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The Land Beyond Summer
The Land Beyond Summer is posted for entertainment purposes only and no part of it may be crossposted to any other datafile base, conference, news group, email list, or website without written permission of Pulpless.Comtm.
Copyright © 1996 by Brad Linaweaver. All rights reserved.
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
WHO SETS THE RULES
zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzplop! Fay heard a
man fishing with an expensive rod and reel. Emerging from behind
one of the structures in which the Klave turtles exlored
relationships on the half shell, she saw a larger body of water
than had been visible before. It was a perfect circle, the same
as the ponds in which the the turtles swam, but the water was a
richer shade of blue.
At first she couldn't see the fisherman; only part of his
line and a yellow plastic floater came into view as she walked
the circle. Odd clumps of the grey material (she still
remembered how much she disliked the taste) were all over the
place, some of the mounds as high as six feet. The fisherman
stood behind one.
Everyone in Fay's party was walking casually in the same
direction. She assumed that it was all right that she was sort
of out in front. She saw the man first. He was pale and thin,
with a sunken chest and a posture that did nothing to flatter
what was good in his features. Dark circles under his eyes
completed the effect. He looked more skeletal in his own way
than did the Tabriks.
"Hello!" boomed the hearty voice of Mr. Wynot. "Why if it
isn't good old Mr. Brine, Assistant Treasurer to Mrs. Norse."
Fay wondered if there were anyone in this peculiar world besides
important personages. There seemed to be an actual population of
Tabriks, but when it came to normal looking humans -- and normal
animal life, for that matter -- it was a very underpopulated
environment. She'd started missing the variety of rich odors
that she had taken for granted back home.
"Look what he's wearing!" shrieked Jennifer, pointing a
trembling finger at a white button on the lapel of the double-
breasted jacket that hung about his narrow frame. Mr. Wynot and
the others seemed just as upset.
"Oh dear," commented the man, putting down his fishing
equipment. His hand went to the button on which could be seen
one lonely mark in jagged black lines: the letter M.
"The symbol of the evil one," moaned the Tabrik leader.
Mr. Brine had removed the button and replaced it, only now
it was quite different. He'd turned it around so that it showed
the letter: W. In a flustered voice, Mr. Brine stuttered,
"I - I'm sti- still wearing one of your campaign but-buttons, Mr.
Wynot." Then he got hold of himself. "Please forgive my
carelessness."
Everyone immediately relaxed, except Fay. The more she was
around these people, the more they started seeming like adults
from the old homeworld. Little kids gave her a pain, but nothing
frustrated her more than the way grownups (or however they styled
themselves) could go completely crazy over absolutely nothing.
Feeling a rubbing against her leg, she looked down at Kitnip
who winked at her! She hadn't known that cats could wink.
"I know how you feel," said the cat. "I always know when
you're tense like this. Except that how you feel right now is
how I feel about all humans ... most of the time."
Jennifer, smiling prettily, entered the fray. "Oh, I'm so
embarrassed," she said. "What must you think of us."
"What's this all about?" asked Wynot.
"It's my fault," said Brine. "I'm always making stupid
mistakes. My wife says I'm the greatest fool who ever lived; and
that I never behave properly and that I apologize too much. I
know it's stupid when I start apologizing for my apologies, but
somehow I can't help myself. And then...." He sighed at this
point, paying no attention to the surprised expressions
surrounding him. "There's nothing left to do but go fishing."
Mr. Wynot removed his helmet and wiped his brow. Fay was
sure that if there'd been a sun in the sky he would have taken
this opportunity to squint at it. "Now, now," he began, "I'm
always interested in hearing about other people's domestic
difficulties. Gives me a better perspective on how fortunate I
am with dear old Mrs. Wynot. We get on splendidly. Of course,
we only see each other every full rotation of the cosmos, but
absence makes the heart grow fonder and all that. Still and all,
before I lose everyone's attention, I should like to ask you,
dear sir, just what is it you characterize as your fault?"
"The button!" observed Jennifer. "We've all behaved badly
just now, and I'm to blame for starting it."
Fay laughed. "Well, it seems a big fuss over getting a
letter of the alphabet upside down. It's only a black mark on a
white circle, after all."
Kitnip meowed. Before the cat had ever spoken in clear
sentences, she had shown a knack for mimicking human speech,
using shorter and longer sounds, and a rising emphasis that for
all the world seemed like a asking a question. She made cat
sounds rarely enough in this world that Fay took it as a very
personal message to herself.
Fay bent down, and listened to the cat's advice: "Perhaps
you should drop this subject, Fay. I seem to remember our world
has nothing to brag about. People kill each other over symbols,
instead of something reasonable like food and shelter. Once I
remember how your father nearly foamed at the mouth when he saw a
teenager on a motorcycle wearing a T-shirt that had a white
circle with a few black marks on it."
"My goodness," remarked Fay. She could think of nothing
else to say.
There is no telling how long this conversation might have
gone on had they not had their attention distracted by something
far more interesting than an exercise in polemics. A red cloud
appeared out of nowhere and began heading in their direction.
