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1685 lines
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** ************
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*** *********** **** **** ********* *** **** ***********
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**** ** *** ** *** *** *** ** *** *** **** **
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***** *** *** *** *** **** *** ****
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****** *** ******** ****** ******** ****
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*** *** *** *** *** *** *** **** *******
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*** *** *** *** *** *** ** *** *** ****
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********* ***** **** **** ********* **** *** ****
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*** *** **** **
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*** *** ------------------- **** ***
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****** ***** The Online Magazine ***********
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****** ***** of Amateur Creative Writing ************
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---------------------------
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======================================================================
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November 1989 Circulation: 431 Volume I, Issue 3
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======================================================================
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Contents
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Etc... .................................................. Jim McCabe
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Editorial
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Final Memories .................................. Keith C. Vaglienti
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-------------- Fiction
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Hampton Cafe ........................................... Garry Frank
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------------ Fiction
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Winds ............................................ Daniel Appelquist
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----- Fiction
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Fundamentally Switzerland ....................... Barbara Weitbrecht
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------------------------- Fiction
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******************************************************************
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* *
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* ATHENE, Copyright 1989 By Jim McCabe *
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* This magazine may be archived and reproduced without charge *
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* under the condition that it is left in its entirety. *
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* The individual works within are the sole property of their *
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* respective authors, and no further use of these works is *
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* permitted without their explicit consent. *
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* Athene is published quasi-monthly *
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* by Jim McCabe, MCCABE@MTUS5.BITNET. *
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* This ASCII edition was created on an IBM 4381 mainframe *
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* using the Xedit System Product Editor. *
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* *
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******************************************************************
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Etc...
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Jim McCabe
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MCCABE@MTUS5.BITNET
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======================================================================
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First, I want to thank everyone for waiting the extra week for
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this month's issue of Athene. I normally try to get the magazine out
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during the first weekend of the month, but school and work forced me
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to delay it by a week this time. I'm confidant that December's issue
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will be on time, even though it is only a couple weeks away.
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Since the last issue, I polled the readers of the plain text
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edition of Athene for their opinion of the magazine's appearance.
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From that response, that version of Athene will no longer have
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justified paragraphs. It makes it easier to read on a display
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terminal, and it also makes it easier on those people who reformat
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Athene for their own printers. Thanks to everyone who responded!
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Getting feedback from the readers is a great experience, and I
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encourage you to contact me if you have coments relating to any aspect
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of Athene. I'd like to make this magazine as responsive to *your*
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needs as possible. In fact, I'm looking for a new logo, and I am open
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to suggestions from the readers.
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Here we are in issue three, and yet two of this month's stories
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were submitted back before issue one! In fact, "Final Memories" and
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"Fundamentally Switzerland" were the first two stories Athene ever
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received. I want to thank Keith and Barbara for their great stories
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and patience.
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We also have an interesting story from the driving force behind
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Quanta, Dan Appelquist. "Winds" has a unique narrative style that
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forces us to consider how we would react in extremem circumstances.
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"I considered first person but it wasn't powerful enough," Dan says.
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"The reader could still say ''I'd never do anything like that.'' With
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the second person narration style, the narrator is telling *you* that
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*you're* doing these things and that way you're forced to think about
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it more, and doubt whether you couldn't be like that too."
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Also, after last month's excellent story "Solitaire," Garry Frank
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gives us yet another good one with "Hampton Cafe."
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With these stories, I think that this issue was well worth the
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wait. Thanks again,
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-- Jim
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Final Memories
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By Keith C. Vaglienti
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CCASTKV@GITNVE2.GATECH.EDU
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======================================================================
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I am tired and I hurt. What's the saying? Mother come take me
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home? Strange that I should die now when I am just coming to terms
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with what I am. Still, I do not think I would mind dying if only it
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didn't hurt so much.
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* * *
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Overhead I can feel the moon calling to me as I stretch my stiff
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limbs. I did not sleep well last night. The hunger seemed to gnaw at
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my bones and kept me from having a proper rest. I must do something
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to satisfy my curse but not yet, not yet.
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I finger my crucifix ruefully. He who visited this damnation on
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me was destroyed by merely being in the same room as one but it seems
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to have no power over me. In truth I obtained this one in the hopes
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that it would kill me but such was not my fate. Perhaps it is because
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I have never been what mortals believe. I feel the beginnings of
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despair and know I must seek the night and find release.
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I let change sweep over me and when it is done I bound up and out
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through the basement window. At the sight of the moon a keen howl
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wells up in my throat but I hold it back. This is neither the place
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nor the time.
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It is but a short run to where my love lies buried, murdered by
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the foul creature that took me. Ah my love, you were the fortunate
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one. Surely death can not be worse than what I must endure but endure
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it I must. Though I have tried to take what little there is of my
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life, it resists most hardily. Neither sunlight nor holy signs nor
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running water seem capable of destroying me and I cannot bring myself
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to employ more drastic measures. Surely this is Hell, to abhor one's
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self but not be able to do anything about it. Now my love I must
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leave. The hunger grows too strong and I fear the pain of it might
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make me hurt someone.
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I head for the park. Not too long ago I caught a pair of rabbits
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there. Perhaps tonight I shall have similar luck.
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I hear them first; the soft padding of tennis shoes and the sharp
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click of high heels. Then I scent them, one has a decidedly masculine
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smell while from the other wafts the delicate scent of some perfume.
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Before I see them I know what to expect; two kids, probably from the
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local college, out on a date, going for a romantic stroll by moonlight
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in the park. In short, fresh blood for the likes of me.
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My pulse quickens with the thought of the hot, rich, red liquid
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coursing down my throat. I catch myself as I begin to edge forward.
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If I am not careful my instincts will get the better of me. It would
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be so easy, the humans never take any real precautions against such as
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I and they are easier to catch than the animals which are my normal
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fare but no, I will not give in to the hunger, I cannot. I hate what
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I am but I have to live with it and with myself. And so I ease myself
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back into the shadows as the humans come round a hedge. I was right,
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just a couple of college kids out to have a good time. Silently I
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wish them luck for I envy them their innocence.
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Then I see the wino that is no wino. He wears the ragged clothes
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of a street bum. In one arm he cradles a bottle of Muscatel, of which
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he reeks. A battered hat shields his face from the street lights,
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hiding it in shadow. A good enough disguise to fool a human but not
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enough to trick my senses. Silently I laugh, where is the smell of
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old vomit and urine that normally accompany such as you? You cannot
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fool me, old friend, for you and I are brothers. I see the gleam of
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hunger in your shadowed eyes, the glistening tip of your tongue as you
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moisten your lips in anticipation. I know what you are feeling so
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intimately for I too just felt it. But you are one of the weak ones
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or worse, one of the ones that glories in such things as what we are.
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He has been lying on the bench so still that the couple has not
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noticed him. Maybe they think he is asleep. Maybe they were so
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wrapped up in each other that they didn't see him. Whatever the case,
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they know he is there now as he lurches to his feet, hands reaching
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out to grab and hold. The boy, brave in his ignorance, shoves the
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girl back and moves between her and the wino. Undaunted the wino
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lashes out, his hand a blur, to smash aside the boy with inhuman
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strength. The lad lies still where he falls, unconscious, possibly
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dead. Now the wino glides toward the girl, relishing the terror which
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holds her paralyzed. He opens his mouth in a leer and she screams at
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the sight of his fangs.
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I am the wind as, on shadow silent paws, I rush past her to hurl
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myself at the wino. My jaws snap at his throat but it is no longer
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there as he becomes mist. Then it is another wolf that faces me. We
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circle each other warily for a moment. I stop between him and the
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girl. He hungrily eyes the boy, then changes again; this time his
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shape flows into that of a bat, and he flies away. I consider
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pursuing the abomination but, no I must help the humans.
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``Good boy,'' comes the girl's voice. I turn to face her. She
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smells of fear but she is unwilling to leave the boy. She moves
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slowly towards him, trying not to spook me. She is brave like the
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boy. I change and it catches her by surprise. Before she can
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remember the legends, I trap her eyes with my own. I remake history.
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When I am done she remembers nothing of what has happened. I release
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her and turn to examine the boy. He still lives. With rest he will
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recover.
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I hear the sound of running feet. People coming to investigate
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the girl's screams. I stand and nod at the girl, then fade into the
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night.
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It is late and I still haven't eaten. I must do something soon
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or the hunger will consume me. But for now I am satisfied. I am
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nosferatu and I am human.
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* * *
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A lot of people are afraid of death but I am not. I came to
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realize early on that death is inevitable; nothing lives forever.
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Perhaps I shall see my love when I die. I hope so.
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* * *
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``I love the night.'' Lynn laughs and her eyes seem to sparkle in
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the moonlight. ``I don't know why. It just seems like the darkness
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sets my spirit free. I feel like I'm bursting with energy. I want to
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run and jump and shout for joy.'' Suddenly I am serious. ``Lately I
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feel that way a lot. Whenever I'm with you.''
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``You've been watching too many old movies,'' jibes Lynn as she
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gives my hand a squeeze.
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I grimace and moan, ``The lady doth wound me deeply. I confess
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my love and she laughs at me.''
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``Pardon me, kind sir. How may I make amends?''
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``If you would dance with me it might ease the pain some small
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degree.''
