A Remedy

Nulla

That winter, death comes barreling down on the Macario family with expected talons to claim Pumpkin, the old orange family cat. His age and origins they’ve never known for certain, though these unknowns have never lessened their love. The day it comes time for mercy, Mamá, who found Pumpkin all those years ago, comes with Papá to pick Tomasa up from school early, huffing and donning painted pink cheeks as she pulls Tomasa away from a particularly rigorous game of Seven Up. By the time Tomasa and her siblings are clutching lifeless orange fur for what will be the last time, the game is long forgotten, her oft-released childish wails justified in the echo of the sterile room. Even at the unripe age of seven she thinks it woefully unfair that this is it, that this is where Pumpkin has breathed his last: an unfamiliar room. Cold, metallic, colorless. Above all else, cold.

When her parents have settled everything and they’re heading back to their minivan, cavernous silence where Silvina and Martín would usually be bickering—which really means Silvina scolding Martín, and Martín retorting with a swear word or a shove—Mamá falls behind with the lagging Tomasa and wraps her scarf around her, then adds an arm to boot.

“Don’t be too sad, Tomasita.” With each word Tomasa’s eyes moisten more and more. Through this wetness she looks up at Mamá, whose lips have formed the tiniest of something that looks like it means to comfort, and it’s with these lips that she adds, “It was his time.”

Which finally gets Tomasa to pipe up something other than a wail, indignant when she croaks out, “Who said so?”

“If we knew that,” Mamá says, and Tomasa is barely listening, she’s thinking too hard to try to will the tears away, “we wouldn’t really be human, would we?” Then she tightens the scarf in tandem with her hold on Tomasa, and together they stumble to the car behind Tomasa’s father, behind Tomasa’s older siblings, behind the suffocation of death in the family.

I

It’s something Papá tells Silvina after a while of Mamá being gone, and seven-year-old Tomasa has gone unnoticed and is picking at lint balls behind the couch where she likes to hide sometimes. 

“Your mother,” he says to Silvina, and Tomasa is only half-listening, “has always been addicted to being alone.” A few minutes later, having heard her father shuffle off and away from the living room, Tomasa jumps up and throws herself next to a red-eyed Silvina. At the age of fourteen, Silvina is graceful, poised. Today, she looks younger than ever, her hunched figure startling at the sudden motion from Tomasa.

“What’s addicted mean?”

“Don’t worry about it.” Then, Silvina starts asking if Tomasa has finished her homework, which makes Tomasa shriek and run off. They’re all being so dramatic, so solemn. Even Martín has started sulking more than usual. Tomasa doesn’t understand why her mother has been gone for almost two weeks, or why her maternal grandparents came around to speak in hushed voices with Papá, or why Silvina has been so teary. Mamá will be back. She goes, but she always comes back and when she does, Tomasa jumps into her arms and it’s like she never left. So yes, Mamá will be back. Tomasa wonders if she ought to tell them this. It’s ridiculous, after all, to think that Mamá, who wouldn’t pass her name down to Tomasa no matter how pretty Papá thought it was, would want anything to do with being alone. Soledad in name, not in practice. 

V

Wanting to die isn’t so novel—it’s in the back of Tomasa’s mind, mostly, until something yanks it forward, like when she’s eighteen and all the people she thought of as friends go to colleges more distant than the local state one, the only one to which she applied, and separate ways ends up meaning incompatible ways, and she wonders if they were ever really her friends at all if they were so easy to lose. 

Or when she’s nineteen and a pissed-in-two-senses-of-the-word Martín decides the Thanksgiving table is the best place to tell Silvina that he overheard a conversation years ago and Soledad—whose only real form of contact with them for years now has been in the form of sending extravagant Christmas and birthday gifts—isn’t her real mother because her real mother is dead, and Tomasa wishes she could unsee the unprecedented anguish that contorts noble eldest sister Silvina’s face. 

Or when she’s twenty and one of the more traumatizing files in her file cabinet of girlfriends—and girls who wouldn’t let her call them that—swipes a few hundred dollar bills from Papá’s nightstand drawer and all he gives her is a look, silent and expressionless, before turning away from her tears. 

Or when she’s twenty-one watching Martín check the pulse of a body they found turning into an alley on a shortcut home from the bar, a route she’ll only take if Martín is with her, and when nothing happens and she sees the gunshot wound, clear as day in the night, she thinks about how it doesn’t matter that Soledad didn’t pass down her name because she didn’t want her youngest daughter to be alone, because Tomasa is alone anyway, and how would her shaking hands explain it to Martín and the police if she did it; or when she’s twenty-two and she finally does it. 

Or when she’s twenty-two and she wakes up from her temporary death after the so-called attempt that was, definitely, of course--how could it not be after how many she swallowed--successful. Tomasa’s shock announcing itself in a scream startles the already shaking Silvina kneeling down on the ground next to Tomasa’s once-lifeless body, and then Tomasa realizes, with rage and a variety of emotions not yet named, it wasn’t her time. 

Well, fuck whoever decided it wasn’t Tomasa’s time. Her life isn’t a fucking tragedy. It never has been, and it might never be. She knows this too well, she knows it as she’s shipped off to the hospital, she knows it as they tell her it’s a miracle that she lived, that it’s a miracle because they can’t even find any signs of overdose despite her self-report of having done just that. It’s a miracle, it’s a miracle, it’s a miracle. She bites her tongue instead of spitting back don’t I fucking know it.

II

In a move the Macario family--save for the perpetrator--must’ve been expecting, Tomasa takes her playground havoc-wreaking too far one day and shoves a smart-mouthed, pristine-pink ribbon-wearing playmate in her second grade class, leaving her with a bloody nose. The school responds with a brief suspension lasting up until the end of the school year; Papá deals with the ribbon’s parents, and Tomasa spends all summer seeing a psychologist every other week. The psychologist says that, based on what Papá has told him about quote-unquote family history, there may eventually be the need for a certain,official diagnosis. But Tomasa is too young for him to tell for certain, he also says, so he never divulges anything further to Tomasa. And she never thinks to push the topic, too fascinated by the pastel Legos in his city office.

Always quick to rattle off any thought that comes to mind, Tomasa is rendered a complete pariah as she enters third grade with no one to talk to her aside from her siblings. But Silvina is a sitting-pretty high schooler and Martín’s sixth-grade status may as well mean he lives in a different country altogether for how little attention he pays to Tomasa. So she explodes when she gets home, rotating listeners and talking everyone’s ears off. Only Soledad, who has been gone for a few months, escapes these vocal tirades.

After a few weeks of this, Papá tells Tomasa that Mrs. Umstead and her daughter Julia, the latter a year above her and someone who has never spoken a single word to Tomasa, have extended an invitation for Tomasa to come over and play. The words are an incantation that carry her from her house to their porch, where Julia opens the door, offers a nod as greeting, and wordlessly escorts Tomasa to her second floor bedroom. 

When Soledad returns unannounced, Tomasa has troves to unload that everyone else in the house has already heard. She tells her about how Julia has beautiful coloring books from which she’ll give Tomasa a page nearly each time she visits. It doesn’t matter that Tomasa has her own beautiful coloring books that Soledad and her maternal grandparents—all of whom respond to Tomasa’s material demands with sleek cards more often than Papá does—have given her because Julia’s beautiful coloring books are more special, more of a novel. How mature and wise nine-year-old Julia is sometimes trusted to watch her younger sister, how Julia and her play with the abundant neighborhood stray cats and have even named one: a rare brown one. The name they chose is Lily, which means the name Tomasa chose is Lily. Tomasa says all this and more and omits other parts, like how Tomasa and Julia, both naturally bossy, clash more often than not and Tomasa holds her breath after each impulsive outburst, expecting it to be the last one Julia will ever tolerate because Julia’s anger is so much more contained, so much more graceful, hidden behind careful quivers. She talks and talks about Julia, all the time knowing that Julia, when they’re at school, won’t even look at her once. Julia, so tall and pretty in the pink floral prints and frilled lace socks her mother makes her wear, pretended she didn’t hear Tomasa the one time Tomasa, bold as ever, said hello as they passed each other in the cafeteria.

When Tomasa is done and out of breath, Soledad nods and murmurs, “She sounds nice.” With that she turns over in the guest room bed, her snores becoming booms in the otherwise empty house. The dusk light dissipates almost as rapidly as the thing that sparked alight in Tomasa’s chest when Soledad’s car pulled into the driveway. 

Tomasa forgets about matters of dissipating light the next day when she and Julia are stalking through the neighborhood at Tomasa’s behest, Julia’s twinged-with-irritation twinkle of a voice saying, “Tomasa, it’s going to get dark soon.”

“So we need to find her by then.”

“She’s a stray, we don’t need to find her.”

“Just a few more minutes. What if she’s hungry?”

Sometimes Tomasa wants to shake Julia. She never actually does, although she’s felt her fingers flinch more than once. Julia, who has never known loss, can’t possibly understand, she often thinks with a bitter twang in her heart. Tomasa needs Lily like she’s convinced herself Lily needs cat food, always taken from the large bag Soledad bought a few days before Pumpkin died. The bag, almost two years old and nearly empty now, still sits in their cluttered garage.

They turn the corner into the street behind theirs, Tomasa leading the way with purpose, the small plastic bowl gripped tight between both of her hands. Julia sees it first, a sharp intake of air preceding a yelp that makes Tomasa jump, turning to look at Julia before following her gaze and catching sight of the brown, pink-red lump. The color of insides, sole occupier of the asphalt, and two girls the only audience.

Without a second thought, Tomasa lunges toward Lily. Julia’s strangled airy voice tells Tomasa to stop, to put Lily down, that she shouldn’t touch dead animals even if she loves the dead animal. Both of them are screaming when a hiss halts their yells and the bones spring out of Tomasa’s arms, but not too fast for them to miss Lily stitch back together. Instantaneously and impossibly, there are glowing embers in Tomasa’s throat burning bright for just a second--and just a second is all it takes.  Then Lily decides her second life would be best spent elsewhere. 

“She was definitely dead,” uttered Julia. Her voice falls on Tomasa’s pounding ears, and Tomasa finds herself affirming this with words that come out mechanically. Then Julia bolts, new sandals click-clacking loudly. Too loudly. 

Soledad is gone again when Tomasa stumbles back home empty-handed, head spinning, breathing hard with a thirst like no thirst she’s ever felt before in her young life. She goes to the kitchen, her bloody t-shirt unnoticed by Martín, who is in the living room. She drinks three glasses of water in a row before scurrying upstairs. She stuffs her shirt between her mattress and bedframe. She feels delirious. She collapses atop her comforter.  She falls asleep. 

Later that night, she wakes up and walks downstairs with bleary eyes, narrowly avoiding running into a thin-lipped Mrs. Umstead being escorted to the front door by Papá. And Papá, he gives her a look like the one he gave her after she pushed that girl over. He tells her she can’t see Julia anymore, that Julia won’t be seeing her anymore. And Tomasa, she wishes Soledad was here, wishes Soledad would make sense out of the nonsensical, like she always does. She wishes Julia wouldn’t hate her so badly because of something she isn’t even sure she did. She wishes and wishes.

III

So Tomasa, age eight, resolves to forget about it. It takes effort not to look at Julia when they’re going in and out of the house at the same time or when they pass each other at school. Even if she did something, even if what they think she did was real, she doesn’t want to reckon with it alone. And Julia has taught her enough about how others might react. With each passing year, though, it gets harder not to look at Julia, for different reasons. Reasons she buries behind some door in her heart, and she puts the key aside. Still there, though never wielded, she feels this presence  the most  on the second day of middle school, when she sees twelve-year-old Julia with a boy. It bothers her and she pretends she doesn’t know why it bothers her.  She picks up the key and stands before that door in her heart before she walks away. 

Often, Tomasa finds herself walking away in her mind’s eye. Better to not know, better to not think. It’s already so very hard to get out of bed or keep herself from going crazy for how noisy the world is, never mind how noisy she can be, despite mostly outgrowing her childhood temper tantrums. Yet, also with aging, brief moments of wonder possess her and she’ll run the possibility over in her mind: that for some insane reason, some faulty mechanism of the universe, she has been chosen for something as grand as this. But that also pulls back what Tomasa has decided is illusion—being “chosen.” Chosen, implying that Tomasa must have somehow done something to earn this. If not, then it was a mistake. She bristles at that, the possibility that she’s some kind of mistake. More than once, Martín has proposed that they, as a collective sibling unit, are Soledad’s mistakes. For all the times Silvina tells him to be quiet, she never tells him that he’s wrong. 

Soledad, intermittently arriving and leaving, leaves for the last time when Tomasa is thirteen. Her grades are sinking, too, which is part of how she earns her first psychotropic prescription.  

It’s been a year and a half of Soledad’s absence and Tomasa’s medicated state when Papá, driving her to school, tells her Soledad won’t be returning, so he’s going to put some extra shelves in the guest room for Silvina’s overflowing collection of books. May as well do something with the room, and it’s not like they have many other guests. 

Tomasa says okay, which is a lie.

It’s frog dissection day in her first period biology class, and she’s volunteered to help set up the room in exchange for extra credit, so she jumps out of the car without saying goodbye to Papá and heads there with an aching head, thumping heart. Following the rules should be simple, just organize the vacuum-sealed frogs, one per station, and leave it at that. 

The biology teacher Mrs. Nuñez leaves the room and, through her aching head, Tomasa thinks it wouldn’t hurt to just see, and no one will miss one frog. Never mind the question of how she’ll discard it. The dead thing attacks her with its pungency, and she still has the ripped packaging in her hand when she touches its slimy texture and her throat burns. This time practicality has the decency to possess her. But she still can’t catch the frog before Mrs. Nuñez enters the room again, gracing the entire E Hallway with a banshee-like howl as a frog—curious, wide-eyed—bounces towards her.  

Afterwards, Tomasa looks through an encyclopedia of Google search results for a myriad of different phrases, more or less fruitless: bringing things back to life, bringing things back to life after touching them, making things alive again and feeling completely numb and then feeling really thirsty and dehydrated. If there are others out there like her, they aren’t talking about it on the internet. She makes a long dramatic monologue of a post on an unexplained phenomena forum and the sole answer is a link to a WebMD page about psychosis, which is disappointing because she made a new email account and elaborate fake name up for that post: Antoinette Frances Ursula Ramirez.

There’s experimentation as well. It isn’t easy to find test subjects, but she makes do. Three tangled-dead spiders she touches spring back to life. Tomasa conducts another internet search and finds out spiders rarely die of natural causes, and the pieces start coming together. Miscellaneous others, mostly insects and varying in success rates. There was a dead squirrel on the road by the school that sprung back to life like it had something to prove, and all that was left behind was the blood-coated concrete. 

VI

People suddenly want to talk to her after the fact, especially after the hospital stay is over with. People that left her alone for years, and now are suddenly interested. Tomasa responds by keeping her phone off altogether, eyes glued to YouTube videos on her laptop screen behind a resolutely closed bedroom door, her family allowed entrance in short intervals that are really instances of masked supervision. Soledad tried to visit when she was in the hospital but, by then, Tomasa had already made a point of telling her doctors she wanted Soledad Emilia Sanchez, who never changed her surname to Macario, on the list of people forbidden to visit her. This brought her list to a grand total of one.

Now Soledad continues trying to make amends, or at least that’s what Tomasa gleans from the fact that she won’t stop calling. At least one call a day. At least Soledad half-got the hint and doesn’t come to the house. She’s a county away, her voicemails say, she’s not far at all and, when Tomasa is ready to see her, she’ll come. Tomasa periodically listens to these voicemails, deletes them, and turns her phone back off. Because look at what she had to do for Soledad to be interested again; because she hates herself for wanting to tell her mother everything. All of it, not one detail left out:  

Something clicked. How it clicked, Tomasa cannot know—she only knows, with a certainty etched into the marrow of her bones, with the certainty of something ancient or something divine even though she has rarely pondered the ancient or the divine. When she died, something clicked. A dial was turned. It did not save her immediately, did not keep her from being immersed in that emptiness. She was falling for years that felt like seconds turned into minutes turned back into seconds turned into years. No perception of anything but that emptiness so full. With Lily, with everything else, all she could think about was heaving and rushing to grab water or in one case to grab a frog, left with no time to think about what one might feel after being dragged—perhaps kicking and screaming—from the banks of Styx. But she didn’t see a river, she didn’t see any kind of god, she didn’t see anything. She woke up at 3:46 p.m., about twenty or so minutes from the time she’d done it. On the ambulance ride she kept thinking so it’s different for humans, huh. So it’s different if it’s me, huh

Tomasa still thinks about this, turned-off phone in hand, curled up in bed and facing the bedroom window that gives her a good view of the Umstead’s driveway. She knows what she’s wishing for, who she’s wishing for. So it goes.

IV

Soledad long gone, Silvina an anxious workaholic. Tomasa steps into the odd borderland between girl and woman without fully noticing, mostly occupied with pondering her ability to conditionally negate death. Inevitably the obsessive solitude of the cross she bears is beat by the look a girl in her art class gives her when she sees Tomasa’s rainbow anklet.   A look that promises her something other than solitude and a look that turns out to not be the last of its kind, nor unique to this girl. 

