ROBIN AURELIAN
JELLY BONES
This is the story of a guy named Morty. Nobody's really sure who
he is--not
Shilling. not Peterson, not Morty himself. But what about the green Coupe de
Ville?
Sometimes bones are just an inconvenience. I melted mine. This is a handy talent
to have
when one is trapped in a small space and the only way out is an even
smaller opening. This
sort of thing happened to me all too frequently. I wasn't
sure why people were always so
upset with me. They didn't seem to feel this way
about most of the other people I saw them
interacting with.
In the present small dark space where I was trapped, I couldn't actually
find a
door, and the space was full almost to the top with liquid. I had swallowed some
of
the liquid when I was first dumped into it, and I was pretty sure it wasn't
water. It
didn't taste like anything else I'd tasted since I became aware.
There was no light, so
there was nothing to see. I closed my eyes. I took a
really big breath -- when one had
jelly bones and the rest of one was pretty
stretchy one could take a really big breath --
and dove to the bottom of the
enclosed pool, feeling along the walls for anything useful. A
crack, perhaps, or
a drain I could pull the plug from or unscrew or otherwise manipulate.
My
fingers had the ability to shape and harden or soften as I directed them. Most
of my body
did. A screwdriver from an index finger was nothing, Phillips or
flathead, I didn't care,
although turning a screw was a bit more involved, since
all of me had to turn.
The inner
surface of the pool was smoother than most surfaces I had encountered.
It didn't even have
any corners, just curves. It reminded me of glazed
porcelain, pleasant to feel even though
it was cool to the touch. For a while I
rolled along the walls, enjoying the smoothness
against my skin. But tactile
pleasure wouldn't do me much good in this situation if I ran
out of air.
I swam back up to what was left of the air pocket. Most of the air was already
inside me. I had been trickling carbon dioxide out through my skin while I swam
and
searched. There had to be a door in this compartment somewhere. After all, I
had been stiff
with bones when Shilling dropped me in here; when I had bones, I
was pretty big and not a
bit oozy. At least, I thought I had been bony; I had
also been in a somewhat intoxicated
state so I wasn't sure of anything. Even if
I had been compressible, he must have pushed me
in through some sort of crack or
other. Where could it be?
It eluded me for a long time,
until I pressed as much of myself against the
curved walls, floor, and ceiling as I could
and still maintain cohesion. I
focused all my awareness on the nerves in my skin and crept
from the bottom to
the top of my space. After a long silent time I realized that there was
the
thinnest crack in the porcelain above the air pocket, a crack that formed a
circle.
I
pressed what I could of myself up into the crack and exerted as much pull as I
could. Time
and space narrowed down to my efforts to work my way out of this
fix. After an
indeterminate while, the doorway came open and I oozed up and out,
dropping the door into
the pool behind me. It sizzled.
I found myself in a corridor, which I realized was dark as
soon as I reactivated
my eyes. I felt my way along the floor and walls and found that they
were not as
slick as the pool's inner surface had been; they were something else entirely.
I
tasted them and concluded that the floor was dressed stone and the walls were
very cold
and sweating plasterboard. There were other tastes on the floor. A lot
of people in a
variety of shoes had passed this way, and not too long ago. I
tasted someone's spitwad
before I realized what it was. I was pretty sure it had
come from someone I knew.
"Should be
dead by now," said a strange voice not far enough away. "I wouldn't
bet on it," said
someone more familiar. "Morty has a way of getting out of tough
spots." The voices were
coming closer.
I considered my options. I could run or ooze or flow down the corridor away
from
them into the unknown, or I could hide from them as they discovered my
disappearance,
then follow them away to someplace people preferred to be, or --
I unjellied my bones and
pulled myself together, unblobbing until my form was as
human as I could make it, though I
had a feeling I had messed up a few details
here and there. Let alone I had lost my clothes
before I escaped the pool. I
wasn't sure how or when; I only knew that they hadn't been in
my way when I made
my explorations. Breathing out the extra air that had me swelled up like
a
watermelon, I settled around my bones. I sat with my feet dangling down into the
hole I
had climbed out of, and waited for the voices to bring their forms with
them.
They also
brought light. I used it to give myself a quick once-over. Oops. Six
fingers on one hand. I
reabsorbed the extra one. I stalked an eye out and
glanced at my face. Mouth should be
below the nose -- I fixed that too, then
sucked the eye back into its socket.
"Damn," said
the first voice. "Hi, Morty," said the second voice. I squinted
past the flashlight shining
on me and recognized Pete Peterson, one of
Shilling's chief thugs. He had been nicer to me
than anybody else, and I liked
him.
"Hi, Pete," I said. "I get the idea somebody's mad at
me, but I don't remember
why."
"How could you forget a thing like that?" "Like what?" "No
joke, you don't
remember?" "Remember what?" "Shilling was having one of those parties where
he
had a bunch of important customers around the pool, enjoying free alcohol and
drugs and
trying to out clothes-horse each other, and you showed up yelling and
waving three knives
in each hand. You threw the knives and hit some people in
the clothes, but never actually
wounded anybody -- did you do that on purpose? I
bet you did. You pushed people into the
pool three at a time while yelping like
a buckaroo. You don't remember any of that?"
