Trunk Stories

1420 MHz

prompt: Start a story that begins with a character saying “Speak now.”

available at Reedsy

“Speak now.” The interviewer sat back in their seat, letting the camera run.

“It’s hard to describe. To paraphrase Dickens, it was the best time of my life, it was the shittiest time of my life. Maybe both and neither at the same time, like Shrödinger’s cat. I guess we can open the box now and see which way the waveform collapses.

“Not that I’d change anything. The lack of sleep, the shitty little room I could barely afford on my part-time wages, meals consisting of whatever I could scrounge from the kitchen at work. No one tells you how hard it is to live and pursue a doctorate at the same time.

“I might’ve been able to work more hours if I didn’t volunteer at the observatory to pay back the time I’d used up in gathering the data for my research. I mean, I didn’t have to, but it only felt right.”

The interviewer cocked their head to one side. “Perhaps it would be easier to start at the moment you became aware of the contact?” It waved a tentacle in a ‘carry on’ sort of gesture.

Ally brushed her straight, lank, not-quite-blonde hair back from a pink, sun-burned cheek. She stared at the camera with light brown eyes. “Yeah, I can do that.”

She took a deep breath and leaned forward. “I was on overnight duty at the radio observatory….”

#

Ally usually had plenty of time during her shift to work on her doctoral thesis. She was on her final revision; spelling and transcription errors solved, graphs and graphics finalized. It was down to making the language as smooth and readable as possible.

An alarm went off on the main dish. Not like the movies, with flashing lights and blaring klaxons, just a repeated chime like the dishwasher letting you know it was done.

She turned from her laptop to the terminal and turned off the chime. Scrolling back through the data, she found a spike in the 1420 MHz range. It continued for seventy-two seconds then stopped.

After checking the area of the sky the dish was observing, she picked up her phone and called her advisor.

“Very funny, Kelly. How much did it cost to rent a plane and fly a transmitter?”

“Huh?” Kelly’s voice was muffled, having been woken in the middle of the night. “Who is this? What is…Ally?”

“Yeah. You know I’ve been interested in the comet hypothesis on the Wow signal and tonight I just happen to get the same signal for the same seventy-two seconds?”

“What?” Kelly cleared her throat. “You know I wouldn’t prank the observatory.”

“Well, this looks an awful lot like the Wow signal. Same narrow band, same time, and…hold on.”

“What is it?”

“It’s starting again.” Ally checked for known air traffic, satellite overflights, any other possible cause. The signal stopped and she logged the time; thirty-six seconds.

“Well?”

“Sorry, Kelly. This one was thirty-six seconds, starting twelve minutes after the first…so 720 seconds…I’ve gotta go.”

“I’m on my way in.” Kelly hung up before Ally could respond.

Ally began to notify other radio telescopes around the globe, looking for verification. Within minutes, she had four others online that had seen the two bursts, one that had seen only the second, and three more coming online.

What she found most odd was that no two of the telescopes were pointed in the same direction. Whatever was making the signal, it seemed to be coming from the entire universe, in every direction at the same time.

As she had guessed, 720 seconds after the last pulse, another came in for eighteen seconds. She agreed with the others she was talking to online; this was not natural. That’s where agreement ended, though.

Ally wasn’t sure what she believed about it. Was it a simple “hello” or trying to encode some mathematical basis like we might do with simple counting or a Fibonacci sequence? Could it be a countdown? To what?

When the next signal came in 720 seconds later, every radio telescope she could reach was online and received the nine second burst. Kelly had entered just as it had started and took over coordination between the observatories.

Ally was glad for that, as it meant that Kelly could handle the call from the Department of Defense, and NORAD. The US wasn’t the only country to scramble their air defenses and air forces.

She imagined the hotlines between nations were burning up with chatter that amounted to, “It isn’t us, is it you?”

The 4.5 second burst was picked up by every radio telescope observatory and thousands of amateur astronomers with a 1420 MHz receiver. Ally found herself leaning toward the countdown version of the hypotheses, as, it seemed, did most of the non-professionals discussing it online as it happened.

Every major country had, by then, fighters in the air. Politicians were live on television trying to calm the populace and assure everyone they were not under attack, while at the same time putting their military on the highest level of alert.

The 2.25 second burst was live on every major network, while pundits gave their own theories on how dangerous or not the aliens would be. Ally heard her name several times on the television that Kelly had turned on. Nothing else they said caught her attention in the same way as the data she was seeing.

When the 1.125 second burst came, it was followed immediately by a voice transmission that began, sentence by sentence, in English, then Mandarin, then Hindi, Spanish, French, Arabic, Bengali, Russian, Portuguese, and Urdu.

“Greetings to the people of Earth. We do not wish conflict. We, the larger Collective of the galaxy wish to extend an invitation. You are invited to send representatives to speak for your world and people to the Collective.

“We have monitored your transmissions, and wish to speak to scientists, linguists, and doctors in addition to any political representatives you choose to send.

“Our science branch would like to extend a personal invitation to Ally Reeser to attend as well.”

#

Ally leaned back. “I mean, can you imagine how that felt? Not only did aliens contact us, they asked for me?”

The interviewer rolled a tentacle in a gesture of questioning. “I cannot imagine how that felt. What did you do?”

Ally cleared her throat. “I—I uh, acted rashly. I connected the test transmitter and sent a voice message back that said, ‘Pick me up, I’m ready.’”

The interviewer made a nodding gesture. “You were the first, right?”

“I was. Imagine how surprised I was when fighter jets started flying a pattern over the observatory and patched in their communications to the 1420 channel. I didn’t know the military could transmit on that channel, never mind that it’s reserved for radio astronomy.”

#

“Leuschner Observatory, this is Guard Alpha One. We have contact with ATC and the aliens who wish to land near your location, over.”

“Um, yeah, this is Ally,” she transmitted. “They can, uh, land here, I guess, if there’s room…over?”

“Ally, Alpha One, roger. Be advised, we have clearance to fire at any sign of hostile intent, over.”

“Please don’t,” she said. “Um, over.”

“We have our orders, ma’am. We’ll try to keep our shorts untwisted. Out.”

She didn’t know how to respond to that, so she turned off the test transmitter. Kelly was busy flipping back and forth between channels, all of them showing live the news about the aliens.

The alien ship followed what seemed to Ally like proper ATC communication procedures, getting clearance to land at the observatory. They also communicated with the military aircraft, keeping them apprised of their position as the dropped from 72,000 feet.

When the military aircraft and ATC both said they had nothing on radar, the aliens turned on some sort of device that made them show up. The air traffic controller sounded relieved when their signal showed up, while the ‘Alpha One’ pilot kept a level calm throughout the whole thing.

Ally stepped outside, Kelly following close behind, filming with her phone. The fighters flew overhead before splitting off in opposite directions to make another pass.

Kelly filmed the jets, then turned toward Ally with the camera. “We’re streaming live. Ally, you’re about to meet aliens. Anything to say?”

“Uh, I’m fucking scared. And excited. Oh! My thesis is done, except for one paragraph that feels a little clunky, but at this point, I don’t even care. It’s on the USB stick plugged into my laptop. Just in case I can’t…I don’t….”

“You’ll have to come back for your defense. If anyone can convince the aliens that humans are okay, it’s you.”

“Thanks for your vote of confidence, Dr. Simmons, but I feel like I’m going to throw up.”

“That’s just nerves, or ga—,” Kelly cut off as she swung the camera up to film the descent of the alien ship. The size of a bus, and of a similar shape, it settled down on a shimmering pillar.

The closer it came to the ground, the larger the dust and stones that floated lazily up from the ground, only to fall back when the ship touched down and turned off its engines.

Overhead, the jets were taking turns overflying the location. Kelly kept the camera fixed on the blocky ship. A door opened, moving inward where there had been no visible seam and sliding to the side.

Ally walked toward the ship, then found herself frozen in place. Curiosity kept her from running, and fear kept her from stepping forward, until a ramp extended from the door.

The creatures that walked out looked like a Hollywood invention. Four sturdy tentacles carried a roundish trunk, from which four smaller tentacles extended. They had four obvious eyes set aside and in front of a head that rose from the trunk and could be extended higher or brought almost entirely inside the trunk.

“Hello, Ally. My Earth name is Sarah, and my friend’s Earth name is Jack.”

“Hi, Sarah and uh, Jack.” Ally stood dumbfounded.

Sarah lowered their head nearly inside their body. “I’m sorry that appearance is frightening to you,” they said. “We mean you no harm at all. The atmosphere inside is tailored for you, and free of any microbes that might affect your physiology.”

Kelly was still streaming, and stepped forward to Ally and handed her a cold soda. “Take this and enjoy the ride.” She turned toward the aliens with a slight bow and said, “It was an absolute pleasure to meet you, and I hope we meet again soon.”

Ally boarded the ship followed by the aliens, the door closed, and it lifted off again. It rose so fast that the phone camera could only catch a blur of it. “I hope that’s anti-gravity tech of some sort,” Kelly said, “or Ally’s paste now. That was at least a thirty-gee takeoff.”

#

Ally chuckled. “Would’ve been paste for sure. I saw the end of Kelly’s livestream from within the ship. I didn’t feel any movement at all, but it did feel like the gravity within the ship was a lot lower than what I was used to.”

She leaned forward again. “As I’m sure everyone watching knows, I was whisked aboard one of your science vessels where Sarah and Jack took me to meet their peers.”

The interviewer raised a tentacle to interrupt. “Your peers, too, correct?”

“Well, I didn’t feel like it at the time. I felt like a kid with no education trying to understand advanced calculus being taught in Mandarin. At least, with all the ‘basics’ of gravity control they were showing me.

“I was floored that the wider galactic scientific community hadn’t even considered the possibility of Hawking radiation and black hole evaporation. When they looked at me every bit as confused as I had just been, I felt a little better about the place of humans among the travelers of the galaxy.”

Ally laughed. “When I finally caught on to what they were trying to explain about gravity, I saw how simple the solution to combining General Relativity and Quantum Field Theory was. Not that it was easy, but it was simple.

“Unlike the short and sweet formulae that Einstein and Shrödinger gave us for General Relativity and QFT respectively, the formula takes half of an A4 sheet when printed large enough to read.

“Faster-than-light travel and gravity control are two things that we long considered to be theoretically possible, but in reality, nothing more than fantasy. In fact, they both play a huge part in human fiction.

“Of the two, though, control over gravity has to be the biggest breakthrough in the galaxy. Need an engine? Not anymore…use gravity. Need a way to accelerate at twenty or thirty gees without killing everyone? Use gravity. Need to fly regardless of atmospheric density or shape of the vessel? Use gravity. My mind was blown.” Ally made a gesture like her head exploding.

“Anyway, that was the point where I decided I needed to move to the Galactic University and do some more studies.”

“Have you returned to Earth since then?” the interviewer asked. “You finished your doctorate.”

“I went to Earth for my oral defense, got my doctorate, then came right back here to the University. I haven’t left in the twelve years since.

“We’re currently working on determining the math behind a negative gravity well strong enough to put a camera inside the event horizon of a supermassive black hole and bring it back again.”

“Do you think you’ll be able to construct such a device?”

Ally laughed. “I’ll leave that to the engineering folks. We’re just trying to figure out if there’s a possible way the math can work without those pesky infinities popping up.”