She hears the news first from art class girl: after three or so days in critical condition, Julia’s younger sister has passed away from injuries sustained in a car crash. The Umstead patriarch will, as far as they know, continue to outlive her, and at the funeral, Tomasa finds out he did, in fact, outlive her.  She watches the Umstead family from her awkward position in the polite acquaintance outskirts alongside Papá and her siblings, bitter and buried beneath the black coat Silvina made her wear. Papá threatens phone confiscation when Tomasa resists Silvina’s instructions for her to come along and give condolences, like he threatened phone confiscation when Tomasa pitched a fit about attending the funeral. It’s uncomfortable, being moved along until she’s standing in front of Julia, who looks delicate in her black dress even though her sharp features have never let her be delicate before this. Uncomfortable, to look into those blue eyes and avoid looking at the sobbing Mrs. Umstead, the bandaged and bruised Mr. Umstead, as she says, “I’m sorry.” Which could mean a lot of things. 

Julia doesn’t nod, just says, “Thank you.” Like they’re perfect strangers, and maybe they are. Tomasa doesn’t know what else to say, starts to walk away and back to her family and then there’s a hold on her wrist, a tentative hold by Julia’s cold fingers.

“Tomasa,” says Julia, the three syllables pins that stick Tomasa in place more firmly than those fingers ever could, “I’d like to speak with you tomorrow, if you have time.” And who is Tomasa to say “no” to the request of a grieving person.

It isn’t until the sun starts setting the next day that Julia knocks on the front door, bike resting against the porch step railing. Tomasa’s heart is an alternating cycle of palpitations and stillness as she tells Julia to wait for her to grab her own bike from the garage. Martín, the only one home, halfheartedly tells Tomasa, on her way out, that she needs to be home by midnight, meaning nothing because Papá doesn’t get home from work until after 3 AM. Julia doesn’t say much, just that they need to go somewhere before she can talk, and impressively, Tomasa’s nerves let her make it five blocks pedaling behind Julia until they dissipate and morph into frustration. She brakes, startling Julia into doing the same.

“I really am sorry about your sister,” Tomasa says, and Julia’s face, only half facing her, is glazed in the orange streetlight, which makes this easier, “but where the hell are we going?”

Still glazed in orange, Julia looks at Tomasa head-on, lip trembling when she says, “To the cemetery, Tomasa.”

That makes enough sense: a surprising, disturbing amount of sense, enough to make Tomasa step back. Still gripping handlebars, she brings her bike back with her. She starts to say something about needing to go, not bothering with an excuse. Julia, like before but with more purpose this time, lurches forward and grabs Tomasa’s hand, fingers tentatively lacing themselves with Tomasa’s own—Tomasa’s fingers betray her when they mirror Julia’s. 

“I heard about the frog from last year.” This comes out in a rush. “How you were the one to find it, and how it’s not native to California, how it’s the same species as the one your class was supposed to dissect, and I—” 

“I failed biology, so I wouldn’t know anything about that,” tumbles out of Tomasa, a knee-jerk reaction that should surprise her except she can’t stop thinking about what this is really about, how it’s not really about her, how foolish she was for having thought this was about her. Another knee-jerk reaction, contradictory, when she adds, “I can’t do anything about it anyway.”

“You can, though—”

“You don’t know anything about what you think you know,” Tomasa finds it within herself to pull her fingers apart from Julia’s, “You haven’t talked to me since I was eight.”

“I know what I saw, Tomasa. We were kids, I know, but I know what I saw.” Julia is crying. Tomasa wonders if she’s been tearing up this whole time, and she just hasn’t noticed in the semi-darkness. Tomasa doesn’t get to announce her second attempt at going home before Julia says, “It was messed up that our parents made us spend so much time together, I know, but…” Like a defendant that has sealed their own judgment, Julia’s face goes ashen when she sees the look on Tomasa’s face. “You never figured it out then, did you?”

“I don’t care.” It’s not nerves pumping Tomasa’s heart so quickly anymore, it’s something else altogether. She turns her bike around, turns her back to Julia, so the older girl won’t see her shaking hands. “Who gives a shit? I barely remember all that.”

“Tomasa.” The final plea. “My mom, she’s—my dad—it’s just not good, Tomasa.”

“How’re you planning on explaining her miraculous revival to everyone who saw her buried yesterday?” Tomasa doesn’t turn around, doesn’t add the how dare you ask this of me on the tip of her tongue, doesn’t think much of anything as she pedals back home with no one behind her. Modus operandi.

So she ignores Julia. Ignores her with purpose and with faux dignity. It’s not like it’s hard, it’s not like Julia is exactly vying for her attention. Sometimes they’ll accidentally make eye contact, maybe because it’s hard to forget what they both know about Tomasa. Julia always looks away first. Tomasa wants to be angrier than she is.

Still, she treks on. Tries to forget what she knows about herself, too. It’s Silvina who tells her when Julia has committed to an out-of-state college. Mrs. Umstead had stopped Silvina outside and, apparently beaming with pride—rare, even after two years have passed, to see her smiling at all—announced the jolly news. 

Tomasa isn’t thinking much, really, when she finds herself bussing to the cemetery that night; she doesn’t make it, gets off halfway through the route and then busses back. It’s not that she wants Julia to stay, it’s that she wants that possibility of Julia staying. That possibility that one day she’ll grow up and Julia will grow up, and she can rest knowing that someone else out there understands. She makes it to the cemetery on her third bus ride, the ridiculousness of it all collapsing on her as the doors open and she steps onto the sidewalk. Before the homebound bus arrives, she leaves a pile of vomit next to the rusty bench, a panic-induced pile.

Soledad is a ghost that makes Tomasa shriek when she gets home from the cemetery. 

“I’ve been meaning to come back for some jewelry I left behind,” says Soledad, and Tomasa wants to ask why it took her four years to do that, and why it’s jewelry she missed, and why she doesn’t just buy replacements because they all know she can afford it.

Instead all Tomasa says is, “I just came from a cemetery.”

“Of course you did.” Then, Soledad presses a quick kiss to Tomasa’s forehead, and Tomasa isn’t sure but she thinks there’s sadness on her face when she darts off, leaving Tomasa with a lipstick stain to rub off. It’s not the power of prophecy that she’s been given but, somehow Tomasa knows with fierce certainty that she won’t be seeing Soledad, again. 

What a damn useless gift, and a damn cruel trick, giving her something as mighty as the power to bring back the dead. 

Just the unlucky ones, though.

VII

Para todo hay remedio, si no es para la muerte. Words, spoken by Papá one day when he walks into Tomasa’s room and finds her there, in bed instead of in group therapy, unmoving and listening to too-loud 2000s rock, blared and tinny from her laptop speakers. His dichos slide unnoticed past Tomasa, mostly, for how frequent they are. Donde hay amor hay dolor, al mal tiempo buena cara, something something this will change your perspective trust and believe. But that one—that one, she’s never heard before, never heard such absurdity sprout from his mouth that moves her to promise that next week, at last, she will finally make it to group therapy. The group therapy that comes after intensive outpatient therapy.. Two weeks out of the hospital and her head is still mud, a differently colored mud than it was before, but still mud. 

With her mud-filled head Tomasa stalks downstairs, where Silvina is planted at the kitchen table working on something boring, something that has to do with accounting. Silvina’s been doing that lately—coming around, staying around, supervising. Tomasa plants herself across from Silvina and announces, “I brought a cat back to life when I was eight years old.”

“You mean you nursed it back to health?” Silvina pencils something in before looking at Tomasa with a raised eyebrow. “I think I’d remember something like that.”

“No,” says Tomasa. “I actually brought her back to life. She was dead and I touched her and she was alive again after that.”

“Right.” Silvina pauses, then takes a sip of lemonade, already losing interest. “It must’ve not been dead, then.” 

Tomasa takes this in. She makes a show of nodding. She says, “You’re probably right.” 

“I usually am,” says Silvina, and Tomasa snorts loud enough for an encore of that confused eyebrow. And that eyebrow, paired with those words, are an incantation that carry Tomasa from the Macario house to Umstead’s porch, where Mrs. Umstead opens the door, surprised, and Tomasa smiles a smile that shows teeth and tells her the Macario family will be sending Christmas cards this fine winter. Tells her they’ll be sending them to everyone they know and they’d like Julia’s address to send her one too, please.

“For everything there is a remedy, except for death.” And only one other person, Tomasa thinks, knows this to be false. By the time she is halfway to the city where Julia is getting a PhD in something she can’t remember because she wasn’t paying attention to Mrs. Umstead’s idle, post-address-acquisition chitchat, she’s realizing it might have been a better—smarter—idea to take a Greyhound instead. It would have certainly been less demanding of her meager savings account. At least the drive gives her the isolation she needs to think about what she’s going to say when she gets there, even though she knows she’ll promptly forget as soon as she opens her mouth. 

VIII

Julia who doesn’t come home for holidays. Julia whose face Tomasa hasn’t seen in over four years, nearly five. If Tomasa wanted to, she could count the exact number of days, it wouldn’t be so hard. But she doesn’t want to, not now when she’s looking at Julia and the older girl—woman, now—has changed so little in appearance that Tomasa, in her still, staring trepidation, wonders if Julia can also do something odd, inexplicable but no less real than so many years ago when Tomasa touched a dead cat and Julia watched as it sprung back to life.

And Julia, blue eyes as unnerving as when they were children, averts her gaze finally, her surprise having run its course and leaving her once again cognizant of social graces. 

“I just saw a message from my roommate about an old friend stopping by. I can’t say I was expecting it to be you,” she says, and her words break the cautious line between them.

“Yeah.” Tomasa is suddenly hyper aware of her disheveled appearance, of the many students afoot around them in the hallway of this college building. Ridiculous, sure, because she wasn’t exactly self-conscious when she took off and made the interstate drive to the university where Julia is a graduate student. “Sorry I lied and said we were friends.”

“In elementary school, we kind of were.” Julia is visibly troubled, which is something in which Tomasa—not shamelessly—finds satisfaction. She knows it has nothing to do with the question of whether their companionship was genuine friendship. “For a while.”

“We weren’t,” says Tomasa, because it’s the truth. “Anyway, I’m sorry to impose but, if you’re not busy right now, can we talk?” 

“I’m not busy,” says Julia. Like she’s at a confessional, like she’s someone with a screen between her and someone holier. For once, Tomasa feels like the someone holier.

IX

“That’s what it felt like.”

“Oh, Tomasa.” Julia, looking down into her lap, rubs tears away from her winter-chapped face. The bench on the fringes of campus is isolated enough that neither of them have to worry about anyone overhearing the impossibilities Tomasa has just recounted. It’s gentle when Julia asks, “Why did you come all the way over here to tell me this?” 

“Because,” Tomasa starts, and the sensation that fastens itself onto her is urgency and relief in a combined avalanche, “all these feel-good stories online talk about coming out of it with wisdom from God, stuff like that. But there’s more to it that I can’t really tell, except.. well, to you.” 

“How did you do it?” 

“I don’t know. But you believe me?”

“Of course I believe you” Closer now, Tomasa can see that Julia has changed, that her under eyes are dark and that her face is slightly rounder. Small alterations, barely noticeable. Human. “I always believed it. You scared me.”

“Till you needed me,” Tomasa says without thinking, and Julia nods.

“Till I needed you.”

They fall quiet, comfortable like old friends. Odd, not entirely unwelcome. After a few lingering moments Julia says, “So the universe makes mistakes sometimes, and you’re the failsafe.”

“It wasn’t a mistake. I did it on purpose.”

“If you can do this, maybe it’s not so much of a stretch to believe in something like fate, though.” 

Fate. Tomasa turns that over in her head—fate that dictates only Julia ever knowing this secret. Fate that dictates Julia running away from whatever went on in the Umstead house after the car accident. Fate that dictates Tomasa taking Martín’s car keys without asking. An impulse, an itch, to tell Julia about this one grand feat that feels so grander than the rest. Julia who barely knows her. Julia who knows her so well. In Tomasa’s pocket, her phone feels heavy. She puts a hand over it. She thinks about how she isn’t alone, not in this moment, and how much of a miracle that is. How much of a miracle she can be. Her phone, on silent and clutched in her hand, lights up. Soledad, like clockwork. 

Tomasa says, “I need to take a call.”

“Service isn’t so great here, but if the call’s coming in, then you should be fine,” says Julia, and she looks confused when Tomasa laughs.

“Not today,” says Tomasa. “Tomorrow, or the next day. Soon.”

 

Alex Luceli Jiménez (she/her) is a writer of horror and other types of speculative fiction from the inland city of Fontana, California. That said, she has also been known to write the occasional lesbian love story. She is currently a fourth-year student at the University of California, Berkeley majoring in comparative literature and English with a minor in creative writing. Her writing — fiction and otherwise — has previously appeared in Berkeley Fiction Review, The Daily Californian, and Lunch Ticket. Please send any and all LGBTQ+ literature recs to her Twitter: @alexluceli.

Talyen

I must have paced for hours. There was no clock, I had no form of communication, and the amount of shadows that moved past our enclosure had trickled down. A few stopped to watch me pace. The same spot over and over. But there was not much else to do. No TV. No sound system. There were books, a few, but most were in Mandarin or Spanish. I'd read our copy of Pride and Prejudice so many times I almost screamed at the thought of opening it up again. 

It wouldn't work. I wouldn't be able to stay still for long enough. All I could do was keep moving. In the hope that I could exhaust myself, or with luck, be sedated by one of the staff that watched over us.

*                *                *

The first time I woke in the enclosure I could barely move. My vision was so blurred and all I could do was wretch to get used to the strange, synthetic oxygen that was pumped through the air. In and out of sleep there was light and movement. I was sure I was dying, I wished it would just take me. Hands touched my body but I couldn't flinch away. Was it human skin?

“It's OK.” A deep voice said. “It's just the sedatives. Sleep.”

And like some kind of spell, I did.

*                *                *

The smell of bacon and pastries made my nose twitch. My dry mouth suddenly began to water and I rose from a bed in the centre of a cage.

I didn't realise it was a cage at first, it looked like a vintage apartment. With rich red persian rugs and chairs made of deep woods. Floor to ceiling windows and dark grey diamond tiles. Like a set, without the cameras. What was left of the human race no longer decorated with such colours or patterns. Everything from the mid 2000s onwards was monochrome and plain, with an emphasis on minimalism and cleanliness.

As I wandered over to the windows something in my legs woke. A sensation of weight, a tightness loosening. Wherever my captors had taken me, they had gravity. Something I hadn't experienced in years. Even my breath felt heavy in my lungs. I smiled. 

But it was short-lived. When I met the wall of glass that reached up to the ceilings, there was no garden or deep space beyond it. Just what seemed like a dark corridor. I began to walk along the glass, reaching a corner, then another.

“Stop. There's no door.” I heard a voice behind me say.

I turned to see a person sitting at the table. They had an accent I couldn't place, and they kept their eyes on their plate of food.

“English?” They asked. Still not looking up.

It took a few coughs before I could speak. “Yes.” I said.

“Good.” They nodded. “Put something on.”

They pointed to a small pile on the floor. I was nude, I realised as I looked down. I quickly moved to the items.

A simple tunic and a pair of briefs. Not totally uncomfortable. White cloth, exactly the same as the person at the table was wearing.

Looking up, they pushed a plate toward me.

Maybe it was the strange headache climbing through my brain but their eyes seem to glisten. I sat beside them.

The food tasted and smelled like bacon and croissants, but something told me it wasn’t. Regardless, I moved it into my mouth so quickly, I almost expected my mum to appear, smack me on the back of my head and tell me to stop eating like such a pig.

“I'm Darren.” They said.

“Old name.” Was all I could think to say.

*                *                *

When they finally returned Darren, he was exhausted. They had flooded the tank with gas that knocked me out, and as much as I held out, I let myself fall gently back against the bed. When I came around he was lying beside me. Out of instinct I thanked God and moved to check he was breathing. He was in and out of sleep for days. I brought him his food in bed, propped him up with pillows and stroked his hair back from his forehead when it grew thick with sweat.

The nightmares grew less and less as time went by.

*                *                *

Darren and I didn't speak for a number of days. We had eaten quietly, he showed me where I could sleep and relieve myself, then he picked up a book. 

Like a vintage apartment, we had a clawfoot tub in one corner of the room. The water was surprisingly not freezing. Although Darren and I were always polite enough to look away when each of us used the facilities, there was nothing to stop the crowds.

In the years leading up to my capture, Earth was a warzone, practically just fire and brimstone. A lot of us fled to the moon and outer colonies, but a few years later, They came. 

Their ships were the size of moons themselves. They devoured Earth. Wiping out what little was left of civilization and mining the planet for any scrap resources they could use. We were nothing to them. A sunken ship in the sea of space. 

They wore robot metal armour and used gasses and noise rather than bullets and bombs. The few of us humans left fled to the outer reaches of our galaxy. And the ones they spared the lives of were bought and sold like commodities. Slaves rumors said, but you got the occasional kinky collector, or this, the place I was now.

Darren didn't need to explain how it was some kind of zoo.

*                *                *

“Talyen,” he began one day while I was napping in a chair. It had become a hobby. There was little else to do. “How old are you?” He asked.

I sat up in my chair. My head was heavy.

“Twenty-four. In solar cycles. You?”

I didn't want to pry but he had heard me shit. Would it make it worse to get to know the guy? 

I would be lying if I said I hadn't wanted to question him from day one. He must have been of similar age to me, he spoke English well and maybe I had watched him once or twice, using the bath. Darren wore a constant frown but when he was in the bath, it was almost a smile. His back muscles slowly eased with the warmth of the smooth water. His muscles were bigger than mine.

“You're such a scrawny boy. All you do is sit in your room and play those games.” My mother had laughed, poking her bony fingers into my ribs. I would slap her hands away and stalk off, cussing at her. 

