Authors: Aaron Starmer
They hiked at a steady pace, the sun wicking the moisture from Alistair's damp clothes. The field went on for at least a mile. No change. The yellow grass sashayed back and forth and tickled Alistair's bare arms. He was wearing jeans and a T-shirt and white socks with red stripes, his standard uniform from home. He wore no shoes, because he came here with no shoes. He was beginning to regret the fact. Luckily the earth was soft and free of stabby things.
Finally, a patch of trees appeared in the distance, the first sign that this world was not all pastures and tribesmen, and right before the trees, a perfectly round rock came into view. The rock was about twice Alistair's height and it rested in the field like a marble dropped from the heavens. The men approached the rock cautiously, keeping a buffer around it as they circled, but the dragonflies led Alistair straight to it.
There were images on the rock's surface. Bears, bulls, lions, and horses. Cave paintingsâAlistair had seen similar ones in books. Only these didn't seem ancient. They looked fresh.
“We honor you and bid that you release the night,” the tall man said. “Then we will feast.”
A feast where I will see her?
Alistair wanted to ask, but it was as if the dragonflies were speaking for him. “Yes, sir,” he whispered instead.
The tall man pointed with his spear at the rock. The others followed suit, pointing if not with their spears, then with their fingers. Alistair waited for more instructions, but none arrived. So the dragonflies took the reins, guided him ever closer to the rock. The men let out deep, satisfied grunts. Alistair leaned in and examined the animal paintings.
They were shimmering. They were trembling. It was more than a symptom of the sunlight; it was as if tiny creatures lived in the pigment and were wiggling their way to the surface. Alistair looked back at his companions and saw that their weapons were poised. A bad omen. And yet it was irresistible. The paintings begged to be touched, like feathery scarves hanging in a costume store, like a freshly shaved head. Alistair reached out and placed his fingers on the rock and, as if startled from their sleep, the images jumped to attention and scampered from his hand.
Running, leaping, galloping, the silhouetted creatures circled the surface of the stone. They were more than paintings. These things were suddenly alive, and Alistair stood there transfixed. A lion tackled a horse and tore into its throat as the other horses scattered, only to be confronted by the bears. The bears stood on their hind legs, defending their corner of the stone with drawn claws and teeth. The bulls, swept up in the commotion, scuffed their hooves and prepared to charge, and when their charge began, there was no stopping it.
Alistair felt them before he saw them and tumbled to his back as the bulls leapt off the stone and emerged in the field, three-dimensional and fully grown. They weren't made of flesh, though. Their bodies had a solid black sheen, and their joints, horns, and eyes consisted of twinkling stars. It was as if they were carved from chunks of the cosmos. As the bulls plowed through the field, the dragonflies scattered. Finally in control of his movements, Alistair bolted, worried about what might leap out next.
The horses leapt next, followed by the lions, and finally the bears. Their bodies were also black and speckled with stars. None of the animals seemed particularly interested in Alistair as they fled the rock. Alistair's touch had lit a fire in them, and they seemed determined to burn, burn away.
The men were far more prepared than Alistair. They had spread their ranks and were now running among the bulls at speeds that didn't seem humanly possible. The two men with slings were twirling them so fast that blurry halos appeared over their heads, and when they snapped their wrists to deploy their weapons, disc-shaped stones rocketed out and struck a bull on the head with a one-two punch.
Thwack! Thwack!
The bull collapsed to the ground.
Before the lions or bears could reach the wounded prey, the four men with spears had it surrounded. The tall man lanced the bull's neck, and its body jerked for a second, then deflated. Blood, red and true, spilled out. It was a stunningly fast kill.
Ahead of them, the other bulls lifted their hooves. The confines of the rock couldn't hold them and neither could the confines of the ground. They dug those hooves into the air and took to the sky, where they charged right at the sun. The other animals streamed past the band of men and took to the sky as well, their dark and sparkling bodies amassing above like a murder of hulking crows. They roared and growled their way upward, speeding and then spreading, blacking out the green tinge until the sky was their bodies and their bodies were the sky. The sun faded and dimpled and transformed into a moon.
