3242 lines
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3242 lines
130 KiB
Plaintext
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InterText Vol. 10, No. 1 / Spring 2000
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Contents
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Drifters..........................................Barney Currer
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Moral Minority......................................Ceri Jordan
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Passing the Torch...................................John Gerner
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Something in Between...........................Gary Cadwallader
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What I Found........................................Greg Durham
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....................................................................
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Editor Assistant Editor
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Jason Snell Geoff Duncan
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<jsnell@intertext.com< <geoff@intertext.com>
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....................................................................
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Submissions Panelists:
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John Coon, Pat D'Amico, Darby M. Dixon, Joe Dudley,
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Diane Filkorn, Morten Lauritsen, Bruce Ligget, Rachel Mathis,
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Heather Timer, Lee Anne Smith, Jason Snell, Jake Swearingen
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....................................................................
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Send correspondence to <editors@intertext.com> or
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<intertext@intertext.com>
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....................................................................
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InterText Vol. 10, No. 1. InterText (ISSN 1071-7676) is
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published electronically on a bi-monthly basis. Reproduction of
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this magazine is permitted as long as the magazine is not sold
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(either by itself or as part of a collection) and the entire
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text of the issue remains unchanged. Copyright 2000 Jason Snell.
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All stories Copyright 2000 by their respective authors. For more
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information about InterText, send a message to
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<info@intertext.com>. For submission guidelines, send a message
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to <guidelines@intertext.com>.
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....................................................................
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Drifters by Barney Currer
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============================
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It's always darkest before the dawn.
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Even in outer space.
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....................................................................
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"Ok, we're about to hit," Sean said. "So hold on tight." Eva
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wrapped both arms around her distended belly and leaned into the
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restraining straps. The pegs on their junky little runabout no
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longer lined up with the contacts on the newer spun-off living
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quarters. Linking up meant ramming the patch head-on, then
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hoping one of the contacts would stick and hold. Every link-up
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bashed their vehicle a little bit more, but there was nothing
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much they could do about it.
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On impact a stabilizer fin crumpled. One of Eva's restraining
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straps snapped, jerking her out of the seat in a vicious arc.
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But she held on tight, protecting the fetus, and when Sean cut
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power they were linked up with the most promising jettison
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quarters of them all.
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"Shit, lookit this, Eva. _Ward unit_. This used to belong to the
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fuckin' hospital! It's a fuckin' sign, is what this is! We're
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due for a spin of fuckin' luck!"
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Eva just sat there, lips pressed together, praying for the best.
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The baby was due any moment now. She'd lost count of the days
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and months long ago, when her day-hour correlator busted. It'd
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be so much easier down on planet: sun up, sun down, one day and
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you count them just like that. Out here in the junk ring they'd
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be searching out jettison and she'd see sunup and sundown behind
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planet half a dozen times in ten hours. Her body was the only
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thing knew what time it was, and it wasn't giving any advance
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notice.
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Sean worked the provisions sensor, followed the readout with
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growing excitement. "Lookit here! Contents: Oxygen, ten thousand
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hours; water, five thousand gallons; freeze dry, seven-fifty
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kilos; human inhabitants, nil. No one onboard! Eva! We just hit
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the fuckin' mother lode!" He jumped up from the console and did
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a little dance in the aisle.
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That was the thing about hospital jettison: it always got spun
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off long before it was anywhere near used up. The medical error
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margin. Another drifter had told them about it, early on. Dirty
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and blue-fingered from oxygen deprivation, he'd crawled out of a
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freeze dry locker in an old orbiting crew quarters they'd hooked
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onto. Given the two of them a lot of tips, too. Like how to rig
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up propellant cells to run the oxy unit. How to pulverize freeze
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dry so it needs less cook-up water. How to spot jettison most
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likely to have something left onboard. "A hospital ward unit,
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now that's whatcha want to find," he'd croaked. A dozen hours
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later they'd found him dead, in the locker. How long ago was
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that? Five thousand hours? Six? Memory was getting harder to
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come by.
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The spot they were in now, it was also a luxury. Just getting
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out of the vehicle and into the jettison was a death risk. Eve
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was so big she barely fit in her oxy-suit. It needed splicing at
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the shoulders and knees with their last roll of duct tape.
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During transfer she'd have to float motionless, praying it
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didn't unravel; Sean, who did all the door-dogging and
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pressure-lock busting, needed the tougher suit. All she could do
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was hold her breath, and wait. By now, terror was little more
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than an old familiar ache.
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When she heard the entry door clank shut the ache transformed
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itself into a bulb of joy. She'd be alive a little while longer,
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after all.
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"It's beautiful, Sean, innit?" Everything white and rich and
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clean. Sheets and beds; lights and power and magnegrav that kept
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you from floating helplessly all the time. Even nicer than the
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subsidy quarters back in Industrial Orbit.
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"We'll get a thousand hours outta this place, min." Sean rubbed
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a callused hand over his stubble jaw. "I can scavenge up some
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little jettisons we see come by, empty 'em right into here. This
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could be our home, Eva, and I mean a _home!_"
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When the sun passed behind planet they gorged on freeze dry,
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then took a water shower and climbed between fresh white sheets.
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With gravity, Eve discovered she had to sleep on one side not to
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be suffocated by the baby's weight. It was a little more
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complicated than weightless but in a way she liked it: it let
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her know the little one was really there.
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In the dark Sean said to her, "We ain't gonna always be junk
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ring drifters. We're better than that, we are. I could retrain.
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I mean, I'm willing to retrain and that's half the battle,
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innit? I'd start out for three grand an hour. I mean, depending
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on the opportunity. I'd work for three grand, sure. It ain't so
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much the money so much as it's... getting back control of your
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own life, you know?
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It was a comfort for her, hearing him talking like this again.
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In all the thousands of hours they'd spent drifting he'd grown
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frighteningly silent. Brooding. Sometimes she was afraid he
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blamed her for what had happened. Or blamed the baby. Everything
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had started to go sour from the moment she found out she was
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preggers. Until then things had been -- well, if not perfect
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then comfortable enough for what they were used to. And that was
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life as zero-grav assemblers on the Industrial Orbit.
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They'd both been born to it. Eva hadn't been planetside in her
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life, although she knew it from videos. Same with Sean. Just a
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couple of I-orbit yokels who bought the company line about
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loyalty and letting management take care of you. The two of them
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had met on the line, fitting five-kilo spheroids. He'd taken her
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out to a beer party at the Level 5 hall and shown her off to all
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his pals and the next thing she knew the date was set. Everybody
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their age was doing pretty much the same thing.
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For a while they rented subsidy, outboard of the factory. Living
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near Sean's pals, commuting to work in a little second-hand
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runabout Sean had gotten from his uncle. They did sex games at
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home and watched video and life seemed to be going OK. Next she
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was standing at the shift boss's desk: "Sorry, Eva, but we're
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putting through some new production techniques that have made
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you, uh, redundant." The flash of nausea that washed over her
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was not from the bad news -- as she'd thought -- but from the
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baby. When Sean came home fifty hours later and told her the
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news about his own layoff she was in the bathroom being sick.
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Things came apart faster than she could have imagined. They
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hadn't saved; nobody in Assembly ever did. Sean wasn't about to
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work for less than seven grand an hour, which was what all his
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Level 5 pals were getting. Then they were behind in the rent and
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the power was being cut off. Eva couldn't quite believe what was
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happening even when they were packing what they had left in the
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vehicle. They had to go somewhere: another factory, other
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housing. Somewhere. They weren't going to be living out of a
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beat-up orbit commuter with a hundred thousand hours on it.
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Even when they slipped I-orbit and picked up the junk ring it
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didn't seem possible, what they were doing. Only when the
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blue-fingered derelict crawled out of the freeze dry and babbled
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at them and died and began to stink did it begin to sink in. And
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it sunk in deep.
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In their first ten hours onboard, she almost lost Sean for good.
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He'd been spending time by her bedside at the window, watching
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for jettison with salvage potential. Sean spotted an abandoned
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transient crew quarters, and was into his oxy-suit and out the
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hatch almost before she could stir from bed.
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The minute the runabout detached from the ward unit she knew he
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was in trouble. A stabilizer fin was completely wiped out. The
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thruster was either banged up or out of fuel. Half the bank came
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on and swung the runabout in a cockeyed circle. He couldn't get
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it to travel in a straight line. Eva watched as that one bank
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flicked on and off, on and off; the runabout wobbled towards the
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TRQ, then nudged back toward the ward unit. It began to occur to
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Eva that the vehicle might be beyond repair. That they'd be
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stuck onboard until Sean managed to fix the runabout. Or made
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contact with some other drifter with transportation. Or until
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the provisions ran out.
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These thoughts were in her mind the instant the runabout shifted
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sideways and slammed the TRQ into the side of the ward unit.
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Spewing air and water supplies made a sparkling haze around the
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runabout. She could see Sean struggling to free the vehicle from
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the debris. Watched him carve a humpbacked path away from the
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bristling metal. Watched him miss the ward unit entirely and
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follow a lazy parabola away from her window.
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Now the vehicle was floating back towards her quarters,
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unpowered. Eva sat up in bed and stared out the window, as if
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the force of concentration could draw it toward her. It did seem
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to be approaching. An hour passed, and another. She would weep
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and scream, grow silent and exhausted, then watch and wait and
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weep and scream all over again.
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She sensed that the shock throbbing through her might bring on
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the baby. The runabout was close enough now for her to see
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Sean's face, ashen and bleeding.
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She would not let herself have the baby now.
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Fifty feet between them. Thrusters flared briefly, swinging it
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in a half-loop towards the contact pad. The jolt from the crash
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nearly shook her out of bed. The power blinked out for a moment,
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then returned. Eva held her breath, listening for oxy leaks. The
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hiss she heard... was from the pressure lock.
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Here was Sean, alive, at her bedside. She took his head in her
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hands and held him, close to the baby. Held the both of them.
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According to the chronometer they'd been onboard 100 hours. To
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conserve power and oxy, they'd spent much of that time sleeping
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with the lights off. Awake, Sean had ransacked the quarters,
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searching for tools. The surgical supply closet was packed with
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forceps, scalpels of every shape and size -- plus stethoscopes,
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sonoscopes, snips, sutures, and a huge array of unknown
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chrome-plated things. Nothing of use in rehabilitating a
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crippled space vehicle. The largest hammer was eight inches long
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and weighed maybe ten ounces. The biggest wrench was good for
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tightening nuts on agurney. He found a trunk full of brand new,
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first-quality oxy-suits, but until there was reason to go
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outside they weren't any more useful than the sonoscopes.
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They were awakened by the sound of a connection being made
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outside. No crude ram-and-jam: a legitimate four-peg link.
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Sean climbed warily from bed. He pulled on a surgery smock and
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advanced to the pressure chamber with the largest scalpel he
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could find. The chamber door opened, and the whole blinking,
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bleating, one-eyed monstrosity trundled in.
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An unmanned remote news gatherer from industrial orbit's Channel
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52 had found them.
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Once the sensing lens picked up evidence of human life the red
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light above the camera transmission lens came on. Over the
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speaker system, distant voices competed with one another. This
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was the unit they dispatched whenever a job was too dangerous or
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too distant for a news crew: one big bristling self-propelled
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electronic vulture.
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"Greetings. This is Channel 52! We're working up a piece on
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drifters on the junk ring. Are you, by chance, a transient in
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these quarters?"
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He could find one of the surgical hammers and bash out its
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lights and lens. But they'd probably just send another.
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"Yeah. Just temporary, this is. I'm an Assembler. I also do
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light spacecraft maintenance." Sean looked into the lens. "We're
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both of us willing to retrain, you know."
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The red light blinked. "We?" Fifty-two asked. "Someone else on
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board with you?"
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"My wife, Eva. She's in bed in the back. Baby's due any day."
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"Baby?" Static rumbled through the speaker. "We'd like to meet
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her! We'd like to talk to you both!"
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Sean pointed the way. The remote news gatherer wheeled past him.
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Painted on its side was a huge plum-and-orange Live at Five
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logo. Its nose-for-news heat sensor guided it to Eva's bedside.
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"Tell us, if you would, a little more about your situation,"
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Fifty-two prompted.
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"We both got laid off within 100 hours of each other," Eva said.
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"And then, well, money got tight..."
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"Fuckin' offed us, is what they did," Sean interrupted. "Fuckin'
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management. The ones with all the juice."
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Fifty-two made the sound of tape being quickly re-run.
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"We weren't sure whether we'd find quarters with enough air and
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food left for me to have my baby. We were just lucky, you know,
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finding a whole hospital ward out here."
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"Yours is a tragic, touching story," Fifty-two said. "We'd like
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to add it to our video reel."
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Sean and Eva looked at each other helplessly. Finally Sean said,
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"Right now?"
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"We're set up for right now. And tell us, how soon do you think
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your child will be born?"
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"Twenty hours. Ten hours. Five minutes. Your guess is as good as
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mine."
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"Who's going to deliver it for you?"
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"Who else the fuck is there but me? I done it once before. With
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my sister-in-law, when she had her kid. I helped tie off the --
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that cord thing, you know? All I hope is nothing goes wrong. You
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got any better ideas?"
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Fifty-two burped electronically, paused, said, "We sympathize
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with your situation, uh..."
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"Sean. Sean Hogan. This here's my wife Eva."
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"Uh, Sean and Eva. But you're right; you're too remote for help
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in less than a hundred hours. Maybe something can be arranged
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for you in the future. For now, we'd like to take a little video
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bite of the two of you here at bedside. And, uh -- Sean? We
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understand the sources of your hostility, believe us. But here's
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a tip: this interview will be so much more _effective_ if you
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can tone down the anger, clean up the language, and project the
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uncertainty and helplessness we know you're feeling right now."
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Sean pursed his lips. He looked down at Eva, contrite, took her
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hand, said, "Well, maybe your news gatherer could stay, until
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after our little one's born, and..."
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"Yes!" Fifty-two enthused. "Yes! What you're projecting just
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now, Sean -- is perfect! Try and hold onto it!"
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"I think I can."
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The completed video bite was a work of art.
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"For most of us here in industrial, the Jettison Orbit -- the
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junk ring -- is an economic fact of life. To some of us, it's an
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ecological blight.
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"To a few of us, it's home."
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From a wide shot of weightless trash in orbit, the camera pulled
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back to reveal a window -- and two homeless wanderers looking
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helplessly out to space.
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"Meet Sean and Eva Hogan. Just a few thousand hours ago, they
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might have been your neighbors. Might have worked your same
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shift. Today they're scavengers, wondering what happens next.
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"Here in segment one of Junk Ring Drifters we'll find out how
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and why Sean and Eva are in this situation.
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"It will make you think. It will make you feel. And it will make
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you weep. But first, these messages."
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Following the commercial break, the RNG established a second
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tableau: Eva propped in bed, her swollen belly visible. Sean at
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bedside, holding her hand. Behind them, the abandoned nurse's
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station. During the voiceover the camera tightened in on the two
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of them.
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"A scene to make most of us smile: a young couple anticipating
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the birth of a child in a maternity ward.
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"Except that we're not in a maternity ward. What was once I-O
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General's Ward 7881 is now a junk ring spin-off. With maybe 300
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hours of oxygen left. One last, desperate refuge for drifters
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Sean and Eva Hogan.
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"Sean, can you tell us what comes next?"
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"Well, we want have the baby here, then stay on as long as
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possible. After things run out here -- I suppose we'll have to
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find our way to some other jettison."
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"And who's actually going to deliver the child?"
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Sean's chin began to tremble; he shrugged his shoulders. The
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camera tightened on his reaction.
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"Me, I suppose. We got no one else. I keep telling myself,
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babies used to come natural all the time, back on planet. I read
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that once, in a book."
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The camera panned down Sean's arm to his hand, linked with
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Eva's, then up to Eva's face.
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"And how do you feel about this, Eva? Frightened?"
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"Yes, a bit." Her eyes welled up with tears; the camera zoomed
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in on them. "Everything'll be right with us, though. I hope it.
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I pray it."
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A cut to the distant tableau of the two of them: "Sean and Eva
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Hogan. Part of a sea of human misery -- all but ignored out here
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on the junk ring.
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"Will their child be born normally? What are their real chances
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for survival? I'll have the answers in segment two of Junk Ring
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Drifters. Until then, this is Fifty-two Remote, reporting from
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Ward 7881, Jettison Orbit.
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"Dave and Wendy, back to you."
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They could hear the howls of delight at the first edited-tape
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rollover.
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"Sean and Eva: that was very, very nice," Fifty-two said. "And
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yes, we definitely want to keep the RNG onsite until after
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whatever happens with the child. There's going to be plenty of
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interest in our followup report."
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"Right," Sean said. "And maybe you could even... have the news
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gatherer uplinked at the time of the birthing...?"
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The sounds of an anxious discussion seeped out of the speaker.
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At last a single voice said, "That would be powerful. But we
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can't be online thirty straight hours waiting for something to
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happen. I suppose we could tap in every six hours -- "
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"I tell you what," Sean said. "I know assembly. I know light
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repairs. You tell me how to do it, I could activate the camera
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from here. Then back-link when the time comes. How about it?"
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"Deal!" Fifty-two said gleefully. "Manual override's in the
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back. Tools in the lockbox to the left. The combination's
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13-right, 23, 31. Check the operating manual in the jacket below
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the camera."
