Water Music
David J. Schow
----------------------------------------------------------------------
The pull of history is tidal. The pull of human history can be
countermanded; it occupies too scant a footing on the timeline to offer
resistance. Mere mammals to date have claimed precious little
additional length on that timeline. Imagine a yardstick. Human history
barely fills the final l/16th inch of the span. Mammals have yet to
stake an inch, let alone a foot... long after evolving opposable
thumbs.
Nonhuman, non-mammalian creatures fill much more of the Earth's
imaginary timeline. There, the weight of the past can exert an
irresistible pull — a dangerous undertow, a riptide that can enfold,
sometimes with toxic results. Death, even.
Abe Sapien is aware of this when he fugues. The fugue is a form of
self-meditation, an almost out-of-body state vital to maintenance of
mind and spirit, but as with medication, there is the hazard of
overdose. One can get lost in his own genetic past, as the price for
consultation with one's former selves.
Most humans lack the option, let alone the control that Abe Sapien has
cultivated through deft experience. Humans, he has found, remain
stranded in the backwaters of ghostly visitation, of demonic
possession, of poltergeists and so-called past-life regression —
superstitions they use to rationalize the preternatural.
The preternatural is already an accepted part of Abe Sapiens universe.
To augment the experience of the fugue, and permit more control, he has
climbed into his special isolation tank. Chemically enhanced pure water
at optimum temperature; utter silence; total darkness. This helps Abe
Sapien to concentrate on leveling his brainwaves to exclude the
here-and-now world. To an unschooled observer, Abe Sapien appears to
segue into a coma state, respirating less than one breath per minute
through the delicate lamellae of his gillwork. The "floating" sensation
of the buoyant solution in the tank gives way to the airborne,
"hovering" sensation that is the first stage of fugue.
Abe Sapien floats — transcending the concerns of the petty or material,
temporarily obviating the earthly need to indulge emotions. Like hate.
Like resentment. Abe Sapien has been suffering these feelings more,
lately, than he judges to be normal, even for a unique specimen such as
himself. Hate, mirroring the hatred of human beings for anything
different from their limited form and shape. Species hate, too often
against ichthyo Sapien. Resentment at the arrogance of the Bureau for
Paranormal Research and Defense. Lately Abe Sapien has been feeling
that the B.P.R.D. has been taking him for granted, as if he had no
other options in the world of humans. Yeah, throw the freak a bone,
gang him with the other mutants and misfits, and see if we can somehow
profit from their investigations into spooky stuff.
Never does Abe Sapien express these sentiments, but he cannot lie to
himself — he feels them, from time to time, always keeping the feeling
to himself. Human feelings, to his fancy, in conflict with his
non-human nature; it is not a choice between human-or-otherwise. He
occupies not a netherworld, but a neither-world. But he acknowledges
that to bottle up misgivings is never healthy. They fester in the dark;
they grow malignant and burst forth into black consequences. That is
one of the reasons he has come to the tank tonight, to meditate, to
fugue. To circumvent these confusing emotions and re-attack them
obliquely, from a refreshed perspective.
Abe Sapien does not appear to age, but he is aware he is somehow
outside his own skin, looking at himself, over a century earlier. He is
younger, smaller. He is standing knee-deep in some anguineous backwater
of New Orleans swampland, feeling the mystic transport of his fellow
creatures, the water witches and the Peremelfait, shrouded festively in
the ghost-shapes of drowned pirates, decorated with Spanish moss and
kudzu. He feels at one with the earth, the quickmud, the backwater
tidepools, all of it teeming with biology, with the reassurance of the
ocean always nearby ...
... and he jolts, subtly, in his tank, from synapse shock. The warm
feeling of homecoming is an illusion, a confection of his mind. The way
he would like his past to have been. He has heard humans do this, too —
idealize a childhood that never existed, editing out the objectionable
bits.
But the fantasy refuses to dissipate. Abe Sapien knows what history
claims. The theory goes that he was created in a laboratory as the
first human-fish hybrid, a homme amphibie, nearly a century before the
word "bioengineering" was coined.
For him to backtrack, via fugue, along that path is a dead end, and he
knows it. That path ends in 1895.
Several decades of isolation in a water cylinder, labeled as a marine
curiosity, had taught him a lot about leaving his body. About fugueing,
and finding ways to "think himself elsewhere." To Abe Sapien,
"Elsewhere" is a destination. When he achieves the proper mental state
to fugue, he has arrived at Elsewhere ... and Elsewhere has nothing to
do with being fabricated, mutated, or invented. Elsewhere pulls him
gently backward along a different path, an alternate life.
