Monterra's Deliciosa & Other Tales &

Home > Other > Monterra's Deliciosa & Other Tales & > Page 14
Monterra's Deliciosa & Other Tales & Page 14

by Anna Tambour


  "The Farm now belongs to the medlars," Tim announced, "as they are the wisest. But the Frawleys will be the caretakers, and will do your bidding as long as you rule best for all: the kangaroos, the eucalypts; the Frawleys, too. This is to last for perpetuity—as long as long—and I have arranged matters as well as I can, considering it involves humans."

  The medlars were uncharacteristically solemn on receiving this news. The teller of epics delegated herself to give their thanks. All the trees who had known the Frawleys thought that Tim could not have done better.

  "That boy, Bram?" they asked. "Is he still with them?"

  "Not only that, but his wife—her name is Rachel—and their baby girl are coming, too," he answered, and thought, not the first time, that life would have been different if he had met a woman like Rachel.

  "We have high hopes for Bram," said the thin Nottingham. "Then you'll love his wife," smiled Tim, as well as he can smile these days.

  "What was Rachel's parents' name," asked a rather rude apple.

  "How would Tim know?" the Smyra quince snapped back. "We'll find out when she comes."

  ~

  It is now a week later, and the Frawleys have just arrived. They've brought all the tree family they had from Timespast Nursery, who Tim assured them would have a happy home at the Farm. He had said it with an odd grin, but the Frawleys thought he just meant that with the next door farm now going to be part of the whole, there would be more space to plant.

  The Frawleys have their doubts about what they are getting into with this wildman and his millions bequest and his designation of the Farm as a reserve in perpetuity with strict forbiddance on killing any of the inhabitants.

  Tim hasn't told the Frawleys about language. He knew that if he had spoken of these things in the Frawleys' shack in Victoria, they would have chosen their poverty over his insanity.

  Instead, Tim told them to move into the house and then to meet him in the orchard that evening. His own belongings left in the house do not cramp the Frawleys because they consist almost entirely of books, to the delight of Stephen.

  The sun throws long, late afternoon shadows from the bare trees. The human congregation has assembled at the orchard.

  Tim has told everyone to be very quiet, and now he begins to explain. He speaks from the entrance of his Royals home, the most curious growth the Frawleys have ever seen.

  At first, the Frawleys are afraid. This man is so sick that this must be hallucinations.

  But there is something about his eyes that says he is more well than any of them.

  The animals begin to appear.

  Suddenly, the baby begins to laugh, and she reaches out her arms, not to her mother Rachel, but to the nearest tree.

  - 5 -

  It is now three months since the Frawleys moved in, and last night, it was the little green spiders who first sensed when Tim drifted off to death. The spiders' mourning was a terrible thing to watch. They rent their webs in grief. They hung from the limbs of the medlars just by their rappelling lines, vibrating, vibrating. No one had guessed the depths of the spiders' emotions. But then, no one else had believed in Tim as deeply from the very first. The medlars were just behind the spiders in their knowing, and the donkeys stopped their grazing, and set up a thunderous bray. The persimmons took the news gravely and silently, the fenouillet gris uttered a piercing cry; and all the other trees, in their own way; and all the other creatures, in their own ways, felt their own loss. The humans were by this time awake; and walked as one, down to the orchard, knowing the news without needing to have it spelled out further.

  A heavy nightdew fell, and as the drops bent the browned winter tips of the grasses, the air reverberated with the sound of sadness. The plop, plop of tears falling from the eyes of the fruit bats—as loud as rain.

  The wake began at dawn. Such a wake the world has never witnessed. All the creatures—animal and vegetable, human and otherwise—cried until—until they laughed. All the medlars worked so hard turning salt into sugar that they will need an extra-long rest period this year, just to recover.

  ~

  For the humans, the learning has taken time. It was difficult for all, and oddly enough—for Gwyneth, the most difficult, as she had spent her whole life telling trees what to do and doing things to them—not listening to them at all. But eventually, all of Frawleys learned. Rachel is, indeed, the most fluent. She first met Bram because of her parents, who were the Frawleys' first clients.