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"Gotcha." Sean fumbled the combination and the box sprung open
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suddenly. Wrenches and screwdrivers bounced on the deck.
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"What you need to do is convert it to manual mode," Fifty-two
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said. "Position the camera where it'll get the best show when
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the moment arrives. Leave it there -- and half-an-hour before
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she's due, back-link to us. Then switch to auto and we'll take
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over from there."
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"Right."
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More buzzing on the line: an argument. Finally, Fifty-two said,
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"Maybe it'd be a good idea to try a rehearsal run-through right
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now. Ready, Sean?"
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"Whenever you are."
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"Oh, and -- Sean? Stay close to that ops manual, will you?
|
|
You're working with our latest generation RNG. Self-propelled,
|
|
heat-seeking, multi-lens, the whole three-trillion package. It's
|
|
must-recover hardware for us, you understand?"
|
|
|
|
"I'll take care of it, don't you worry."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Suddenly, time was very short, and the brand new oxy-suits Sean
|
|
had turned up were worth their weight in gold. He'd told Eva
|
|
their luck was due for a change, and here it was: the stabilizer
|
|
fins matched up exactly with his runabout. Even the bolt holes
|
|
were identical. The propellant came in the same snap-in
|
|
canisters, but with a difference: the RNG's XB-3 packed triple
|
|
the punch of the mouse milk they had been using. The camera even
|
|
had its own detachable gyro.
|
|
|
|
Ten hours of frantic labor. Then, returning through the pressure
|
|
lock after dry-testing the thrust rockets he heard her feebly
|
|
calling his name. Between her legs, the bedding was wet.
|
|
|
|
Forceps. Water. Linens. Sutures. Sean tried not to sweat. The
|
|
RNG jacked over the bed, ogling down through its single
|
|
zoom-lense eye. He had her crack one of the painkillers between
|
|
her teeth and when the contractions started he booted the unit
|
|
and back-linked to the station.
|
|
|
|
"Who the hell is this?" asked an irritated voice (apparently a
|
|
second-shift super). Sean told him.
|
|
|
|
"Seanie, _please_," Eva whimpered. "It's coming. It's coming."
|
|
|
|
"In segment two of Junk Ring Drifters we're going to explore the
|
|
problems of growing a family in spun off carriers. The last time
|
|
we talked with Sean and Eva Hogan they said the baby was due to
|
|
arrive at any moment. As you can see, that moment is now."
|
|
|
|
Sean's total concern narrowed to the liquid white sac slowly
|
|
emerging from the dilated orifice. He was just barely aware of
|
|
Eva's breathing and her moans, the idiotic jabbering from the
|
|
RNG over his shoulder. How slathered and packed in jelly-like
|
|
translucence was this glorious new package; somehow much more
|
|
wonderful than the one he'd seen emerge from his sister-in-law.
|
|
Free of the mother, now, linked only by the lifegiving pink
|
|
cord. He cut it and tied it and slapped the newborn. It was
|
|
awake and screaming now. It was alive, a female. It was his.
|
|
|
|
He brought it to Eva and laid it in her arms. Fifty-two was
|
|
still yammering away. Mechanically, he fetched it from the back
|
|
of the foot of the bed, keyed it tight on the tableau of Eva in
|
|
bed, with the child. "In the wasteland of Jettison Orbit, the
|
|
miracle of human life casts its glow," it was raving.
|
|
|
|
Sean managed a lopsided smile.
|
|
|
|
"Sean, how does fatherhood feel to you?"
|
|
|
|
Rolling his eyes earnestly to the camera, he wagged his head
|
|
back and forth.
|
|
|
|
"It's like I can't describe it. So many feelings are going
|
|
through my head, I mean, all it's like is... I feel wonderful."
|
|
|
|
"Do you have a name picked out?"
|
|
|
|
"If it was a girl I wanted to name her Rosalie. Always fancied
|
|
that name, you know. I'll have to check with Eva, though, and I
|
|
haven't done that yet."
|
|
|
|
Fifty-two made a wisecrack he missed, then asked Eva for her
|
|
reaction.
|
|
|
|
"I love her. Things will work out. We can stay here a while.
|
|
Sean has a plan. I think... we're going to make it."
|
|
|
|
"And Sean, what's next for you and your family?"
|
|
|
|
"Next is getting out of the Junk Ring and back to work. I've
|
|
already got me a firm job offer."
|
|
|
|
"You do?"
|
|
|
|
"Sure. And I want to take this moment to say thank you to
|
|
Channel 52! For offering to start me as your newest Life-At-Five
|
|
Assignments reporter, and most of all, for -- "
|
|
|
|
Again, the sound of tape being rewound frantically. From the
|
|
RNG's speaker came a disappointed voice. "Sean, Sean. We're
|
|
sorry, we're going to have to redo the last twenty seconds,
|
|
here. Starting back to where we cut from Eva."
|
|
|
|
"How come we got to do that?"
|
|
|
|
"Sean, we haven't promised you a position here at the Station."
|
|
|
|
"No, but you're going to."
|
|
|
|
"Hello, Sean? This is Syd Cole. Station manager. Look, even
|
|
though all of us here are extremely sympathetic to your
|
|
situation we're simply in no position to -- "
|
|
|
|
"Right! And I'm in no position to worry about your fuckin'
|
|
three-trillion electronic vulture here after we'd headed off to
|
|
another piece of fuckin' jettison."
|
|
|
|
"That's no problem, Sean. Just back-link control to us and it'll
|
|
fly back on its own."
|
|
|
|
Sean tipped the camera down ninety degrees, to give them a look
|
|
at the stripped base. "Not without thrusters, it won't. Not
|
|
without stabilizers, or fuel. See, we borrowed them things for
|
|
our runabout -- didn't think you'd mind or nothing."
|
|
|
|
Fifty-two sat there regarding itself mutely. The infant made
|
|
little lapping noises at Eva's breast.
|
|
|
|
"We'll send a recovery vehicle, Sean."
|
|
|
|
"Not if I cut off your trace, so you'll never be able to find it
|
|
up here in fifty million fuckin' tons of orbiting space junk!"
|
|
|
|
"Sean -- "
|
|
|
|
"Tell you what." He wrenched the camera back to eye level and
|
|
stared into it. "I'll disassemble this unit, pack it in the
|
|
runabout. I can do that. Maybe cart it back to I-orbit for you."
|
|
|
|
A resigned voice said, "That would be helpful."
|
|
|
|
"And you can't say I don't know about appearing on fuckin'
|
|
video. I done it just the way you wanted, first time out, and it
|
|
worked perfect, dinnit?"
|
|
|
|
"Sean..."
|
|
|
|
"Dinnit?"
|
|
|
|
"Sean..."
|
|
|
|
"We're halfway through segment two and you know you got a
|
|
fuckin' treasure on your hands. Tell you, just clear me through
|
|
the station when we get back and I'll give you a wrap-up that'll
|
|
have `em crying their bleeding eyes out. What do you say?"
|
|
|
|
"Sean, we could take you on as a video tech. That's a
|
|
possibility. But on-air talent's something different. The
|
|
station has an agreement with Equity."
|
|
|
|
"What's Equity?"
|
|
|
|
"It's like a union."
|
|
|
|
"Fuck the fuckin' union. I'll fuckin' join the fuckin' thing.
|
|
I'm already on this fuckin' tear-jerker you're taping so what
|
|
the fuck's the difference?"
|
|
|
|
There was a long pause. "Stand by, Sean."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The wide shot included a tableau of the new father, his arm
|
|
around his wife, the baby at her breast. Their eyes glittered
|
|
with gratitude and relief. As Sean spoke, the camera slowly
|
|
focussed tightly on his careworn face, his gentle eyes.
|
|
|
|
"It's like a dream come true. For Channel 52 to give me this
|
|
opportunity, I don't rightly know what to say."
|
|
|
|
Briefly words stopped as Sean struggled with a throat thick with
|
|
tears. The camera panned to Eva, gazing up towards him with
|
|
reverent dependency, then down to little Rosalie, her alabaster
|
|
head feathered with downy brown hairs.
|
|
|
|
"Sean and I are looking forward to a second chance at life. It
|
|
means so much to the future of little Rosalie."
|
|
|
|
"I know it ain't going to be easy for me, either, at the
|
|
beginning. I never been anything but a working stiff, a guy who
|
|
speaks his mind without hiding what he really feels. But that's
|
|
gonna help me get close to the stories I'll be covering: lives
|
|
of the I-orbit's working class. Robo-techs, welders,
|
|
transporters. Assemblers, like Eva and me. I'll be giving
|
|
viewers a look at what we do. What we want. What we're afraid
|
|
of.
|
|
|
|
"And along the way we'll be giving you updates on Rosalie, as
|
|
she grows up. Seems fair enough -- since all of you helped with
|
|
her birthing.
|
|
|
|
"And so for now, reporting live from the junk ring, this is
|
|
Fifty-two 's newest on-the-spot reporter, Sean Hogan."
|
|
|
|
"That's a wrap, Sean."
|
|
|
|
"Fuckin' A," Sean muttered, and unscrewed the camera lens. It
|
|
was time he and Eva had a little privacy.
|
|
|
|
"And Sean, can we get an idea of when you're planning to return
|
|
the -- of when you're planning to arrive here at the station?"
|
|
|
|
"I'm gonna take another 750 hours out here, make sure Eva and
|
|
Rosie's up to the trip before we set off. Maybe longer, if I
|
|
have to. Just keep a lid on. You'll see the bunch of us soon
|
|
enough."
|
|
|
|
"All right, Sean."
|
|
|
|
"G'day," Sean said, and pulled the backlink plug. The excitement
|
|
of the possibilities ahead flowed through his chest like
|
|
electricity.
|
|
|
|
"I always had faith in you, Seanie," Eva said. "I knew all you
|
|
needed was a chance of your own."
|
|
|
|
Sean squeezed his wife's hand, gazed tenderly at his child. Then
|
|
looked out the window at the junk -- beyond it, the Industrial
|
|
Orbit; beyond that, planet; and back of it all, the sun. It was
|
|
thrilling how control was flowing back into his own hands, as
|
|
though it had never left.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Barney Currer (barney45@mcn.org)
|
|
----------------------------------
|
|
Barney Currer's short fiction has appeared in the Antioch
|
|
Review, the Hawaii Review, Thema, and Aboriginal Science
|
|
Fiction. He splits his time between a vineyard in California's
|
|
Sonoma wine country and a marijuana truck farm in Fort Bragg,
|
|
Mendocino County. He prefers the term "Speculative Fiction" to
|
|
"Science Fiction," since it's the year 2000 and we're all living
|
|
in a Science Fiction world.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Moral Minority by Ceri Jordan
|
|
=================================
|
|
....................................................................
|
|
An average man lives 72 years.
|
|
But what about _the_ average man?
|
|
....................................................................
|
|
|
|
It was all a question of balance.
|
|
|
|
He called himself Henry this week; formal Brit-style names were
|
|
on the upswing, according to the figures. Next week he might be
|
|
a Joshua or a Mohammed, depending on who was winning the
|
|
breeding race down in the 'burbs -- or a nickname, Chilli or
|
|
Turbo or Elex, if the summer swing towards youthCulture held
|
|
out as it usually did. The only thing the trends didn't change
|
|
was the number on his account, and that was how the government
|
|
referred to him, so his roving nomenclature didn't bother them
|
|
any.
|
|
|
|
017394782394-Henry prided himself on being the sort of guy you
|
|
never looked twice at. Part of the job specs, of course. But he
|
|
elevated it to an art form. He could have been thirty or fifty,
|
|
Hispanic or Pacific or Native-A, you just couldn't tell. When he
|
|
went into the Hendrix Burger Bar -- once a week regular, to
|
|
order "Whatever you've sold most of this week" -- he often had
|
|
to clear his throat a couple of times before the tired-looking
|
|
cyberheads behind the counter slouched over to serve him. People
|
|
bumped into him on street corners and blinked into his face like
|
|
there was nothing there.
|
|
|
|
No one ever noticed (temporary)Henry. That was exactly the way
|
|
things should be, he mused, chomping on a vegan WatchtowerBurger
|
|
while wild guitars climbed heavenward on the permanent
|
|
soundtrack and teenage Next Big Things cruised by in open-tops,
|
|
blaring their beauty at an indifferent world. With so many
|
|
bright and glorious individuals shrieking for their attention,
|
|
why should anyone notice Mr. Average?
|
|
|
|
And that's how he got careless, how he ended up sitting with his
|
|
back to a door both real and metaphorical, and that's how he
|
|
ended up where he is now -- free, happy, and totally and utterly
|
|
screwed.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
It started on a Wednesday, the most average day of the week. No
|
|
one ever did anything wild on a Wednesday -- and if they did,
|
|
they were statistically irrelevant -- so Henry didn't either.
|
|
|
|
That particular Wednesday, he was sitting on a bench uptown,
|
|
watching the rainbow-colored pigeons pecking crumbs in the
|
|
square. It wasn't fun, but, for reasons that eluded him, a lot
|
|
of people spent a lot of time on benches. Consequently, so did
|
|
Henry.
|
|
|
|
There was a big session going down tomorrow. A market test for a
|
|
new soft drink or something -- the company didn't release
|
|
details in advance, in case the competition tried to bribe or
|
|
infiltrate. Which was stupid. Average people didn't take bribes.
|
|
Anyway, a big session; all fifty of the averagers, men and
|
|
women, were being called in. There'd be a bonus payment, to keep
|
|
their lips sealed until the product hit the marketplace; and
|
|
since it was perfectly average to blow any bonus on something
|
|
unnecessary and probably useless, he'd be free to spend it how
|
|
he chose. Maybe a personal massager, like on the TeeVee. He
|
|
might even consider a holiday. A real holiday. It wasn't
|
|
entirely unusual for lower-middle income males to jet off to
|
|
Europe and do the sights, not these days -- and with Venice
|
|
going down like the Titanic, he ought to go this year, while you
|
|
could still sightsee without scuba gear.
|
|
|
|
Fishing in his pocket, Henry extracted the Probabilator and
|
|
tapped in a few variables. Seventy-three percent probability of
|
|
someone in his social bracket selecting a cheap guided package,
|
|
only 24 percent prob that they'd go solo. Pity. He didn't like
|
|
guided tours much. Well, that's the downturn of the job, as
|
|
they'd told him when they signed him up.
|
|
|
|
He sat and watched the pigeons for a while, waiting for his
|
|
perfectly trained, perfectly average attention span to expire.
|
|
When it did, he got up, shook out his trench coat, and moved on,
|
|
pressing buttons on the Probabilator as he walked. Go to a
|
|
movie, 83 percent prob; get something to eat, 79 percent. Near
|
|
enough to make no difference. And he took in the only decent
|
|
movie of the month last week.
|
|
|
|
Turning left into Dissolution Avenue, Henry started scanning the
|
|
luminous shop-fronts for somewhere suitable.
|
|
|
|
He'd done this a lot when he first signed up. Wandered around
|
|
town, staring in the windows of the outfitters and the plastic
|
|
surgeons, wondering how long before he could spend his money in
|
|
there. Day never came, of course. They'd hired him as a B3
|
|
white-collar working stiff, and that was exactly how he had to
|
|
stay. He even had to work still, to keep abreast of the tensions
|
|
and camaraderie of the workplace. Only three days a week, so he
|
|
could stay sympathetic to the increasing number on Assistance as
|
|
the ArtiFlects ate up their jobs. He never did much; shuffled
|
|
papers, drank coffee, listened to everyone else in the office
|
|
complain. But that must be just about what an average working
|
|
guy did. If he was straying too far, the Probabilator was
|
|
programmed to protest.
|
|
|
|
No new suits, and no new face. They'd let him sign up with a
|
|
whole bundle of bright shining illusions, when you came to think
|
|
about it. There had to be laws against that.
|
|
|
|
The window in front of him was darker than the others, smoked
|
|
glass, giving him glimpse of movement and candle-flicker within.
|
|
Turn Of the Century Tearooms, real oldieQuaint. Thirteen percent
|
|
prob, said the overgrown calculator in his hand, and he ought to
|
|
be keeping his averages bang on so he'd be ready for tomorrow,
|
|
spontaneous and natural and reacting like that mythical man in
|
|
the street.
|
|
|
|
Hell. It was average enough to do something unusual sometimes.
|
|
|
|
Pushing the brass handle down, Henry opened the door.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
It wasn't as gloomy as he'd expected; recessed lights in the
|
|
wooden beams of the ceiling spread a gentle glow, and the
|
|
candles burning on the tables and the windowsills were just
|
|
there for atmosphere. Pretty busy, too. Moneymen at that table,
|
|
in their flash suits, glancing automatically at their hand-held
|
|
stock analyzers every few words, can't take their eyes off the
|
|
markets. A gaggle of trophy wives in the corner, preening and
|
|
giggling, watching him in a vast oval mirror on the rear wall.
|
|
|
|
A B3 white-collar ought to feel nervous as a rat in a lab,
|
|
coming in here. But he didn't. He liked it. The mud-red tiles on
|
|
the floor, the oak paneling dappled with years of wear. A
|
|
passing waitress gestured for him to take a seat, and he picked
|
|
a small table by the window -- two-seater, modest and
|
|
unobtrusive -- and sat down.
|
|
|
|
The woman at the next table looked up and smiled.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Quondam-Henry smiled back. That's what people do, after all.