And ancestry.
He glimpses his younger self — still in the fanciful swamp — but
momentarily, as though from a fast-moving hot-air balloon bobbing
overhead. Then he continues his journey, passing his own birth ...
Wait a minute. His birth?!
His sensitive dermis dances with galvanic new input. What he sees is
contraindicated, yet it moves him as profoundly as any single vision
could. Abe Sapien has never embraced any notion of having a real mother
or father. Yet there they are, and they love him. They are regal and
gracile, sophisticated masters of both land and sea.
Elsewhere blossoms for Abe Sapien, offering more, and he opts to
continue his journey back along this genetic timeline.
Now he sees his progenitors as a spare and noble race — overlords of
Atlantis; demigods of Amazonas; favored consorts of Triton and Poseidon
(as humans had later named them, erroneously). They had developed their
own culture and written language, no artifact of which survives today.
The paintings of the great human masters crumbled to dust in fewer than
a thousand years; the ancestral dynasty of Abe Sapien is millennia
older than that.
He visualizes an earlier configuration for himself. Primordial,
tougher, more brutal. Armor-plated scales, talons, an almost
microscopic alertness of the air around him and the signals it imparts.
With ancient, chromium eyes he can now see into the infrared.
Hyperdeveloped sensors in his taste buds now convey crucial hunting
data, like the smell of fear.
And it is in this form that Abe Sapien touches down on the virtual
ground of Elsewhere. The hot ozone of antediluvian lightning-strikes
charges the atmosphere. He stands on gray rock outcrops jutting from a
turbulent, iron-colored sea, and knows humid wind is buffeting him, but
cannot feel its temperature. His civilized self, back in the tank,
floating, fugueing, would be handicapped here. He looks down to see he
still wears his formfit tunic, because that is what his memory has
provisioned for this fugue. This might be the world as it was before
the aquatics crawled, gasping, onto land. The enormity of this place
dwarfs both his irritation and preoccupation — the foibles and
frailties he still biases as "human" in his mind.
If Abe Sapien owns a cellular history, he is the only extant repository
of that line. A possible past. It is easy to extrapolate others like
himself. Even his own ancestors. In this fugue, he might even be able
to console his misgivings by consultation with others of his kind.
Others of his kind — the revelation is deliriously gravid with
possibility. The dormant lobes of his thinking mind, back in the fugue
tank, know this is not real. But the illusion is deeply convincing.
Here — theoretically — he can be alone instead of lonely. At least,
that is what he thought until he saw the visitor. Intruder, perhaps.
Standing atop a rock in distant shadow, a humanoid silhouette, perched
on one leg like a warrior sentry. It seemed to have just noticed Abe
Sapien; both stood in regard of the other for several tense moments.
Abe Sapien felt himself being sized up.
Then the other being dove into the choppy water and swam to a closer
rock. It hauled itself up, sea foam sluicing from its smooth naked
body, which was a dark, mossy green, mottled with brown spots. Its legs
were backward-jointed, avian. Three fingers, three toes on each spindly
limb — long, super-attenuated digits designed for grasping. A little
pot belly like a pygmy, which did not conceal the protuberant stump of
penis.
Abe Sapien knew evolution. If this were some sort of protohuman reptile,
anthroposaurus Sapien, then the brain development required to advance a
species to the status of a thinking being would induce the upright,
bipedal stance of a human, and thus necessitate the ventro-ventral mode
of copulation, which was a more reliable method of mating than the way
birds or lizards did it.
It stood there with a definite attitude of challenge, then took to the
water and swam closer. Now it regarded Abe Sapien from a reef less than
thirty yards away.
This was not the "dinosauroid" posited by paleontologists, the
"primosaur" theorized as a possible conqueror during a time when vastly
outnumbered mammals kept to the trees to avoid predation by the
dinosaurs. This was different. This was a version that had crawled from
the water and learned to climb the trees.
It glared at Abe Sapien, waited exactly as long as it had before, then
swam nearer. It was now ten feet away. It rose erect and commenced its
stare-down. Its skin was scaly, probably armor-hard and elephant-tough.
It had large, oval eyes with vertically slit pupils, protected by bony,
slanting plates. Definitely a nocturnal hunter, and evidence that its
visual associations had shifted to its enlarged cerebrum. Lizards
processed most of their visual information in the retina, not the
brain.
It was not until the 1990s that scientists were able to use CT scans to
map the musculature of a dinosaur heart, which proved to have a single
systemic aorta, unlike the double-aorta found in cold-blooded
crocodilians. Extrapolated, this meant that anthroposaurus Sapien would
have warm blood, and a higher metabolic rate.
