INTERTEXT - Volume 1, Number 1 - March-April 1991
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INTERTEXT - Volume 1, Number 1 - March-April 1991
INSIDE THIS ISSUE
FirstText / JASON SNELL
A War In the Sand / DANIEL APPELQUIST
Anticipation of the Night / DANIEL APPELQUIST
Direct Connection / PHIL NOLTE
The Sculptor / ANDREA PAYNE
Mister Wilt / JASON SNELL
Do You Have Some Time? / MARY ANNE WALTERS
The Talisman / GREG KNAUSS
Schrodinger's Monkey / GREG KNAUSS
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Editor: Jason Snell (jsnell@ucsd.edu)
Assistant Editor: Geoff Duncan (sgd4589@ocvaxa.cc.oberlin.edu)
Assistant Editor: Phil Nolte (NU020061@vm1.NoDak.edu)
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InterText Vol. 1, No. 1. Intertext is published electronically on a
bi-monthly basis, and distributed via electronic mail over the
Internet, BITNET, and UUCP. Reproduction of this magazine is
permitted as long as the magazine is not sold and the content of the
magazine is not changed in any way. Copyright (C) 1991, Jason Snell.
All stories (C) 1991 by their respective authors. All further rights
to stories belong to the authors. The ASCII InterText is exported
from Pagemaker 4.0 files into Microsoft Word 4.0. Circulation: 1057
(832 ASCII). For subscription requests, email: jsnell@ucsd.edu
->Back issues available via FTP at: network.ucsd.edu<-
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FirstText / JASON SNELL
Welcome to InterText, the new net magazine devoted (well, I'd
like to think it will be devoted) to the publication of fiction.
First off, I'd like to thank Jim McCabe, the man who produced
Athene, for all the work he did on that magazine.
This magazine takes its place, and I hope that you will all find
the stories we publish to be entertaining and thought-provoking.
Publishing a commercial magazine is a risky business --
electronically publishing a non-commercial magazine is risky and
essentially untried. The only similar magazine that publishes in both
ASCII and PostScript(TM) format in the United States that I know of
is Daniel Appelquist's QUANTA, which has been published since Fall,
1989. (The other netmagazines are DARGONZINE, which is distributed in
ASCII format only, and the GUILDSMAN, a roleplaying journal.)
First, a little bit about myself: I'm a Junior at Revelle
College at the University of California, San Diego, majoring in
Communication with a minor in Literature/Writing. I've been writing
fiction since I was in elementary school, though none of it has been
professionally published yet. Of course, I haven't submitted any of
it, so there's nobody to blame but myself.
In addition to my schoolwork, I put in a ridiculous amount of
time at UCSD's school newspaper, the Guardian. I'm in my second year
at the paper, and I'm the News Editor.
What do I expect from this magazine? All I really want to do is
bring good stories to the people who subscribe. I'll be hunting down
stories on any subject from all over the network, and hopefully we
can put out an issue every two months. I'm hoping to alternate with
the publication schedule of QUANTA, so the two magazines will
dovetail into a semi-monthly production schedule.
QUANTA, if you didn't know, is a bi-monthly net magazine -- and
its specialty is Science Fiction. InterText, on the other hand, is
for all kinds of fiction. I don't mind publishing SF here, but since
Quanta is an established magazine with a specific format, I'd expect
most of the SF to go there.
Then again, since people who use the net seem to be forward-
thinking in nature, I wouldn't be surprised to find that there's so
much SF out there that I end up running quite a bit of it. It doesn't
matter what kind of fiction appears in InterText... it's up to you.
Within this issue you'll find an interesting collection of
stories, to say the least. A few stories (but not as many as I had
hoped) fell into my lap for this issue, including two from Quanta's
Dan Appelquist, one by myself, and one by my Assistant Editor Phil
Nolte. Still, I'd hope that InterText won't be dominated by "editor-
writers", and so I encourage everyone to submit their fiction. There
are some stories (especially non-SF stories) that have no other net
outlet, and so you might still see stories by editors here, but we'll
try to keep it to a minimum.
(For example, next issue I'll probably end up running another
story written by me, just because it's not SF and so I can't really
get it into Quanta.)
Dan Appelquist's "Anticipation of the Night" is a fascinating
piece of work... quite strange, yes, but very interesting. His other
story, "A War in the Sand," was sort of written because of the cover
of the PostScript version of this issue. (The cover is a drawing of a
dove of peace sitting atop a tank in the middle of the desert.) I
sent Dan a template of InterText that jokingly listed a story called
"War in the Sand." I guess Dan took me up on it. Anyway, those
stories and the closing pieces by Greg Knauss ("The Talisman," a
loopy Stephen King parody, and "Schrodinger's Monkey," a deep
contemplation of quantum mechanics and bananas) form what I'd like to
think of as a pair of strange bookends: two to welcome you to this
first issue and two to wrap it up.
In between are Nolte's "Direct Connections," (which we're
printing under sad circumstances -- Phil gave it to me only after
AMAZING STORIES rejected it), a story by me, and stories by Andrea
Payne and Mary Anne Walters. I thank everyone for submitting and
helping me out with this issue.
Some people have asked about an FTP site for back issues of this
magazine, and for those who'd rather not have the issue pop up in
their mailer. Well, with great thanks to Brian Kantor of UCSD Network
Operations, InterText will have an FTP site on network.ucsd.edu. Look
in the "intertext" directory (of course).
Before I go, I'd like to thank everyone who helped out with the
creation of this magazine. It has been three months since I began
working on this magazine, and many people have contributed.
I'd like to thank Dan Appelquist for giving me help on how to
distribute the magazine and for testing the validity of my PostScript
code, zoetrop@ucscb.ucsc.edu for giving me a program that corrected a
major PostScript problem, Jim McCabe for his help in easing the
transition and allowing me to use the ATHENE mailing list, GUARDIAN
Design Editor James Collier both for saying he liked the InterText
PostScript edition design and for taking the picture of me that
appears on page three of the PostScript version, and, of course, my
assistant editors Geoff Duncan and Phil Nolte.
And thanks to all of you for subscribing to the magazine. Feel
free to send us letters with your comments about things we should
change, things we shouldn't, and anything else you'd like to know.
Geoff, Phil, and I will be sure to listen.
Oh, three final notes. First: there will be an FTP site for
recent issues of InterText. The host will be network.ucsd.edu, and
both postscript and ASCII editions will be located in the "intertext"
directory on that system.
Second: If you do have the ability to print this magazine to a
laserprinter, I urge you to try FTPing a PotScript edition of this
magazine and printing it. In ASCII you get the bare bones, but the
PostScript version is easier to read and (for this issue) runs 29
pages in length. It also has a neat cover graphic, as mentioned
above.
Third: I'd like to know who I have reading this magazine, and
how many of you there are. If you receive this magazine by some other
route than via direct mail (i.e., through a server or via ftp),
please drop me a message saying that you do. I'll put you on a
"notification list", letting you know that the new issue is out and
you can expect it coming through the mail and showing up on the ftp
site. This way, I can keep in contact with you and know how many of
you there are. Thanks. And enjoy the magazine.
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A War In the Sand / DAN APPELQUIST
Last night I heard rockets. The sound was a familiar one, but it
still somehow manages to grab hold of my spine. I lay there, on my
concrete bed, shaking, trying not to think of tomorrow. I can't say
where the rockets were coming from, or where they were going to. I
heard no explosions last night, but perhaps it would have been better
if I had. The explosions of the past few nights somehow had the
intensity to jar me out of the realm of conscious thought, turning me
into a creature of mere instinct, my will to survive primary. The
sounds of rockets only made me think harder about who I was, where I
was and when the madness would end.
Last week, my cousin and aunt left, setting out on the long trek
across the plain, the no man's land. I don't think I will ever see
them again. I don't know why I didn't go with them. It had nothing to
do with pride, nothing to do with a love of country. Perhaps it was
the nagging thought that an escape from the place I have called home
would constitute its ultimate destruction. I have no wish to become a
refugee, to abandon all I have known, to become a nameless no-one,
fleeing like a cockroach from a burning building.
I have heard a rumor that the tanks of the enemy are on their
way, rolling in a ceaseless procession through the vast desert sands.
If they arrive, they will find no resistance here, in this pile of
broken concrete, once a town. I welcome them now -- not because they
are right, but because they represent an end, a bringing to a close
of this ungodly catastrophe. I will greet them with open arms.
This morning, there was smoke on the horizon, a column of dark
grey painted on a backdrop of lighter grey. Grey is a color I have
become well acquainted with of late. The very air here is thick with
a grey soot, a residue from past bombings. A rain will sometimes wash
the air, leaving it clear for an hour or two, until the bombs return
and the cycle begins again. Lately, there have been no bombings, but
neither has there been any rain, so the dust remains, settling only
slowly onto the already debris-laden ground.
I went in search of food today, thinking that I might find some
bottled water, some canned fish. All I found was a ripped child's
cover-all, stained with blood. I stood there for a long while, trying
to remember who had lived there, who the small owner of this garment
might have been. Discouraged, I returned to my shelter, the basement
of some now unrecognizable building.
When I reached the entrance to my shelter, I found a small boy
on his way out, shirtless, obviously under-nourished, clutching as
many of my supplies as he could carry in the tattered remains of a
turban. I was enraged, beyond all reason. I struck him, I don't know
how many times, I think I saw in him all that was wrong with us, all
the weaknesses that had brought this calamity upon us. After the
child ran away, screaming, I sat down in the middle of the scattered
cans the child had dropped and cried. I had been reduced to my own
object of hatred in that moment. What monsters are we men. Our
civilization is pretense. Our science, a sham. Our kindness, a
convenience. We would build sprawling empires out of dust.
But when the bombs begin to drop, all our false faces drop with
them. Carefully constructed worlds crumble noiselessly at our feet. I
stood there in the street for a long time, looking up at the sky,
silently cursing God for bringing us to this, then cursing myself.
The engine-roar of a formation of war planes shrieking overhead
brought me out of my reverie. How like birds they were, I thought.
How graceful in their movements. How awesome in flight. No. Not
birds. Birds do not rain destruction upon cities and towns. As if to
answer my thoughts, a group of vultures ascended in rapid, flapping
chaos from behind a mound of earth. I did not look to see what their
quarry had been. Perhaps a friend. Perhaps a relative. I bid them a
silent farewell, picked up my cans and descended into my shelter.
Now, I wait for the tanks, for the soldiers. There is no
feeling, only a vast, empty nothingness in my head. Now I hear the
rockets again, and now the explosions. Why have I bothered? I should
have let the child get away with my cans. The nourishment that now
keeps my brain alive would have gone to much better use in his mouth.
Perhaps his thoughts would weigh not so heavily upon his brow. I
wonder when they will come for me, when the fire from the skies will
finally seek out my safe haven and make a mockery of my fight for
survival. Now? Now?
Now.
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Anticipation of the Night / DAN APPELQUIST
Satan, the wiles of the immaculate beast return yet to further
trouble my already derided spirit. And what should I have expected, I
in my innermost protected sanctum, the fire light of those withered
memories casting a pale black shadow upon my craggy pock-marked face.