  Bram was never a reader but learnt technique from his mother and his own obsessive experimentation. He is superb as a doctor, possessing skills that the untutored Tim Thornbourne never had. The trees keep him busy dressing their windwounds with his soothing medicaments.

  And Bram has the best memory for the stories told. This is good, because his father who reads five languages and was the scholar of the family, can understand everything the trees say, but is so poor at communicating that he feels like a nincompoop, even compared to a sapling. The human babies, each one as they come, are favourites of all the trees, and grow up in a creche of rivalrous care between tree and animal, learning early what a kangaroo's pouch feels like from the inside.

  ~

  The tree family now extends to the far side of the valley, new residents voted in by old. The pruners and grafting knives are now only used when requested by the residents.

  Of course, no residents are sold.

  Shortly after Tim died and as soon as the medlars felt they could without seeming disrespectful of his name, they brought up a subject that they had avoided during his life because he was not social enough with his fellow man to be able to cope with it. Fire.

  The medlars, as is their way, think much more deeply and further in advance than we, the smooth skinned two-trunks, are used to. They had known that as far as people are concerned, Tim had done his best, and the Frawleys would, too. But nature is a different story. And nature in the form of Fire worries them the most.

  "We need to make children in case of disaster. Other cities, other places," they said when all the Frawleys had assembled.

  "What are your parents' names, Rachel?" the rude apple asked again.

  "The Crittendens," she said.

  The medlars looked at each other in the way trees always have, without people noticing.

  "They'll understand better than you've been giving them credit for," said the rather quiet Dutch. "Your father, especially. Summon him."

  It took a remarkably short time, considering, for a list to be drawn up, of people whom the medlars thought had the capacity to listen and to hear. The niche was a subclass of the few true gourmets who had been the clients of the Frawleys back at Timespast. The Crittendens had driven from a ridiculous distance to sample the fruits of the Frawleys. They had bought medlars. They had bought apples of more types than populated the valley now. And they lavished the trees with love.

  "I'll invite them next week," Rachel promised.

  Then there was Stephano watsisname, the epic-telling Royal remembered.

  "The one who sat in his grandfather's medlar tree?"

  "The very one."

  "And ..."

  It wasn't a long list, but it was a good list. From it, the medlars were sure, new cities would spring up in different valleys, different continents. A fire could ravage the valley, but never raze what had grown.

  ~

  All of the Frawleys neglect the mansion on the hill shockingly these days. There is much laughter in the city in the valley. But also a schooling like nowhere else on earth. Much of Stephen's time is spent working on the tome that Tim began—a book that will make the RHS Encyclopedia look like a skinny paperback. Its title will be The Wit and Wisdom of the Medlar.

  The book, by popular demand, will be dedicated to Tim Thornbourne, and the dedication is a long, funny story about Tim, written by the tall, skinny Nottingham with the name that no two-trunk can yet properly pronounce.

  Tonight, though, something else hovers in the valley. An all too-f
amiliar smell floats in the air—the gusty hot air. The late day's sun is red, announcing the blooming of fire, over the hills to the west.

  There is confidence and fear and bravery and cowardice here, just as in the rest of the world. A flurry of burnt leaves carried from afar falls upon the medlars' open blossoms.

  Catechismic Chaos

  Did nature in creation spurt with math as part of One,

  or are numbers a religion making all obey to Sum?

  Whatever be the truth of it I never feel less grave,

  Than when Nature to The Numbers, refuses to behave.

  Dr. Babiram's Potentials

  Two is S. Three is orange plastic anything. Four, the smell of burnt toast. Five, just five. Six, red, the color. Seven, a tiger lily. Eight and nine, just ordinary ordinals. One is something. I have a feeling about one, but it eludes me. Everything else is just your kind of substitution for so many oranges taken away, added to, etc. Except for the odd exception, like the salty taste of forty-three, the sick in the stomach lurch of one hundred and two.

