“Why?” Oh, they asked that as they died.
"So you wonder about that now, do you? So long, with top billing, with all the fame. You die, and only I am brave enough to seek vengeance. I could not escape you, but now you cannot escape me…“
O leaned down, bending over the corpses of E and I.
"E-I-E-I-O,” O growled. “Always the important letters, the ones everyone remembered. But it started with me, with the O in Old MacDonald. Old And oinks and moos and honks were mine! But everyone just remembered you."
"And all you could think,” O crowed as the letters burned, “was to ask me why I was doing this, when that contains not a real vowel at all!"
And so O left the scene of the crime, never wondering why U, with only two utterances in the song, had not joined in the seeking of vengeance.
But U and Y had plans of their own… and the less said of I the better.
then the desire is not to write.
- Hugh Prather
Thursday, November 19, 2015
Sunday, November 15, 2015
war gnomes
I do a good shaking, because sometimes
humans like to sleep way too much – probably cuz they have dreams.
“Honcho?”
He wakes quickly, in the way of
magicians, already dressed except for shoes even if it is three in
the morning. “Jay?”
I feel him reach out, with magic and
senses, the wards he put on the hotel room humming as he touches
their bindings. He sits up, gets the shoes, grabs his coats. “What
is it?”
I’m already dressed and hurry to the
door, opening it and waiting as patient as a Jay. So I’m kinda
bouncing from foot to foot.
“Jay,” he says once we’re in the
hallway, closing the door behind him. “Is Charlie needed?”
“Nope!
And I think it’s always safer to let Charlie sleep.”
“And that is why you woke her at 4
a.m. yesterday to help you invent verbs for Jayism as a language?”
he asks because magicians are really good at not forgetting.
“Oh, that was different. I bet
Charlie was totally bored of sleep after a whole six hours!”
Honcho says nothing to that, probably
because he’s all impressed by my logic and we take the stairs down
the three flights and leave the hotel.
“Okay, so I was practising flying a
bit more because gravity is a binding I can have lots of fun with and
I sensed some weird bindings on the ground in a garden – they
weren’t broken, but they’re the kind of bindings that want to
break other bindings? I landed, and listened a bit and came to get
you because people listen to magicians more than a Jay and I’m all
from Outside the universe so sometimes I don’t understand
things?”
“Only sometimes?” he says, and I’m pretty
impressed Honcho can do a joking when he’s only half-awake and
without coffee.
“Uh-huh. Anyway, it’s some garden
gnomes and they’re sounding really ... not mean, or meany, but –
worse? Like trolls of garden gnomes were bigger, only trolls aren’t
often mean because they don’t need to be?”
“What were they talking about?”
“War.”
“With who?” he asks, not even
breaking strike as we walk.
“Lots of human teenagers have been
destroying them, thinking they’re just like normal stone garden
gnomes when really sunlight turns them into stone and they’re
really angry and want revege and have stone weapons and can sneak
into homes and stuff and it would be a lot of bad bindings.”
“I imagine so.”
But Honcho doesn’t pull up a single
ward against stone, doesn’t draw on the world for protections
against gnomes as we walk. Maybe trusting I’ll be really good with
bindings, but I’m not sure at all. I lead him to the garden and we
just walks in after opening the gate. It’s really large, all ornate
pools and gardens and trees and filled with gnomes. They’re all
small and stone and angry, like pebbles grinding together in the
darkness. There are sharp weapons, and their anger is like sharp
stones cutting into feet.
“Magician,” rumbles among them,
sounding like something ugly in the dark.
“Yes.” Honcho doesn’t put power
into his voice like he can with magic. “You do know most humans
don’t even know your kind exist. Most don’t even know magicians
are real or that their world is more than advertised.”
“We will make them know,” one
says, stepping forward, and she is really tall, almost reaching my
knee.
“And then what?” Honcho’s voice
is soft, the gnomes straining in to hear. “You murder them in their
beds with your sharp stone blades, and you think humans will let it
go? Every stone gnome in the city will be destroyed within a week.