And then she died, and I prayed every day to feel those sharp nails through my t-shirt once again.

“Twenty-six.” Darren said. Then he went back to his book.

The space was quiet. You couldn’t really see the visitors on the other side of the glass. We hadn’t a clue what our captors looked like. But we could see dark silhouettes like shadows. I watched a group stop, peer at us, then shuffle away. 

We weren’t very interesting. 

“Where are you from?” I asked, before the moment slipped past.

Darren put a finger in his book to hold the page.

“New Glasgow, originally.”

“No way!” I blurted. “Me too.”

“New Glasgow was a big place.” 

Did I detect a small smirk? I moved from my chair to perch on the end of the bed where he sat.

“Which zone?” 

“Zone 2.”

“Oh.” 

He looked down at his book in his hands. “But when I was four we moved to Earth.”

“Where abouts?”

“Spain.”

“That’s so cool. We vacationed there a few times… We could never live there. We were…” I hesitated. Stupidly embarrassed. But he had lived on Earth and now he was here, in the same place as I was. Money, I remembered, is obsolete when the world ends. “Zone 26.” I said.

He nodded. His thumbs brushed the pages and I wondered what he was thinking.

“How long have you been here?”

Darren’s eyes met mine again. Then he let out a short laugh. “I… I don't know.” He threw his book on the sheets. “I was 26 when I came here but there’s no days. No clocks. No calendars. Lights on, lights off.”

“Are they days, do you think? Human days?”

He shrugged.

“I don’t know anything.” He said.

Then he closed his eyes, moved down to lay on the bed, and rolled away from me.

*                *                *

When the lights were out I would often lie awake and think of space. I would fall asleep imagining the sound of total silence, imagining what it would be like out there. After a while the thought of stars became paired with the sound of Darren’s deep breaths. I envied how used to his bed he was, how familiar it seemed to feel to him. And yet I pitied how obviously he had given up.

*                *                *

One morning, as I pulled a fresh tunic over his face, he finally spoke. 

“Where am I?” He asked.

“With me. With Talyen.” I said.

Neither of us knew how long he’d been gone for when we discussed it afterwards. Anything about the days they had taken him was foggy.

“I keep turning the dail,” he would say, “but I can’t find the station.”

And we left it at that.

I had his arms through both holes and was tugging.

“Talyen…” He said it slowly.

“Yes. Me. Remember?”

He had been like a ghost, waking to do nothing but eat and stare into the air. He laughed a little like he was drunk.

“Talyen…” He said again. “The man… with the freckles.” Then his smile faded and our eyes met. Slowly, he reached his index finger up to my nose and gently grazed it over the freckles there. Was he recognizing me? Remembering me again?

I tried not to let the hope rise too much inside my chest.

When he dropped his hand I gave a short laugh.

“Si tonto, I’m Talyen.”

*                *                *

I pulled at the books on the shelves, making a small pile of the ones in English.

“You skip your language lessons?” Darren laughed.

“I’m bored.”

“That didn’t take long.”

“I don’t understand.” I said. “If there’s no door, how do they come in and out?”

He shrugged.

I had walked around and around the cell. Banged on the glass, screamed my throat raw. Nothing.

Darren didn’t watch or speak. He just laid in bed, read his books, and did his exercises.

“Pride and Prejudice, 1984... that’s sadistic.” I shook my head. “Great Expectations. Ugh!” I threw the book down.

“They’re classics?” Darren said. But it had the hint of a question. 

“Would it kill them to throw in a little Tolkein?”

He laughed. 

Then without a blink, the room grew cloudy and my head hit the tiles.

“I’m never going to get used to that.” I said, as I pawed at my sore face. 

“Why do you think I’m always here?” Darren gestured at his bed.

The gas wasn’t that bad. Like being put under a sudden anesthetic, then waking up again suddenly to find you’re horizontal. It wasn’t like getting over a come down, more like the feeling after you do a big sneeze. It was surprising, but not totally debilitating.

As usual when we were sedated, there was now food awaiting us on the table. We gratefully tucked in and I was so glad of something to do.

“How do they get this stuff?” I pointed at the vegetables. “It’s like… fresh.”

“I’m sure it’s synthetic. But it’s good.”

“It tastes real.” I nodded. “We didn’t even eat like this before the wars.”

Darren nodded back. “On a special occasion we might have fresh meat or fruit, but not like this.”

“I was raised on that fake packet stuff.”

We paused to enjoy the offerings and I sipped at a cup of water.

“Why Spain?” I asked, bringing up the chat we’d had a week or so ago.

“My dad was Spanish originally. He got a promotion there. My mother was from the British Colonies.”

“Like me then? I was fourth… fifth generation.” I guessed.

Darren nodded.

“You learned English from her?”

“Yes. And we studied it at school. And various other languages.”

“Wow.” I looked down to the plate.

“I was lucky enough to go to a good school.”

“We did French but… when was I ever going to the French Colonies - let alone actual France?”

*                *                *

Darren and I never talked about the noises. The noises one of us might hear coming from the other, late into the darkness, when we both pretended to be asleep.

It was intoxifying sometimes. The room felt smaller than ever. Darren with his sun-bronzed skin and thick jet black hair. I wanted to run my hands through it. 

Eventually, we fell into a roommate kind of friendliness. We discussed the food, our families, our lives before - although - I always seemed to share a little more.

Sometimes he caught me. My eyes creeping over the cover of Great Expectations. Quickly, I would look back down. I didn’t want to make things awkward.

“Do you want to know a trick?” Darren asked one day, as I had come to pester him in boredom.

“A trick? Of course!”

“Get your bed sheets!” He ordered. “We have to be quick.”

I grabbed everything up in my arms and tossed them at Darren.

He began to arrange the sheets so that they fell over the edges on the iron bed frame.

“Get under!” He whispered.

I dropped to my knees and crawled below the bed. Darren followed.

“It’ll be a few minutes before they realise they can’t see us.”

There was just enough space to lay on our sides, a few inches apart from one another. For once, I realised, we had privacy.

His face had never been so close, and he broke out into a wide grin. 

It made my stomach flip and my throat clog. I smiled back, our eyes and lips wide like children caught with their hands in the cookie jar.

“You’re so smart,” I said and I reached up to touch his arm without thinking. Then I pulled it away, rolling back to face the mattress.

Had I given too much away?

All I could hear was our breathing, it was warm under the bed. 

Then, Darren reached out and brushed my face with his fingers.

“These freckles…” Was all he said.

I seemed to hear a ringing in my ears. I turned my eyes to meet his; they seemed softer than before. I moved my face toward his.

His eyes moved over my face, taking me in. I seemed to inhale and then we were kissing. His lips were strong. His hand reached up to cup my face. I leaned against him. Finally letting myself touch him.

Then he paused, pulling away and...we both looked down. The white gas had finally found us.

When I woke, in my own bed, Darren was already reading.

Suddenly I remembered his fingers on my skin, the melted gooiness in my stomach. I sat up, smiling.

“That was fun.” I laughed.

But Darren didn’t react. He just turned away, and flicked the page over.

*                *                *

Days, maybe even weeks, had gone by since the moment under Darren’s bed. We began to stay seperate. I tried to talk to him but he seemed engrossed in his tasks, unaware my voice made any noise.

I decided to stop being so shy. I made no attempt to hide my glances. I watched him, hoping the weight of my gaze would force him to acknowledge me.

“Were you always alone?” I nudged his knee with my elbow as I squeezed my way onto his bed. This was before we had kissed. Before I even considered he had thought of me in any other way than a friend.

He groaned, readjusting his sitting position.

“Why are you so annoying?” He said, his accent gruff, but he was smiling.

“You’re avoiding my question.”

“I’m not.”

“Were you always alone here?”

“No.” He said.

“No?” I sat up, turning to face him.

“No.”

“Elaborate for fucks sake!”

“There was another.” He put his book down a little too hard against the pillow.

“Another… guy?”

“He identified as that, yes.”

“What was he like?”

“Nice. Polite.” He shrugged.

“What was his name?”

“I don’t know. We didn’t speak much. He wasn’t like you.”

“Like me?”

“Annoying.”

I shoved his knee.

He shook his head. Was he blushing? Had I missed it in my quest for information on our captivity?

“He was sad. He was young. He cried a lot. Kept to himself.”

“Poor guy.” I said.

He nodded, his smile fading.

“What happened?” I asked.

“I don’t know. I woke up one day, he was gone.”

“Gone?”

“Just gone. I was alone again, for a little while. Then you.”

“Oh.” Was all I could muster as his eyes seemed to linger, too long on mine.

*                *                *

“That’s enough.” I announced. 

Darren didn’t react, he simply continued with his sit ups.

“I’m sorry.” I held my hands up. “I don’t know what I did, but I’m sorry. Can you please just speak to me again?”

Darren paused, his breathing heavy. 

“That kiss… forget it.” I began, but I stopped myself.

He picked up his towel to wipe the sweat from his face.

“Humans are social animals. I can’t be stuck in here with a statue. I’m going to go insane.”

I waited. But he said nothing, he just began a set of push ups. 

“For fuck’s sake!” I shouted, then made my way back to my side of the room.

*             *             *

I had hopped from colony to colony. Me and a few other stragglers we picked up along the way. 

Never staying in one place too long. The ship we had jacked wasn’t big or powerful enough to get as far away from The Colonies as we needed to be. Far enough away not to be eradicated with the rest of our race.

We moved zone to zone, scavenging. Food, supplies, fuel. Anything to keep us alive or that could come in handy and all the while we searched. Searched for a new ship that could take us far, far away.

Valya and Leksa were with me from the start. My two best friends from our early days of conscription. They had been in the same army regiment and they were so in love it would have made me poisonous with rage if they weren’t so awesome. 

“What happened to you?” Darren asked after he’d told me about his old cell mate.

“Toka was just a kid we picked up on Earth before we left. Orphaned and alone, it was a warzone. It was mostly the four of us. Others came and went, joining us and moving on.”

Darren nodded. Most people didn’t want to travel in groups, it was too obvious.

“I had gone out to find something, anything resembling soccer paraphernalia. It was all I could get Toka to talk about. Otherwise, he was quiet.”

Darren smiled at that.

“I raided a mall, restaurants, rail stations and one or two fuel centres.” Those were for people who used their own ships for travel between Earth and The Colonies. 

“I went too far. But I had been searching for almost a day and nothing.” Moving about slowly in my little magnetic pod that kept me attached to the roads in the small colony town. I floated through empty houses, careful not to tangle my bungee belt that kept me safely secured to my pod.

“I was starving and I began encroaching on territory we hadn’t scanned and surveyed yet.”

Darren looked down. Was he remembering his own capture?

“It wasn’t long before I saw it. Dark clouds, far too low. Running as fast as I could wasn’t enough, the dark smoke was on me before I could make it back. Then I was here… with you.”

*                *                *

My eyes opened to the white ceiling, the bright lights, the smell of syrup. Sitting up, my eyes immediately landed on Darren’s bed. 

Empty.

Empty?

I scanned the room. I rushed out of my own bed and checked under his. One bowl on the table. One set of new linens on my armchair.

He was gone.

Then I was pacing.

Occasionally I would stop by his bed, pick up the book he was reading. The only tell that there had been someone else here.

Had there been someone else here? 

I suddenly felt sick.

My thoughts were suddenly consumed with what Darren had said about the person before me. 

“I woke up one day, he was gone.”

“Gone?”

“Just gone…”

Was this the same? Had Darren’s time run out? I felt my eyes water. How stupid. How stupid I had been to think I could let myself get attached.

But then...the bed was perfectly neat; no dust, no hairs. Not a trace.

Darren had been here… hadn’t he? I wretched.

No. I told myself. Stop.

If there hadn’t been another person here, why was there a bed? The bed was real. 

“Very real!” I shouted, as I climbed into it. Alone. 

I was exhausted. The room seemed to get smaller and smaller. 

I realised as the lights dimmed I hadn’t eaten. Hours passed, a whole day perhaps and I had paced. Just paced. 

“Darren.” I muttered. Then black.

*                *                *

After I had helped dress him, trying hard not to think too much about how he was letting me touch him, I set his breakfast down in front of him and made him eat.

He devoured his plate quickly, before laying back on the bed, satisfied. 

He kept speaking to me in Spanish. 

“No hablo Español,” I repeated. “We didn’t get around to that yet.” 

I gave him his books and let him be.

The next morning he was up before I was, doing his work out.

“Buenos días.” I chirped.

He stopped, looking up at me.

“Oh…morning.”

Is it morning, I thought, if there is no sun to rise? 

“Are you ok?” I asked.

“Yes.” He looked away.

I sat to eat the food left for us.

“You seem more yourself today.’

“I feel… less groggy.”

“Can you remember your name?” I joked.

He rolled his eyes, but smirked a little.

“Yes. I am Darren. You are Talyen.”

“Full marks.” I smiled. Then I turned away toward my plate.

We didn’t speak much that day, but he was acting his usual self. I let him be, just glad he was back and I wasn’t alone.

*                *                *

When the lights dimmed again and I climbed into bed, I waited to hear him do the same, to listen to his soothing deep breaths.

But instead, there was nothing, just footsteps. Then a voice, barely above a whisper beside me.

“Talyen?”

“Yes?”

Without a word, Darren pulled aside my duvet and climbed in beside me. I didn’t move, letting him move his body toward me, his chest against my back.

“Is this ok?” He said.

“Yes.”

He put an arm over me, embracing me.

“Is this ok?”

“Yes.” I repeated. Trying not to let my voice crack. His body was on mine, so warm. Those toned thighs and pecks I’d avoided admiring too often were touching me. My heart raced.

“I’m sorry.” He said, his voice weak, like he was crying.

“It’s ok.”

“I…”

“It’s ok, Darren.” I said.

“I wanted to…I wanted you…I just…”

He seemed to hug me tighter.

“I get it.” I said. “I woke up and you were just gone…” I sighed. 

He was afraid. Afraid of letting himself feel for another…only to lose them. 

But he was here now. Beside me.

We both laid quietly, our raspy breathing slowing, and I let myself drift to sleep, his lips on my neck.

 

Alice Rose (she/her) is an emerging writer from the UK. Shortlisted for the Bath Flash Fiction Award (Feb 2017), Rose has also been published at Crêpe & Penn, CafeAphra, ReflexFiction and others. Rose writes from her small, St Albans flat, feeding other people’s cats and attempting to keep her plants alive. You can find her at alicerwrites.wordpress.com or on Twitter: @a1ice_r0se 

The Thieves

The two of them were Young and Spry. Young was a little bit spryer, and Spry was a little bit younger. A couple of some-good thieves. The kind that stole fresh fruit, hanging laundry, worshippers’ shoes, and bright red magic amulets.

“But really, we want to be the kind of thieves who steal gold and jewels,” said Young. He was balancing on the railtrack with his arms held out like a highwire artist.

“I don’t think anyone with gold and jewels would ever come to New Pagar,” said Spry, walking some paces behind. He was panting like a dog but he would never ask Young to stop to rest. It was one of the reasons Young liked him so much.

“We’re not flimflammers, nitwit. We’re thieves. Rich idiots with deep pockets are worthless targets if we’re trying to be no-good,” said Young. “We need to be thieving from mystical temples or flying castles if we’re gonna be anybody.”

“That’s not what Luke said—”

“I’m tired of listening to that wet floater,” Young said twisting backwards fast enough that he lost his balance and fell on his bony ass.

Spry rushed over to help him up.  Young tried to launch into a handstand and grab Spry's helping hand by his foot. Instead, he nearly poked himself in the eye with a lunge toward a finger pointed in the direction of his chest.

“Your amulet’s glowing. There’s something magic nearby.”

He was right. A veiled pink light was shining through Young’s thin shirt. It wasn’t easy to spot in the dryland sun, but Spry had a good pair of eyes.

“Maybe one of my nipples is migrating inland,” said Young.

Spry chuckled. Young had told that joke a hundred times. The thinner boy got up and made a show of spinning around with his hand over his eyes to shade the glare.

“Not a train in sight nor a traveler. Do you think someone’s dropped a firestick we can use to burn Luke’s hair off?”

“I’m worried it might be a rogue wizard,” said Spry thoughtfully.

“Or one that’s bing-banged up a teleportation spell.”

“Don’t remind me of that,” said Spry. “It took me weeks to clean the hair out of the gutters at the guild.”

The amulet was still shining, warm against Young’s chest.

“Maybe whip it out?” said Spry.

“I wouldn’t miss a chance to do that,” laughed Young. Though he did pull the amulet out. It was a cameo of a rose on a black chain. A real cameo, where the intaglio and the relief were all carved from the same gem. Stained cerise with magic. Young had boasted about taking it from an old wizardess’s house for as long as Spry had known him. It was the most beautiful and precious thing that either of them had ever seen and Young guarded it like a three-headed dog. They had, after all, lived their whole lives amongst thieves.

“Brighter when I hold it this way,” said Young. The two of them followed the brightness until they came upon a tiny bush whose leaves might have died a century before the two of them had been born.

“Lemme guess,” said Young. “It’s enchanted for a softer wipe.”

Sweat drops were forming all over Spry’s round face. It reminded Young of the drops of water that formed on a cold round of chocolate, a delicacy Young hadn’t tasted in ages. Spry wouldn’t know what that was if he told him though.

“You can sit down, Spry,” said Young. “Sorry for getting all excited over a shrub.” 

“It’s okay, Young,” said Spry as he huddled down. Young was about to lift his shirt over Spry’s head for shade when he heard his companion’s excited gasp.

