing her rucksack to lay it and the lantern on the ground. Too noisy for a stealth attack, too heavy for battle agility. She moved again with only her axe. 

Spying beyond the threshold, she found a grotto ten times taller and wider than her little house. A skylight shone down on a pool of crystalline water, sun rays bouncing off it and the thousands of precious gems and treasure covering the space. No rock could even be seen on the cave floor. The only dark spot in the cavern, just off the center, looked to be a mountain of fabric. An impressive pile of curtains and sheets homed a myriad of frayed, holey, discolored remnants of clothes, and one thin, sleeping woman.

Lily restrained herself from calling her aunt’s name. Margaux wouldn’t be able to hear her even if it there was no threat of exposure. Double-checking that the grotto was empty of monsters, she tiptoed into the humidity toward the mound of textile. Careful to shift the glittering trove as little as possible, she waded her way over and crawled onto the sheets. She gently laid a hand on her aunt’s bare knee.

Margaux slammed upward, long hair wild as her sunken eyes, pulling her bony limbs into herself. Lily took back her hand and sat very still. She waited until Margaux’s shock turned to relief, to curiosity, to fear. Margaux? Lily asked, just in case. Her aunt nodded, lips chapping open as she parted them to mouth Yes. 

Lily signed slowly, not sure how many words Margaux knew. Theo had said that while Margaux was an older child when he met her, she’d spoken like someone his age, and it was clear that she hadn’t interacted with other humans in a very long time. My name is Lily. We met when I was born. I’m Lucie’s daughter. My name was Marco. I am a knight. I’m here to save you and take you home.

Just as Lily had seen her mom do countless times, her aunt started to quiver. Margaux’s mouth guppied, trying to pick words but failing every time. Tears trickled down pale, dirty cheeks. Not sure how to react to her blubbering, Lily just reached for her leg again, pulling towards the exit, and Margaux leaned into her touch.

Come on, Lily urged. Her aunt’s eyes and head flitted around to every tunnel entrance, panicked one might reveal her Mother Dragon, but she followed on her knees nonetheless. When they reached the edge of solid rock, rising to stand, Margaux nearly knocked Lily over in a sobbing hug. Her stale, unkempt scent almost made Lily sneeze, but she held it in as Margaux pet her spine. She was not much taller than her niece, but Lily was sure she could lift the woman over her head with one arm. She peeled her off so they could move on, and it wasn’t until then, arms sliding over each other, that she realized Margaux’s gangly appendages ended at her wrists.

Everyone who knew that Margaux’s hands had been found in the well and buried in her otherwise empty grave, assumed they were only bits left, but Lily hadn’t ever really pictured her without them. No hands to crawl upside-down around her brother, or blind a dragon, or sign. Lily’s teeth clenched. Margaux wasn’t being childish or difficult—she just couldn’t communicate.

Lily had to look away to clear her throat, try not to show how shocked she was by the scarred wrists. She took Margaux by the elbow to lead her into the passageway, but she resisted. Turning back to question her, she saw Margaux pointing at a heap of scales on the ground. She looked back at the tunnel, but gave Margaux the benefit of the doubt that this was important. She bent to inspect it.

The scales were sewn similarly to Lily’s clockwork chainmail, except woven with feathers. A shoulder and chest piece, fit for a large child. Lily recognized it from Theo’s story and attempted to tone down her awe. She straightened again and offered it to Margaux.

Her aunt shook her head and pointed at her. Lily couldn’t contain her grin as she pulled it on over her own homemade protection. It was small over her tan muscles and broad shoulders, but it fit. The scales were smooth as water and tougher than anything else in the cavern. They seemed to glow in the sparkling light. 

A glow that did not belong to her shimmered in Lily’s peripheral vision. The air was so hot here, neither aunt nor niece noticed a spike. Lily dropped to the ground just in time for teeth like swords to snap in the space above her. Margaux fell next to her, folded into a ball with arms covering her head. 

The sound of the dragon’s hissing threatened to burst Lily’s eardrums as she ducked again, its snout crumpling against the ground as it missed her. The world had been so quiet before and the beast had made no noise coming in. Her temples throbbed against the thunder of her own running and the bustling of gemstones.

“I protect the silent, foul knight,” a voice conveyed in her head, even louder and more unreal. It wasn’t words but it was understood, and very much not her own.

“I need no mortal words. I need only to guard,” it projected again and startled Lily so much that she slipped on a huge pink-and-blue geode. The Mother Dragon was inside her mind.

From her fall, Lily flipped over and swung her axe at the nearest part of the beast, a section of stomach. The metal scraped uselessly against its scales, clanging right off and landing by the fabric pile. Its muzzle rounded its body, spitting filthy droplets at Lily. Nose scrunched and tongue drooling, it prepared to bite.

“Not a knight?” It slowed momentum so only its massive nose buried into Lily’s chest. This close, she could see the difference in its good and bad eyes. The seeing one, with thin black pupil in a globe of gold muscle and crimson veins, was fixated on her. The damaged one was almost all red, pupil broken into brownish halves going in different directions. There were still splinters inside. 

The Mother Dragon hissed, rattling its long body around the cave. The pool of water rippled for the first time since Lily arrived. “Smells like knight but tastes like princess. Attacks like knight but looks like princess. Who are you?”

Lily grit her teeth and flung the nearest thing at the dragon’s face, a heavy goblet rushing against its whiskers. It growled and struck again, but this time with more hesitation. It didn’t know whether to kill or hoard.