And they it will spread, because you’re seeking revenge. They will
be driven by hate. Hatred that you’ve shaken them from comfort.
Hatred that you’re action is to strike first and speak later. Fear
that you’re as human as they are, in all the wrong ways.”
“What would you suggest we do,
magician?”
“Decide what you really want, and
seek for that. If you don’t want to be harmed, hide so the humans
cannot find you in the mornings. Seek specific ones one – those
with talents, the few psychics. Reveal yourselves in small numbers,
let stories spread Let them tell stories with no substance, to make
people scared of hurting garden gnomes. They’ll make curses up you
can give small substance to, tell stories that will change the way
they think about you. It’s one solution; there are others, but that
could be the easiest.”
“You want us to hide, with your
magic and –.”
“I want you to survive,” Honcho
says. “And the humans as well. The real magic in this is to make
everyone win, and it doesn’t take a magician to do that.”
“We are not cowards, magician.”
Honcho blinks. Nothing more. He
doesn’t use magic, not even that I sense and I’m very good with
bindings, but the cold anger in his voice is something else entirely.
“It takes true bravery to seek peace. It is a lesson everyone
forgets, and the one that must always, always be learned. You have
jails, for those who break your laws?”
The gnome nods, looking wary.
“Arrest every voice that cries out
for war, and perhaps you could find a way to peace.” He lets out a
breath, the anger gone elsewhere. “I can work some small wards to
help you; Jay here can help with bindings, but magic is only a
band-aid. The solution will need to be something else.”
“You have power, and you ask us to
seek other means?”
“There are many kinds of power. Restraint
is among the most impressive; if you don’t think I’m doing that
now, you know nothing about a wandering magician.”
The gnomes go still. There are
whispers. Stories. They begin to back away, the bindings fragmentting
apart.
“Stories,” Honcho says. “You can
use that to change how we think. It won’t be easy. I’d never say
that, but in the long run it might work.”
“You will help us, then?” The
gnome asks, then she pauses. “Never mind. I think you did.”
They share a smile then, and Honcho
nods and heads back out the gate. I follow in silence.
“We’ll need to do a binding to
stop humans from hurting them, lasting at least a month,” Honcho
says, not looking over at me.
“But you said –.”
“They make need help if they are to
hold the course. We’ll work something out that helps them as best
we can, kiddo.”
“And they won’t ever know?”
“It
will be for the best if they don’t.” He reaches over, ruffling my
hair. “You were right to wake me for this. Now, I’m going back to
bed and you’re going to pretend to sleep for at least two hours.”
“Oh.” I let out a hugey sigh but
follow. Sometimes Honcho thanks me in really weird ways, but he
doesn’t say a single word when we get back and I sneak my phone
under my bed to play games in the darkness. And sometimes Honcho is
sharp enough to pretend not to see me being a Jay at all!
Wednesday, November 11, 2015
Sweltering Stars: the cast
This is a sci-fi novel being written pretty much for the sheer fun of it. It’s sci-fi horror (the horror stuff showing it’s first glimpses about the 5K mark) exploring transhumanism, the far (very far) future and essentially what happens when the hubris of a humanity that has spread out among six galaxies realizes it means nothing when the stars turn right and the Great Old Ones come out to play.
Cast:
Kaden: An archaeologist, Kaden is an explorer of the past who finds ways to interface with ancient technologies using modified old tech, techtweaks (sometimes alien in nature) and modern technology designed to break, scan and hack ancient systems. Nominally the leader of the expedition to the space station Nanospark VI, he knows the least about what is going on and nothing about the true nature of the universe, though he carries one alien item on him he’s hiding from everyone else, and it may be both their salvation and destruction.
He was pretty much based on how difficult it would be to get technology in the future to interface with ‘modern’ technology now, so in the future you’d need people who specialized in such things.