The interviewer leaned forward and extended a tentacle. “Thanks for your time, Dr. Reeser.”

“Thank you, Jane. Xkrthzgnd, right?”

“Yes,” the interviewer said, “your pronunciation is very good.”

Ally waited until the light on the camera facing her was off before standing to leave, and gave a wave to the interviewer and the crew. Her colleagues were waiting in the hall outside for her, and she was eager to get back to work.

“I’m Xkrthzgnd — Earth name Jane — and this is ‘Galactic Leaders One on One.’ Next cycle we’ll be talking with the musical group My Name is Not a Slur, who have taken their music beyond Earth into the galaxy at large and have integrated the styles of almost every member species of the Collective.”

Trunk Stories

The Last Moon

prompt: Write a story about a fox spirit (a gumiho, jiǔwěihú, kitsune, or hồ ly tinh), inspired by, e.g. Korean, Chinese, Japanese and Vietnamese folklore.

available at Reedsy

When I first met her, she was pale, emaciated, yet her smile was warm. She was dressed in a loose robe-like gown that showed the sharp angles of her joints when she moved. She carried a bundle of flowers she attempted to sell to everyone who passed by.

There was something in her golden eyes that was both desperate and crafty, wild and careful. I watched for a short time, as she failed to sell a single flower, before I approached.

“How much are the flowers?” I asked.

“Whatever you feel is fair,” she said.

I opened my wallet, pulled out a fifty, and handed it to her. “I’ll take all of them.”

“Oh, kamsahamnida,” she said with a bow. “It is too much, sir. I have no change.”

“Instead of change, will you join me for dinner?”

“Wha—why?”

“There’s something interesting about you, and I’d like to know more. Besides, you’ve sold all your flowers. Do you have any other plans?”

“I…no,” she said with a bow, “I have no other plans.”

“You don’t have to bow to me. I’m Alex Watts, by the way.”

“Kim Soon-ja…I mean, um, Soon-ja Kim.”

“Still getting used to the switched around name order? That’s ok, Kim Soon-ja. Would it be okay if I called you Soon-ja?”

“I…uh, yes, that would be okay Alex Watts.”

“Please, just call me Alex.”

“Ne, Alex.”

“No? Oh, right, ne means yes in Korean. I’ve watched enough Korean movies and shows I should know that by now, even if I can’t pronounce it quite right.” I gestured down the road toward the area where the restaurants were. “Shall we?”

The area where the restaurants clustered was beginning to fill up with the early dinner crowd. “What sounds good?” I asked. “Steak? Sushi? Pizza?”

“No meat,” she said.

“You’re in luck. There’s a new vegan Asian-fusion joint down the way, and no crowd.” I led her there, hoping the food would be edible and not some meat-free, gluten-free, taste-free crap.

To my surprise, the smell on walking in was heavenly. Garlic, herbs, spices, and some undefined, heady scent that made my mouth water. “Looks like a good spot.”

We took our seats and were given water and menus.

Soon-ja glanced at her menu and set it down.

“Would you like me to read the menu to you?” I asked.

“Please.”

I moved around the table to sit next to her and began reading the menu. The pad Thai sounded like a good choice to me, but as soon as I read kimbap, she brightened.

“Oh, kimbap, please. And kimchi if they have it.” She pronounced the k’s somewhere between an English k and g.

I started to rise in order to move to the other side of the table, and she put her hand on my arm. “Stay, please?”

“Of course.”

Her eyes shone with tears as she tried the kimchi. She began to eat her kimbap, popping each large piece in her mouth in a single bite and savoring it. She leaned against me. “I miss my home,” she said, popping another slice of kimbap in her mouth.

“What brought you to the states?” I asked.

“A plane.”

I chuckled. “Right. I mean, why did you decide to come to the states?”

“I am trying to find a relic that was stolen from the spring shrine I guard.”

“A Buddhist shrine?”

“No, older than that,” she said. “The spring is the home of a water spirit, and the relic is meant to keep it safe. Now, no one visits the temple.”

“That sounds like a lonely existence.”

“It is the life I chose. You are still right, Alex Watts, it is lonely, but not for much longer. My trial is near an end.”

“Trial?”

“If I told you, you would think I am crazy.”

“Try me.”

“To cease being a kumiho, I must go a hundred years without meat, restore the temple, and discover what it means to love and be loved by a human.”

I thought about my words with care. It wouldn’t do to confirm her suspicion about what I might think, but she might need help. “You say human, why is that?”

“Kumiho,” she said, pointing at herself.

I let it go. “A hundred years? So, your whole life?”

She laughed, that warm smile spreading again. Something dangerous flashed behind her eyes as she leaned close and looked in my eyes. “I am two thousand years already. Do not tell anyone.”

I nodded and mumbled a promise. I was certain that she needed help, but I couldn’t force it on her. The best I could do was to be a friend, and if the opportunity arose, I could suggest, gently, some counseling.

I had finished my pad Thai and she had nearly finished her kimbap. “Do you have any hints about where the relic is?”

“It is in an antique shop. I am trying to make enough money to buy it back.”

“Can I help?”

“No. You do not even know me.”

“Well, Soon-ja, I would like to know you. Do you have a phone?”

“Ne.” She pulled a phone out of her robe that seemed to have hidden pockets everywhere. “A kind woman gave it to me on my first day here. She was a Christian nun, I think. She also gave me a bible in Hangul script.”

I added my name and number to her phone. “If you like, you can call me whenever.”

She looked at the number and name, and entered the name in Hangul as well, “아렣큿”.

“Kamsahamnida, Alex Watts.”

“You’re very welcome, Kim Soon-ja. I hope you call soon.”

A few days later, she called. We spent a long afternoon in the park, where she explained all the spirits of the stones, trees, plants, animals, and the pond. Her English seemed to have improved in a dramatic fashion.

She captivated me with her explanations of how the spirits lived, communicated, and made themselves known. Then she looked at the runners passing through the park on the trail.

“The runners,” she said, “are so focused on the physical world that they’ve ignored their spirit. It’s been beaten down to an ash. Not like you. Your spirit is still rich and alive.”

“What makes you say that?”

“I knew it when you first approached me. You shine with a warm aura. That’s how I knew I could trust you.”

“Thanks for thinking so highly of me,” I said, “but really, I’m just trying to be a friend to someone who seemed in need of one.”

“Exactly what I would expect you to say.”

“Your English was good before, but you’ve improved a lot in the last few days. What’s your secret?”

“Immersion. When we met, I’d only been here a week. I learned to read English yesterday, too, so you won’t have to read menus to me.” She watched the geese on the pond. “I mean, if we were ever somewhere with a menu again.”

“You seemed to be homesick when I met you. That’s a short time in which to feel such longing.”

“I’ve been traveling for two years now, tracking down the relic. It’s a relief to be so close.” Her eyes held the expression of a caged animal looking out to the wilderness.

“Did you sell flowers today?” I asked, changing the subject.

“Yes. The wild roses have started to bloom, and they are popular. They’re not real wild roses, though. They’re hybrids that birds have seeded in the wilderness. I found twenty-four and sold them all.”

“Nice. How much did you make?”

“Twelve dollars.”

“Soon-ja, that’s not enough. You could charge a lot more.”

She put her hand on my arm. “I know you’re concerned about me, but I will do things my way. In two more moons I will have enough to buy the relic and will have fulfilled my meat fast.”

“What does the relic look like?” I knew there were a limited number of antiques shops in the area, and there was something about her that made want to help.

That dangerous flash showed behind her eyes again. “If I tell you, you’ll go find it and buy it for me. I know you want to help, Alex Watts, but it can’t be rushed.”

I nodded. “Okay, Kim Soon-ja. I defer to your wishes.”

“Thank you.” Her eyes turned warm again.

The next few weeks passed in a blur. We got to the point where I was spending every waking minute I could with her. She wouldn’t let me buy out her flowers, but she would let me stand with her and talk while she sold them.

I took her out to eat several more times, and even dancing one night. It seemed like she always wore the same outfit, but I figured it must be several identical outfits, since it was always immaculate when we met up, even when the last time I’d seen her the previous day she had grass stains from rolling around in the park. We only did that a couple times…well, maybe four or five times…but it was worth it to hear her laughter.

It was early on a Saturday morning that she called. She sounded nervous. “Alex, come with me to get my relic back?”

“Sure. What time and where should I meet you?”

“Now. I’m waiting at your door.”

I’d told her where I lived when she’d asked weeks earlier but hadn’t expected her to show up. “I—I’ll get dressed and be right out.”

We took a cab to the edge of the city where a rundown antiques store offered questionable goods amidst the graffiti on the surrounding buildings. I followed her in, and she went straight to the back of the store and lifted a small stone sculpture of a fox.

She carried it gently to the counter and set it down with care before counting out three-hundred dollars. The man behind the counter looked at the relic, and at Soon-ja.

“Maybe I shouldn’t sell this,” he said, reaching for it.

Soon-ja growled an inhuman sound, and her eyes flashed something feral and frightening. For a moment, I thought I saw fangs. He must have seen it too, as he recoiled back and put his hands up. “Just joking,” he said.

He snatched the money and counted it, before putting a fifty back on the counter. “Since you like it so much, I—I’ll give you a discount.”

She ignored the fifty and cradled the relic. I picked up her change and led her out of the store. Once we were back in the full light of day, she seemed to calm down. “Thank you. If you hadn’t been by my side, I might have done something I regret,” she said.

I called for a cab. “Where are you staying? I wouldn’t want you to lose that now that you have it.”

“If you could just take me to the airport,” she said, “I will fly back to Seoul tonight and return to my temple tomorrow. The last full moon I must endure is almost here, so this needs to be returned by then.”

I stared at her, gape-mouthed. “You—you’re leaving, just like that?”

“I must,” she said, tears beginning to roll down her cheeks. If I don’t restore the temple before the full moon, the last hundred years have been wasted, and I’ll get no further chances.”

“What about your luggage? Anything to pick up?”

“Everything I own is what you see,” she said.

I’d decided before I realized it. “I need to swing by my place first, pack an overnight bag, and grab my passport. I’ll try for a tourist e-visa on the way to the airport.”

“It…hurts,” she said, clutching her stomach. “The thought that I have to leave you hurts down here.”

“It hurts me too,” I said, “which is why I’m going to try my damndest to go with you.”

We got to the airport with plenty of time to spare, but her flight was full. My e-visa was approved, so I booked the next available seat on a flight to Incheon Airport in Seoul.

“I’ll wait for you there,” she said.

“It’ll be twelve hours. I don’t want you to be late to your temple. You could give me directions and I’ll meet you there.”

She brushed a light hand on my cheek. “I won’t be late. I have the whole day. I’ll wait for you.”

I smiled. “Thank you.”

As my flight took off, I estimated hers was landing or had just landed. The separation from her felt immense. There were a couple days every few weeks where she’d been too busy to meet up, but even then, it didn’t feel so insurmountable.

It surprised me to be awakened by the flight attendant to prepare for landing. The soda I’d gotten just after lift-off was still there, watered down by the melted ice. I gulped down the flat, tepid drink, put the empty cup in the trash bag she carried, and raised the tray.

After customs, I stepped out into the main atrium, and my heart sank. This made LAX seem quaint. There was no way I’d find her here.