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Lynn laughs, ``Here on the sidewalk? With no music?''
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``Of course not,'' I exclaim. ``What do you take me for? A
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fool? No, don't answer that. I mean on yonder hill in the faery ring
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that crowns it. There we can dance to the strains of an elvish
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band.''
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``Has anyone ever told you that you're strange?''
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``Of course, many a time. I'll have you know that I work very
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hard to make people think I'm strange.'' We are young and in love.
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The night is full of silver magic.
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Our waltz is interrupted by a dog's howl. Lynn shivers so I pull
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her close. From behind me comes a growling sound and Lynn suddenly
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stiffens. I turn to find myself facing a wolf. Once more it growls
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and then it takes a step forward. Pushing Lynn behind me I say,
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``Just stay calm and don't make any sudden moves.'' The wolf's muscles
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seem to bunch and then it leaps upon me. Startled I fall backwards.
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My head strikes something cold and hard. Unfriendly blackness
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consumes me. The last thing I hear is Lynn screaming.
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* * *
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When I awoke Lynn was dead, her throat torn away, and I was a
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vampire. I begin to laugh but it only makes the pain worse so I stop.
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Funny how the past always returns to haunt you. As if my life was not
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already more horrid than I can bear. The kids in the park reminded me
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so much of Lynn and myself that I had to track down their attacker and
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destroy him as I did the other. I never thought I'd die doing so.
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For a moment I gather my strength and then once more pull on the
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wooden shaft which pins me to the wall like an insect. It is to no
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avail. I look down at the pile of dust which is my murderer. He made
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the mistake of coming close to taunt me. He never expected one of his
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own kind to be carrying holy water. Still, his is the last laugh.
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His death was relatively swift and less painful than mine.
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Outside the window the day grows brighter. I have to smile. My
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last sight will be sunrise. The first light of morning touches me.
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It seems to soothe me as a numbness radiates through my body from its
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gentle caress. The air grows hazy with sparkling motes of dust. Is
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my body crumbling away into nothing? I can't feel anything. About me
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the world dissolves.
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Who's there? I can feel your presence. Lynn? Lynn...
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Hampton Cafe
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By Garry Frank
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CSTGLFPC@UIAMVS.BITNET
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Copyright 1989 Garry Frank / Failsafe Productions
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======================================================================
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He was a small man, no taller than a boy of fourteen, but he
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carried himself with an air of contentment and virility that made him
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hard to forget. I do not know his name, and I do not ever wish to. I
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met him for the first and only time in a small cafe near Hampton, a
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place I would often escape to when I needed to be alone. Hampton was
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peaceful, and the cafe even more so.
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It was not uncommon for me to spend hours of my time sipping
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coffee and twiddling my spoon in a small, deserted booth in the south
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corner. It was a special place to me, a place I could go to be
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thoughtful or dreamy. Or in this case, sorrowful.
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I had gone to Hampton on the afternoon of October 12, 1981, two
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days after the death of my brother, Matthew. I had gone to the
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funeral almost completely alone, since he and I were the last
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remaining members of our family, having been the only sons of a man
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who was an only child. That man, my father, had attained his own date
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of mourning in the cafe some years earlier.
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I invited none of my friends, not even Matthew's, and I wonder
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sometimes if I hadn't intentionally avoided informing everyone but a
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small handful of people about his death. I do not like to cause any
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more grief in the world than I have to.
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I am not obsessed with death. I think that I may have been the
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only person at the funeral who truly accepted the concept of Matthew
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being dead, and the peace that such a thing should bring. All the
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same, this acceptance did not stifle my need to escape to the cafe, to
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my special table, sip coffee, and think.
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The waitress gave me no more attention than she would give any
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other patron and did not recognize me. Nor did she make the
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connection between my face and the particular table at which I was
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seated, the same table I had always selected for almost six years now.
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The coffee was black and strong, and I had to mix several packets of
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sugar with it to make it tolerable. It cooled in the stagnant cafe
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atmosphere, and when the steam had completely departed, it revealed
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the old man, standing less than seven feet from my table, staring at
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my coffee.
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He was wearing an old but intact gray two piece suit. His
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stature was wide, and his shoulders broad, but he still had an aura of
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humility about him that I could not explain. His face gave away his
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age, which was in the mid-seventies, I imagine, and it was
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clean-shaven, yet haggard, like the face of a man who has lost
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interest in appearance. His shoes were clean, an extremely odd thing
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to notice at that point, I know. My acute sense of observation
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sometimes gets the best of me. Covering his short, brownish-gray hair
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was a short-brimmed hat of almost the same color.
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His eyes were like dark chips of ice, yet when he stared at me
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through the clearing steam, feelings of care and compassion swamped
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over me.
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"May I sit down?"
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His voice was clear and soft. It took me a little by surprise.
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"Yes, please do." I found myself saying before thinking about
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what I might be getting into.
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He shuffled himself into the booth, sitting across from me,
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nearer to the window.
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"Cold." He said, smiling and shrugging his shoulders, "That
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coffee looks quite good."
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I paused for a second. The man did not have the appearance of a
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man stricken by poverty.
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"Would you like some?" I was full willing to by him a cup of his
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own, if not to give him mine, which I seemed to had lost the taste
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for.
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"No." He shrugged. "No, no, no... I am not in need of favors.
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I am simply making small talk."
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I nodded, confused. I had an urge to simply come out and ask him
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what it was that he wanted.
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"Cold, yes. Quite cold. Very difficult times."
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I frowned.
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"Do I know you from somewhere?"
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"Only indirectly... In passing, so to speak. I was a good
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friend of your brothers."
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I accepted this in good faith, not taking the time to stop and
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weed out the oddities of his story.
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"I see."
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"Very good friend indeed. I understand you are now all that is
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left of the family line."
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"Yes, you could say that."
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I thought back briefly on what the old man had said. Was a good
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friend, he used the word was, and I had never seen this man before in
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my life. I had only told six people about the death, only one of
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which was a good friend of Matthew's, and this man was not one of
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them.
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The obituaries, I thought to myself, he just read about it in the
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papers. I came up with the comeback myself: there hasn't been an
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obituary report yet. A clerical error had caused the local newspaper
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to report the death two weeks after the event itself, so where,
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thought I, did he find out?
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Again, I came to my own rescue, there must have been other
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reports. Other articles in the news. This man had just been paying
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acute attention. Perhaps he was a consistent member of the church
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where the service was held, and saw it written in the schedule
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pamphlet.
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He was, after all, a good friend of Matthew's.
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So why wasn't he at the funeral..?
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"Such a pity. His demise, I mean. That is, after all, the
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reason you are here, is it not?"
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"I'm sorry?"
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"You have come here to grieve, so to speak."
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My eyes were locked open. He continued to speak with remarkable
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calmness.
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"Do not be frightened. I am here as a friend."
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My throat was getting slightly dry, and it clicked as I
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swallowed. I was genuinely intrigued, if not scared.
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"Look, I'm sorry, but I've never seen you before in my life, and
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I knew most of Matthew's close friends."
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"Are you saying that I'm not who I say I am?"
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"I'm saying that you haven't said who you are at all. Now
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please, my good man, state your business or leave me in peace."
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"I have a message."
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I couldn't move.
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"A message?"
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"From Matthew."
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It was then that all time seemed to stop in the Hampton Cafe. I
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found myself mesmerized by this old man, held in some kind of
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imaginary, supernatural grip. I began to breathe quickly, then
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stifled it, to conceal my fear.
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"I don't understand."
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"I have a message from Matthew."
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"Are you in charge of his will?"
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He chuckled.
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"No. No, not at all. This is not something that he wanted to
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say to you. This is something that he wants to say."
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There it was again. Has a message. Wants to say. The fear of
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this man, of the unknown crept up slowly from my heart.
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"Would you like to hear it?"
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I paused.
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"Yes." I whispered.
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For the next few seconds, a startling change came over the old
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man's face, a change that I will describe only once, something which I
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have never been able to satisfactorily explain since. For the brief
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moment when the old man relayed his message, his eyes changed. His
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eyes and mouth took on a new form, perhaps only in my mind, perhaps
|
|
not. His eyes turned dark brown, and they somehow glistened
|
|
differently, with youthfulness. The eyes portrayed a different mind,
|
|
and the mind that was behind them was a mind that I did and still
|
|
could recognize at a moment's glance. It was Matthew. For a brief
|
|
instant, the old man's eyes became Matthew's. He said:
|
|
|
|
"Thank you, Jonathan. For all you have given me. Please forgive
|
|
the shortcomings of my youth, the pain of our days growing up, for
|
|
someday you will be with me, and together we will be happy."
|
|
|
|
Then his eyes faded, and the man sat back in his cushioned seat.
|
|
|
|
"He thought you should know that before you went on living."
|
|
|
|
The old man slid to the end of the seat, and moved to stand up.
|
|
|
|
"Wait." I croaked silently. He seemed to take no notice. He
|
|
stood, and walked toward the exit of the cafe. Just before he opened
|
|
the door, he stopped, and I got up enough strength to ask:
|
|
|
|
"Who are you?"
|
|
|
|
He nodded and stepped out the door. I sat in my own sweat for a
|
|
long time, not knowing what to make of what I had just experienced. I
|
|
have not told anyone about my periodic expeditions to the cafe until
|
|
just now. Not even Matthew. If this was some elaborate joke, how did
|
|
he know to come here? Had he been shadowing me since the funeral?