Remembering the cloud that Malak had sent against them on the
stone mountain, Fay was afraid that he was launching another
attack. She began to run when Jennifer reached out and caught
her by the arm.
"It's all right," said Jennifer, "it's not what you think."
The cloud fell upon them ... except that it was not a cloud
after all. Thousands of ladybirds surrounded them, tickling
their arms and faces as they brushed past them. And all that Fay
could think of was how just a short time before she had been
wondering over the dearth of animal life in the Land of the
Seasons.
"My goodness!" she said again, and this time with more
feeling. The last of the birds fluttered away. They were
identical to the terrestrial variety.
"I've got a great idea," said Jennifer. Let's go for a
little dip." She began removing her dress.
"I don't have a bathing suit," said Fay.
"What's a bathing suit?" asked Jennifer, whose remarkable
grasp of the English language and its rich vocabulary had failed
her for the first time in her acquaintance with the girl from
earth.
"Uh, it's not important," muttered Fay, noticing that
everyone else was starting to disrobe except for the Tabrik who
didn't wear clothes. Although she hadn't given the matter a lot
of thought before now, she found her eyes irresistably drawn to
the point on the Tabrik's body were the two legs met. Her
curiosity was rewarded with much of nothing. She would refer to
the Tabrik as an it except there was an ineffable male quality
about him. All the Tabriks seemed identical. There was nothing
remotely female about any of them.
But there was no question about the sexes of Mr. Wynot and
Jennifer who seemed to be in a race to see who could take their
clothes off the fastest. If she'd been asked one short week ago
what would be one of her most important concerns after her
parents disappeared, and she and her brother were dumped in
another universe, she would not rank modesty very high on the
list. Which only goes to show the limitations of self-knowledge.
She thought that when she had put her top back on, she
wouldn't have to go through this again. She started undressing,
but very slowly. If she could only go slowly enough, maybe she
could talk herself into it. When she was a little girl she
hadn't minded taking her clothes off for baths or to change
clothes no matter who was in the room.
Then had come a day when Mom put a firm stop to all that.
Fay was surprised when she realized that Mom had been giving her
little hints that she should start worrying about such matters.
Fay wasn't much better at picking up on hints than Dad was about
a million other things. At least Fay had the excuse of being a
little girl. Fathers didn't have excuses.
And speaking of excuses, Fay was going to have to come up
with one or strip down with her new friends. She did want to go
swimming. Folding her top, she placed it neatly on top of her
bag, and then fumbled for the buttons on her shorts. Mr. Wynot
in the nude didn't look much more ridiculous than he did with
his clothes on. Jennifer was radiantly beautiful. Fay wondered
if she would ever look that good. One could always hope.
Mr. Brine was still fishing. He put down his rod for a
moment, removed his jacket, shook it out, then put it on again!
Fay had the impression that the man was cold even though it was a
warm.
"I'll finish up here in a moment," he said in a sad voice.
"I don't want to be in your way. Besides, I must help the
Tabriks count the latest harvest of Klaven eggs."
Fay was down to her panties, hoping for a last minute
reprieve. Maybe she could go swimming like this. It wouldn't
take long for them to dry out afterwards. She only hoped she
wouldn't give offense for not going all the way.
If Dad were here, he'd be teasing her to join in the fun and
be uninhibited. She realized that in this he was not typical of
most fathers. Mom and he had enjoyed more arguments as a result.
Claire was ten years younger than Russell, and had missed what he
referred to in reverential tones as "The Sixties." Whenever he
was in one of those moods, Mom would burst his balloon by
throwing around words like "AIDS" and "Drugs." She said all
those things most non-reverentially.
Just thinking about her parents put a lump in her throat.
She remembered the feel and smell of her mother's hair after
they'd shampooed together. She remembered helping look for one
of Mom's contact lenses and how it looked like a drop of water in
the white sink. She remembered Dad's aftershave lotion: Old
Spice, and too many other things.
Better to forget, to think about anything else. Defiantly,
she took off her panties and threw them with the rest of her
clothes. It had to be coincidence what happened next.
The smooth surface of the water was broken by bubbles the
size of small trailer homes. Simultaneously the fishing line
went taut and almost pulled the rod from Mr. Brine's hands. Then
something monstrous rose from the lake.
It was the biggest living thing Fay had yet seen, a cross
between a fish and a spider, looming over all of them as if a
construction project by an insane insect. The fishing line ended
in the monster's jaws, dangling as if a thread. Kitnip hissed
quite reasonably.
Grotesque as it looked, the worst part was how it moved --
by inhaling tons of air through its horribly gasping mouth and
then circulating the air through its long legs that were hollow.
The whooshing sound set up a high pitched squeal that made Fay's
ears feel like they were about to burst. She clasped her hands
over her ears but she couldn't shut out the terrible sound.
Then the monster began to move. The air funneled out
through the legs, churning the water beneath the abomination.
There was something very odd about seeing something that size
actually hovering over the water. Then it began to run right at
them.