|
|
People are polite. They smile and avert their eyes so they don't
|
|
have to say anything, don't have to engage.
|
|
|
|
"Looks like I've been landfilled," she said, waving her hand at
|
|
a street full of people, and none of them whoever it was she was
|
|
waiting for. "May I join you? I feel so conspicuous sat here
|
|
alone."
|
|
|
|
He didn't want this. Didn't want to be bothered with small talk
|
|
and lies and trying to think of ways to avoid giving her
|
|
whatever it was she wanted -- sex or money or just time and
|
|
attention, he kept it all jealously guarded so it didn't make
|
|
much difference.
|
|
|
|
"I guess so," he said, one eye on the Probabilator balanced in
|
|
his lap. Say yes, 93 percent. Get away as fast as possible, 99
|
|
percent.
|
|
|
|
She shimmied into the seat opposite and smiled again. It was a
|
|
spontaneous smile, Henry felt, or a good imitation of one. A
|
|
child's smile, not bothering to hide or to guard. From the way
|
|
she was dressed, he decided she was a medium-income housewife.
|
|
With expensive shoes. Maybe with a side job or a moneymaking
|
|
hobby. That swirly gold jewelry she was wearing, the necklace
|
|
and the bracelet, maybe she made that, small-scale, to help the
|
|
budget along.
|
|
|
|
"Lori," she announced, and he realized that was his cue.
|
|
|
|
"I'm Henry. Pleased to meet you."
|
|
|
|
"You know, Henry, I'm sure I've seen you somewhere before..."
|
|
|
|
It was a sorry excuse for a conversation-spinner, but she looked
|
|
like she meant it, so he shrugged and offered, "People say that
|
|
a lot." Which they did. "I have a pretty average sort of face."
|
|
Which he had.
|
|
|
|
"I wouldn't have said so," Lori observed, swirling the dregs of
|
|
her coffee in the tiny porcelain cup. "You have a nice face. Too
|
|
clever for whatever it is you do for a living."
|
|
|
|
Henry shifted position, gripping the Probabilator down between
|
|
his knees where she couldn't see it. "Oh," he said, for want of
|
|
anything better; and then the waitress was there, and he ordered
|
|
tea and scones in a panic, without a glance at the probability,
|
|
and offered Lori more coffee, but she said no, she was fine. And
|
|
then they were alone again, and she said, "You're a
|
|
collar-and-tie, for sure."
|
|
|
|
"I'm sorry?"
|
|
|
|
"Collar-and-tie, an office worker. Paper-pusher, people used to
|
|
say. My father called himself that. A paper-pusher."
|
|
|
|
"That's... accurate. That's about all I do."
|
|
|
|
Probability of accepting an offer of sex, 89 percent. You are
|
|
reminded that all sexual activity engaged in is at your own
|
|
risk. The company accepts no responsibility for --
|
|
|
|
The tea arrived, in a dainty little pot with a handle he
|
|
couldn't have got one finger through, and a cup with no handle
|
|
at all.
|
|
|
|
"Allow me," Lori smiled, and poured for him. "Sugar? Milk?"
|
|
|
|
"Milk," he conceded. He preferred it black, but he had to get
|
|
these averages back on track. The scones arrived while he was
|
|
waiting for it to cool, and Lori accepted the offer of one with
|
|
another riveting smile.
|
|
|
|
Probability of accepting an offer of sex, 95 percent.
|
|
|
|
"So, um," he said, looking for a way to distract himself from
|
|
the hint of lacy vest below the neckline of that blouse, and
|
|
thoughts of taking it off. "That jewelry's nice."
|
|
|
|
"This?" She pinched the necklace between finger and thumb, as if
|
|
reminding herself what it looked like. "I stole it."
|
|
|
|
She looked at him and laughed, but he knew she wasn't joking.
|
|
|
|
"Are you shocked?"
|
|
|
|
He started to look to the Probabilator for guidance, but she was
|
|
watching him too closely, she'd wonder what he was paying so
|
|
much attention to down there. "Yeah," he said. "I guess."
|
|
|
|
"Haven't you ever done anything crazy? Just because you felt
|
|
like it?"
|
|
|
|
"Well, I... not something against the law."
|
|
|
|
Lori shrugged. "Never mind. Couple more sips of tea, and you'll
|
|
see what I mean."
|
|
|
|
There was a little gap in the conversation, while Henry realized
|
|
that this was evidently the point that any normal person's alarm
|
|
bells would start bringing the roof down -- and that his were,
|
|
self-evidently, not.
|
|
|
|
"Oh," he said.
|
|
|
|
Lori began to laugh.
|
|
|
|
Setting the teacup aside, Henry looked sternly at her for a
|
|
moment. Yes, she could have had time to slip something into his
|
|
cup while she was pouring for him. He'd been buttering her a
|
|
scone, ungrateful woman, and he wouldn't have noticed. Perhaps
|
|
she even had an accomplice in the teashop, drugging likely
|
|
customers for robbery or organ theft or anything at all. He
|
|
looked at the Probabilator screen, but it was wittering
|
|
something about the probability of accepting that as a joke --
|
|
which it quite obviously wasn't, what was wrong with the
|
|
machine?
|
|
|
|
"Don't blow a valve," she grinned, her tone shifting abruptly
|
|
toward some street slang or other. He could see now that she
|
|
didn't belong in those clothes. The jewelry didn't belong,
|
|
either, though with which image, he couldn't tell.
|
|
|
|
He was tired of sitting here talking.
|
|
|
|
"Let's go somewhere else," he said.
|
|
|
|
The Probabilator squealed like he'd sat on it -- which he
|
|
hadn't. It was still safe and sound on his knee. Maybe it was
|
|
malfunctioning.
|
|
|
|
"In a minute," she said, smiling. "I want to finish my scone
|
|
first."
|
|
|
|
Henry thought about what he wanted. It was a word he hadn't
|
|
used, not properly, for a long time. He wanted to buy a bottle
|
|
of wine, then climb up the face of the black granite Mother Of
|
|
Suffering on the riverbank and sit there, drinking and throwing
|
|
litter at passers-by. No, maybe not. Maybe he'd go down to the
|
|
park, hang around watching the artists defacing the walls and
|
|
plaiting rubbish into the tree branches, let them laugh at this
|
|
plump, aging collar-and-tie for a while, until they'd maybe
|
|
offer him a swig from those illegally-brewed bottles and try to
|
|
explain their work.
|
|
|
|
The Probabilator was bleeping away like a cardiac monitor, and
|
|
people were starting to stare. He picked up the cup and took
|
|
another couple of gulps, almost draining it, and then said, "So.
|
|
What did you put in the tea?"
|
|
|
|
"Specialized psychoactive. Knocks out social inhibitions. Don't
|
|
worry, it'll wear off in about 72 hours. I'd hate to rob anyone
|
|
of their livelihood, in these troubled days. After all, you've
|
|
got one of the very few jobs that an artificial intellect can't
|
|
do." Lori finished the scone, wiping her butter-smeared fingers
|
|
on his napkin, and reached into her pocket. "You're going to be
|
|
having some fun over the next couple of days, my friend. Why
|
|
don't you allow TermaMarlCorp to express their gratitude in a...
|
|
financial fashion?"
|
|
|
|
The Probabilator was going crazy. At this rate, he was going to
|
|
have to sit on it or something. "Gratitude for what?"
|
|
|
|
Slapping a wedge of credit slips onto the table, Lori stood up
|
|
and began buttoning her coat. "Screwing up the tests of our
|
|
competitor's new wonder product, of course."
|
|
|
|
Of course. It was all starting to sound perfectly logical, Henry
|
|
thought, spinning one of the credit slips on its gold-coded
|
|
corner for a moment. He couldn't think why he'd been so worried
|
|
about having tea with this nice woman. Damn machine, that's what
|
|
it was. Ruling his life -- or trying to. He'd show it who was
|
|
boss.
|
|
|
|
"Have to rush," Lori confessed. "Lots more people on the
|
|
employee list to be tracked down and invited to tea. Or beer, or
|
|
a forced injection if that's what it takes... you'll be all
|
|
right on your own, won't you, Henry?"
|
|
|
|
Lifting the lid on the teapot, Henry dropped the Probabilator
|
|
inside and watched the firework display.
|
|
|
|
"I'll be just fine, thanks."
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ceri Jordan (dbm@aber.ac.uk)
|
|
-------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Ceri Jordan lives in mid-Wales. Her work has appeared in many
|
|
U.S. and UK magazines, including The Third Alternative, Kimota,
|
|
The Zone, and Not One Of Us. She is currently working on an
|
|
experimental hypertext novel, and will be S.F. news
|
|
correspondent on the new online magazine At The End Of The
|
|
World. Her first novel is The Disaffected, (Tanjen Books, 1998).
|
|
Previous InterText stories written by Ceri Jordan: "Handlers"
|
|
(v5n6), "Making Movies" (v6n3), and "Savannah" (v7n5).
|
|
|
|
<http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/1901530094/intertext/>
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Passing the Torch by John Gerner
|
|
====================================
|
|
....................................................................
|
|
What a symbol represents depends
|
|
entirely on your point of view.
|
|
....................................................................
|
|
|
|
I took a long deep breath, stood up, and bowed. "_Wu an_. I'm
|
|
Mike Dorian, chief architect at Talex Entertainment. We're
|
|
excited to be a finalist in this design competition for the
|
|
world's greatest theme park, to be built right here in Shanghai;
|
|
one that will be better than Tokyo Disneyland." Everyone liked
|
|
the comparison -- a guaranteed crowd-pleaser.
|
|
|
|
I stood on a small stage in one of the meeting rooms of the
|
|
Shanghai Imperial Hotel, which did night-duty as a karoake party
|
|
room. The air had the faint smell of stale beer and tobacco,
|
|
suppressed by lilac air freshener. There was a slight chill, the
|
|
result of overworked air-conditioning. Top managers from the
|
|
Chinese development company, along with some banking and
|
|
government reps, sat at small cocktail tables.
|
|
|
|
The large projection screen behind me was normally used for
|
|
sing-along videos. The first time I'd stood on that stage, I
|
|
sang along too, surrounded by my drunken Chinese cohorts,
|
|
teaching them the words to "New York, New York." But that was so
|
|
many years ago -- back in the twentieth century, before the
|
|
Second Depression, before the world got turned on to Sino-Pop.
|
|
|
|
This time it was business, all business. I started my
|
|
presentation by recapping the lessons we'd learned while
|
|
designing smaller theme parks in Southeast Asia, emphasizing how
|
|
the new Fantasy Wonderland would build on these experiences.
|
|
It's important to name-drop your past successes; it provides
|
|
reassurance.
|
|
|
|
And I needed reassurance too. This was a once-in-a-lifetime
|
|
opportunity and it wasn't a slam-dunk. We were competing against
|
|
two Chinese design firms -- one from Hong Kong, one home-grown.
|
|
The Hong Kong firm was known for its cutting-edge ideas. I had
|
|
to persuade them the American approach wasn't old-fashioned and
|
|
outmoded.
|
|
|
|
I began leading everyone through my computer-generated 3-D model
|
|
of the new theme park, Fantasy Wonderland, briefly describing
|
|
the major proposed components. The basic approach was to whet
|
|
their appetite, not bury them in detail. I'd learned some time
|
|
ago that theme parks are sexy projects, enticing everyone to go
|
|
into child mode and play dream-maker. That's okay. I'd
|
|
intentionally left little gaps for them to fill, knowing they'd
|
|
be more likely to buy into my design ideas if they were actively
|
|
involved in its creation. I couldn't afford to be a prima donna.
|
|
If I came up dry here, I'd be back beating the bushes again.
|
|
With the U.S. and European economies in shambles, that would
|
|
mean Asia -- and I wasn't Asian.
|
|
|
|
I pointed out that the overall layout of the new theme park
|
|
would follow the popular "hub and spoke" approach originally
|
|
used in Disneyland, with the five themed sections of the park
|
|
surrounding its visual centerpiece. At Tokyo Disneyland, that
|
|
visual centerpiece was Cinderella's Castle; at Kings Island it
|
|
was a one-third scale replica of Paris' Eiffel tower. At Fantasy
|
|
Wonderland, it would be a replica of the Statue of Liberty,
|
|
which would also serve as the anchor attraction of the American
|
|
section of the park. During preliminary discussions over the
|
|
previous few months, everyone had agreed it would be a great
|
|
symbol of China's progress. Decades ago, tanks had torn down a
|
|
small home-made version built by protesters in Tiananmen Square,
|
|
but now it would be the centerpiece of China's premier theme
|
|
park. I took comfort in their initial reactions. Of the three
|
|
finalists, my firm had the only design with the Statue as the
|
|
park's centerpiece.
|
|
|
|
I had a much more personal reason for picking the Statue of
|
|
Liberty. When I was a kid, Granddad Dimitri would pick me up in
|
|
Alexandria on his drive back from Miami each year and take me to
|
|
his townhouse in New York for the weekend. We'd spend two whole
|
|
days there seeing the sights, just the two of us.
|
|
|
|
The first time we took the Ellis Island ferry and passed by the
|
|
Statue of Liberty, he smiled and put his arm around my
|
|
shoulders. "Look, Michael, isn't she beautiful? Except for your
|
|
Grandmother Maria, I think she is the most beautiful woman in
|
|
the world. When I was a little boy like you, in 1943, my whole
|
|
family came to America. Nobody wanted us in Greece. So we got on
|
|
a big boat and sailed for days and days. There was nothing but
|
|
water around us. Water as far as you could see. I was afraid,
|
|
Michael. But then we saw her in the harbor. Her torch was
|
|
bright, showing us the way. She wanted us and I was no longer
|
|
afraid."
|
|
|
|
So my choice of the Statue of Liberty as the visual centerpiece
|
|
for the new theme park was my personal tribute to Granddad
|
|
Dimitri, for all the fun times we had together.
|
|
|
|
"Mike, what size will the Statue of Liberty be in the new theme
|
|
park? I can't tell from looking at your computer model," Li
|
|
Cheung asked.
|
|
|
|
Li, head of our prospective Chinese partners, was wearing an
|
|
impeccably tailored dark gray suit. Stanford-educated,
|
|
incredibly self-controlled. Shanghai's jade dealers wore dark
|
|
glasses because their pupils would involuntarily dilate when
|
|
they saw a real find. Li wouldn't need the glasses. He was one
|
|
of the few people I couldn't read, and I admired that.
|
|
|
|
"The Statue of Liberty replica would be half the size as the
|
|
original, the same scale as the landmarks at Shenzhen's Wonders
|
|
of the World park."
|
|
|
|
"I'm sorry, Mike, but the Statue has to be full-size."
|
|
|
|
I started shaking my head. A change like that would be more than
|
|
tinkering. "Li, if we go full-size, the Statue would dwarf
|
|
everything around it. We'd have to double the size of
|
|
practically every building near it and that'll really increase
|
|
the construction budget."
|
|
|
|
Li was insistent. "We understand, but it has to be full-scale."
|
|
|
|
I tried a little humor to get everyone back on track. "Look, the
|
|
only reason you'd _have_ to go full-scale," I chuckled, "was if
|
|
you were going to use the _real_ Statue of Liberty. Otherwise,
|
|
the extra cost needed to..."
|
|
|
|
At that moment, Li was static, as expected, but the two
|
|
associates at his table suddenly got fidgety. One quickly locked
|
|
his right foot behind the back of his left leg -- a definite
|
|
defensive position. Feet don't lie. The other started biting his
|
|
fingernail. Subtle movements, but to my feelers it was like
|
|
watching jaws drop to the floor in an old cartoon.
|
|
|
|
I tested the waters again by bringing up the indoor coaster, one
|
|
of the park's top thrill attraction, planned inside the replica
|
|
of the Statue of Liberty.
|
|
|
|
"Scrap it," Li said.
|
|
|
|
The coaster had been Li's idea. Something had changed in the
|
|
last few days. But if a deal had just been ironed out, it would
|
|
obviously be secret, on a "need to know" basis. And, frankly, I
|
|
wouldn't need to know. As long I assumed a full-scale Statue of
|
|
Liberty with nothing inside, it could be a replica or the real
|
|
thing.
|
|
|
|
But I wanted to know. I decided to take the direct approach.
|
|
"Li, have the Chinese somehow worked out a deal to get the real
|
|
Statue of Liberty and move it to Shanghai?"
|
|
|
|
Like the sphinx, he answered without expression. "Yes. I must
|
|
now remind you and your associates of the confidentiality
|
|
agreement your company signed."
|
|
|
|
My boss, Barry Sloane, was squirming in his chair next to me,
|
|
giving me the "let's move on" look. He didn't want me to say
|
|
anything that would jinx us getting the project. But I was just
|
|
stunned and blurted out, "Why'd you do it?"
|
|
|
|
Li answered, "Our government sees this as an historic coming of
|
|
age. The British took the Parthenon's Elgin Marbles from the
|
|
Greeks. The British sold the London Bridge to Lake Havasu in the
|
|
U.S. And now we've acquired the Statue of Liberty. It's a
|
|
symbolic passing of the torch from one superpower to the next."
|
|
|
|
Silence. I didn't know what to say. Then Barry stood up next to
|
|
me and said "Well, this is certainly a surprise. But since the
|
|
high top brass wants to do this, I'm sure we can make the
|
|
necessary adjustments in our designs. Can't we, Mike? Mike..."
