It felt a bit like Aedo was vanishing, herself. “You have to explain all this,” she said.
“Ja, ja,” LogicalOR said. It was one of the principle rallying points of VL: right to data about you; right to know how your data was being stored and used. Or, in this case, systematically erased. “We will level you up. A+ celebrity cracker-hacker.”
The progress bar finished, and LogicalOR handed back the first pad. It was Aedo’s imagination—she had enough sense to know that—but it seemed lighter.
“Welcome to the underground,” LogicalOR said, and their grin promised an entire future Aedo would never have considered on her own. “We’ll take care of you here.”
© 2016 by An Owomoyela.
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
An (pronounce it “On”) Owomoyela is a neutrois author with a background in web development, linguistics, and weaving chain maille out of stainless steel fencing wire, whose fiction has appeared in a number of venues including Clarkesworld, Asimov’s, Lightspeed, and a handful of Year’s Bests. An’s interests range from pulsars and Cepheid variables to gender studies and nonstandard pronouns, with a plethora of stops in-between. Se can be found online at an.owomoyela.net, and can be funded at patreon.com/an_owomoyela.
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See The Unseeable, Know The Unknowable
Maria Dahvana Headley | 4983 words
There are woods, and the woods are dark, though there are lights hung from the trees. Many of the lights no longer light up. Around the edge of the clearing, someone has strung a long chain of origami animals on barbed wire, some gilded paper and some newsprint, some pages torn out of books, some photographs, each animal snagged on its own spike. The animals have been rained on, and more than once. Not all of them are animals, not exactly. There are some shapes unknown here. The grass is trampled down in the center of the clearing, and there are muddy swathes deep enough to drown in.
We know things. We know that there are some things which possibly shouldn’t be written about any longer. Possibly shouldn’t be done any longer. The golden ages. They’ve been written, and better, performed, and better. A stranger, for example, comes to town and changes everything. Not a single stranger, but a troupe of strangers, spangled, striped, trapezed.
But we love a circus.
We know it’s old-fashioned, but we can’t resist it. That is the smell of greasepaint. We know it by now, though it still sings to us. We know how the roar of the crowd sounds. We know what the carnival refreshments taste like. We know the door that takes us to the sideshow. We’ve slept on the bed of nails, and maybe, though we won’t admit it, we’ve fucked the two-headed goatgirl. And, yes, we know the important lessons, too.
We know never to run away to join the circus. There are circus people in the real world, on the run from circuses, escaped and fled, trying to pretend they never flung themselves in to begin with. Sometimes people get away from the thing they wanted. People like that could tell you stories.
In the world down here, there’s a man with a belly full of flames who sometimes chokes on smoke; a tattooed lady with the universe, nebulas and black holes, comets and constellations, and all the words for light and dark that have thus far been invented, hidden up her sleeves. There’s a strong man pushing a pencil across a desk.
A sword swallower steps through a metal detector and raises his hands in preemptive apology for the blade he’s substituted for his spine. An acrobat climbs through a window and into a museum’s upstairs bathroom looking for something that will fix the ache inside him, an elephant charges a train calling for its mate. Circuses dissolve. Carnivals collapse. Things get broken.
We have always come here, when we’re in the area. Every seventy-six years or so, we visit, and the place has always forgotten us by the time we come again, but that doesn’t mean we have difficulty with our methods. We’ve been doing this for centuries, and we’re skilled.
At the end of the summer, here in this town at the edge of the woods, there’s a day on which broadsheets fly in the form of paper airplanes, landing on doorsteps, catching in trees. The townspeople open the flyers and consider the date of the show with some annoyance.
Inside one flyer, there’s an advertisement for a performance fifty years in the future. In the next, a performance fifty years in the past.
See the Unseeable, all the flyers read, and the townspeople grumble at the litter. The next batch are printed Know the Unknowable.
No one on Earth wants to know the unknowable anymore. There are plenty of things to know already. The world is too full and brains can only hold so much. Headlines flash across foreheads. Sometimes the guilt of information is too much to bear, and people hide inside their houses, burrowing under the covers, trying not to listen to the news. Whole countries are dying out there. The sky is falling. Some of the birds have stopped singing, and no one knows whether that’s been true for years, or has only just happened. There is too much noise, and it’s hard to tell who hasn’t been heard from in a while.
There is an ailment moving from continent to continent, these days, and its symptoms include spontaneous deafness and blindness, and finally, in its last stages, spontaneous and permanent silence, without even any satisfying last words. A person might ask for a refill of coffee, and that will be all. Some people try to expose themselves to the disease. The quiet calls to them.
In this town, no one has the disease yet, for which we are grateful. Everyone can hear the flyers flying. Occasionally, one of them makes a trill, and townspeople look up, frustrated, snatch the flyer from the air, and stomp on it, feeling assaulted by whimsy, or possibly spied upon by their government.
On each broadsheet there’s a simple drawing: a large black box in the center of a circle of trees. Maybe it isn’t a box. Maybe it’s a door. And maybe there is something, far off in the blackness inside it, something. But maybe not. Probably not. It’s a blotchy drawing, and unsatisfying. It seems to have been done by a child, not by any real artist. Fingerpaints on paper. Each one is hand drawn, not printed. Whoever did them doesn’t know much about much.