Screaming, Mr. Brine threw down his fishing rod and fled
with an awkward gait not much more graceful than the monster.
The others were rooted to the spot, staring dumbfounded at the
sight.
"We've got to make something to fight it," shouted the
Tabrik leader, squatting down and plunging his long, delicate
hands into one of the gray mounds of squamous material that
studded the beach.
"Are you crazy?" cried Mr. Wynot, his white belly flopping
as he grabbed at this clothes. They were all coming out of their
trance of terror as the cause grew nearer. "There's no time!
Only Mrs. Norse or Malak could activate the special substance
quickly enough!"
Fortunately for all concerned, Kitnip kept her head ... and
whiskers. "Use the special pine cones," she said to Fay.
"Always listen to cats in emergencies," agreed Jennifer,
rushing over to help Fay who was already opening the sack.
"Wish I had hands," said Kitnip. Many the time Fay had
thought the cat did have a pair she kept hidden somewhere --
especially when she'd open doors.
Fay and Jennifer threw their first two cones in perfect
unison. The spiny missiles curved upward in a graceful arc and
connected with the target at almost the same moment.
The explosions were gratifyingly spectacular: KA-BLAAAAAM
and PAH-BOOOOOOOOOM!
The monster answered with a sound of its own:
ssssssssssssssssRRRRRRRREEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE!
The only drawback to this cacophony was that the monster
kept on coming, putting Fay in mind of a landlord with an
eviction notice. What she really hated was that she was
screaming and couldn't seem to stop. Jennifer was already
grabbing for a new cone and Fay recovered enough to do the same.
Jennifer's bomb seemed to fall short of the target, but this
time did more damage than the previous explosions against the
main body of the thing. The new explosion was near one of the
legs and succeeded in throwing the monster off balance. As it
tipped forward, the head became a better target and Fay connected
with it on her next try. No more pine cones were needed after
that.
But as is so often the case, victory is rarely neat. The
monster was still moving from remaining air in the legs after Fay
had removed its head. And the carcass was still headed straight
for them.
The girls ran for safety not a moment too soon as the
spider-fish cracked up on shore. The cracking sounds it made
were like a combination of splintering lumber and ripping rubber.
It didn't smell very nice either. (At last Fay had some new
odors to notice.)
Fay's heart was beating so fast that she could hardly catch
her breath. Jennifer was breathing hard, too, and gasping out
short little sounds that turned out to be words when Fay's
breathing had slowed down sufficiently so that she could listen
again.
"I told ... you ... those cones ... should only ... be
used...."
"Against monsters," Fay finished.
"Yuck," observed Kitnip.
Jennifer helped Fay to stand and she again noticed they were
both naked. In the heat of excitement, she had completely
forgotten.
"Do we go swimming now?" asked Fay, laughing. Jennifer
responded by playfully pushing her in the direction of the water.
"Oh, Mr. Brine?" came Mr. Wynot's voice from behind one of
the grayish mounds.
"Yes," came a quivering voice from behind yet another mound.
"You'll be able to tell everyone you caught a big one
today."
***
Meanwhile, in a black fortress hidden between two snow
covered cliffs deep in the heart of Winter, Malak, the Dour One,
observed all that had recently transpired in the domain of
Spring. He was dressed in purple robes, in the manner of the
ancient Caesars of earth, except the material of his clothing was
woven of a much warmer material. It was a really smart outfit.
The way he kept up with all Four Seasons, and his home world
as well, was by means of television sets; and video recorders for
when he couldn't schedule the time to see a certain event
contemporaneously. But as he had just caused the visitation of
the water monster, he'd watched that one live.
"Yes, dear Fay," he said to the flickering screen, "I'll get
you, my granddaughter, and your little cat, too!"
One of his slaves nodded so vigorously that a thin line of
drool fell from his mouth onto a copy of The Book of the
Seasons, the same book that Mrs. Norse had shown Clive. There
were only two copies of the book in all existence. They were
identical in all respects except that Lord Malak's copy now had
an itty bitty little stain of saliva at the exact center of the
silver design on the cover.
There was enough of Grandfather's mind left, at least enough
of the French side, to deeply regret waste. The little creature
that had just drooled on his most cherished possession had
required time and effort to create. He Who Was Malak thought
about the effort he'd put into the little creature -- he really
did -- as he rubbed at the wet spot on the cover of his copy of
The Book of the Seasons. He watched the wet spot become
larger. His eyebrow went up, the way it always did when he was
trying to exercise self control, as a little bit of silver thread
came a wee bit loose on his book.
Malak turned and took a good, long look at the four foot
high homunculus. The little guy was of the same design as the
jack-'o-lantern men of Autumn. Only the grey material-of-making
had a completely different texture here in Winter. The head was
blue-grey, as if a snowman's head. The little fella hadn't been
nearly as much trouble to make as the copy Malak had made of
himself. Now that had been hard work, but he destroyed it anyway
just to make a dramatic point with the old taking-the-head-off-
and-throwing-it routine. The first nightmare Clive ever had was
inspired by the Disney cartoon version of The Legend of Sleepy
Hollow, and Malak couldn't waste that knowledge.