|
|
|
|
I was remembering how the Hanson administration blamed recent
|
|
immigrants and minorities for America's social and economic
|
|
troubles, but I'd always figured that was just political
|
|
posturing. I was also aware the government was desperate for
|
|
hard currency since the dollar recently took a dive. Who wasn't?
|
|
But this?
|
|
|
|
Li added, "Our top government officials are very excited about
|
|
this arrangement. They couldn't justify the cost of acquiring,
|
|
repairing and restoring the Statue unless it's part of a
|
|
commercial enterprise. And since the theme park will be financed
|
|
by government-backed loans, we're excited too. The U.S. will
|
|
receive debt forgiveness on some major loans. Even the French
|
|
have agreed to this arrangement. And I don't have to remind you
|
|
that your company has the only design with the Statue of
|
|
Liberty."
|
|
|
|
I felt a sharp pain. Barry was giving me his typical "stop what
|
|
you're doing right now" signal by stepping hard on my left foot,
|
|
hidden by the podium.
|
|
|
|
But I just couldn't go back to talking about theme park designs.
|
|
After a few seconds of awkward silence, I leaned forward to the
|
|
microphone and mumbled "I'm sorry, I have to take a quick break,
|
|
sorry," and walked off the stage. A pained expression would buy
|
|
me a few minutes of privacy.
|
|
|
|
Barry caught up with me in the hallway. He had this uncanny
|
|
ability to look both happy and pissed at the same time -- he was
|
|
demonstrating it at that moment. "Mike, you heard Li. We've got
|
|
it, so let's get back in there and clinch this thing."
|
|
|
|
"I don't know if I want to. You heard what's happening."
|
|
|
|
"So what? Let them have the Statue of Liberty. It's just a relic
|
|
of a time long gone. Keep your eye on the prize, Mike. Can't you
|
|
see this is our ticket out? We can finally get our papers to
|
|
move here to China."
|
|
|
|
"I'm not ready to leave."
|
|
|
|
"Why not? Don't you get it? It was the European century during
|
|
the 1800s, the American century during the 1900s and now we're
|
|
in the Asian century. I want to be where it's happening. Not
|
|
moping and whining about the good old days. Don't you?"
|
|
|
|
I stopped arguing with him, it wouldn't have done any good. I'm
|
|
not the arguing kind, and honestly, I would have had a hard time
|
|
debating him.
|
|
|
|
Barry's tone then became more like a parent than a boss. "Look
|
|
Mike, you've always said you hated the business side. So just do
|
|
your job and you'll be fine."
|
|
|
|
I hesitated.
|
|
|
|
"Well, Mike, what are you going to do?"
|
|
|
|
When it comes to decisions, I'm not someone who ponders,
|
|
carefully weighing out each option -- many times I wish I had. I
|
|
know people and I know ideas. So at that very moment, by
|
|
instinct, I looked down deep into the depths of my own soul. And
|
|
I knew what I had to do.
|
|
|
|
When we passed the men's room, I darted inside. The stall
|
|
partitions were stone-tiled from floor to ceiling -- sound-proof
|
|
-- a luxury hotel perk. With my back pressed up against the
|
|
stall door in case someone tried to get in, I used my cellular
|
|
phone to call directory assistance in New York. I got the number
|
|
for the News Leader and called their informer line. I began
|
|
telling the guy who answered what I knew about the Statue of
|
|
Liberty deal.
|
|
|
|
"I don't want to hear this," he interrupted.
|
|
|
|
"It's true, you've got to believe me. I'm risking everything to
|
|
tell you this," I said.
|
|
|
|
"No, I don't want to hear this 'cause you're telling me what's
|
|
in today's local section. The story was leaked last night."
|
|
|
|
"What's the response?"
|
|
|
|
"There's some protesters down there, and some people are
|
|
squawking."
|
|
|
|
"Will they stop it?"
|
|
|
|
"Nah. Done deal. I don't know how things are over there, but
|
|
people have a lot of things to deal with here. We've got a
|
|
depression going on if you haven't noticed. Thanks for calling."
|
|
|
|
Dial tone. So much for heroics. A hero was not required at this
|
|
time. And I, looking like some two-bit spy, just felt foolish
|
|
and old.
|
|
|
|
When I walked out into the hallway, Barry was waiting for me. He
|
|
could tell from the expression on my face that something was
|
|
wrong. I can read other people pretty well, but I never could
|
|
hide my own feelings.
|
|
|
|
"What's going on, Mike?" he asked.
|
|
|
|
I wasn't going to lie to him.
|
|
|
|
He thought for a moment. "You called someone, didn't you? Talked
|
|
about what's happening here."
|
|
|
|
I stood there, speechless.
|
|
|
|
Barry shook his head. "Stupid move. You know about our
|
|
confidentiality agreement. You've just put the firm at grave
|
|
risk." He now just looked pissed. "You're fired."
|
|
|
|
I didn't say anything; there wasn't anything to be said. I
|
|
thought about going back to my hotel room, but I didn't want to
|
|
be alone, so I headed to the lounge, found a small empty table,
|
|
and had a beer.
|
|
|
|
After I'd finished my second Tsingtao, a voice came from behind
|
|
me. "Mike, can I talk with you for a few minutes?"
|
|
|
|
I turned around. It was Li. I almost told him there was nothing
|
|
to talk about, but I didn't. I just motioned for him to sit down
|
|
in the chair next to me.
|
|
|
|
"I just spoke with Barry," he said, sitting down. "Why didn't
|
|
you go along with the Statue of Liberty arrangement?"
|
|
|
|
"It's personal," I answered. And then I told him about my
|
|
Granddad Dimitri. The whole story. How much the Statue had meant
|
|
to him so long ago. I ended by saying "I thought the Chinese
|
|
understood about honoring ancestors. But maybe capitalism has
|
|
changed a lot of things."
|
|
|
|
Li hesitated before answering. This wasn't like him at all. In
|
|
past talks, he'd been like a chess grandmaster, always thinking
|
|
many moves ahead. But not this time. Silent.
|
|
|
|
Finally, he spoke, his voice a bit shaky. "My father helped
|
|
build the Goddess of Democracy, modeled after the Statue of
|
|
Liberty, that stood in Tiananmen Square in 1989."
|
|
|
|
"Was he one of the protesters who..."
|
|
|
|
"Yes. Having the Statue of Liberty here in Shanghai will
|
|
reassure my mother of why she was left alone."
|
|
|
|
Li had been so good at hiding his feelings, I'd sort of assumed
|
|
he was like a desert. But at that moment, I realized his facade
|
|
was really more like a dam. Holding back an ocean. And there
|
|
were tiny cracks under his eyes.
|
|
|
|
He handed me a plain manila envelope. Inside were some typed
|
|
pages describing a new themed attraction in Shenyang that was
|
|
still in the early concept development stage. I looked up,
|
|
puzzled.
|
|
|
|
"It's not as prestigious as Fantasy Wonderland," he said, "but
|
|
it needs your touch. It's yours if you want it. Sole source. The
|
|
first project for your own design firm, perhaps."
|
|
|
|
I put my hand on his shoulder. "Hey, let's get out of here. I
|
|
hear there's this new karoake bar down on Nanjing Lu."
|
|
|
|
As we walked out of the hotel, I turned to Li and said "Don't
|
|
get too attached to the Statue of Liberty. You know the Greeks
|
|
finally did get the Elgin Marbles back from the British."
|
|
|
|
"Yes. It took about 200 years."
|
|
|
|
"But things change so much faster today. Don't they?"
|
|
|
|
Li smiled. "Yes, they do."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
John Gerner (jgerner@aol.com)
|
|
-------------------------------
|
|
|
|
John Gerner likes to think of himself as a writer/songwriter,
|
|
though the IRS considers him a consultant who does planning
|
|
studies for new tourist attractions. He was a Clarion West '97
|
|
attendee.
|
|
|
|
<http://www.richmond.infi.net/~jgerner/creative.html>
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Something in Between by Gary Cadwallader
|
|
============================================
|
|
....................................................................
|
|
The houses of the Zodiac may offer guidance --
|
|
just don't forget about the homes here on Earth.
|
|
....................................................................
|
|
|
|
I was fifty before I cast my first spell.
|
|
|
|
"You have the power," Cleo had said. Cleo is my astrologer. And
|
|
he knows things, but then he always has. "You have the desire,"
|
|
he had said.
|
|
|
|
Oh God, did I have the desire! Three really bad years had beaten
|
|
me up. A divorce, eleven months of purposeful celibacy -- not
|
|
even dating -- and then two love affairs that ended badly... oh
|
|
yeah, I had the desire!
|
|
|
|
So I made my cast. Just a little thing. And what could it cost?
|
|
|
|
I wrote down everything I wanted in a woman. There were fifty
|
|
items, all on green spiral notebook paper. A list.
|
|
|
|
|
|
* Great sensitivity
|
|
* Good looking
|
|
* Loves me
|
|
* I love her
|
|
* Is faithful
|
|
|
|
-- and so on, becoming more complex as I went:
|
|
|
|
* Talks things over with me
|
|
* Comes to me with her troubles
|
|
* Knows when I'm having trouble
|
|
-- and sometimes kinkier:
|
|
|
|
* Number 35
|
|
* Number 36
|
|
* Number 37
|
|
|
|
-- and ending with:
|
|
|
|
* Makes me feel like a hero
|
|
* I make her feel like a goddess
|
|
|
|
That sort of thing. I put the list under my pillow. It was a new
|
|
pillow, big and fluffy. I had bought new sheets and a comforter.
|
|
The comforter was pink and green, but nice looking and not too
|
|
feminine... just enough, I thought. And I was sleeping on this
|
|
old black sofa that made into a full-size bed. There was a red
|
|
indoor-outdoor carpet on the concrete floor of the basement. I
|
|
could make the bed up and have a little living space.
|
|
|
|
No one had ever been here but Cleo. I wouldn't ask anybody else
|
|
over. I looked up at the bare wooden beams that made up my
|
|
ceiling. I thought I should get some cardboard, paint it white
|
|
and draw the Sistine Ceiling up there. I could lie in my bed and
|
|
admire Michelangelo. Life would be better.
|
|
|
|
And I slept on my spell for a month. I was trying to draw the
|
|
perfect woman to my side. Cleo said, "There's no difference
|
|
between making a list and praying. You're talking to God either
|
|
way."
|
|
|
|
As I look back, I wonder if the list should have been longer.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Cleo comes over to the house I share with my sick father. We're
|
|
a strange mix. I'm fifty, white, and down to 132 pounds. I make
|
|
a decent living as an artist. _Very_ good, for an artist, but I
|
|
give half of it for child support. Cleophus Brown, my old
|
|
schoolmate, is a black man. He was a lineman in football. Now
|
|
he's a professional astrologer. Pop, who everyone calls "Darn"
|
|
because he won't swear, is eighty-one. Retired. Waiting to die.
|
|
You can see it in his eyes. Nobody knows what color they are
|
|
anymore.
|
|
|
|
Cleo and Darn don't get along that well. Cleo has opinions. Darn
|
|
doesn't tolerate them anymore. Age made him arrogant. I remember
|
|
him as Pop, the good guy. The best man I ever knew.
|
|
|
|
I won't disagree with him. I tell myself it's out of respect.
|
|
Maybe it's love? I don't know. I know he taught me to play golf
|
|
when I was eight. He gave me a five-iron to use for every shot.
|
|
He was a great golfer, and he had to put up with this little kid
|
|
who shot 101 on the first nine and 99 on the back. I spent more
|
|
time in the woods than on the fairway. But he didn't care. He
|
|
appeared to be the most patient man in the world.
|
|
|
|
I didn't inherit his patience. I'm his opposite, like Mom was.
|
|
The other half of his soul. Lack of patience is probably why I
|
|
cast a spell -- conjured up the perfect woman. But then, I look
|
|
at Pop and know time is short and meant to be lived.
|
|
|
|
As men go in the singles market, I'm not much of a catch. My
|
|
weight's down to my high-school days, that's true -- it's nice
|
|
to have no gut. And I've drawn myself a new chin using my beard
|
|
for a drawing pencil. That works. But younger? Nope. That isn't
|
|
going to happen. Richer? Well... not until Pop dies. Which I
|
|
hate to think about, but it's always there in the back of my
|
|
mind.
|
|
|
|
I have serious doubts about the future.
|
|
|
|
It's November now; football is in full swing. Cleo and I are
|
|
remembering the old days.
|
|
|
|
"You're looking good," he says. "Old number ten! Sitting on the
|
|
bench again," and he laughs. I know he's talking about my
|
|
relationships, but I ignore that.
|
|
|
|
"Yeah, but I got in once, remember?"
|
|
|
|
Three hundred-pound Cleo was only seventeen years old and
|
|
already weighed two-twenty. He could bench-press four hundred
|
|
pounds without warming up, and he was the trap blocker on _my_
|
|
play. Coach had drawn it up just for me. I was on the left.
|
|
Everybody came toward me like it was a run around left end, but
|
|
it was a delayed handoff up the middle. Cleo was supposed to
|
|
pound anybody who didn't fall for the fake. There should be a
|
|
hole up the middle big enough for our yellow school bus.
|
|
|
|
The play starts. I set up like I'm blocking people trailing the
|
|
ball carrier. Cleo backs a step off the line and parallels me.
|
|
|
|
I get to the quarterback. He gives me the ball. I see the hole
|
|
in the middle just like Coach said. It's huge! There's a pile of
|
|
guys on the left, another on the right. But in the middle? Jeez!
|
|
Nobody's in the middle. The hole is five yards wide. All I gotta
|
|
do is run.
|
|
|
|
"Dammit George, if you'd just been patient," Cleo says.
|
|
|
|
I look at my feet. Patience never was my strong point.
|
|
|
|
"But noooooo, you see that hole and just take off!" He laughs
|
|
about it. We still laugh about it. Good lord, it was
|
|
thirty-three years ago.
|
|
|
|
One of the defensive linemen gets through on the right. Cleo is
|
|
waiting for him. He won't even see him coming. Cleo will lay him
|
|
out.
|
|
|
|
But --
|
|
|
|
I see the hole and just go. I'm feeling good. I have the ball. I
|
|
run.
|
|
|
|
Cleo screams something and points. I look right. There's the
|
|
lineman from the other team.
|
|
|
|
Bang!
|
|
|
|
Cleo and the lineman collide. I'm in the middle. Then, while I
|
|
watch someone in the stands wave a flag and the cheerleaders
|
|
talk among themselves, everybody falls down. My foot is
|
|
underneath. Everybody falls.
|
|
|
|
Snap goes the ankle. I hear it. It's not a bad sound, just
|
|
interesting, and I'm detached from it. Later the pain comes, and
|
|
I lose my detachment.
|
|
|
|
Funny thing is, I end up learning to paint while I'm sitting out
|
|
the rest of football season, and win a scholarship to the Kansas
|
|
City Art Institute. Things change quickly. I'm an opportunist.
|
|
|
|
"Moon in Gemini," Cleo says of that time. "Mr. Versatile. Mr.
|
|
Changeable. Act now and ask questions later?"
|
|
|
|
When he's being catty like an old woman, he trashes me like
|
|
that. "Oh, sorry," he says. "Sentences too long for you? George
|
|
bored? George go home now?" He says it like he's talking to a
|
|
cave man.
|
|
|
|
I give him my ugliest look -- the one that means, "You're just
|
|
puke on toast." It always makes him laugh.
|
|
|
|
He _is_ puke on toast, but that's another matter. Besides, he
|
|
calls me "White Slime Ass"... and that's when he's in a good
|
|
mood.
|
|
|
|
His good moods are more frequent lately. He's doing well for
|
|
himself.
|
|
|
|
It took a while. When we were in high school, he sent off to New
|
|
York for an astrology chart. He was amazed. The mail-order
|
|
astrologer pinned him to the wall. She told him things about
|
|
himself that no stranger could know. Then she went on to tell
|
|
him when he'd marry. She told him he'd divorce. He'd have one
|
|
kid -- a boy. Everything.
|
|
|
|
He lied to the astrologer. He said his name was Marcus Purcell.
|
|
Doesn't matter. Everything in his chart had already either
|
|
happened just like she said it would, or seemed so reasonable --
|
|
so likely to happen, and happen only to Cleo, that he swore
|
|
he'd found the truth we all are looking for.
|
|
|
|
Then!
|
|
|
|
Then she has the nerve to call him "Puke on Toast." Hey hey hey.
|
|
|
|
Cleo shoulda known we set him up, but for some reason, it didn't
|
|
matter. He began to study astrology like it was the Bible. I
|
|
told him, "Cleo, be reasonable, the football team and I told
|
|
that woman everything about you. It was a joke!"
|
|
|
|
He didn't listen.
|
|
|
|
He studied, he worked. He began to draw sentences from the
|
|
symbols he saw.
|
|
|
|
Dammit, it shouldn't have worked. It was a joke. But Cleo made
|
|
it work for him.
|
|
|
|
"I'm gonna do this stuff," he said. "I'm gonna study astrology."
|
|
|
|
Today he's living in a condo and running off at the mouth about
|
|
his stocks. And his charts _work_. His charts are not fakes.
|
|
They are not so generalized that could fit anybody: they are as
|
|
specific as warts on a pumpkin. Turns out he had a gift. Jeez,
|
|
we were just fooling around. The guy bases the rest of his life
|
|
on one practical joke -- and makes it work?