|
|
Where did he get his information?
|
|
|
|
Breaking the spell, I stood up violently and stepped toward the
|
|
exit, just as he had done seconds ago. I threw open the door, and
|
|
stepped out into the parking lot. The wind was cold, and I had left
|
|
my jacket in the cafe, so I stood there, shivering, looking earnestly
|
|
for a trace of the old man.
|
|
|
|
I found none.
|
|
|
|
There had been only one automobile in the lot, and it was mine.
|
|
The only possible directions he could have gone walking (I heard no
|
|
motor) were well within sighting distances. It was as though he had
|
|
just vanished.
|
|
|
|
Several explanations came to me later, ranging from the abstract
|
|
(I had merely lost track of time, and he had walked many blocks during
|
|
my spell) to the common (he had escaped on bicycle) to the silly (he
|
|
was hidden under my car).
|
|
|
|
Since none struck me at the time, I resigned myself to re-enter
|
|
the cafe and sit once again at my booth. I pondered the events which
|
|
I now chronicle, then paid for my coffee and left.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
It has been many years since my encounter with the old man at the
|
|
Hampton Cafe, and I am still as speechless about it as I was back
|
|
then. What happened, you ask. I do not honestly know. Some
|
|
elaborate prank? There had been too much detail which would have
|
|
required so much research and money that the prank would have been
|
|
worthless without a punch line, so to speak. And I have not been
|
|
bothered by laughing co-workers since.
|
|
|
|
Was this old man somehow a messenger from wherever Matthew is
|
|
now? I do not know. I am not even sure if I believe that myself, and
|
|
I was the one who recognized his eyes. Did the event change my life,
|
|
do you ask? I only wish it had. I still find myself as much of an
|
|
agnostic as I was many years ago.
|
|
|
|
I still have no answers.
|
|
|
|
The only change it brought about in my personal philosophy is not
|
|
one of conviction in the afterlife, or in Heaven and Hell. The change
|
|
is acceptance that there are many things in this life which we cannot
|
|
explain. I accepted this with the same calm frame of mind with which
|
|
I accepted Matthew's death:
|
|
|
|
There are things in this world which defy logical explanation.
|
|
|
|
There is so much we don't understand. I am convinced of that.
|
|
There is so much about this world that we do not understand.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
So now what? I visited the cafe a total of three times after the
|
|
incident. Once for the birth of my son, once for the death of my
|
|
wife, and once for the end of World War III. Very few events other
|
|
than these have influenced my life.
|
|
|
|
I enjoy my life, but I am not afraid of losing it.
|
|
|
|
The dingy cafe four miles to the East of the small Missouri town
|
|
of Hampton is still standing. So am I.
|
|
|
|
|
|
---------------------------------------------------
|
|
Garry is a Broadcasting and Film major attending
|
|
the University of Iowa. He is an aspiring
|
|
screenwriter and an accomplished playwright, with
|
|
three of his full-length plays having been produced
|
|
by the West Side Players, an alternative theatre
|
|
organization at Iowa. He writes short fiction in
|
|
his spare time, and watches too many movies.
|
|
Garry's other interests include reading, skiing,
|
|
acting, "splitting atoms and graduating."
|
|
---------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Winds
|
|
By Daniel Appelquist
|
|
da1n@andrew.cmu.edu
|
|
Copyright 1989 Daniel Appelquist
|
|
======================================================================
|
|
|
|
Your name is Phil Miller. The time is 21:34 on October 27, 2050.
|
|
You are packing a state of the art Phased Plasma Pistol, a real
|
|
beauty. You can feel its cold metal pushing up against the skin of
|
|
your left side through the tight fitting radiation-proof cover-all.
|
|
Feeling the piece there gives you a sense of security, a feeling that
|
|
armies would fall under your fire. The fact that you are on massive
|
|
amounts of speed, of course, does wonders for your sense of euphoria.
|
|
|
|
On the opposite side of your body, there is another object that
|
|
makes you feel good. Although not as large as the pistol, you can
|
|
still feel it's weight. It is a small iron bar, a one day pass into
|
|
the free-neutral city. The city lies four hundred kilometers to the
|
|
southwest of the base you are stationed at. Right now, you're driving
|
|
down a fairly straight road, bounded on both sides by seemingly
|
|
endless planes of glass-like residue, the only telltale that there
|
|
ever was a fusion explosion here. The sight is familiar to you, so
|
|
you do not contemplate how this area will be barren for millennia to
|
|
come, nor of how you are only able to pass here due do the heavy
|
|
shielding of your '20 Chevy Sunblazer. Your mind doesn't flicker
|
|
back, even for a second to the millions who died when the great city
|
|
that once stood here was annihilated completely.
|
|
|
|
The speedometer reads 207 km/hr. A respectable speed, but you'd
|
|
like to go faster. Your left hand planted firmly on the wheel, you
|
|
toggle the velocity switch a few times until the green counter rises
|
|
to 265. Normally, you wouldn't be able to control the car at this
|
|
speed, but the increased awareness and strength provided by the drug
|
|
does a lot to help. The base won't notice a few patches missing from
|
|
the barracks supply station. You think back, only for a moment, to
|
|
all your poor compatriots who don't have a friend in the supply
|
|
division; who can only experience what you're experiencing now while
|
|
in action. Your thoughts quickly turn to contempt.
|
|
|
|
"Fuck 'em!" you mutter venomously under your breath. You raise
|
|
the velocity to 296.
|
|
|
|
Now, through the leaded glass of your windshield, you can see the
|
|
towers and lights of the free-neutral city, and also something else of
|
|
interest. Perched ominously over the lighted city is the hulking form
|
|
of the carnival zeppelin. The zeppelin, now dark, will shine tonight
|
|
with the intensity of the sun. Even at this distance you can feel the
|
|
members of the psycho-symphony tuning their instruments. Nothing mind
|
|
effecting now, but later... later... You reach back behind your
|
|
neck, flick a switch on your brain implant, and the disturbances
|
|
cease. It wouldn't do any good to have distractions now, not when
|
|
every movement of the wheel is life or death. No.. As good as the
|
|
carnival psycho-symphony is, you decide to forgo tonight's
|
|
performance. You have some other entertainment in mind.
|
|
|
|
The towers are closer now, as is the looming hulk of the
|
|
zeppelin. A blinking radar dish icon on your dash tells you that
|
|
you're about to enter into a speed patrolled area. Regretfully, you
|
|
thumb the revert-legal button on the wheel and your speed drops down
|
|
to 150. Even in your drugged state, you realize that the pistol
|
|
pressed tightly against your armpit won't save your from the automatic
|
|
guns that are the city's defenses. You've seen city defenses in
|
|
action before. You're not about to let that happen to you; not when
|
|
you've got so much to do.
|
|
|
|
As you pull your vehicle in through the ramparts, your level of
|
|
excitement rises. You can feel the blood course through your veins
|
|
faster and faster, driven by your racing heartbeat.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
You are in a field; a broad, green, gently sloping field; the
|
|
kind they had before the terror. You are a child. The grass is
|
|
thick, although not overgrown. Small portions of it break off and
|
|
stick to your feet as you run through it. The sweet smell of flowers
|
|
is near. You don't know which ones. It doesn't matter, the smell is
|
|
good. As you run across the field, you start to bound, your bare feet
|
|
contacting with the ground, then your entire body raising into the air
|
|
with each stride. How easy it is. And how futile.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
"Your pass sir? This is the last request I shall make. I repeat
|
|
my assertion that I am prepared to use deadly force unless
|
|
identification is certified."
|
|
|
|
The voice of the gate computer brings you back from your reverie.
|
|
You remove the iron bar from your right vest pocket and insert it into
|
|
the slot next to the window. You're amazed that you were able to
|
|
negotiate the car to its present position. You try, in vain to
|
|
recapture your vision, but it is forgotten. You can think now only of
|
|
the carnival's delights. No doubt there will be mutant death
|
|
wrestling, perhaps a few burnings of recently seized technocrats, and
|
|
certainly there will be the famed sex-slaves. You reach down into
|
|
your left hip pocket and finger the coinage therein. There is enough.
|
|
|
|
The light in front of you flashes green, and the gate opens. The
|
|
auto-control of your car is engaged, removing you from the loop. At a
|
|
creeping pace which angers you even more than the tone of that gate
|
|
computer, you are drawn into the spacious parking lot of the city.
|
|
|
|
When you finally stop and get out, a female voice gently reminds
|
|
you "remember where you parked, please." Your hand instinctively moves
|
|
to your gun, eagerly anticipating. It is only when the weapon is half
|
|
drawn do you realize that the voice's source is the PA located at the
|
|
top of a high pole some thirty meters from you. "Remember where you
|
|
parked, please" she states again, softly. Fighting your nature, you
|
|
sheathe the pistol, but the swirling energy in your blood stream
|
|
remains undiminished. You must consummate your feelings; soon.
|
|
|
|
You enter the winding walkways of the free-neutral city, walking
|
|
at what you consider to be a slow pace, so as not to broadcast your
|
|
condition. Still, you seem to be passing out most of the other
|
|
walkers.