  It's not a code, if that's what you're thinking. Not a code any more than roses are. Or I wouldn't be here, any more than Albee would be, over there sitting sideways in that brown swivel chair.

  Dr. Babiram asked me today whether I ever missed "the outside," but when I answered, "Have you?" he did his jumping eyebrow thing.

  "Please answer the question."

  I looked him in the forehead. He looked away first.

  The door eventually slammed as much as Dr. Babiram could make it slam, which wasn't much because of the pneumatic glider on the top. But the crisp click of the hasp was a fraction of a second earlier than the thud of the full-metal door.

  Albee screamed like a pig seeing a knife. He had my attention, so he smiled in my direction, then bent his head again and closed his eyes, his toes busy as always, syncopating. I call it syncopating. Babiram calls it algorithming. I call it syncopating because those toes do move. I tried to figure out the music but I can't. Once, I ripped five holes in two pieces of paper, and shoved his toes through the holes. When he moved them, I heard each movement. I expected music but a rat in the attic scratches a better song. After a few minutes, Albee tore off the paper. I like music, and do miss it. With Albee, there are no distractions allowed.

  His monitor is housed in Block C. He doesn't need to see it, and it distracted him when he did. Distract might not be the word for it. The technical term is anaphylactic shock, but that's supposed to only happen with, say, peanuts. For Albee, being in the presence of feedback monitors produces instant rash, bloated features, and rapid suffocation.

  So the usual imaging equipment MRI, fMRI, MEG, SQUIDS, PET and the electroencephalogram; the tests for change in blood pressure, hormone level, skin response, respiration rate, and electromyograms, all had to be scrapped unless there was some way that the data could be collected without Albee's interaction, even if only through his autonomic nervous system. And because Albee acts more autonomic than let's-do-it, cognitive/behavior scales had to be amended, because Albee doesn't speak or react or do anything on a daily basis, regardless of how actively his toes are dancing about. He doesn't open his eyes except for a moment now and then, and his verbals are that scream. Instead, he tolerates an electrocap for a couple of hours a day, has debraded eyelids with the translucency of watered milk; insists on wearing during the day, a pair of old boots that is cut off to leave his bare toes hanging out; and sleeps in a shortened bed with no covers in our tropically heated room. And, like all of us Potentials, Albee's skull is modulated, his face parafaced for the irregular biops imperative to the Center's funding needs.

  In case you're thinking of trying to get in, don't. You can't recommend yourself. You have to be headhunted. And for that, don't try to put yourself in the way of the hunters. You will never find them. The whole point of the Center is Discovery. If you discover yourself, there is no Success in that. Dissertants trust their own proposals only, trust their own networks only, as there are so many false leads that it is not worth screening potential Potentials who submit themselves. So the best Potentials come from agents used by the most successful Dissertants, especially serial Dissertants like Dr. Babiram. And he is the high profile type of Dissertant who brings in the big grants. It is not considered odd that Babiram jobs headhunting out. He doesn't have the time to roam the world looking. Experts for experts.

  I once tried to find out what Albee did in his past life, without success. I think that he grew up on a farm, but it may have been a metal scrapyard. That scream could be either pig or steel, when I think about it. I think he watches what is going on. He can hardly not see. But he has never spoken to me, and the only way I think these things about him are deductions.

  I did grow up on a farm. I remember how much my brothers and sisters wanted to get away. How good they were at counting how many chickens had died that day when Gene 'forgot' to top up the chickens' water, because the air was so hot that the metal faucet burnt his hand to turn it on. When they got to one hundred and two, I knew how many they had. The vomit many. When Dad asked me how many and I doubled over and gagged, he was so understanding. "You gotta get used to it, Jennifer. It's life and death." He stroked my golden braids. "Now how many? You were doing the counting when Gene was throwing them on the compost pile."