It was only here, in the tower I created with my own pride, my
foolish arrogance, that I felt truly safe, and it was here that the
battle over my soul, having been planned and replanned for centuries,
was finally fought, and lost. I say this in no uncertain terms, mind
you. I have succumbed to that hate, that uncontrollable desire to
which all pretend innocence. I have made my peace with it and in
doing so I have surrendered, the half-truths of my life becoming full
lies, at least now honest in their untruthfulness. I look upon
others, those who pretend an existence apart from evil, apart from
that which controls, that which contorts, and I laugh. In a corner of
my heart I long for that time, the time of ignorance, of blindness
punctuated by a joy so foreign to me now that I think I would not
recognize it, or would mistake it for pain or anguish.
Call me, then, Jeremiah. I am a man, and yet my heart is the
heart of the beast, the heart of the man before Man. My only hunger
now is the burning Lack, that which drives me on to commit atrocity
after atrocity in hope of fulfillment. The time of my mortal hunger
has long passed. My corporeal nourishment provided to me by
mechanisms and bodily subterfuge, I cheat Death of her prize quite
glibly. Mine is the best life money can buy.
Ah Death, how fair you are, and yet how you must despise me for
putting off our wedding date so rudely and so often. We will be
joined, Death, you and I -- but not yet. I have a little business to
attend to first.
And so in the first year of this, a new eon on Earth, I sit,
awake, for, in this state, even sleep is robbed from my hardly human
body. They come to me, my minions, my demons, and show me things,
proofs of their atrocious acts, their foulness reeking through my
mind as their memories become absorbed into my own. For them, I have
become a bank, a God, and father confessor, rolled into an
incongruous one. How they must revere me, my minions. They come to me
to deposit their memories, and by doing so to share their
experiences, thus to make each act they commit sacred in some small
way. A link -- to transcend prayer, talk, all earthly modes of
expression and cut to the quick. In the instant I sense their waking
thoughts (unable to truly break through, to take ACTION!) I become
more than myself, and I sense them becoming part of me, their life
stories only sub-plots of my own. Perhaps some of them think they
control me, perhaps they think they use me for their own purposes,
but in their hearts, they fear.
'Jerem', they call me: 'The Reawakened'. My throne, a bed where
my wasting body, beyond atrophy, sits vestigially, omnipotent. From
there, I sit and relate to them visions of times long past, of things
long forgotten; of days when men of power, ruling with steel fists,
would stare eye to eye, knowing that even a flinch would silence a
million voices, even the memories of whom would be reduced to a puff
of smoke. There were such men, and I was among them. My memory of
those days is crystal clear. I can lose myself in those memories and
I often do, letting the players of my mind act out scenes from my
past. It is only the most recent of memories that I now find
strangely obscured, no doubt the product of my decrepit brain -- ah
what a fair instrument you have been.
Some have said that the Brain is not the true center of one's
soul; that in this explanation there is no beauty, no harmony to show
God's divine influence. They know nothing. Within the beautiful
symmetry of the Brain is the ability to have such thoughts, such
awful, grinding examples of mortality, that even I have been loath to
look upon them. I have known Brains, oh yes. So many that they defy
counting. The myth of the mind, that attempt by man to raise his
faculties above the level of a simple chemical reaction, beyond nerve
and synapse, is his last, greatest lie to himself. There is no mind,
only the Brain, that juicy repository of all that makes us truly and
grittily human, even to the last.
It is not man we are truly searching for but the image of man,
which is embellished within our consciousness through re-telling and
re-telling. It is that archetypal hero for which we forever search,
unable to come to terms, finally and satisfactorily with the idea
that he does not exist, or has died away. In the time of death,
perhaps, we come to this realization and grasp for life to be reborn
into this new knowledge, but by then it is too late, the dying embers
of our past cannot kindle anew the fire of our forbidden future. We
are consigned to once more trace the same circle, forever going back
and forth without ever truly knowing ourselves or those around us.
For all real purposes, blind, deaf and dumb.
In my false death, my trickery, I have surpassed that terrible
knowledge. I no longer search for man or for any sort of earthly
fulfillment, save the one single sinking Purpose. See them gather
around me in futile hope that they might absorb a measure of
greatness, of ultimate power: my acolytes, my priests.
Once, I was possessed of earthly flesh, but that flesh has
melted away. It exists, and yet it does so only as a convenience.
Once my emotions were such that oftentimes I would close my eyes and
weep inwardly, or smile the smile of true happiness. There is nothing
that delights me now. I remember when I awoke, after they had taken
my body from its cryogenic crypt. "Lead us," they had pleaded, those
elite, those men of power. "Bring us power, for in the ways of
distrust, we are mere pupils. You are the professor-professor."
I resented them at first. I thought them mad to bring me back. I
did not want this Godhood that was being foisted upon me, so fresh
out of the grave. But it was too late. I had been deified long before
my awakening. I remember my morbid fascination with the texts that
described my deeds of life. How inaccurate they often were, and
sometimes how stunningly correct. They knew truths that had been
kept, I thought, only between myself and my own inner confessor, but
of my own inner thoughts they knew nothing. Thus my re-awakening, my
bane. That I should have been brought back into this world, this
never-ending pain.
How I resisted, then, and how they fought me. They did not ever
openly oppose me, but their expectations were a ladder, each rung
bringing more protestations, yet still leading downwards into unknown
abysses. I know now that I was true evil from the moment lucky sperm
met unexpectant egg.
And then, resigned to a life such as they had planned, I
resolved myself to change this world, this ruined landscape of man's
blind stupidity. "Has man not reached the stars?" I asked them in my
foolishness. "A foolish dream." they replied. "The planets, then,
what of the colonies, teeming with fresh insight, noble spirit and
purpose," to which they replied "there never were such places. There
never was such a spirit." And in that moment, I despaired. I thought
then, in my ambition, that I would bring about a change, a tornado of
progress that would shake the foundations of the earth. I was,
instead, drawn into the whirlpool of an ever decaying, dead planet.
Now, my minions leave my fatherly care, to destroy, to rape
whatever still exists in this filthy, dying world, to release the
dragons. Ah, my sweet Delores, if only you could see me now. When I
killed you I kept you with me throughout all time, forever
reinventing your immaculate psyche. Now they release the Gorgon.
Split the fragile egg of your own birthplace. Return its dust to that
which, in a child's breath, created all that now is. I know you
truly, now, Death. I am your angel. Encircle me with your eager arms
and let us embrace.
--
DANIEL APPELQUIST (da1n@andrew.cmu.edu) is a senior studying
Cognitive Science at Carnegie Mellon University. In his spare time,
in addition to sometimes writing obscure fiction, he published
QUANTA, the electronic magazine of Science Fiction and Fantasy. He
resides in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, with his girlfriend Roberta, and
his cat, Emma (more commonly known as the Psycho-Kitten). He plans on
spending the remainder of this year in a desperate search for
employment.
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Direct Connection / PHIL NOLTE
A Whitman's sampler lay with its lid open on the coffee table.
Inside, a jumble of dark brown waxed paper cups lay empty and in
disarray. In fact, only four of the little cups still contained their
chocolate coated treasures. Janis mentally scolded herself for having
eaten most of the bottom layer in one sitting.
"You're gonna miss your target weight for this week, Janis," she
sighed, thinking aloud. Still, chocolate was her only indulgence, one
she occasionally resorted to for solace, especially after a
particularly trying day. Like this one had been. Her hand hovered
over the box for a moment as she decided which of the remaining
morsels looked the most appealing. Finally she selected one and bit
into it, savoring the rich, dark chocolate. Ah, a coconut center, one
of her favorites!
Janis Tolbert was alone in her efficiency apartment, sprawled
out on the old beat-up sofa, still dressed in her work outfit, a
smart, no-nonsense navy blue skirt and white blouse that still looked
reasonably fresh in spite of having been worn all day. She had her
shoes off and her panty hose-clad legs propped up on the table. The
boxed remains of a take-out Chinese dinner added to the clutter on
the small table. She knew from experience that nothing worked better
to soothe her shattered nerves than a little out of control, self-
destructive eating binge.
"I could kill that damned Maynard Hughes!" she thought. "I swear
to god if he ever lays a finger on me again I'm going straight to Dr.
Parsons!" Hughes was the reason for her present agitated state of
mind. He was the office "lech" -- a self-appointed God's gift to
women--and he was nothing if not persistent. Janis was the present
target of his unwelcome sexual advances, probably because she was a
new employee, still under six-month probation, and Hughes was
confident that she would be reluctant to raise a fuss. Of course, it
didn't hurt that he was married to the former Estelle Parsons --
daughter of J. Harold Parsons -- the founder of the Parsons Sensory
Research Institute where both Janis and Hughes worked.
Actually, Hughes wasn't all that bad looking; she had even
accepted a ride home once, on a rainy day, before she knew what he
was like. In his car outside her apartment Hughes had proved himself
to be all hands and terribly hard of hearing. That had happened over
three months ago but it was as though the incident had given him some
kind of go-ahead signal or presented some sort of irresistible
challenge to his male ego because, since that time, he had taken to
grabbing the soft and sensitive parts of her body whenever he could
contrive to get her alone at work. That was the other problem, Hughes
was experienced and clever enough to make his moves only when he
could be certain that there weren't any witnesses. Janis found it
hard to believe that a man could be so brash and bold and so
insensitive to another person's feelings. What an ass!
Just thinking about it made her want another chocolate. She
looked the remains of the sampler over carefully before selecting
another of the little tidbits.
Janis suppressed a shudder as the day's incident ran through her
mind for the hundredth time. She had innocently boarded the elevator
to head downstairs for afternoon coffee. Hughes had cleverly dashed
into the elevator just before the door closed. As the elevator began
moving he hit the emergency stop, which stranded them -- alone -- and
pushed her back into the corner. She could still feel the weight of
his body pressing her into the corner and his rough, inept hands
painfully mauling her breasts. Janis pushed him away and covered her
bosom with her arms. That target no longer accessible, he redirected
his efforts to her shapely and unprotected backside, reaching behind
her to gather a generous pinch of the soft, yielding flesh. She
brought her knee up and slapped him as hard as she could. While he
was momentarily stunned, she cancelled the emergency stop and pushed
the button for the next floor. Janis stomped out of the elevator,
straightening her clothing, her face red with anger, embarrassment
and frustration. Her knee had missed its target -- at least there had
been some satisfaction in the slap, but it wouldn't deter him, it
would happen again, she knew that from experience. "Well," she
thought, "Just a few more weeks and I'm off probation. Let's just see
how that lecherous swine reacts to the threat of a sexual harassment
suit!"
Gobbling down most of the little box of chocolates had had the
desired effect and she felt somewhat better about the incident. At
least she could think about it without shuddering. Janis yawned and
stretched, her arms extended outward and above her head, and glanced
at the clock. Time to turn in! Tomorrow was Saturday and though it
was normally a day off, she was going back to the Institute to earn
some extra money. The secretarial job she had didn't pay well and,
her paychecks, like almost everyone else's, were never big enough.
The only instructions they had given her was to get a good night's
sleep because they wanted her rested and alert for the morning
session.
To her dismay, she had to share the elevator in the nearly empty
building that morning with none other than her nemesis, Maynard
Hughes. She wrapped her arms tightly around her bosom and backed into
the corner, ready to defend herself. Strangely, he didn't made any
kind of move at all. In fact, he barely seemed to notice her. It was
like he was preoccupied with something. But the conspiratorial look
on his face was most disturbing. She breathed a sigh of relief when
he got off on the second floor.