Still, it was one thing to destroy for a purpose and another
to destroy out of spite. He carefully weighed his options and
made a decision.
"Hey there," he said, putting his arm around the creature,
"I should get around to giving all of you names someday. How'd
you like to be called Droopy or Grumpy or Snoopy or Snuffy, eh?"
The little guy looked up in awe at his maker and produced a
touch more drool. This was not a speaking model.
"Have you performed any useful tasks for me lately?" The
creature nodded. These beings were incapable of lying so Malak
knew he'd gotten some use out of the thing. And there's no doubt
that it would have been more cost effective to repair the
defective mouth than lead its owner over to the window with a
splendid view of icy wasteland under stark blue sky ... and then
push the little fellow out into the abyss.
"There's something to be said for spite," said Malak to the
stark scenery marking his domain.
Grandfather would never deliberately throw anything away.
Nor was the original Malak a natural spendthrift as he was still
using certain rocks as paperweights, all that remained of early
opponents. But Malak was vindictive in ways that Grandfather
could never approach. The more time anyone donned the guise of
Malak, the more Malak he became.
"That bitch Norse can't change the rules," he said to the
vault of heaven. "She knows it and I know it. Just because
she's defeated me every other time doesn't mean history, or her
story, will be the same this time! I only have to win one time
to get what I want. She has to win every time and that will
prove her undoing."
To a casual observer flying by the castle tower, it might
seem that Malak was talking to himself. In actuality, he was
addressing a tremendous pile of the grey stuff out of which both
he and his nemesis could create living beings. A lot had gone
into making the spider-fish, a complete washout. Even before his
hand touched it, the material possessed a rudimentary
consciousness, pulsating and trembling at every word.
Then again, maybe he was talking to himself.
"Rome wasn't built in a day, and a perfect hatred takes
tender loving care," he continued speaking to the quivering
sludge. "My stupid daughter and her no good husband were on the
way to a perfect divorce. They followed all the steps: love
replaced by indifference, indifference mutates into intolerance,
intolerance bubbles and boils until passion returns, only now we
have hate instead of love. Out of their negative energy will my
dreams come true!"
For a moment, Malak was almost happy. He went over to one
of the telvision monitors and brought up a picture of Mr. Gurney
lying on his stomach in the wheat field where the poor man had
collapsed from exhaustion. An ugly looking sunburn covered his
naked back. Malak let himself enjoy the picture, but just for a
moment because he didn't want to become hooked on the boob tube.
After congratulating himself on putting Dad in a world with
a sun in the sky, Malak brought up a picture of Mom. She was
sitting on the ground, leaning against one of the semi-
transparent walls. The little male figures continued jumping up
and down outside the radius of the walls. They would never grow
tired, although their duration was not forever. Eventually they
would simply disappear as they burned up from their exertions.
By that point, she would have so internalized them that their
physical presence would no longer be required.
Then he decided to tune in Clive and Fay. He gave them both
a cursory glance. Fay had recovered from the attack. Clive was
safe with Mrs. Norse. He couldn't make up his mind what to do
about the kids. He had a few options, based on one simple
requirement: the young Gurneys must be turned to his advantage
so that Norse would regret ever bringing them here.
He turned back to his gray pile of sludge and began kneading
the edges. As he worked, he resumed his soliloquy, enjoying the
squishing feeling of the muddy gook between his fingers: "Where
Mrs. Norse will make her mistake is in assuming I'll try the same
approach I've used every other time, trying to make one season
obliterate the rest while still maintaining its original
character. Besides, she expects I have a preference for Winter
to win."
There didn't seem to be any talking creations around to help
out at this point so he had to keep the ball rolling himself:
"Ah, but isn't that so, you might ask. Don't I want Winter to
win? That used to be true ... but not any longer! Here, let me
demonstrate."
Malak had been living alone for a long time and had come to
rely on himself for company. The fact that he incorporated
different people in himself was a big help.
After wiping his hands, he produced a fresh leaf from inside
his cloak, where it had remained unaltered since he picked it in
Summer. As he held it up to the window, he concentrated on the
beauty of its design. The leaf trembled in his hand, and then
went through all the metamorphoses of its life cycle: from
healthy green, to orange and gold as life slowly ebbed from it,
to a brown caricature of its orignal vitality ... and then it was
a frost covered outline, turning to powder, as if all the cold
outside Malak's castle had been thrust into the heart of the
leaf.
Malak talked some more: "That's what I can do now. But
when I'm through with my great experiment, the next leaf will
undergo a fifth state of existence, completely different from its
condition in the Four Seasons." He laughed in a manic way that
Grandfather would never have done. Grandfather never laughed.
"The Fifth Season is my great invention, not at all what
Norse and her stooges expect. And after I take care of them,
we'll see about bringing back the night."
He looked out the window at the blue patch of sky. "Night
for all the universes." He wasn't laughing now.
"Forever."