Young knelt down to his level and saw the bush rise over him until it was less a bush and more a copse. The leaves turning emerald and a tunnel of roots presenting itself beneath the foliage. He looked over at Spry to make sure they were seeing the same thing. Spry was nodding his head like a hummingbird in excitement.

“Spry, my boy, you’re a charm. Luckier than the stars in the sky,” said Young as he began crawling inward.

It didn’t take long for all semblance of the unmagicked world to fade into the distance. The tunnel of roots was predictably much longer than it looked from the outside, and it went in only one direction. Young was about to suggest that it might be a puzzle of some kind when he went tumbling forward through the foliage into a much wider space. Spry stepped more carefully out of the brush some moments later.

The two of them found themselves in a bed of cotton in boll, soft tufts of white flowering from dry autumn stems. Young looked back to Spry at the top of the hill he had tumbled down and saw the horizon in strange pinks and greens that he had never before witnessed. At the hill’s summit was a topiary sculpture: an open hand reaching toward the spattered sky.

Spry made a gentle skid down the path Young’s body had cleaved through the cotton. Young took the stocky boy’s hand and they both waded across the cotton until the soles of their sandals crunched onto a path. 

Soft wisps of magic light came alive in the air and the whistling of birds suddenly filled the air. Tamarind trees dotted along the path that the two boys followed, their footsteps crunching on the brown pods that had fallen to the earth. Every so often, the path would be interrupted by an agave plant tall as two men or a bush full of berries that shone just a little too sweetly. The stones marking the way forward snaked through the manicured thicket presenting each fern and each flower with the bored grandeur of those useless and venerable statues of dead generals at the great hall of New Pagar.

Eventually the shade of the trees gave way to the cool light of the sky, the path branching three ways into a most beautiful array of green shapes. An endless population of green hedges trimmed into the forms of people, animals, wizards, gods, and trains.

“It’s a garden,” said Spry, “I read about these from one of those books we stole from the library.”

“It’s clearly a magical dungeon, nitwit,” said Young. “Gimme a lift.”

Young was on Spry’s shoulders a moment later. A box of glass, tall as a public house, iridescent as crystal, shone from somewhere far within the army of hedge statues.

“In the center of the maze is a golden prize, my boy. Onward!”

And Spry with his hands on Young’s knees went barreling into the center path so quickly that Young hit his head on the topiary archway. All that time his amulet was glowing, as if  his red heart was blooming right out of his chest.

*             *             *

“What kind of treasure do you think it is, Young?”

 As they walked, Spry sometimes leaned over and put his hand softly to where Young had knocked his head, as if checking for a fever. Young muttered something along the way about how it didn’t even hurt and it didn’t. 

Not even the walking hurt, though they hadn’t taken a break and had, in fact, briefly gotten turned around because of two hedge statues of goats that were identical. Young was looking at his sandaled feet as Spry removed his hand from the skinny boy’s head. He expected there to have been cuts from all those dry cotton stems.

“I bet it’s like a jewel of power or something. Like those batteries the minter at the guild uses, but also it’s solid diamond and it keeps this whole place from turning into a ratty mess like the top of Luke’s greasy head,” said Young.

“Wowza, really?” asked Spry.

“Yeah-za, really,” said Young, “And I bet we’re gonna pull it out of its pedestal and this whole place is gonna go down like when the caravan master got so drunk they kicked him out, but then he fell off his horse back in through the pub window.”

Spry laughed. He had a warm, heartfelt laugh. Young loved that sound.

“We’re gonna be kicking and jumping past haunted guard dogs and these green beasts will come to life and—”

Rustling, a scream. Young threw a fist into a vibrating hedge to his right. A swarm of color burst from every crevice of a huge topiary lizard. Young screamed louder.

“They’re only birds, Young,” said Spry. 

Young looked at the flitting shadows overhead. Agitated bird chatter. He felt a scratch of embarrassment in his throat.

“But it could have been a golem,” said Spry, sensitive Spry. “You were very brave.”

“It coulda,” said Young. He did jabs in the air. “And it wouldn’t have stood a chance.”

A single odd sparrow came swooping low right over Young’s head causing a shriek.  The older boy turned around to see Spry with his hands cupped together triumphantly.

“Oh no,” said Spry on approach. His hands which had been shaking to contain the little bird had gone still. “I think I might have killed him.”

He opened his hands and was surprised to find not a brown sparrow but a ball of crumpled paper. Spry didn’t recognize it at first, all the books in New Pagar had pages stained yellow brown from age and heat. He let it fall to the floor and bounce softly like tumbleweed.

Young took Spry’s hand and dashed away from the courtyard, the birds still flying above in a sky that suddenly seemed much too low. He expected to be chased, for the golem birds to launch towards them like spears through the ribs of a general’s horse. They did no such thing, just flew and flew and never once landed.

*             *             *

Spry didn’t say a thing about the birds. He wouldn’t, unless Young asked him, and Young didn’t. Instead, Young picked flowers, small ones with long stems and wove them together into a little crown that he threw in Spry’s general direction. Spry caught it with his head. 

“It’s a little small,” said Young as Spry tilted it to sit diagonally.

“I think it’s just right,” said Spry.

*             *             *

If the hedge garden was a maze, then it was decidedly unmazelike. Clear paths and elegant overpasses guided the boys from one themed enclosure to the next. Here was a steel angel assembling a train all looped through with ivy. A short walk down and there would be a garden of stone cairns balanced atop sand that combed the boys’ footsteps out of itself as they walked through. The box of light soon became visible without need for Young to sit on Spry’s shoulders.

The entire area was uncommonly lovely: the way only magicked places could be. Spry looked at every new courtyard with the light of wonder shining through his dark eyes. Young might have too, if the amulet’s heated warning on the center of his chest would let him. Spry spent his time looking at the garden: the hedges of chimaera and the long mosses that danced as he stroked them with the tips of his fingers. Meanwhile, Young found himself looking more and more towards the glass box. He wondered if this place was as deserted as it seemed. Perhaps a wizard was trailing behind them, his face dark with bloodlust having seen the trampled cotton and plucked flowers. Or maybe they would come to the glass structure and find a wizardess at embroidery, ready to pluck out their eyes with the needle and sew them right into her latest thread work.

“Spry,” Young said. “Aren’t you tired at all?”

Spry blushed. “I’m okay, Young. See? I’m not even sweating.”

They came across a pretty gazebo with a couple of white chairs sitting on its deck, surrounding a table in the shape of a rose in full bloom. Creeping closer, they found at the table’s center a little brass bell with a black handle, of the kind that preachers used to cry in the streets. 

“Look,” Young said, and he pulled the bell from its place and made his proclamation. “From now on, Young is the king of the Thieves’ Guild!”

Spry giggled. “Luke would thump you for that.”

“Former King Luke is a toad!” Clang clang. “Also, missionaries are con artists!”

A loud whizzing caused Young to drop the bell. It clattered across the floor of the gazebo, rolling outwards as the two boys took cover underneath the table. Two figures skated out from opposite hedges and up the steps of the gazebo towards them. Young clutched at his amulet while burying Spry’s face in his shoulder, his entire body tensing as the two sets of strange legs approached quicker than the two of them could think. They heard the sound of sound of thudding against the tabletop, clinking of metal, whistling of steam. Young was getting ready to kick a pair of white legs over when as quickly as they had arrived they stepped away.

One returned to the hedge from which it came with little notice. The other stopped some distance away. It bent over and picked up the bell. Young saw its face then, painted onto the porcelain crudely, as though a child drew it. It would have seen them if it had eyes with which to see. It made a quick return and Young felt a wetness coming off Spry’s face, whether tears or sweat he didn’t know. The younger boy was shuddering.

“Shush,” said Young. “It’s only returning the bell.” 

Then it was gone.

Young crawled out from under the table and Spry followed. On the table was a teapot and a jug of milk, a miniature sponge cake with pink cream, glazed pastries filled with candied mangos, and a plate full of chocolate rounds, glossy and covered in the shreddings of tree nuts. Sitting exactly where it was when they had first arrived, was the bell.

“Chocolate!” Young whisper-shouted, afraid to summon anything else. He quickly sat at the table and poured two cups of tea, as he stuffed a whole sphere of chocolate into his mouth. He gestured to Spry to take a seat, his mouth full enough to hide the dimples formed by hunger.

“What were those things?” said Spry holding his side as he gently plopped into a white chair.

“Golem servants,” said Young. “We used to have a lot of them—”

He stopped himself and gave Spry a hard look. There was a cut, wide but not deep right beneath the rib that Spry was holding. Spry quickly covered it with his shirt, which wasn’t covering a lot of his skin to begin with. A splotch of red ate through.

“Spry!” Young said.

“The rose has thorns,” he said mousily. “The table. You were pushing me into one. Not that it’s your fault. I’m sorry.”

“What the hell, Spry? How many times do I have to tell you to speak up when something’s wrong?”

“There were dungeon monsters,” he said. “I’m sorry. Are you mad at me?”

“No, I’m not—” Young made an exasperated sigh. He stood up and went over to the younger boy. “Don’t tell anyone I know how to do this. Especially not that floater, that toad.”

“Know how to do what?”

Young took his amulet and pushed it into his lips. The glow faded inward as the rose on the cameo closed its petals, revealing the image of a kind-faced woman with her hair tied in a bun. A circlet of pink stars was wreathed around her head. Young separated Spry’s shirt from the wound and touched the flesh with his amulet. Where the stone warmed against his skin, the wound closed and became smooth, undamaged.

“Holy roly poly, Young,” said Spry. “You’re a wizard! You learned how to be a wizard!”

“It’s all the amulet,” said Young, surprised by Spry’s reaction.

“But if you can do magic with one of these, I can too! We can be magic thieves together!”

Young suddenly felt a great deal older than Spry.

“Yeah, Spry. I would love that. Hey, we might even find something for you at the end of this dungeon. But for now let’s just eat. Chocolate is my favorite.”

They sat down and had tea and ate cake and pastries. The chocolate was sweating. Spry gave Young a strange look. A sudden pang of fear crept over Young. Fear that Spry saw him differently now. The war had not been so long ago, after all.

“Hey, Young,” said Spry, interrupting his thoughts.

“Yeah, Spry?”

“Why is this your favorite? It doesn’t taste like anything.”

And he was right. In fact, nothing on the table seemed to have any taste at all.

*             *             *

When they were done, they rang the bell again a spitting distance from the gazebo and ducked into a bush, tossing the brass object close enough that they could see it from their hiding spot. The doll-like servants came out as neatly as clockwork soldiers, skating in stiff poses as if the gravel below them was ice. They arrived at the table and began fixing the plates back into themselves, through a cavity in their porcelain chests that became quite full when the table was completely clean. One zoomed back, same as before, and the other approached the bell. It bent to pick it up at an angle too severe, its chest full of plates and half eaten pastries caving inwards. And as it dashed back, the two boys followed it, running at full pelt to keep up.

The golem did not seem to move in any traditional sense. When it travelled it was completely still, the straining of musculature or machinework absent. It simply was in one place, and then in the next, and then in the next. As if it was the ground beneath it that was moving while it remained entirely motionless. The boys struggled into the thinning of greenery it came out of, and found themselves losing sight of it almost instantly.

They emerged into wet air, a fresh and cool breeze. Four pools of glittering waters, long empty rectangles whose depths were tiled with patterns like those on the carpets of rich men. The swimming pools were arranged like a window, two on top of two, with the ground around them paved in a red stone brick that the boys had never seen the likes of.

“Look, Young,” said Spry as they walked along the center beam that separated the pools from one another. “The water in this one is orange.”

“Lava!” cried Young as he pulled Spry back from the corner of the orange pool so fiercely that the two of them toppled into the pool opposite. They landed with a splash and some pain in Young’s bony behind. It was a shallow pool, water barely up to their knees if they had been standing, but the pattern of the tiles gave it an illusion of depth. 

“The water is salty,” said Spry coughing, wading outwards, rubbing his eyes.

He knelt over the second pool and cupped some water in the palms of his hands, splashing it into his face. Young caught up to him, rubbing his sore end. The older boy put his hand on the younger’s shoulder only for Spry to turn a puckered face towards him. Young couldn’t help but laugh, though he had been struggling to get air back into his lungs only a few moments prior.

“This one is sour, Young.” Spry stuck his tongue out. “It’s deeper too.”

He plunged his arm into the depths to demonstrate, nearly tipping over in the process.

Young cupped a little of the pool and drank. Vinegar without bite. “Shall we try the third?”

The boys cannonballed into sweetness. 

“We should play chicken,” said Young.

“Just you and me?” laughed Spry. He didn’t mention, of course, that he had already carried Young today. Spry let a lot of things slide, but Young never did.

“You can get on my shoulders, come on,” said Young.

“I’m okay, Young.” Spry said. 

So instead Young started a splash fight that ended with the two of them leaning their elbows on the side of the pool, panting. The water was deep enough that their whole bodies would be submerged if they let go. Every now and again one of the two would let himself slide down, eyes open to see the blue and green lights dancing on the surface of the water, the gentle kicking of their companion who was still hanging onto the ledge. His feet would touch the smooth tiles at the bottom only for a moment before he would bound back toward the surface of the water, gasping.

There was no sound in the air, unlike in the water. The false birds had all gone and the wind was as silent as the turning world. Opposite the ledge they were leaning on was the amber pool.

“It isn’t lava,” said Spry, a moment after Young had surfaced.

“How do you know?”

“There’d be convection. We’d already be burning.”

“Kun-vek-sun?”

Spry lifted himself out of the sweet pool and waddled toward the orange one, cupping his hand to pull the amber liquid from its source.

“Spry, no,” said Young, quickly scrambling after him.

Without missing a beat Spry turned around with two handfuls of the strange water leaking through his fingers, onto the wet brick. It ran like water and shone in a way that a rust filled puddle would not.

“Do you wanna taste it?” said Spry, holding up his hands. “You gotta hurry.”

Quick to a challenge, Young dunked his head into Spry’s hands. Spry giggled.

“Savory?” asked Spry. “Bitter?”

“It tastes like… water,” said Young. Spry tried himself.

“That’s disappointing.”

Young put his fingers on the surface of the pool. He almost expected it to be honey or jam, the color it was, but ripples formed easily as his skin touched the water. Perhaps it was another illusion of space, but the pool seemed awfully deep. The bottom of it seemed far far away. He took a step back, rushed forward and leaped as far as he could into the center of the pool.

Eyes open, down he went. The water was indeed cavernously deep. Headfirst, he could see the tiles at the bottom, a dark color that in the light of Young’s amulet looked like vine fruit, like wine. Beyond the reach of his light, in the amber water, the bottom seemed black, an endless expanse of darkness. Young felt his breath running short and became afraid that the floor of the pool was indeed just a pit with no end. But before he knew it he was touching the smooth tiles with his calloused feet, pushing up back into the light.

There was a shape up above, on the surface: Spry. Outlined in honeyed light, Young’s dear boy could be mistaken for the shadow of one of those absent angels who once rose from long forgotten seas. But then something happened. The shape was writhing, the shape was splitting up like a cube of sugar in a cup of tea. Spry’s shadow was disintegrating, bit by bit, the image of him turning into light on the water.

“Spry!” Young mouthed, breathing in that tasteless amber water. 

Young kicked hard with all his energy but by the time he reached the surface there was no shape, no shadow. A crown of flowers was floating on a brown pool. Young looked around and saw that he was alone.

*             *             *

It was there. It had been there, behind a short hedge easily jumped, just beyond the four pools. How, wondered Young, had neither of them noticed it was right there? Its light had been cast upon them. His eyes were red, his pants still dripping on the red brick which continued into the box’s courtyard. As he landed the jump he restrained a sneeze in such a way that sounded like he had cried out after biting his tongue. The garden didn’t move a muscle. The central building, the box of glass, reflected no indication of having noticed his arrival.

Young crept along rows of plants, blossomless poppies arranged in long planters. He looked at the building: its precisely angled roof, the thin white pillars holding up the sheets of glass. There was no source Young could name for the afternoon glow. Not the inside of the box, nor the sky up above. The scene of the glass house was like an elegant landscape. All that light was painted on. The wash of glare shifted ever so slightly; suddenly Young could see inside. 

A bedroom, that’s what it must have been. There were clothes lying in soft disarray over the floor: a polished white material, same as the roof and the pillars. In the  corner from where Young crouched, there stood a bend of bookshelves full of butterflies in glass frames, pressed flowers, and massive shells belonging to animals Young had never before seen. In between the oddities were the gaps where books were supposed to have been, Young could imagine that much. The books were at the opposite corner, stacked uneasily on a little desk that faced towards the glittering pools, towards the length of the hedge maze which Young and Spry had travelled. A person could sit at the desk and while away the hours staring at the loveliness of the greenery, if not for the piles of books that blocked the view.

In the center of it all was the bed. It was an enormous bed. Young had slept in a bed once, and it hadn’t been as big as that. As he tiptoed closer to the house, relying on a white pillar not even half as wide as his body to conceal him, he imagined Spry simply walking from the pool and into the glass house. What a comfortable looking bed, Spry would have said. And he could have fallen asleep right there in the depths of plush tapestry blankets. That’s right, Young thought. I’ll pull back the blankets and he’ll be right there.

Young reached the entrance, a rectangle missing from the bottom center pane. There was a boy in the bed, Young realized. But it wasn’t Spry. 