|
|
|
|
Perhaps it is the subliminal advertising boards hung above the
|
|
pubs, or perhaps you were simply too excited to notice it before, but
|
|
you suddenly feel parched beyond belief. You must have a drink. The
|
|
noisiest, most garishly colored bar attracts your attention and you
|
|
enter, anticipating the cool feeling of liquid passing down your
|
|
throat. The place is crowded, hiding for the moment your
|
|
conspicuousness; the wide open eyes and red lips that are the mark of
|
|
a soldier.
|
|
|
|
You look towards the bar, and she is there. Just the same as she
|
|
was all of those years ago, at the first carnival. There is no
|
|
thought in your mind as to how she is here, or why she doesn't
|
|
recognize you when you sit down next to her and offer her a drink.
|
|
Your increased awareness does not extend to your inner being, and so
|
|
the illusion lives on.
|
|
|
|
"I'd be much obliged, stranger. Ooooh.. Are you a soldier? How
|
|
interesting! You must be very strong. And very wealthy, no? I'm
|
|
sure you have some coinage on you, eh?"
|
|
|
|
"I'll have a bourbon and soda, and a beer for the lady," you
|
|
state impassively at the bartender. "Coming right up, sir," he says
|
|
as he turns around, revealing the series of raised switches on the
|
|
back of his neck. A deserter, no doubt. You hate deserters, but you
|
|
suffer him to live as long as he doesn't give you any lip. "Do you
|
|
live here, or are you part of the carnival?" you ask politely, even
|
|
though she is obviously of the latter persuasion. Her scant, ornate
|
|
clothing and wealth of hair, a commodity for which other less
|
|
fortunate women would kill, give her away clearly.
|
|
|
|
"I'm a carnie worker... I'm, uh.. off for the day though." You
|
|
don't hear her. You're too busy looking her up and down. Her body
|
|
has some inconsequential differences to how you remember her, but all
|
|
in all she appears the same. Large breasts heaving with the effort
|
|
she must take to breathe this thickened air. Eyes dilated by
|
|
depressants or pleasure heighteners. Smooth skin unblemished by even
|
|
a single spot or bump. She's been modified, as they all have. It
|
|
goes without saying. She is too perfect, just as she always has been.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
You've run into a section of the field where the grass is taller,
|
|
thicker, more easily concealing. Some of the long strands have a dry
|
|
seed pod at the top, waiting to be blown away by the wind, to
|
|
propagate, to spawn, to swarm. Bees buzz around you now, but you've
|
|
had your shots, so they don't come within a few feet of your heaving
|
|
body. You ran hard and fast, and now your friends won't find you; for
|
|
sure they won't, and then you'll win. You'll prove yourself superior.
|
|
You squat down to provide yourself even more protection than before.
|
|
Waiting, anticipating the moment you hope will never come, when your
|
|
questing friends will come upon you with a shout and you will taste
|
|
your defeat.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
As you walk out of the bar with her, your excitement reaches a
|
|
peak level. You start walking faster, faster, until she can barely
|
|
keep up with you. "Why are you walking so fast? What's the hurry,
|
|
honey?" You still don't hear her. To you, she has become a
|
|
non-person; an object. As you pass a deserted alleyway between two
|
|
towering buildings, you push her in with all of your weight, following
|
|
close behind. As her crumpling form hits the wet ground, you reach
|
|
up, to your left side, grasping your pistol, pulling it out of its
|
|
carefully fitted holster, aiming it for her crying eyes, now turned
|
|
full force on you and filled with a fear unequaled by any opponent you
|
|
have ever met in battle. There is only time for her to scream a
|
|
plaintive "Why?" How dare she? Why indeed? Doesn't she know?
|
|
Doesn't she remember? With only a grim hate in your mind, you pull
|
|
the trigger. The only evidence is a clean hole directly in the center
|
|
of her forehead. You always were a good shot.
|
|
|
|
Kneeling over her dead form, you plant a kiss tenderly on her
|
|
stiffening lips. "I loved you." Are the words yours? You don't know.
|
|
You only feel the deep satisfaction that came from the kill. You
|
|
raise your head to see the tops of the buildings and the huge hulking
|
|
form of the zeppelin overhead, blotting out the stars, the sky. Soon
|
|
the lights of the zeppelin will brighten the streets of the city. You
|
|
take out a small phial, remove a new patch and apply it eagerly,
|
|
discarding the old one. Already you can feel the excitement course
|
|
through your veins, just as you can hear the blood rushing there even
|
|
now, pumped by a renewed purpose.
|
|
|
|
By now your drugged mind has almost forgotten the existence of
|
|
the corpse beneath your feet. You must find her again, and kill her,
|
|
and again. You will kill again tonight.
|
|
|
|
* * *
|
|
|
|
The time was twenty years ago. You were a trainee. Seventeen
|
|
years old, a mere boy. But even then you had been carrying a weapon
|
|
when you rode into the city, a distant city, with your friends from
|
|
the academy. Indeed, the academy required that all personnel on leave
|
|
carry a firearm at all times. One never knew what scavenging scum one
|
|
might find in the wildernesses of the wasted world. That city had
|
|
been much like this one. Smaller, perhaps, but still much like this
|
|
one. You remember seeing first the defense towers, and then the
|
|
radiation dome that that city had required, being in an area of much
|
|
higher risk, and of course there was the zeppelin. You remember
|
|
sitting in awe in the main concourse of the city with thousands of
|
|
others as the psycho-symphony played through their set, the effects of
|
|
the performance sending waves of strange, undefinable sensation though
|
|
your body. "Better than sex," you had remarked to one of your friends
|
|
afterward. Well, perhaps, perhaps not. Of course, you had been a
|
|
virgin at the time, so the use of the expression had been more comical
|
|
than anything else.
|
|
|
|
She was at the city. Her name was Juliana. She told you she was
|
|
not a prostitute of the carnival, merely a worker for it. Her job was
|
|
mostly in setting up the carnival, and so she had some time off, time
|
|
she usually spent in whatever city the carnival was in, looking
|
|
around, experiencing. She was young, and not unpretty, although not
|
|
of the caliber required for the prostitutes and sex-slaves but to you
|
|
she was perfect. What you and her shared that night was greater than
|
|
any pleasure you have since had. You shared tenderness, you exposed
|
|
your soul to her, and she to you. And for the first time in your
|
|
life, you believed yourself to be happy. You cared for her, damn it!
|
|
You cared for her in the few weeks that you were together. You spent
|
|
most of your time with her and when the call to return to the academy
|
|
for classes and training came, you disobeyed it.
|
|
|
|
And then it had come. A subtle change in the way she acted
|
|
towards you, the way she spoke to you. Almost unnoticeable, but you
|
|
noticed it. You felt her love for you deteriorate step by step, while
|
|
you tried to wish away the hour you knew would come, tried to tell
|
|
yourself it was just a passing phase. You remember the moment when
|
|
you came back to the apartment she was renting. She told you that
|
|
night that she had loved another man. A man of the carnival. The
|
|
carnival was leaving, and so was she. She didn't want to see you any
|
|
more. She was a wanderer, she didn't want to stay put for any length
|
|
of time. Many other things were said, many more excuses. All you
|
|
could think of was how she had used you, how horribly insensitive she
|
|
was to you, how much you had given to her and how she was now repaying
|
|
you, with her brutal farewell. You remember running back to the
|
|
academy, to lick your wounds, to nurse your hate. They reaccepted
|
|
you. No reason was grave enough to give up a potential soldier. And
|
|
a soldier was what they got.
|
|
|
|
The image of her in your mind is skewed now, distorted, enhanced
|
|
by the images of other, lesser women. Women with expressions of blind
|
|
terror frozen into their faces, just like the woman you even now leave
|
|
in the alley. In a very real way, all of those women are and were
|
|
Juliana. All of them.
|
|
|
|
|
|
* * *
|
|
|
|
|
|
The field has turned a deep auburn color now. Still the grass is
|
|
thick, but many of the strands are dry and brittle. Now as you run
|
|
back towards the school the strands break under your feet, sometimes
|
|
causing pain. The sky, formerly a deep shade of blue, now appears
|
|
gray. Huge black clouds move fast and silently over the darkened
|
|
land. Strong winds have begun to blow in from the south. Already you
|
|
can feel the first drops of the storm impacting on top of your tousled
|
|
mop of hair. The other children are already there, waiting for you,
|
|
calling to you, calling from safety, along with the worried teachers.
|
|
"Hurry up, Phil!" they shout plaintively. "The storm's coming! Get
|
|
inside quick!" Or maybe the voices come from inside. The schoolhouse
|
|
seems so very far away.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
You walk several meters down the street from where the opening to
|
|
the alleyway lies when the lights come on. From above, from the huge
|
|
form of the zeppelin, there is light; a bright white light, a magical
|
|
light. You try to look up, but the zeppelin is too bright to look at
|
|
directly. Like the sun. Like the truth. It leaves a shadow on your
|
|
vision that never seems to completely clear. You feel a slight
|
|
brushing against your mind, a signal that the Psycho-Symphony has
|
|
started its epic concert. Still, you make no move to cut out your
|
|
shield. You've seen her now. There she is! Walking out of that
|
|
residence! This time you'll have her. This time she can't escape
|
|
your savage passions.