I took out my phone and turned it on. No connection. I’d need a Korean SIM card for that, and my number would be different. At a loss as to where to go, I went outside to the taxi stand.

She appeared out of the crowd and rushed toward me to give me a hug. “I knew you’d find me,” she said.

“I think you found me. I feel a little lost.”

“Let’s go. I’ll show you my temple.” She led me into a cab and had a long discussion with the driver before we took off.

Soon-ja took my hand. She took my focus so completely that it felt like only minutes before the taxi stopped next to a footpath on the dirt road that disappeared over the horizon toward the city.

Holding hands, we walked down the footpath for almost an hour, the late afternoon sun settling lower on the horizon.

I could hear the burbling of a stream nearby, and she stopped. The path wavered in front of me, the trees disappeared, and we stood in a clearing where a small shrine sat next a large spring.

The energy of the place was overwhelming, and it felt like Soon-ja’s hug, only bigger.

With great reverence, she placed the stone fox on a small shelf in the shrine and let out a huge sigh. Her back was still toward me, but I could tell she was tense.

“What is it, Soon-ja? What’s wrong?”

“The full moon. It comes tonight, the last part of the test.”

“I’m here for you,” I said. I looked at the cot in the corner of the shrine. “If it’s not okay for me to sleep here, I can sleep on the path and wait for morning. Whatever you prefer.”

“No. You must sleep here.” She pointed at the bed.

“Where will you sleep?” I asked.

“I will not sleep tonight.”

“If you’re sure.”

“I am sure, Alex Watts.” She pulled a band of cloth out from beneath the bed. “You must not take this off tonight. You must not look at me again before the sun comes up. Promise.”

I figured it had something to do with her thinking she was a kumiho, and it wasn’t time to get into that. “Okay, Soon-ja, I promise.”

She tied the blindfold and I lay down on the cot. I heard her washing in the spring, and I felt the night grow cool around me. Then all was silent.

The pad of small feet, the snuffling of a dog, a whimper, the scent of musk on the air. I felt the air as a dog-like nose sniffed at my hand, then the warm, wet nose nudged my hand up.

I petted gently, the animal pulling closer and making a purring, whining sound. The pointed ears and soft fur felt foxlike, but it was too large to be a fox. The animal squeezed onto the cot, laying partly on top of me, and licked my face. It whimpered again.

I don’t know how I knew, but I did. “Shh, Soon-ja,” I said, “I’m here.” I petted her fur from nose to the many tails she had. “I’m here, and I’m not going to run away.” I felt awful for having doubted her.

She calmed, making a purring-like sound.

“I bet you’re beautiful like this. I wish I could see you.”

She whimpered and placed a paw on the blindfold. “I’m not going to look. I promised.”

I began to drift off, her warm weight and soft fur putting me to sleep. I had to say something before the moment was gone, though. “You know I’m in love with you, right?”

She licked my cheek once and then settled back down.

The sun felt warm on my skin in the morning, and I heard Soon-ja in the spring. I sat up without removing the blindfold.

“You can take it off now,” she said.

I took it off. She stood naked in the spring, fox ears sprouting from her head, and nine fox tails swirling behind her. “You—you’re beautiful. But…this must mean it didn’t work.”

“It worked,” she said. “It’s fading now, and I wanted to show you who I was before it was all gone.”

“You’re sure it worked?”

“I’m sure. The water’s cold! It’s wonderful.” She waved me in. “You should join me.”

I joined her for a quick wash, the water was cold, then we lay out in the sun to dry off and warm up. “Will you still guard the shrine?”

“No, I’m a human now, so I have to leave when my tails disappear.”

“Where will you go?” I asked.

“Anywhere you are,” she answered.

Trunk Stories

Big Tom

prompt: Write about a character who would have complete happiness, if it weren’t for that one thing.

available at Reedsy

Thomas “Big Tom” Wilson pulled strips of meat out of the smoker. The hard needles the trees dropped from time to time made an excellent smoke source, somewhat like applewood. The meat came from the small creatures he caught in traps around his garden.

He turned off the smoker’s burner coil and doused the still-smoldering needles in the tray above the coil. Satisfied that he wouldn’t waste any smoke fuel, he carried the strips of meat into the cabin he called home…or rather the emergency shelter he called a cabin he called home.

After a day spent smoking meat, the smoke smell had seeped into his clothes, his skin, his long hair, and his beard. He checked the shelter’s water level. It would do him for the moment, but he’d need to collect more water in the next couple days.

He stood in front of the mirror and cut his beard short with the one knife he had. He had tried to shave with the knife once…that was one time too many. Judging his beard to be somewhat even, he stripped and stepped into the tiny shower. A quick rinse, a thorough scrub, and another quick rinse and he was done.

Dressed in his second set of clothes, he put the smoky set in the decon/sanitizer. It was a quick way to clean them without using water. If there were spills, mud, blood, the yellow goo from the plants he called “snot-vines,” he’d wash that out with water first…usually…sometimes. The once white clothes were a dingy grey with a collection of stains of varying natural and unnatural colors.

He set up the camera facing the kitchenette and turned it on. “Hey, fans! Welcome back to Big Tom’s Cabin. Big Tom here on day 797. Today I’ll be making a bean soup with the snot-vine beans from my garden and the smoked meat of the snot-vine creepers.

“If you don’t like the common names I’ve given them, you’re free to call them anything you like. I’m still working on the phylogenetic tree of this planet, so giving anything a scientific name now is premature. They creep around the snot-vines with their soft-boned, thin-furred bodies and nip off the buds that will turn into the bean pods so…snot-vine creepers.

“Anyway, here’s the meat I smoked today, which will add that smoky flavor to the broth. Remember, stock is made from simmering bones in water, broth is made from simmering meat and/or vegetables in water.

“Because the critters’ soft bones turn to powder when trying to roast them and turn to gelatin when cooked in water, I’ll stick to making a broth. The broth will use the smoked meat and these flowers that taste like onion.”

After talking through the recipe and preparation techniques which were of no use outside the planet Big Tom found himself, he set the pot to simmer and sat in front of the camera.

“While that’s cooking, it’s time for another Big Tom story, I guess. ’Course I think I ran out of stories to tell…except maybe to explain how I ended up here in the first place. I don’t mean the lander crash, or dragging the shelter to the nearest flat ground, or any of that.

“Someone out there somewhere is probably wondering why I would volunteer to survey a planet so far away that it was a one-way mission.

“From Earth’s point of view, it took me ninety-six years to get here. From my point of view, it took seven. This message won’t reach Earth for another seventy-four years. How long after that the colonists would’ve come, I don’t know. This planet is damn near perfect for it, except for one thing.”

Big Tom heaved a deep sigh. “I’ve always been the DIY type and lived off the grid more than on it after getting my doctorate. Whenever there was a study that needed a biologist in a remote jungle, mountain, or desert, I volunteered.

“When the Eden Project said they needed a biologist, you can bet the first name on the list was Big Tom. I didn’t think I’d have a chance, though. You know how many astrobiology doctorates were handed out while I was focused on microbiology? Too many.”

Big Tom laughed. “Yeah. Imagine my surprise when I was the only biologist that signed up. I’m out here doing the first cataloguing of alien biology, and it’s awesome! I mean it.

“I’ve found things that could be classified as Eukarya: plants, animals, and fungus. There are single-cell and single-cell colony species that could be classified as Bacteria or Archaea. I’ll have to add a new one, though.”

He moved a small clay pot in front of the camera, with what looked like tendrils of glass. As he placed a hand near one side or the other, the tendrils swayed and bent toward the hand.

“These little guys convert heat to energy. They use that energy to build these long-chain silicates they use as cell walls for their specialized cells with organelles and no nucleus. They pull silicates from the dirt, leaving behind a carbon-rich soil, while pulling carbon from the air. Various fungus and bacteria rely on these guys to take hold before they can invade and make the soil fit for plants. Whatever we thought about the limitations of RNA stability versus DNA can be put to rest. These guys, unlike all the other life on this planet, don’t have DNA, they use RNA. They replicate by fragmentation, the root system breaking apart when disturbed.”

He pushed the pot back out of frame. “So far, every sample of this type of life is a variation on these heat-converter glass grasses, of which I have identified sixteen species so far. Oddly, every organelle contains a copy of the RNA.”

Big Tom stretched and groaned. “I have a lifetime of work to do here, and a lifetime to do it. I’m healthy, I’m happy, and I couldn’t have asked for a better life. That’s right, fans. I am the happiest person in the world…or out of the world, I guess.”

The timer dinged and Big Tom rose to take the beans off the heat. “I’m going to let these cool down before I dig in, but I will have a little taste. It smells like heaven.”

He dipped a spoon of the broth out and blew on it to cool it before tasting it. “Oh my god…this is the best batch yet. The onion flowers made all the difference.”

“My life would be perfect, except for one thing.” He moved to the camera and picked it up. He carried the camera outside, past the garden, to the well-worn footpath that led to the crashed lander.

He pointed the camera at the path. Along the edges of the path were freshly picked flowers of the type he had used in the soup. Following the flowers, the camera focused on a snot-vine creeper, tied in a plant-based rope. Beyond that lay a basket filled with snot-vine beans.

He zoomed the camera in to a footprint. It was small, and similar to an opossum’s rear footprint with five well-defined toes and an opposable thumb. “These guys do this every twenty-four days. Considering they have six digits on their hands?…paws?…whatever, it kind of makes sense.

“That’s right. It’s now been long enough since the first, encrypted message to control that if they haven’t made it public, I will. There is sapient life here. Our little crash-landing got their attention, and now there are two factions in this area. One leaves these gifts every twenty-four days. I only see them briefly, though. He zoomed the camera to a small quadruped that reared up on its hind legs and spread its fingers. There were symmetrical designs on its face and body in the bright yellow of the snot-vines.

“That’s one of the little guys there.” He waved and called out. “I’m not a god, you know. You could just come say hi.”

The creature disappeared into the brush without a sound. “I think they’ve taken to worshipping me or something. They started doing this every twenty-four days since I buried Karina, the geologist. That was on day 509. The other group—ouch!”

He turned the camera in a circle as small figures rose in the tall grass on the other side of the path and flung rocks at him with slings. “Knock it off!” Big Tom took a deep breath and let out a loud roar that sent the creatures running.

“These little shits take every opportunity to throw rocks at me. They know it doesn’t do anything except piss me off, but they keep it up.

“You may be wondering how I know it’s two different groups. I’m not an anthropologist, or whatever the equivalent would be, but I’ve seen enough.

“The first group decorates the trail and the graves of Karina and Hassan. They bury their dead there, too, and leave grave goods with them.

“The other group throws their dead into a cave a little further on after stripping them of any tools or weapons.

“Both groups live in shelters built from grass and have equivalent technology. The only social difference I see are burial rites and personal decoration.

“Both groups are tribal in nature and seem to be led by the strongest. Of course, the strongest of them can, at most, give me a little boo-boo. The rock-throwing group seems to be doing it to show off their bravery or something.”

He walked to the lander, showing the graves of his two former crewmates. Their helmets sat atop their graves, and fresh flowers and beans had been sprinkled around them. He rotated the camera to show the small mounds of the creatures’ graves, marked with round stones, about the size of their head, similarly adorned.