He had hair the color of wheat gone to harvest. There would be no missing a feature like that in New Pagar, but in the midst of the jewel tone blankets and the bronze of the headboard, he could have been just another patch of color. The boy was pale, very pale. The last time Young saw a man be so pale he was bleeding out. He had a book in his hands, larger than the ones gathering dust on the desk. Pages turned over quite calmly, though the boy’s face was scrunched up as though there were something impossibly wrong, as if the contents of the book were a source of great bitterness and upset with the world. 

“Hello?” said Young.

The boy didn’t look up from his book, and Young teetered between thinking that he hadn’t heard him or that he was an illusion created by the magicked garden. He stepped through the threshold and tried again.

“Hellooooo?”

The boy muttered something Young couldn’t hear clearly. His face didn’t acknowledge Young as either guest or intruder. Young walked closer, until he was right at the foot of the bed.

“Um, I already said this but hello,” said Young. “I’m looking—”

“What is your name?” said the boy, still not looking up, turning a page.

“Oh,” said Young. The boy had a hideous voice. “My name is Young. What’s yours?”

“Incorrect,” said the boy.

“Your name is Incorrect?”

“Yours. Young is not a name. It’s an adjective.”

“Oh,” said Young. “Is an adjective a kind of name?”

At this the boy finally looked up from his book with a puzzled expression. Young laughed nervously. His heart thudded against his amulet.

“You don’t know, huh?” said Young. “I bet Spry would know. Um, have you maybe—”

“I know. The names of stars. The names of dreams. The names of poisons. Animal names. Entropic names. Names of light.”

“You sound like… a wizard?” said Young. He walked around the bed and crouched down. The other boy was so much smaller than him, yet he felt as if they might be the same age. The boy in the bed seemed to recede as Young’s face came in closer. He stared at Young with eyes that were not so different from his own.

“Yes,” he said. “A wizard.”

“Wowza, bang,” said Young. “I’ve never seen a wizard my own age.”

“Your age?” said the wizard boy. Young felt bad for him.

“Is there anybody else living here?”

The boy shuffled uncomfortably. “They went out.”

“Were you left here during the war? You can’t have been more than a kid.”

He looked at his book again. “I’m waiting for them.”

“My parents died in the war. It was a long time ago now.”

“Incorrect,” he said. “The war did not end.”

Young was struck silent. He sat on the side of the bed. He pulled out his amulet which was shining so brightly that the brushed-on light of the glass house seemed more like a fog that the amulet’s glow cut through.

“Look. I’m a wizard too,” said Young. He kissed the carving and the rose closed once again to form the lady, her hair full of stars. He held her away from him and she began crying, glittering tears falling upon the bright floor. “Granted, I probably know less than you. Can’t exactly get an apprenticeship in New Pagar of all places.”

“You’re not a wizard,” said the boy. The scowl on his face had returned.

“Am too,” said Young, ever impulsive.

“You don’t look like a wizard,” said the boy. “You don’t look like me.”

“Well, that’s because—”

“You look like him,” the boy said, pages of his book flying without his touch. The book opened to an illustration of a boy lying on his side. The ink was shivering.

“Spry!” Young said, falling forwards as the other boy snatched the book away with one hand and grabbed the amulet with the other. “What are you doing? Let go!”

The other boy did not let go. He held tight with an unexpected strength, the chain of the necklace digging into Young harshly as he was forced away from the book, and the image of wet and shuddering Spry. Young saw for the first time that the boy’s hands were lined with bulging veins.

“This doesn’t belong to you,” said the boy. 

Water was streaming through his fingers. Tears and pink light.

“That hurts!” screamed Young. “Let go!”

“How are you using it? How did it protect you?”

“I told you,” said Young. The boy was pulling harder, he twisted the chain to choke Young’s thin neck. “I’m a wizard. My mother was a wizardess and she passed it on to me, but my father was unmagick.”

Young made a sharp exhale. He was straining and dizzy, trying to pull away from the bed. The boy held his grip even as the amulet’s tears started pouring onto his sheets like a faucet.

“Liar,” said the boy. “Magic doesn’t belong to people like you. You stole it.”

“I’m not,” Young gasped, failing to hold back his tears. “I’m not lying.”

“The war should be over,” said the boy. “You shouldn’t be here anymore. Where are they? Where have they gone?”

The boy twisted the chain one more time. Young tried pulling away one last time but it was too late. The world was drowning in red and the pressure around his neck disappeared. Young dreamed his mother was singing. The boy of the box, his voice unmistakeable, was letting out an ear-splitting scream.

*             *             *

Young awoke on Spry’s belly. He wondered for a second where he was, and then looked around and realized that he hadn’t been dreaming. Though it was very dark. The boys were surrounded by pillars and glass panes. Young quickly checked Spry for a heartbeat.

“He’s fine,” said a hideous voice.

Young went into his best pretense of a combat pose and quickly tripped, unbalanced and groggy as he was. The boy who had been on the bed was sitting at the desk, staring at the spines of books. Young took a step towards him. 

“Don’t,” said the voice. He sounded scared, more than threatening. “Go pick it up.”

The amulet and its shattered chain sat in a puddle on the floor by the bed. Water streamed from the pendant and quickly boiled into a white steam. The woman in the cameo was wringing her hands. Young approached and black links of chain started skittering across the floor and reassembling themselves. He knelt down and picked up the amulet by the newly reformed necklace. He put it on and kissed the woman’s forehead. The rose opened, and laid cool against his chest.

Young swiveled and saw that the whole room was dark. And the whole garden beyond it. And there wasn’t a star in the too low sky. Once again, he moved towards the desk where the boy had his back turned to him. All Young could see of him was a sliver of a twitching hand.

“Your hand is hurt. I can—”

“No. Go away.”

“But—”

“Go away.”

Young was silent. “Okay,” he said finally.

Young lifted Spry onto his shoulder with some difficulty and began dragging his way out. He stopped at the doorway and looked back at the boy, his face buried in the palm of his burnt hand. Young thought he might have fallen asleep but then suddenly heard his voice clear as light.

“You people have stolen everything from me.”

Young thought for a minute about apologizing, but for what exactly, he couldn’t figure out. Young couldn’t understand the sorrow he felt. He turned away. Even in the darkness, the garden was immensely beautiful.

He passed through a hedge and found himself and Spry back at the hill of cotton, the topiary at its peak now a closed fist. Young climbed, Spry on his back: up the hill, through the tunnel, back into the unmagicked world.

*             *             *

“So you didn’t nab anything good?”

“I told you, dingdong, I was busy having a magical duel to save you from a crazy wizard.”

“And you couldn’t have stolen one ring of invisibility for your boy?”

It was going to be a long way back to New Pagar. They were walking alongside the railroad again, along the wasted crater of Old Pagar that the wizards had long since burned into the earth. Spry threw his flower crown down into the pit, an offering for the dead. Young kissed Spry on the lips to shut him up. Spry laughed, blushing. Young squeezed his hand.

“Next time for sure. Then we’ll be Young and Spry, magic thieves extraordinaire.”

 

Reno Evangelista (he/him) is from Manila, in the Philippines. His work has been published in Guernica Magazine, Outlook Springs, and Cosmonauts Avenue, among others.

Luridia Beach

It’s always cold on the gray sand shore of Luridia Beach. I love it anyway.

Close to Ganymede's modest icecaps, the ocean here never warms up. Cobalt-dark waters lap against the rough sand, sucking the heat from the air and replacing it with clammy breezes. Silvery swaths of the solar mirrors interrupt the cloudless, star-freckled sky. Jupiter's out of sight, despite the planet's ubiquitous image in Ebipolis, projected onto buildings and lighting up screenwalls throughout the city.

The beach is just far enough away to feel isolated. Twenty minutes on the bus makes the difference between urban jungle and a kilometer stretch that rarely sees more than a dozen people at a time. Tonight it’s just us.

The days when cold fronts come up from the south are the worst. Taking a walk on the beach on those days is courting frostbite, offering an open hand and puckered lips to the hungry winds. I printed a mask and a thick pair of gloves for those days. It's never enough to feel warm, just enough to keep my skin safe, but then, I suppose I like the cold.

Today's not that bad. It's chilly enough I can see my breath, but only just.

Sylva and I walk in silence, our faces bare. Our boots sink into the sand with each step. Sylva follows me sullenly while I wander close to the water, as close as I can without the waves lapping at my soles. Each time I lift my foot is a tiny victory, free from the sucking sand and gravity. But I put my foot down again so soon. Again and again.

If I look down at my feet, I can pretend the sand goes on forever. Nothing in the world but gray grit, cool salty air, and the crunch of our footsteps. If I lift my head though, the gravel gives way to Phillo Point's impassable rocks not fifty paces from here, capped with its decrepit lighthouse.

I stop at a rocky outcropping. It's a single big chunk, larger than the two of us together but not quite as tall. Oysters have grown thick across its surface, dirty white and gnarled brown enveloping most of the water-darkened gray stone.

Sylva halts with me, radiating impatience I pretend not to notice. We’ve both grown skilled at ignoring what we don’t want to confront.

I wonder idly if the bivalves growing on the rock are good to eat. Back when we still went out on dates, Sylva liked mollusks marinated in lemon and coriander, never the crispy fried globs I’d gobbled down as a kid. Cured instead of cooked was superior, more authentic to the food's origin, she told me when she took me to her favorite shellfish eatery. The restaurant was on the top of one of Ebipolis's greentowers. I remember the intoxicating view, the best part of the whole night, looking down onto dozens of glass-paneled floors of swelling fruits and green herbs growing in dense hydroponic tangles.

Eating oysters fresh off a rock in the sea sounds even more authentic to me, but I doubt Sylva would agree.

Food doesn't come from "the wild" on Ganymede. Eating wild seafood isn't technically banned, but primarily because why would one bother? Food comes from a greentower lab, carefully grown, controlled, and prepared.

Sylva shifts her weight between her feet. Her pink scarf flutters in the breeze as she rubs her hands together. I know she wants me to break the silence, or at least keep moving. The pressure to explain myself, to justify, to please her is immense, building up inside my head. Even though I want to say something, I can't find the right words for anything.

I'm so exhausted, always thinking about what she wants.

Perhaps a minute after I stopped walking, she finally speaks.

“I don’t know why you picked here, of all places."

I exhale through my nose and watch the momentary mist of white fade into the darkness of the beach. My moisture joins that of the night and the ocean.

“You always told me it was too crowded in the city,” I say. It's true, but it's not actually the reason I picked this place.

I knew she wouldn't like this place, not how empty or how wild it was. Crowds were unpleasant to Sylva, but far more boring was a naked patch of sand with some miscellaneous organic life, wild leftovers from Earth from millennia ago.

My reason for bringing her here is much more selfish. I want Sylva to myself for one last time. One final, unremarkable encounter so I can scour my memories of our mercurial, intoxicating relationship with the grit of mundane reality.

It is mundane, but I’m not feeling the peaceful closure for which I'd hoped. I suppose I've always come to Luridia Beach to be alone, to be present with the world, with Ganymede and the ghosts of Earth and the distant power of Sol, more than with any other person. 

I didn’t expect this place to feel lonelier with Sylva. 

"I don't know why you thought I'd like the beach any better," she says as she glances out at the water with a frown. “At least the city is warm. And besides, you're the one who likes Ebipolis so much you insisted on staying."

Inhale. Exhale again. As my breath becomes mist, am I releasing some of my life force back into the world? Am I spiritually bereft in that pause between breaths, floating in limbo until I take in fresh oxygen again? Or do I just feel empty when I’m with Sylva?

“I know, I know," she continues when I don’t respond quickly enough. Her words are sharp, but tinged with more resignation than anger. "It's not that simple."

Sylva crosses her arms, tucking her hands into her armpits as the wind whips some of her copper hair free from under her hat. The strands float and struggle in the air, mimicking the movement of her scarf.

Guilt seeps in for the first time. I had my reasons, but I did drag her out to this chilly beach, away from the few places we had good memories, far from any lingering pockets of warmth.

“You know I’m going to miss you," Sylva says.

I didn’t know.

I know I will miss her despite myself, despite my efforts to disengage entirely and forget. I honestly didn’t think she would miss me.

And I still don’t know, I realize after one, two, three hot, wet heartbeats. I want to believe everything that comes out of her mouth. Those precious few beads of honesty, or perhaps strategic vulnerability, drip out like ambrosia.

I used to fall for it every time. But that was before years of canceled plans, before the countless fights and three break-ups that didn’t quite stick. That was before she went to Rhea on a day’s notice for her own luxury vacation, after months of making excuses why she couldn’t take the time to travel off-world with me.

When Sylva told me she was moving to Io, my first reaction was relief. I was grateful, realizing I finally had my out, a way to end this after my willpower had failed me so many times before. Weeks after our most recent “break,” my desire to be with her had started to eclipse my reasonable doubts again. I might’ve wasted another three years on her if she’d let me.

A week later, Sylva asked me to come with her. I knew I couldn't, that it'd be even worse for me than what we had here. I told her I was too attached to this moon to ever consider leaving. She didn’t argue much.

Honestly, I had thought Sylva would be relieved to leave me behind, even as I jealously hoped she would come to regret it.

“I didn't think it'd matter that much,” I say, shrugging. “You like new places and meeting new people.” I clench my hands together until they hurt, then release. Then do it again.

“I liked you.” She tosses me a mournful look. Her eyes are wide, her mouth downturned, like the universe itself has let her down cruelly. The first time I saw that pitiful expression, I was seized by a powerful urge to comfort her, to change my mind and do everything I could to make her happy again. Now, I only feel a faint echo of regret. “You know that, don't you?”

Sylva liked me, and I loved her. Neither changes who we are, or where we are.

“I know,” I say. I won’t offer her my own emotional confession. I’ve made a fool of myself enough for this lifetime.

“Look, if you don’t want to talk,” she says, every word suddenly like a shard of glass, “then I don’t know what I’m doing here.”

The frostiness of her voice is nothing compared to this cutting wind. Not when every part of me that used to respond to that coldness with a desire for warmth is scarred and calloused, used up until it became something else. Something less sensitive to her. Some way I could survive.

“If this isn’t what you wanted, then I won’t keep you,” I say. The words come so easily, like letting go of a rope stretched taut, sighing in the freedom of releasing it.

“That’s all you have to say for yourself?” she replies. “You know what? Fine.”

She makes sure to catch my eye, and I fall for it one last time. With her pursed lips and her razor-sharp eyebrows, she tells me in a look that I am the greatest disappointment she has ever had the misfortune of experiencing. She is an excellent actress.

Strangely, her scorn warms me a little. The absurdity of her final act of drama sparks a tinder of anger and amusement within me. I watch her leave, her pink scarf and mussed hair billowing in the biting wind. When she’s reached the edge of the road, she glances back. Too far for me to see her expression, but close enough for her to see I haven’t moved.

Petty satisfaction coils in my guts. Sylva was the one to hesitate in the end. Not me. She hates the distance she put between us and I merely accepted, and yet she still can’t fathom why I won’t just follow her. Why I will no longer be the one to apologize, over and over again.

When I chased her before, I could feel myself being pulled into thin, fragile strands, plucking out the inconvenient grit of my own self-respect. Immobile on the shore, I feel more like the rock. Crusted and ugly but sheltering what life I can hold.

I wait until after Sylva has disappeared from view. Only then do I turn back to the patient, gentle waves. I’m too cold to stand still any longer, so I step toward the rocky outcropping, breaking the barrier into the ocean.

My boots are waterproof but my leggings are not, I realize as the icy spray soaks through the fabric. I ignore it. I go deeper.

The water’s at my thighs, cold as Pluto, when I reach the outcropping. It’s craggy with oysters the size of my fist, thick and vying for a little patch of surface. I take off my jacket, even though it makes me shiver all the worse, and carefully wrap it around my hand. I’m impulsive, and maybe something like distraught, but I’m not stupid. I will endure suffering, but I won’t invite it needlessly.

With my now-cushioned hand, I reach for an oyster. Any oyster, whatever’s closest, whatever I can grasp. A pebbly-shelled thing of ugly colors, barely the size of my palm. It closes its shell as I touch it.

I can’t pry it off, so I hit it. Smash it again and again, until I crack something, in me or in it I’m not sure. It falls, broken, onto the thick clusters of bivalves below it. The others clam up, concerned only with their own survival.

Gently, I pick it up. My jacket is filthy and my knuckles sting, but I have my prize. The oyster smells stronger than the ocean, saltier and more organic. I could rinse it in the waves and rip it from its shell, scarf it down right here.

I have no tools though, and I feel more cold and aching than bold and powerful now. The few steps back to shore feel long and heavy, like trying to wake from a bad dream. The chill will cling to me all the way home.

I will take the oyster back with me, crack it with a seafood knife, wash it in my sink. I’ll admire the white flesh on its shell canvas, and I know I’ll think of Sylva, of all those dinners we had together and all the places she went without me.

Maybe I will just devour it raw.

 

Lore Graham (ze/zem) is an agender author of speculative fiction and poetry. When ze's not writing, ze's often reading, cooking, or moon gazing. Lore lives in Massachusetts with zir partners and zir cat. You can find more of zir work at www.GrahamLore.com 

Valedictory Dream

He lit beside me like a butterfly—  

with silver lips and glass albino eyes. All

through the night, his specter spoke to me 

because I could not bear to be alone

and missed him so that somehow,

through a lurid, emerald light, he flew 

to me with love. 

“Some lovers lie,” he said, 

“together, yet apart— the separation wider 

than a world. But look at us, my friend, 

apart and yet together at your call, 

embraced through space and time.” 