The Land Beyond Summer
The Land Beyond Summer is posted for entertainment purposes only and no part of it may be crossposted to any other datafile base, conference, news group, email list, or website without written permission of Pulpless.Comtm.
Copyright © 1996 by Brad Linaweaver. All rights reserved.
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
WHO SETS THE RULES
zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzplop! Fay heard a
man fishing with an expensive rod and reel. Emerging from behind
one of the structures in which the Klave turtles exlored
relationships on the half shell, she saw a larger body of water
than had been visible before. It was a perfect circle, the same
as the ponds in which the the turtles swam, but the water was a
richer shade of blue.
At first she couldn't see the fisherman; only part of his
line and a yellow plastic floater came into view as she walked
the circle. Odd clumps of the grey material (she still
remembered how much she disliked the taste) were all over the
place, some of the mounds as high as six feet. The fisherman
stood behind one.
Everyone in Fay's party was walking casually in the same
direction. She assumed that it was all right that she was sort
of out in front. She saw the man first. He was pale and thin,
with a sunken chest and a posture that did nothing to flatter
what was good in his features. Dark circles under his eyes
completed the effect. He looked more skeletal in his own way
than did the Tabriks.
"Hello!" boomed the hearty voice of Mr. Wynot. "Why if it
isn't good old Mr. Brine, Assistant Treasurer to Mrs. Norse."
Fay wondered if there were anyone in this peculiar world besides
important personages. There seemed to be an actual population of
Tabriks, but when it came to normal looking humans -- and normal
animal life, for that matter -- it was a very underpopulated
environment. She'd started missing the variety of rich odors
that she had taken for granted back home.
"Look what he's wearing!" shrieked Jennifer, pointing a
trembling finger at a white button on the lapel of the double-
breasted jacket that hung about his narrow frame. Mr. Wynot and
the others seemed just as upset.
"Oh dear," commented the man, putting down his fishing
equipment. His hand went to the button on which could be seen
one lonely mark in jagged black lines: the letter M.
"The symbol of the evil one," moaned the Tabrik leader.
Mr. Brine had removed the button and replaced it, only now
it was quite different. He'd turned it around so that it showed
the letter: W. In a flustered voice, Mr. Brine stuttered,
"I - I'm sti- still wearing one of your campaign but-buttons, Mr.
Wynot." Then he got hold of himself. "Please forgive my
carelessness."
Everyone immediately relaxed, except Fay. The more she was
around these people, the more they started seeming like adults
from the old homeworld. Little kids gave her a pain, but nothing
frustrated her more than the way grownups (or however they styled
themselves) could go completely crazy over absolutely nothing.
Feeling a rubbing against her leg, she looked down at Kitnip
who winked at her! She hadn't known that cats could wink.
"I know how you feel," said the cat. "I always know when
you're tense like this. Except that how you feel right now is
how I feel about all humans ... most of the time."
Jennifer, smiling prettily, entered the fray. "Oh, I'm so
embarrassed," she said. "What must you think of us."
"What's this all about?" asked Wynot.
"It's my fault," said Brine. "I'm always making stupid
mistakes. My wife says I'm the greatest fool who ever lived; and
that I never behave properly and that I apologize too much. I
know it's stupid when I start apologizing for my apologies, but
somehow I can't help myself. And then...." He sighed at this
point, paying no attention to the surprised expressions
surrounding him. "There's nothing left to do but go fishing."
Mr. Wynot removed his helmet and wiped his brow. Fay was
sure that if there'd been a sun in the sky he would have taken
this opportunity to squint at it. "Now, now," he began, "I'm
always interested in hearing about other people's domestic
difficulties. Gives me a better perspective on how fortunate I
am with dear old Mrs. Wynot. We get on splendidly. Of course,
we only see each other every full rotation of the cosmos, but
absence makes the heart grow fonder and all that. Still and all,
before I lose everyone's attention, I should like to ask you,
dear sir, just what is it you characterize as your fault?"
"The button!" observed Jennifer. "We've all behaved badly
just now, and I'm to blame for starting it."
Fay laughed. "Well, it seems a big fuss over getting a
letter of the alphabet upside down. It's only a black mark on a
white circle, after all."
Kitnip meowed. Before the cat had ever spoken in clear
sentences, she had shown a knack for mimicking human speech,
using shorter and longer sounds, and a rising emphasis that for
all the world seemed like a asking a question. She made cat
sounds rarely enough in this world that Fay took it as a very
personal message to herself.
Fay bent down, and listened to the cat's advice: "Perhaps
you should drop this subject, Fay. I seem to remember our world
has nothing to brag about. People kill each other over symbols,
instead of something reasonable like food and shelter. Once I
remember how your father nearly foamed at the mouth when he saw a
teenager on a motorcycle wearing a T-shirt that had a white
circle with a few black marks on it."
"My goodness," remarked Fay. She could think of nothing
else to say.
There is no telling how long this conversation might have
gone on had they not had their attention distracted by something
far more interesting than an exercise in polemics. A red cloud
appeared out of nowhere and began heading in their direction.