“I fear that I’ve inadvertently introduced religion to the little guys. At first, I was worried that the aggressive group would just wipe them out, but they’ve never come to blows. In fact, I’ve seen members of one group move to the other with no friction whatsoever.”

Big Tom sat against the side of the lander and pointed the camera at himself. “So, you’re thinking that the one thing I don’t like is being alone, with Hassan dying in the crash and Karina dying almost a year ago. That’s sad, but not it.

“You might think that if I could hear their speech, I might be able to communicate with the little guys…let them know I’m not a god or a devil or whatever. Unfortunately, their speech is all in the ultrasonic range. I’m not even sure whether they can hear me, or just feel the vibrations of my voice. That’s still not it, though.

“It’s not even that they figured out pottery by watching me. They can be incredibly sneaky. I realized they’d copied what they saw me doing when I saw more of the clay dug out by the river, and a new fire pit there with a few broken shards.

“One of them made a little lop-sided pot and painted designs on it with the goo from the snot-vines and left it just outside the garden. By the way, they’d already figured out gardening by themselves, both groups. I copied their design.”

He brought the camera closer, so his face filled the frame. “No, the one thing that gets on my last nerve is what will happen in the future.

“Long after I’m gone, the lander and the cabin will still be around. They aren’t going to deteriorate much in the next thirty or forty-thousand years. That will be enough that someday, they’ll be watching their tiny little TVs…and some nut with wild fur will be going on about how ‘Ancient Aliens’ were responsible for every great thing they ever achieved, and I’m the asshole that gave that fire fuel.”

He laughed and moved the camera back before doing a slow pan of the graveyard once more, before turning it back toward himself and the lander. “Well, that’s enough of that for now. Those beans are cool enough to eat, so I’m off to do that. Thanks for watching. Big Tom signing off for the day.”

Trunk Stories

Refugees

prompt: Set your story in a cat shelter. 

available at Reedsy

Jordi held open the door. “Welcome to the cat shelter.”

“Knock it off,” Pen said. “I hear anyone, including you, refer to the Strallins as ‘cats’ again, they’ll be relegated to the loading dock.”

Jordi led Pen to her new office. “What about the Strallins that refer to themselves as cats — or as nekomimi?”

“What are you talking about?”

“When they first got here, a Strallin found an old manga somewhere. They thought it was some sort of prophetic thing that we would have drawings of them.”

Pen stopped in front of her desk and rubbed her temples. “What have I gotten myself into? I’m supposed to be overseeing humanitarian aid for alien refugees, not creating superstitions or religions.”

“I don’t think they’re getting religious about it. They already have a belief that future events will show themselves to artists, whether they know it or not.”

“Good, I wouldn’t want them to think we’re gods or prophets or saints or something.” She took off her overcoat and tossed it across the empty desk.

“Um,” Jordi looked uneasy, “I don’t think we need to worry on that front.”

“Why? They get here and the first thing they see is…wait a minute. What kind of manga was it?”

Jordi looked away. “Well….”

Pen groaned. “Great. We offer refugee assistance, and the first thing they see gives them reason to believe we have perverted motives for doing so.”

“I wouldn’t say they think we’re perverted, but they think we are strange, and they are…uh…curious.”

“About what?”

“Don’t be alarmed if one of them asks to see your body.”

“They what?!”

“They find it odd that we wear clothes regardless of the temperature. They only wear clothes when they need protection of some sort; warm clothes when it’s cold, camouflage or armor when they fight, and so on.”

“Have you—”

“Hey! Give me a break, here! None of us has done anything of the sort. These people are traumatized, and we’re here to help.”

“Sorry, that’s my own bias leaking through.” Pen took a deep breath and looked Jordi straight in the eye. “I apologize for equating young man with sexually irresponsible.”

“Apology accepted. And I apologize for immediately thinking you were a ball-breaker. It’s awful to say, but I should be honest with you; that’s what I thought when you first responded to my welcome. By the way, quite a few of the Strallin refer to the ORC as the ‘cat sanctuary.’”

“Ugh. Now that we’ve both embarrassed ourselves, why don’t you show me through the facility and introduce me to some of the refugees. I especially want to meet those with infants and young children to see what other resources we might need for them.”

“Through here.” Jordi led her through a door that opened to his badge. “I’ll get your badge to you in a bit. Got behind today’s schedule sending the supply truck off to San Diego.”

Jordi hadn’t exaggerated. There were a few Strallins wearing a light blanket wrapped around them, a couple wearing trousers with a hole cut out for their tail, and not much else in the way of clothing apart from what the humans wore.

They were shorter than the average human, and looked finer of muscle, yet the way some of the young ones jumped she got the impression they were stronger than they looked. She had to admit to herself that they were a near perfect match for nekomimi.

They had a semi-feline face, large, triangular ears that twitched and turned, a long tail they used for balance, and a covering of fine vellus hair in colors ranging from pale to deep blue, matching the skin color beneath. Eye colors ranged from pale gold to deep green. The females had visible mammaries, two at the top, two smaller below them, and pair of supernumerary nipples below those. The males, like earth-based mammals, had the same number of nipples without any mammaries.

Pen felt uncomfortable. She knew they were aliens, yet something in her mind was on the verge of panic.

“I know that look,” Jordi said. “Uncanny valley, huh? You get used to it.”

A Strallin woman walked toward them, waving.

“Who’s this?” Pen asked.

“Aritarila,” he said, rolling the r’s, “but she goes by Rita.”

“Aritarila,” Pen said, “it’s a pleasure to meet you. I’m Penelope Watkins, but just call me Pen.”

“Good meeting, Pen. Please, calling me Rita.”

Jordi said something to Rita in her own language and she laughed. “Close. Riquat being early morning, now being raliat…late morning.”

“Who’s teaching us their language?” Pen asked Jordi.

“I teaching humans,” Rita answered. “Norman teaching Strallin Englishes.” She struggled with the pronunciation of the “r” in Norman, and with the “ng” sound in English. Her pronunciation of the word “Strallin” was difficult for Pen to wrap her tongue around, but she’d heard Jordi doing it, so she knew it was possible.

“I would very much like to meet with mothers and families with small children and infants. It is important that we get the supplies they need.”

Rita called out a what sounded like a chirp, and a young Strallin child ran to her side and hid behind her leg, standing only as tall as her knees. “This being my…parap…

“Son,” Jordi offered.

“Yes, son. Peter, saying hi.”

He peeked his head around her leg. “Hi, miss. Hi, Jordi. Can I go play now?”

Rita knelt to his level and whispered in his ear. He bounded off to play with the other children. She stood and faced the humans again. “Sorry, he being shy.”

“That’s fine. He has no accent. You said his name is Peter? Is that just his name here? Does he have a Strallin name as well?”

Jordi cleared his throat. “Peter was born here. Rita was one of the first refugees.”

“He’s only six months old?”

“They mature physically a lot faster than we do. Not in size, but in coordination and the ability to walk, run, jump, and so on. At least in the first year. From what I understand, they mature on par with us after that. A one-year-old Strallin is equivalent to a five-year-old human in terms of physical development. Mental development is more equivalent, but Peter is…exceptional.”

“Peter saying Englishes and Strallin before Peter eyes opening.”

“I apparently have a lot to learn about the Strallin,” Pen said. “If it’s okay with both of you, I’d like to spend the day with you, Rita; get a feel for what works here and what doesn’t.”

“That’s fine with me,” Jordi said. “Rita, feel free to show Pen around, and don’t be afraid to complain about anything you don’t like.”

He turned to Pen. “I’ll get your keycard ready, and forward all the medical info we have on the Strallins to your comm.”

“Thanks, Jordi.”

“Yes, thanking.” Rita linked her arm with Pen’s. “Walking with me.”

“Of course.” Pen noticed how warm and soft Rita’s arm was, and how steely were the muscles beneath whenever she shifted.

As Rita led her to the area where the children played, Pen asked, “Are there toys from your world we don’t have?”

“We making toys,” Rita said, pointing to the pile of feathers, beads, sticks, and strings. The children were playing with a broad array of different sorts of toys, made from those same four components. Some flew their spaceships, others baby-talked or scolded dolls, others played a game that reminded Pen of a cross between hacky sack and badminton.

“Is that what you have always done?”

“Yes. We making own toys. Making-places…uh…facter—”

“Factory?”

“Factory making ships and armor and tools and dertilara,” she said, making a brand, dismissive motion. “Sorry, not knowing this in Englishes.”

“I think I understand.” Pen’s comm chimed and she checked the message. It was a long one, but she skimmed it and got the broad points.

“Rita,” she asked, “have you had any fresh fruit since you’ve been here? What about vegetables?”

“Sorry, not knowing those Englishes.”

Pen opened an image browser on fruits and vegetables. She showed Rita as she scrolled through them. “Have you seen any of these since you’ve been here?”

“They being foods?”

“Yes.”

“We eating this foods,” she said, lifting an empty emergency ration pack from the trash.

“Okay, that’s the first thing I’m fixing.” She leaned in close to Rita and whispered in a conspiratorial tone. “Do the children like sweet things?”

“Yes.”

“I’ll try to have a surprise for them in the morning, early morning, what was it…riquat?”

“Yes.”

Pen sent a message from her comm:

FROM: Penelope Watkins, Director, Oceanside Refugee Center.
TO: San Diego Refugee Coordination Warehouse

Add to required provisions, in amounts to match ORC population:

Daily: Fresh, in-season fruits and vegetables. Eggs. Honey. Bread. Butter.

Weekly: Extra strawberries. Extra Butter. Maple syrup. Blueberry syrup. Waffle mix or base ingredients for waffles.

Extra requisitions, one time: Twelve double waffle irons. Lego classic 1000 pcs or more.

Any item unavailable from SDRCW, have driver comm ORC Director for purchase on the economy at Director’s expense.
Trunk Stories

Cups and Balls

prompt: Write a story entirely of dialogue. Nothing but dialogue. No attributives (he said, she said, etc.). No descriptions of scenes or gestures or movements (unless these things are presented in the dialogue). Just words between quotation marks. Pure, beautiful, untainted dialogue.

available at Reedsy

“I’m knackered. Glad that’s over.”

– “You? All you did was sell me out, you Judas. I had to do all the work.”

“I’m terribly sorry. I thought he was another tourist. I have a hard time getting simple directions in this city, and I speak English.”

– “Yeah, we’ve all heard it…New York sucks and everybody’s awful.”

“When I saw a tall bloke in cosplay trying to get anyone to acknowledge him, I stopped to see if I could help. He just said, ‘Show me magic,’ so I thought he was looking for a street performer.”

– “You thought that was cosplay?”

“At first, yes.”

– “And you talked to a freak that looked like that?”

“Yes. Why wouldn’t I have done?”

– “This ain’t London, darlin’. He coulda drug you off to an alley, and a thousand people would walk by without noticing a thing.”

“What makes you think London’s so different?”

– “I’ve performed there. Cameras everywhere. At least there you have the chance that cops are looking at the right time.”

“I wasn’t trying to involve you in anything other than entertaining another tourist. I really am sorry.”

– “You couldn’t tell how creepy he was?”

“No, he just seemed lost.”

– “Darlin’ you’s in the wrong city to have a busted creep meter. That guy set me off right away.”

“You really think someone could abduct me in broad daylight, on a crowded pavement, and no one would say anything?”