Nothing’s made of paper now. There are better things to write on. Paper melts in rain. Paper turns to ragged slushy nothing. Even folded paper animals eventually disintegrate.
But we like them.
Old-fashioned paper ticket stubs pour down one afternoon in a swift yellow storm. The Show Happened Before You Were Born, they are printed, and on the other side, The Show Will Start After You Are Dead.
It isn’t the children who pick them up. The children are busy, and things like this are beneath them. The town’s janitor uses a snowplow to gather the drifts and then to pile them at the edge of town. He sets them on fire with a single quick breath. Then he sits down in some satisfaction, and roasts a hotdog.
Nothing has come to the town that hasn’t always been there. This isn’t new. The janitor has seen weather like this before. It always passes, and if it doesn’t pass, there’s the end of the world to consider.
He has a menagerie of tin cans, and plenty of ammunition. He has some hounds. One day, he suspects he’ll need them, but he’s lived in proximity to the possible end for long enough that he’s used to it. If it gets him, it does. Everyone dies. He keeps things clean, and that’s his job. Clean doesn’t always mean things are safe. There might be lights on every corner, and there will still be shadows. There’s nothing the janitor can do about that, save setting the town on fire, and even then, light only lasts so long. He’s only one person here, cleaning up at the edge of the woods, and he works from nine at night till five in the morning. He’d been doing this job for centuries, in this part of the country, which is a notorious part of the country. Everybody knows it is. People live here anyway.
There is, as it happens, one stranger in town. The woman moved here recently, from a much larger city. She isn’t officially a resident, though she’s rented a tiny house near the place where the forest starts. She owns a gray cat named Susurrus, remnant of a relationship, and
a small roll of money that won’t take her far.
She left her last place in the middle of the night, as the ambulances were coming, and there was no time to pack up more than the cat, who prowls now, joyful but for his bell, stalking the edge of the woods where the songbirds don’t sing.
The woman has used up the name she had before, and now she doesn’t have one. She opens the flyer stuck in her screen door, and finds her old name written across it in a filthy blot, as though by a thumb pressed in ink.
She crumples up the paper, tears it into tiny pieces, and then buries it in the back garden, but two hours later, she feels the need to dig it up and put it in the oven on broil, until it’s ashes. She realizes only after she’s burnt the broadsheet that she has looked at the drawing underneath her name. When she shuts her eyes that night, she can see the dark, smudgy rectangle at the center of the trees, and she can see something inside it, far off in the black, something moving. The date on her flyer, the only one like this, is neither in the past nor in the future.
She opens her eyes and pours herself a drink. It’s four in the morning. She pours herself another. It isn’t as though she’s going to this performance. She’ll get drunk instead, and maybe drinking will put her to sleep.
Outside the window, she can see that it’s started to snow. It’s summer, not winter. At last, she goes out in her underwear and discovers that the snow isn’t snow, but popcorn. She picks up a kernel. It’s cold and flat, muddied. Whoever made it doesn’t know much about popcorn. That, or it’s been falling a long time.
She hears a machine start up, and a moment later, the janitor drives by, pushing the popcorn ahead of him, a rolling wave, a dry tsunami.
“Strange weather,” she ventures, calling out to him from her steps, but if he hears her, he doesn’t have a reply. Maybe it isn’t strange at all. She doesn’t know. She’s new to town. She can’t tell how people speak to one another here. He hasn’t even looked at her, and here she is, standing outdoors, the better part of naked.
For the past week, since she arrived on foot from the bus station, she’s been either naked in her house, or wearing the same thing: a pair of torn up jeans that don’t belong to her, picked up from the floor of the last place, and a t-shirt covered in black and red blotches like some kind of accidental Rorschach. In her old life, she would never have gone outside like this, but this is her new life.
She puts on the jeans and t-shirt, scrapes her hair up into a ponytail and goes out barefoot into the drifts of popcorn. There are ashes smeared on her face from the burning of the flyer, but she doesn’t care about that either. She takes the bottle with her.
She can hear her cat’s bell and so she walks toward that, into the trees, where the storm abruptly stops. Now it’s dark and all there is to hear is the sound of the bell cheerfully jingling. Sometimes she wants to give up and let Susurrus catch birds, just to see if they sing as he kills them, if what she hears as singing are actually birds screaming. She wonders if their lack of song is a choice, if they, too, are tired of the noise. She wonders if birds ever get tired of Earth.
Her feet on the ground feel suddenly like the cat’s paws, and she looks down, strangely certain, expecting to be startled by something unholy. No. She’s half drunk, is all, and sleep deprived. There isn’t enough sleep lately. She’s due a rest. She’s here to sleep, and to dream, and to forget, and to be forgotten about. Faint hope, but it’s a place near the woods, and that’s been her plan. Screen door and little porch. She hasn’t even been into the trees yet. Somehow everything else takes up her time. She’s scrubbed the house three times already, trying to wash away the blood that isn’t there, and never has been. On her knees, she realized what she was doing, and she was bewildered. Her mind had been telling her a story about something that had never happened here.
