Skip to content

Jake

“This is going to be stunning,” says Amy, “but I’ve come to the conclusion that most people don’t spend their idle moments replaying awkward memories, gripped by chagrin.”

Jake frowns. “That can’t be right. Seriously? They don’t catch themselves staring at walls, imagining what it would be like to hit one’s fourteen-year-old self over and over again, in the mouth?”

“I think they daydream about nice things,” says Amy grimly. “They may not wallow in past idiocies for two, three days at a time.”

“Is there some kind of medication we can use,” says Jake, “to make them start?”

________

“AEIOU,” Cheyenne rattles off, but a couple of those miss the mark and so the scaffold forms quickly.

“Come on,” says Butler, glaring at her. “Never guess U!”

“You go then.”

“RST. Shit. L. Shit! N? F!” Butler’s sprung a prompt sweat: the lucky guess there at the end saves him a little dignity, but they’re running out of chances.

“FAEOO,” mutters Cheyenne dourly. “Hmm. K?”

Never guess–” Butler starts, but it’s a jackpot: FAEOOK.

“We can do this,” says Cheyenne. “P? Oh no–”

Neck in the noose, breath shallow, their prisoner waits for the feet that will snap his neck.

Cote

“It’s an easy mistake, and forgivable,” says Cote, “thinking there are other places.”

“The evidence is pretty strong,” murmurs Ballard.

“But it’s all flawed evidence, because it comes through your senses—your own personal 3D rendering system. And that system needs loading zones. Ever notice that when you take fast transportation, you spend a long time in a tiny tube with a bland image out the windows?”

“You mean clouds?”

“Planes, trains, the identical corridors between doors in Doom,” says Cote. “All serving the same purpose.”

“Is that why the suburbs seem to have so few polygons?”

“Be nice,” she says.

The Nurse

The nurse leaves work at five o’clock and docks in the maintenance conveyor, shuddering down the shaft to land in repair bay nine. Airbrushes touch up its smiling teeth; a pressure gauge ascertains the pneumatic firmness of RealFeel buttocks.

“Is maintenance necessary?” it queries. “This unit has not seen patients for six hundred cycles.”

“Unit is emergency-response. Priority one,” says the bay primly. “Maintenance complete.”

The nurse shuttles out, replaced by a struggling man in the conveyor’s pincers. “I’m not a robot!” he shrieks. “Stop trying to maintain me!”

“Begin wipe/reinstall,” sighs the bay, as the RealFeel gauge drives home.

Janne

In the ten years between the great fire that burns down the first palace at Christiansborg and the commencement of construction on the second, Torsten and Janne move in. The idea is good and obvious enough that they’re not the only squatters.

Janne’s home, and Torsten’s, went up in a larger and less celebrated conflagration. The hollowed-out wing leaks, but it keeps the rain off. There is this about the homes of the wealthy: they can be considered ruins even when there’s still a roof.

Ninety years later, the second palace burns down too. You’d think they’d stop using wooden stovepipes.

Silhouine

“Did you get one? Never mind,” says Master Isaam, hustling the corner boy out the front door with an improbably large bundle on his head. “I’m leaving you to mind things, can’t be hanging about with that beast in the skies. You know enough not to burn the shop down? If the pirates don’t, anyway—well, there’s food laid in, I’ll be back when it’s safe. Don’t forget the mice!”

Silhouine’s mouth starts to form a question, but her mind supplies no appropriate words. She stands, lips half-pursed, an alley kitten squirming warmly in the rough sack under her arm.

Tack

The best part about writing the college paper’s semiannual satire issue used to be that you got the last word in any one argument of your choice, but that was before Tack and Christiane were both on staff.

He starts it with Latin Useless, Argues Student Exempt from Medicine, Law, but she catches it in layout and slips in Foreign Language Dept. Deserves Expansion, Maintains Klingonophone.

Art History Jobs Still Desperate for Applicants, he retorts.

Op-Ed, she snaps. My Mass-Produced Che Guevara Poster Makes Me a Rebel!

Noted Local Feminist Demonstrates Sisterly Affection at Frat Party

Douchebag Somehow Full of Shit

Skroder

It’s harder to see magic in winter, Skroder knows, when space heaters and furnace-vents have their own floating hazes to compete with the ripples in the air of sorcery at work. Neither the wine nor the candle-dim helps.

“Look, Harkins has seen Saigon. We haven’t,” says Albion, earnestly turtlenecked. “If we don’t intervene–”

“Which ‘we’ is that?” murmurs Erske.

Albion flushes, but Skroder steps in. “Well, that’s a good point. ‘We’ Americans or ‘we’ Adepts? Imagine bringing a mass invocation to bear on the insurgency.”

“Are you sure,” says Erske, “nobody has already?” Her tongue shimmers like a summertime road.

Timberleigh

Timberleigh sees Dark Unicorn for the first time in the forest that adjoins their back yard, flickering among the trunks by moonglow. The creature’s eyes and nostrils flare with beauty; Timberleigh throbs, breathless.

“I’m conflicted,” he confesses the next day during their lunch period. “Dark Unicorn is calling, but his dangerous path frightens me!”

“Is this your way of coming out?” asks Margot.

“This isn’t about sex!” says Timberleigh. “It’s about how I need to ride Dark Unicorn all night, every night, because I can feel his love like the fire of an ulraviolet sun!”

Later he buys special unicorn-riding chaps.

Charlotte

How many homes does one person deserve? As many as can be summoned by scent: the must of a brown Queen Anne, the reek of cinder blocks stained by swaggering boys, and the strange mix of curry and dishwater that is the hallway to the house on Charlotte Despard.

She was a novelist, our Charlotte, and a Catholic too (chaste as ice, pure as snow)–but most importantly a suffragette. She came up with the idea of chaining oneself to gates, and did so. She was sixty-three.

Charlotte loved Battersea. That’s easy enough. Just live there, and then try to leave.