|
|
|
|
"You should put five hundred in AQCT," he says. "It's ten cents
|
|
a share right now. It'll hit two bucks by August. Where you
|
|
gonna get that kind of return?"
|
|
|
|
"You're a greedy little black man," I say. "Besides, what
|
|
happened to 'you were gonna die in August?' "
|
|
|
|
"Okay, I was wrong about that one." He looks sheepish. He did
|
|
his own chart. He saw something coming in August. "You can't
|
|
always tell what's coming," he says. "There's the high road, the
|
|
low road, and something in between. I could meet the girl of my
|
|
dreams. I could get killed on the highway -- but now I think
|
|
I'll just make more money. The middle road is the most likely
|
|
path, after all."
|
|
|
|
"The world wants us to be mediocre," I say.
|
|
|
|
"Now you just sound silly."
|
|
|
|
"Ah Cleo, I thought you were infallible."
|
|
|
|
"Silly, silly, silly. You were always the one that believed in
|
|
me. But nobody's infallible. I calculate my angles, draw my
|
|
charts, and make sentences. I see Venus in Virgo and think it
|
|
means one thing. It could mean something else. Soon enough you
|
|
see the real meaning. Besides, your own chart is the hardest to
|
|
read. The sentences you draw up are always colored with wishes,
|
|
you know? Or fears."
|
|
|
|
I could remind him it was all foolishness in the beginning, but
|
|
he'd just say it was God's way of showing him his calling.
|
|
Besides, look at him now. Look at me. I do believe in him.
|
|
|
|
He's always talking about drawing sentences. He makes me study
|
|
my glyphs, the symbols that represent the planets and the signs.
|
|
He makes me study house meanings. Sometimes I can draw up a
|
|
pretty good sentence myself.
|
|
|
|
"Pop's gonna die in March," I tell him.
|
|
|
|
"You want me to look at it?" He doesn't like to look for death.
|
|
It's really hard to find anyway. Serious health problems? That
|
|
you can predict. Death? Not so easy.
|
|
|
|
Besides, as he says, "The stars impel, they don't compel." He
|
|
says that all the time. It's caused us many an argument.
|
|
|
|
"I'm not going by the stars," I say. "Mom died three years ago
|
|
in March. He always gets depressed then. I don't think he'll
|
|
make it through another one of those."
|
|
|
|
We get on the computer to look.
|
|
|
|
Thump, thump, thump.
|
|
|
|
It's Pop banging on the floor. I'm up the basement stairs before
|
|
Cleo can move, but then, I always was fast. And I'm feeling like
|
|
a kid again since the spell worked.
|
|
|
|
Cheryl Ann is forty. She's five-foot-two and ninety-eight
|
|
pounds. She has gray eyes when she's pissed and green eyes when
|
|
she's horny. She's got honey-blonde hair -- Clairol Maximum
|
|
Golden Blonde, in fact -- and the bone structure of a model. I
|
|
could paint her for the rest of my life. Hands, feet, eyes,
|
|
arms, legs -- everything is perfect. I can't figure out how
|
|
she's had four kids and still has such a body. Yeah, there're
|
|
stretch marks -- she won't wear bikinis anymore -- but the
|
|
skin's tightened up and the stretch marks are now tiny lines
|
|
that glisten in the sun. They are battle scars you come to
|
|
admire.
|
|
|
|
And:
|
|
|
|
* She's incredibly sensitive.
|
|
* She's faithful.
|
|
* She's beautiful and sexy.
|
|
* I love her.
|
|
* And old number 35 is her favorite position.
|
|
|
|
"Let's do thirty-five," she says. "Thirty-five. Thirty-five!"
|
|
For I've shown her my list.
|
|
|
|
She wasn't shocked. She was flattered. She put it in a scrapbook
|
|
with our movie stubs. She calls it our "suvie book."
|
|
|
|
She is everything I've ever wanted. She makes me happy. Cleo
|
|
says we don't marry for happiness; we marry to be complete. I
|
|
feel complete with her. She brings me the joy I've never had. In
|
|
bed she licks her finger and sticks it in my ear. I can't help
|
|
but laugh. Nobody else would dare. We are like kids.
|
|
|
|
Fat, black Cleo was right. I had the power to cast spells. And I
|
|
did. I don't know what the cost will be, but I don't care. I've
|
|
never been so happy. For a visual man, she is the ultimate
|
|
prize. I buy her double-zeros off the rack and they fit like
|
|
blue paint.
|
|
|
|
It's amazing how much I've calmed down. But, then, life isn't
|
|
through with me yet.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Thump, thump, thump.
|
|
|
|
I run upstairs. Pop's calling me again. It's December now -- my
|
|
daughter's fifteenth birthday. She's already pissed at me
|
|
because of Pop. I canceled our dinner together because he
|
|
thought he was dying. Right now she can't see it. She'll be
|
|
self-centered for another year or two, I think. But no one's
|
|
brighter, or more beautiful. She'll be all right.
|
|
|
|
Pop won't be all right anymore. The arrogance of growing old,
|
|
when you think you know everything, but you won't _do_ anything
|
|
about it. And the depression that fear of dying brings about. It
|
|
makes a nice man into something else. And you begin to wonder if
|
|
you still love him.
|
|
|
|
"I'm feeling bad," he says.
|
|
|
|
"How do you feel. Tell me?" This is a problem for us lately. He
|
|
won't answer any of my questions. I remember when he made a
|
|
four-inch telescope and we took it out to the driveway. "There's
|
|
Saturn," he would say. "There's Venus." And he would explain the
|
|
mythology of the constellations. He was so smart, he could
|
|
explain Einstein -- and make you understand.
|
|
|
|
"I just feel bad." He's lying on his bed, which he hasn't left
|
|
in days. The walls are covered with old black-and-white pictures
|
|
from his youth. Somehow, it doesn't help. It only looks
|
|
depressing.
|
|
|
|
"Dammit, I need more details."
|
|
|
|
"Georgie, I can't give you any more. I just feel bad."
|
|
|
|
"Well, are we going to the emergency room tonight?" We've been
|
|
five times this year alone. That's why I canceled on Jennifer.
|
|
You can tell when the ER visits are sneaking up on you like
|
|
thieves.
|
|
|
|
"Don't know. Don't want to. I'll try to get through the night."
|
|
|
|
I try to get more information. He gets snippy. I'm pulling teeth
|
|
-- but if I did, his dentures would come out in one piece. I
|
|
know he feels terrible. I also know he sleeps better in the
|
|
morning. Nights are hell for him.
|
|
|
|
"Getting old isn't for sissies," he says.
|
|
|
|
Then stand up and fight, you old bastard, I think. If you'd just
|
|
eat!
|
|
|
|
But he won't eat. Last month Cheryl Ann brought him a plate from
|
|
Thanksgiving dinner. He ate one bite of potatoes and one of
|
|
peas. Two bites total. Two! That was his food intake all day.
|
|
|
|
I'm going crazy. I don't like exchanging places. I don't like
|
|
being the parent. "Eat," I tell him. "You gotta eat. You're
|
|
gonna die."
|
|
|
|
Nothing.
|
|
|
|
It's only later I realize he is committing suicide the only way
|
|
a Catholic can. It's the constant mumbling, the Hail Marys when
|
|
he's out of his head, that make me understand. He's praying for
|
|
forgiveness. He's committing the ultimate sin.
|
|
|
|
"Hail Mary, full of grace.... mumble mumble mumble." No one can
|
|
make it out except me. I know what he's doing.
|
|
|
|
"Hail Mary. Hail Mary. Hail Mary."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Three years ago, when I moved in, we talked of fear.
|
|
|
|
"I worry about what it's doing to you," Pop said. He was sitting
|
|
on our worn out dirty-gold couch. I put a two by three-foot
|
|
piece of plywood under the cushion -- support needed for aging
|
|
bones to stand up. It matched the two ugliest chairs in Pleasant
|
|
Hope, which, of course, were also in our living room. Along with
|
|
a rug the color of brown pond.
|
|
|
|
Fear of dying. Fear of not dying. Fear of not dying _well_.
|
|
|
|
"Hey Pop, I made up a budget. Guess what? I've got a whole
|
|
forty-four dollars left at the end of the month. That's good,
|
|
right? I figured with my child support, I'd be in the hole."
|
|
|
|
So, he raised my rent forty dollars. Because he was afraid he'd
|
|
live too. Afraid he'd live and not have any money. Get it while
|
|
you can, I suppose. Mom left me some money in the will, but I
|
|
never asked for it and he never offered. I knew why. He was
|
|
scared.
|
|
|
|
I claimed the damned basement for some privacy. I was broke. I
|
|
go through a period of five girlfriends in five months. Nobody
|
|
stays. They think I'm cute. They'll go out with me. A couple of
|
|
them even let me spend the night at their place.
|
|
|
|
Then it would end.
|
|
|
|
And that is what brought me to my spell. My case of desperation.
|
|
The constant endings. Shelly left. Angie quit on me. Tracey
|
|
thought I wouldn't amount to anything. Yada, yada, yada.
|
|
|
|
But I knew I had the power.
|
|
|
|
Cleo told me. "Pluto is approaching your ascendant. You can do
|
|
anything you want over the next three years." And much of it is
|
|
true. My finances improve. He introduces me to Victoria, an
|
|
interior designer. She gets me a contract to paint two hundred
|
|
small still lifes for Holiday Inn. I've got all the work I can
|
|
handle for a year. I can move out, except I can't move out
|
|
because now Pop is really sick -- dying, in fact. Only I don't
|
|
know it. I don't realize his heart's like a flat tire that can't
|
|
be fixed.
|
|
|
|
"Then I'm gonna make me up a woman!" I say. "By God, if I can do
|
|
anything, then that's what I'm gonna ask for."
|
|
|
|
"The Bride of Frankenstein." Cleo giggles. His belly rolls. I
|
|
think he's gonna fall out of his chair.
|
|
|
|
"No one likes you," I say.
|
|
|
|
"Somebody has to be wrong." And he laughs again.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
On Jennifer's birthday -- December 21st -- the emergency room is
|
|
full. I go through the list of medicines. I repeat the diagnosis
|
|
I've been told. "Congestive heart failure. Kidney failure.
|
|
Diabetes." It never sounds good. And then I add, "And he won't
|
|
eat."
|
|
|
|
"You've gotta eat," the triage nurse says.
|
|
|
|
"I'm just not hungry," Pop says.
|
|
|
|
Liar, I think.
|
|
|
|
"Besides, I can't breathe."
|
|
|
|
They try to get the fluid out of his chest. We're there until 4
|
|
a.m. -- finally they decide to admit him. "He'll stay here
|
|
tonight and then we'll see what we see."
|
|
|
|
I go home. It's dark and lonely. Depressing house. Grandma's
|
|
heart burst here. Mom had a stroke here. Pop may not come back.
|
|
I'll sell this son-of-a-gun if he dies.
|
|
|
|
It all started with that spell.
|
|
|
|
It changed things. First, Cheryl Ann came into my life, then Pop
|
|
started getting spooky. He took me to the bank and changed his
|
|
bank account into a joint account with me. It should have been a
|
|
sign. It should have stared me in the face like Saturn opposing
|
|
Mars. I should have read the symbols.
|
|
|
|
A bigger sign was when he ran into a smoky glass partition at
|
|
the bank. Just flat out didn't see it. Knocked the shit out of
|
|
himself. He didn't fall, which he's been doing a lot of lately,
|
|
but jeez he was stunned. I could see it in those colorless eyes.
|
|
I've looked at them long enough to read them. Yeah, they're dead
|
|
like slate, but _I_ can still read them, a little.
|
|
|
|
When we're done at the bank, he wants to go to the eye doctor.
|
|
He thinks he has an appointment. I tell him he doesn't. He
|
|
insists. God, he's my Pop. I drive him there. Of course, the
|
|
damned place is closed for the weekend. He feels stupid and
|
|
confused. He won't admit it. He tries to make up something about
|
|
the eye clinic got the dates wrong.
|
|
|
|
"I'm sure that's it, Pop. Those secretaries don't always get
|
|
things right," I say not believing a word of it but making an
|
|
attempt to sound sincere. All I can do is try to keep his morale
|
|
up. Pump that self-image like I don't know this is the end.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The first time cheryl ann came over to the house, he tried to be
|
|
the old Darn Poke. He tried to be polite, and stand up when a
|
|
lady entered the room. Jeez! He fell to his knees and I had to
|
|
help him back to the couch.
|
|
|
|
He was so embarrassed.
|
|
|
|
"Bless his heart," Cheryl Ann said later. She didn't know how
|
|
right she was.
|
|
|
|
I got her out of there so Pop wouldn't have to feel less of a
|
|
man. I'd give him some time alone... then pretend it didn't
|
|
happen.
|
|
|
|
I gave myself a break and spent the night with her.
|
|
|
|
When I got home, I find out he went into the garage. He had to
|
|
get past two steps. He caught his toe on the top one and fell
|
|
back into the kitchen. He couldn't get back up. He fucking
|
|
crawled to the phone and called Charles next door.
|
|
|
|
"From now on," he said. "We can't lock the front door."
|
|
|
|
"You got it, Pop," I said. He was always scared somebody might
|
|
come in and get him... then he's scared he'll die on the floor.
|
|
You just gotta eat, I thought
|
|
|
|
"How about a pizza," I said
|
|
|
|
"Nah, I just want Jello."
|
|
|
|
"Christ, what flavor?"
|
|
|
|
"Raspberry."
|
|
|
|
I made it. He ate maybe half a cup.
|
|
|
|
"I'm full... thanks, Georgie."
|
|
|
|
"Pop, you _gotta_ eat. This isn't funny anymore."
|
|
|
|
He started telling me where the safe deposit box key was. And
|
|
how many CDs he's got. I knew what he was doing.
|
|
|
|
"Maybe I should put the house in both our names," he said.
|
|
|
|
"Not necessary," I said. "You're gonna live here another ten
|
|
years, right?"
|
|
|
|
He didn't answer.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The doctors admit him to the hospital and they're planning on
|
|
keeping him a week or so. "Are you eating?" I ask, standing in
|
|
his room. There's a white curtain separating him from the next
|
|
patient. I've brought his overnight bag. We keep it packed all
|
|
the time. His extra razor is in there; socks, pajamas, crossword
|
|
puzzle books. We're always ready.
|
|
|
|
"Oh yeah, I ate," he says. I can see the full tray pushed away.
|
|
Looks like he took two bites of mashed potatoes... and he downed
|
|
the whole damned Jello square.
|
|
|
|
At home, I find his stash of candy. That's what he's been eating
|
|
to keep the hunger pains down. Reese's Peanut Butter Cups.
|
|
Cherry Mash. Snickers.
|
|
|
|
He's gonna die, I think.
|
|
|
|
I toss the whole stash away. By God, when you come home, you're
|
|
gonna eat right, I think.
|
|
|
|
A week stretches into two, then three.
|
|
|
|
People wonder why I've got an attitude. Ha! "You try living with
|
|
someone who can't make up their mind to live or die," I tell
|
|
Cleo.
|
|
|
|
"Georgie?" he says and I know I'm in trouble because nobody but
|
|
Pop and Cheryl Ann call me that.
|
|
|
|
"Yeah?"
|
|
|
|
"I found a date."
|
|
|
|
I know what he's talking about. "Just tell me the details and
|
|
I'll say if you're right." It's arrogant, I know, but I'm
|
|
pissed. He goes along with me because this is it.
|
|
|
|
"Okay, I found it in _your_ chart, not his. Sometimes a close
|
|
relative, lover, family member, whatever... is where you find
|
|
these things."
|
|
|
|
"Yeah, yeah, get to it!"
|
|
|
|
"Right. Anyway, you moved in here three years ago when Saturn
|
|
hit the cusp of your fourth house... family, living area, et
|
|
cetera. Saturn hits your fourth house cusp and you get divorced.
|
|
Your living standard lowers. You change residences." He
|
|
hesitates; his big old lips are stuck. "So... you see, Saturn
|
|
leaves your fourth house January 12th."
|
|
|
|
"Well, that's a good thing. Get the devil out of my house."
|
|
|
|
"Georgie, you don't understand. Saturn opposes your Sun at the
|
|
same time. Natal Sun represents Father. Saturn is hard lessons,
|
|
restrictions; it's called the greater malefic."
|
|
|
|
"I know, Cleo. Hard times facing my Pop. January 12th... that's
|
|
four days from now. Hell, I could guess that, he's in the
|
|
hospital, he's not eating... what do you want, a medal?"
|
|
|
|
"Georgie, there's more. Saturn is also commitment. It's moving
|
|
towards the cusp of your fifth house, romance, creativity, etc.
|
|
And, Saturn tends to reward as it leaves one house and enters
|
|
another. It's leaving your family and home sector. It's opposing
|
|
your Father. It's already rewarded you, as it moves towards the
|
|
fifth, with Cheryl Ann. Now Saturn will get serious. Your
|
|
relationship will get serious. How many times have I heard you
|
|
say you won't get married again until your father dies?"
|
|
|
|
"Shit."
|
|
|
|
"Further rewards, Georgie. A new girl, a new life... your father
|
|
dies and you finally get your inheritance, which you've put off
|
|
asking for... now there's no asking. You are the only heir." He
|
|
pauses. "There's only one way you get an inheritance, George."