|
|
|
|
Now another woman lies dead in a thirty-fourth floor hallway,
|
|
slumped against one wall. This is the third for this night, and still
|
|
it is the first ever. Again, the look of crazed terror on her face.
|
|
Again, the clean burn-hole bisecting her frontal lobe perfectly. The
|
|
effect is enhanced by the bright light streaming down through the
|
|
picture window from the zeppelin, giving all objects in sight a
|
|
day-glow luminescence. Still, you love her.
|
|
|
|
Skulking out of the residence, pistol still hot from the last
|
|
shot, you glimpse, out of the corner of your eye, an ambulance drone
|
|
carrying another one of this night's victims along with several other
|
|
corpses you don't recognize. It appears you aren't the only one who's
|
|
been busy this night. Far from it. It's the way it always is at
|
|
carnival time. Some corner of your mind reaches out to these other
|
|
murderers, leaving a trail of dead flesh just as you do. You feel,
|
|
somehow, that you are all kin, a brotherhood. But this feeling is
|
|
soon wiped clean from your mind by the all-pervasiveness of the new
|
|
dose of the drug. You must kill again, for only in killing can your
|
|
passions be consummated. Your carnal excitement reaches a fever
|
|
pitch. Not thinking of your own safety, only of your purpose, you
|
|
reach for your pistol, tooking out across the crowded square for a
|
|
target; any target.
|
|
|
|
"Phil? Phil Miller?" The voice shatters your concentration like
|
|
a brick thrown through a plate-glass window. You turn, hand still
|
|
gripping the pistol in its shoulder holster. At first, you can't make
|
|
out who or what... and then there she is. "It's Juliana. You do
|
|
remember me, don't you? I know it's been a long time, but when I saw
|
|
your name come up on the city pass list, I just had to go looking for
|
|
you. You all right?"
|
|
|
|
You're not. You're frozen in stark terror. You can feel the
|
|
blood drain from your face, your pupils dilate. It can't be! Your
|
|
grip on the pistol is greater than ever.
|
|
|
|
"You OK Phil? Oh dear! I seem to have given you quite a shock!
|
|
Maybe I should have left well enough alone... Want to sit down or
|
|
something?"
|
|
|
|
If you hear her at all, it is merely as a shadow, as all of those
|
|
other women were merely shadows of this goddess that stands before you
|
|
now. Juliana, how could I profane you so? The words only appear in
|
|
your head, but to you they are real. You pull the pistol slowly out
|
|
of its holster.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The storm is raging full force now. Rain batters at the
|
|
schoolhouse windows and roof, propagating waves of sound that
|
|
reverberate throughout the cinderblock classrooms. As much as you
|
|
tell yourself that the building will stand under this punishment, and
|
|
as much as the teachers reassure you, you can't help thinking that the
|
|
world is on the verge of collapse. The wars in Asia and Africa seem
|
|
to grow nearer every day. The blockades in South America are causing
|
|
more and more controversy. The government, torn apart and dominated
|
|
by huge corporations, holds no answer, no hope. Somewhere in your
|
|
mind, you realize that most of your thoughts now are in retrospect,
|
|
looking back on that day with the point of view of someone who's been
|
|
through it, but the image is still real. The blinding flash far on
|
|
the horizon. The rush for the underground shelters. The horrible,
|
|
horrible noise. These are real memories, no phantoms. The death.
|
|
Only the death is unreal. It could not be realized by even the
|
|
oldest, wisest minds, and certainly it could not be realized by a
|
|
child.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
"Phil, no! no!" She rushes at you but it is too late. Your
|
|
enhanced motor functions bring your pistol to bear on your target with
|
|
deadly accuracy, and in a split second, the weapon is fired, muzzle
|
|
pointed squarely at your own forehead. Seemingly in slow motion, you
|
|
see the plasma bolt come racing towards you. Your last coherent
|
|
vision is of Juliana's eyes, older eyes, wiser eyes, open eyes.
|
|
Crying eyes. Crying for you or crying for the world that has come to
|
|
this; for mankind?
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Still, the savage winds of the shock wave blow over the small
|
|
school house, a harbinger of an ever darkening future.
|
|
|
|
|
|
---------------------------------------------------
|
|
Dan Appelquist is a Cognitive Science major at
|
|
Carnegie Mellon University. He also takes classes
|
|
in film studies in an attempt to broaden his
|
|
horizons. In his spare time, he VP's the KGB,
|
|
publishes his own magazine (Quanta), takes care of
|
|
his kitten Emma, and reads newsgroups of
|
|
questionable merit. He wrote "Winds" after the
|
|
breakup of a previous relationship. "If it sounds
|
|
a bit depressing," Dan says, it is because he was
|
|
"going through a LIVING HELL!"
|
|
---------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Fundamentally Switzerland
|
|
By Barbara Weitbrecht
|
|
IRMSS100@SIVM.BITNET
|
|
======================================================================
|
|
|
|
The black dress was not dirty, but Margaret dropped it down the
|
|
cleaning chute as soon as she removed it. She climbed into the
|
|
bathtub and soaked, water as hot as she could stand. At last she
|
|
drained the tub, wrapped herself in her warmest bathrobe and made a
|
|
pot of tea. When it was poured and steaming she opened her purse and
|
|
took out the funeral program.
|
|
|
|
The cover was a tasteful photograph of stars over a quiet sea and
|
|
a few lines from "home is the sailor." Inside was the order of
|
|
service, a list of hymns, a short biography and a recent publicity
|
|
photograph. Nothing in it seemed to have anything to do with Paul.
|
|
There was no mention of suicide.
|
|
|
|
The telephone was ringing. Margaret crumpled the program and
|
|
dropped it in the waste chute. She picked up the receiver before the
|
|
third ring.
|
|
|
|
"Yes?" she said. "Oh, Andrea, hello!" She looked across the room
|
|
at the calendar, where a date three weeks ahead was circled in black.
|
|
"Yes, it was a lovely service .... Your roses were beautiful .... I
|
|
thought so too .... No, I went alone. I'm sorry you couldn't get
|
|
back in time. How is Japan?"
|
|
|
|
A longer pause. "No, I suppose they didn't. It happened on
|
|
Wednesday. He was working on his new novel. The machine was still on
|
|
when they found him. He shot himself through the head. He hadn't
|
|
even taken off his harness." Margaret was surprised how calmly she
|
|
could relate this. "No, he didn't leave a note. There was no clue in
|
|
the tape. No one knows why he did it."
|
|
|
|
Damn him, Margaret thought. I always hated his gun collection.
|
|
And his war books-- "It was a new Constantin Falcon adventure.
|
|
Something about gold and white slavery in the banana republics. He
|
|
was on the second draft." She stiffened. "I wouldn't know, Andrea. I
|
|
suppose you could contact his attorney."
|
|
|
|
Now she relaxed again, speaking as one professional to another.
|
|
"Yes, I'll have it in the rough tape by the end of the month .... No,
|
|
I can work on it. I lost a few days, of course .... No, I'm fine
|
|
now. In fact, the work should do me good." She smiled at the reply.
|
|
"Yes, Andrea .... No, Andrea .... I'll see you later, Andrea.
|
|
Goodbye."
|
|
|
|
Damn the bastard for killing himself, she thought, and the tears
|
|
finally came. Why the hell should it hurt so much? It's been over a
|
|
year since we split up. We just meet at authors' parties, chat over
|
|
drinks. It's all so fucking civilized.
|
|
|
|
She cinched her robe tighter, picked up her tea and walked to the
|
|
study. The composing machine took up nearly half the room. It was
|
|
the one she had used for 23 years, bulky with banks of flickering
|
|
lights and trembling meters. She had to be half technician to operate
|
|
it. But the new machines were less sensitive--
|
|
|
|
She was starting self-hypnosis as she sat and pulled on the
|
|
receiving harness. She pasted the pickups over the acupuncture
|
|
meridians, tightened the headband, clipped the ground wires to her
|
|
earposts. She smiled at her reflection in the window, strapped and
|
|
metal-studded and umbilical-wired like a character in one of her space
|
|
fantasies.
|
|
|
|
She was adjusting knobs, choosing the tape. She recited her
|
|
mantras for this novel, entering the mood. "Fundamentally
|
|
Switzerland. So small against the immensity. The high proud terror
|
|
of the snows." She settled into the chair and played the familiar
|
|
switches, advancing the tape to the roughed-in chapter. "Margot flees
|
|
to the pass. The pass -- the "col" -- is haven. Escape from Italy.
|
|
Switzerland. Premonition of the final terror." Should I record from
|
|
the start? She decided to view for a while, as if she were audience.
|
|
|
|
Now, belted and strapped like a spaceman she descends, counting
|
|
downward through the three stages of sleep. She has reached eyelid
|
|
catalepsy, she drains her arm of feeling, then fills it with light.
|
|
Far away as in a dream she feels it levitate. When it reaches her
|
|
face it drops and she enters the story.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Blue sky, cloudless and cold, dark with high altitudes.
|
|
Featureless--a sudden pain at the sun, overexposed--drops back to blue
|
|
and below, mountains. These are white mountains, sharp ice edges
|
|
against the void. A sudden cold, as if wind blows from the ice. In
|
|
the cold a subtle undertone, a terror, a premonition or a nostalgia.
|
|
|
|
Margaret, surprised, decides that last mood flicker must be
|
|
removed. This novel has nothing to do with nostalgia.