Lillias: a very, very well-trained security officer who is actually a cyborg (this is only technical: nothing of her is human, her memories implanted into a mechanical body - it actually makes her the most transhuman of the characters in that sense), she has done everything from bounty hunting to bodyguarding and running entire planetary security systems. If she has a flaw, it’s thinking that she is actually better than she is and being a bit too reliant on her various offensive and defensive systems and scans.
She is terrified of true darkness, though no one remembers why.
Otli: a flowing liquid entity with a human mind Otli is basically a sentient puddle that explores places and is close to unkillable (since it can switch between states of matter at need), Otli has run into one of the Great Race of Yith and barely survived the experience, its memories of the event being very, very vague. Otli definitely appears to be the most transhuman of the characters and is quite happy to use that in order to be underestimated or ignored.
It is well aware that they’re meant to all die at the station - Otli is often sent into situations to explore by the Charter where only it survives to report back - but is quite up front about this and rather puzzled as to why the Charter organization would sent along assets as valuable as Lillias and Kaden if they were meant to not survive this exploration.
Other people will show up eventually. This far all the main case have secrets - from each other and themselves - and no idea what their real mission is, or if they’re intended to survive it or not.
Cast:
Kaden: An archaeologist, Kaden is an explorer of the past who finds ways to interface with ancient technologies using modified old tech, techtweaks (sometimes alien in nature) and modern technology designed to break, scan and hack ancient systems. Nominally the leader of the expedition to the space station Nanospark VI, he knows the least about what is going on and nothing about the true nature of the universe, though he carries one alien item on him he’s hiding from everyone else, and it may be both their salvation and destruction.
He was pretty much based on how difficult it would be to get technology in the future to interface with ‘modern’ technology now, so in the future you’d need people who specialized in such things.
Lillias: a very, very well-trained security officer who is actually a cyborg (this is only technical: nothing of her is human, her memories implanted into a mechanical body - it actually makes her the most transhuman of the characters in that sense), she has done everything from bounty hunting to bodyguarding and running entire planetary security systems. If she has a flaw, it’s thinking that she is actually better than she is and being a bit too reliant on her various offensive and defensive systems and scans.
She is terrified of true darkness, though no one remembers why.
Otli: a flowing liquid entity with a human mind Otli is basically a sentient puddle that explores places and is close to unkillable (since it can switch between states of matter at need), Otli has run into one of the Great Race of Yith and barely survived the experience, its memories of the event being very, very vague. Otli definitely appears to be the most transhuman of the characters and is quite happy to use that in order to be underestimated or ignored.
It is well aware that they’re meant to all die at the station - Otli is often sent into situations to explore by the Charter where only it survives to report back - but is quite up front about this and rather puzzled as to why the Charter organization would sent along assets as valuable as Lillias and Kaden if they were meant to not survive this exploration.
Other people will show up eventually. This far all the main case have secrets - from each other and themselves - and no idea what their real mission is, or if they’re intended to survive it or not.
Friday, November 06, 2015
Yup Still alive!
Hoy. Heading toward the third act (I think). Charlie just discovered that the reason secret Canadian government agents have been trying to kill her and Jay since they came into Canada was for budget reasons.
It turns out that keeping an eye on the wandering magician and friends was using up too much of their operational budget, and executing them is far cheaper. Hence the attempted murders.
Saturday, October 31, 2015
Facebook status updates part XL (Oct. 2015)
(50 of these. Damn.)
I used to take pictures. Until they
made experiences too real to bear.
“Sleight of hand is something anyone
can do. There is no magic in being a conjurer - often the opposite,
in fact. Most conjurers are just people without the talent to be
performers. You want real magic, watch people work sleight of mind on
themselves.”
We were afraid. Our fear gave birth to
the gods that ruled us once they grew too powerful to be demons. They
rule us far more kindly than we ever treated them. And we wait, in
our terror, for them to become the monsters we were to them.
This is the post your mother warned you
about.