|
|
|
|
"And there's only one way I'll ever leave this house," I say. I
|
|
look at him and he looks sorry. He doesn't need to look sorry. I
|
|
don't want to kill the messenger. I'd rather be warned than
|
|
surprised. Besides, I'm the one that cast the spell. No spell is
|
|
perfect. Spells are just changes. They are catalysts. You throw
|
|
every thought you've got into making the spell work... and
|
|
_boom_, it does!
|
|
|
|
"Thanks, Cleo," I say.
|
|
|
|
"But it might not play out that way. You'll just have to see, ya
|
|
know?" He tries to look hopeful. To me he looks like a big black
|
|
Friar Tuck.
|
|
|
|
"That's right. There's the high road, the low road and something
|
|
in between. In between happens most often. Maybe he'll move to a
|
|
nursing home for a while until he gets back on his feet. I take
|
|
power of attorney so that I can pay his bills. He lives, I see
|
|
Cheryl Ann... yeah, yeah, it could play out that way, right?"
|
|
|
|
"Sure, Georgie. Sure. That's probably it."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
My beeper goes off. I'm at Cheryl Ann's. We made love and have
|
|
been asleep for maybe twenty minutes. We both jump up. She looks
|
|
at me like she knows.
|
|
|
|
"What the hell number is that?" It's a hospital number, but I
|
|
don't know which one.
|
|
|
|
I call. It's the nursing station outside Pop's room.
|
|
|
|
"George," the unknown nurse starts. "Mr. Poke passed away about
|
|
ten-thirty. I'm sorry. I thought you might want to come down."
|
|
|
|
"Yes, yes," I say. "I'll be right down. Gimme a minute. I don't
|
|
know how to act." Pop passed away while we were making love.
|
|
|
|
"I understand, Sir. You just take your time."
|
|
|
|
My breath is gone. The adrenaline is flowing, but I know it has
|
|
no where to go. It's a hole so big you could drive a yellow
|
|
school bus through it, and my feet won't move.
|
|
|
|
I look at Cheryl Ann. She's so pretty. She has on a long silver
|
|
gray nightgown. Her shoulders are bare. Hair down. Golden curls
|
|
are spilling all over her shoulders. My dad is dead and I'm
|
|
thinking about Cheryl Ann's permanent.
|
|
|
|
"I'll be right there," I repeat and hang up the phone.
|
|
|
|
"I'll go with you." I'm not sure how she knows.
|
|
|
|
"You don't have to, Baby."
|
|
|
|
"I want to," she says. She's dressed before I am.
|
|
|
|
It's a strange drive to the hospital. I don't remember it, but
|
|
the car goes on automatic pilot. Weird thoughts keep going
|
|
through my head. I'm rich, I think and am immediately sorry for
|
|
it. Cancel that thought. Cancel, cancel, cancel.
|
|
|
|
Too late. It's already in my mind and it'll never go away.
|
|
|
|
Everyone is so nice when we get there. They get the on-call
|
|
priest. They take me in the room and show me Pop's body.
|
|
|
|
Damn, he looks asleep. I try to wake him up, but when I touch
|
|
his body he's cold. Cold is the only way I know he's dead.
|
|
|
|
"He passed away in his sleep," the nurse says. "I checked on him
|
|
at ten. By ten-thirty he was gone. I don't think he felt a
|
|
thing."
|
|
|
|
It really looks that way. There is such peace on his face. Not
|
|
like the last few days when he was out of his head and mumbling
|
|
his prayers so loud they had to move him to the end of the hall
|
|
-- he had his own private little monastery.
|
|
|
|
I didn't even go up to see him that day. The last one to see him
|
|
was my daughter Jennifer. I think she's forgiven me for blowing
|
|
off her birthday dinner. Cheryl Ann wants to take her out for
|
|
lobster. Jennifer has never had lobster.
|
|
|
|
Somewhere in the last twenty-four days since he entered the
|
|
hospital, I said, "Watch what I do here, Jennifer. You'll have
|
|
to do this for me someday."
|
|
|
|
Fuck!
|
|
|
|
Not good. Not good at all.
|
|
|
|
The last time I saw him, he said, "How many people we got to
|
|
take care of?" He meant, when you send me to a nursing home,
|
|
will I ever come back? Or will you and Cheryl Ann get married
|
|
and leave me here?
|
|
|
|
I told him, "It's just us, Pop. Just you and me." And he smiled.
|
|
|
|
Now, I look at him at peace and wonder if telling him made any
|
|
difference. It's January 13th. Cleo was off by only one day.
|
|
Incredible! How could he draw such an accurate sentence from
|
|
such malleable symbols?
|
|
|
|
"Could you all leave us alone, please?" I ask. And the nurse and
|
|
Cheryl Ann leave the room.
|
|
|
|
I sit in the chair next to his bed for awhile. We say nothing. I
|
|
wait for him to speak, but he won't communicate. Life wants us
|
|
to be mediocre, I think. You step on a Ladybug in Missouri and a
|
|
kid falls dead in Afghanistan. You cast a spell -- ask for
|
|
change? You never know what's gonna happen.
|
|
|
|
"Was I a good son?" I ask. "Did I do it right, Pop?"
|
|
|
|
He doesn't answer. I guess that's okay.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Gary Cadwallader (rmcheal@sound.net)
|
|
--------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Gary Cadwallader lives in Kansas City, Missouri. He is a former
|
|
fine arts major who has switched to writing because it is the
|
|
most visual medium available... and it's cheaper. Gary also
|
|
wrote "The Greatest Vampire" in InterText v6n1.
|
|
|
|
<http://www.sound.net/~rmcheal/>
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
What I Found by Greg Durham
|
|
===============================
|
|
....................................................................
|
|
People can try anything to fill an emptiness inside.
|
|
Maybe that's no better than trying nothing at all.
|
|
....................................................................
|
|
|
|
1.
|
|
----
|
|
|
|
The sun had set somewhere between Richmond and Roanoke. My
|
|
mother stood on the platform of the Greyhound station, back to
|
|
the wind. Cigarette smoke trailed away from her. The brakes
|
|
squealed and bucked us to a stop. I wanted to get up and off, do
|
|
what I'd come home for, but I stayed in the seat. Mom's eyes
|
|
scanned back and forth and then back again, finding me. She
|
|
waved with her smoking hand, palm parallel to the ground,
|
|
raising and lowering, as if she were trying to keep something
|
|
down that wouldn't stay. The ash of her cigarette blew off and
|
|
rolled over a coat sleeve before evaporating into the whip of a
|
|
gust. I waved back, my fingers shaking.
|
|
|
|
Mom pressed the cigarette between her lips, freeing her hands
|
|
for a hug that came hard and quick. By the time I'd let my
|
|
backpack to the ground, she had backed away and was running
|
|
toward the parking lot.
|
|
|
|
"Come on, Tammy Jean!" she called over her shoulder. "This wind
|
|
is cold."
|
|
|
|
The interior of her Nova was a clash of tobacco and
|
|
air-freshening pine. The passenger's seat was littered with
|
|
manila files, a pair of L'eggs and an empty milkshake container.
|
|
Mom picked it all up as a bunch and tossed it to the back seat,
|
|
scattering the paper contents of the files.
|
|
|
|
"Sorry about the mess."
|
|
|
|
I pitched my bag to the floor.
|
|
|
|
"That's okay." I smiled. "I don't even have a car to mess up."
|
|
|
|
"Mind if I smoke?" Mom lit another cigarette and then reached up
|
|
to hit the dome light button. "Is that a rinse?"
|
|
|
|
"No, of course not!" I laughed and reflexively tucked a lock of
|
|
hair behind my ear. "You're just used to seeing my hair lighter
|
|
in the summer when you come to Philly."
|
|
|
|
"I don't remember it so dark. Whose side of the family do you
|
|
get that from?"
|
|
|
|
Mom revved the engine and peeled out of the parking space,
|
|
sending up a wild screech. Two white-haired ladies in matching
|
|
sweat suits grabbed one another in fright and declined when Mom
|
|
motioned them in front of us at the crosswalk.
|
|
|
|
"I can't believe we finally got you down here, city girl," Mom
|
|
slapped my knee, accelerated, and laughed a smoky laugh. "To
|
|
think, Tammy Jean Thomas returns to Virginia, of her own free
|
|
will no less. If it takes me moving to get you down here then
|
|
I'll have to do it more often." She coughed abruptly and took a
|
|
drag. We were quiet for the ride home, and I watched the sooty
|
|
shadows of the Appalachians race us off to the right of the car.
|
|
|
|
The American flag I helped Dad install one Fourth of July was
|
|
still attached to the front door frame. The flag had faded to
|
|
pastels now -- pinks and baby blues, the colors of a child's
|
|
room. Mom ground her cigarette into a planter outside, under the
|
|
flag.
|
|
|
|
"I've stopped doing it in the house," she whispered. "Larry says
|
|
the smoke'll kill him." Mom flipped on the entryway light and
|
|
tossed her purse to the floor. A blusher compact slid out and
|
|
clattered against the fake stone.
|
|
|
|
"Do you want a Tab, honey?" she asked, moving down the hallway
|
|
toward the kitchen. "Are you hungry?"
|
|
|
|
"No, I ate tons on the bus," I lied, putting my backpack down.
|
|
I'd only eaten a miniature pack of raisins given to me by a
|
|
woman that boarded the bus in Aberdeen.
|
|
|
|
"Helping your mother move. Now, that's a tough one," raisin
|
|
woman had said. "I did that a couple years ago when my mother
|
|
had a stroke and had to go into a home. You know, you throw the
|
|
stuff out, but..."
|
|
|
|
She didn't finish the sentence, but I knew what she meant.
|
|
|
|
Later, I watched her sleep, face forward and erect, like a
|
|
Catholic school girl at attention, her top and bottom lip
|
|
separated.
|
|
|
|
"If you have to pee, use the commode on the second floor," Mom
|
|
called from the kitchen. "I broke the handle on this one down
|
|
here."
|
|
|
|
The living room was hardly lit. A ceramic lamp my grandmother
|
|
made in the mid-'70s flickered on its lowest setting. Cardboard
|
|
boxes piled onto each other in one corner, but nothing was
|
|
packed into them.
|
|
|
|
"I see you didn't pack anything yet." I took a tentative step
|
|
onto the carpet. This had been a forbidden zone as a child,
|
|
Mom's "entertaining" area.
|
|
|
|
"I was waiting for you, young lady."
|
|
|
|
Her sudden reappearance startled me. I backed off the carpet.
|
|
Mom held out a glass of water and then clapped twice, fast. The
|
|
overhead light in the stairway popped on.
|
|
|
|
"Isn't that great?!" Mom giggled, wrapped her arms around her
|
|
middle. "Larry gave it to me last Christmas. It's called The
|
|
Clapper."
|
|
|
|
Two decades of Thomas family photographs led to the second floor
|
|
-- my parents' wedding, everything in between, ascending to my
|
|
junior year in high school. Mom had lost her interest in
|
|
photographs after that.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
I was in a first, fragile sleep when the front door jolted me
|
|
awake. Uncle Larry's voice rasped, "Where is she? Where's my
|
|
Jeanie-girl?"
|
|
|
|
I rolled onto my stomach. Mom's flip-flops slapped the soles of
|
|
her feet, rushing to the entryway from the kitchen.
|
|
|
|
"Larry, please. She's trying to get some sleep." Then a more
|
|
consoling try. "You'll see her in the morning. She's here for
|
|
the whole week," putting the stress on _whole_.
|
|
|
|
An hour passed. Shadows through the venetian blinds stretched
|
|
and moved across the ceiling. Every once in a while I caught the
|
|
ice-blue numbers of the digital clock change. Mom had not
|
|
touched the room in ten years. The walls were still painted
|
|
maroon like the seats of our old Pinto.
|
|
|
|
She tried to keep quiet a little while later, bolstering Uncle
|
|
Larry up the stairs, but the wall beside my bed thudded and
|
|
scraped.
|
|
|
|
"Lord, I have to quit smoking if this is going to keep up," Mom
|
|
said. "Thank God we're moving to a rancher."
|
|
|
|
Their combined weight lay heavily on the floorboard in front of
|
|
Uncle Larry's room, sending up a wooden whine. I'd always been
|
|
careful to avoid that floorboard. I could hear Mom whispering
|
|
instructions -- your clothes, the lights, the alarm -- and then
|
|
good night. I turned onto my left side and watched the door, the
|
|
knob reflecting the bare light from the clock. I hadn't moved
|
|
when the doorknob jiggled quietly and slowly. Turn, stop, turn.
|
|
|
|
"Tammy Jean," Uncle Larry's breath rustled softly through the
|
|
gap between frame and door. "Unlock it, honey. I want to see
|
|
you."
|
|
|
|
I was still as stone. Five, ten, fifteen minutes.
|
|
|
|
"I love you, Jeanie-girl." His voice seemed to circle my room
|
|
and I held an inhalation for a second. The floorboard creaked;
|
|
Larry was gone. I exhaled.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mom had a whole album of pictures taken at state borders. It was
|
|
Dad's thing. We measured our progress as a family and in the
|
|
growth of me and Jeff, my brother, in those photos. North
|
|
Carolina 1967, Maryland 1970, Pennsylvania, Christmas 1972.
|
|
|
|
When I was ten, Uncle Larry became an addition to our everyday
|
|
lives and our vacation pictures. Aunt Sheila had filed for
|
|
divorce and sent my uncle on a drinking and drugging binge. When
|
|
he lost his apartment, Dad took him in and joked that he'd
|
|
wanted three kids anyway. Larry didn't appreciate the joke, but
|
|
he appreciated the roof over his head and so laughed with the
|
|
rest of us.
|
|
|
|
Dad and Uncle Larry switched places on the highway on New Year's
|
|
Day 1973, driving home from Aunt Mary Ellen's. Dad was coming
|
|
down with the flu and couldn't concentrate. Mom sat behind with
|
|
me, reading The Stepford Wives, her panty-hosed feet curled up
|
|
on the seat beside her. Jeff slept in a makeshift bed in the
|
|
back of the station wagon. I watched the Maryland and Virginia
|
|
state signs pass, but didn't say anything, returning the camera
|
|
to my backpack.
|
|
|
|
Uncle Larry skidded out of control on an icy patch near
|
|
Harrisonburg. Jeff was thrown through the back window glass,
|
|
landing fifty feet from the car. Dad died from internal injuries
|
|
four hours later. The rest of us got out of it easy compared to
|
|
that.
|
|
|
|
The first birthday without my father was my thirteenth. He and
|
|
Jeff had only been buried three months, but they were both
|
|
withering for me. Dad's college friends stopped calling, the
|
|
bills came in Mom's name, and their smells -- in Jeff's room and
|
|
in Dad's den -- were disappearing into the carpet and walls
|
|
forever. I took a "Virginia is for Lovers" t-shirt Dad had worn
|
|
on road trips and stowed it under my bed. Mom cleaned one
|
|
Saturday while I was at the mall and when I came home the shirt
|
|
was gone, along with the rest of his clothing, to Goodwill.
|
|
|
|
"Spring cleaning," Mom said over the drone of the vacuum, not
|
|
looking at me.
|
|
|
|
My birthday fell on a warm night in April. I lied to Mom and
|
|
Larry, saying I was spending the night at Bonnie's house. I
|
|
packed an overnight bag and pulled myself into a pair of hip
|
|
huggers, saving the covert halter top I bought with my allowance
|
|
for later, safely out of view of the house. I was in the
|
|
bathroom, trying to straighten my hair with a comb and spray,
|
|
when Uncle Larry arrived home.
|
|
|
|
"Going over to Bonnie's tonight?" he asked, a Slim Jim in hand,
|
|
poised at his lips.
|
|
|
|
"Yeah." The comb jerked through a knot. I glanced at him in the
|
|
reflection of the mirror. His overalls were smudged with grease
|
|
from the garage where he'd been working as a mechanic.
|
|
|
|
"Is Bonnie a good girl?" Larry squinted his eyes and chewed. "We
|
|
don't need our Tammy Jean hanging out with nasty girls."
|
|
|
|
"Uncle Larry!" I squealed and rapped his arm with a brush. "My
|
|
friends are not nasty!"
|
|
|
|
Larry grabbed his arm in mock pain and I pulled the comb through
|
|
once more, popping hairs out of my scalp.
|
|
|
|
"Well, good." He stepped up to me from behind and draped his
|
|
arms around my shoulders. "That makes me feel better." Planting
|
|
a kiss on top of my head. "Hey, want a Slim Jim?"
|
|
|
|
"I'm not hungry," I giggled and rolled my eyes. He knew I hated
|
|
Slim Jims.
|
|
|
|
Later, Kenny, Bonnie's brother, drove us to a Roanoke College
|
|
party.
|
|
|
|
"Look what I have, girls." Kenny tore off two Black Labels and
|
|
threw them to the back seat. They landed between me and Bonnie,
|
|
bouncing against each other on the vinyl. Just one of those
|
|
little beers made me unsteady and we weren't even to the party
|
|
yet.
|
|
|
|
Within two hours we'd been picked up for speeding and ended up
|
|
at the Catawba police and fire station. When asked how much I'd
|
|
had, I couldn't answer. I heard Bonnie say "four" and the
|
|
officer filled in a blank space on the report.
