essaysbysean.blogspot.com
My last two posts were long and dense,
so:
Here are three pieces from my Friday
Freefall group. We are a cheerful bunch, where we choose a “prompt” and
then everybody “freefalls” by writing swiftly without second
thoughts or revising. Then we go around the table reading our stuff out loud. Each week, everybody
wonders how I will turn a prompt into a science fiction piece.
Everything today is first-person. Two
celebrate prairie life, winter and stampede, old trapper and young
physics nerd. The middle piece, about exploring a mysterious
building, takes place in the future. Yes, I made it science fiction.
Prompt-(celebrate the) solitude
The foothills had a new blanket of
snow. The wind fluttered, never quite dying down. The sky was half
overcast, which I decided meant no snow on this new day. Good,
because I couldn’t take anymore. My nephew was running my trap
line, my niece had my old cabin, and what was I to do? I would enjoy
God’s good land. I was retired, and I deserved it. Tromp, tromp,
tromp across the fresh snow—a little icy, if truth be told. But
there was no one to tell it to. Down a little hill and along some
brush. No friendly rabbits. No sound of birds. Up to another rise and
along a long expanse of ground. I’d surprised some grouse along
here, a few times, a few years ago—heck, a decade ago. Time had
fled somewhere, and people I know had all fled too.
Tromp, tromp, tromp. In the Iliad their
shades were grabbed and they went groaning down to Hades. I guess all
the Greeks hated winter. It wasn’t bad for me but, under the winter
sun, there was no one to turn to and say, “I wonder what Ajax and
Achilles would say?” or “If I have to tromp around I’d rather
talk to Hector and Paris than to the Greeks.” No, no scholars in
this white cold solitude.
I hate it when my hands are cold and
there’s nobody around. But the land abides. I could arc around and
by mid-day I’d be at the old cabin. I bet it would be warm with my
niece baking apple pie. Oh boy!
prompt—I got
it
It’s a spooky awesome building, with
stone fascia and flush dark windows, more squat than tall, raising up
to five or six levels. The colors are more than light gray and dark
grey windows; there are also rich vermillion, scarlet, and
ultra-violet peeping at the edge of perception. What mad eye framed
this fearful edifice? I approached with the same feelings as its
fractured face. We were both beyond cubism—I felt awe, fear,
rejection, mystery, gloom and a glimpse of a world that maybe I
didn’t want to know about.
Surrounded by a large expanse of half
dead grass, in a never-developed industrial park (or so I assumed)
the building squatted devoid of any human touches. No one sauntered
out to any picnic tables, no cheerful deliverymen. Only silence. The
front doors were armour-glass, dusty. I felt a chill shoving the door
open but I really wanted to know. Why? Who? What was this place doing
here?
Somewhere a generator hummed, the
lights shone, but none of the people this sort of place attracts were
around. The lobby desk had a dead rubber plant. Maybe this place
preferred plastic plants. I don’t get it. I moved about, walking
silently, taking in the pictures on the wall. I saw a Martian
landscape picture I recognized, by one that I didn’t, by a Martian
crawler, by one with people in orange jumpsuits posing in front of a
crawler. Another landscape, and then a big portrait of a man I had
seen in childhood. It was Dick Branson.
Was this his place? He was certainly
the sort of visionary to build it. You never heard of him since those
quick plague years, but yes, if he was part of the crew that brought
the plague back then that would explain a lot. I got it. What a sad,
sad answer to this mystery building.
Prompt-fake it till you feel it
Don’t you just hate this stupid
stampede? A German blundered into the comic store and said, in his
immortal words, “This store is the only good thing about this silly
stampede.” So of course we had to write down his words and put them
on a sign: Stampede Sale!
I like when Joss Whedon made his movie
about the far off frontier planets. People had horses, but… If
you’re going to make an action movie, you have to have a hover-car
chase! And so they did, while firing their six-shooters.
Do you know why English literature is
not popular? No ray guns! No car chases or explosions. Now, what’s
up with that? At least in the comics old Aunt Agatha will swing a
mean samurai sword.
So every year we nerds have to endure
stampede. At least there’s lots of beer. Ya, but you can swig beer
at a Star Trek convention—at least there’ll be one on the
following weekend. At lot of guests come to the CON after using
Stampede as an appetizer.
My friend—the lady who always goes as
Princess Lea (complete with slave costume) tells me to just fake it
until you feel it.
So here I am, with a physics degree,
master of the dark forces, responsible for twelve gigajoule servers,
and you want me to feel like, “yee-haw”? I’d rather be on a
see-saw. Let’s wear our gothic clothes over to the park—oh you
make such a fine Lolita— and go sit on the teeter-totter.
Sean Crawford
Calgary
July
2015
Footnote: Do you want more such
fiction, or do you only want my serious essays?
I love your fiction and your essays. Keep up the great work!
ReplyDeleteThank you Cindy for your feedback. I feel heartened to keep at it.
ReplyDelete