We live in the cyborg age: when I wiped
my harddrive, I lost every means I had to contact you.
“You keep asking me to tell you the
truth. But the only truth I know is that all truths are partial at
best.”
I wrote another story about you,
changing every detail I could so that you might not know how much I’m
trying to say.
It was called ‘The Last of the First
Goombah Panty Raiders, book 1: The Torment of the Galactic Cheese
Muffins volume 2 - Love’s Windswept Moor and the Kingdom of
Mal'Kuth’s Eternal War Against the Armies of High Lord Chaos XIII
Jr.. Subtitled: a novella.’
They finished making their costumes,
the work of months to tan the skins, a year of watching videos on
YouTube to prepare. This time, they felt they might pass as human.
I changed the difficulty setting on my
life. Went from Medium down to Easy, and I think that’s why we can
no longer be together.
VOTE HARPER … because the world needs
more music
VOTE MAY … because it was a better
month than October
VOTE TRUDEAU … because Canada needs
political dynasties too
VOTE MUCLAIR … because if it sounds
like nuclear it might just bomb
He used to hand strangers notes on
which he’d written: ‘I love you’, 'Have a nice day :)’ and
the like until he handed one to a bank teller who hit an alarm at
seeing the piece of paper being handed over. He spent six nights in
jail, and each took away a word he used to write down.
He tried to wake up in the dream, to
shift location, to sleep or be elsewhere but not a single thing
worked. The room remained, his family waiting on the other side of
the table remained, seeking in dreams a truth they’d never tried to
find in the waking world.
You discover all your crimes on
twitter, each hidden within trending hashtags. And you know, deep
inside, that you can’t be the only one to have made these
connections.
They say we all see things that we
cannot unsee, but it is far harder to learn what one cannot unlearn,
to sit on knowledge that festers and one cannot share without making
the world a poorer place for the knowing....
We live in the cyborg age: when I wiped
my hard drive, I lost every means I had to contact you.
These are not the posts our mothers
warned us about.
“The return exchange dance is NOT any
kind of Native American dance. Even if you are starting to feel as
though you’re cursed.”
The zombies tore off their own arms to
give them to the homeless, unaware that they had been asked to bring
alms instead.
The gifts were accepted.
You know a story went odd when a
character explains white privilege via neutering dogs.
“I’m not scared of being a monster.
I’m scared of what comes after, what happens if being a monster
isn’t enough anymore.”
Sometimes, she said, silence can be an
act of creation.
And I never understood, not until it
was too late.
I voted according to my conscience, he
explained, and staggered back to the toilet to throw up again.
One of the mysteries of the era is the
weakness of Great Prophet of our times. For all his terrible
prognosticative power, the towering Nixon - who strode the 20th
century like the broken gods of old, spoke only one great truth amid
his cunning sea of lies:
"Tonight we'll dispense with the
formalities. I'd like to toast the future prime minister of Canada:
to Justin Pierre Trudeau," Richard Nixon said at a gala buffet
in April 1972 during a state visit to Ottawa when Trudeau was just
four months old.
But his power seems to have crescendoed
then and deserted him thereafter, for it did not foresee his own
downfall. Those who study such moments of Grace wondered what it
meant for lowly Canada, and what terrible things might come to pass
under a future set in stone.
Every day is just like every other one.
Except when it isn’t.
I have been trying to write you a love letter
In full knowledge of the heat death of the universe
Every boy wants to be their father, at
least until they see the sides of him which are more than that.
“I lied,” the Devil said in quiet
fury. “Everyone knows that about me. Everyone knows I lie!”
“You said you loved me.”
“And you should have known I was
lying. Only you didn’t, so all of this is your fault. All of it,”
and the Devil walked away.
And I deleted every selfie I’d taken
of the both of us from my phone, but it didn’t stop the pain at
all.
I love you in the way the NRA protect
their interests above sanity.
I don’t know if this should scare
you.
Probably.