She stopped outside the door of the appointed meeting place at
8:55 AM, five minutes early. The frosted glass window read:
Room 351 A
Gustatory Studies
She was still a little flustered by her close brush with Hughes
on the elevator but at least, to her relief, he hadn't attacked her
again. Perhaps her penetrating glare had been sufficient to keep him
at bay. She shook it off, took a deep breath, opened the door and
went in.
Hardly anyone in the busy room even looked up as she came in,
except for one person at the far end of the room. She recognized the
man immediately as he tucked his clipboard under his arm and came
over to greet her. His was the face in the painting in the main lobby
that gazed down at her sternly every time she entered or left the
building. It was the old man, none other than J. Harold Parsons,
M.D., Ph.D. himself, who was heading the team that she had
volunteered to be guinea pig for.
"Good morning. You must be Ms. Tolbert," the distinguished,
silver-haired old researcher said jovially. "May I call you Janis?"
She nodded nervously, her hands clasped awkwardly together. Sensing
her nervousness, Parsons continued. "Did you get a good night's
rest?"
Janis found her voice. "Yes, thank you Dr. Parsons," she managed
to stammer out.
"Good, good!" he replied. "Well, we'd best get started. But
first, let me show you our equipment. Please come this way."
He led her over to a large, complicated chair that was the
centerpiece of the room. She followed cautiously and looked it over
dubiously. What she saw did not inspire her confidence. It looked
like a kind of hyper-modern barber's (dentist's?) chair -- one whose
specifications had come straight out of a demented electrician's
nightmare. There were wires and cables running helter-skelter from
the base and down the back of the chair, across the room and into a
large glass-fronted booth which covered the entire west wall of the
room. Through the wide, waist-to-ceiling window of the booth she
could see a battery of control consoles and computer monitors. There
was definitely some high-powered research going on, because each work
station was manned by a white-coated staff member and there were more
than twenty of them in the booth.
At the top of the chair on a moveable arm was a small stainless
steel dome, about the size of a large mixing bowl. Its surface was
crawling with an even more complex snake's nest of wires that were
gathered into a fat, lumpy cable that ran down the back of the chair
and across the floor before it too disappeared into the glass booth.
"We're doing gustatory studies here in our laboratory, Janis --
research into the human sense of taste. I think it's safe to say that
we have made some real breakthroughs in last few months. Make no
mistake, what we're doing here will surely revolutionize the science
of how and what people eat!" An assistant helped Janis into a white
plasticized coverall, gently sat her down in the chair and buckled
her in with a sort of webbed seat belt. The chair felt fine, it was
softly padded, and supported her in just the right places. Janis was
almost comfortable, except for the hard little knot of fear simmering
in the pit of her stomach.
"Please relax, Janis," soothed the old doctor. "This will be
totally painless. In fact, I think you'll find it to be quite
pleasurable." He carefully placed the metal mixing bowl device over
her brown shoulder-length hair -- it fit snugly -- and after a few
minor adjustments to position the fit, he secured it with a velcro
chin-strap. He then swivelled a small tray over in front of her. The
tray had a stack of wooden spatulas on it and five small containers
that looked just like her mother's Tupperware. After looking the
whole set-up over one more time, he smiled, patted her on the
shoulder, and went across the room to enter the booth. Janis was
alone with her thoughts for about half a minute.
"As I said earlier, we are going to do some tests on your sense
of taste, Janis." The voice, sudden and unexpected, startled her. In
a moment she realized that Parsons was speaking softly into a
microphone that was wired directly into a speaker in the mixing bowl
headset. "But first we need to calibrate our equipment. Would you
please take a small taste of the first sample?" One of the
containers on the tray had a large number "1" scrawled in magic
marker on its top. She removed the lid, took one of the disposable
wooden spatulas from the pile on the left and, expecting the worst,
carefully took a small taste.
There was no electric shock, no thunder. It was salt, good old-
fashioned table salt. She felt the salty bite of it on the sides and
tip of her tongue.
"Excellent, my dear!" came the soft voice from the helmet.
"You're coming through loud and clear." She couldn't move her head
but from what she could see, it looked as though Parsons and the
others were busy making adjustments to their equipment. "Now rinse
your mouth with some water from the squeeze bottle and try sample
number two.
Number two was pure white sugar that dissolved immediately and
tickled at the tip of her tongue. She repeated the procedure for
samples three and four. Three was a dilute aqueous solution of
quinine, bitter on the back of her tongue and the roof of her mouth.
Janis had never developed a taste for gin and tonic and the water
rinse was most welcome. Number four was vinegar, wet and sour, which
nibbled sharply at the sides of her tongue. Parsons and the others
continued to make adjustments to their consoles after each sample she
tasted.
His voice sounded soft and clear inside the headset.
"Very good, Janis! You've just finished tasting samples of the
four major families of compounds, salty, sweet, bitter and sour, that
together make up the human sense of taste. At this stage, our
equipment can be considered to be roughly calibrated. However, you
probably know that the senses of smell and taste are closely linked.
Next we'll try some familiar foods to determine how your individual
patterns differ from our previous subjects and to tune in that all-
important olfactory component."
The pretty, young assistant brought in a different tray and took
the old one away. On it were a number of fruits and vegetables and
other everyday foods like bread and cheese. She tasted each one in
turn, all the while receiving encouragement from the disembodied
voice in the headset. Dr. Parsons made an announcement after the
second tray was removed.
"Save this setup on drive B, Hamilton," she heard faintly. Then
more loudly: "We're ready to move on to phase two now, Janis." The
lights in the room dimmed. "Until now we have been measuring the
electrical signals from the receptor cells in your taste buds to the
corresponding areas of your brain's taste center. Now were going to
use our calibrations to electrically stimulate your taste center.
This will allow you to experience selected tastes directly, without
chewing or eating anything. Have another water rinse, please." She
nervously complied. The voice came again, "Are you ready?"
Janis gulped and said tersely, "Okay."
There was a change in tone of the persistent electrical hum that
had pervaded the room all morning. Funny, she hadn't even noticed it
until it changed pitch. Very gently she felt a sensation brush at the
tip of her tongue. It started out faintly and ended up sugary sweet.
Next was sour, followed by bitter and salty. Each was pure and
perfect, only the gritty texture of the powders was missing; the
equipment could even mimic the sensation of cool wetness that the
liquid formulations possessed. Janis smiled -- the sensation was
definitely weird, but really rather pleasurable, just like J. Harold
Parsons had told her at the beginning.
"Excellent, Janis. Okay, now we're ready for phase three."
There was another change in the intensity of the electrical hum
and Janis tasted the pure tart-sweet flavor of the orange she had
just enjoyed about a half hour before. It was the same... only
different. It was somehow amplified, better, this despite the lack of
any familiar texture on her tongue or in her mouth. The apple was
better, too, and she had never tasted such flavorful bread. Janis was
favorably impressed with the new technique, to say the least!
But they had saved the biggest surprise for last. Using
recordings from their previous subjects that had been subtly modified
by the computer programs to match Janis' electrical patterns, she was
able to experience foods that she hadn't tasted earlier that day. And
they had somehow chosen her favorite.
Chocolate!
Chocolate -- smooth, almost intoxicating milk chocolate that
bathed her tongue and the roof of her mouth in creamy ecstasy. This
was the way chocolate was supposed to taste! Too soon, it seemed, it
was time for something else. She was terribly disappointed when the
wondrous sensation ended.
But only for a moment.
They followed it up with the rich, almost bitter taste of dark
semi-sweet chocolate. Perfect! Never had she tasted its like. It was
incredibly pleasurable, nearly orgasmic in its chocolate intensity!
But they still weren't done yet!
While Janis was still in sensory shock from the tremendous
chocolateness of it all, they skillfully layered on a subtle mix of
flavors that had her absolutely reveling in a sort of tenth-power
chocolate-covered cherry!
She almost cried when they shut off the power and the lights
came back on. The assistant came over and helped Dr. Parsons
disconnect her from the chair. She swiveled her head to and fro and
up and down to get the kinks out of her neck. To her acute
embarrassment, the upper front portion of her coverall was soaking
wet. Deep in the throes of her chocolate orgy, she had apparently
salivated all over it. Obviously they had been thinking ahead by
having her put on the coverall.
Parsons held out a hand to help Janis up. She felt fine, outside
of being a little dizzy. The assistant helped her out of the coverall
and took it away. Red-faced, she wiped off her chin with the towel
that Parsons handed her.
"That's one side effect that needs a little work," said the old
doctor lightly. "How do you feel, Janis?" She glanced at the clock
and was amazed to find that it was nearly noon. The morning was over.
"Uh...Okay, I guess," she said. "Wow, that last part of the
experiment, the bit with the chocolate, was incredible!"
"Oh yes," he chuckled. "We like to add a bit of stimulation to
other selected areas of the brain during that phase. You might call
it 'a blast of chocolate straight to the pleasure center!' You
really liked it?"
"Any time you need a subject, just give me a call," she replied.
They both laughed.
Parsons' tone became a little more serious, "There are many
possible applications for this research. Of course, none of this
would be possible if we hadn't created machinery that can directly
stimulate the brain using a non-invasive technique. With this
technology many things become possible. A weight-loss program would
be a snap, because you could experience the pleasure of any food you
wanted while never eating a thing! Or you could eat something
mundane and have it taste like something sublime. Imagine, for the
cost of the electricity, you could eat a cheap, tasteless, nutritious
pap, while enjoying the sensations of a gourmet meal! Or keep a
library of the world's greatest cuisine in the memory banks, to be
experienced whenever you have the desire or ..." He stopped, a
little embarrassed. "I'm sorry, Janis. I get kind of carried away
when I start talking about it.
They made small talk for a few more minutes and shook hands
before they parted. She left the building with a spring in her step,
elated with the grand experience she'd just had, glad to have most of
a Saturday ahead of her and secure in the knowledge that her next
paycheck would be fifty dollars fatter. She went out and did a little
shopping and then spent the evening at the movies with her best
friend Gwen.
After her Sunday morning workout, she decided to have the
remaining chocolates in her Whitman's sampler with a cup of coffee.
She carefully selected one of the remaining miniatures in the yellow
box and delicately took a small bite of it. Funny, it had the right
texture and feel but it didn't taste right at all. The flavor was
off, the tidbit tasted more like wax than it did like chocolate. She
washed it down with a gulp of coffee and threw the rest of the piece
away. "Stuff goes bad so quickly," she thought, and reached for the
one remaining piece, a chocolate covered almond. The almond flavor
came through just fine, but again the chocolate tasted funny, like
paraffin. She sighed and finished her coffee and then got busy doing
her laundry and writing out checks to pay her monthly bills. She
thought no more about it for the rest of the day.
In the evening she noticed that the chocolate mint she had after
dinner had the same sort of weird taste but it really was kind of
old. Wasn't it?
She began to get worried when the Mr. Goodbar she bought out of
the vending machine on Monday morning to have with her coffee break
tasted the same. Alarmed, Janis offered half of it to one of the
other secretaries to see if she thought it tasted funny.
"Mr. Goodbar," said the older woman. "One of my favorites."
"Does it taste alright to you, Phyllis?"
"You bet, nice and fresh. It's perfect. Thanks, Janis!"
A few minutes later Janis was outside of room 351, trying to
calm herself down enough to knock, enter and explain her problem. She
screwed up her courage and rapped softly on the door.