“I didn’t have much time to be

with you,” I said. “I’m glad I’m with you this way now

at least —or should I say, at most—

in your ideals. For love to us

was so ill-timed, ill-starred. I wasted moments now

we only dream. I hate love every morning when I wake.” 

The great, pellucid butterfly tipped his wings.

Their bleached, acidic lusters evanesced

into a dark dimension, not this world. Unfolded 

into sight again, he said, “There comes a time

when all of us must leave. The day must break,

and none can catch the dream that keeps me here

with you.” 

Suspended there, he shed two pearls       

for tears, his fingernails a polished ivory, 

his hair a blond no fairer than his skin. 

He left a spectral frost on my lips with his ethereal kiss

and then took flight in one clear vanishing, 

my white phantasm in the black of night. 

 

Ken Anderson’s (he/him) Someone Bought the House on the Island was a finalist in the Independent Publisher Book Awards. A stage adaptation won the Saints and Sinners Playwriting Contest and premiered May 2, 2008, at the Marigny Theater in New Orleans. An operatic version premiered June 16, 2009, at the First Existentialist Congregation in Atlanta. His novel Sea Change: An Example of the Pleasure Principle was a finalist for the Ferro-Grumley Award.

The Witch's Castle of Forest Park

Wet mouths desperate for release and solace, 

Two bodies finding each other after dusk 

Shaking from the cold and the guilt. 

The sea between her legs spilled over my 

Fingers like honey I’d craved for years without knowing its 

Taste. 

She apologized afterward, her green eyes 

Downcast. I wanted so feverishly to tell her she was 

Beautiful and to return to limbs and 

Mouths, but we were once again two 

Girls afraid of ourselves and what we knew we 

Couldn’t contain. 

I jumped off the stairs without a word and ran 

Back to the trail head, 

Hopping on my blue Schwinn and pedaling 

Home. I dampened the seat with my newfound 

Electricity and

Shame.

 

Phoebe Woofter (she/they) is an outdoorsy Portlander with a B.A. in English from University of San Diego. Her work has appeared in Human/Kind Journal, Vamp Cat Magazine, College Magazine, and more. She is passionate about destigmatizing the lesbian identity and reconnecting humanity with their environment. 

The Queerness of Water

I love to submerge myself in
Water.
Each breath lost underwater given
With eager reverence.
Each pang in my lungs a prayer.
As I drift, humming a muffled 
Lullaby, to the surface,
My blue world disappears beneath my sun
Soaked feet,
Leaving traces of glittering foam—tiny diamonds—dappling the loose
Earth 
Like pretty pieces of Nature’s crown scattered about my mortal toes.
And with its disappearance, I sink slowly. 
Abandoned by water, I am vulnerable,
Stripped of the protection of the
Infinite blue.

No longer a being of the Sea,
But a creature of Earth am I.

Sound is clear and harsh here.
My ears sting with the chorus of words the water washed
Away:
Kill the dyke, kill the dyke, God said
Stone the fags, God said
Stone the fags!
Sight is overwhelming and paralyzing here.
A crowd of children vindictively
Jab fingers of condemnation at me.
They clench stones in their
Tiny fists, 
Poised to steal my life.
Touch is jarring and excruciating here.
Sharp thuds of muddy rocks against my flesh,
Meaningless against these earthly weapons.
All I feel are my bones cracking, bruising, crying  
Out for relief.
Please.
That helplessly raw word tears from my lips before I can
Pause to clench the throat of Weakness and 
Choke him into silence.
Taste is thick and bitter here.
Rubies fill my mouth.
I thought they would taste as divine as they look.
But they cake my tongue, my teeth, my lips
With a viscous, rusty chalk.

I surrender as I fall,
A broken rag doll,
To the dirt.
My body begins
To give itself to sleep.
And I pray to oblivion,
Let the waves drag me back to the water.

 

Phoebe Woofter (she/they) is an outdoorsy Portlander with a B.A. in English from University of San Diego. Her work has appeared in Human/Kind Journal, Vamp Cat Magazine, College Magazine, and more. She is passionate about destigmatizing the lesbian identity and reconnecting humanity with their environment. 

Jasmine

I traced “sundayfear” on my forearm

All week

And when the day arrived I dragged my feet 

On the steps of the church.

She turned around, 

Grabbed my hand and 

Pulled me up the stairs.

Everyone saw first grade friends, 

I saw her purple beads that jangled in her braids and

Her honey brown skin.

Crammed in the pews side by side

I murmured a prayer to banish her name

But my skin screamed louder than I could stand and

Her name grew lavender in my eyes.

The color purple haunts my mind

The love of Jasmine I’ll never find.

 

Phoebe Woofter (she/they) is an outdoorsy Portlander with a B.A. in English from University of San Diego. Her work has appeared in Human/Kind Journal, Vamp Cat Magazine, College Magazine, and more. She is passionate about destigmatizing the lesbian identity and reconnecting humanity with their environment. 

When Your Girlfriend is a Goddess

I see you, Enhaduanna, staring out

from a luscious, hanging garden, your hands

scented by almond and quince, those golden apples 

from the fertile crescent’s flood plains.

In the desert heat, you rest your Lyre on a wall

of baked bricks in bitumen mortar and begin to write  

with your reed stylus, press syllables

into wet clay tablets: hymns, prayers and poems

that describe how your Innanna howls like hurricanes 

screams like tempests. I too have dated women

who seemed divine until their perilous scorpion stings

made me lament how days were morphed by sandstorm. 

I imagine you wailing in that holy cloister

with your ritual basket after she banished you

to the shadowlands, how you watched other women, 

happy, in the perfumeries of the agora

by the ebbing Euphrates. You told how betrayal

and banishment, confused your mouth of honey,  

and turned your beautiful face to dust.

I envisage even the vines from the Iranian mountains

must have wept into tributaries from the Tigris.


Selina Whiteley (she/her) has been published in two books, “Up to Our Necks in It” and “The Kaleidoscope Chronicles” as well as in various magazines. Most recently, she was published in Literary Veganism and in The Lake. She will have two poems published in Neon Mariposa in May 2020.

Animal Control

Greg woke abruptly, and without reason. He bolted upright in bed, heart in his mouth, one hand groping in the dark until it touched the warm, sleeping body beside him. A thump echoed up from downstairs. He spared a moment to feel envious of Jacob's ability to sleep through anything. Most of him, though, was remembering his mother's anxious phone call a few days ago, fretting about the rash of break-ins her favorite news program had reported in his area. Greg swallowed hard and eased himself out of bed. There was a baseball bat propped against Jacob's side of the dresser, which Greg picked up on his way out of the room. 

Because the bedroom was always the warmest in the house, Greg slept shirtless, and he shivered when he stepped into the hall. He almost reached to turn on the hall light, but stopped himself as his fingers brushed the switch. Taking a two-handed grip on the bat, he crept down the stairs, towards a dim glow shining through the den’s entryway. Greg frowned. It wasn't the warm white of the standing lamp or the bluish flicker of a television left on. It was too steady to be a flashlight. Did burglars bring lanterns to break-ins?

In the hallway, just out of sight of the den, he paused. His spine crawled and his guts twisted, cold and sick. His heart was beating faster, climbing up his throat, and it was getting hard to breathe. It occurred to him suddenly that he should have called the cops before he came down, or at least woke Jacob up with instructions to call 9-1-1 if he didn't come back soon.

It was too late for that.

His rising panic was interrupted by a bright tinkle of breaking glass.

Gritting his teeth, Greg brandished the bat and leaped around the corner. “Hah! All right, get the fu...what the hell?”

He did not see the ski-masked, black-clad figure that television (and his mother) had led him to imagine would be standing in the middle of the room with a flashlight in one hand and a sack full of his belongings in the other.

Greg lowered the bat and raised a hand to briefly cover his eyes. When I look again, this will make sense, he told himself firmly. He dropped his hand away from his face.

There was still a unicorn standing in the middle of his den.

The steady, soft glow radiated from its lovely white coat. It had a golden mane and tail, with a horn like pearls and hooves of silver. The unicorn shifted its weight, one hoof thumping on the floor. That must’ve been what woke him up. On its back were saddlebags which looked like soft, red silk. There was a scatter of broken glass on the floor before it, and a horn-shaped hole in the middle of the television on the wall. 

“How did a unicorn get into my house?” Greg muttered out loud, shock leaching his voice of any apparent emotion.

“Uh...neigh.” 

Greg's grip tightened on the bat. “Did you just say neigh?” he asked incredulously.

“...Nooo.”

“I'm calling the, um, I'm calling... ah....I'm calling animal control,” Greg stammered. 

The unicorn heaved a sigh. Its breath was fresh and sweet and reminded Greg of the summer afternoons of his childhood. 

It leveled the sharp point of the horn at his face and said, “Put all your valuables in the saddlebags or I'll put a new hole in your head.”


C.J. Dotson (she/her) has been reading sci fi, fantasy, and horror for as long as she can remember, and writing for almost that long. She's bi, and is a wife, mother, and stepmom. Before the pandemic she worked in a bookstore and co-hosted an SFF book club, and will hopefully do both of those again someday. In her spare time, she paints and bakes. She has previously had flash and short fiction pieces published with idleink.org and cabinetofheed.com. Visit cjdotsonauthor.squarespace.com or find her on twitter as @cj_dots 

Fire Souls: Protectoress

There are creatures in the ice wilds. Flat expanses of glaring, glittering white; lifeless only for those who refuse to see. Animals flourish there, their evolutions protecting them from the harsher days. But more than animals, there are lives that choose this place to flourish.

They are the abandoned ones, the forgotten, the pushed aside. Those whose fire was condensed, contained, and pressurized into single, guttering flames holding onto their last passions. The flames live aimless and formless, drifting with winds and tides. The last sparks that refuse to go out.

In the ice wilds, colonies of the fire souls collect and find peace in each other. A pact made with the ice an era ago began this place.

It’s peaceful, of glowing ground and carving storms. Here, the fire souls made themselves in ice and flame. Here they welcome others, show them how to grow into all they can be.

As the day fades to evening, snow still glittering, flames brighten within their shining ice bodies, sculpted only for themselves. They dance. Traditions reborn.

Fire flickers across the wild, shaped into elegant arms, tiptoes and tantalizing bodies of every shape. The freedom they were denied flowing through them now. Too loud for woman, too queer for acceptance, too dark for opportunity.

Flame licks along their arms, burns in their core, mingles and sparks. Beneath a sky aflame with northern lights, or shooting stars, they dance and welcome anew.

Amidst the twisting light there are tiny, single flames, gaining strength in company. These souls brought to the dance by Lexi and her partner Norel.

Their flames grow and stretch, not feeling the cold, not bending to the wind. Relearning themselves under the brilliant sky.

One flame understands the whispered, crackling language first, and begins to coat herself in ice, scooped from the ground, and melted just enough to mold her arms. Norel murmurs of control and intention, and she learns, remembering and sculpting a torso, a throat, flames alight and embodying every new piece.

Another presses her flames into the ice around her, marveling at its melting, at its solidification when she pulls her heat into herself. She laughs.

Alia shies away, folding into herself, her flame gutters brightly in the open air. Lexi and others gather around her, calming and strong. You don’t have to look as you used to, they murmur. You can be you. Alia’s flame strengthens.

The fire souls dance, flames against the night; in celebration, in exploration, in building themselves.

Two dance together. Delighting in the sensations they feel from ice and fire from each other.

Alia joins in the dance with the others.

The world of the fire spirits is dancing and passion. They dance, mingle, and whisper to each other, for days and nights. They are family, some are lovers, as Lexi and Norel are. Some friends, all of them community.

Alia shapes themselves, without the intent of intimacy. They shape themselves for strength, for confidence. They dance to know their new world, and to make peace with their past. They are family with the souls aflame, and they spin beneath the sky, laughing for the first time in eons.

Each new cycle, Alia joins the flickering flames against the dark air, the star splashed sky, and becomes protectoress. They built themselves, not as a warrior, but as healer. Guiding, calming of storms.

Alia knew storms, knew how to tame them within themselves. Learned how to tame them within others. Helped them learn to roam free as Lexi helped Alia.

The ice wilds are not barren, and neither are these souls, escaping what trapped them to flourish anew.


Zoe Brook (they/them) is a queer writer and stagehand living in the Pacific Northwest Seattle orbit. They write novels and short stories in many genres, frequently involving queer romance, fantastical worlds, and found community. They find great joy in comics, theater, and plants. Find more of their work and social links on their website zoebrook.com.

Playing Possum

There are many things in the world that people are not meant to know exist. Janus wondered several times a day if they were included in that category.

Truth be told, very little about Janus could be considered “lab regulation.” Not the shorts and patterned tights they wore in lieu of typical scrubs, not their asymmetrical hair dyed a shade of red usually reserved for Christmas advertisements, not the bold, brass pronoun placard on their door in a bigger font than their name, and certainly not the anomalous creature causing all sorts of trouble in the lab. Janus drummed their fingers on the cold metal of the surgical table, as though completely oblivious to the creature causing all sorts of hell around the room. They were not as oblivious as they looked, they were just hoping that creature would wear itself out sooner rather than later and they could turn it over to the proper facility. Truth be told, they were wishing they’d had time to stop for coffee this morning because it was turning out to be a long day, even at 9:24 AM. A supervisor was droning on in their ear, the phone cradled between their head and shoulder.

They always hated when these damn things played possum. 

It kind of looked like a possum, actually, a possum that’d been swallowed into some sort of hell-void and spit out wrong. For one thing its fur didn’t seem to move, it was reminiscent of cartoons that used stationary textures for the characters’ clothes, like a solid unmoving patch of black and grey whirls. Whether it had actual eyes or empty sockets, Janus wasn’t entirely sure, but whichever it was, it was the blackest black they’d ever seen that swallowed any light. It scuttled across the floor in rapid, glitch-like zigzags that Janus’ eyes couldn’t quite track, and it was curled in on itself like it’d stepped in a puddle in sock feet. Janus would’ve found that hysterical if the damn thing wasn’t supposed to be dead. 

Creatures like this thing, whatever it was, lived in secret every day. They coexisted with humanity unseen and that was probably for the best. People had proven time and time again that they couldn’t handle being confronted by the things that go bump in the night suddenly bumping its way through the daylight. That’s where The Facility came in.

It had a longer, official title, but as long as Janus had worked there, nobody had ever used it. It was just The Facility, the ones who kept the strange and unexplainable beasts firmly unexplained. And what better way to figure out how to secure the living ones than to see what made the dead ones tick.

That’s where Janus came in. Unfortunately, they weren’t nearly as good with the live ones.

“I know you said it was dead,” they yelled into the phone as the Void Possum skittered up a wall. They picked up a broom from the corner and tried to whack the damn thing down. “It looked pretty dead to me as well when what’s-her-face brought it down, but I am very sure that it’s not dead now!” The girl who’d brought the Void Possum down that morning had looked frazzled, probably new or an intern, or both. The possum had been in a tiny little body bag, the size of which had made it look like it came from some kind of Mortuary Barbie set. 

Coincidentally, the intern looked like Mortuary Barbie too.

“Delivery?” she’d said, giving Janus the all-too-familiar baffled once over of someone who didn’t know the Facility coroner dressed like an indie rocker before poking around the lab. “So this is the autopsy room, I’ve never been down here.”

“I’m aware, I would’ve remembered you,” Janus said, tossing the body bag onto the table like junk mail. 

“I’m new in the experimental medical division,” Mortuary Barbie said. “I could definitely see myself down here, I hope I get to spend some more time in the lab.” Their lab. There were plenty of other labs but this one belonged to them and she didn’t need to be seeing herself anywhere in it. She didn’t offer a name.

“Maybe,” Janus said. “But I can’t cut it open with anyone else in the room who’s not a trained medical examiner so I’d get back upstairs if I were you, have a good day!” They’d tried to sound cheery as they shooed her out of the room, with minimal success. Nobody took that much interest in the lab and being in it. This was their job and they were damn good it, Mortuary Barbie could find her own damn place. Granted, it was silly to think that someone would be gunning for their job, of all things, but the possibility reared its head. 

Right around the time the Void Possum reared out of its little bag, very much awake now and none too happy at being tossed around like a softball, and bolted the second the bag was unzipped.

“Are you sure?” came the voice of a tired supervisor through the phone once they’d caught him up to speed.

“It’s trying to get into the ceiling tiles, that’s as not dead as you can get!” What they didn’t say was the nagging thought that maybe Mortuary Barbie had known that, and was upstairs laughing at the thought of Janus chasing the very not-dead critter across the lab while plotting her redecoration once she moved in.

“Don’t snap at me, Janus,” their supervisor said, pulling them back to the present moment. They could hear the exasperated sigh in his voice. “Are you sure the creature isn’t some kind of reanimated—”

“It may very well be but it’s moving around.” Janus ran their free hand through their hair. “My job is to cut open the weird dead shit you all find out in the world and figure out what makes it tick in case your field team encounters it again. Moving around, crawling up walls—” They jabbed at the ceiling with the broom handle just as the Void Possum jerked to the left to avoid it. “—Means I can’t autopsy it. Moving around is not. My. Department.” 

“Alright then, we’ll send the intern back down if you can contain it—”

“What do you all think I am trying to do?” Janus said. “Teach it to do tricks like a show dog?” Trying to make a fool of myself so she can waltz right in? “ It climbs walls, sir.”