|
|
|
|
"Where is she?" Uncle Larry's voice had an edge of frantic in
|
|
it.
|
|
|
|
"Just relax, Larry, she's fine," Ronald Bupp, Bonnie's cousin
|
|
and the Catawba deputy, said. "She's back here."
|
|
|
|
I pushed my palms against the chair seat, out of my slouching
|
|
position, then casually folded my hands in my lap. There was no
|
|
pretending I wasn't drunk, though. Larry said nothing, but I
|
|
felt myself lifted under the armpits. I leaned close to his
|
|
chest as he carried me to the car.
|
|
|
|
"I hate you," Bonnie hissed at her cousin as we left.
|
|
|
|
"I have a headache," was the first thing I said after arriving
|
|
home.
|
|
|
|
Uncle Larry led me to the rec room couch and turned the lamp to
|
|
a low setting. I groaned and hid my face, horrified by the
|
|
embarrassment of being drunk in front of my uncle, terrified of
|
|
what Mom would do to me.
|
|
|
|
"That was a stupid thing to do," he said finally, sitting on the
|
|
edge of the couch. I accepted a mug of Nescafe from him. "You
|
|
could have been killed. They clocked you all at 78 on Trindle
|
|
Road."
|
|
|
|
I put the mug to my lips and tested the coffee. Too hot. "I'm
|
|
sorry, Uncle Larry. Mom's going to murder me."
|
|
|
|
Larry leaned forward, lifting my chin gently. "You don't have to
|
|
worry. I won't say anything. Not this time."
|
|
|
|
"You mean, you're not -- "
|
|
|
|
Larry put a finger on my lips to quiet me. "We all have
|
|
secrets," he said. "And it's important to trust someone. I know
|
|
your Daddy was important to you and I know you miss him." A
|
|
brief well of sadness pulled up in me. "I miss him, too," Larry
|
|
continued. "He helped me out of a lot of trouble -- took a
|
|
chance on me. He and I shared a lot of secrets."
|
|
|
|
"Mom never talks about him. It's like he didn't even exist."
|
|
|
|
"It's a peculiarity," Larry sat back. "People deal with things
|
|
in funny ways. We both lost someone, though, you and me. That
|
|
puts us in the same boat." Bitter steam wound up out of the mug,
|
|
under my chin and nose. "This isn't what you were wearing when
|
|
you left the house." He fingered the shoulder strap of my halter
|
|
top.
|
|
|
|
"I didn't think you'd let me go out in it." For my drunkenness,
|
|
I could feel blood rising in my face. "I think I left my coat at
|
|
the party."
|
|
|
|
Larry leaned into me close again. "Your mother won't know any of
|
|
this. You're growing up fast into a woman. It's natural you'd
|
|
want to look like one. Just be careful of the guys who would
|
|
take advantage of a mature girl like you."
|
|
|
|
"I can handle them, Uncle Larry." I managed a grim smile.
|
|
|
|
He laughed. "I'm sure you can." He wrinkled his forehead
|
|
thoughtfully for a moment. "I'll tell you what. Since it's
|
|
mostly you and me here alone in this house with your Mom working
|
|
the night shift, how about if we make a deal?"
|
|
|
|
I crossed my arms, anticipating one of his jokes. "Okay. What?"
|
|
|
|
Larry held up one finger.
|
|
|
|
"First and foremost, we have to trust each other. So I promise I
|
|
won't keep anything from you." Another finger. "And you promise
|
|
to do the same. No secrets, and it all stays between you and
|
|
me." I said nothing, but leaned forward for a hug. "Just say
|
|
you'll always take care," he breathed warm on my neck. "It'd
|
|
kill me if anything happened to you."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
I slept for four hours that first night home and woke with a
|
|
cool shower just after dawn. I've never been a good sleeper,
|
|
having lost the ability as a teenager, and every night I looked
|
|
forward to morning and light. I stood naked in the mirror after
|
|
the shower, watching water evaporate off my skin, crossing my
|
|
arms across my breasts when a chill came through the window. My
|
|
legs were taut, the thigh muscles sinewed and strong, the lower
|
|
part of the quad making a defined arc over my knees. I had taken
|
|
up running in the past year at the suggestion of a clinic
|
|
co-worker and it had removed any hint of baby fat I may have had
|
|
left.
|
|
|
|
"You should wear skirts, Tammy," she said to me on a jog through
|
|
Fairmount Park one morning. "You have great legs and you hide
|
|
them like they're the crown jewels."
|
|
|
|
Two weeks later I took a skirt into the dressing room at
|
|
Wanamaker's. It was a light cotton blue, cut several inches
|
|
above my knee. It was a strange vision of myself and my body --
|
|
"laid open," I remember thinking. With no warning, I burst out
|
|
crying.
|
|
|
|
"Are you okay in there?" a clerk rapped the door.
|
|
|
|
"Fine, thank you." I fished for a Kleenex in my purse. "Fine."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mom's pens were in the same drawer they'd always been, mostly
|
|
red ones lifted from work, wherever that happened to be at any
|
|
moment. I wrote a short note saying I wouldn't be long, and took
|
|
the keys.
|
|
|
|
Mom had been making a decent living -- her words -- as a temp
|
|
for eight years now. Good enough for a down payment on a new
|
|
rancher five miles away. She was leaving the home she'd bought
|
|
with my father, but hanging on to it as a rental investment.
|
|
When she sent a letter saying she'd be moving, I wrote back that
|
|
I would help her. If she was surprised at my easy willingness to
|
|
suddenly return home after so long away, she didn't say.
|
|
|
|
Driving in daylight now, the neighborhood had a barren quality I
|
|
didn't remember. The sidewalks were empty of people and rust
|
|
edged the siding of several houses I passed. Trees planted
|
|
during the '60s had stunted and were barely blossoming now in
|
|
the early spring. In cruel contrast, the mountains in the
|
|
distance were already green with new growth. When we'd moved
|
|
there from a smaller house near the city, the houses were shiny,
|
|
the lawns still dirt and seed. Behind our house had been fields
|
|
of corn and soy on alternate years, stretching to the edge of
|
|
Jefferson National Forest and Brush Mountain beyond. When I
|
|
looked out my bedroom window this morning, I couldn't even see
|
|
fields anymore. A sea of bi-levels rose and fell instead.
|
|
|
|
The car bucked up over Clifton Hill, my foot a little quick on
|
|
the clutch after all the years away from the wheel. The Clifton
|
|
Hill Lutheran Church came into view, with a considerably
|
|
expanded parking lot -- but today, Saturday, it was empty.
|
|
|
|
The dewy ground squished under my sneakers as I wound up one row
|
|
of graves and down the next. Daddy had been in the last row, but
|
|
time had passed and the cemetery went deeper now. By the time I
|
|
found them, morning moisture on the grass had seeped through my
|
|
canvas sneakers. Tiny pools of water sat in shallow grooves of
|
|
the headstones. Jeff's said "Just sleeping..." and Dad's,
|
|
simply, "Beloved Husband, Father, Friend." Uncle Larry had
|
|
written the epitaphs when Mom couldn't bring herself to do it.
|
|
|
|
"Hey, Daddy." The stone was cold on my fingertips. I plucked a
|
|
couple twigs off the top. From here, there was nothing to
|
|
interrupt the view, though there would only be a few more years
|
|
until the developments stretched to the church boundaries. A
|
|
southwest breeze came off Brush Mountain, on it the moist odor
|
|
of oak and elder. Hot, humid summer would be here on those winds
|
|
soon.
|
|
|
|
"Not a bad place to spend eternity, right, Jeff?" I tossed the
|
|
twigs to the ground in front of my brother's grave.
|
|
|
|
I squatted in front of my father's plot. The carved dates were
|
|
as deep in the stone as the day they were made. I ran my fingers
|
|
over and around them, the sharp bottom-curve of the 'J' in
|
|
January, the tragic, trailing end of the '2' in 1972.
|
|
|
|
A car door closed in the parking lot and I glanced back. Uncle
|
|
Larry stepped onto the grass, waving. My runner's legs
|
|
tightened, ready as at the beginning of a race, five seconds
|
|
before the starting gun fires.
|
|
|
|
He stopped a few feet from me, tears in his eyes. His hair had
|
|
moved back on his forehead since I'd seen him, losing some of
|
|
its sandy color along the way. The grooves under his eyes were
|
|
deeper and darker in the daylight.
|
|
|
|
I smiled toward him, but my eyes looked past. I wondered if
|
|
tears would come. They did not. Blood pounded suddenly through
|
|
my temples.
|
|
|
|
"Good God almighty," he drawled slowly and took a half-step
|
|
closer. "You are alive after all."
|
|
|
|
"Uncle Larry -- "
|
|
|
|
But he had his arms around me, mine momentarily useless at my
|
|
sides. His hands on my back held me close into his denim jacket.
|
|
He smelled like car oil and wood. His pulse raced through the
|
|
fabric, against my cheek. He was high.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2.
|
|
----
|
|
|
|
Mom was unpacking groceries when I got home, thirty seconds
|
|
ahead of Larry.
|
|
|
|
"There's little Miss Mysterious." She folded a paper bag.
|
|
"Where'd you go?"
|
|
|
|
"Good morning," I said and went into the bathroom. I locked the
|
|
door and sat on the bathtub edge, pacing my breathing,
|
|
practicing the relaxation techniques I had been teaching at the
|
|
clinic.
|
|
|
|
The front door opened and closed.
|
|
|
|
"Where were you?" Mom was standing outside the bathroom. "Tammy,
|
|
you can't flush that one."
|
|
|
|
"I found our Tammy at the Clifton Hill -- " Larry started.
|
|
|
|
"I went to see Daddy and Jeff." I opened the door and slipped
|
|
past my mother.
|
|
|
|
Larry hung his coat on a rack in the hall. Mom followed into the
|
|
kitchen on my heels, agitated.
|
|
|
|
"I don't see why you have to upset yourself with only a week
|
|
here." She slid Coffeemate across the counter. "Besides, there
|
|
are _living_ people that'd like to see you. Your uncle obviously
|
|
couldn't wait."
|
|
|
|
I pushed the Coffeemate away. "I'm not upset, Mom. It was just a
|
|
visit."
|
|
|
|
"How are they?" She crossed her arms and looked incredibly young
|
|
for a moment, her bottom lip curled under the top.
|
|
|
|
Larry popped the top off a beer.
|
|
|
|
"They're fine. The church has grown a lot, though."
|
|
|
|
Mom returned to the groceries and resumed unpacking with a new
|
|
energy, slamming cans of vegetable medley onto the table. When
|
|
she looked up again, there was a tremor that tore across her
|
|
face.
|
|
|
|
"You could have asked me if I wanted to go, too."
|
|
|
|
"Sherry, you never went even -- "
|
|
|
|
"I'm not talking to you, Larry," Mom cut him off. "And you're
|
|
never here." _Slam._ "When I let Mary Ellen take you to
|
|
Philadelphia I didn't know you'd never come back. I would have
|
|
thought better otherwise."
|
|
|
|
A can of snow peas hit the table. We stood in a silent triangle,
|
|
the coffee machine drip-dripping behind me. I poured the
|
|
contents of my mug into the sink and watched a woman quickly
|
|
swat her daughter's bottom once in the next yard. A wail went
|
|
up.
|
|
|
|
"I'm sorry, honey." Mom came up behind me, leaning into my
|
|
shoulder. "I got my period this morning."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mom worked the late shift at Red Lobster for four years after
|
|
the accident. Back then, Uncle Larry would get home after five
|
|
and we'd eat leftovers, the two of us, that Mom had brought home
|
|
from the night before. Sometimes we ate in front of the
|
|
television, Larry reclining back in Daddy's La-Z-Boy, letting
|
|
the effects of a joint take hold, laughing at the shows. I was a
|
|
quick study in inhaling, but Uncle Larry always made sure we had
|
|
Cokes just in case I started coughing.
|
|
|
|
In warm weather, we lay in the yard to watch the sky,
|
|
perpendicular to each other, my head on Larry's stomach, him
|
|
running his fingers through my hair.
|
|
|
|
"We're not alone," he'd say in his spookiest voice. I'd laugh
|
|
and close my eyes, the weed spinning me tenderly. "And if there
|
|
is someone else out there, we'll be taken first to that
|
|
extraterrestrial paradise, because we believe and we'll be the
|
|
only two, like Adam and Eve."
|
|
|
|
"You're crazy, Uncle Larry." I moved closer to him for warmth.
|
|
|
|
"Crazy about you, little girl," he said always.
|
|
|
|
Mom was still a regular at Red Lobster, even now. She'd gotten a
|
|
taste for popcorn shrimp that nothing but a trip down the pike
|
|
would satisfy. We went to dinner there my second night home. She
|
|
walked in ahead of me, passing out hugs and blowing kisses,
|
|
waving to someone at the salad bar.
|
|
|
|
"Hey, Sherry," they all said.
|
|
|
|
"Smoking," she said back. Mom led us through the main dining
|
|
room to a booth, giggling when the night manager told her she
|
|
was keeping mighty trim. "It's my Salems that keep me slim,
|
|
Troy," she said, flirting, "because I have the appetite of a
|
|
horse."
|
|
|
|
"Amen to that," Troy, a smoker himself, replied.
|
|
|
|
Uncle Larry took our jackets to the coat rack and then headed
|
|
toward the bathroom. Mom already knew what she was having, so
|
|
she chattered while I skimmed the over-sized, laminated menu of
|
|
shrimpboat variations and seafood lover's platters. I hadn't
|
|
eaten anything since the raisins, twenty-four hours earlier.
|
|
|
|
"He's snorting up in there," Mom said and nodded in the
|
|
direction of the bathroom. "Glass of chablis, please," to the
|
|
waitress. "Oh, hey, hon. I didn't even recognize you with that
|
|
short hair. You look great."
|
|
|
|
"I'll just have a coffee." I handed the menu to the waitress.
|
|
|
|
Uncle Larry's good old boy laugh carried over the tops of the
|
|
booths as he returned from the restroom. He was teasing a
|
|
waitress who said, "Larry, you are sooo baaaad," drawling it out
|
|
in flirtatious emphasis.
|
|
|
|
"Well, he should come back with some energy." Mom rolled her
|
|
eyes.
|
|
|
|
"How long has it been since he's been off the wagon?" I turned
|
|
slightly to see if he was getting close.
|
|
|
|
"Since you started calling again," Mom said in a hushed voice,
|
|
leaning across the table.
|
|
|
|
"Sherry, you know I hate cigarettes," Larry said, lowering into
|
|
the booth.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, Jesus, Larry, relax." Mom tipped her ash onto the bread
|
|
plate. "If you can..." Her voice trailed off as she inhaled
|
|
deeply and blew smoke sideways out of her mouth, away from us.
|
|
"Never mind."
|
|
|
|
Mom drank four glasses of wine through dinner, and Larry had six
|
|
beers while I sipped first coffee and then a Lipton tea. They
|
|
were telling stories about growing up in Asheville, laughing and
|
|
arguing over who knocked who out of the front yard tree and who
|
|
was responsible for breaking Grandmommy's heirloom vase. Mom
|
|
finished her shrimp and pushed the basket away, letting her head
|
|
rest back against the seat, eyes closed.
|
|
|
|
"Mmm, those were the days, weren't they, Lar?" she sighed and
|
|
pushed a fountain of smoke straight up in the air.
|
|
|
|
Larry reached across the table and settled a rough-skinned hand
|
|
on my arm. His fingers trembled on my skin. From the drugs, I
|
|
told myself.
|
|
|
|
Mom sat up all at once. "Larry!"
|
|
|
|
Larry jerked his arm back, knocking over a beer. "What? What?"
|
|
in rapid succession. "Shit, you scared me."
|
|
|
|
"Nothing," Mom said, watching me for a moment then grinding out
|
|
her cigarette. "I think it's time to go home. I'm feeling
|
|
dizzy."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
"You better drive." Mom tossed me the keys in the parking lot
|
|
before I could even answer, and headed to the passenger's side.
|
|
Uncle Larry caught the rabbit's foot chain with his right hand
|
|
and my forearm with the left, turning me toward him. Mom was
|
|
already stepping into the back seat.
|
|
|
|
"I've missed you something fierce," he said low, across the top
|
|
of the car as we got in on opposite sides.
|
|
|
|
"No games," I said back.
|
|
|
|
Mom prattled from behind during the ride home, down and around
|
|
darkened, bumpy roads to Catawba. I cracked my window a half
|
|
inch to breathe. Her voice filled up the car, filled it up with
|
|
nothing. I felt like every bit of oxygen was being sucked
|
|
outside. I was suddenly a teenager again, sailing over quick
|
|
rises and around edgy curves. I hadn't driven these country
|
|
roads sober, probably ever, but I knew the way home.
|
|
|
|
"There used to be a farmer's market there," Mom tapped the
|
|
window with a red nail at the fleeting, black landscape.
|
|
"They're going to build a Wawa. I guess it'll be more convenient
|
|
for milk and soda on the way home."
|
|
|
|
Larry sat silently, buckled in beside me. I only caught his face
|
|
by accident, when we came to a stop sign and I had to look right
|
|
for traffic. His hands gripped his legs as he watched the road
|
|
pass under the headlights, early spring bugs careening toward
|
|
us.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Uncle Larry suggested the color for my room, the dark red. We
|
|
had driven to the Home Store on a Friday night, smoking a joint
|
|
on the way, Larry squeezing my hand to keep me from laughing
|
|
wildly at the other customers. He negotiated a custom color, a
|
|
mix of red and brown. We waited twenty minutes while a clerk
|
|
mixed three gallons.