Dr. Parsons answered the door and though she might have imagined
it, she thought he looked a little nervous himself when he saw it was
her.
"What is it, my dear?" he asked. "You seem rather upset."
"I'm sorry to bother you Dr. Parsons, but I'm afraid there's
something wrong," she said.
"Wrong? What do you mean?"
"It's chocolate," she said. "It doesn't taste right anymore.
I've tried several different kinds in the last two days, since the
experiments, and they all taste the same to me -- just like wax."
The old doctor nervously ran his fingers through his hair.
"Please sit down," he said solemnly. He took a deep breath and let it
out with a sigh. "I'm very sorry, Janis. I was afraid that something
like this might have happened. "You eat a lot of chocolate, don't
you?" Janis nodded. He continued. "Did you eat a lot it just
recently?" She nodded again. Parsons shook his head. "That's what I
thought. After you left I noticed that the gain on the transmission
unit was two clicks higher than it should have been during the
chocolate input test. The result is a sort of fatigue of the nerves
as a consequence of sensory overload. We were lucky that it wasn't
more intense. Hopefully your condition will get better soon."
"What do you mean by soon?" she asked, just managing to keep her
voice controlled.
"Well," he replied. "Certainly less than a year, possibly only a
few months."
"A year!" she cried. "This is terrible, chocolate is my favorite
food, my only vice, it helps me get by! What'll I do without it?"
"Now, now," he said, lamely. "It could be worse."
"What if I decide to sue you?" she said as her resolve began to
crumble, knowing that the threat was hollow even as she made it.
"You did sign a waiver, if you remember," he replied.
It was obvious that Parsons had no idea how miserable life would
be for a lonely, single woman who couldn't enjoy a bit of chocolate
once in a while! Janis fell back on her last line of defense. She
began to cry softly.
Parsons looked at her for a few moments, and his face softened.
Even after thirty years as a Psychologist, the old doctor was still a
sucker for the young woman's tears. He endured her onslaught for only
a few moments before getting up and putting his arm around her
shoulder. "There, there," he soothed, "let's not argue. I think I
have a solution that we can both live with." She looked up at him
hopefully. "You were such an excellent test subject that I'd really
like to continue working with you -- to find out more about what went
wrong, if nothing else. If you really miss chocolate so terribly we
can just hook you up to the machine and take you for a ride. What do
you say, Janis? I'd like you to become an integral part of our
research team. The pay will, of course, be a lot better than your
secretarial job."
Janis knew when she was being offered a good deal.
"I accept," she said, wiping her eyes and sitting up straight.
"But make sure that those dials are on the right settings from now
on, okay?"
"Just be thankful that you're not Maynard Hughes," said Parsons.
Her ears perked up at the sound of the name. It occurred to her
that now was the perfect time to bring up that subject.
"Hughes," she said. "I've been meaning to talk to you about him,
Dr Parsons. He's absolutely terrible, a real sex fiend, always
grabbing at me and the other girls in the hallways and in the
elevator. Something should be done about him."
"I had been looking the other way because of my poor long-
suffering daughter," Parsons confessed. "That and I'm afraid that his
condition is partially my fault. Hughes volunteered to be a subject
on the McAllister sexual stimulator a couple of months ago.
Unfortunately, the results were not quite what we expected.
"Oh really," asked Janis, intrigued, "what happened?"
"Because of his highly oversexed nature -- which I didn't know
about, by the way -- we had the power set five notches too high when
we hooked him up to the simulator. He suffered a numbing of the
senses just as you did. That old McAllister unit had one more side
effect that we've corrected on the new simulators: the subject was
afflicted with an overpowering and irrational urge to satisfy his
desires. That explains his awful manners. Maynard would do or say
almost anything get relief. Eventually he found that he could only
get satisfaction by hooking himself up to the simulator. The poor
fool began coming in after hours, boosting the power ever higher with
each visit. Hamilton finally caught him one evening. We took away his
key and gave him a stern talking to. Unfortunately he must have had a
duplicate because he came in and hooked himself up again this
weekend.
"Hm, that must be where he was going when I saw him last
Saturday," said Janis, remembering her brief panic on the elevator.
"Probably. He set the machine on full power and I'm afraid that
he irreversibly overstimulated some of the nerve channels to his
brain. This time his condition is not reversible -- the power was set
too high. It's tragic. If only he'd had a little self-control!"
"Poor Maynard!" said Janis.
"Yes," said Parsons. "Thank goodness we've licked the irrational
addiction problem on the new machines."
"I'm glad to hear that, Dr. Parsons," said Janis, getting up. "I
really should get back to work now." She glanced at her watch.
"Actually, I have about ten minutes left." She thought for a moment.
"You don't suppose you could hook me up to that machine right now, do
you? I mean, just to see if it works. It would only take a few
minutes, wouldn't it? Please? You realize that I haven't tasted any
chocolate for two whole days now! Please, Dr, Parsons, please?"
--
PHIL NOLTE (NU020061@vm1.NoDak.edu) is 42 years old, and works on
potato diseases as a full-time research specialist at North Dakota
State University in Fargo, North Dakota. He is also a part-time
graduate student who must graduate with a Ph.D. this spring. He
writes science fiction as a hobby, and because he thinks there is a
shortage of the good stuff. He says he will keep writing until he
finds that he hates doing it.
--------------------------------------------------------------------
The Sculptor / ANDREA PAYNE
The marble was flawed. Anyone could see that. Though the
translucent block of pearl-white stone appeared whole and lovely,
moving into a different angle of light clearly revealed the tiny webs
and fractures that made it all but useless for sculpture. The
Sculptor eyed the marble with a critical and irritable eye.
"Perhaps Michelangelo could create from this damaged stone," he
thought, "as he created the timeless 'David', but I am not
Michelangelo!"
He turned and walked around the block where it stood on his
artists' pedestal, again and again, taking in the sight of both the
glory and failing of the stone.
"I cannot work with this," he sighed. He laid his hand upon it,
and felt the tingle of mystic power within the vibrant pillar -- deep
in his mind he felt fashioned the image of what lay hidden within.
The Sculptor stepped back to his worktable and took up the
narrow-bladed chisel and the small wooden mallet, the tools of his
artistry. Then returning to the marble he carefully placed edge
against the stone, lightly tapped it with the hammer, and the first
shaving of his creation slipped away like gossamer on the wind...
Caleb MacDhougal was impossible. He was intractable. He was
rude, and curt, and foul-mouthed. He was unapproachable, solitary and
unkind. Very few persons in the graduate program for Art Therapy at
Brakespear College held much hope for his success in that field. Very
few persons wanted anything to do with him, because he was so all-
around unpleasant. But in spite of all the negative things he was, he
had a way with whatever medium he chose to work in, and the spark of
genius could be said to burn in him somewhere.
"If only he weren't so damned secretive and arrogant and
unsociable!" said Lindy Walker as she walked with friends toward
Hillyer Hall, the site of the first of many practicum classes for art
therapy grad students. She spoke to her circle of friends, gathered
in the previous year of the program.
"And strange," added Alex Burton. "Always wearing that hood and
cape and those tan leather gloves!" He pursed his lips. "I've even
seen him in the studios painting or drawing or whatever, still
wearing the hood and gloves. I think he's obsessed."
"With what?" asked another of the group. She was a newcomer to
Brakespear, having transferred to the school to finish her degree.
Alex looked her up and down, as if to say "I don't know you, so why
should I answer your questions?"
"Jyl-Ann Korotev," she ventured by way of introduction, and at a
slight nod by Lindy, Alex continued.
"I think he views himself as some kind of eccentric artiste,
with his put-on airs. He won't make much of a therapist, though, with
whatever emotional baggage he carries along with him all the time.
That's why he's so rude, you know?"
Conversation ceased as the group entered their classroom. It
ceased not because of their entering, but because the subject of
their discussion was already there, seated defensively with his back
to the far wall, facing the door. Jyl-Ann got her first look at the
much- discussed genius cum s.o.b.
There wasn't a lot to see. Caleb MacDhougal wore a long,
midnight blue cape which sported a deep hood. This effectively hid
his face in deep shadows, even in the bright fluorescent light of the
classroom. All that could be seen was the slight movement and angry
sparkle of his eyes. His jeans poked out from beneath the cloak, and
the hint of a dark shirt could be seen in the sleeves that were
firmly overlapped by the ends of long, tan leather gloves covering
his hands.
He studiously ignored the others after their entrance, and they
all took seats on the opposite side of the room from him.
Jyl-Ann was intrigued. Caleb radiated quite clearly that he
wished to be left alone in whatever private hell he was in. Jyl-Ann
couldn't imagine what could tear a person up so... or she could, but
having dealt with her own darkness with the help of a loving husband
and a committed priest-counselor, she sometimes lost sight of the
pain and anger that could twist and gnaw and destroy a person's self-
respect and self-love.
Rather than join the others in their rejection of Caleb, Jyl-Ann
walked over to the seat next to his and asked, "Is this seat taken?"
The hooded head jerked up and bright blue eyes turned to glare
up at her... she sensed the utter rage trembling beneath the
eccentric clothing. Nothing was said for a moment, then he croaked
hoarsely, "No, sit wherever the hell you like," and returned to
contemplation of the sketchbook he was holding.
Jyl-Ann cautiously stole a glance at the image of charcoal tiger
lillies and cornflowers on the paper. It was elegant, and she said
so. Caleb snorted in disgust, whisking the sketchbook closed and
slamming his books upon it with a finality that reverberated across
the room. Gingerly she took the seat next to him, surreptitiously
finding Lindy's gaze, hoping for support, but finding nothing but
tense astonishment there and in the eyes of the rest of the class. It
was with relief that she realized Mark Kaiser had entered the room
and begun taking role call.
When finished, Mr. Kaiser turned to Jyl-Ann with a reassuring
smile. "Ah, yes. A fine new face in our midst. Would you like to take
the floor and tell the class something about yourself?"
"Sure. I've been interested in art therapy since I was a senior
in high school. I took one of those general interest computer tests
and realized art therapy was the perfect combination of my love for
the visual arts and what I believe to be a gift for helping people. I
don't want that to sound conceited, but I have been told over my
lifetime that I'm sensitive -- sometimes overly so -- to the hurt
felt by others, and have wanted to alleviate that hurt as best I
could whenever possible. I've been working toward this degree on and
off now for over seven years, and am very glad to settle down and
finish it here at Brakespear."
"Well, good. We're glad to have you here. Now for an icebreaker
to get everyone loosened up for the year ahead. Think of an object or
group of objects that symbolizes what you would like to accomplish
this year. Using any media you have available, depict that object or
objects, and then partner up with one or two people and tell them
about your goals."
Jyl-Ann watched Caleb while arranging her materials. He sat
still, but for twirling a silver pen, staring into space. She settled
to work, mentally sighing and asking for prayerful guidance. Her
gentle scrolls were abruptly interrupted by a series of low growls
from Caleb and the scrape of rough strokes of charcoal meeting paper.
Then silence.
She shifted her weight to lean closer to the dark form next to
her and cleared her throat expectantly. "Caleb." A nudging. Soft. He
began twirling the pen again. Before him on the page lay a stark,
reflective hunting knife glistening with fresh blood. He said no
word.