What would have happened? Intelligent dinosaurs might have dominated
what are called the Cretaceous terminal extinctions — the so-called
"Kimmeridgian turnover" of 145 million years ago, the "Aptian turnover"
28 million years later, and the "Cenomanian turnover" 22 million years
after that — possibly even steam-rolling over the apes that were in
power by the end of the Tertiary geological era.
In short, they might have resembled this guy.
Abe Sapien thought that the being's expression classified as smug. It
gave a dismissive snort and jerked its head sidewise ... then leaped
from his rock to the one Abe Sapien was standing upon. Abe Sapien
willed himself not to recoil as the creature landed in perfect balance.
The pads on its spatulate fingers and toes gripped the porous stone. It
appeared to weigh about a hundred pounds, and its stubby tail (more a
tailbone, with vertebrae) was probably vestigial.
Its snout was akin to a blunted beak, but still had nasty teeth, or
perhaps ridged gums. Either way, they looked pointy and pain-capable.
Abe Sapien wondered who and what this vision was supposed to represent.
I am the thing you have always feared most, the being said. But it
stood there, transfixing Abe Sapien with the combat stare. It had not
moved its mouth, nor spoken. Abe Sapien heard the thoughts of this
being in his mind. Perhaps his brain was fabricating that detail, while
putting a face to some enemy who laid traps deep in his subconscious,
those unmapped eddies accessed by the fugue state.
But Abe Sapien retained his share of instinct, too, and that primordial
fight-or-flight coding engaged on an autonomic level. His left hand
flew up to protect his face, while his right struck with ballistic,
deadly force. Crush the throat and one usually brings down the
antagonist.
Abe Sapien's martial-arts jab passed through the being; it was like
punching cigarette smoke. It was not corporeal.
In response came an organ-dislocating hammerblow of pain that sank Abe
Sapien to his knees, as palpably as being mashed by a falling safe.
Purple coronas of concussion nimbused Abe Sapien's view.
And again. Abe Sapien grimaced and tried to shove himself up from the
abrasive surface of the rock, which was similar to pumice; volcanic.
Pressure vised his neck and impeded his wind.
Choking, Abe Sapien felt the density of the battering waves of hatred
that assailed him. The Anthroposaur was knocking him down with sheer
hate — megatons of it, eons of it, all backed up on the yardstick of
time until it became a lethal physical threat.
You persist thinking according to real-world terms.
All Abe Sapien could summon by way of response was, "Bite me, Doggie
Legs."
You forget that we are beyond the realm of the corporeal.
"Not so far beyond that I can't feel this! And if you're a phantom — "
Not even that. We are not memory. Because we never existed.
In his mind, Abe Sapien began to block and patty. He could feel the
killing energy invading him and fought to deflect and defuse it. He
managed to rise to one knee, then stand, flinching as if pummeled from
within.
"Why?" was all he said.
Abe Sapien felt the salvo ebb, just slightly. The Anthroposaur had
tilted its head, as it had before, peering at him.
Your race eliminated the possibility of our existence. And now you are
the last of your race.
The massed energy of an entire race, denied by history, was focused
toward making Abe Sapien history, too.
As a civilized being, Abe Sapien was supposed to have an advantage over
this ... this Joke, this dawn-of-time mockery of evolution. At least
the damned thing couldn't club him with a bone axe. In a human fight,
Abe Sapien would have favored the Neanderthal by default, for savagery
and efficiency in extermination. He needed to become his own version of
a primal man, someone unencumbered by modern tactics or remorse.
All he had by way of return fire was his own capacity to hate.
But defending himself was also a risk. He had to expend thought toward
this battle, here, now, thereby increasing the risk that he would never
be able to meditate upward from the fugue state. His travels, before,
had never divided his attention this way, and it wasn't as simple as
clicking his heels and saying there's no place like home. He needed a
reserve to avoid being sucked down by the undertow of this past, yet he
had to summon all his will, now, to engage this unexpected foe. The
fallout could be worse than death, as the atoms of his very
consciousness were spread thin over the return centuries, in a
dustcloud of miniscule microns. Even his own considerable mind, body,
and spirit would be scattered so widely that he would run out of
particles before he could make it back, whole.
Your kind exterminated my race before we could flower.
