Read Casserole Diplomacy and Other Stories Online
Authors: Various
Tags: #Sci Fi/Fantasy/Horror Anthology
of Cassiopeia. Their names on her tongue
are crystal—light made sound, a thoroughfare
of bells. Arcturus. Aldebaran.
And Vega of the Lyre—herself as heroine.
“Vega knows the stars.” Her husband claims
a share in her excitement, vicarious
and teasing. “No, don't say that.” Pained
by his intrusion, she blushes, shrugs
away his arm. He is no Perseus,
although she loves him. Her longings are
mute but stubborn, gleaming, nebulous.
A perfect marriage made of stars
beckons to her, sidereal, singular.
Diana
“Here, Mrs. D. I’ll turn the bed.
They say you’ll see the moon
from this direction.”
Poor old
thing. She’s just not
coming back from that last
treatment. It’s gone too far.
pain
dull apron
on abdomen
pain
remembered pain
like thick weight
of monthly blood
blood waiting
to be born
remember moon
seen when?
sixty years. We
lived somewhere
else else
where?
half full moon
D-shape
I remember
pregnant
wait I was
pregnant. Elsie?
moon a big belly too
pressed against
sky.
Elsie born
that night
remember
pain
The cataract clears. The iris opens.
A city stares into the black sky bowl.
One point on the western rim of cloud
turns to supple silver fabric—peau-de-soie
then lace, then filaments that trail long fingers
of desire after the escaping moon.
Diana
Look Mrs. D . . . A full moon.
I doubt she even hears us. Such
a pity—it’s just too late
for her to take this in. Hope
I don’t go like that.
aching
moon arc complete
as a crone’s
wheel complete
as a life flow
of silver flower
light
bud, bloom
splendid fruit
birth only
a beginning else
where
now the ache
of utter
contrast silver
against dark
arc spun end
to end
end over
end splendour
all the way
round.
Vega
Vega knew the stars—her secret dower
of pattern. But not these stars, incessant
rain of light, a pathless, brilliant flour
sifted on the night. Pattern irrelevant,
garbled, a wilderness of radiant
white noise.
“So, where’s your star?” Husband tries
to take her arm. “Where’s Vega?” Exuberant
he gazes up at star drifts. Tears fill her eyes.
“I told you—I don't know.” Her face shuts out the skies.
Nikki
Nikki, wake up.
See the stars.
Nikki struggles through muffling
layered sleep. Her world of muted days
and cloud-reflected city glow at night
has
vanished. Overhead
the stars hang near,
intense and lapidary, as though
the gem-encrusted fabric of the sky
drooped with their weight.
Wondering, she lifts her hand. Sudden
hunger makes her fingers curl,
coveting glory, coveting their fire.
Stars suddenly as real
as the fizz of soda pop, as close
as sparklers on her birthday cake.
Will they be here tomorrow?
No, just tonight.
Aren’t you a lucky girl
to see the stars
at least this once.
But luck drains out of Nikki's eyes,
like starlight through her small
plump fingers.
They won't be here
tomorrow?
The loss assaults her. Some birthright
snatched away before she knew
the heritage was hers. She is angry.
Her voice beats wings
above the reverent murmur of the crowd.
No!
No!
I want them again
tomorrow.
The stars sing back to her,
their voices incandescent.
Pale faces flower in the pricking flame
of starlight. The watchers seek
to memorize unearthly messages
ciphered by far-off suns and sent
across millennia.
Some among the multitude begin
to drowse and screen the dark
hollows of their mouths, heavy eyes
able to absorb only so much glory,
cups that fill too quickly.
But most cradle wonder like a quiet infant
all night in their arms, yearn upwards
to the moon’s bridge, to the stars’ black lake,
to the wide-set floodgates of the firmament
until the clouds come.
Originally published in On Spec
Fall 1994 Vol 6 No 3 #18
Alice Major
has published nine highly praised poetry collections and a book of essays, “Intersecting Sets: A Poet Looks at Science.” She served as the first poet laureate for Edmonton.
Robert Boyczuk
Magic!
Bertwold thought, grinding his teeth and staring at the castle wedged neatly—and quite impossibly—in the heart of the pass.
Nothing good ever comes of magic!