"Caleb." She brushed his shoulder with her hand. He started
violently and leaned back away from her to stare viciously. "My
friends call me Jyl. Um, my goals are depicted here" she moved the
pastel scrollwork of vines and leaves around a glowing cross closer
to Caleb's workspace "by the obnoxious growth of these flowers... I
hope not only to be taught how to be an art therapist, but also to be
my own client, working with others and God to better understand me
and my inner soul."
Caleb stared at her with clenched jaw until she squirmed
uneasily, then slowly turned to his own drawing, tapping a slow beat
on the blade of the knife with the pen at each uttered word.
"Revulsion. Fear. Mutilation. Death."
After class Lindy caught stride with Jyl, popping with
questions. "What do you think of Caleb, Jyl? How could you stand to
sit next to him? Did he say anything to you? Haven't you heard the
stories about him? Did you get a look at his face?" At this last
Lindy put on a contorted expression.
Raising an eyebrow in question Jyl replied cautiously, "Alex was
right about Caleb having a lot of baggage."
"His face and hands are withered and welted with ghastly scars!
Jason told me during class that he caught a glimpse of them when
Caleb was rinsing his face in the men's room during that heat wave
last summer. Caleb tried to get him to keep quiet about it, but
Jason's a born blabbermouth."
And you're certainly not helping matters, thought Jyl, looking
around guiltily at the throng of people they'd entered near the
Towers snack grill.
"And Alex says he heard that Caleb got those scars from
attacking a woman with a knife and trying to rape her--but she got a
hold of the knife herself and cut him up!"
"Knife?" Jyl gulped as she remembered Caleb's chilling drawing
in class.
"But Sherry says he was caught in a horrible house fire while
babysitting two boys."
"Did they survive?" Her voice held a note of sarcasm as she
recovered from her personal panic at the rape story. All of this was
probably an active textbook case of rampant rumor.
"No. Personally, I think he murdered them and hid them in the
basement."
"Lindy, that's ridiculous."
She quickly put a finger to her lips as a threateningly cloaked
figure stepped in line two or three people behind them.
"Do you think he heard us?" rasped Lindy in an ill-disguised
stage whisper.
Eyes flashing warning, Jyl shook her head curtly and said, "Even
if he didn't, which isn't likely, most of the students in our class
are probably wondering about him, and I'll bet your talk has piqued
interest in our present company, too. Has anyone actually asked Caleb
why he wears his cloak?"
"Are you out of your fucking mind?! I won't go anywhere near
him!"
"Uh-huh. Which means you've compounded his isolation. Now
instead of simply an obsessive oddity you've created grotesque
reasons to be both ridiculing and curious of him.
"I want to be your friend, Lindy. And Alex's, and Jason's, and
Caleb's, and everyone else's friend. If not close, then politely
amiable. I doubt Caleb trusts anyone. But believe me, I want to
change that. After all of this spewage gets around, whether or not it
is true, Caleb will be doubly hellish, I'm sure. If you have
curiosity to cure, confront him yourself. I want no part in your
cruelty."
Jyl turned away from Lindy's shocked open-mouthed "O" with sick
grumblings in her stomach...but not before they both sensed and saw
Caleb gazing steadily at them.
It was with a great shuffling that the girls gathered their food
and moved into the room. Jyl stopped and looked apologetically at
Lindy. "I'm sorry. He scares me, too. But I'm determined not to let
my fear keep me from trying to get to know him better. I'll see you
later. I'd like to be by myself for awhile." Jyl moved away slowly
and took a seat in an almost-deserted alcove and picked dejectedly at
her salad, her appetite long gone. Brooding, she glanced up to see
stark blue eyes gazing at her from the depths of a hood not more than
two table lengths away.
The form was there. A basic, rough-hewn shape almost clawed from
the stone by the chisel laying inert now in The Sculptor's slick-
sweated hand. A precarious balance was held in this block. He traced
the dark flaws with his fingertips, straining in his mind to see how
he might integrate this ugliness into the frozen beauty he wished to
create. A misplaced tap, a too-eager breaking out of the form toward
the details he saw deep within the rock could end in absolute,
shattered chaos. It was a precarious balance indeed.
Jyl stared at her salad for a long moment, stabbing at it with a
trapped vengeance while under Caleb's scrutiny. Why does he watch me
so? "...trying to rape her..." It's only a vicious rumor... right?
She pushed her bowl away in contempt. How could she allow herself to
fall into that talk trap...even momentarily? She set her chin in the
cup of her hands, fading into thought.
So what's wrong with admitting I'm afraid? He does cut a
menacing figure, even if I don't know the true reason why. How would
he react to such honesty? Is he afraid of nothing? The memory of his
staccato croaks, "Repulsion. Fear. Mutilation. Death." echoed in her
mind, causing her to narrow her eyes and lean into her hands to
attempt to read the suddenly guarded sparkle staring back. Or does he
soak up all fear and hatred and shock encountered from others to
reflect it out again in a front of omnipotence? If it's only a
front...
But even if it is a front, I still can't bring myself to ply
excuses for Lindy's "revelation" about him. Surely he heard. And I
doubt he's a fool.
The best I can do is try to find the good in him and focus on
it.
What if, inside, hidden beneath the shield of dark shadows and
wicked silence there is a man repulsed, afraid, and lividly hateful
of himself?
Then I can only accept him as he is, reach for the good, and
continue to be honest. Perhaps he may come to trust me.
At this she walked over to him and waved meekly. "You've
frightened me, watching me this afternoon. What do you find so
fascinating about me?"
Caleb snorted, retorting, "You're afraid. Good."
Jyl felt a shiver of dread pale her face ashen. "They're only
rumors!" she screamed to herself.
"As to fascination, I could ask the same of you." He rose then,
towering above her in a swirl of cloth and scent of soap, and stalked
from the hall, whipping his dishes on the conveyer belt with a
clatter.
Over the next few weeks, Jyl gently and persistently greeted
Caleb every day in their classes with a soft "Good morning" or
"Hello". Tense and silent, he turned his back on everyone while
working, jealous in his protection of his project plans before
completion. Jyl never intruded, but she let her presence be felt by
tentative verbal nudgings when the frustration of artistic failure
loomed too closely.
One morning, Jyl came to class early to gain some quiet time for
finishing a project, and Caleb's entrance was felt more than actually
seen. Her greeting to him was subdued and preoccupied. He settled
with a huff, then grumped a low "Hi" in her direction. Jyl froze for
a fraction of a second, her eyes grown wide at the gutteral sound.
Her smile of pleasure was evident despite her attempt to control it.
Another sliver fell away. With an exasperated expulsion of air,
The Sculptor pushed away from the table and stood to stretch. The
faint hint of a leaf. But that damn flaw held him in check. He was
tempted to crack it with one deft blow...but that would shatter the
grace he'd been coaxing from the stone. Little pieces of marble, some
no longer than his thumbnail, littered the floor. This was the only
way.
To Jyl's dismay, her classmates did not share her desire to
befriend Caleb. Most simply ignored him. One or two bordered on the
obnoxious with references to the "Phantom of the Opera" and "the
Shadow knows". And of course there were the rumors. The frequency of
halted conversations at her entry and Caleb's increased gruffness
caused her to be afraid.
Did Caleb even notice the energy she used to protect him from
Jason and Alex's incessant teasing and spying? She tried to pierce
his menace by being present for him, tried to remain vulnerable and
accepting to ease him into a friendship with her. She shuddered with
the realization that he could heartlessly rend what threads of
watchfulness and privacy she'd already drawn with only a few curt
words or actions. He was cold, arrogant, and sealed in a shroud of
crushing bitterness. Was she really up against the monster Lindy
hinted lurked in that hood? One who did not want her protection nor
her attentiveness no matter how subtle she was? This possibility had
not occurred to her before. And it hurt like hell.
Maybe she could work out some of her anxiety in the ceramics
studio. Clay didn't move as freely as a pencil and paper, but she did
find it was safer to punch around than most other solid objects, like
apartment walls.
Anxious and pensive on entering the room, she found a little
relief in that there were only a few people present, but not so much
that Caleb was one of them. Her greeting to him was barely a whisper.
He shifted his weight uncomfortably, gave her a shallow wave, then
returned his attention to the potter's wheel he contemplated. She
quietly stepped up beside him and studied the cylinder of clay with
him. "What will it be, Caleb?"
"A study in clay netting. Coiled lace on the outer walls."
"You must have very deft fingers for detail work like that,
Caleb. I'm sure it'll be gorgeous." Jyl turned to slice off a chunk
of clay from the storage supply, and began kneading it and mashing it
just for its energy absorbing properties. Caleb fired up the wheel
and began weaving the shining coils around his vessel. As the pattern
grew, Caleb half stood in his concentration. Out of the corner of her
eye Jyl saw Christy lugging a five-gallon bucket of glaze behind
Caleb, trying to get through a space too narrow. With a clunk and a
splash the bucket hit Caleb in the back of the knees, throwing him
forward.
The sound of Caleb's work collapsing beneath his body seemed
loud in the sudden silence of the room. For a moment, everything
seemed frozen in a tableau. Then Caleb was straightening up, whirling
on Christy who backed down the aisle between two worktables,
terrified at the angry fire in his eyes. Caleb's arm was an accusing
lance pointing at her as he hissed, "You clumsy... stupid... fucking
FOOL ! DAMN you!"
Jyl covered the distance in two strides, yanking on Caleb's
shoulder in urgent determination. "Caleb! Caleb, stop it! Look at
me!" Jyl stepped between Caleb and his quarry, near-desperation in
her eyes. She took his hands in hers, encased though they were in
clay-mucked plastic and leather gloves, and peered into the deep
hood.
She would have recoiled at the danger she saw there, but
suddenly the pressure of control between them was not hers. "Caleb?"
she whispered, fighting down the apprehension as she stared at the
shadowy fissures and weathered parchment that were the left side of
his face.
"I have been working for two months on this piece, and she
doesn't even have the grace to say 'excuse me'? I could have moved
aside, you know." Christy's inane babbling apologies caused Caleb to
turn on her, still gripping Jyl's hands. "You're careless. You're an
idiot. Why didn't you just ask me to move? I don't know how you ever
got into this program. You've destroyed two months of my work!"
Jyl tugged on his hands, drawing his attention back to her.
"Caleb, was this a project for one of your classes?" she asked.
"Hell, no," he said bitterly. "I was just doing this for...
for... me. Just because I like ceramics... and sculpture... just
because..." His anger was lessening. His grip on her hands weakened.
And finally, his lips pursed tightly in a thin pale line, he
brusquely pulled his hands from Jyl's. He turned to the wheel, swept
the crushed fragments of his creation to the floor, and strode coldly
from the room without a backward glance.
Jyl didn't know if she should give chase or remain still. But
she probably should breathe again. With a whoosh she let the tension
of the last few minutes go, and sucked air into her lungs once more.
Christy was crying. "He's not a monster, you know." Jyl looked at her
defiantly, threw her poundings and Caleb's fragments into the scrap
barrel, and left.
A quick stop at the front desk confirmed Caleb's apartment being
a floor up from Jyl's. She climbed the stairs, and soon found herself
poised to knock on his door. But the muffled sounds of metal against
stone stopped her. Working again. Didn't his ideas ever stop? Didn't
he ever get blocked? Didn't he ever get tired? Jyl smiled, shook her
head. He's okay. And she snuck back to her rooms as quietly as she'd
come.