The energy of hatred pulsed from the Anthroposaur in wave after wave,
relentless as the ocean, like magnetism that could rend Abe Sapien
asunder; the hot, devastating microwave power of cosmic rays. Abe
reeled as he absorbed each attack, struggling to envision himself
inside a shielding cocoon of healing water. He imagined the motes of
aquatic life, the quintillions of living forms in every ounce of fluid,
bonding together to work with a purpose and protect him in unison. He
thought the image clearly and felt another barrage soar into his guts —
but this strike felt deflected, as if magically sapped of aim.
To prevail, Abe Sapien would have to enact a genocide unprecedented in
the annals of civilized history. But at this moment, he was not
occupying civilized history, and turned his thoughts to hatred.
Abe Sapien thought of being stranded in time, alone, the only one of
his kind, seeking community in the company of ghosts. Of humanity's
dismissal of him as a sideshow freak. Of the prejudices of little
people, against him, and against what he represented. He hated humanity
— and every other phylum that could despise him so much with no cause.
He confronted black, primeval emotions that his modern self had learned
to tamp down, restrain, and muzzle. He gave his loathing full rein
against the scientists who had bottled him up for years, uncaring. His
ire for the condescension of the B.P.R.D. was allowed to bloom into a
scalding fireball of hatred that was both irrational and unwarranted —
but he could not permit the luxury of mercy or compassion or
understanding, not now. The whirling fireball took on the chartreuse
cast of poison, decanted, as Abe Sapien expanded his hatred to include
all air breathers, all mutants and mockeries, anything that was not Abe
Sapien.
And he found he could stand, at last, to face his opponent.
Deep down, past the veneer of manners and feel-good drivel spoken, but
not meant, Abe Sapien acknowledged that he was unilaterally hated and
feared, on some level, by every living thing he had ever encountered
... and he was able to focus that hatred, that fireball, and swing it
like a scythe. He brutally reduced his thinking mind to the elements:
Water, from which he sprang. Earth, on which he stood. Air, which could
serve as a hot conduit for Fire, which was the summation of his
capacity for rage.
Coming to hate every living thing still did not include the
Anthroposaur, who was not a living thing.
So Abe Sapien stretched the parameters of his hatred to include the
dead and the never-born, all of whom had committed the sin of forcing
Abe Sapien to consider his own demise someday, and his place in a world
that did not want him. Even his ancestors — the ones he had never had —
had stranded him. If they had existed, he wanted them to suffer. If
they were figments of a dream, he wanted them to live so he could
murder them, and kill anything else that had denied him a different
world from the one he knew.
Now Abe Sapien could see the force being deployed against him, as an
icy blue aura enveloping the Anthroposaur, and flowing from it to him.
They both held steady, like arm wrestlers locked in tension, as the
blue collided with the chartreuse. Much of the energy was canceled out
by its mirror, its opposite.
And when matter and anti-matter meet ...
Abe Sapiens eyes could not see fast enough to record all that happened.
But he got fragmented images: A molten sunspot in the center of the
Anthroposaur. The ocean behind it, visible through the hole only for an
instant as the hole flared, supernova bright, and consumed the world in
white-out. It was like opening a porthole and seeing a star, close-up.
It was too much for any mind to bear, in its vastness. It was the
blinding opposite of a black hole, shredding time, ripping a gouge in
the fabric of the universe.
Abe Sapien felt himself displaced.
He drifted in a gray limbo with no reference points, no up or down,
gravity-less. He could see through parts of himself, not wounds, but
portions of his wholeness that had ceased to be. Lacking all except the
most basic urges, Abe Sapien swam — swam as his ancestors might have,
without thought to time, which existed only as an ordering conceit of
more rational beings. He swam as they would have, before evolution,
before social groupings or sequential cognizance. Before right or
wrong. And when he could no longer swim, he floated, unmoored ...
... until a mighty hand of stone grasped his arm, and hefted him bodily
out of the isolation tank.
"We thought we'd lost you," said a voice. "Your readouts had all gone
flat."
Abe Sapien could not see anything until he remembered to retract the
protective membranes that had automatically snapped upward to guard his
delicate eyes. He was very thirsty.
"Just what do you think you were doing in there?"
"Relaxing," said Abe Sapien.
He took in the concerned expression on the devilish visage of his
friend. Horns, hooves, crimson skin. Yes, most humans would have
collapsed into gibbering insanity upon waking up to see such a sight.
"Yeah, well, you almost relaxed yourself to death."
With help, Abe Sapien was able to debark the tank and stand upright — a
biped, as intended. Nausea washed over him. He had returned to the
world of humans, and demons, and pain without measure. But not without
the assistance of a friend.
It felt good to be home.