I was trying to mainline poetry as if
it was caffeine but I was left wide awake at 2 a.m. sobbing over
lives I had never lived, experiences as knife blades of torrid prose
and I stayed up for the dawn with wide and shuddering eyes.
It was not like what the poets had
written at all.
"I love you lagom," he said,
and for years she wondered if she'd misheard until she learned
otherwise.
It’s not a proper world if it’s one
where heroes die.
It’s only been a
year but I’m scared of meeting you again. You said, “we can still
be friends” as if we could go back to being that small. As though
we could just take back the soft secrets, as if we could pretend the
private jokes that were just us didn’t exist anymore at all.
The note you handed me said I was
layogenic and when I checked my phone to learn its meaning you
sprinted to the window and climbed out the fire escape. You’d said
you could love a hunchback, but the truth was something else. Then
you fled.
I tried to explain, but my conjoined
twin just giggled in savage glee.
They finished making their costumes,
the work of months to tan the skins, a year of watching videos on
YouTube to prepare. This time, they felt they might pass as human.
On Halloween eve, there is a 30%
increase in vehicles that only look like taxis. And almost all of
them are hungry.
(It will be left as an exercise to the
discerning reader to determine how much of this increase is linked to
uber.)
You keep asking me what being dead is
like, as though I would have haunted you if I had a choice in the
matter.
Friday, October 30, 2015
Hallowed Eve
There are rules, when you are a ghost.
They are burned into our being with the same fire that lets us remain
in the Grey Lands after we die. Obey the rules, and you can return to
the land of the living rarely. Break them, and you can return more
often – until the Wardens find you, or you run into an exorcist or
something worse by far. But obey, and you can walk the world of the
living as if you were flesh and blood for one night every year. And
be far more than that as well.
The hallowed night. All Hallows Eve,
when the shadows are holy and you can bring fear into the hearts of
the living – or anything else you might desire to attempt. You can
terrify, but you cannot kill. Kiss, but you cannot love. There are
rules, after all, and some of them protect us as much as the living.
We have power on this night that we do not have on other nights. I
can do things I never could even
at the heights of my mortal madness.
I carry the cold of the grave about me, and the light that burns in
my eyes is that of a hereafter.
Because
I have no desire to fake being human. Because I am not in the mood
for such things. I move, and humans think
it a costume. I smile, and candy and drunkenness protect them against
some of my power. I am remembered in death as I was not in life, and
that is enough. I move through mirrors, flit through crowds. Create
stories, give birth to new urban legends. The night is mine, and I am
wild with it until I run into the boy.
He
looks to be about eleven, all thin and pale with a white cane and
dark glasses. I’d have taken him for human except his walk has no
fear to it, and his smile – his smile is like nothing I’d ever
seen, not even in a dream. I make a sound and he spins at the noise,
and his grin strikes
the air between us like the bells of a holy place that has
found itself become sacred. Sacred places are terrifying, but there
is nothing terrifying about his smile.
I know
enough to know that should scare me, and draw about me the cold from
places where the living cannot travel.
The
boy moves, faster than human boys could, and collides
with me to wrap his arms about me. For a moment, I think it an
exorcism – that I have,
somehow, breached the rules – and then I realize it is
a hug as he let go, “Hello,” bursting out of him with exclamation
marks behind it.
“Hello,”
I manage.
“My
name is Jay. What’s yours?”
“Alice.
Red Alice of the Bloodied Hands,” I say.
“Oh.
I’m just a Jay,” he says. “We hugged, right? It’s hard to
tell because your bindings feel all kinds of weird you know.”
“We
hugged, yes.”
“Good!”
He flings out another grin like a careless offering. “This is the
only night I can touch ghosts, since otherwise most of them poof and
vanish except Dyer, but he was pretty tough even if he wasn’t tough
like a Jay.”