|
|
|
|
The view drops from ice to rock, then down dark forest slopes.
|
|
Below is the road, two lanes, old blacktop, white dashed line. It
|
|
clings to the mountain in vertiginous switchbacks, fades into blue
|
|
haze far below. On the road two cars crawl about two turns apart, as
|
|
if linked by invisible string.
|
|
|
|
We descend rapidly toward the red Chevy convertible, white
|
|
leather top open, a starlike reflection off the paint. A glance
|
|
behind at the gray Mercedes, sharklike, implacable. Now we are in the
|
|
car, a disembodied viewer in the passenger seat. Margot, who is
|
|
driving, looks over her shoulder at the Mercedes two turns below.
|
|
Fear flickers about her mouth. She controls the shudder, tries to get
|
|
more speed from the red convertible. The car skids on a tight turn.
|
|
A quick glance at the blue depths below, a shudder of fear.
|
|
|
|
We pass an Italian mile-post. It is sixty-five kilometers to the
|
|
Swiss border. Margot's mouth silently forms the words "sixty-five
|
|
kilometers." She looks up toward the col. (Segue here--pass, col,
|
|
Ramuz, Switzerland.) Our gaze follows hers. We know that the top of
|
|
the pass is the Swiss border and safety.
|
|
|
|
Our gaze lingers on the far snowfields after Margot's has
|
|
returned to the road. The cold returns, now mixed with Margot's fear.
|
|
(Is the nostalgia still there?)
|
|
|
|
Margaret decides to take control. Far away, in a dream of
|
|
flickering lights and trembling needles, her wired hand moves to a
|
|
switch, presses it. Tape reels revolve silently. The mountains
|
|
heave, then stabilize. The landscape is the same. But now she is
|
|
creating it, wandering invisible in circuits of brainlike complexity
|
|
half a mile below the publishing house. She feels the potent joy of
|
|
creation.
|
|
|
|
Margaret sharpens a mountain peak. She defines the line of the
|
|
road where it crosses the snowfields, gray on white. With the
|
|
landscape in order she turns to her heroine.
|
|
|
|
Now that they are recording, Margot is aware of Margaret's
|
|
presence. But she does not turn yet, still in character. "The woman
|
|
menaced." Very good, thinks Margaret, studying her expression. Just
|
|
the right touch of brave resolve over the fear. Margot reaches back
|
|
and touches her hair where it is held by the clip, an almost
|
|
unconscious gesture of vanity or bravado. She glances back at the
|
|
gray Mercedes. It is no closer.
|
|
|
|
"Good morning." says Margaret.
|
|
|
|
Margot relaxes and smiles. "Good morning, Margaret. Are you all
|
|
right?"
|
|
|
|
Margaret frowns, says "Well enough. Why do you ask?"
|
|
|
|
Margot looks at her strangely. "Andrea was here this morning.
|
|
She left a note for you in the glove compartment."
|
|
|
|
Margaret finds it:
|
|
|
|
Great feel to the last chapter. Keep up the good work
|
|
We're all pulling for you, kid. Love, Andrea.
|
|
|
|
Margaret smiles. "Did you read this?" Margot nods. "Someone I
|
|
once loved has killed himself. Paul Constant. He was a composer
|
|
too."
|
|
|
|
"He created Constantin Falcon, didn't he?"
|
|
|
|
"Of course you remember him. I had forgotten our joint story."
|
|
Margaret blushed. "I had always sort of hoped we could do another.
|
|
That one was very popular."
|
|
|
|
"Well, I enjoyed it."
|
|
|
|
Margaret stares at her character. My god, she acts so real
|
|
sometimes.
|
|
|
|
She remembers their first and only collaboration. In the first
|
|
delights of mutual lust, they had created New Orleans brothels,
|
|
unspoiled Pacific islands, mad gallops over the Arabian desert under
|
|
the lurid moon. When they finally settled on a plot they had edited
|
|
out all the sex scenes and left only the romance. The emotional
|
|
undertones had required more skillful, professional editing before
|
|
Andrea would release it. "We are NOT a porno house!" she stated,
|
|
tapping her pencil.
|
|
|
|
("I'll write her into my next as Queen Victoria," Paul had
|
|
whispered.)
|
|
|
|
"I'm glad Andrea dropped in. Margot, let's try to finish up the
|
|
chase to the pass today. I think we can keep the main action and
|
|
views we blocked in last week, and work on emotions."
|
|
|
|
Margot frowned. "I still think the action is a little weak.
|
|
Maybe we could leave it open for improv, see what turns up. We can
|
|
always use the backup tape if it doesn't work."
|
|
|
|
"Well, it is a little trite. Why not?" Margaret trusts the part
|
|
of herself that has created Margot, that is Margot. Paul always kept
|
|
the Falcon on a tight leash, a wooden puppet. ("Hell, woman! All the
|
|
people want is action! The other stuff is all literature." Half
|
|
ironically, half meaning it.)
|
|
|
|
Margot returns to the script, squeezing every ounce of power from
|
|
the red convertible. Vertiginous views, spraying gravel, the smell of
|
|
hot brakes. Margot's fear, more insistent, a hint of her thoughts. A
|
|
memory image--golden sunset, Claude handing her the white packet by
|
|
the Grand Canal. "They'll kill for this, love," he had said. Now
|
|
they are trying. The road again, the pass still far away, white on
|
|
blue. Near panic, then control. The high snows brood over all,
|
|
fundamentally Switzerland.
|
|
|
|
Margaret notices the mountains sagging. That's a hazard of full
|
|
recording, not depending on the tape. Your attention wanders, things
|
|
change. Stream of consciousness takes over. Objects have emotional
|
|
undertones. It can save a tired story or ruin it. She plumps the
|
|
mountains up again, but the peaks seem softer, as if the ice were
|
|
melting.
|
|
|
|
Another turn. The scream of tires on gravel echoes the silent
|
|
scream in Margot's head. Good effect. We'll keep it.
|
|
|
|
She hears Margot gasp.
|
|
|
|
The gray Mercedes has crept up a hundred yards. There is now
|
|
barely a switchback between them. Too early! thinks Margaret. But
|
|
let it be, maybe it will tighten the pacing. Margot pulls ahead
|
|
slowly, regains the lost space. Another turn, a skid near the edge.
|
|
Too close--we made it! Relief, then remembering, the fear again. The
|
|
road turns up a glacial valley and the ground becomes nearly level.
|
|
Dense forest blocks their view.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
"The car is boiling over," says Margot.
|
|
|
|
"That's not in the script."
|
|
|
|
"It's doing it anyway." The gauge needle is well into the red
|
|
zone. Margaret tries to will it down.
|
|
|
|
"I suppose the radiator would have boiled if we had been driving
|
|
this hard," she says. "Damn it, I keep forgetting about old cars.
|
|
Margot, I'm going to make a fork in the road ahead. Take the left
|
|
road. I'll get the Mercedes to take the wrong fork."
|
|
|
|
It is hackneyed, but she doesn't know what else to do. Margot
|
|
can't flee on foot in this country. Nor can she have a shoot-out with
|
|
the men in the gray Mercedes. That can't come until the end, five
|
|
chapters away, in a speedboat on Lake Constance. "Maybe there can be
|
|
a small dirt road over a different pass, known only to local
|
|
farmers...?" (Trite! You're getting old, Margaret!)
|
|
|
|
Or maybe I should give Margot a better car. It would mean
|
|
retaping most of the chapter, but we could salvage a lot-- The
|
|
intersecting road appears. The tires squeal as Margot swings suddenly
|
|
to the left, a quick decision.
|
|
|
|
Good touch, thinks Margaret. Maybe this will work out after all.
|
|
|
|
"There's a gas station ahead," says Margot. "I'm stopping."
|
|
There is, indeed, a small building with a sign that says PETROL, red
|
|
letters on white.
|
|
|
|
Is that right? Margaret wonders. She changes the word to
|
|
GAZOLIN, then ESSENCE, but it still looks wrong. I'll research it
|
|
later, she decides. She pulls out her notebook (and far away a second
|
|
tape revolves.)
|
|
|
|
Ask A. re: "gas" Ital. Switz., ca. 1967. Photos?
|
|
|
|
Margot pulls up beside the pumps. The mechanic lifts the hood
|
|
and begins spraying water on the erupting radiator. "Won't that crack
|
|
the engine block?"
|
|
|
|
Margot smiles. "Trust me. Let's go in and have a cup of
|
|
coffee."
|
|
|
|
Margaret notices the little restaurant beside the gas station.
|
|
The white neon sign in the window spells CAFE ANTARCTICA.
|
|
(Antarctica?!) "Why not? I need time to think."
|
|
|
|
The two women sit near the window. Outside, trees sway in the
|
|
wind from the pass. Above them the mountains look soft and
|
|
vulnerable, like ice cream.
|
|
|
|
In the station lot, the mechanic is doing something to their
|
|
engine with a large wrench.
|
|
|
|
Margaret hooks her arm over the back of the chair and looks
|
|
around the cafe. "Don't they heat this place?" Her breath fogs the
|
|
air. The walls are brushed steel, the white linoleum floor spotless
|
|
as a hospital. On the tabletop, which is a mirror, are a transparent
|
|
vase and one white rose. The sign in the window, seen from the rear,
|
|
is reflected around it in puddles of white light. CAFE ANTARCTICA,
|
|
reversed and inverted.
