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Monthly Archives: July 2010

Golda

The danger about the Confessor, Golda is certain, has to do with rationale. She knows his vices are inveterate; she knows his faith is sub-agnostic. And yet his explanations take her in.

These people need me, he says. That, he might even believe.

They jounce along ruts in a wagon drawn by motorcar. Golda drives. By sundown they’ll be at the next scrubby townlet, and she’ll get out the tent while he prepares his vulpine mask. Two bits to a couple likely cryers, and soon the pious and the curious will trickle in, water through the cup of his palm.

Ballard

Cote sticks her head into the bathroom, towel-turbanned. “Why’d you turn off the radio?”

“You needed the hair dryer,” Ballard says. “You can’t fit both on the outlet.”

“Turn one upside-down.”

“Don’t do that–” he starts.

Cote flips the hair dryer’s plug over, then reinserts the radio. NPR resumes.

“–you might reverse the polarity and–” Ballard falters.

Cote picks up the hair dryer and pokes the trigger. It works fine.

“–scramble the deflector shields,” Ballard mutters.

“How can you not know what a polarized plug looks like? You’re an engineer!”

“A software engineer,” says Ballard, employing history’s weakest defense.

Rupert

Clambake (1967): Elvis Presley as an oil heir who becomes a water-ski instructor.

“That cannot be a real movie,” says Rupert. “That’s a collection of random words!”

“This from you?” says Nikki. “The professional diver/nightclub singer who schemes to find pirate gold?”

“All of that makes perfect sense in context,” says Rupert. “Um, doesn’t it?”

Nikki shakes her head.

“Oh no,” says Rupert, in dawning horror. “No!” A guitar falls into his hands; attractive girls in retro bikinis wheel palm trees onto the set.

“Why?” sobs Rupert, hips already jerking.

“The King is dead,” coos Nikki. “Long live the King.”

Zach

It takes Zach hours to realize he has a roommate.

Vode?” croaks the little voice behind the curtain. He can hear a clicking call button, but nothing’s happening. “Vode, molim.

Zach gets up and shuffles over, feet curling on cold tile. “Hi?” he says. “You need something?”

A grumpy little girl looks up, big eyes dark and hollow, a wide bandage across her torso. “Vode,” she mutters, and gestures to a carafe.

“Oh!” He pours her a glass of water; she drinks with both hands. Then she smiles.

“Listen,” says Zach. “I hope it’s clear I shot you completely on accident.”

Spacegirl

The dogstar and the shepherd moon herd the stars into the sky. Magnetic fields are lush underhoof, this far from the naked eye. On Earth, Arecibo is listening for whispers. Hubble is lost in the deep. Galileo was tucked in a long time ago, and Hawking is fast asleep.

Spacegirl stops by to pet a stargrazer, close-cropping the velvet of night. “Play a song, shepherd?” she asks. He obliges, his harp strung with silver light.

She claps her hands, gunbelt askance, as the solar wind starts to sing. The stars shoot glances; a comet dances; and Saturn, as always, rings.

Hester

Dialing with a keypad is strange now, but some patterns your fingers remember.

“Hello?”

“It’s me,” says Hester.

“Oh. You okay?”

“Can’t believe you still have this number.”

“They let you keep it when you transfer.”

Breathe.

“I’m in town,” says Hester.

“That’s great,” he says. “I’d love to see you, but look, this week…”

“You don’t have to say it.”

He doesn’t.

“I called out of courtesy,” she says, “so if we ran into each other, you’d know.”

“Maybe lunch.”

“Okay,” says Hester, “if there’s time,” and her fingers start to pick again at the fraying cuff of her shirt.

Lurlene

Messages encrypted in junk DNA are the stuff of yesteryear; Lurlene uses auctioneer steganography, planting her data in their throwaway patter and broadcasting in the clear over rural radio. Estate sales for receiving data, cattle and cars for sending. When the transmitter pauses for breath it means “STOP.”

Lurlene’s practically off the grid: Mallory doesn’t listen to much AM. She’s tried tuning into those numbers stations on one speaker with her code on the other, to see if they cancel out. (Not yet.) Information cannot be created or destroyed, says Hawking. Lurlene thinks about the ionosphere, and keeps her cover deep.

Admiral Ackbar

“Have the Mon Calamari cruisers arrived yet?” asks General Madine.

“Not yet,” says Princess Leia. “Admiral Ackbar, perhaps you’d like to hail the Mon Calamari on the comm?”

Ackbar looks annoyed, probably. “Hail whom?”

“Your planet’s contribution of the fleet,” says Princess Leia, looking up from the combat plotter. “You know, the Mon Calama–”

“Stop saying that!” yells Ackbar. “We’re not calamari! Calamari is a food you people eat! That’s like me asking for you to send a communique to the roast macaque!”

“Galactic Standard has lots of borrowed words,” chuckles Madine. “Just ask Darth Vader.”

“What?” says Luke Skywalker. “Why?”

Julie

Julie thinks the Executrix would be less frightening if her job were actually to kill people. Instead (as Julie finally worked out at 11) she ensures that their wills get carried out.

Whether she kills people who contest them is up for debate.

Her name is Herringbone and Julie’s been her ward since she was four: a hazy age marked by bad dreams and confusing faces. Some of those faces were almost definitely her parents. Their will must have been a tortuous puzzle, to have enforced custody of their daughter upon the reader; and someday, Julie knows, she’ll read it herself.

Terence

The Nostalgia Network has drifted from its core mission, abandoning the glorious future of segmented markets for another mishmash of reality reunions and made-for-irony monsters of the week.

Which, to be fair, is sort of what people get nostalgic for these days.

This week’s monster is a CGI capybara, currently represented by a yellow ball on a stick. Terence looked up capybaras on his phone and he’s not buying it.

“I actually sort of miss when they showed reruns,” he says to Annabeth, awaiting craft services.

“Of course you do,” she sighs. “Hindsight’s 20/20, but nostalgia’s got blinders on.”

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