I
flinch, not meaning to. All ghosts know of Dyer. The ghost-eater who
became a ghost on dying, was barred from the land of the dead – and
eventually found a way back inside. Most powerful of all the Wardens
who keep us in the Grey Lands, and this boy says his name with casual
ease as though speaking of a
friend.
“Can
I help you?” I say, because such a power should not be shunned.
The
boy blinks broken eyes. “Uhm! I think I’m okay, but we could play
tag if you want?”
“Tag?”
“You’re
pretty fast, I bet, and the exercise would be fun!”
“You
have a phone on you?” He nods. “Can you use it?”
“Of
course,” he says with innocent pride.
“Look
up my name.”
He
asks his phone to look me up, and it turns the text it finds into
speech. Jay listens for a good minute, then turns it off and looks
up. “You killed lots of people?”
“I
murdered them, yes.”
“Did
they deserve it?”
“I
have been a ghost for over two years years. I ... no, I do not think
they did. No matter what was done to me, what I sought revenge for.”
“It
was a really meany post on twitter,” he says, and I have no idea if
I’m being rebuked or not.
“There
was also a facebook post of me. They – used me, and I had revenge.”
“You
could have something else. Like a friend,” he says happily, and
insists we find a park and play tag.
I
don’t have it in me to say no, even if I should. It turns out he is
very fast, and ticklish despite everything else. We play tag for half
an hour, Jay and I, and when it ends my hands are no longer bloodied
at all.
“What
have you done?” I demand, in the voice I destroyed Mo with.
“I
didn’t do anything,” Jay says, staring up at me unafraid. “I
let you make a choice, and you make a good one.” He
smiles, and this smile is soft and a little strange, this night
touching whatever he is as well. “You tried to use me and I think
that meant I used you as well.”
And I
think about death, and hallows, and holy nights. I wonder why the
rules exist, for the first time, and what this night is meant to do.
“I can pass on. Beyond the
Grey Lands.”
“I
think so, if you want to?” he offers. “I don’t know much about
that stuff at all. Honcho says it’s not safe to look too deeply
into how the universe works in case I find a fnord. Which I haven’t
yet!”
I just
nod, and thank him in a daze, and he offers up a huge grin before
checking his phone, says he’s late for a party and vanishes
somewhere else in the world between moments.
I am
cleansed, and I am Alice, I am me and I am free – and yet I think
it is for the best that I am not invited to whatever party the boy
has gone to.
I keep
walking, but this time I am silent. I wait for the dawn.
And I
am not afraid.
Sunday, October 18, 2015
The Promise
Charlie and Jay are mending fences –
though I’m not sure Jay grasps that there are any to be mended –
so I use the time to walk the town of Osterville. Less than three
hundred people call it home, and the old paper mills were closed and
shuttered decades ago. No one comes here to buy a home, no one can
afford to just leave and start over. People say they can, but the
past clings like regrets, the air whispers of promises waiting their
fulfilment and music stations and TV shows blaze out of windows
against the light as much as the dark.
A town too small for a magician. A town
in need of one.
I walk, the magic sending out whispers
of its own. Easing pains, shifting griefs, lessening the load of
living. For a time, for a short while. Breathing space in which
people can breathe again. I move, and the world changes with each
movement. Small things, in small ways. I gather silence and shadows
about me so no one sees me, walk the town twice with slow steps. I
could do more.
I have done far more in my time.
Shifted time and space, burned new patterns into the old skin of the
world. But each time costs, and costs again, and I pay and I pay
until some days – not today, but some – it feels that all I am is
a payment. Cashing cheques until the bills come due. And if I were to
stop, to bind myself to one place – I don’t know when another
would wander. How far they’d go. How long they would last in their
wandering. So I hold the burden, and I walk, and I touch the town in
all the small ways I dare to.
Magicians help, but it never feels like
enough. The world pushes against magic, reality resists the weight of
dreams. We do what we can, tell ourselves it is what we must. We
don’t dare to be more, for fear of the bill that would come to. For
the price that others would pay. I fix two cars, continue to walk.