It was no longer daytime. Alistair had set free the night.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
Nighttime back home meant damp, cool air. It meant solitary sets of headlights slicing through the black and illuminating the red reflectors on spinning bike wheels. It was almost endless in the winter, sixteen hours of darkness sometimes. Home for Alistair was Thessaly, a small town in northern New York, the sort of place where secrets mattered, where you held on to them because they defined you, or at least gave you something that you could call your own. The only time you shared your secrets was when you told them to the person you trusted the most. Or when you told them to the stars.
On a clear night back home, layers of stars trembled in the cold air, but it was nothing like what Alistair saw now. The sky in Aquavania pulsed and undulated. It had a heartbeat.
The men carried the dead bull by tying its legs to their spears and propping their spears on their shoulders. It didn't slow them. If anything, they moved faster now, and Alistair had to jog to keep up. Those dragonflies, those tiny shepherds, had flown away, yet he continued to follow the men anyway. If the men had intended to harm him, then they could have easily done it already. Alistair wasn't as strong or as fearsome as a bull. Even for a twelve-year-old boyâwhich is what he was, after allâhe was considered timid.
At the edge of the forest, the group passed by an enormous blackened tree stump. It was even thicker than the sequoias Alistair had seen during a family trip out west, and though he wanted to examine it closer, the tall man advised against it.
“When that tree was mighty, evil lived up there,” he said. “Do not put evil in your head.”
Alistair nodded as the group moved into the forest, where the trees weren't nearly as big, but they were dense and dark. The twinkling of the bull's fur lit their way, and the moss that clung to nearly every stone and fallen trunk absorbed the light and glowed in earthy oranges and yellows. If this were a place on Earth, it would have qualified as one of the great natural wonders. It would have been swarming with shutterbugs and scout troops. And yet Alistair and the small pack of men had it all to themselves, which perhaps wasn't a treat for them, but it was for Alistair. Sure, it was terrifying, but it was also unimaginably beautiful. He began to understand at least some of the appeal of Aquavania, the reason kids would keep coming back here, why they would stay rather than go home.
When they reached the bottom of a small hill, the sound of chattering voices greeted them.
“Is that her?” Alistair asked the tall man.
“You do not know the girl you seek?” the man replied.
“I do,” Alistair said. “I ⦠I'm confused. This is all new to me.”
“You do not swim between realms?” the man said.
“I don't know what that means.”
The men snickered. Such naïveté.
“What is your name?” the tall man asked.
“Alistair.”
“I am Roha,” the tall man said with a rumble in his voice. He pointed to the others, one by one, starting with the dragonfly breather. “Dorgo, Haji, Mee, Utor, Koren.”
The men bowed their heads slightly, and Roha spat on the ground, which Alistair read as
So there you have it
. Then Roha turned his attention to the hill and led the charge up a surface so powdery and soft that it was a wonder the men didn't sink in it. It spilled out behind them like sand, cascading with each footfall, and yet they climbed as if they were moving across flat and solid land. Alistair struggled and fumbled over the swells of dirt. It took him more than twice as long, but the group waited to greet him at the top.
“Mahaloo,” Roha announced with his arms outstretched. The hill had been hiding a small valley. Caves nested in cliff walls below, and a group of villagers gathered outside the caves around a glowing hearth in the nook of the valley. Except for a solitary person seated on a stump, the villagers wore the same attire as the men: mud and cosmic fur. The stump-sitter was wearing something completely incongruous: a spacesuit.
“Fiona!” Alistair screamed. “Fiona Loomis!”
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Fiona Loomis back home. A girl with sharp eyes and a knob in her nose, a girl who told stories that no person would ever believe, unless that person was Alistair. When she went missing, the police canvassed the neighborhood, asking people when they last saw her. Mrs. Carmine, who lived across the street from the Loomis family, told them that on the morning of Saturday, November 4, 1989, sometime around three a.m., she was having trouble sleeping, so she made herself a snack of potato chips and cottage cheese and sat next to her living room window to watch the snow.