“Don’t let it get in the ceiling! If it gets into the ducts we’ll never get it back!” he said. Another audible thump as the Void Possum narrowly avoided the broom handle. “Don’t kill it!” He didn’t sound happy, and Janus couldn’t be sure if that annoyance was with the field team who didn’t check the so-called corpse or their inability to wrangle something the size of a rodent. It sounded terrible, but they were hoping for the field team.

“Right now I’m focusing on getting it off of the ceiling!” said Janus. “Where did you find this thing anyway? It smells awful.”

“There was a nest of the creatures in a blind woman’s crawl space,” their supervisor said. “The rest got away, they were startled by the industrial lights, but we thought we’d scared this one to death.”

“You thought wrong.” 

“Tone, Janus,” he said. No response. “Janus?” Janus couldn’t resist the urge for a snarky quip, especially in a situation like this, and he knew that. Their silence was not encouraging.

“Hang on,” Janus said, setting the broom down. “Be quiet, I lost sight of it, and I’m not giving up until I have this thing” Because if I can’t wrangle something the size of a yam then that doesn’t say very good things about my competency.

Which was ridiculous, and as soon as the thought popped into their head they knew that. Their job revolved around the firmly dead and they couldn’t be expected to be perfectly prepared for a situation like this. They were too good at their job for something like this to be more than a blip on the higher ups’ radar.

Right?  

“Janus, don’t tell me to be quiet—”

“Shh!” they hissed.  “It’s still in the room, I can hear it scuttling—AH FUCK!” They hadn’t seen the creature drop down from the ceiling but at some point in their bickering with the supervisor, it had, and now it was crawling up their leg. It stared up at them with those pitch black eyes like a grinning skull and a slightly slack jaw, and for the first time since the critter had been brought in Janus thought it might be something to be afraid of, and they weren’t often afraid of their job. They’d never been the kind of person to scare easily, they’d walked off into the woods at eleven years old in search of the Jersey Devil on a Girl Scout camping trip, and had always thought of that as setting the precedent for the rest of their life. 

But now? Now they were something close to scared. Not necessarily because of the Void Possum and its devilish little face, but because if it got out it was their head on the chopping block. People weren’t supposed to know about things like this, that was the whole reason for The Facility’s existence, so if one little marsupial from hell got out of the lab and somehow into the outside world, it was nobody’s fault but them, and no matter how good they were at their job, it didn’t outweigh being a leak.

They knew what happened to leaks, even if The Facility had a separate lab for human autopsies.  

They kicked at it but the Void Possum had dug its midnight purple claws into their stockings and was making a wailing sound like a strong wind through a cave, or a funeral dirge. Not a good sign.

“Janus?” the supervisor asked, the phone now abandoned on the floor. 

“Hang on, I’ve almost got it!” they yelled, clueless as to whether or not he could still hear them. They’d grabbed their lunch bag, a tote bag that proudly proclaimed how Alan Turing Fought Nazis with his Big Gay Brain, and in one clumsy movement managed to snatch up the Void Possum, ripping a hole in their stockings in the process. “Alright, success!” They picked the phone up from the floor, grateful it wasn’t a video call so that their supervisor couldn’t see how haggard they looked. “Unless this little bastard can teleport I’ve got it!” 

“Someone should be down to get it soon.” He hung up before they could respond. 

“Gotcha,” they said, tying the bag’s straps together so the creature couldn’t get out again. It kept thrashing and hissing, none too happy about its current accommodations, and Janus couldn’t entirely blame them. “You’re a piece of work, you know that?” The guttural hiss in response could’ve been affirmative, they weren’t sure. They talked to dead things on the regular, being alone down in the lab; the fact that this one could kind of respond was almost refreshing. “It’s your fault I almost had an existential crisis today, so I will take great pleasure in seeing how you work once you’re actually dead. I’m sure your guts are fascinating, I’m very good at my job. Good enough to keep my job.” It wasn’t the possum that needed to be reassured of this.

“Doctor?”

Mortuary Barbie was back before Janus could get so fed up with the creature they threw the sack at a wall. She took one look at Janus, grimacing with their hair half out of its ponytail and the hole in their stockings and winced.

“Oh my god, it really is still kicking,” she said, covering her mouth in shock. “One of the supervisors said the thing I dropped off turned out to be playing possum and I thought they were just pulling one over on the new girl. I would’ve come help you if I’d known, that’s not your job!”

“It’s not. Take it,” Janus said, thrusting the wiggling bag into the girl’s arms. “Bring it back if it dies for real and not a minute sooner. I said I wasn’t giving up until I caught it, and now it’s someone else’s problem.”

“Do you want your bag back?” she asked as Janus pushed past her.

“Keep it, I’ll order another one!” they said.

“Suit yourself, but the fact that you caught this thing in a tote bag is damn impressive,” she said. “I forgot to introduce myself earlier, I realize. I’m Eleanor.” She glanced at Janus’ plaque by the door. “She and her are fine. I’d shake your hand but…” She pointed her chin towards the unhappy bag of possum.

Janus stopped, glancing back at the table.

A separate lab for human autopsies.

No, none of that. They were victorious today, no need to dwell. It was silly, to think they’d lose their job over a fluke like this. “Janus. They and them, if you don’t mind.” Deep breath. “You want coffee? I’m going for coffee. I can wait until you’re done taking that thing wherever it belongs until it dies, but after this morning, I’ve earned it.”


Alice Scott (she/her) is an author who may or may not be a ferret turned into a person by a kiss from a prince. She has a degree in creative writing from George Mason University and is currently working as a bookseller with a specialty in recommending queer and underappreciated YA. When not at work she is usually chipping away at her novel, writing collaboratively with her boyfriend, AJ, or procrastinating working on her novel by writing short stories. "Playing" was one of said procrastination projects. She is also the cohost of the #LGBTWIP hashtag event on her Twitter, and you can follow her at @AllyScottAuthor

future as science fiction

from our gilded cages here,

we will plot the future like

a novel. my darling, you will

be a cyborg in a crown and

touching you will be electric.

i will be royalty wrapped in

merlin’s robes and your hand

in mine will be magical. we will

exist, monster-other, illustrated

in our prettiest, most awful detail.

 

in the movie version, audiences

can watch two beings coalesce

into a pangea; their skin will be

inlaid with her sizzling circuitry,

hers with the gold embroidery

that will snake off their clothing

in pleasure. abstract beauties

writhing like gears pulled from

their machinery--allegory of the

totalitarian, fantasy of relief.

 

in some parallel universe, we

have always been here, living

in the hour of invention with our

feet slipping over the brink. we

were never apart, never forced

to drag science and spellwork

out of our own bodies. today,

we are separated only by the

thin film of time-travel. today, we

are only scrabbling for scissors.


M.P. Armstrong (they/them) is a disabled queer poet from Ohio, studying English and history at Kent State University. Their work appears or is forthcoming in Luna NegraRed Earth Review, and Social Distanzine, among others. They also serve as managing editor and reporter for Curtain Call and Fusion magazines. In their spare time, they enjoy traveling, board games, and brightly colored blazers. Find them online @mpawrites and at their website, mpawrites.wixsite.com.

Labours of Athena

I once compared you to a mayfly; the way you spool

between streetlights. Flashing nervous eyes

around for rats. We wept over freckled doorways,

mouths stretching around new starvations.

I wanted to tell you about a book I read

where humans were swallowed by the trunks of trees.

rescued in time by a witch. I wanted to suggest,

I think this is you. Both tree and hero.

Why don't you open throats from the inside

and give voice to the roots? If all you need is a weapon,

you have me in your hand.

I once compared you to a zebra. That was better.

We feel like moments of resolution.

Slow motion shields.

You rebirth yourself in the image of your peers;

screaming, forehead beaded.

It has to be done, you said,

it has to be done. At some point. Maybe

every queer soul understands how it feels

to hold a scream in too long.

The divers cast their nets in the fountains outside

the private hospital. I asked them to

hunt for orange scales to jewel your pending crown

but you said no, no,

that it was your struggle, that you would sculpt it from

the very clay of your own hands.


Lindz McLeod (she/her) has had short stories published by the Scotsman newspaper, the Scottish Book Trust, the Dundee Victoria & Albert Museum, and more. Her poetry has been published by Allegory Ridge, Impossible Archetype, and more. Lindz is the competition secretary of the Edinburgh Writer’s Club and holds a Masters in Creative Writing. Her writing can be found at www.lindzmcleod.co.uk. She is on Twitter @lindzmcleod.

Luna See

The moon howled at me. I tried

to tell her: that wasn’t the way ‘round

it was supposed to be

but  

she just kept on howlin’,

s p i T T i n g

her cries into the night and my deserted

hillside.  

I knew why.

She was mad.

Mad I’d let her be for so long

without a kiss.

But you see,

(I told her)

every time I try to break away to come and press

your sweet lips against mine, the stars

start chattering and talking, and

pretty soon the Sun

is going to find out

and want to know

why I’m dallying with his best girl.

 

And I’ll have no answers for that


Amara George Parker (they/them) is a London-based writer. Their short story, Rafterland, recently appeared in Mslexia’s Other Worlds-themed Showcase, and their poetry has been published in literary magazines Spoon Knife, Sufi Journal, inkspace, Aeva, Voice of Eve, She Who Knows, and Earth Pathways diary. As a queer disabled writer, they hope their work offers readers an inclusive perspective. 

When they’re not writing, they love being immersed in nature, exploring new parts of the world, and listening to something sultry or funky. They'd love to chat to you about literature, drag, disability, paganism, and boats. Will read your tarot for a price.

To learn more, visit amaragparker.wixsite.com/agparker, and follow them on Instagram at a_g_parker and Twitter @amara_gparker.

Jenga

For a second, I think I am safe

standing supported by solid ground,

A firm foundation of self-esteem.

Then some kid puts teacher is a fag

On the white board and then suddenly

The ground becomes Jenga pieces pulled

Out from underneath me. Suddenly

I am sixteen and I am shaken

Again.


Charles K. Carter (he/him) is a queer poet and educator from Iowa who enjoys live music, yoga, hiking, and film. He has an MA in creative writing with a concentration on poetry from Southern New Hampshire University and is completing an MFA in writing from Lindenwood University. His works have been published or are forthcoming in Anti-Heroin Chic and Dodging the Rain.

E Pluribus Unum

The ring of stellar debris

around the nascent earth

had coalesced into two tense

and unstable moons,

who stood like slow dancers,

all adagio, at Lagragian lines.    

Ever loyal, they pirouetted

on their cosmic paths in deep space

while other moons,

like Icarus girls, sought the sun.

Their solitary lust

built to magma for 80 million years

until, in glassides across the galaxy

they came, in crazed calesita,

to find perpetual companionship.

In that beautiful compression,

their union set shockwaves

across scarp terrain and boulder fields

that shone in brilliant soil

and their bodies became landscapes

of a million moonquakes

They sweated the constant rain

of the micrometeoroid impacts

until their flesh caused landslides

to ripple through their Massifs

and their Sculptured Hills


Selina Whiteley (she/her) has been published in two books, “Up to Our Necks in It” and “The Kaleidoscope Chronicles” as well as in various magazines. Most recently, she was published in Literary Veganism and in The Lake. She will have two poems published in Neon Mariposa in May 2020. 

A Portrait of You at First Light

I think of you, drinking Rioja wine

in that one perfect, protoplanetary night,

pure and unadulterated. 

You lounged, celestial

on a cloud of noble gases,

until magnetic and electrified plasma

tore through universal darkness

to mould galaxies and quasars,

space debris and asteroids. 

And you became all

spiralling, stellar arms,

a nascent Milky Way of hot flesh

around your insatiable black hole. 

And I, a dense star, orbited you,

lost in your gravitational pull

till you made me bend

like the curvature of spacetime. 

And my arching body

precessed in planes of motion

beneath an early sky that shook

with tension

as quantum spumes

circled ions of ring-beams

around a pristine sun,

and I was scorched

by your 100 million degrees.

A second before nuclear fusion,

you sang with the comet’s rarefied crooning,

hummed deep bass notes and harmonics

to charged particles

pirouetting on solar winds.

Heat drew a line

and you emitted those first luminosities

in fresh greens or excited carbon reds.

at all wavelengths to your Black Hole,

random molecules

like a swarm of bees against my hand.


Selina Whiteley (she/her) has been published in two books, “Up to Our Necks in It” and “The Kaleidoscope Chronicles” as well as in various magazines. Most recently, she was published in Literary Veganism and in The Lake. She will have two poems published in Neon Mariposa in May 2020. 

World in a Living Room

The edges of postal stamps curl upwards

crisp, emptied, like cocoons in March.

People, presidential buildings,

flowers, grow,

crawl out onto the table,

above the shine of glossed paper.  

First, a rose blossoms above the stench

of adhesive, so close you might cut

your thumb,

then a strand of grapes

overflows the edges, fills the room

with the perfume of Cabernet.

The pile of stamps on the table

are no longer clumped like Pangaea.

There are continents. In Paris,

Marie Curie and Moliere watch Chopin play

a Nocturne in C Minor to the crowds.

In Hong Kong’s botanical gardens,

Frida Kahlo and Gertrude Stein picnic

in a watercolour painting of willows,

magnolias and flame of the forest tree,

as Frida sketches flamingos in the wetlands


Selina Whiteley (she/her) has been published in two books, “Up to Our Necks in It” and “The Kaleidoscope Chronicles” as well as in various magazines. Most recently, she was published in Literary Veganism and in The Lake. She will have two poems published in Neon Mariposa in May 2020. 

Only Deathless

When they took me away from you, they didn't know I'd get ferocious. Didn’t realize how far I’d go when I was afraid. They didn't know what I was capable of, never realized I was a monster through and through--even without you, star-swallowing you. You were ethereal; together we were deathless. They never understood it, what I was, who I was, what we were, you and I and all of those I’s, those eyes. They thought they could end what I was, end me, end this, just by ripping my mind in half and saying, You will never find Forever

I laughed at them. I just laughed.

Forever is a mech. Forever is a vessel. Forever is my self, myself, even as they are another being. They belong to me, with me. They belong to the Starseed corporation like I used to, before Starseed found a better, brighter star. One that would listen obediently to everything they were told. Starseed didn't want a pilot, they wanted a dog. And they didn't want a thousand dogs in the form of two linked constellations, canis major, canis minor--they wanted just one dog. Not what we were. What we were meant to be. You, Forever, were meant for me.

The Starseed corporation constructed massive mechanical creatures of thistle-sucked steel for style and profit. The Starseed corporation wasn't ever meant to produce heroes. Doesn't change the fact that they did. I was one of the only ones that worked. The shells were supposed to allow their chaotic alien cores to take physical form rather than the palm-sized ethereal auroras they naturally embodied, but something they didn't understand went wrong.

So for a while, Starseed had it good doing what the corporation had been made for. And then the empyreans struck. These ethereal alien auroras that Starseed had sucked out of fallen stars, they were not the only ones of their kind. And these cousins of the auroras, they were massive bodies of divine light, destructive and chaotic.

Starseed initially refused to give their money-making auroras up, but after the empyreans leveled a city with a single spit of radiant flame, they decided to try returning what they'd stolen.

It didn't work.

The empyreans didn't want the auroras back. They wanted to destroy everything the auroras had, not understanding that the auroras didn’t have anything, that it was they who were owned. The Starseed corporation from there took their initial mech-fucking designs and transformed the concept of a pilotable alien/human robot to a new scale, a new level. They created gigantic, humanoid, mechanical shells of the same thistle-sucked steel that was emblematic of the corporation. And then they tried to find pilots.

When every hero they'd cherry-picked for the honor died with radiance choking the life from them in the pilot's seat, they let the auroras pick the pilots. It took many auroras to ignite one of the savior mechs, so there were only two hero mechs total, and one of them was clearly sovereign above all the other. The sovereign mech took an unusual amount of auroras to ignite compared to the others, though it wasn’t size or complexity that required such power. This mech, the monarch, was slender and sleek and sinuous. It glowed with a power that surpassed its fellows.

It was Forever, and it had found me.

The rest became an awakening, the alien aurora blooming into other selves within me, coming to full-flower in a mind that now reached an eternal spring. 

Starseed would never understand what we were, who we were, that we were always together from then on. We were a system. Sever self from body--fine. But sever self from self--never. At least, never for long. I would find you amidst the flowering swamps of this silver planet, Lien Mai. You will never find Forever had the unspoken because you will not remember who they are. It didn't matter what they'd do. I'd always remember you.

I fought for the first hour against a tide of jumbled memories, of chrysanthemum loves, of bittermelon friends, some of them mine, some of them yours, some of them from one of our infinite selves. I realized that my memories had been scrambled, unable to arrange into a timeline, but time had never been a friend of mine.

I only existed in this moment, right now, and any version of me that existed before was a different self-state, not me, Only. I didn't exist in the future. I couldn't conceptualize a future. I only existed in this moment, never before now, and never later--any iteration of myself that existed later wasn't me as I was. It was a different self entirely. So time wasn't real for me, not in the same way as it wasn't real for everyone else I talked to. I could withstand the jumbling in a way they wouldn't be expecting.

Because it should have been worse than that.

I should have had no trace of you in my mind. The memory wipe should have worked, and not only worked, but worked perfectly, with impeccable precision.

It didn't.

They couldn't erase me. They couldn't erase what was mine from myself. And you were mine in the same way I was yours--we were each other, and every other that we became when we were together. A mech and pilot system, but a system in another way, too. Multiple presences together in the same mind. So all they really did to me was fuck up time, which was already fucked up for me. It was screwed up in the same way that there was a pressure in my mind that made me think of we, of us, where I should have been myself, alone. I thought that this was you meeting me, reaching out to me, before we even became one.