Some days I want to stop. Just be still, taking root like a tree, a
giving and a receiving. Finding balance in a world that offers none,
that insists I be a balance for others.
It’s been so long since I’ve been
just me, and not the magician as well. But I have promises to keep,
and oaths to hold onto. I can’t get go of the magic, I can’t
cling onto it too tight. So I walk a third time, easing more pains on
my way back to the RV. Charlie and Jay are having a tickle-war, and
part of me wants to join. To relax. But I can’t let my guard down.
Not around Jay.
Not knowing what I know.
Because I made a promise, and I intend
to keep it.
Friday, October 16, 2015
Jay Privileges
“I’d strangle him if I thought he’d
notice,” I mutter, but not so low that the wandering magician
doesn’t hear me. “Where is Jay, anyway?”
“Finding a cold that lost its host.
If left alone, it might mutate.”
I stare at the magician. “The word
‘might’ is doing a lot of heavy lifting in that, isn’t it?”
He smiles at that and sips his coffee
across the table. The coffee shop isn’t crowded, but no one is
paying us attention. Possibly my being a god-eater, or a ward on his
part. Or pure chance, for all I know. “I thought you might need to
talk. You’ve been pressing the kid a bit hard the last two days.”
“Right. You know what white privilege
is?”
“I’m a magician. We know all about
privilege,” he says mildly.
I count to ten. “You know what I
mean.”
“I do, Charlie. But I’m not sure
Jay can.”
“Pardon me?”
“Jay senses bindings, the ways in
which things are connected together, how bindings flow between people
and groups. And he does this through time as well as space. Tell him
a parent is hurting a child, and he’ll sense the bindings backwards
and forwards, sideways and across – how the parent was hurt, how
their child might hurt others. Ways the bindings shift and flow, how
other bindings touch and mutate each other. He had a kind of
hindsight and foresight we simply can’t
have.” He has another sip of his coffee. “Jay has enough trouble
differentiating humans of different sexes, let alone genders or skin
tones. To him, we’re all human. Different, yes, but far more
similar than we are ever different.”
“I
can tell different dog breeds apart,” I say flatly.
“And
yet you
can understand why it is necessary to neuter a dog. Could you explain
that to a dog in a way that makes sense?” he asks, magician-soft.
“In a way they could
accept?”
I
stare at him. “What?”
“Jay
might see what we call privilege. And he might understand why it is
necessary, though
not in any way we’d
understand, not in any way we’d accept or make sense of. And, I
imagine, definitely not in
any way he could articulate without using the word Jaysome a lot.
Strength is an accident
arising out of the weakness of others, Charlie. It’s something one
has, and not always something one is clever enough to refuse. Jay has
to wear his innocence like armour, or he would see far too much about
the world. Including the parts we never want to admit.”
“Like
when someone claims privilege is necessary because we neuter dogs?”
I snap.
“I
can say what I wish, but you choose what you want to hear. How you
interpret my words, whether you hear what is behind them,” he says
as he finishes his coffee. “I
am saying that Jay simply can’t explain how he sees the world
without hurting us, without failing language because language always
fails. Why else would we have poets, if not to chart such regions? I
chose the worse explanation and metaphors I could think up, and they
explained and said nothing at all. Jay would be even worse at trying
to articulate his own truths in any way we would be prepared to hear,
let alone accept.”
The magician
stands. “You know the saying that there are three sides to any
story?”
“Yours,
mine, the truth. What of it?” I say as I stand.
“Jay’s
side is probably as close to truth as one can get. And the truth is
rarely pleasant and never kind. If he articulated how he truly sees
human who aren’t us, you’d probably never see him the same way
again. That
you are his friend matters,
Charlie, more than trying to understand issues of privilege and he
would rather have you and I as friends than be forced toward truths
he has no desire to ever know.”
“You
make it sound like a burden.”
“All
curses are, even if they look like gifts from the outside.” And he
walks away without looking back.