Remembering the cloud that Malak had sent against them on the
stone mountain, Fay was afraid that he was launching another
attack. She began to run when Jennifer reached out and caught
her by the arm.
"It's all right," said Jennifer, "it's not what you think."
The cloud fell upon them ... except that it was not a cloud
after all. Thousands of ladybirds surrounded them, tickling
their arms and faces as they brushed past them. And all that Fay
could think of was how just a short time before she had been
wondering over the dearth of animal life in the Land of the
Seasons.
"My goodness!" she said again, and this time with more
feeling. The last of the birds fluttered away. They were
identical to the terrestrial variety.
"I've got a great idea," said Jennifer. Let's go for a
little dip." She began removing her dress.
"I don't have a bathing suit," said Fay.
"What's a bathing suit?" asked Jennifer, whose remarkable
grasp of the English language and its rich vocabulary had failed
her for the first time in her acquaintance with the girl from
earth.
"Uh, it's not important," muttered Fay, noticing that
everyone else was starting to disrobe except for the Tabrik who
didn't wear clothes. Although she hadn't given the matter a lot
of thought before now, she found her eyes irresistably drawn to
the point on the Tabrik's body were the two legs met. Her
curiosity was rewarded with much of nothing. She would refer to
the Tabrik as an it except there was an ineffable male quality
about him. All the Tabriks seemed identical. There was nothing
remotely female about any of them.
But there was no question about the sexes of Mr. Wynot and
Jennifer who seemed to be in a race to see who could take their
clothes off the fastest. If she'd been asked one short week ago
what would be one of her most important concerns after her
parents disappeared, and she and her brother were dumped in
another universe, she would not rank modesty very high on the
list. Which only goes to show the limitations of self-knowledge.
She thought that when she had put her top back on, she
wouldn't have to go through this again. She started undressing,
but very slowly. If she could only go slowly enough, maybe she
could talk herself into it. When she was a little girl she
hadn't minded taking her clothes off for baths or to change
clothes no matter who was in the room.
Then had come a day when Mom put a firm stop to all that.
Fay was surprised when she realized that Mom had been giving her
little hints that she should start worrying about such matters.
Fay wasn't much better at picking up on hints than Dad was about
a million other things. At least Fay had the excuse of being a
little girl. Fathers didn't have excuses.
And speaking of excuses, Fay was going to have to come up
with one or strip down with her new friends. She did want to go
swimming. Folding her top, she placed it neatly on top of her
bag, and then fumbled for the buttons on her shorts. Mr. Wynot
in the nude didn't look much more ridiculous than he did with
his clothes on. Jennifer was radiantly beautiful. Fay wondered
if she would ever look that good. One could always hope.
Mr. Brine was still fishing. He put down his rod for a
moment, removed his jacket, shook it out, then put it on again!
Fay had the impression that the man was cold even though it was a
warm.
"I'll finish up here in a moment," he said in a sad voice.
"I don't want to be in your way. Besides, I must help the
Tabriks count the latest harvest of Klaven eggs."
Fay was down to her panties, hoping for a last minute
reprieve. Maybe she could go swimming like this. It wouldn't
take long for them to dry out afterwards. She only hoped she
wouldn't give offense for not going all the way.
If Dad were here, he'd be teasing her to join in the fun and
be uninhibited. She realized that in this he was not typical of
most fathers. Mom and he had enjoyed more arguments as a result.
Claire was ten years younger than Russell, and had missed what he
referred to in reverential tones as "The Sixties." Whenever he
was in one of those moods, Mom would burst his balloon by
throwing around words like "AIDS" and "Drugs." She said all
those things most non-reverentially.
Just thinking about her parents put a lump in her throat.
She remembered the feel and smell of her mother's hair after
they'd shampooed together. She remembered helping look for one
of Mom's contact lenses and how it looked like a drop of water in
the white sink. She remembered Dad's aftershave lotion: Old
Spice, and too many other things.
Better to forget, to think about anything else. Defiantly,
she took off her panties and threw them with the rest of her
clothes. It had to be coincidence what happened next.
The smooth surface of the water was broken by bubbles the
size of small trailer homes. Simultaneously the fishing line
went taut and almost pulled the rod from Mr. Brine's hands. Then
something monstrous rose from the lake.
It was the biggest living thing Fay had yet seen, a cross
between a fish and a spider, looming over all of them as if a
construction project by an insane insect. The fishing line ended
in the monster's jaws, dangling as if a thread. Kitnip hissed
quite reasonably.
Grotesque as it looked, the worst part was how it moved --
by inhaling tons of air through its horribly gasping mouth and
then circulating the air through its long legs that were hollow.
The whooshing sound set up a high pitched squeal that made Fay's
ears feel like they were about to burst. She clasped her hands
over her ears but she couldn't shut out the terrible sound.
Then the monster began to move. The air funneled out
through the legs, churning the water beneath the abomination.
There was something very odd about seeing something that size
actually hovering over the water. Then it began to run right at
them.