Jyl remembered she still had to mount three drawings for the
critique tomorrow. It was actually a finalist judging done by the art
professors for the Brakespear Student Art Show. They would choose no
more than five entries from each class. Hope and competition was high
in the studios this time of year.
Jyl hoped Jason wouldn't throw a fit about Christy. They'd been
going together for two years, and he was almost fanatic about his
protection of her from Caleb. Nothing had happened. Jyl had seen to
that. But events like that always managed to blow out of proportion.
She sighed and settled to work. Only morning would give the answers.
When Jyl entered the gallery the next day where the judging was
to take place, Jason and Caleb were already having an argument. Or
rather, Christy was standing off to the side with a smug look on her
face talking to Lindy while Jason yelled at Caleb. Said midnight
tower stood his ground in silent contempt.
"One of these days, Mr. MacDhougal, you'll go too far. Then
you'll be sorry you ever haunted the Brakespear campus." Jason never
addressed Caleb by his first name. The formality lent more non-
humanity to his attacks.
"Don't threaten him, Jason." Jyl walked over.
"Oh, so now you've got a guardian angel, Mr. MacDhougal. Is she
acting as your tongue today?"
"No." One word.
"Let it be, Jason. Caleb didn't hurt Christy physically, and he
was rightfully angry. Caleb lost a piece of artwork. Christy lost a
little courage. It's over."
"That's what you think." Jason crossed the hall grumbling.
Jyl didn't like the look of things. She shot a side-long glance
at Caleb. He met her gaze. "While the profs are puttering around, how
would you like to do a tandem critique of our own work?" she asked.
"You want to know what I think of your work?"
"And I'd like to see what other ingenious ideas you've tried and
been successful with. That vase was fantastic."
"Yeah." Gruff. "Well, come here then."
Their voices were low as the judges started their rounds. Jyl
was careful to praise and encourage, and to ask Caleb before handling
any of his pieces. They were all sculptured in some form.
"How do you do that, Caleb?" Jyl remarked on a three-foot-high
marble carving of a gnome. "It's stone, for God's sake. How do you
get a creature like that out of stone?"
"You've seen my woodcarving, right? It's like that only the
surface is much harder." Caleb moved in front of Jyl's softsculpture
train. "I think your embroidery balances the cab and cars well.
You're talented in sculpture and details too, Jyl." Jyl blushed under
the fond warmth in his eyes.
They sat on a bench to critique other students' work for the
rest of the afternoon. And immersed as they were in their world of
color and symbolism, they both started when Jason exploded in fury at
the judges' announcements of the show entries.
"I should have been in this show. Not YOU!" He pointed a vicious
finger at Caleb. "What did you do to weasel your way into this thing,
you son-of-a-bitch?"
"He didn't do anything other than produce work better than
yours, Jason." Jyl looked from Caleb's gold -starred gnome to Caleb
with a smile.
Jason turned on Jyl with disgust. "And you!" Jyl's head snapped
up in surprise. "What the hell do you get out of being near him? A
good fuck? Is he "loveable and capable"? Do you "ease his pain" with
sexual favors? You're a goddamn fucking SLUT!"
Jyl sputtered and shook at the absurd cruelty of Jason's words.
She suddenly felt very small. Choking back a sob, she ran from the
room to escape the eyes that stared at her.
Caleb rose slowly from his seat, and glared at Jason squarely in
the eye, measuring him. "I usually let shit run off me like water off
the back of a duck. But not when it involves my friends." He hauled
back and hit Jason in the stomach, doubling him over. Caleb looked at
him dispassionately and then stalked from the hall.
The Sculptor had been working for hours. Paper was strewn over
the table and floor in utter disarray, sketches of the form before
him. Maybe it would work. Why hadn't he thought of it before? Could
he actually make the flaw a fair part of the statue?
The next day, Caleb's chair in class was empty. Jyl tapped her
pencil on the table. He'd never missed a class. She looked furtively
at Jason and Christy. The former was stonefaced. She traced circles
over her paper with her fingertips, made some weak scribbles. She
frowned. Was he sick? Had something happened to him? She made a face
at her work and threw it away.
Afterwards, Lindy came up to her with awe in her eyes. "You
should have seen what Caleb did to Jason after you left!"
Jyl's stomach took a flip. "What did Caleb do after I left?"
Lindy put her arm on Jyl's shoulder confidentially and said, "He
rumbled something about crap not affecting him unless it had to do
with his friends, and then he slugged Jason in the gut!"
Jyl's eyes were wide with concern."What did Jason do then?"
"He just doubled over moaning, and Caleb walked out of the
room."
Jyl looked around, hoping to see the familiar dark shadow, but
he wasn't there. So why hadn't Caleb been in class?
She practically ran to Caleb's apartment, surprised to find no
answer to her knock, and the door unlocked.
But more astonishing was the fragile marble cluster of flowers
on the table. Polished and glowing, it sat in elegant splendor among
a sheaf of scattered sketches, which showed various views of a deep
flaw in the stone. Jyl traced the delicate form with her fingertips,
then remembered why she'd come.
"Caleb?" She walked to the living room. No one. She walked down
the back hall, and knocked softly at his bedroom. No answer. She
peeked in. He lay sprawled on his bed in peaceful slumber, bare to
the waist. His scars extended down his arms and chest, slightly
warping the muscles in streaks of white and faded brown. Embarrassed
to find him so vulnerable, she approached slowly, and drew the cover
over him to his neck. Her touch awakened him.
He pulled back somewhat, his eyes shifting between question and
guarded uncertainty. "What are you doing here?"
Jyl's embarrassment increased. "You...you weren't in class this
morning. I...I was worried about you. So I came up here to check on
you."
"Oh." He burrowed deeper in the blanket, gazing at her
uncomfortably. "Why were you worried about me? Why bother?"
Jyl smiled and gently touched his scarred cheek. He started to
pull away, grimaced, then allowed himself to come back against her
hand. "Caleb, you're my friend." She squeezed his shoulder, then
rocked back up on her feet. "C'mon. Get up. I'll go in the other room
so you can get dressed."
"Jyl."
"Hmm?"
"Thanks."
She walked out in the hall, then called back, "Those flowers on
the table are gorgeous."
"Oh that. I've been working on that for a long time. The biggest
bitch was trying to work around the flaw."
"How did you do it?"
"I realized I had to work with the flaw, and not against it. I
think the whole thing is stronger now."
"Like Michelangelo's 'David'?"
"Yeah, right."
They were silent for a few moments, then Jyl scuffed her toe on
the carpet and asked, "Why didn't you go to class today?"
A long pause, then a sigh. "I had some thinking to do."
"About?"
"My scars."
Jyl nodded to herself, stroking the scars on her arm,
remembering the hopelessness and pain in a young girl's mind so many
years ago. "Do you want to talk about it?" She moved to the living
room as Caleb emerged in jeans and a green short-sleeved shirt.
He stood running his fingers through his hair, watching her.
Abruptly, he turned to trail his hand along the edge of the table.
"I've been working on this all semester, you know." He grazed the
petal edges of the statue with his fingertips. "Do you recognize it?"
Jyl moved to stand opposite him. "No...you've never done... wait
a minute! Cornflowers and tiger lillies!" She locked her gaze with
his in confirmation. "It's from that drawing I saw the first day of
class, right?"
She crouched down at eye level with the piece to scrutinize it
more closely. Then she turned and said softly, "Does this tie in
somehow with what's bothering you?"
"Yeah." He ran his fingers through his hair again, not looking
at her.
"Caleb." She rose, taking one of his hands in hers, gazing at
him plainly. "I'm your friend. Talk to me."
He pulled away and strode to the window. For some time he simply
stood gazing out at the lawn. "When I was in third grade my art class
took a field trip to a glassblower's shop," he spat through his
teeth.
"A field trip."
"Yeah." His face took on a pained expression, his knuckles white
on the sash of the window."Some of the finished pieces sat on a
shelf, cooling. They glowed. I thought there was some kind of magic
inside." Then he turned and slowly sat down on the couch. "Why the
hell am I telling you this? You don't need to know this! I feel like
it's being pulled from me one fucking word at a time."
Jyl wondered if he'd ever fully trust her. Her voice was very
quiet as she spoke. "What do you think I'm going to do to you if you
keep talking, Caleb?"
"I don't know. Go away."
"That's right. You don't know. And I'm not going away, either.
That's what everyone else has done, isn't it? Talk to me."
Caleb turned to stare at her. The light in his eyes was hard.
"What do you know about what others have done? Except run away from
me as fast as they could because they were terrified at what they
saw?"
"Caleb, I didn't run away from you. And I don't blame you for
your being scarred. Did you ever think that the others ran away from
you not because of what they saw, because you've always worn your
cape, but because of what they've felt from you? When I approached
you that first day of classes, I could almost tangibly grasp your
anger."
"Of course I know that!" he exploded. "I drove them away! That
fucking cape is my protection against this whole shit-filled world!"
His voice caught and he covered it over with a cough. "But hiding
doesn't work anymore." he added softly.
He sat there for a minute or two, clenching and unclenching his
fists. Then he laughed without mirth, saying, "When no one was
looking, I put my hands around one of those fucking vases." He mocked
childlike wonder and the fateful action. "The shock sent me into
convulsions, and the glass spread and splattered over my body like
the Blob." He rubbed at his arms and hands as though to scrub the
scars off, then wiped his hands on his thighs. He looked reluctantly
at Jyl. "The damage was already done by the time the teachers could
get there to help me."
Jyl sat still for a long time, letting his words sink in, trying
to send acceptance to him. She slowly held out her hand. "Magic is a
great thing, you know. And I think there's still a spark of it inside
you, because you've managed to become a successful artist despite the
pain you experienced."
He glanced at her then, and back to his open, welted palms.
"Yeah. Pain. It's interesting, isn't it, that I'm a sculptor now, and
that I work with cold things... clay and marble and the like."
Uncertainty still lingered in his voice.
"Jyl." He gingerly placed his hand in hers. "I realized
yesterday that I've never let the bitterness go." His grip tightened.
"For all these years I've clung to the rumors, to the teasing and the
cruelty and the ugliness, and let them devour me into a shadow." He
took a shaky breath, looked at her squarely. "I've never stood up for
me as a man. I...I've always lived as the monster everyone's said I
am. I've had to come to terms with that."
Jyl smiled at him, stroking the back of his hand with her thumb.
"You've taken some large steps toward that goal right here, Caleb."
"I know. But I think I've still got a long way to go. I've only
begun to break my own shell." He paused, thoughtful. "I realized
something else, too."
"What's that?"
"Being present and listening to a person is 95 percent of being
a therapist. Not jabbering advice." He looked at her with a spark of
hope in his eyes. "Thanks for being here, Jyl."
"That's what friends are for."
They sat that way, in comfortable rapport, for the better part
of half an hour. Then they stood, and Jyl moved to give Caleb the
hooded cloak hanging by the door. But he stopped her with a wave of a
disfigured hand.
"No, I don't need that anymore."
--
ANDREA PAYNE (picasso@buhub.bradley.edu) is a junior at Bradley
University, majoring in art. She has been an artist of sorts since
age 11, and has dabbled in media such as drawing, painting, ceramics,
embroidery, and crocheting. She has interests in Scottish medieval
history, classical music, archery, and in helping others. The last
has led her to become a private duty nursing assistant, and she hopes
to continue her education along those lines by working toward a
Master's Degree in Art Therapy.