|
|
|
|
Why Antarctica? All that goddamn snow. I'm freezing. What's my
|
|
subconscious up to today? Margaret shivers, hugs herself. Margot
|
|
silently offers her a sweater.
|
|
|
|
The waitress has come. Expressionless, white as a nurse, eyes
|
|
hidden by mirrored sunglasses. Her hair flames bright as a rainbow, a
|
|
shaggy cut dyed orange, blue and golden.
|
|
|
|
"Two coffees, one black, one with cream." It is Margot who
|
|
orders. Margaret stares at their reflections in the table top. Her
|
|
heroine, dark and slim, smooths her immaculate hair. Margaret's own
|
|
image is large and blondish, visibly middle-aged. She feels worn out.
|
|
Her shoulders ache. She cannot find her comb. She tries to recapture
|
|
the mood of the novel, repeats her mantras. "Fundamentally
|
|
Switzerland. Facing the immensity alone. Riding like a falcon above
|
|
fear. Death in the high proud snows." When she reopens her eyes the
|
|
coffee has come.
|
|
|
|
Horribly, it comes in clear glass mugs. The steam rises above
|
|
the cups and sinks into the depths of the mirrored table. The
|
|
reflections of the ceiling lights look like stars. She sips slowly.
|
|
Calm. Be calm. You are in control. This your world, your self.
|
|
Fundamentally--
|
|
|
|
Outside, the mountains roll past in stately progression like
|
|
waves on a peaceful sea. The trees sway in the wind like seaweed.
|
|
Warped reflections from the ice fields dancing on the walls are like
|
|
the surface of water seen from beneath. As a drowning man might see
|
|
it. Once again the cold washes over her, and with it the strange
|
|
nostalgia. She knows what it is now. It is depression, nostalgia for
|
|
sleep.
|
|
|
|
So this is what I had in mind, Margaret thinks. I had thought
|
|
this novel would be fundamentally Switzerland. I wanted high proud
|
|
mountains over pastures, domesticated immensity. Images taken from
|
|
the novelist Ramuz: cows climbing to fragile summer meadows, the
|
|
threat of avalanche, fear overcome by stolid courage. Margot,
|
|
exhausted by her pursuit from Italy, would meet this hardy courage and
|
|
make it her own.
|
|
|
|
But instead it is becoming Antarctica. I hate Antarctica. The
|
|
snow there is dead snow. It has been there since before there were
|
|
men. The horror of frozen mountains under strange stars. Green
|
|
witch-lights dancing in the night that lasts all winter. Blank white
|
|
silence or wind howling in the dark. The sleep of a land with no hope
|
|
of waking.
|
|
|
|
What the hell, perhaps I should scrap the whole thing and make an
|
|
adventure story. One man alone on a snowfield with solitude and
|
|
death. Wolves howl under the northern lights. He's already eaten all
|
|
the sled dogs. Death by freezing. They say it feels warm, sinking
|
|
down to sleep.
|
|
|
|
I wonder how Paul--
|
|
|
|
Goddamn it, I know depression when I see it. Occupational
|
|
hazard. Snap out of it!
|
|
|
|
You're just tired, babe. Mistake to work today. Take the week
|
|
off and fly to Hawaii.
|
|
|
|
Or maybe--
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The cafe door opens. The young man who enters is, even before
|
|
introductions, unmistakably a reporter. He tips his hat back on his
|
|
sandy hair, shakes out his plaid sport coat. "Wind's rising!" he
|
|
announces. "Are you Margaret Norris?"
|
|
|
|
Where'd I get him? Margaret wonders. He looks like something
|
|
from a 'forties film.
|
|
|
|
"Sorry, ma'am. Of course I know who you are. I came here to
|
|
meet you. But you're probably wondering if I'm real or something you
|
|
improv'ed." He extends his hand. "Joe Jackson from the Chronicle.
|
|
We're doing a feature on famous composers and I thought it would be
|
|
great to do an interview on-line, as it were..."
|
|
|
|
"How the hell did you get into my novel?"
|
|
|
|
He smiles and pulls up a chair. "Coffee, black!" he shouts over
|
|
his shoulder. "Oh, I have literary ambitions myself. Taking a
|
|
composing class out at City College. I've done a little computer
|
|
stuff before and -- well, I just hacked my way into your account.
|
|
Hope you don't mind."
|
|
|
|
His coffee has arrived. "Thanks, miss. Great hair. You see,
|
|
ma'am, I've always been sort of a fan of yours. And I thought, Joe,
|
|
this is your chance of a lifetime. You can actually be IN a Margaret
|
|
Norris. See the master in action. Will you do an interview?"
|
|
|
|
He's real all right. I couldn't possibly have invented this.
|
|
"All right," she agrees. "But frankly I'm having a lousy day. Just
|
|
keep it short. And don't ever do this again, or I'll call the cops."
|
|
|
|
"Thanks, Ms. Norris!" Relieved. Not a bad kid, just a bit of a
|
|
nerd. He turns on his tape recorder and sets it on the mirror among
|
|
the mugs.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Q. Ms. Norris, a lot of our viewers have asked us, and
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frankly I'm curious too. How do you put a dream on a disk?
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A. That's a good question. You need an engineer to answer
|
|
it for you. But basically, and I'm probably getting
|
|
some of this wrong, the dream is never really on the
|
|
disk. There's too much data. The disk just holds the
|
|
addresses of the real images, which are stored in a very
|
|
large computer owned by the publishing house. That's
|
|
why you pay per viewing. You're using computer time.
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Q. Where do you get ideas for all your novels?
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A. Well, I read a lot. Before composing machines became
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so common I wanted to be a writer. The Margot Noel
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series is based on the spy and adventure novels of fifty
|
|
years ago, which is when they are set. Beyond that,
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|
it's hard to describe how it happens. I work from
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|
dreams, sometimes, or waking fantasies. This novel
|
|
started with a few isolated phrases. "The high snows
|
|
of fear" was one, and of course that became the title.
|
|
"Snow" was also slang for cocaine, which is the pivot of
|
|
the plot.
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|
|
(...and the adventure genre tied me closer to Paul, let me be Margot,
|
|
just as he as the Falcon. But the rest of him was a bitter, balding
|
|
little man who drank too much and collected guns. Who shot himself
|
|
through the head three days ago. Just as the rest of me is a
|
|
middle-aged writer manquee'. We never forgave each other that.)
|
|
|
|
Q. Do you base your characters on real people? They seem
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|
so real.
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|
|
A. I don't think you can make them real unless they
|
|
are really part of yourself at some level. Actually,
|
|
after a while characters seem to take on a life of their
|
|
own. It's not just practice. They are partly stored in
|
|
the computer. They get more interesting as you work
|
|
with them.
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|
|
|
Q. Sounds spooky! Aren't you ever afraid they'll take
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over?
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|
A. Well, that's a common plot for horror fantasy, but it
|
|
just doesn't happen. The composing computer is
|
|
incredibly complex, but it doesn't create. It's more
|
|
like a magic mirror from a fairy tale, that shows you
|
|
your greatest hopes and fears.
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|
|
|
(...as if that were any less dangerous. And here I am in a blue funk
|
|
with my mountains melting. Damn, but it's cold here.)
|
|
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|
|
"Thanks for the interview, Ms. Norris. Say, I was wondering...
|
|
but it's an awfully big favor."
|
|
|
|
"What?"
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|
|
|
"Well, like I said, I'm studying to be a composer. And I noticed
|
|
you're having a little trouble with the scenery today. Mind if I fix
|
|
it up a little bit?"
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|
|
Margaret sighs. "Be my guest. I've given up on taping today
|
|
anyway."
|
|
|
|
Beyond the window the mountains are boiling like clouds. The
|
|
reporter stares at them. A snap like a shutter, and they freeze into
|
|
postcard outlines, with the Matterhorn dead center. "Greetings from
|
|
Zermatt" half visible in the lower right-hand corner.
|
|
|
|
Outside, the mechanic has been replacing parts in their engine.
|
|
There are red and yellow rubber things and coiled black hoses. He
|
|
slams the hood down and walks away.
|
|
|
|
"Honestly, I don't think the Matterhorn is visible from here."
|
|
|
|
He shrugs. "It's Switzerland. They'll never notice. Well,
|
|
thanks again. Ciao!"
|
|
|
|
He climbs into his Porsche and starts the motor. Reporter, car
|
|
and postcard mountains vanish in an almost audible click. Logout,
|
|
tape off, power down.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
God, I feel awful, Margaret thinks. I'll have to erase the whole
|
|
chapter, start over from the backup tape or even from Venice. "Margot
|
|
dear," she says, "I really don't feel like working today. Shall we
|
|
take a few days off and start over? Maybe where you leave Claude in
|
|
Venice."
|
|
|
|
Margot pats her hand. "No problem. But we've come so far today,
|
|
perhaps we should walk through to the pass scene, just to get the feel
|
|
of it."
|
|
|
|
Margaret hesitates, then agrees. A rehearsal will make it easier
|
|
later. If only the mountains would stop heaving.