Screaming, Mr. Brine threw down his fishing rod and fled
with an awkward gait not much more graceful than the monster.
The others were rooted to the spot, staring dumbfounded at the
sight.
"We've got to make something to fight it," shouted the
Tabrik leader, squatting down and plunging his long, delicate
hands into one of the gray mounds of squamous material that
studded the beach.
"Are you crazy?" cried Mr. Wynot, his white belly flopping
as he grabbed at this clothes. They were all coming out of their
trance of terror as the cause grew nearer. "There's no time!
Only Mrs. Norse or Malak could activate the special substance
quickly enough!"
Fortunately for all concerned, Kitnip kept her head ... and
whiskers. "Use the special pine cones," she said to Fay.
"Always listen to cats in emergencies," agreed Jennifer,
rushing over to help Fay who was already opening the sack.
"Wish I had hands," said Kitnip. Many the time Fay had
thought the cat did have a pair she kept hidden somewhere --
especially when she'd open doors.
Fay and Jennifer threw their first two cones in perfect
unison. The spiny missiles curved upward in a graceful arc and
connected with the target at almost the same moment.
The explosions were gratifyingly spectacular: KA-BLAAAAAM
and PAH-BOOOOOOOOOM!
The monster answered with a sound of its own:
ssssssssssssssssRRRRRRRREEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE!
The only drawback to this cacophony was that the monster
kept on coming, putting Fay in mind of a landlord with an
eviction notice. What she really hated was that she was
screaming and couldn't seem to stop. Jennifer was already
grabbing for a new cone and Fay recovered enough to do the same.
Jennifer's bomb seemed to fall short of the target, but this
time did more damage than the previous explosions against the
main body of the thing. The new explosion was near one of the
legs and succeeded in throwing the monster off balance. As it
tipped forward, the head became a better target and Fay connected
with it on her next try. No more pine cones were needed after
that.
But as is so often the case, victory is rarely neat. The
monster was still moving from remaining air in the legs after Fay
had removed its head. And the carcass was still headed straight
for them.
The girls ran for safety not a moment too soon as the
spider-fish cracked up on shore. The cracking sounds it made
were like a combination of splintering lumber and ripping rubber.
It didn't smell very nice either. (At last Fay had some new
odors to notice.)
Fay's heart was beating so fast that she could hardly catch
her breath. Jennifer was breathing hard, too, and gasping out
short little sounds that turned out to be words when Fay's
breathing had slowed down sufficiently so that she could listen
again.
"I told ... you ... those cones ... should only ... be
used...."
"Against monsters," Fay finished.
"Yuck," observed Kitnip.
Jennifer helped Fay to stand and she again noticed they were
both naked. In the heat of excitement, she had completely
forgotten.
"Do we go swimming now?" asked Fay, laughing. Jennifer
responded by playfully pushing her in the direction of the water.
"Oh, Mr. Brine?" came Mr. Wynot's voice from behind one of
the grayish mounds.
"Yes," came a quivering voice from behind yet another mound.
"You'll be able to tell everyone you caught a big one
today."
***
Meanwhile, in a black fortress hidden between two snow
covered cliffs deep in the heart of Winter, Malak, the Dour One,
observed all that had recently transpired in the domain of
Spring. He was dressed in purple robes, in the manner of the
ancient Caesars of earth, except the material of his clothing was
woven of a much warmer material. It was a really smart outfit.
The way he kept up with all Four Seasons, and his home world
as well, was by means of television sets; and video recorders for
when he couldn't schedule the time to see a certain event
contemporaneously. But as he had just caused the visitation of
the water monster, he'd watched that one live.
"Yes, dear Fay," he said to the flickering screen, "I'll get
you, my granddaughter, and your little cat, too!"
One of his slaves nodded so vigorously that a thin line of
drool fell from his mouth onto a copy of The Book of the
Seasons, the same book that Mrs. Norse had shown Clive. There
were only two copies of the book in all existence. They were
identical in all respects except that Lord Malak's copy now had
an itty bitty little stain of saliva at the exact center of the
silver design on the cover.
There was enough of Grandfather's mind left, at least enough
of the French side, to deeply regret waste. The little creature
that had just drooled on his most cherished possession had
required time and effort to create. He Who Was Malak thought
about the effort he'd put into the little creature -- he really
did -- as he rubbed at the wet spot on the cover of his copy of
The Book of the Seasons. He watched the wet spot become
larger. His eyebrow went up, the way it always did when he was
trying to exercise self control, as a little bit of silver thread
came a wee bit loose on his book.
Malak turned and took a good, long look at the four foot
high homunculus. The little guy was of the same design as the
jack-'o-lantern men of Autumn. Only the grey material-of-making
had a completely different texture here in Winter. The head was
blue-grey, as if a snowman's head. The little fella hadn't been
nearly as much trouble to make as the copy Malak had made of
himself. Now that had been hard work, but he destroyed it anyway
just to make a dramatic point with the old taking-the-head-off-
and-throwing-it routine. The first nightmare Clive ever had was
inspired by the Disney cartoon version of The Legend of Sleepy
Hollow, and Malak couldn't waste that knowledge.