We were only one for as long as you would remember me, and if I stopped remembering you, you would stop remembering me. It wouldn't take effect immediately, so Starseed needed to isolate and monitor you until it did. And when you forgot me, then they would kill me.

Killing a pilot while the mech still remembered them had volatile effects. Either the mech forgot immediately, or they remembered for much longer than they would had Starseed just wiped the pilot's memory. And a savior mech had such power to destroy. Save the world or end it, it was up to the pilots, and Starseed didn't like the odds of that. So they wiped and then killed any pilot they didn't want. They never wanted me.

 I was a pilot that hardly listened and often wandered with you even outside of battle, spending very little time outside of you. I was almost always piloting you, because I felt best when we were together, as we should be, system that we are, that we were meant to be. This was permissible as long as I fought off the empyreans. 

And then one day, I stopped doing that.

We were spending time together, our split monarch selves scattered across the city and the surrounding marshland, looking through myriad eyes, listening through multitudinous ears, but spending our primary attention on the flowering swamps of the planet, simply enjoying being among the tall, wicked trees and the milk-honey petals of the blooms that grew in the swamp. There was a certain kind of serenity in just being together, resonating the way we did. It felt right.

Our gentle moments together were interrupted by Starseed's bells tolling through our chest. Calling us to kill off the empyreans. We'd been curled up inside a swamp flower, and I started to get up, but you said, Only, wait. Only Ngo, my name, my true name, the one I’d picked for myself when I discovered my pellucid, colorless, binary-less gender because it was the only one that fit.

Around us laid the swamp. It was scaled for gods, the blossoms big enough to curl up and sleep in as they floated on the surface of the flooded forest, the trees so large it was impossible to see anything but the distant lacework of their treetops. The trees all had shining, metallic bark, the swamp flowers of Lien Mai adorned with sharp, luminescent petals. The water of the swamp was a rosy pink, and the flowers a sweet pearl. I stroked the tender, soft petal-flesh. 

"What is it?" I said aloud. You never spoke aloud, but I did when we weren't around others.

It was a quiet moment like many moments we had where we simply played music from the flowers that grew out of our blossoming mech chest and listened to the world around us–swamp sounds of frog bellow and owl hoot and cricket chirp playing along with the gentle, dreaming, gauzy beats of the pop we both liked to listen to. Someone was singing about losing someone. I am two-hearted / but when they took you from me / I was taken back to the start. We thought then that we'd never feel that.

I don't want to go, you said. I want--I want a world of starlight and sunshine and flowering bliss. I want an eternity of moments like this.

Moments like this.

Moments like this being moments where we could be ourselves. Moments when we weren't fighting the world, the heavens, the universe, with ourselves unforgiven for all the ethereal blood we'd shed. We didn't have to think about that here, together, with each other to soothe one another. I wanted that, too, and I wanted it badly enough that--that I was willing to stop fighting, that I was willing to end the violence for more of this harmony. I would do it for you, for us.  

*             *             *

I asked you once, "Why have we stolen the stars? Why have we taken such different names for the stars than the name for this planet?"

The stars? you said. The constellations?

"Yes. The tongues that named these constellations aren't the ones that named Lien Mai."

They are, actually.

Starseed's historical records show that the first settler on Lien Mai was caught between two cultures, the same way your name is. Only, belonging to this tongue, and Ngo, belonging to another.

This silvertongue that we have, the one that named you Only, it was the only one that the very first settler knew. Of the two cultures they were caught between, one dominated, but they never forgot where they came from, whose lineage they were a part of.

I have forgotten mine.

"Really? How?"

You know how the remembrance of the auroras works. I can only remember that which remembers me. My companions back home, they only remember shattered fragments of me. I only remember the tiniest shards of home.

"What do you miss the most?" 

The feeling of not being alone. My companions and I, we would fuse together in an unbroken line of auroras. I was never more together than I was with them. It felt--exquisite. There was an infinite joy in the world, then. Imagine the extended warmth of the intention behind holding hands, except with your entire self-state, your entire being, melding together and dancing with something more holy than starlight.

I feel something like that with you, although you make it different. I like it, though. I like us.

I smiled. "Me too, Forever."

*             *             *

Only, you said once. Only, Only, Only.

"I'm sleeping."

Only, I'm lonely, I'm--I feel alone.

"How can you feel alone when I'm right here?"

I don't know. And then smaller, I don't know why you love me.

"I love you because you're the only one that's made me feel like this, brighter than any supernova, more divine than death. I'd felt--your presence, before you found me, and together we...we just feel right in a way I can't explain, the same way I couldn't explain the pressure in my head I felt of you before you found me. This sense of togetherness. You gave me a name to speak to. A name for it.

"You gave me the names for this, yourself, us. System, Forever, Deathless. For too long, I didn't have any words to even think about it. I didn't have anyone to talk to. I was alone in knowing that I wasn't alone but not knowing that well enough to--to talk to you. I knew I wasn't alone, but I didn't know with who."

"Now that I do, though, I've never--I've never felt as harmonious as I do now. Never so together. Never so right. I don't know how to say it. I'm better now, with you, better than I've ever been, better than I ever will be.

"I've just...never been anything like this, and I feel like I've ascended. That's why I love you, Forever."

*             *             *

"I'm a monster," I'd said to you before.

So am I, you'd said. To be monstrous once meant to be a portent for tidal changes to come. It means to have fortune's strength behind you. So we'll bring fortune down on our enemies, no matter who they may be, and we'll be a tide-bringer, sword-singer, dead-ringer. We'll be a monster.

So we, monstrous we, soothed one another with our presences. That's what it meant to have moments like this.

To hear that you wanted those moments to be forever, that was enough.

*             *             *

And it was more than enough. I would find you no matter how ferocious I had to become.

*             *             *

My furious self was a seething thing. It hissed and spat, rearing up inside me serpentine. But I didn't show it at first. Oh no, I didn't. I stood in the hangar bay waiting for Sleeping Forest's pilot to show up. She wouldn't have heard the news yet--I'd be catching her coming in from an off-world mission, and for news as big as ruining a pilot, they'd want to say it in person, to give either the threat of the same fate or the assurance that it wouldn't happen, so long as she was obedient.

Starseed designed Sleeping Forest after a stag beetle, granting her a stunningly dark shell and two arcing horns modeled after beetle mandibles. Intricate, threadlike, wisping designs incorporating Starseed's trademarked starburst in its similarly guarded thistle-sucked shade of purple twisted all across the mech's carapace atop a base of iridescent black. Sleeping Forest was the biggest of the two savior mechs, the boldest, but not the best.

Sleeping Forest and her pilot are sweet on us even though I've never bothered to remember her name, referring to her always instead by the name of her better half. Once, when we were fighting the empyreans, and our selves had split our embodied mechanical shell too many times for us to protect our core, our shell rendered thin, fragile, Sleeping Forest had protected us. She'd stood with her beam saber and gored the empyrean about to cut our core in half. That was one time out of twenty-one, as many times as I was old.

Sleeping Forest was the most daring, the most valiant in every united battle we'd had with them, with her, pilot and mech one unit together, their mech/pilot pair a system called the Sylvan system. When I was piloting Forever, Only Ngo didn't matter anymore. I became Forever, and we, together, were the Deathless system.

I'd asked you once, Can you die?

Together, we cannot. Deathlessness is granted to the monarchs of we auroras, as you call us. But we monarchs need hosts so far away from our homeworld.

Giddy, I'd said to you, So we're immortal?

As Deathless as death itself.

Knowing that, we should have been the boldest, but we let Sleeping Forest take the glory. There was no true honor if there was no true risk, and we were too bitter for honor anyway.

If not a system like Forever and I were, Sleeping Forest and her pilot were something close to it. The Sylvan system. Whatever that meant to them was a secret they kept well. It probably had something to do with protection, with heroism. Sleeping Forest would be the one to slay the empyrean monsters, would be the one to save the day, would be the hero. But Forever and I, the Deathless system, were the sovereign who commanded it.

Sleeping Forest arrived with a soothing hum, the engines singing. Harmony. Once the cockpit opened up, and I saw the brown face of the pilot as she stood on the walkway just outside of her mech, I used our roles against her.

I commanded, "If you love her, you'll step away."

"Love who?" she said, taking a guard position.

I didn't stop walking. 

"The Sleeping Forest. She loves you." We were chest to chest, breast to breast, as much as I, genderless I, hated to be reminded I had breasts.

She put a hand on my shoulder. "I know you--care a lot about Forever, but it's not real, you know?"

I resisted the urge to grab her by the throat. "They're real. We're--we're more than you can even comprehend. Us and our infinite selves."

When I was piloting you, we could split our embodied shell into thousands of different shells, a swarm of monarch butterfly mechs, each a different self that could project an aurora to create an ethereal, phantasmagoric monstrous embodiment on par with the empyrean. You said, the first time we all split, Know that each one of us loves you. Together, we were a massive, royal, four-monarch-winged sinuous, sleek, blossoming figure, peony and orchid and spiderlily flowering all across the mech. We were the most beautiful thing I'd ever been, would ever be. 

The pilot stroked down our arm and looked down on me and the traces of you that I could still feel in my mind. I gritted our teeth.

She said, "All that stuff about aliens, you know that's fake, don't you?"

"How can you say it's fake when you've piloted her yourself? You know there's something real in there. Real as you are."

"Yeah, and it's called an AI."

"How can you fight empyreans--celestial aliens!--and not believe that one of them powers your own mech? Your own other half?"

"Sleeping Forest isn't my other half. It's just a robot. That's all it is. You know, I think you're pretty cool, but, like, you need to chill a little. Talk to some real people. Stop spending so much time with your AI. And, like, believe me when I say none of this is real in the way you seem to think it is. Forever's just another robot. It's not alive."

"Then neither am I."

I suckerpunched Sleeping Forest in the gut and scrambled into her mech. Sleeping Forest's system woke up, recognizing me. She went through a pleasant series of chimes as she awakened and then yawned. The interior of the mech was a comfortable but narrow emerald green seat with a few levers and switches to pull and press surrounding the pilot's seat. The interface lit up, and Sleeping Forest projected herself out, an aurora of light glowing against my cheeks.

"Whyever did you hurt my pilot, Only?" she said. "Sleeping, I need to find Forever. Starseed is trying to take me away from them. I'm not even supposed to remember them now, except we are--you know what we are. Our selves intertwined. I am Forever, and Forever is me, and they can't take myself away from me." I laughed, so sudden and hard it almost made me cry. "Except they'll try."

Sleeping's pilot banged on the hard-light barrier surrounding the cockpit. "Hey! What the fuck are you doing?"

"Sleeping, I need your help. Please."

"I'm sorry, Only, but I only do what I am asked."

Her pilot was still banging on the barrier. I phased my arm through the barrier, grabbed the pilot, pulled her completely inside, and then the barrier closed shut again. While she was still disoriented, I shoved her into the seat and straddled her legs, grabbed her by the throat, and wrist-flicked out my sedating blade. The sedative was in there, ready to inject the moment I sent it down the blade with the right mechanism.

"Only," Sleeping Forest said, a storm of furious light beginning to coalesce from inside the cockpit. But two of us could be furious.

I lied, "Sleeping, I'm going to kill her if you don't help me."

"Sleeping!" the pilot said. "They won't kill me. They--they care too much about how much you fucking AI feel to truly hurt another AI's pilot. They know how badly Forever would feel if they died, don't you?"

It was true, I cared about Sleeping, but I cared more about you, about us. I cared more about ourselves than I cared about anyone else. I couldn't lose you. We, together, were as whole, as holy, as I'd ever felt. I wasn't myself without you. I wasn't enough of a self, alone. I was weak, worthless, a wisp in the whispering wind. I was pathetic, puny, piercing pomelo pith with my fingertips. I was null, nil, nothing. You made me into something celestial; together we were something divine. Empyreans were your cousins--you showed your heavenly heritage when we were together, so powerful we were that we could swallow the world and still be ravenous enough to spit at the stars.

With resolve, I pressed the tip of the blade into her neck, without sending the sedative down the blade yet. I closed my eyes, took a deep breath. I didn't want to put her to sleep--the drug had to be potent enough to stop her heart for enough beats that Sleeping Forest would think she was dead, and then slow enough to evade detection from being scanned again. I didn't want her heart to stop at all. It would be best if she would just help me. I didn't want to do this, but you and I had to be together. Forever, Forever.

"You don't have to die. You just have to pilot Sleeping until we find Forever."

"You're fucking insane."

"Call me insane, call me wicked, call me Deathless, dying, dead already. A rose by any other name smells just as sweet. Will you help me?"

"Hell no! Don't you know what's going to happen if you kill me?" I knew. I did know what was going to happen.

Either Sleeping Forest was going to go unstoppably chaotic in remembering you and your death, and Starseed would be forced to bring Forever in to stop the devastation since the last savior mech was off-world, or Sleeping Forest would forget completely and I would pilot the mech. Both results would get me what I wanted--a way to you.

"Last chance, Sleeping. Help me or your pilot dies."

The pilot shook her head. "Don't bother, Sleeping. Only's only giving us so many chances because they have no intention of following through. They're not evil, just scared. Right?"

"Wrong. I'm ferocious."

The sedation mechanism clicked.

A shower of light filled the cockpit, blinding, sending incandescent starbursts into my eyes. Sleeping cursed me in a thunderous, booming voice, in the alien tongue of the ethereal. I felt it ruin me, but I gritted my teeth and held my guts in place inside my body even as they were trying to crawl out. I screamed, but it came out as a gurgle, blood filling my throat.

I cut into the pilot's neck--not deep, but just enough of a nick that I felt blood on my fingers.

Sleeping Forest fell black.

There was a moment where the only thing I could hear was my own breathing. Sleeping Forest had gone completely dark. All the lights that had surrounded the digital interface, the lights lacing the narrow leather seat, the lights on the thistle-metal panels edging the barrier--all of that had gone dark. I swallowed. I didn't know if it had worked. I didn't know if Sleeping would find out that her pilot wasn't really dead, didn't know if this was over, over, if I would never ever find you again and I would be alone forever, alone and weak and worthless and--and then Sleeping Forest turned back on again.

"You are going to watch as I kill everything you love about this world," Sleeping said. You were the only thing I loved in this world, but she didn't know that.

As Sleeping Forest rampaged, I discreetly checked the pilot's pulse--slow, but steady. Her breathing was so deep it was nearly imperceptible.

I closed my eyes through most of it, curling up in the cramped pilot's seat and listening, just listening for you. Waiting until the resonance between us began to sing, the chime of our intertwined immortality ringing brightly.

Soon enough, it did.

I felt it shaking my ribcage, felt your voice, indistinct, whisper-screaming for me in my head--you, there again. As Sleeping Forest destroyed the world, glass shattering, flames roaring, steel groaning, I felt your presence come closer and closer, the radiant warmth of your light inside my mind bringing me back to the unity of we, us, ours as we came closer to becoming Deathless again.

When I opened my eyes, Sleeping Forest was ripping apart the empty steel-and-glass artifice of the upper city. Whenever mechs walked the city, the residents of it all were evacuated to the underground. Sleeping Forest was destroying their world, but not their lives. Between us and the empyreans, the city was constantly, stubbornly rebuilding, refusing to live a life without the sun. The tall glass spires of corporate offices were cracked, and the twisting, winding steel arches of shopping complexes were warped out of shape, wound into knots. Fire blazed across the city, illuminating it in the dreamless night.

And you were there.

You had all our selves coalesced together, cutting a majestic silhouette in the moonlight, a starry dusk form with four thistle-glowing monarch wings. Our sleek, slender, sinuous body wound around Sleeping Forest's thudding, heavy attacks, swiftly evading. Spiderlily, peony, and orchid bloomed across our chest, making my heart ache. You moved our mech vessel so quickly that flower petals streamed behind you, the petals regrowing just as quickly as they were shed on the starlit wind.

I punched the top of the barrier to the cockpit, but Sleeping Forest was taking no chances. I couldn't get through, only bruising my knuckles. I screamed as loud as I could, hearing it even inside of my head. You screamed back at the same pitch, and I screamed until my throat was raw, just so I could hear us resonate, our voices as though they were one. You were a warmth like sunlight inside my mind, as vast and perfect as a star. I could feel you, so close, now, with Sleeping Forest slamming her body into ours.

As I punched the barrier again, so did you.

It shattered under our elegant, dark fingers. You lifted me up and out of Sleeping Forest's cockpit, the mech roaring, enraged. Starseed was howling something or another, Pilot Ngo, remove yourself now, but I muted them. You placed me inside our own cockpit and falling into it was like falling into a bath, with the same soothing sensation and sense of pleasant gentleness. I could feel me becoming we as our selves chirped at one another at harmonious frequencies, the sound of it perfectly melodious. Welcome home, you said. Where shall we go?

"Anywhere, everywhere, foreverywhere. Forever, Forever! Let's just get out of here. We'll find ourselves in the stars. We'll find a world of starlight and sunshine and flowering bliss. We'll find this, we'll find this."

Okay, you laughed. Okay.

We will be only forever.


Xuan Nguyen (they/them) is a writer and artist who focuses on the intersections between transgender identity, divinity and monstrosity, and stigmatized mental health. Their work is entirely #OwnVoices, and they can be contacted through their website at feyxuan.com or on Twitter @feyxuan. When not writing or drawing, they can be found petting their Siamese cat, drinking cold Viet coffee, or reading unbelievable amounts of fanfiction.