– “We disappeared from here, what, ten hours ago? And we reappeared a few minutes ago. Has anyone even looked our direction?”

“They all seem to be actively looking any other direction than this.”

– “Exactly. I need a drink. My nerves are shot.”

“I agree.”

– “Cups and balls…I can’t believe that worked.”

“You what?!”

– “What?”

“You didn’t think it would work?”

– “I didn’t have time to think past, ‘Oh, it’s that cute Brit tourist girl again, with a tall, creepy dude.’ Besides, that ain’t the point.”

“What is the point?”

– “It worked. They ain’t gonna make us slaves…yet.”

“Yet.”

– “The science types have a thousand years to figure out this magic doohickey before they come back. Maybe we’ll get real magic.”

“In your act you said magic was all make-believe.”

– “Well, I thought it was.”

“What changed your mind?”

– “How about when a big-ass space elf froze us in place and teleported us to his ship?”

“Space elf?”

– “Come on, you were thinking it.”

“I was thinking bloody Romulan, or Vulcan, but I guess that works too.”

– “You watch too much TV.”

“Maybe. I agree that I believe it’s real now, but for you, why magic? Couldn’t it just be advanced technology?”

– “Could be. But they really hammered on the whole magic thing. What convinced you?”

“The entire time on their ship I could…feel it? I don’t know how to describe it.”

– “I didn’t feel anything except scared that I’d mess up and they’d eat us or something.”

“Bloody hell. We’ve got a thousand years to arm ourselves against Vulcans with magic and faster-than-light transport.”

– “They ain’t all that scary when you think about it.”

“What makes you say that?”

– “They say they can do magic, and magic is the only true test of sentience—”

“Sapience, they said, not sentience.”

– “Yeah, whatever. But they ain’t all that bright. Hell, any grown-up with common sense would tell you that what I do is illusions and sleight of hand, even if they don’t know how I did it.”

“True, but you are quite good at it.”

– “Ouch. I know what that means in British English. I spent some time in London, remember? Then again, you ain’t wrong.”

“Oh! I meant ‘quite’ in the American sense.”

– “Sure you did. Space elves with real magic are convinced that humans have magic because a mediocre street magician — me — did every trick I knew, and even flubbed a couple when I was getting tired. If they paid attention, they woulda caught the palm a couple times.”

“I was watching closely. You had me fooled when I stopped by the first time, and then the whole time on their ship. I still don’t know how you do any of it.”

– “I could teach you some simple tricks, if you’re up for it.”

“You’d do that?”

– “Yeah. I can teach you the cups and balls to start.”

“That would be lovely. I’d have something to show off when I get home.”

– “Here, hold this thing while I set up for it.”

“What should we do with—hey!”

– “It…turned on.”

“I didn’t do anything. I’m just holding it.”

– “Hand it back.”

“And it’s off again.”

– “Touch it.”

“Wow.”

– “Ouch! Take it or let go, it hurts!”

“Sorry, sorry.”

– “It’s not hurting you?”

“No, it feels like it did on their ship.”

– “Wait, you get magic, and I don’t? Life is so unfair.”

“It’s not my fault, really.”

– “I didn’t say it was. Anyway, let me set up the cups and balls with clear cups so you can see how it’s done.”

“So, there’s already balls there?”

– “Of course. The rest is manipulation. I’ll go slow for you, then you can try.”

“Now that I see it, it’s so simple. Not easy, mind you, but simple nonetheless. Surprising that this was the one that sealed the deal.”

– “Like I said, they ain’t that bright. I know you knew all along it was sleight of hand, even though you didn’t know how, right?”

“Of course. This thing, though….”

– “Can you make that thing do anything other than light up?”

“I don’t know. Maybe I can—bloody hell!”

– “You, uh, just blew up the bus stop.”

“I didn’t mean to, I just wanted to make a light over there. Please, take this back.”

– “It turns off again. Hey, there’s a thousand years to get ready. Would it really be so bad if you took some time to learn how to use this thing, and then we won a bunch of money on that magician show?”

“It would. This should go to researchers right away.”

– “Eh, you’re probably right.”

“Perhaps we should leave. It sounds like the sirens are getting closer.”

– “Shit. Help my pack up my table.”

“I think it’s too late for that. There are chaps in hazmat suits coming from both directions. And you said no one notices anything in this city.”

– “Yeah, except at the worst possible time.”

“What should we do with the device?”

– “I don’t think we’ll be given a choice.”

“Oh, bollocks. Before they cart us off, I have to ask about something you said earlier.”

– “Ask away.”

“You called me cute?”

– “I wha—uh…yeah. Yeah, I did.”

“Ellen Chambers, from Croyden, London.”

– “Derrick Little, Augusta Georgia. Ouch! Remind me not to shake your hand when I’m holding the device.”

“I think they want us to set the device down and back away from it.”

– “You should do it, so they can see that it responds to you. Better chance of not disappearing to Guantanamo or something.”

“What about you?”

– “My best tricks are escapes. I’ll be out of cuffs before they notice. If I’m really lucky, they’ll use the zip tie type. I’ll bolt the first chance I get. By the way, I slipped my number in your pocket when you were here the first time.”

“How forward of you. I’ll call the first chance I get. Looks like they want us to separate. For now, we should obey their orders. They got riled when the device lit up. Be safe, Derrick Little of Augusta.”

– “You too, Ellen.”

Trunk Stories

Not Until the Job Is Done

prompt: Write a story about someone who doesn’t know how to let go.

available at Reedsy

Maria Cointreau looked up at Indri, the tall creature hidden behind the wall with her. Standing on four legs, with two arms with odd joints, four compound eyes, and smooth, grey skin, she looked like a praying mantis from a fever dream. The human-made sub-machine gun she carried just reinforced the image.

“I’m out,” Maria said, lowering her assault rifle, “but if we can get to the warehouse by the river, we can re-supply.”

“We lost. It’s time to leave.”

“Bullshit!” Maria Owens spit on the ground, blood mixed with her spittle. “As long as we’re alive, we’ve still got a chance. We’re not giving the squishies your planet. We can take the drainage tunnels to the river, then climb the bank from there.”

Indri knelt, putting her compound eyes on the same level as Maria’s. “It has been an honor fighting alongside you and the other humans, but our world is lost. If we want to live, we need to head to the evacuation site.”

Maria grabbed Indri’s arm and leaned in close. “Until Terra command calls general retreat, we’ll fight. It’s not over, and it’s not just us, you’ll see. But….”

“But?”

“I’ll get you to the warehouse. There should be transpo to the evac site.” Maria loosened her grip. “I’m not leaving but I can’t ask you to stay; it’s only going to get more dangerous.”

Indri followed Maria from cover to cover, spending tense moments hiding in the alleys while scout drones walked the streets. Indri stopped her at one point to change the bandage on Maria’s head. The old one had soaked through, and blood was pooling and drying behind Maria’s right ear.

After an hour of careful movement, she found what she was looking for. Maria pulled the cover off a storm drain. The design was human, and as such, the ladder down was not something Indri could descend without difficulty.

Maria growled. “Ugh. This one hasn’t been fitted for timinids.”

“I could just drop down.”

“And risk breaking a leg? No.” Maria stepped onto the ladder. “Climb on my back, I’ll get you down.”

They followed the tunnels, moving always down. When daylight and the river came into view, Maria motioned for Indri to stay put. She crawled out, her head on a swivel.

She was scouting for a way up the slope when she saw a human patrol. Maria raised her hands and stood slowly. “Friendly!”

One of the soldiers broke from the patrol and trotted to her. “Sergeant Pall. Where’s your platoon? Are you alone?”

“Lieutenant Cointreau. I’ve got a local hiding in the drain. She needs evac and I need re-supply.” Maria sighed. “My platoon was wiped out when a drone rushed us and self-destructed. Rescued a new friend, though.”

“I didn’t know they could do that. Shit. I’ll pass that info up the chain. Go get your friend,” he said. “The warehouse and immediate surroundings are secure.”

“The patrol?”

“They’ll continue their rounds; I’ll rejoin later. Backup is just a whistle away.”

“Who’s in command?”

“That’d be me, ma’am, unless you want the job. Our platoon was left to secure the site, and the Lieutenant and first squad were killed in a drone attack. We’ve got half a dozen wounded in the warehouse office waiting for evac as well.”

Maria returned to Indri. “Come on, they’ve got this area secured. We’re safe here.”

As they walked up the slope toward the warehouse, Indri put a manipulator on Maria’s shoulder. “Are you sure you don’t want to evacuate? I mean, it’s not even your planet.”

“I don’t leave a job undone. Besides,” she said, “we protect our friends.”

“Friends? We didn’t know each other until this morning.”

“The timinids and humans are friends. That’s what our treaties mean, and that’s why we were building this city and military installation…to provide protection.”

Indri followed along, her hand still on Maria’s shoulder. “Friends…. All humans and all timinids?” she asked.

“In theory, at least,” Pall answered.

The warehouse was cavernous, and Maria’s booted footsteps echoed. Where three days prior she’d seen shelves groaning under the weight of supplies, most were now empty. Shipping crates, long since pried open and broken apart, lay in a heap of scrap to one side. “What the hell?”

“Corporal Jimenez will see to your needs…at least as far as we can.” Pall motioned the corporal over and left to rejoin the patrol.

“Ma’am,” Jimenez said, “I take it you need ammo. How about rations and med supplies…well, bandages at least?”

“Whe—where did everything go?”

“What wasn’t used up was lifted out last night to a more secure rear supply area. All the blankets and most of the medical supplies were sent to the evac ships for the locals.” He looked at the weapons the two carried. “I’ve got plenty standard ball for the 6.8 but I’m out of 9mil for the SMG.”

“That’s okay,” Maria said. “Indri, you should get on the next shuttle out. It’s not safe, and it’s probably going to get worse before it gets better.”

“That’s what I keep trying to tell you.” Indri unclipped the strap that held the sub-machine gun and let it drop to the floor. “This is my home—was my home, but it’s not safe. Why are you staying?”

“Because it’s the right thing to do. I won’t let my friends down, especially you.” Maria turned to the corporal who was lugging a case of ammo to them. “You said supply moved back. What about the front-line units?”

“We aren’t going anywhere, ma’am. We’re just holding tight until the cavalry gets here.” He set down the ammo box and motioned to the warehouse. “This is now the FOB until they clear out enough of the city to move HQ back here. That’s why we’re keeping the warehouse and the landing area clear.”

“Landing area?”

“We bulldozed a shuttle landing just off that side of the warehouse,” he said, pointing to his left. “The next shuttle should be here in about twenty minutes. They’re bringing more rations and I sent a comm to bring some 9mil as well. Unless you want to swap for a 10mil pistol?”

Maria waved him off. “I don’t think timinids can handle that kind of recoil, not to mention, it’d be hard to hold with their hands.”

Indri knelt again, to be on eye-level with Maria. “Please, come with me. You’re injured. You saved my life, let me save yours now.”

“I haven’t saved you yet,” Maria said. “Not until your world is free of the squishies.”

“Speaking of the squishies,” Jimenez said, “patrols haven’t seen any in several hours…just scout drones.”

“Maybe the Navy finally cut their supply lines. No methane for their breathers, no squishies running around.”