Beside him, Lumpkin, his crew chief, mined his nose abstractedly, evincing no interest whatsoever in the castle.
The two men stood at the juncture where the road turned from gravel to dirt. All work had ceased; picks, shovels and wheelbarrows lay in the long grass next to the idle road crew. Behind them the paving machine huffed in a quiet rhythm, its bellows rising and falling, as if it were a beast drifting off to sleep. The digging and grading machines had already been shut off and lay like giant, inanimate limbs on the road. Bertwold had fashioned them thus—in the shapes of human arms and legs—to assuage the King’s distrust of machines. But now their very forms irritated Bertwold, reminding him of all the hoops he had already had to jump through to win the Royal contract.
And now this.
Clasping his hands behind his back, Bertwold stared miserably at the castle.
Its outer walls were fashioned of basalt, rising seamlessly from the ground to a height of nearly ten rods. Each corner boasted a square tower surmounted by an enormous ivory statue. Curiously, all four of the carvings appeared to be of imperfect figures, each lacking one or more limbs. The statue on the nearest corner was missing a head and sporting two truncated stumps where there should have been arms. Within the castle itself, visible above the crenellations of the walls, were apical towers of coloured emerald and ruby glass; and between them, the tops of ovate domes that shone with the lustre of gold and sparkled with the cool radiance of silver. Thin, attenuated threads, the colour of flax, (walkways, Bertwold reckoned, though they were empty) wound round and connected the buildings in an intricate pattern that was both complex and beautiful to behold—and, he thought with a slight degree of irritation in his engineer’s mind—altogether impossible.
“How long has it been there?” he asked at last.
“We’re not sure, boss,” Lumpkin said. “It was there when we came out this morning to start work.”
“Have you sent anyone to . . .” Bertwold hesitated, not sure exactly what might be appropriate in this case. “. . . to, ah, ring the bell?”
“Well, no sir. I tried to order a man to do it, but they’re scared of its magic, you see . . .”
Turning to Lumpkin, Bertwold tapped him on the chest with his forefinger. “Then you go and find out who lives in that
thing
, and what they’re doing there. You, personally. Don’t send a labourer.” Lumpkin opened his mouth, as if to say something, but Bertwold cut him off. “Or I’ll find someone else who’s hungry for a promotion.” Lumpkin clamped his mouth shut. “In the meantime, I’ll get the men back to work. We’re still at least half a league from the castle, and there’s plenty of road yet to lay. As far as I know, there’s nothing in the contract that prevents your men from working in the presence of the supernatural.”
Lumpkin, now a shade paler, nodded and swallowed hard. Spinning on his heel, he stumbled away, the gravel crunching under his boot soles.
Bertwold sighed. He had not counted on this when he had won the king’s commission to build the greatest road the land had ever seen. He looked at the castle, imagining the pass as it had been yesterday, and the day before, and every day before for as long as men remembered: a wide, inviting V of sky that gave onto the tablelands beyond.
Why would anyone want to drop a castle there?
Lady Miranda peered through the arrow slit.
Ants
, she thought, watching as a clutch of figures emerged from a tent and scattered, busy with their unfathomable, pointless tasks.
Insects
.
She looked at her right hand, then at her left, and pursed her lips. Between the two there weren’t enough fingers remaining to end this quickly. Perhaps if she asked Poopsie . . .
No
, she thought,
he’d never agree
. He was still off somewhere, sulking. It had been as much as she could do to convince him to move the castle from that horrid swamp to where they were now, even though he’d undershot their destination by over a hundred leagues. If she had been the one with the talent for moving, it would have been done right; but her talent was transubstantiation, of little use in such endeavours. She knew he should have offered his entire leg and not just the shin, for the gods were capricious and not entirely to be trusted. But that was Poopsie, always trying to cut corners, to save a finger here, a toe there, and ending up paying a much higher price for it in the long run. She’d wanted to warn him, but had, with difficulty, held her tongue. Now he’d have to go an entire arm or the other leg to unstick them if they ever wanted to leave this absurd spot.
And they must.
The mortals would never leave them alone until both she and Poopsie had been whittled down to their trunks. Humans
were
ants, swarming over their betters and bearing them down by dint of sheer numbers. Crush a hundred and a thousand would return. Their thickheadedness was simply incomprehensible.