As it gnashed at her, Lily ran for her axe. She thought that if she could only find a weak point, where the scales were scarcer or thinner, she could defeat it. She slid across Margaux’s sheets and bat the axe blade up under the Mother Dragon’s chin, which only annoyed it. 

Suddenly Margaux skid to a halt next to her with Lily’s still-lit lantern held between her wrists and chucked it at her Mother Dragon. The glass and metal burst ablaze right in its working eye. A terrible shriek filled the cavern, echoing off the walls and Lily had to bury her ears in her arms. The dragon thrashed its head, endless body whirling into a circle around the two humans, trapping them, and slammed Margaux down under one of its feet, caging her between its claws.

“Die, knight!” The dragon snapped, teeth snagging Lily’s left arm. “Princess blood?! How!” It seethed, gathering height and bearing over her. She backed up until she risked hitting its torso behind her. She brandished her axe again, her shadow lifting its weapon on the beast’s scales.

The Mother Dragon came down at her again, jaws splitting open. The skylight’s beam shifted against the towering arch of neck, displacing Lily’s shadow next to her. She readied to hit the monster close-range. If it swallowed her, she could cut off its head from the inside. However, as its mangled eyes drew closer, she saw her aim would be off—it dug its teeth just right of her, into its own body, where her shadow stood.

A shrill scream escaped the dragon’s throat as its snout came back bloody, black liquid slopping over the treasure. Its head moved the sunlight again, and Lily watched her shadow jump with her to the left. Raising her axe again, she struck just past the dark shape of herself. As before, the tool bounced right off, but the Mother Dragon still felt it. It sunk its teeth in again, ragged pupils shrinking and dilating in rapid succession as it tried to define knight from princess, person from shadow. 

Lily scattered, swiping at scales all over the serpentine creature. Over and over, the dragon bit itself, tearing its own flesh open. It clawed at her a few times, releasing Margaux in the struggle. The woman traveled to every wound the dragon created, shoved crystals into the cuts. Lily wasn’t sure if that was a torture or healing tactic, and decided to never ask. 

 Exhausted, bleeding out, in pain—the beast finally, as the light above started to fade into dusk colors, laid down its head and its pupils stilled. Lily slayed the dragon. For good measure, after signing to Margaux to look away, she cut out its tongue and eyes, and climbed inside its mouth to slit the back of its throat. No sight, no taste, and bleeding into its lungs—if somehow it lived, it wouldn’t for long.

Let’s go home to Lucie, Lily said after wiping jowl-slime from her body. For the first time since reuniting, Margaux smiled.

They followed the cold through the black forest. Sounds of nature returned to Lily and, under Margaux’s feet, the feeling of creatures living unafraid. Dawn broke on the edge of town, dew twinkling on the squash fields. The aunt and niece tossed their sets of armor and numbered necklaces down Witches’ Well.

The Poulter sisters’ reunion was the hottest news in town. A search party was scheduled to find Lily but before they could depart, Lily returned home with the dead. Porch-dwelling elders whispered about the feral girl, the Dragon’s Daughter, a reminder of old magic in the forest. They croaked about giving her proper suspicion. Parents used Margaux’s story as a caution to their children: don’t wander into the woods, or your hands will get eaten.

Only the kids themselves treated Margaux with proper respect, in awe of her survival, the determination of her family. They surrounded her constantly, asking questions about her captivity and theorizing wild answers in her silence. She couldn’t tell them about her life as a princess, but she adored their shameless attention. After so long without human connection, and from such a young age, their constant gabbing and fearless love made her feel the safe kind of warm.

While Lucie’s heart stayed incomplete without her wife, it healed greatly with the return of her baby sister. She thought she’d surely die if Lily didn’t come back from her rescue mission, and to see both home safely also almost killed her. She’d collapsed in her son’s arms, certain she was hallucinating. Once the truth had settled in, she promptly smothered her daughter in kisses while tripling her chores as punishment.

Lily accepted this easily. Laundry duty was certainly easier than being a knight. For a while she couldn’t go anywhere—the clockmaker’s, the squash farm, the backroad to the cemetery—without everyone congratulating her, thanking her, blessing her. Then, after people started to get used to Margaux’s presence, she became just Lily again. The girl who appreciated her brother, missed her mother, loved her mom, cared for her aunt, and preferred the cold.

The children on Margaux’s wake spun stories about Lily too—the girl-knight whose shadow saved the handless princess from the long, warm dragon in the woods. Like Margaux, she let them hypothesize as they pleased, and their tales eventually overcame the nightmares that the elders warned. They shared it with other children, variations and extrapolations, who retold and mistold it to even more children, then grew up and lullabied their own families with it. The forest again grew safe with time, and kids strayed into the trees, tumbling back out with blackberry stains on their hands and claims of finding little clock numbers under brush.

That’s how old memories become new legends—they start with the young, return to where they came from.

 

Kylie Ayn Yockey (she/her) is a queer southern creative with a BA in Creative Writing & Literature. Her work has been published or is forthcoming in Glyph Magazine, Meow Meow Pow Pow Lit, Night Music Journal, Gravitas, Ordinary Madness, Stray Bunch, and Not Very Quiet. She has edited for Glyph, The Louisville Review, Ink  Voices, and is the poetry editor for Blood Tree Literature.

Website: https://www.kylieaynyockey.com/