“Ma’am…uh…you don’t think they’re pulling out for orbital bombardment, do you?” Jimenez asked as he helped her load magazines.

“I doubt it,” she said. “Why does anyone risk ground combat?”

“I don’t know,” he said.

“To save the infrastructure,” Indri said.

“Exactly. The only launch port that was destroyed was the one we blew up yesterday, before they could take it for themselves.” Maria packed her magazine pockets full to bursting. “I just wish the drones were as easy to take out as the squishies.”

“I might have something for you,” the corporal said. “Do you still have your 10mil sidearm?”

“Sure, not that it does any good against them. Indri’s SMG was only good for getting their attention, and the 10’s not much more oomph.”

“I have some 10mil electro rounds. Slightly lower muzzle velocity than standard ball, but it dumps thousands of volts into them on impact.”

“Why don’t we have something like that for the 6.8?” Maria asked.

“We only have a couple dozen left, and the patrol is loaded up with them.”

A deep hum resonated through the warehouse. “It sounds like the shuttle is early,” Indri said.

“That’s not a shuttle,” Jimenez said, “that’s reinforcements.”

“Personnel carrier,” Maria said at the same time.

“Oh, should I wait for—”

“No, they’ll take you back with the wounded,” the corporal said. “Now that we’re reinforced, we can catch our breath. Lieutenant, would you be willing to help offload and get the wounded loaded on before you go? I mean, you’re in better shape than most of the other wounded.”

Maria nodded. “Of course.” She put a hand up to touch the bandage on her head. It was starting to soak through, but it felt like it had slowed down. “Besides, it’s not that bad. Heads just bleed a lot.”

Indri put a manipulator on Maria’s shoulder again. “Will you come with me? Please?” she asked.

“I’m sorry, Indri, I can’t. The Navy will see you get somewhere safe, until you can all come home again.” Maria turned back toward Jimenez. “Corporal, I hear you could use a platoon leader, and I could use those 10mil electro rounds.”

Trunk Stories

Bleeding Through

prompt: Write a story about a character who is experiencing glitches in their reality.

available at Reedsy

It was there again for just a split second, then it was gone. A flash in the eye; something off-kilter just a bit. I couldn’t tell what it was, but it made me think I might be losing my marbles. If I hadn’t been too nervous to try when it was offered in university, I would blame it on it acid flashbacks.

I pulled my hair into a ponytail and tied it with the spare band I had around my wrist. It served as an excuse to stand outside for a moment longer to gather my wits.

The reception had that sterile, cold, hospital feeling down, complete with the forced smiles of the young people in scrubs checking people in and answering questions. I approached the counter when the young woman there waved me forward.

“Hi. I’m Wendy, how can I help?”

“I have an appointment for an fMRI at three,” I said.

“What’s your name?” she asked.

“Celia Andros.”

After confirming my birthdate and address, she gave me a form to fill out while I waited. I filled out the rough outline of my medical history and wondered why I had to do it so often. My entire medical history was tied into this hospital, so they already had this information.

The waits for imaging weren’t like waiting for the doctor. They got me in right at three, had me out of my clothes and in a gown, lying in the machine by fifteen after.

While I was in the machine watching the images they showed on the screen above me, it happened again. The difference was, this wasn’t split-second. While I saw the machine around me, through it I saw the ceiling high above, crumbling. It was like seeing two films at the same time, one bleeding through the other.

There was a button under my thumb that I was to push if I noticed anything odd. I pushed it, I think. At least, I told myself to. Just as details in the ceiling were becoming clear, including the steady drip of black water from the edges of the tiles, the image disappeared and the machine and screen above were once again solid.

The fact that it happened during the fMRI might provide some insight into what was happening. My doctor already told me that I’m too old for the initial onset of something like schizophrenia, so she wanted to rule out a physical cause before doing anything that might exacerbate the situation.

I spent most of the ride home — and most every empty minute after — trying to decide which would be worse; something physical that may kill me any moment or something entirely psychological that would eventually see me sectioned.

Feeling sorry for myself, I stopped at the grocery on the way home for some nibbles. I picked up a large bag of crisps and box of herbal tea with chamomile and valerian. On the spur of the moment, I picked up a fizzy drink and an ice lolly.

The ice lolly and fizzy drink were gone by the time I’d got home. I sat in front of the telly, not paying attention to what was showing. At some point, I roused myself to put on a kettle and open the crisps.

It was between sips of the herbal tea that it happened again. The newsreader was going on about a pile-up on the M1, complete with live coverage of the traffic jam. I saw, behind the image or through it, the same stretch of the M1 broken, part of it jutting up as though the land had been lifted. A lorry lay across the change in elevation, burning.

The image faded after a few seconds and the story changed to one about some MP caught up in some ethics scandal…as if that was a news-worthy occurrence.

I continued to munch on the crisps, letting the sound from the telly fade to background noise. After a second cup of the herbal tea, I was tired enough to sleep.

Over the next few days, the episodes became more common and far more vivid. The scenes that showed beneath the everyday were all of destruction. Why that should be, I don’t know.

I walked to the corner shop, and it happened again. The shop entrance was elevated from the pavement, as though it was built on a kerb. I nearly tripped as I tried to step up into the shop. Then I realized that in addition to being lifted twenty centimeters or so, the shop I was seeing was in a state of total disarray.

To avoid the stare of the man behind the counter, I turned down one of the aisles and waited for the episode to end. When it ended, I still had after-impressions. It was as though some traumatic event had burned it into my brain.

I shook it off and picked up a fizzy drink and ice lolly. It was as I was paying for my purchases that I realized I didn’t know why I’d gone to the shop in the first place. Probably boredom combined with the stress of waiting for my doctor to call me in about the scan.

The call from my doctor came as I was heading home. She wanted to see me in her office first thing in the morning. She talked as if it wasn’t anything to be concerned about, but I wasn’t certain I believed her tone.

I sat in her office after a sleepless night. I was still undecided whether a physical or psychological cause was worse. She caught my wandering attention.

“Sorry, Doctor Mathis.”

“Celia, you can relax,” she said, “and please, just call me Sharon. We haven’t found a physical cause for your hallucinations. To start with, I’m going to put you on an anti-psychotic to see if we can get it under control.”

I nodded, realizing now that it was the worse outcome of the two. At least if it had been physical, it would be something I could point to and blame.

“Why don’t you tell me what you’ve been seeing. We can decide from there if we should involve the psychiatry department.”

I explained how the brief, vague flashes had morphed into views of destruction. I made sure to provide the vivid details of the latest episodes. It was then that another hit me. The doctor was both in front of me, and huddled beneath the desk, upon which the ceiling had collapsed, trapping her there.

Looking up, I could see the floor above on fire. Water sprayed from unseen fire hoses outside, washing ash down with it, turning it black. It took over, more real seeming than reality, as if reality was the bit bleeding through. As suddenly as it started, it stopped.

“Celia, are you well?” she asked. “Did you just have another episode?”

“I…did. It looked so real. You were trapped beneath your desk with the ceiling collapsed all around. The floor above was on fire, and water was spraying on it from outside.”

She just nodded and jotted it down in her notes. “You’re not having any thoughts of harming yourself or others, are you?”

“No, it just…it’s like I’m seeing another reality behind this one, or maybe another time.” I laughed at myself. “Sorry, Doctor M—Sharon…now I sound daft.”

“It’s fine, Celia. Promise you’ll pop by the chemist on the way home and get this filled. One tablet every night before bedtime. Don’t expect it to work right away, it needs to build up. And don’t skip any doses. I’ll set a follow-up appointment for two weeks from today.”

I nodded at her, took the prescription she’d written, and walked out. Anti-psychotics. I’ve gone ’round the bend, I thought, and I’ll be sectioned before year’s end.

As I’d promised, I took a detour to the chemist on the way home. It was only one stop earlier than my usual, so it wasn’t much of a detour.

Medicine in hand, I walked toward home. I had finished the big bag of crisps the day prior, so I decided to pop into the corner shop to get some more. Fried potato therapy.

A low, rumbling noise, like a train, came barreling toward me. The light poles began to sway, and the ground started to shake. Unable to stand, I dropped to my knees. The ground next to me, where the buildings abutted the pavement, rose with a deafening roar.

A few seconds after it started, it was over. Sirens called out from all over the city, and the streets were littered with collapsed brickwork from many of the older buildings.

I went into the shop. I had to step up to get in, and the scene was exactly as I had seen the last time I was there.

The clerk shooed me out and followed. “I’m not sure the roof will hold,” he said, “but I grabbed you an ice lolly on the way out. No charge.”

“You’re very kind.” I opened the lolly and looked down the street to my building. The entire facade was laid out in front of it, and my front room was open to the world. I pointed to it with a bitter laugh. “How do you like my interior-exterior design?”

That night, as I lay on a cot in a Red Cross shelter, I wondered whether to take the pills or not. The scenes from the news, including the upthrust that cut across the M1, the partial collapse and fire at the hospital — all of it — was just as I’d seen.

I tried to call Dr. Mathis, but most of the cell towers were down, and the ones that weren’t were overloaded. I told one of the aid workers to contact the firemen at the hospital and let them know she was trapped beneath her desk, but he just looked at me like I was barmy.

I decided that, for now, the pills could wait until it happened again…if it happened again. With the full realization that I had, somehow, seen into the future, I left the shelter for the hospital. I hoped it wasn’t too late for Dr. Mathis.

Trunk Stories

Fighting Monsters

prompt: Write a story about two characters whose paths briefly cross, but are actually going in opposite directions — whether literally or figuratively.

available at Reedsy

During my second year in the academy, I was still trying to decide what I wanted to specialize in. At that point, it didn’t matter; I was going to do anything that got me into space and away from the outer colonies for good.

One afternoon, there was a test of a new vectoring thruster built by the engineering students. It was supposed to be super-efficient or some other thing.

There were several of us watching on the periphery; just something to occupy our free time. They were testing on the perpetually “Coming Soon” soccer pitch. It hadn’t ever been sodded in the fourteen years since the academy opened and was just a gravel field with stadium furniture. The thrust mount was in the middle of the field, and to one side, the empty trailer they’d brought the thruster in.

She stood near the trailer, and I was just a little past her from it. We had a decent vantage on the test, but not as good as the people in the stands.

It started out underwhelming and somewhat expected. The thruster sat in its stand and fired up, the big display over it showed the angle of vector, thrust in kilo-Newtons, and fuel consumption per second.

Then all hell broke loose. The bottom of the mount failed, and the thruster twisted parallel to the ground. The people in the stands were safe, as well as the testers, as the thrust was pointed away from them, straight at us.

I pushed her into the trailer and held the door closed as well as I could against the blast of the thruster. The pain was intense for just a moment, then I’m not sure whether it was nerve damage or shock that numbed me. It was then that the thruster exploded. The shockwave knocked us both out and ripped the door out my hand and off its hinges.

I woke up to someone holding and stroking my left hand. It was the girl I’d pushed into the trailer, but she was bald.

“Hey,” I said, “you were in the trailer. Your hair…are you okay?”

Her eyes brimmed with tears. “I’m fine. My name’s Cora Martin. We didn’t get a chance to get properly introduced. Thank you for saving my life.”

“Hi, Cora. I’m—”

“Zephyr Langstrom. If it’s all right, I’ll just call you Zeph.”