|
|
|
|
"Stop," she whispers, and they freeze back into mountains. But
|
|
they are wrong mountains, more like bedpillows. She sits while Margot
|
|
pays the bill, fighting down feelings that come in waves, a wave of
|
|
nausea, of memories of Paul, of cold, of weariness, that terrible
|
|
nostalgia for sleep.
|
|
|
|
"I'm so tired," she says.
|
|
|
|
"We'll be done soon." They leave the empty cafe. Their car is
|
|
waiting for them. Margot takes the wheel again. Margaret lies back
|
|
in the seat. She closes her eyes. Remember Switzerland.
|
|
Fundamentally....
|
|
|
|
On the road again in the alpine air, Margaret finds she can think
|
|
more clearly. The mountains are almost certainly proper mountains.
|
|
They show no tendency to shift. Perhaps the break at the gas station
|
|
was what the plot needs. A break from the panic. What to use in
|
|
place of the reporter?
|
|
|
|
No matter, this is just a rehearsal. They will drive to the top
|
|
of the pass and walk through the scene there. Then Margaret will go
|
|
home and take a hot bath. A clean flannel nightgown lies across the
|
|
bed, with clean sheets. In a distant dream Margaret senses her body
|
|
waiting patiently at the composing machine, strapped and studded like
|
|
a space explorer. She smiles at it. Hello body. I'm coming home.
|
|
|
|
They are well above the snowline now. Italy has vanished into
|
|
blue mist. A milepost passes. Three kilometers. Another switchback,
|
|
and the col opens around them. Two granite peaks frame a glittering
|
|
saddle of snow, slashed the road to the border. The sky is deep blue
|
|
without clouds. The high mountain wind smells of Switzerland.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Margot steps on the brakes.
|
|
|
|
The gray Mercedes blocks the road. A tall man in a trenchcoat is
|
|
leaning against it, waiting. The sun glares silver on something in
|
|
his hand. His hat is over his eyes.
|
|
|
|
The women get out of the convertible.
|
|
|
|
"Go away," says Margaret. "Go away. We are rehearsing."
|
|
|
|
The man may have nodded. It is hard to tell in the glare of the
|
|
snow.
|
|
|
|
Margot is walking toward him. "Careful, Margot. I'm not sure he
|
|
understands." Margot touches the man's sleeve and they embrace. As he
|
|
turns in the kiss Margaret can see his profile.
|
|
|
|
"Constantin Falcon!" she exclaims. "You're in the wrong novel!"
|
|
|
|
They turn to her together, their arms still touching, the gesture
|
|
of old lovers. (Our gesture!) He raises his gun.
|
|
|
|
This has gone too far. I must wake up!
|
|
|
|
Margaret flees across the snow that lies smooth and clean in all
|
|
directions. It glitters and blinds in the sun. Red specks lie
|
|
scattered over it like drops of blood. Butterflies, dead on the snow.
|
|
She struggles to rise through sleep.
|
|
|
|
But it is so cold. Her body lies passive before the flickering
|
|
lights. She can't seem to focus on awakening. She stumbles, falls
|
|
heavily in the snow.
|
|
|
|
They are standing over her.
|
|
|
|
"Go away! You're just part of my depression! I shouldn't have
|
|
been working today. I was upset about Paul. I just need some rest.
|
|
You aren't real. You can't kill me."
|
|
|
|
"Why not?" asks the Falcon. "We already killed Paul."
|
|
|
|
Margot brushes back a strand of hair. She smiles, revealing
|
|
small, perfect teeth. Like the teeth of a skull.
|
|
|
|
The Falcon laughs. "Shall I shoot her now, Margot?"
|
|
|
|
"No, dear, she doesn't own a gun."
|
|
|
|
Margaret crawls away. She must wake up. She must escape. If I
|
|
can only reach the peak. It's the snow that's killing me. I have to
|
|
reach the rocks. But the rocks are so far away. I can hardly see
|
|
them through the glare.
|
|
|
|
Far and away on all sides the snow lies smooth as a bedsheet.
|
|
The red disks lie scattered like stars, thicker now, more insistent.
|
|
|
|
Behind her, she hears Margot's voice.
|
|
|
|
"Stand up, dear. Walk to the bathroom."
|
|
|
|
She feels her distant body rise, unplug the cords, walk slowly
|
|
across the floor. I must wake up! She struggles through the layers
|
|
of sleep, but they lie heavy on her like water.
|
|
|
|
Far away, in a world not attached to her, she sees her hand open
|
|
the medicine chest, remove the bottle of sleeping pills. Margot's
|
|
voice floats directionless over the snow. "Pour a glass of water.
|
|
Swallow them all. All the pills."
|
|
|
|
She sees it all happening, tiny and clear, as if through an icy
|
|
lens which sits in the back of her head and focuses her thoughts.
|
|
|
|
This is not real. I can control this. I am just in my mind.
|
|
|
|
And in the brainlike computer.
|
|
|
|
No, that is ridiculous. They are not something outside. They
|
|
are not robots, or monsters. They are part of me.
|
|
|
|
But that is the worst of it.
|
|
|
|
I must wake up.
|
|
|
|
She stretches her arm toward the distant rocks, forces her mind
|
|
upwards toward waking. The peak wavers and shrinks. Her hand almost
|
|
merges with that other hand, which holds the bottle. They brush,
|
|
almost catch each other. Then the lens melts.
|
|
|
|
She sags into the snow. It warm under her body. Far away, the
|
|
other body sets down the empty bottle, walks slowly to the bedroom.
|
|
There are clean sheets on the bed. The other Margaret crawls into
|
|
bed, turns over, hugs the pillow.
|
|
|
|
So this is what it is like. I read somewhere that death by
|
|
freezing was like sleep, and warm. Like the sleep after love.
|
|
|
|
Lying here in the snow she can see that the red disks have become
|
|
scattered rose petals. She touches one. It lies in a little hollow
|
|
in the snow, melted by sunlight.
|
|
|
|
Where did I get roses? she thought. I had meant them to be
|
|
butterflies.
|
|
|
|
|
|
---------------------------------------------------
|
|
Barbara Weitbrecht is a marine biologist by
|
|
training, a computer specialist by profession, and
|
|
an artist and writer by avocation. She is
|
|
currently living in Washington D.C., and working at
|
|
the Smithsonian Institution, where she is trying to
|
|
persuade Smithsonian employees to communicate with
|
|
each other using PROFS. She would much rather be
|
|
back in San Francisco.
|
|
---------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
QQQQQ tt
|
|
QQ QQ tttttt
|
|
QQ QQ uu uu aaaa nnnn tt aaaa
|
|
QQ QQ uu uu aa aa nn nn tt aa aa
|
|
QQ QQ uu uu aa aa nn nn tt aa aa
|
|
QQQQQQ uuu aaaaa nn nn tt aaaaa
|
|
QQQ
|
|
______________________________________
|
|
|
|
A Journal of Fact, Fiction and Opinion
|
|
______________________________________
|
|
|
|
Quanta is an electronically distributed magazine of science fiction.
|
|
Published monthly, each issue contains short fiction, articles and
|
|
editorials by authors around the world and across the net. Quanta
|
|
publishes in two formats: straight ascii and PostScript* for
|
|
PostScript compatible printers. To subscribe to Quanta, or just to
|
|
get more info, send mail to:
|
|
|
|
da1n@andrew.cmu.edu
|
|
r746da1n@cmuccvma.bitnet
|
|
|
|
Quanta is a relatively new magazine but is growing fast, with over
|
|
three hundred subscribers to date from nine different countries.
|
|
Electronic publishing is the way of the future. Become part of that
|
|
future by subscribing to Quanta today.
|
|
|
|
*PostScript is a registered trademark of Adobe Systems Incorporated.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/
|
|
DDDDD ZZZZZZ //
|
|
D D AAAA RRR GGGG OOOO NN N Z I NN N EEEE ||
|
|
D D A A R R G O O N N N Z I N N N E ||
|
|
-=========================================================+<OOOOOOOOO>|)
|
|
D D AAAA RRR G GG O O N N N Z I N N N E ||
|
|
DDDDD A A R R GGGG OOOO N NN ZZZZZZ I N NN EEEE ||
|
|
\\
|
|
\
|
|
The Magazine of the Dargon Project Editor: Dafydd <White@DUVM>
|
|
|
|
DargonZine is an electronic magazine printing stories written for
|
|
the Dargon Project, a shared-world anthology similar to (and inspired
|
|
by) Robert Asprin's Thieves' World anthologies, created by David
|
|
"Orny" Liscomb in his now retired magazine, FSFNet. The Dargon Project
|
|
centers around a medieval-style duchy called Dargon in the far reaches
|
|
of the Kingdom of Baranur on the world named Makdiar, and as such
|
|
contains stories with a fantasy fiction/sword and sorcery flavor.
|
|
DargonZine is (at this time) only available in flat-file,
|
|
text-only format. For a subscription, please send a request via MAIL
|
|
to the editor, Dafydd, at the userid White@DUVM.BitNet. This request
|
|
should contain your full userid (logonid and node, or a valid internet
|
|
address) as well as your full name. InterNet (all non-BitNet sites)
|
|
subscribers will receive their issues in Mail format. BitNet users
|
|
have the option of specifying the file transfer format you prefer
|
|
(either DISK DUMP, PUNCH/MAIL, or SENDFILE/NETDATA). Note: all
|
|
electronic subscriptions are Free!
|