|
|
|
|
It was sundown when we got home with the paint, brushes, and
|
|
mixing sticks. I ran ahead of Larry, skipping steps, and flipped
|
|
on every light in my bedroom. The juvenile yellow that I'd loved
|
|
as an eleven year old was garish all of a sudden, unbearable in
|
|
a moment. My father had picked out that color for me. I wanted
|
|
to get rid of it.
|
|
|
|
"Let's throw the paint on!" I pulled a gallon from Larry's hand.
|
|
|
|
"You smoked a little too much." Larry nipped at my cheek with
|
|
his thumb and finger and then wrapped his arms around me,
|
|
tripping us onto the bed. We fell, laughing. "Here. I have
|
|
something that will focus you," he said.
|
|
|
|
The plastic bag was small enough it sat in his shirt
|
|
undetectable from the outside. He extracted it slowly, like a
|
|
magic trick, and he was savoring his audience reaction.
|
|
|
|
"Cocaine," I said.
|
|
|
|
Larry cut it with a new razor and I did my first line of coke on
|
|
the marbleized formica of the bathroom counter. He went first,
|
|
demonstrating how to press on the left nostril and draw the
|
|
powder in through the right, using a straw from Red Lobster. The
|
|
first line was like a ricochet. My eyes teared bitterly and I
|
|
couldn't stand up straight.
|
|
|
|
"Are you okay, baby?" Uncle Larry supported me, his hand on my
|
|
back, as I crouched over the sink.
|
|
|
|
I held my nostrils together and inhaled through my mouth for a
|
|
minute. My forehead resting on the edge of the sink, I was hit
|
|
with a clear energy that I'd never known before that moment.
|
|
Larry had a vague, concerned look.
|
|
|
|
"Let's paint, goddammit," I said.
|
|
|
|
We took a break every half hour to get loaded up until midnight.
|
|
I was a natural. Larry ran out for a case of beer and I did a
|
|
line on my own.
|
|
|
|
"You're getting sloppy," Larry said later when I dropped my
|
|
paint brush.
|
|
|
|
It was true. I leaned into my roller for support as I painted.
|
|
|
|
"Here. Come on." Larry took the tools away from me and placed
|
|
them on the newspaper we'd spread over the carpet. He led me to
|
|
the bed, where I sat momentarily and then allowed myself to lay
|
|
back. The ceiling seemed closer than I'd ever noticed.
|
|
|
|
Larry lifted my legs onto the bed. His finger, rough on the end
|
|
from the constant turn and grip of mechanic's tools, drew the
|
|
edge of my ear, and an evening air hovered over my bed from the
|
|
window. Someone had mowed their lawn and I could just make it
|
|
out, mixed with the newness of the paint. I counted in my head
|
|
the remaining days of my sophomore year -- fifteen.
|
|
|
|
"I think I found a treat you like," Larry said quiet, almost in
|
|
a lazy way.
|
|
|
|
"Yeah." I was exhausted.
|
|
|
|
"Does that feel good?" He massaged my head lightly.
|
|
|
|
"Feels great. Dad used to do that while I watched TV. He'd play
|
|
with my hair."
|
|
|
|
"I remember."
|
|
|
|
I awoke at 5 a.m. in my jeans and t-shirt. Someone had turned
|
|
off the light. I rolled to my right side and propped up to the
|
|
window. Mom's car sat in the driveway. I felt heavy and it took
|
|
a moment to get myself up off the bed.
|
|
|
|
The carpet was cool under my feet, crossing to the bathroom. The
|
|
light flickered on and I closed the door so Mom wouldn't hear
|
|
the shower. White residue covered the counter. I ran my finger
|
|
across it and tasted, bending to pull off my right sock. Bitter.
|
|
|
|
I slipped under the covers naked, after drying off and pulling
|
|
my hair into a ponytail. I watched the digits on the clock
|
|
change for a half hour. At 5:42 the door knob turned.
|
|
|
|
"Jeanie," Uncle Larry whispered into the dark. "Are you awake?"
|
|
|
|
"I just got out of the shower," I whispered back.
|
|
|
|
Larry ran his hand along the freshly painted wall, coming to the
|
|
bed, and stepped into the pale blue light of the clock.
|
|
|
|
"I want to talk to you."
|
|
|
|
He tasted like an orange when we kissed that first time. The
|
|
next morning I found rinds on a plate outside my door. He told
|
|
me he'd been waiting all night, thinking of what and how to say
|
|
what was inside him -- if he even should.
|
|
|
|
I pulled the covers over him and he buried his face in my chest,
|
|
kissing my breasts, nipples, saying over and over, "I love you,
|
|
Jeanie-girl, I love you."
|
|
|
|
|
|
I was not a virgin, but it was the first time that I let someone
|
|
in who loved me.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mom was still drunk when we got home from Red Lobster. I sat on
|
|
her bathroom counter and watched her puke. She'd only gotten her
|
|
blouse and one shoe off when the urge hit. I'd been lying on her
|
|
bed looking at a photo album and watched her run past me.
|
|
|
|
"Shit! That was an expensive meal." She leaned forward and
|
|
across the toilet bowl to flush. I handed her a Dixie cup of
|
|
water and a folded section of toilet paper for her mouth. She
|
|
rinsed and spit into the toilet before flushing again.
|
|
|
|
Mom put her hand, fleshy and cool, over mine as she walked by,
|
|
and squeezed. I followed back into the bedroom and we both lay
|
|
on top of the bedspread. It was the same cover she'd always had.
|
|
By now its seams were loosening and the flower print had frayed.
|
|
Mom pulled up against a pile of pillows and sank back, her face
|
|
relaxing into a half-smile. Her red hair matted around the ears
|
|
and hairline, with cold, puke sweat, but she was fine now.
|
|
|
|
When she opened her eyes again, she said, surprised, "Well,
|
|
Lord, look at me there. I must have been thirty years old at
|
|
most."
|
|
|
|
I'd left a photo album sitting open at a trip to Luray Caverns
|
|
we'd taken. There was one of her, diminished in front of a
|
|
stalagmite, a quarter mile underground where everything glistens
|
|
orange. I had taken the picture, Dad behind me, bent over, his
|
|
arms around mine, demonstrating the proper method. Jeff just
|
|
barely made it into the right edge of the frame, his back toward
|
|
us, listening in on another tour group off-camera.
|
|
|
|
Mom pulled the album onto her lap and lifted a page to the light
|
|
from the nightstand. "Your father was so handsome." She ran a
|
|
finger over the page. "Sometimes I forget. You remind me of
|
|
him."
|
|
|
|
"Really?" She'd never said this before. "In what way?"
|
|
|
|
"Well, you have his skinny butt." She studied me for a moment
|
|
and then looked at the photos. "The same squared-off chin. And
|
|
you're both stubborn as you are smart." She closed the album and
|
|
pushed it toward me. "You should take this back to Philly with
|
|
you. It's good to have something from home. Besides, I already
|
|
have enough to pack around here."
|
|
|
|
Mom turned, squinting, to the bedside lamp and clicked it off,
|
|
leaving half of the room dim.
|
|
|
|
"Why'd you come home, Tammy Jean?"
|
|
|
|
"What?" I raised myself up on my elbows and looked at her. She
|
|
was sunk into the pillows again, expressionless, so peaceful she
|
|
could have been asleep. I wondered if maybe she hadn't really
|
|
said anything.
|
|
|
|
"Why'd you come home? Really, I'd like to know. You volunteered
|
|
yourself, come down here for the first time in eight years. And
|
|
you haven't said two words while you've been here but I still
|
|
get the feeling there's a whole lot you want to say."
|
|
|
|
I put my face to the pillow. Mom's hairspray had gotten into the
|
|
cotton case and it conjured a life I had almost forgotten.
|
|
Sitting in the backseat behind Dad, picking at the scab on his
|
|
elbow; his arm resting over top of the seat, fingers brushing
|
|
Mom's shoulder while she read; the Appalachians trapping us in
|
|
on both sides of the highway; the scent of her hair drifting
|
|
backward, Jeff's sweaty head on my lap.
|
|
|
|
I squeezed my eyelids together, refusing tears. It wasn't what I
|
|
had come home to do. I'd come to help my mother move.
|
|
|
|
"I came to give you a hand packing."
|
|
|
|
"No, you didn't come back here for me," she said, opening her
|
|
eyes now to regard me straight on and firm, like she had when I
|
|
was younger. "I don't need help getting out of this house and
|
|
you know it."
|
|
|
|
I held her eyes for a moment, looking for the answer she wanted.
|
|
|
|
"If you came to tell me about Larry," she said, "I don't want to
|
|
hear it." A weariness passed her face. "Your father and Jeff
|
|
were all I could handle. I hope you can see that and try not to
|
|
hate me."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Through the summer of 1976, Uncle Larry and I still shared
|
|
secrets, mostly one between the two of us. I told Bonnie, just
|
|
after the first day of eleventh grade, in a note written during
|
|
study hall.
|
|
|
|
"You're sick," she wrote back. Not long after the rest of my
|
|
group pulled away, too.
|
|
|
|
Larry was fired from the garage in October, passing cars for
|
|
inspection while he was high. At least his boss didn't turn him
|
|
to the cops.
|
|
|
|
"I'll just take vacation for awhile," he said. "It'll give me
|
|
more time to think about making you happy."
|
|
|
|
In March, I was sent home from school with a letter that I would
|
|
be required to repeat a grade due to "poor academic performance
|
|
and excessive absenteeism." I needed the signature of a parent
|
|
or guardian on the return slip. That's what they got when I went
|
|
in on Monday with Larry's signature, Lawrence T. Fasbender,
|
|
scrawled in black ink across the bottom.
|
|
|
|
"This'll be our secret," he said. "No use upsetting your
|
|
mother."
|
|
|
|
"No use," I agreed. I was as tired as I'd ever be, with no
|
|
energy to care one way or the other, really.
|
|
|
|
On the night of my 17th birthday, I took Larry for a drive.
|
|
|
|
"Holy shit," he rebel-yelled out the window as all four wheels
|
|
momentarily left the ground. "You are in control!"
|
|
|
|
My hands gripped the wheel at three and nine. The car lifted and
|
|
dropped, scraping bottom over the sudden dips and subtle rises
|
|
of Peach Glen Road. Blackness streamed faster on either side of
|
|
us as I pressed the accelerator. The wind helicoptered through
|
|
the interior and I screamed. Not anything, just screamed as loud
|
|
as I could out the window. The speedometer was at 80.
|
|
|
|
"Okay, okay! Tammy, that's enough!" Uncle Larry had an edge of
|
|
panic to him. "Fuck, Tammy! Slow down!" He reached over and
|
|
grabbed the wheel, but I pushed the pedal further. "You're going
|
|
to fucking kill us!"
|
|
|
|
Pain shot through my leg as the heel of his boot dug into my
|
|
shin, knocking my foot off the pedal. His foot searched for the
|
|
brake and I turned the wheel hard right, propelling us into a
|
|
field. Dust, dirt and fertilizer swept over the Malibu like a
|
|
wave on the ocean. I hit the steering wheel, losing my wind
|
|
violently. Larry smashed into the windshield and fell back to
|
|
the seat, halfway on the floor.
|
|
|
|
"Oh my God." He groaned and I gasped for my air back.
|
|
|
|
Thirty seconds passed in eerie, utter silence. The headlights
|
|
skimmed the newly-planted field of soy beans. A million
|
|
particles of earth swam in front of us.
|
|
|
|
Larry pulled himself up. His forehead had opened and blood
|
|
dripped off the square of his jaw onto his sweatshirt.
|
|
|
|
"Are you okay?" he asked, distracted and amazed at his bloody
|
|
hands.
|
|
|
|
I didn't answer, but instead pushed the door open and stepped
|
|
out. Standing in front of the car, in the headlights, I looked
|
|
at Larry. The windshield was shattered where he'd hit but hadn't
|
|
broken through. My arm was throbbing. I turned away and started
|
|
to run.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Overnight, no one knew where I was. I walked the eight miles to
|
|
the Coast-to-Coast Motel and paid the room with a twenty Mom had
|
|
given me as a birthday gift. I watched TV until the manager
|
|
asked me to leave the next afternoon, or at least pay for
|
|
another night.
|
|
|
|
Aunt Mary Ellen took the situation in hand, as she'd like to say
|
|
in the years following, when describing that day. She'd gotten
|
|
on a commuter flight from Philadelphia to Richmond to Roanoke
|
|
first thing in the morning. Mom searched my room while the
|
|
police took a description of me, looking for a reason to explain
|
|
a suicidal car ride, or tearing off into the warm, Virginia
|
|
night. She found it in a tin in my nightstand.
|
|
|
|
Mary Ellen called in favors to a good friend at an Ardmore
|
|
clinic and arrangements were made. The clinic even sent down a
|
|
car to pick us up, at great cost, my aunt (who paid) never
|
|
forgot to remind me.
|
|
|
|
"This would never have happened if your father was alive," she
|
|
said
|
|
|
|
I slumped into the back seat with a migraine, between her and a
|
|
nurse, for the long ride to Pennsylvania. I almost laughed when
|
|
she said it. No one but me and Larry knew the half of it.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
I sat on my old single bed in the dark, waiting. The floorboard
|
|
outside Larry's room whined. He's slipping, I thought. The door
|
|
opened, almost soundless, my uncle an outline, black on black,
|
|
in the shadow.
|
|
|
|
"Jeanie," he said, and took three steps into the room, close
|
|
enough that I could see his wired eyes, dancing with cocaine and
|
|
anxiety. "Will you talk to me, baby?"
|
|
|
|
Larry moved to the bed, beside me. The mattress springs creaked
|
|
when he sat down, inches away. His breathing was short and
|
|
uneven, and his palm held a cool sweat that he touched to my
|
|
wrist. He pressed my palm to the feverish skin on his chest and
|
|
for a second we existed in the past. The cagey desperation and
|
|
addiction were there with me, like they'd never been gone, like
|
|
I'd never been cured of him. He lifted his other hand to my
|
|
cheek and in my memory it was my neck, my breasts, between my
|
|
legs.
|
|
|
|
"Jeanie, I miss you." I couldn't see his lips move. "I've been
|
|
waiting so long for you to come back. I would have come to
|
|
Philadelphia but your mother refused me every time I asked for
|
|
you."
|
|
|
|
"She was right." I barely said it. I had no breath.
|
|
|
|
The light shifted almost imperceptibly when the digital clock
|
|
changed to 1 a.m. Ten minutes had passed with silence, except
|
|
for the gentle whoosh of a passing car.
|
|
|
|
"I love you, Jeanie-girl," Larry said finally. "I almost died
|
|
when you left. Your Mom told me you were clean so I got clean,
|
|
too. I figured I'd do whatever you were doing and we'd stay
|
|
connected that way and when you came back things would be even
|
|
better."
|
|
|
|
"Larry -- "
|
|
|
|
He kissed my lips.
|
|
|
|
"Don't say you don't love me anymore, Tammy Jean. You didn't
|
|
come down here after all this time to tell me that."
|
|
|
|
Hang-up calls I'd placed to Virginia, a thousand of them over
|
|
the years, letters that turned into scraps before I had the
|
|
courage to send them, had said everything over eight years. That
|
|
I was drawn to his strange comfort like cocaine. That he was a
|
|
drug I'd finally flushed out of my system.
|
|
|
|
"I was fifteen," is what I found.
|
|
|
|
Larry got to his knees on the floor, his head in my lap. I ran
|
|
my fingers through his hair the way he used to do to me.
|
|
|
|
"I'm sorry," he sobbed, and I knew I was breaking him.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
I left him on his hands and knees in my bedroom, shivering and
|
|
sad. It took two hours for the cab to come, but when it did I
|
|
was waiting by the front door with my coat on. A note for Mom
|
|
was on the kitchen table, a box of Kleenex at one corner to keep
|
|
it from blowing away.
|
|
|
|
The driver got out to take my bag and opened the rear passenger
|
|
door for me. I turned to get in and looked up at the house. Mom,
|
|
standing almost concealed, halfway behind a curtain, lifted her
|
|
hand to her face and blew a little kiss. The end of her
|
|
cigarette made an arc as she let it go.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Greg Durham (gedny@aol.com)
|
|
-----------------------------
|
|
|
|
Greg Durham is the director of online at a large publishing
|
|
house in New York. He'd like to write more fiction if he can
|
|
ever get out of the office at a reasonable hour.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
FYI
|
|
=====
|
|
|
|
Back Issues of InterText
|
|
--------------------------
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Back issues of InterText can be found via anonymous FTP at:
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|
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<ftp://ftp.etext.org/pub/Zines/InterText/>
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|
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On the World Wide Web, point your WWW browser to:
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|
|
<http://www.intertext.com/>
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Submissions to InterText
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InterText's stories are made up _entirely_ of electronic
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For a copy of our writers' guidelines, send e-mail to
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....................................................................
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|
|
Never trust an animal that can run and
|
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relieve itself at the same time.
|
|
..
|
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|
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This issue is wrapped as a setext. For more information send
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e-mail to <setext@tidbits.com>, or contact the InterText staff
|
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directly at <editors@intertext.com>.
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$$
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