“Why are you bald?” My voice was weak and croaky.

“I didn’t want you to be the only one.” I started to reach for my head with my right hand but was stopped by the intense pain. I looked down to see a ruined arm and hand under translucent burn bandages.

I reached up with left hand and felt a bandage on my head. She held up a mirror so I could see. It looked like the right rear quarter of my scalp was bandaged like my arm but didn’t look nearly as bad. The rest of my head had been shaved and a standard bandage covered what I later learned was where a piece of shrapnel had almost pierced my skull.

“How long was I out?”

Cora helped me drink some water while she answered. “You’ve been out for two and half days. I’ve been here the whole time.”

“You didn’t have to do that,” I said.

“I think I did,” she said. “It’s the least I could do. You’d better get used to it, as I’m moving you into my dorm room so I can help out.”

“Help with what?” I asked.

The doctor came into the room, then, and Cora gave my hand a squeeze. Before she could leave, though, I stopped her. I don’t know why, but I wanted her there. “You can stay. If you’re helping out, it might be nice to know what’s going on, right?”

The doctor explained my injuries and what it would take to recover. I’d need several muscle and skin grafts to repair my arm, repeated surgeries to free up the scar tissue to maintain mobility, and constant physio. He guessed about nine to twelve months for recovery up to sixty-percent mobility.

Tears burned my eyes. Without hope of a full or nearly full recovery, I could forget a career in space.

A gentle hand wiped my tears. “I’m here for you, Zeph. You held that door against the blast of the thruster and saved both our lives. You’re tough enough to push through this.”

The doctor nodded. “Not every position requires full mobility,” he said. “In fact, my son is a pilot even though he lost his left hand in an accident in childhood. He was recently promoted, too.”

“What you’re saying is, if I get at least as much mobility as a prosthetic, I’ll be okay?”

“Exactly.” He made some notes in his tablet. “You should get some rest. Ms. Martin assures us that you have care available at home, so we’ll be releasing you in the morning. You’ll have to come in each morning to change your dressings and physiotherapy, and we’ll start laying out a schedule for your surgeries.”

The year following was an exercise in overcoming pain. Cora provided constant support and encouragement. If it hadn’t been for her, I never would’ve been able to keep up with my coursework, and probably would’ve dropped out of physio due to sheer hopeless frustration.

She even kept me going in electives, even getting me through philosophy, which she wasn’t taking. Studying Nietzsche while undergoing daily physio and six surgeries seemed impossible, but Cora made it happen by reading the material to me and making sure I could paraphrase. By the end of the term, she hated the course, and especially old Friedrich.

Contrary to the doctor’s estimate, I recovered more than eighty-percent use of my right hand, and by the time I’d recovered from the last of twenty-nine surgeries, I didn’t notice any impairment. I did however, end up being decently ambidextrous after spending most of a year doing everything with my left hand.

Some fields were unavailable to me due to my injuries. Some things require fine motor skills and two hands, other things involve working around extreme heat or cold, both of which cause me a great deal of pain.

My choices for specialization were limited to combat, pilot, loadmaster, and any of the paperwork jobs. I chose to be a pilot. Of course, what you end up piloting depends on what’s needed when you’re nearing graduation. In my case, it ended up being interdiction patrol ships.

The last year of academy, I received my license to pilot most every ship flown by law enforcement, as well as law enforcement training. Cora had chosen to specialize in interdiction combat, combining law enforcement, close-quarters combat, and ship-to-ship action. She’d told me, “I want to board pirate ships and take ’em all down. Maybe I’ll be on the ship you’re flying!”

Once we had graduated, we received our badges and first assignments. The last few days at the academy we bid farewell to our fellow cadets that were heading off to careers in the military, commerce, law enforcement or government. Since then, I’ve been piloting the Vicious Rabbit, a.k.a. LIV 39-Z-434.

I never saw or heard from Cora again, at least until I stood behind the captain this morning, looking at the report on the screen. It didn’t make sense.

“What’s wrong, Zephyr?” the captain asked.

“I spent most of my time in the academy with her. I thought I knew her.” I rubbed the scars on my arm and hand, feeling the difference between the lumpy burn and graft scars, and the smaller, straight scars from surgeries.

“Is this going to be a problem?”

“No, sir. You get me close, and I’ll put us in boarding range.” A dark thought floated through my mind. “Be careful, she’s trained in ship-to-ship combat. She’s had all the same training our guys have.”

“We know, we have her records.”

“Is there a reason we can’t just…let her do her thing?”

The captain stood and sighed. “I’ll be honest. I would’ve recommended leaving her alone when she first went rogue and was only targeting pirates. Yesterday, she attacked a commercial freighter. She’s made the transition from vigilante to criminal.”

“Cora hated Nietzsche, but she should have listened. ‘Whoever fights monsters should see to it that in the process he does not become a monster.’”

Trunk Stories

Compliance

prompt: Set your story in a society where everyone is constantly aware of unwanted surveillance.

available at Reedsy

There were at least six cameras around the parking lot Grace could see without craning her neck. There were another nine she’d seen as she entered the lot. The counting wasn’t voluntary, it was more an annoying tic. She tried to relax in her car, waiting for the Compliance Office to open, but there was no comfortable position in her tiny commuter one-seater.

She looked at the ticket summons on her phone again. “Presence in a restricted zone.” Convenient, she thought, that they can mark an area restricted with no warning and collect fines.

A stout, matronly woman opened the doors of the office. She looked stuffed into the stiff-collared, square-shouldered Compliance Officer uniform.

After she’d propped the doors open, she put on her uniform cap, stuffing it down over her curly hair where it threatened to fly free any second. She looked at the time on her phone, and motioned for those in the parking lot to come in. Her uniform strained and bunched as she waved her arm.

Grace made her way into the drab waiting room with the others who had been waiting in the parking lot. Her phone chimed and her number in the queue showed: 14. Seeing how there were only six other people in the waiting room, she assumed that the numbers didn’t start at one.

The waiting room was silent. While cameras covered every public space and citizens’ moves were always monitored, the Compliance Office was certain to have visual and sound recording. The fear of saying something that might increase a fine or add a new violation kept everyone silent.

The woman in the overtaxed uniform sat at a desk near the front door and called out, “Number one!”

Grace was surprised to see one of the people in the room stand and approach the desk. She checked her phone again; the number was still 14, and there were now only five others in the room with her.

Every ten minutes, another number was called. Sprinkled between the ones who were called from the room, others entered the front door, their phone chimed with their number, and the woman at the desk called their number in the same moment.

Grace’s plan to save time by arriving before opening and being seen soon was, she found out, without merit. She had expected the waiting room to fill up, but there were never more than a few people there at a time. It was more than two hours before she was called.

She approached the desk and showed her phone. The woman motioned to the door behind her with a thumb. Grace said, “Thank you,” and went in.

Somehow, the long hallway through the door was even more bland than the waiting room. Doors were offset on each side of the hall, and young woman in civilian clothes with a badge on her hip waited for her at an open door.

“Grace Spahn? We’re in here.”

Once Grace was seated at the small table, the woman closed the door. “Grace, I’m Compliance Detective Alexandra McAlly, but you can just call me Lex.”

Grace nodded at the woman but remained silent.

Lex smiled. “Let’s start with the basics. Your name is Grace Spahn?”

“Yes.”

“Where do you live?”

“Sunrise apartments, 302 West Baker.”

“Right there on the corner of Third?” Lex asked.

“Yeah.”

“And where do you work?”

“I’m an underwriter at Starline Mutual.”

“Where is that?” Lex continued to make notes in her tablet as they talked.

“It’s in the Southerland Building, just past East H Street on Fourth.”

“And do you drive to work? Seems a pretty short trip.”

“No, I walk.”

“Do you walk up Third or Fourth or…?” Lex let the question hang.

“Fifth, to work. The same back, unless I need to stop at the market, then I take Seventh instead.”

“Why is that?”

“No sidewalks on Third or Fourth, and Sixth goes right past that biker bar and run-down hotel with all the drug dealers.”

“Yeah, the Braun district can get pretty seedy depending on where you are. But your apartment’s in a quiet area, right?”

Grace nodded.

“I’m not going to beat around the bush here. Your fine is steep. I know you don’t have a way to pay it off without taking out a loan, so I’d like to talk about alternatives with you; see what we can work out.”

“I was fined for walking home from work. The so-called restricted zone wasn’t restricted when I entered it.” Grace crossed her arms. “Don’t I have a right to an attorney?”

Lex leaned forward, her elbows on her knees. “Compliance violations aren’t crimes, and they aren’t handled by the courts. The only time they come up in court is as character background when determining sentencing.”

“If I haven’t committed a crime, then why am I facing a five-thousand—”

“Compliance violation, as I said.”

“If it isn’t laws you’re enforcing, what do Compliance Officers enforce with your constant surveillance and outrageous fines?”

“Community standards, decency, and safety. The surveillance doesn’t belong to us, but to the State. It’s shared with us, police, the Workplace Safety Administration, the courts, and so on.”

“And the Anti-Terrorism Task Force, right? The ones that disappear people.” Grace leaned back.

Lex scooted her chair closer to Grace. “You’re a smart woman, it’s obvious. You’ve got a good job, decent place to live, perfect credit record…you know how to keep your life in order. If you could help us out, this violation would be purged from your record.”

“What’s that supposed to mean?”

“We’re trying to identify someone that was in the restricted zone at the same time you were. If you could walk me through your trip home, it could help…especially if you can remember the people you saw there.”

“You want me to try and describe everyone I saw in the fourteen-block walk home, last week? I’m afraid I won’t be much help.”

“Not everyone, no. Did you make any stops the night you were stopped?”

“Yeah, the corner market, over on Seventh and West Baker.”

“Was that before or after the stop?”

Grace knew that the detective knew well the answers to the questions she was asking. “Before. If you look at the summons, it describes the shopping bag I was carrying at the time.”

“Okay, well, did anything odd happen while you were in the market?”

Grace shrugged. “I got the notice on my phone that the area was restricted right after I got my groceries.”

“Groceries?”

“Well, junk food, anyway. Just some snacks for while I watched the latest streams of Star Voice. I didn’t know Compliance was policing our eating habits now.”

“Nothing like that,” Lex said, “I just want to be sure my report is precise. You understand; you write accident reports for insurance.”

“No, I determine who qualifies for what amount of insurance.”

“Thanks, I just learned a thing. I know you’re observant, I’ve watched you since you walked into the building. You probably know there are four cameras in here and seven in the waiting room.”

“Five and nine, unless you count the one in the foyer, then it’s ten.”

“Exactly. You always count the cameras?”

“I can’t help it, I just do.”

“It’s fine.” Lex flipped through her tablet. “We’re just hoping you can help us out with that observational skill of yours. How many cameras between your work and the market?”

“If I go straight down Seventh like usual it would be eighty-nine. If I take Fifth and then up the hill on Baker, it’s ninety-one.”

“Did you notice anything odd about any of those cameras that day?”

“No…I try not to look right at them…I just count them out of the corner of my eye. I wish I didn’t.”

“Fair enough.” Lex took a deep breath and let it out slowly. “Now, I’m going to ask you again, Grace; other than the restriction notice, what odd thing happened while you were in the store?”