She stood up, yes, and put the scrubbing brush back into the bucket, bucket into the closet, closet locked. All the closets have locks, each one with a key of its own. She has all the keys. She’s counted and tested them. There are no extra keys on the ring. The house is tiny, but she has eleven keys, enough that she can wear the ring as a bracelet. She has it on now as she walks deeper into the woods, and the little skeletons are cold against her wrist.
The bell isn’t as close as it was, and she isn’t really looking for the cat anyway. She leans against a tree and drinks from the bottle. She feels bad about the way she used her old name. It’s wrung out. She doesn’t want it back, even as she’s sorry for it. It belonged to a nicer person, a quiet person, a person who missed things when she looked at other people.
Then, suddenly, her name was everywhere, out of control, surging up in front of her as she drove, flashing across the bottoms of screens.
Someone calling her by name from out of the car radio, telling her to turn herself in.
Turn yourself inside out, she thought, in a fucked up singsong. Things had happened, and she’d lived through them.
For the past week, she’s taken to calling herself a less used name, the one that belonged to her sister before her sister died, falling into a well while in the process of poisoning someone’s water.
The motives of the dead are often unclear. Wren floated up with the fingers of one hand shoved through the handle of a jug of drain cleaner. Whatever mistake she made to cause herself to fall, the poison was on purpose. The neighbors died, and so did Wren, but Wren was born to die in the dark. It was a miracle she’d made it so long.
The second Wren, though, has thus far been a good enough person. A week in, and all she’s done wrong is steal a can of tomatoes from the store. She considers her credentials. Starting over shortens the list of sins. She’s innocent all over again, of crimes, of sorrows, of history, of stupidity.
The t-shirt feels stiff where the blotches are. She needs to steal something reasonable to wear. The only other thing she has is a short green dress, not appropriate for anything but the middle of the night and a dance floor. She found it in her purse along with her high heels, leftovers from the last night of her past, sprinting naked from the house, grabbing clothes from the floor as she went.
Sometimes she hates Earth.
She walks deeper into the dark, the jingling far away still. She feels an object touch her face, and she slaps it away. A bat or bird. It swings back, though, and hits her again, and this time, she sees that it isn’t alive.
It’s a paper animal on a string. A bear. She brings it close to her face and looks at it. Nothing to be afraid of. A tiny cut-out grizzly, rearing up on its haunches, hanging from a string.
There’s a dim light here, in this clearing, and she can see other paper creatures, with light bulbs strung between them. The clearing is large. She can see the lights on the other side, but only barely. She can tell there’s a breeze by the way the lights bounce. There’s a paper lion, and an elephant made of newsprint striped with old headlines. How long has this been here? The animals are the worse for the wear.
She follows the barbed wire around the outer edge, touching each animal in turn. Some of them she doesn’t recognize. There’s a horse with the body of a snake, and a couple of the animals are nothing more than crumpled balls of pointed folds, carefully done, but nothing she’s seen before.
There’s something made of an old photograph, folded and sliced into long arms, many of them, and jaws. She can’t quite see what the photograph was, but it seems to be a family portrait, the kind you’d get taken at a shopping mall. There are grins in it, and the unmistakable alligator emblem of a polo shirt.
The string of lights shakes as Wren ducks under it, not thinking about it. She’s always ducked under fences. Her childhood was rural. There’s nothing here, no beehives, no barbed wire to keep the bears out. She still has her bottle. She has another drink. The cat mews from somewhere quite close, and she looks around.
“Come on,” she says. “Come here,” but the cat refuses. It’s on the other side of the wire. She can see the animals moving where the cat bats at them.
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sp; There’s a strange noise, then, and a bright light goes on, from somewhere high above her. A helicopter, and here she is, in the open. This is a mistake made by her old self. The first Wren would never have made this kind of error.
There’s no place on Earth a person can be invisible forever, not anymore. Maybe there never has been. It’s only been a week, but a week is long enough for her face to be everywhere, projected onto buildings, blinking on in the middle of phone calls.
She crouches lower to the ground, her knees nearly touching the mud, and keeps her head down. She closes her eyes, wondering if it will be guns or ropes. She clenches the bottle in her hand in case they come down beside her and she has a chance. There is no chance with a chance like that. At least she’ll fight.
But there are no sounds of helicopter blades. There are no sounds at all, beyond those of the cat hitting the paper animals with his paws and chirruping when they return to him.
There is a feeling. A vibration, a hum, a whirr, and she opens her eyes, blinded by the light around her. Light and movement. Something’s spinning and she’s at the center of it. Something’s rising and she’s part of it. The cat hisses and spits outside the circle of light, and Wren lurches to her feet, feeling the sky shifting above her.
She hears a clicking, looks up and sees dark things against the brightness, but that is all. There’s nothing certain up there, nothing but sparks and flickers. The clearing is entirely bathed in white, but outside it, there’s night on all sides. She spins slowly, trying to see, but there’s nothing to be seen.
We are the ones above her.
We know better than to be visible, not at this point.
Lightspeed Magazine - September 2016 Page 8