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Mister Wilt / JASON SNELL
I was so tired that I couldn't keep my eyes open. It was eight
in the morning and I was sitting, hair still wet from my early
morning shower, on a cold wooden pew in church. It had taken me until
2 a.m. to get the skinny, squinty-eyed girl I had invited over "to
watch television" into bed with me, and it took me over two hours to
get her out of the house once we were finished. I had managed to get
three hours of sleep that night, and I didn't feel very cheery.
I was tired, I didn't like the feeling of my wet hair, and
church is not my favorite place in the whole world. My mother and
father were sitting on my right, and my little sister was in my mom's
lap. Andi was asleep -- mom is a more comfortable backrest than these
horrible Methodist pews.
When we moved to Clarkesburg, I figured that my life would be
pretty much like it had always been. But instead, my parents had
decided to transform their lives into something straight out of the
fifties. That was appropriate for my new hometown of Clarkesburg,
Pennsylvania, which was also straight out of the fifties. Maybe even
the eighteen-fifties. The whole town was either Baptist or Methodist.
Half the town was sitting on the same hard pews that I sat on.
A little man with a wrinkled face sat on my left, evidently
unconcerned about the time of day and the pain caused by those awful
pews. Old Wrinkly was wearing a plaid shirt and a bow tie, and sat
with his hands folded together in what I assumed was a praying
position. A good supposition, I think, considering that we were in
church.
I assume he saw me staring at him, because his tiny eyes popped
open and he turned to look at me.
"What's your name, boy?" he whispered to me.
I straightened up and looked straight ahead at the minister.
"Jim," I said out of the corner of my mouth.
"Talk to you after the sermon," the man said.
A wrinkly old Methodist wanted to talk to me after the boring
service. It was just what I wanted to hear. At that moment, there was
no place that I would have rather been than back home in bed --
except maybe back in California. No such luck.
After the service, my parents and I stood outside of the church.
Before we could move toward our car, the wrinkly old man sauntered up
and began talking to us.
"Hello there," he said to my father, and held out his hand.
"Name's Mr. Wilt. Pleased to meet you."
My father shook Wilt's hand and smiled. Yeah, my dad had fallen
for this down-home Pennsylvania bullshit. He loved the hard pews, the
boring church services (we're from California, for pete's sake --
we're not supposed to go to church!), and especially the crazy people
who lived in this town. Wilt was just another nutty old Methodist. I
was sure of it.
"I was talking to your boy in church earlier," Wilt said, and
pointed at me. "I don't recognize you folks. Guess you're new to
Clarkesburg, aren't you?"
"Yes, we are," my father said.
"Wonder if you might like to come over to my place for Sunday
brunch? My wife, she's a Baptist, but she's still one hell of a
cook." He chuckled at his joke. I didn't. "Seeing as though you're
new here, I thought it would be hospitable of me to invite you all
over."
My father's face lit up. Of course, nobody was this nice in
California, but dad didn't have to actually accept the guy's offer.
"Thanks for asking, have a nice day" would be acceptable enough,
right?
Wrong. Like I said, my dad is completely enchanted with the
"quaint old-fashioned charm" of the people of Clarkesburg. He
accepted Wilt's offer.
Any hope of my getting back to sleep was gone. I could only pray
(it was Sunday, so why not pray?) that Mrs. Wilt's food was edible.
Wilt's joke was right -- even though she was a Baptist, Erma
Wilt made a wonderful breakfast. The tiny gray-haired woman cooked
and served us bacon, eggs, pancakes, and orange juice all by herself,
and managed to keep a smile the entire time. It didn't taste that
bad, and just the fact that we were being served authentic
Pennsylvanian hospitality cuisine made my father very happy.
I really wanted to be home in bed, asleep, or at least propped
up and watching a football game or something. Then I remembered:
football doesn't start until one in the afternoon out here. What kind
of place was this?
"So," Mr. Wilt asked as we finished our brunch, "how did you
folks end up here in Clarkesburg?"
"Well, I got tired of the hectic lifestyle in Los Angeles, and
decided that my family and I needed a change. My parents grew up just
few miles down the road, in Bucks County, and so I figured we'd come
back here."
My father is a writer. He bought a computer and a modem, and
suddenly living in a big city near his agent became pointless. Using
new technology is all well and good, but dad didn't have to move us
all to an area with nothing but bearded men driving wagons, old Civil
War battle sites, and wrinkly Methodists.
"It's so nice here," my mother said, and smiled. She had bought
into dad's fantasy. She was entranced by the Wilts' old-fashioned
charm.
I, however, felt extremely ill.
"Can I go outside, mom? I need some air." I didn't need to hear
my parents rave about the virtues of eastern Pennsylvanian life
again.
"Jamie, that's very--"
Mr. Wilt cut her off in mid-sentence.
"Sounds like a good idea," he said. "Let's go get some air,
boy."
Wilt led me outside into his backyard, and showed me an old
wooden shed, overrun by moss.
"This shed was my workshop years ago," he said. "Back then, I
wasn't a God-fearing man. I just did my work and figured that
everything else would take care of itself."
Then Wilt's eyes opened wide, he turned around to see if anyone
was nearby, and began to speak in a whisper.
"Turns out, I have to be a God-fearing man. If there aren't
enough God-fearing men, then Satan wins."
Maybe Pennsylvanians weren't as dull as I had thought.
"Satan's out there, boy, and he's working against all of us.
Doesn't matter if you're a Methodist or a Baptist or a hedonist or
anything. He's still out to get us. You've got to fear God if you're
going to survive. Understand, Jim?"
I nodded. I figured that if I said the wrong thing, he might try
to exorcise me.
"Fearing God's not enough, though. You've got to know the
secret. My wife, she's a Baptist. She can't know the secret. Your
parents, they're from California. They can't know the secret. Your
sister, she's too young. She can't understand the secret. But you,
Jim-boy, you can understand. It's not too late for you."
He was speaking quickly, but his voice was so soft that I could
barely hear what he was saying. Still, it was hard to miss his
general point.
"This is the secret, Jim. Don't tell anyone unless they can be
trusted. They've got to pass the test! You understand?"
I nodded again. Sure, Wilt, sure. Whatever you say.
"When people are eating their food, that's when you've got them.
Check to see how many times they bite into the food, boy. Five, ten,
those are fine numbers. Twenty's even fine. Up to twenty-two, you've
got no problems. But if that person sinks their teeth into the food
one more time, twenty-three, and then swallows, they're in on it.
They chew their food twenty-three times, then down it goes. Those are
the people who work for Satan. Got it, Jim?"
"Twenty-three times," I said, and nodded yet again.
"Good, good boy. Now, you've got to be careful -- all sorts of
people are in on it. I remember seeing one of those state dinners on
TV, and Gerald Ford was eating sirloin steak. Sure enough, twenty-
three bites. Not even Clarkesburg's safe. My wife made chicken for
the mayor one night last year, and like clockwork, he chewed on each
piece of that bird twenty-three times."
There was a knock from the house at this point. Mrs. Wilt had
opened a window from the kitchen and was looking out at us.
"Don't scare the boy, dear," she said. "Come on back inside."
He waved, nodded, and started back in. Why did I have the
feeling that Mrs. Wilt had seen her husband behave like this before?
"Not a word, Jim," he said. "Not a word."
It turns out that I chew my food about eight times before I
swallow it. I counted. Wilt probably counted my chewing too -- before
he took me out to the old shed, he made sure I didn't swallow after
my 23rd bite of Erma's bacon, eggs, and pancakes and swallow.
After 23 bites, all food is reduced to nothing but a disgusting
wet paste, made more of spit than of food.
I guess that's how Satan likes it.
--
JASON SNELL (jsnell@ucsd.edu) is the editor of this publication.
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Do You Have Some Time? / MARY ANNE WALTERS
He looked down at the gold Rolex on his wrist. The time was
1:00, Eastern Standard Time. He thought, once again, that there is
never enough time.
"Excuse me, do you have some time?" A simple question.
She was tiny and pert looking, and very well-dressed. She was
also in a hurry. There was no time to stop and chat. With an
irritated glance at her watch she said, "Yes, it's 1:00," and went to
move on.
"No, no, no. I didn't say 'Do you have the time.' I said 'Do you
have some time." You see, I've run out and need some more."
Her eyes glazed over, and the look on her face was one that most
people save for use only when they are required to deal with a child,
a fool, or a lunatic. "I'm sorry, I'm in a hurry. I have no time for
this."
With that, she scurried off, like a tiny, pert looking rat in a
maze, rushing nowhere, but determined to get there on time
nonetheless.
He sighed. He walked a block more. Turning, his eyes scanned the
crowd. They were all rushing. But, there, in the shadow of a
building, was a young man in jeans and a tee shirt. The T-shirt said
IF YOU HAVE THE MONEY, I HAVE THE TIME. Quickly, he walked over to
the young man and said, "I have the money. Do you have some time for
me?"
"Sure, dude. I got all the time in the world." The boys vapid
face was surrounded by stringy blond hair. There was a bit of fuzz on
his upper lip. The boy grinned, but it looked more like a leer to the
man, who cringed.
"While I doubt you do, in fact, have all the time in the world,
I would like to avail myself of some of the time you do have. You
see, I seem to have run out of time myself, and I could use a little
more. So, if you will tell me how much you charge for your time, it
will be easy for me to compute what amount of money I will need to
acquire the amount of time I desire. I have found that 24 hours in a
day is just not enough--I, myself, would prefer about 32 hours..." As
he spoke, he say the boy's leering smile turn to a scowl.
"Buzz off, buddy. One thing for damn sure is that I got no time
for weirdos like you!" The boy sauntered away and resumed his languid
pose in another shadowy corner, where he was soon approached by a
timid little man with a bald head, glasses sliding off the end of his
nose, and the look of a rabbit gathering the courage to sneak under
the fence into the cabbage patch.
He sighed again, heavier. Once more, he scanned the crowd. He
needed someone with time to spare, but who understood the importance
and the value of time. People in a hurry had no time to spare. People
who seemed to have an abundance of time, like the boy, were somewhat
unbalanced. He searched for the perfect mix.
There, on a park bench, was an older man, reading. He wasn't
reading a book (took too much time) or a magazine, but was reading
the newspaper--and not just the headlines, either. Aha! Could this be
the one? He approached slowly.
"Excuse me, sir. Do you have some time?"
The man on the bench was wearing a rather wide, garishly
patterned, luridly colored tie. His suit was on the dusty side of
grey, made of some thick material that gave off a damp-closet smell.
He looked up, and answered in a booming voice, "Sure, the time is
1:24."
NO, No, No, NO! Not THE time, SOME time! I wanted SOME time!"
"Well, there's no time like the present. What time did you want?
"Did you want some of my time? I'm usually a little short of it
myself. Hey, maybe I should take some of your time! Heh, heh, heh.
Actually, you're in luck. I have some spare time right now. We could
spend some time together. And, speaking of time, let me show you some
of my samples." The loud man spoke fast, in a machine-gun-like stream
of patter. He looked down, reeling from the assault on his senses.
The loud man was opening up his briefcase and there within it was a
display of watches, all cheap, and all ticking. The hours were
wasting away before his very eyes. With a look of horror, he flung a
hand up over his face, as if to ward off a blow, and blocked the
sight from his eyes. He recoiled, and looked for a way to escape this
wretched man.