“There was a commotion in the front of the store when I was in the back. I didn’t think anything of it. The neighborhood’s not the best, and sometimes it gets noisy.”

“What about the man who caused the commotion?” Lex showed a still of the man in a mask looking directly at Grace. “Did he say anything to you?”

Grace knew who it was. Jeremiah was her neighbor. He was sweet but disturbed by the constant surveillance. He rarely left his apartment, and always returned in a state of near panic. She knew who it was behind the mask because he had one green eye and one brown eye.

“He said, ‘Sorry’ when he bumped into me on his way to the bathroom.”

Lex showed her another image, Jeremiah’s identification photo. “Do you know this man?”

“Yeah, he’s my neighbor, Jeremiah…can’t remember his last name. You already knew that, though.” She felt like the hammer was going to come down any second. “Why?”

“Is this who bumped into you in the market? It would be hard to hide from anyone he knows with those eyes.”

Grace’s eyes fixed on the door, and she felt the room shrinking.

“If you prefer, you can end this right now and pay the fine.”

“I can’t afford that, but….”

Lex lowered her voice, talking softly to Grace. “Look, I get it. Jeremiah’s your friend, and you don’t want to implicate him in anything. But you know, if you pay your fine and leave, and we find out later that it’s him, you’ll be charged as an accessory after the fact. We have his phone on West Carter and Third before it disappeared, then didn’t show up again until four hours later at his home.”

“Wha—what’s the charge?”

“The police don’t tell us, but if I had to guess, I would guess misdemeanor vandalism. The person in the mask was spray-painting cameras on Fifth and West Baker. If you know something you don’t tell us, though, they can bump it up to felony conspiracy for both of you.”

Lex stood up. “I’m going to give you a few minutes to make up your mind. I’ll come back with a loan form in case you decide to pay your fine today, but I’d rather make the police detective happy than the change counters in Compliance.”

Grace thought about it. She knew that Lex was probably lying that she didn’t know the charges. If she kept quiet, she would have to find a way to pay a fine of more than three months’ rent, and the loan rates would be brutal. She wasn’t sure how much the police and compliance knew. It might be a ploy to get them both on higher charges.

She crossed her arms on the table and buried her face in them so the cameras couldn’t see her cry. “I’m sorry, Jeremiah,” she whispered through the tears.

Lex came back in the room after Grace’s tears had mostly subsided and offered her a box of tissues.

Grace accepted one and wiped her tears and blew her nose. “Sorry.”

“No need to apologize.” Lex kept her voice soft, her cadence slow and soothing. “Have you decided to tell us who the man in the mask was?”

“You already know,” she said. “I saw those eyes, and knew right away, but I didn’t know why he’d be wearing a mask and running. I was afraid he’d done something terrible.”

“It’s really not as big of a deal as the police want to make it, from what I can tell,” Lex said. “But I need you to say it out loud. Who was the man in the mask?”

“It was Jer—Jeremiah…my neighbor.”

“Thank you, Grace. If I can get your thumbprint here, verifying that your answers are truthful and your fine and compliance violation has been purged.”

Grace held her hand out and let Lex get her thumbprint. She felt numb. Lex led her out the rear door of the Compliance Office, and she found herself standing in front of a sign pointing the way to the parking lot.

She had already taken the morning off work to deal with her summons, and now her head was too scrambled to go in. Grace texted work to say that she wouldn’t be in for the afternoon, either, and went home.

She pulled into her parking space as the last of a parade of police vehicles pulled out…including units marked “ATTF”, the Anti-terrorism Task Force. The world shifted beneath her, as she realized what she’d just condemned him to.

Trunk Stories

The Freeze

prompt: Write about a character who, for whatever reason, retreats to a remote cabin.

available at Reedsy

The only thing worse than a poor night’s sleep is the day after. When it happens every night, however, the days turn into a smear of half-remembered impressions as the world passes by at what feels like double or treble speed.

He answered the knocking at his door. “You here to wake me up? You’re a few hours late.”

“You’re dragging again.” There was a hint of pity in her voice.

“I’ll be fine,” he said.

“Just like you haven’t been all week?” She moved closer to where he couldn’t avoid her gaze. “You look like a raccoon, and I know you haven’t slept decently since—”

“Yeah,” he cut her off. “The sirens just….”

She handed him a key on a lanyard, and a sheet of paper. “You’re taking paid leave for a month.”

“Chief, I can—”

“Nope. I’m not taking any arguments. You’re going to my cabin, and you’re going to sleep as long as you need.”

“When did you get a cabin?”

“Been in the family three generations. Don’t worry, it’s got solar power now, a working well and pump and indoor plumbing.” She stopped. “You aren’t sleepwalking, are you?”

“No,” he said.

“Good. Wouldn’t want you to walk off the pier into the lake.”

“How will I get there?” he asked.

“I’m driving you up, so hurry up and pack.”

“You could just give me directions and I could—”

“You could try to drive there, fall asleep on the interstate and get yourself killed. Not happening.”

“I’ll be cut off from everything?”

“Not completely,” she said. “You can usually get enough of a signal from the pier to call or text. You won’t be doing anything online there, though.”

“I don’t suppose there’s any way I can argue, can I Chief?”

“Smart boy. Now pack up some clothes, and your toothbrush. Everything you’ll need is up there. Freezer, fridge, and cupboard are stocked, sheets and blankets are clean. While you’re up there, just call or text if you need anything else.”

Like the days previous, the morning trip to the cabin was a blur. He didn’t remember unpacking, but he remembered that it seemed too large to be a “cabin.” At some point he’d found himself in the bedroom and lay on the bed.

He woke to early evening sun streaming in the bedroom door from the large, western windows of the front room. His stomach grumbled and he moved to the kitchen to make himself a lunch…or dinner…a meal, anyway.

Deciding to keep it simple, he made a peanut-butter and jam sandwich. When he checked his phone for the time, he was surprised to see the battery was almost dead.

“What the hell?” he asked, as if the phone would answer. “I took you off the charger this morning.”

He found the charging cable in the bedroom and plugged the phone in. It took him a more than a few seconds to realize what he was seeing. He hadn’t just slept away the afternoon, he’d slept for twenty-eight hours.

Hunger still poked at him, but he didn’t feel up to making anything complicated. He checked the freezer and decided a pint of gourmet ice cream was just the ticket.

Carrying the pint of ice cream and a spoon, he went out the front door to the pier and sat down at the end of it. Birds sang in the growing shadows, the sun grew red and settled behind the trees, and he ate his ice cream.

He had a moment where he wondered if what he was feeling was contemplation or enjoyment or something else entirely. He shook his head and took another spoonful of the ice cream and let it melt on his tongue. It was better when he didn’t try to think about it.

A shadow in the sky resolved into a flock of geese flying north. As they neared the lake they began to honk and squawk. He finished his ice cream while they circled and began to settle on the lake.

They were every bit as loud as the city, but it didn’t grate on him the way passing cars and trucks and trains did. He felt tired, but not ready for sleep after only being up for a couple hours.

The sun set faster than he’d expected, and a dark, moonless night blanketed everything in silence. The geese slept where they floated in the middle of the lake.

A chill began to fall, driving him back indoors. There was nothing to occupy his time, save a shelf of paperbacks in poor condition. He wandered around the cabin a few times; bedroom, front room, kitchen, bath, laundry room, pantry, small room with a battery bank on one side, the other set up for fly tying, and back.

He pulled a book at random off the shelf and lay down on the bed to read. It was some sort of gunslinger, wild-west sort of novel that failed to hold his interest enough to keep him from drifting off to sleep.

The sirens! The sirens! He couldn’t move, mic in hand, frozen in place. The fire trucks are coming! Get out there! Move! No matter how he tried, he couldn’t make himself move. Not then, not this time. The sirens grew louder, it was going to happen again.

He sat up, panting, his heart thumping as if to leave his chest. Early morning sunlight washed the room in gold, while the geese honked and brayed and shouted their messages to each other on the lake.

That was the noise that his sleeping brain had turned into sirens. They continued throughout the day, a cacophony of excited travelers eating grass and bugs on the edges of the lake, swimming about, then taking short flights only to return to the water’s surface.

He tried reading more of the novel but couldn’t make it through a whole page without his mind wandering. He put the book back on the shelf and perused the collection. It was mostly westerns and historical fiction, with a scant few old science fiction pulps scattered here and there.

The rest of the day he spent much as he had the previous one; wandering about, watching the geese, eating when he felt hungry, and reading from the hilariously outdated science fiction novel he’d taken from the shelf.

When the geese went to sleep, he did too. The quiet made it easy, though his mantra of “Geese are not sirens” delayed it for a bit.

The mantra didn’t work. Once again, he was rooted to the spot while screaming sirens moved closer and everything slowed down. The camera fell to the ground with a crunch and the fire truck….

He took a cold shower to wash off the sweat and wake himself. He stepped out of the cabin as the geese took off and made a formation.

Despite hoping they were back on their journey, the formation did a few large loops in the sky before settling back down on the lake. He began to search the cabin, looking through cupboards and closets.

Not finding what he was looking for, he went to the kitchen and picked up the phone that was still plugged in. He carried it out to the pier, getting a weak signal when he reached the end.

“How are you holding up out there? Need anything?” Her voice dropped in and out.

“I…uh…I need a drink. Any chance you could bring me a bottle?”

“As long as you don’t mind me sleeping on the pull-out. I’m not going to let you drink alone.”

“Fair enough.”

“I’ll see you around five,” she said.

After first examining the fridge and scolding him for his eating habits, she made them dinner. They ate in silence while the geese continued their loud frolic.

Dinner complete and dishes washed and put away, they moved to the end of the pier to watch the sunset and share a bottle of wine.

“Not really what I had in mind,” he said, “but it’ll do.”

“It’ll have to,” she said, “as it’s all I had on hand.”

After the geese had settled and the waxing moon rose, she asked, “Can you talk about it?”

He took another gulp from the bottle. The wine warmed his belly and gave him the courage to speak. “I think so.”

For long moments, he stared at the moon, then its reflection on the lake. She didn’t push, giving him room to speak on his own time.

“The fire was behind me,” he said, “camera in front. Normal news reporting, you know? I heard the sirens….” Tears began to trickle down his cheeks.

“I heard them coming, then I saw…I saw her; the toddler…playing in a puddle in the street.

“I knew I had to do something, but I couldn’t move, couldn’t speak. I just…stared at her.

“The cameraman…the new guy…turned around to see what was going on. He dropped the camera and ran for her without a moment’s hesitation…just like I couldn’t.” He was wracked with deep sobs, and she put her arm around him and held him.

“If I’d just gone…I had time…I could’ve saved her. Instead…,” the vision of the fire truck trying to stop, slamming into both the little girl and the cameraman filled his mind again. “It’s my fault. I’m a coward.”

She held him in silence, rocking gently until his sobs died down. “It’s not your fault, okay? It’s not your fault. You’re not a coward just because your instinct was to freeze rather than run towards danger.”

“I—I don’t want to be alone tonight,” he said. “Is it okay if you sleep in the bed with me? Not to do anything, just sleep.”

The sirens! He was back again, frozen in place, but he wasn’t alone this time. Her voice cut through the sirens and broke him from their spell. “You’re okay,” she said, “it’s not your fault.”

He woke to her wiping the tears from his face, only to break down in sobs of relief.