“Fiona was standing in the street,” Mrs. Carmine said. “All alone. Snow whippin' around her. Two, maybe three minutes she's there. Watching. Or thinking. Nowadays I don't know about these girls and what they think. All I know is she turned to go home.”
But she didn't go home, for this was the last reported sighting of Fiona Loomis. She ran away, or she was kidnapped; everyone was convinced of it. Everyone except Alistair. He feared it at first, and when the evidence became undeniable, he knew it for sure. There was only one place she could have gone.
Through the portal in her basement. Through the cylinder of water behind the boiler, to another dimension, a land she visited often, a world from which she always returned, until, of course, the Riverman found her, and took her, and trapped her ⦠in Aquavania.
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Visions of Fionaâmemories and imaginingsâsizzled and popped in Alistair's head like water in hot oil. His throat still vibrated from yelling her name as all eyes turned to him. The astronaut stood. Alistair took a step down the hill, then felt his feet slipping, his body being taken by a slow avalanche of silty earth. Members of the tribe rushed to intercept him.
“Do not attack!” Roha hollered. “He is a swimmer!”
Faces, both curious and apprehensive, looked down on him once he reached the bottom. One of those faces was his own, reflected in the dark glass mask of the astronaut's helmet.
A gloved hand rose. It pressed a button on the side of the helmet. The mask snapped back, and now there was a new face, young and wild and dimpled. “Who the hell is this Fiona?”
Devastating. There was indeed a girl inside the spacesuit, but it was not the girl he had come to find. “She's ⦠she's⦔ Alistair stuttered.
“A daydreamer?” the astronaut asked as she presented a gloved hand.
The tribe kept their distance, their hands at their sides or on their spears. The only person who spoke was the girl. Alistair let her help him up. “She's a friend,” he said as he rose to his feet. “And I'm here to bring her home.”
The girl smiled. “That's cute.”
“What's cute?”
“You think you're going home.”
Tribe members laughed as if it was the most spectacular joke, but Alistair didn't understand. “Of course I am,” he said. “We're in Aquavania, right?”
“That's a name for it,” the girl said.
“And Aquavania is made up of different worlds, created by the minds of kids, right?” This was something he had learned from Fiona. She had told him stories about worlds made of ice and robots, of clouds and jungles. Fantastic places, all born from the imagination.
“You got the basic gist of it,” the girl told him.
“And the kids who created the worlds have ultimate power,” Alistair went on. “They can invite you in and send you home with nothing more than a simple wish. I definitely didn't create this place, and I don't think Fiona did. So somehow I ended up in your world, right? Can't you wish me wherever I need to go?”
“I didn't hear âpretty please,'” the girl said.
Alistair paused. He wasn't deaf to sarcasm, but he also wasn't taking any chances. “Um ⦠then ⦠Can you show me where Fiona is and then send us home? Pretty ⦠please?”
The girl looked around for a moment. “Um ⦠how about ⦠no.” She laughed, sharp and deep.
“What?”
“I'm messing with you,” she said. “Jeez, you're such a doggie-paddler. And boy are you clueless about your â¦
situation
. I can't wish a damn thing because this world is as much mine as it is yours. I'm like you. I can swim, but I can't create.”
“If this isn't your world, then whose is it?” Alistair asked.
The girl shrugged. “Some Neanderthal from way back. Beats me. Soul got sucked out like the rest of 'em, I guess.” She placed her gloved fingers to her mouth and made a slurping sound like someone working on a stubborn milk shake.
“Who are you, then?”
“Well, since I didn't create this place, it means I'm not a daydreamer. And I wasn't created
in
this place, so I'm not a figment,” the girl said. “Which makes me a swimmer. A swimmer is basically a wanderer, an adventurer, a nomad. And as swimmers go, I'm the best there is. Name is Polly Dobson. And you are?”
“Alistair Cleary.”
“Nice to meet you.” She didn't present a hand. Instead she turned to the tribe, raised her arms, and hollered, “Figments! I thank you for finding me this swimmer, but now you must continue preparing the feast and give us our privacy. For we must discuss watery things!”