"Wait! Don't go! My bus is late. Stick around for a while--we
can kill some time together."
That was it. The final straw. He spun on his heels and fled.
The bus driver was only trying to make up for lost time. That
broken traffic light put him way off schedule. Now, time was of the
essence. He had to be on time--not early, not late. His record was
one of the best, and he was proud of it. And, he was mad at the delay
that had robbed him of the precious minutes and had made him late.
With all these thoughts on his mind, it was no wonder he never saw
the well-dressed, wild-eyed, and generally harried looking man that
dashed out in front of the bus. By the time he realized, it was too
late.
"Shit! Now I'll never get back on schedule!" This thought was
echoed by the majority of the people on the bus, to include the tiny,
pert, well-dressed woman who got on at the last stop, as well as by
the timid, balding man in the car behind the bus (whose passenger was
a dirty, languid blond boy, his lip curled into a leer).
A loud and damp smelling man stepped off the curb and walked
over to where the previously well-dressed (but now considerably
rumpled) man lay, sprawled in the street, still as a stone. He
reached down and took the gold Rolex of the now-broken wrist. The bus
driver walked over, unsure whether he should attempt to stop this
ghoulish act.
"Don't worry," the loud man assured the bus driver, "I saw the
whole thing--this guy stole one of my samples, then ran out into the
street, right in front of you. That's what happened, all right." The
loud man replaced the gold watch with a cheap imitation, and let the
wrist drop back to the pavement. "That's what I'll tell the police."
He winked a particularly nasty wink at the bus driver, who breathed a
sigh of relief nonetheless. The loud man laughed.
"I guess his time ran out, hey buddy?"
--
MARY ANNE WALTERS (m13079@mwvm.mitre.org) is a librarian specializing
in Department of Defense research topics at a federally funded
research and development center. She has an undergraduate degree in
English and American Studies and a Masters in Library and Information
Science. She reads voraciously, and kills time by watching movies,
mostly film noir and horror, and anything she can get to by Peter
Greenaway.
--------------------------------------------------------------------
The Talisman / GREG KNAUSS
Duncan watched as the fat little disk that had so shaped his
life bounded up and down in front of him. He stared at it intently,
almost hypnotized by its motion -- so regular, he thought, so
precise, so easily controlled. He flicked his wrist in a thoughtless
motion and the flattened sphere obeyed his command, knowing what he
wanted without him speaking.
God, I love that, Duncan thought.
It hadn't always been as easy as it was now, sitting here. They
had taunted him back when he had cared, called him meaningless things
that had seemed tremendously cruel at the time. Worst of all, they
made fun of IT. The disk, the one thing he loved.
DUN-CAN, DUN-CAN, THE YO-YO MAN! DUN-CAN, DUN-CAN, THE YO-YO
MAN!
The yo-yo sped up and down a little faster as he remembered, his
motions became a little more intense. He never had to look at the yo-
yo while he used it, but now he stared intently into the distance,
his jaw-line hardening, his eyes no longer those of a nine-year-old.
He didn't blame his parents. He loved them more than he would
have normally -- they gave him this friend on a string when he was
only two years old. He had taken to it immediately, quickly becoming
an expert in the yo-yo parlor tricks of the early eighties.
He had taken it to his first day of school, clutching the
smallish plastic disk instead of his mothers skirt and soon the older
kids began to lay into him.
HEY, DUN-CAN THE YO-YO MAN! PEOPLE WHO CARRY YO-YOS WET THE BED!
YEAH, DUN-CAN! WASSA MATTER? YOU WET THE BED?
HA HA HA HA!
He tried to ignore them. He tried to find friends with common
interests, friends he could relate to, but nobody at school seemed to
be interested in yo-yos. He told his parents about the big kids
making fun of him, but they didn't understand. They wanted to take
his yo-yo away! They said that if that was the only thing causing the
trouble he should stop taking it to school.
They didn't understand. His yo-yo was the only thing that kept
him happy, kept him safe. He loved his yo-yo, and his yo-yo loved
him, he was sure of it.
He was getting better, too. He had moved past everyone he had
seen on TV and was now inventing tricks of his own. His beloved yo-yo
would whiz around, up and down, back and forth at speeds where he
could no longer follow it with his eye. But he knew where it was at
all times -- he and the yo-yo were one, connected by twine.
One day, during recess, he was in a corner of the playground,
casually using his yo-yo, when he was approached by the group of
bigger kids who found endless fun in mocking his love.
HEY, HEY, DUN-CAN. HOW'S THE OLD YO-YO? LOOKS PRETTY GOOD TO ME.
CAN I HAVE IT?
Duncan froze, the yo-yo spun up its string and he closed his
fist quickly around it. No, he thought. No, no, no . . .
YEAH, IT LOOKS MIGHTY GOOD.
MAYBE I'LL JUST TAKE IT.
No! Duncan's wrist flipped up and the yo-yo shot out from his
open palm. It hit the big kid in the stomach and he looked as if he'd
been hit with a fist. The kid doubled over as the yo-yo swung back
towards Duncan. He whipped it behind him, over him and down, in a
high, graceful arc, into the back of the kid's head. There was a soft
crack.
UUNGH.
The kid was on the ground. He could have been sleeping, but
there was a yo-yo embedded in the base of his skull.
The other kids scattered away from Duncan as he flicked his
wrist and forced the yo-yo up its string into his palm. He smiled.
The yo-yo rolled steadily up and down its string as he wandered
away.
He was sitting on the curb now, slowly rubbing the blood off his
yo-yo. He could hear sirens in the distance and he supposed soon they
would find him and want to take him away. He knew what he had done
was a bad thing, but just letting that kid take his yo-yo would have
been worse.
He supposed they might try to hurt him, but Duncan wasn't really
worried.
His yo-yo would protect him.
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Schrodinger's Monkey / GREG KNAUSS
If nothing else, it explains a lot.
For those with a technical education in physics, it seems the
Everett-Wheeler-Graham interpretation of quantum indeterminacy, with
a few addendums, turns out to be correct. For those without, a little
explanation is needed.
Physics, for years now, has had a central question: What is
wrong with quantum mechanics? Quantum mechanics is a method of
calculating values on the atomic and sub-atomic level, a little like
Newtonian mechanics can be used to calculate values on a larger
scale. Newtonian formulas can predict where a rock will fall if
someone throws it in the air, quantum formulas try to do the same
thing for atoms.
But it never worked quite right. Newtonian physics, real-world
physics, always comes up with one specific answer -- it many not be
the right answer, say, if some factor was forgotten, or some
measurement misread, but it is always a single answer. Quantum
physics, though, always produces more than one answer, ALL of which
are technically, mathematically correct. It's called "indeterminacy."
Newton says the rock will land HERE; quantum mechanics says that the
rock will land HERE and HERE and HERE.
This is, of course, impossible.
In the real world you can't have more than one answer. It's not
a question of actually throwing the rock and seeing where it lands.
The formulas should provide one answer, and one answer only. Period.
Schrodinger came up with his famous cat to try to illustrate the
problem. Imagine: there's a box, with no holes or windows, that
contains a cat. The cat has some sort of lethal device hooked up to
it -- I always liked to think of it as a guillotine, but Schrodinger
used poisonous gas -- that can be triggered by some nameless quantum
event.
Now, after a specific period of time, is the cat dead? Quantum
mechanics will return a number of answers, one of which might say
that the cat has been killed, another of which might not. So without
opening the box, is the cat dead or alive? Schrodinger said it was
both -- an obviously false statement --Êjust to point out that
quantum mechanics has a gaping hole in it.
There were a number of explanations for what was going on.
Einstein had the Hidden Variable, Von Neumann and Finkelstein had
Quantum Logic, Bohr had the Copenhagen Interpretation, Walker and
Herbert had "Consciousness" Nonlocality, Sarfatti had "Information"
Nonlocality. They were all attempts to rectify what quantum mechanics
predicted with what actually happened, ways of looking at the
universe to make it fit quantum answers.
As it turns out, events have proven Drs. Everett, Wheeler and
Graham correct. Their model suggested, perhaps fancifully, that for
every indeterminacy -- every Schrodinger's Cat -- an entirely new
universe is created, exactly the same as the first, but for that
single quantum event. In one universe, the cat would be dead; in the
other it would be alive.
Of course, quantum events are happening by the trillions every
second, by the trillions of trillions. Universes would be splitting
and re-splitting and splitting again, taking every possible course
imaginable. Judging by the rough estimate that the universe is 10
billion years old, the number of entirely separate universes is
beyond human imagining. The amount is inconceivable.
I suppose it should be obvious that eventually they'd run out of
room.
The way I see it -- and this is just my particular model,
obviously derived in a hurry, last night -- each universe acts
something like an atom of hydrogen might, enclosed in a glass jar.
When there are only a few hydrogen atoms, they float about freely,
gaseous, and rarely collide. This is the Gas State.
If these atoms, however, were able to duplicate themselves,
along the lines of Everett-Wheeler-Graham, the jar would slowly begin
to get crowded. Collisions with divergent universes explain a lot of
what we're seeing.
Of course these collisions would become more frequent, and
pressure would eventually begin to build. As more atoms were created,
eventually liquid hydrogen -- the Liquid State -- would condense out
of the ever more crowded gas. Collisions would be innumerable nearly
constant, even.
And that's what's happening to us. I don't claim to know what
the "jar" is -- Thornton Wilder would probably call it "the Mind of
God" -- but I think that collisions don't take place physically, at
least not in the lower three dimensions. There's no thud of our
universe running into another one.
Universes seem to "tap" each other lightly -- perhaps there's
some sort of natural repulsion or elasticity -- and only a small
exchange takes place. Parts of the other universe slosh over into
ours and parts of ours spill over into it, following some upper-
dimensional conservation of momentum, like giant bowls of milk.
What does this mean in practical terms? If nothing else, it
explains a lot.
It explains Jesus rising from the grave, for instance. Say three
days after his crucifixion, there was a rare Gas State collision with
a universe where he wasn't killed, and their Christ was bumped to our
world.
It explains what happened to a Spanish book that disappeared
from my locker in high school.
It explains what happens to everyone's car keys, and the one
sock that's always missing from the dryer.
lt explains Atlantis and Big Foot and the Loch Ness monster and
unicorns and every other myth or legend in the world.
It explains why there's another me, very close to an exact
duplicate as far as I can tell, sitting in the kitchen gorging
himself on bananas. We talked for a long time last night, after he
appeared in my bathroom, and the only glaring difference we found
between our universes was that in his, bananas never evolved. Some
quantum event far back in the past prevented whatever it was that
eventually became bananas from mutating in a certain way. He -- the
other me -- loves them, and has eaten over three dozen by my count.
Now that the universes are condensing into the Liquid State
we'll be seeing a lot more of that sort of thing. I wonder how much
longer some sort of societal order will hold out. Somehow I doubt
people will be too concerned with the law if they know that
everything they know as fact might cease to exist at any particular
moment.
And I wonder how long we have before the Solid State.
--
GREG KNAUSS (gknauss@ucsd.edu) is a senior at the University of
California, San Diego, majoring in Political Theory. Greg wants to be
Bonnie Raitt when he grows up. He's also loopy as a loon.
--------------------------------------------------------------------
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