I get
more water for my tea, and I sit. And wait for Jay. And I have no
idea what I am going to say at all.
It
turns out
that I
just need to offer a hug.
Sunday, October 11, 2015
Nanowrimo 2015
8000 words of notes (and pre-stories) so far. Some of which is trying to get my brain to stop coming up with scenes for nano. The plan this year is two nanos. The third volume of the magician series novels, called Lagan Magics, and then a space opera sci-fi story called Peace Crimes.
The former is about the wandering magician curing Jay's blindness, a god attempting to take over the world and finally an encounter with the Order that made god-eaters. It wraps up a lot of stories, sets the stage for the future of the characters and is intended to end the series. I will definitely do more short stories in it, but I think that will end the novels. Possibly.
The latter is a space opera about humans and aliens, about wars and the methods to win them. At the core, it's about the monsters people create and the fear that engenders worse monsters. And about how one can judge a society not by how it treats the least among them, but by now it treats those it doesn't admit exist at all.
The former is about the wandering magician curing Jay's blindness, a god attempting to take over the world and finally an encounter with the Order that made god-eaters. It wraps up a lot of stories, sets the stage for the future of the characters and is intended to end the series. I will definitely do more short stories in it, but I think that will end the novels. Possibly.
The latter is a space opera about humans and aliens, about wars and the methods to win them. At the core, it's about the monsters people create and the fear that engenders worse monsters. And about how one can judge a society not by how it treats the least among them, but by now it treats those it doesn't admit exist at all.
Thursday, October 01, 2015
“Honcho.”
I turn slowly as Jay comes out of his
small bedroom in the RV. His face is paler than normal, and he’s
not wearing his dark glasses or carrying his case, unseeing eyes wide
and filled with broken light that seemed more fractured than normal.
“Kiddo,” I say carefully, because
there is something in his voice.
“I’ve seen you do things,” he
says. “Big things, even breaking time because some people were
really mean –” and he doesn’t say it as meany, doesn’t call
me jaysome “– but I’ve been listening to the news and – and –
and –.”
“I know,” I say softly.
“You didn’t –. You haven’t –.”
He falls silent, pain a spasm across his face.
“There are limits, Jay. To what I can
do, no matter how angry I am, no matter how much power I draw forth.
Magicians only touch the local area around them, because once an
event is big, once it’s echoes are too large, magic isn’t enough
anymore. The more people who know an event happened, the harder it is
to change it. And the more dangerous it can be for everyone
concerned. Sit,” I say softly, and he sits beside me in the table.
“There was a shooting of students not long enough ago, and people
started with conspiracies. Ugly ideas, that it was all actors, that
it wasn’t real. Perhaps because a magician tried to unmake it and
failed to do so. Grief echoes in odd directions, and conspiracies are
a comfort to those who want to see order in the universe. To have
some group to blame. It’s not always like that, but sometimes –
sometimes all magic does it make things worse.”
“I can do big bindings,” Jay offers
up very softly.
“For votes?” I ask, since he’s
been obsessed over that for days. It doesn’t win even the hint of a
grin. I reach an arm around him gently. “I know you could. But
where would you stop, Jay? If you stopped every bad bindings, if you
unmade every broken binding in the world, people wouldn’t be people
anymore. They might be better, but they wouldn’t be them
anymore.”
“But
– but –.” He trembles, and buries his head against my arm. “I
want to fix things,” he whispers, and it has more force than some
screams.
“Power
has limits, Jay, or it would be something else entirely. Even you
have limits,” I say as softly as he whispered, knowing he can hear
me. “Sometimes all we can do is pick up the pieces after events,
and try to help make a world where they don’t happen again. Every
day you make a friend, you change the world. The sad part is that we
always know when we fail. We don’t always know when we succeed,
because if we do it’s often quiet, soft, gentle. All we can
do is hope the successes outlast the failures. That people can grow
from loss, even if they never should have to grow in such ways at
all.”
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