  I straightened up to answer him, but bent again as the morning's scrambled eggs ejected from my mouth, spattering yellow spray onto his dusty boots. He smacked me across the head. "Stop being silly, girl. Now how many?"

  "Sick many," I whispered as I ducked his horny hand.

  I ran away from home as soon as my face looked good enough for me to hitch. I don't know how old I was, but I had breasts by then.

  My life at work was not too good. Wherever you work, you have to add up things, and they don't add up to me same as they do to you. One was always the root of the problem. Like "I'll have a hamburger."

  "One hamburger?"

  "One. You think anyone else is with me?"

  There would be sniggering and then anger. "Two hamburgers," and I got fired for serving some guy burnt toast, though it was only a little soiled from the garbage bin. Where else was I going to get it if I couldn't be the cook myself?

  I tried all kinds of jobs but even though I look kind of cute people say, this number thing always gets in the way. The constant transmutation of numbers by you in your daily life is something that doesn't come natural to me, and makes me feel dirty for always lying, saying they are something they are not. If you can't be honest about the red of six, what can you be honest about. Not much, I was thinking as I was fired without pay yet again.

  But Mr. Docent held open the door, gave me a lift, and when we got here, explained the deal. I don't have to wait tables that I can't do, count one of anything which gives me a headache of the worst sort, or do anything at all. Just tell them all when I know that there are more numbers that people are lying about. The people here think that if they know that, then they will be cracking the code of numbers that surrounds us. I hope they do.

  Because Chaos cannot be allowed to rule. That is the secret message that I found under my pillow one day.

  Chaos cannot be allowed to rule.

  I couldn't tell Mr. Docent what I thought of Chaos and how it rules our lives, but when I got this note, I ate it. I hope for another message every day. Dr. Babiram hasn't asked me about Chaos ruling, any more than he would ask me if I objected to the sun coming up.

  Even I learned the catechism perfectly, Chaos rules the universe in all equations. The title, then the equation. Like all our lessons. The title, then the equation.

  My sister Cindy's cross-stitched Chaos equation probably still hangs near the family photos in the living room back home, though it was from a kit. "Your stitches are so neat, you should enter it in the State Fair," my mother said. My mother was right. Cindy's best friend Deb entered hers, and won, and her stitches weren't half as neat as Cindy's.

  At school in City studi
es, I dutifully learned the City Definition equation, SH (t + 1) = Ft [SH (t),Su(H)(t),SA(t),E(t)], and so on. As we live far from any city, it didn't matter what it meant. We just learned it. But in Human Studies, maybe because us country folks know more about natural life than they do in the city, Mrs. Ogden told us not to worry that the Krebs Cycle equation doesn't work. "It sounds so beautiful, children, doesn't it?" And another lie was learned, as equation after equation piled up in our brains, like flake after flake of snow.

  Outside, the blizzard would be piling up these flakes, while inside we'd be learning our equations, burning these equations into our brains like salt on ice. Business studies, human studies, city studies, biology. Chaos. Chaos rules the world. Equation number 1, and number 256 in a much more complex form. School finished for the day. Three more years to go. I learned and I didn't learn. I was kept after school so much that my father started to complain that if I couldn't be good at school, I might as well come home and do something useful, like cleaning out pig troughs.

  My brother Gene needled me one day. "What in heck do you expect to do in life?" We stopped what we were doing so I could face him. Steam rose from his mouth.

  "Hey, you hate equations? How'd you expect to make sense out of the world, in these troubled times?"

  In these troubled times. That's what the broadcasts always said. That's what everyone always said. In these troubled times. We were both sweating at the time, though snowflakes stung our eyes, the long-haired cattle had their backs to the blizzard, and it was thirty below, barometer falling fast.

  "Does it help you shovel snow?" I spat.

  He straightened for a moment. "Yeah, it does."

  The path from the barn to the house had to be navigable, though it meant wading through this rising tide of white.

  "It comforts me. Life is a pattern." he said. "It's there whether I break my back or not."

 

‹ Prev