Still, it was one thing to destroy for a purpose and another
to destroy out of spite. He carefully weighed his options and
made a decision.
"Hey there," he said, putting his arm around the creature,
"I should get around to giving all of you names someday. How'd
you like to be called Droopy or Grumpy or Snoopy or Snuffy, eh?"
The little guy looked up in awe at his maker and produced a
touch more drool. This was not a speaking model.
"Have you performed any useful tasks for me lately?" The
creature nodded. These beings were incapable of lying so Malak
knew he'd gotten some use out of the thing. And there's no doubt
that it would have been more cost effective to repair the
defective mouth than lead its owner over to the window with a
splendid view of icy wasteland under stark blue sky ... and then
push the little fellow out into the abyss.
"There's something to be said for spite," said Malak to the
stark scenery marking his domain.
Grandfather would never deliberately throw anything away.
Nor was the original Malak a natural spendthrift as he was still
using certain rocks as paperweights, all that remained of early
opponents. But Malak was vindictive in ways that Grandfather
could never approach. The more time anyone donned the guise of
Malak, the more Malak he became.
"That bitch Norse can't change the rules," he said to the
vault of heaven. "She knows it and I know it. Just because
she's defeated me every other time doesn't mean history, or her
story, will be the same this time! I only have to win one time
to get what I want. She has to win every time and that will
prove her undoing."
To a casual observer flying by the castle tower, it might
seem that Malak was talking to himself. In actuality, he was
addressing a tremendous pile of the grey stuff out of which both
he and his nemesis could create living beings. A lot had gone
into making the spider-fish, a complete washout. Even before his
hand touched it, the material possessed a rudimentary
consciousness, pulsating and trembling at every word.
Then again, maybe he was talking to himself.
"Rome wasn't built in a day, and a perfect hatred takes
tender loving care," he continued speaking to the quivering
sludge. "My stupid daughter and her no good husband were on the
way to a perfect divorce. They followed all the steps: love
replaced by indifference, indifference mutates into intolerance,
intolerance bubbles and boils until passion returns, only now we
have hate instead of love. Out of their negative energy will my
dreams come true!"
For a moment, Malak was almost happy. He went over to one
of the telvision monitors and brought up a picture of Mr. Gurney
lying on his stomach in the wheat field where the poor man had
collapsed from exhaustion. An ugly looking sunburn covered his
naked back. Malak let himself enjoy the picture, but just for a
moment because he didn't want to become hooked on the boob tube.
After congratulating himself on putting Dad in a world with
a sun in the sky, Malak brought up a picture of Mom. She was
sitting on the ground, leaning against one of the semi-
transparent walls. The little male figures continued jumping up
and down outside the radius of the walls. They would never grow
tired, although their duration was not forever. Eventually they
would simply disappear as they burned up from their exertions.
By that point, she would have so internalized them that their
physical presence would no longer be required.
Then he decided to tune in Clive and Fay. He gave them both
a cursory glance. Fay had recovered from the attack. Clive was
safe with Mrs. Norse. He couldn't make up his mind what to do
about the kids. He had a few options, based on one simple
requirement: the young Gurneys must be turned to his advantage
so that Norse would regret ever bringing them here.
He turned back to his gray pile of sludge and began kneading
the edges. As he worked, he resumed his soliloquy, enjoying the
squishing feeling of the muddy gook between his fingers: "Where
Mrs. Norse will make her mistake is in assuming I'll try the same
approach I've used every other time, trying to make one season
obliterate the rest while still maintaining its original
character. Besides, she expects I have a preference for Winter
to win."
There didn't seem to be any talking creations around to help
out at this point so he had to keep the ball rolling himself:
"Ah, but isn't that so, you might ask. Don't I want Winter to
win? That used to be true ... but not any longer! Here, let me
demonstrate."
Malak had been living alone for a long time and had come to
rely on himself for company. The fact that he incorporated
different people in himself was a big help.
After wiping his hands, he produced a fresh leaf from inside
his cloak, where it had remained unaltered since he picked it in
Summer. As he held it up to the window, he concentrated on the
beauty of its design. The leaf trembled in his hand, and then
went through all the metamorphoses of its life cycle: from
healthy green, to orange and gold as life slowly ebbed from it,
to a brown caricature of its orignal vitality ... and then it was
a frost covered outline, turning to powder, as if all the cold
outside Malak's castle had been thrust into the heart of the
leaf.
Malak talked some more: "That's what I can do now. But
when I'm through with my great experiment, the next leaf will
undergo a fifth state of existence, completely different from its
condition in the Four Seasons." He laughed in a manic way that
Grandfather would never have done. Grandfather never laughed.
"The Fifth Season is my great invention, not at all what
Norse and her stooges expect. And after I take care of them,
we'll see about bringing back the night."
He looked out the window at the blue patch of sky. "Night
for all the universes." He wasn't laughing now.
"Forever."
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