"Nope."
It didn't sound like me. Or maybe it did. I still didn't know very much
about myself.
"You
were screeching something about being Kali or Shiva or one of those
many-armed Hindu gods.
And swearing you wanted to drink peoples' blood and wear
their skulls for a necklace. It
was like you got religion. For a minute there I
had some hope for your future, but you
didn't follow through. You didn't manage
to hurt anybody. How could a little thing like
that slip your mind?"
"Maybe I left a piece of my mind behind while I was getting out of
that septic
tank or whatever it was." I pointed between my legs to the hole below.
"You mean
the acid bath?" "Acid?" I said. I'd never experimented with acid
before. I had been
swimming around in acid, and I hadn't noticed it acting any
differently from water or
chocolate milk. It had tasted different, but there
were so many things I hadn't tasted that
I hadn't known what it was.
"Most people we put in there dissolve entirely," Peterson said.
"Guess Shilling
was really mad at me, huh?" "Worst I've ever seen him," said Peterson. "You
gotta stop coming around, Morty. Don't you get it that we don't want you here
anymore?"
"Sometimes
I get it, but I don't always have all the parts of my mind aligned
into understanding," I
said. I wondered if I should have said that. I had found
it better to keep my inner
workings to myself in most situations. The more I
talked about them, the more upset people
got with me. Maybe Peterson wouldn't
understand.
"Some parts of your mind don't talk to some
other parts?" he said, dashing
another vain hope.
"I guess." "Well, tell all the parts to
understand this: you can't come here
anymore. You're making the boss lose business. You've
worn out your welcome.
Find somebody else to love."
I stared into his flashlight for a long
long time, trying to imprint myself with
the information he'd given me. It hurt.
Shilling
was the first person I had met whom I could remember. I had opened my
eyes in close
darkness and hot silence, and then the trunk lid had popped open
and there was Shilling,
staring down at me where I was curled up, my wrists tied
tight to each other and to my
ankles behind my back.
Shilling was tall and old and wrinkled and he had a lot of stiff
white hair that
the sun startled into silver. I thought he was the most beautiful thing I
had
ever seen, but then again, I couldn't remember seeing anyone or anything else in
my
whole life. A car gave birth to me, I figured out later, and Shilling was my
midwife. "Who
the hell are you?" he had asked, reaching down to rip the duct
tape off my lips. "What is
this?" he asked somebody I couldn't see. "I just
wanted a mint-green Caddy Coupe de Ville.
I didn't want it with somebody in the
trunk!"
"Sorry, Boss," said the other voice, which
belonged to Peterson, I had
eventually learned.
The more I discovered about human dealings,
the odder I found it in hindsight
that Shilling had actually taken me to his home, released
my hands and feet, fed
me, talked to me, and even named me. Shilling being Shilling, it
would have been
more like him to just shoot me and dump me in the desert.
But he hadn't, and
I loved him. I loved him for every word he had ever spoken to
me, every time he had touched
me, every attention he had ever paid me. His was
the first face I could remember seeing,
and I had imprinted on it. I wanted to
serve and protect him and make him proud.
At first we
had thought there might be something I could do in his service. He
had tried to have me
trained to be muscle, since he didn't think I had a chance
in hell of being brains.
Peterson had done the actual training, and mostly he
had said things like, "Can't you hit
harder than that? Okay, here's a
nightstick, use leverage if you can't use strength -I
barely felt that! You have
to look to do damage, Morty!" I could hit cantaloupes and
watermelons all day
and break them into a shower of tiny screaming spattery pieces, or even
artistically shaped shreds that resembled animals or aircraft, but I didn't seem
to be able
to really whale on people.
Although that hadn't stopped me from threatening people with
knives and throwing
them in the pool last night, according to Peterson. Maybe it I stayed
drunk I
could do all kinds of interesting things that I didn't seem capable of while I
was
sober.
"Are you sure there's nothing I can do for Shilling? Nothing at all?" I asked
Peterson.
I sounded pathetic even in my own ears.
"Give it up, Morty. The only thing he wants from
you now is that you die. I
would rather you went away, myself. I can't figure out how to
make you die."
I stood up. The other guy who had come down with Peterson stepped back, and
I
realized that I was taller than I had been -- taller than everybody, even
Peterson. How
had that happened? I didn't remember acquiring more mass, and
where would I have gotten it?
Now that Peterson told me I'd been in acid, I
realized what had happened to my clothes.
Something else had metabolized them
before I could.
Peterson sighed. "Come with me, Morty,
and I'll find you something to wear," he
said.
"Thanks," I said. I shambled down the
corridor in his wake, looking around. This
was a part of the basement I had never seen
before -- must be lower than the
usual dungeons and torture chambers, maybe even lower than
the vaults. "What
else is down here?"
"A bunch of other stuff that wouldn't work on you
either," said Peterson.
"But this is the worst stuff, right.?" "Yeah, aside from direct
methods like
spraying you with a bunch of bullets or putting you through a sawmill blade a
few hundred times and then watching to see if the pieces reconnect."
"And he hasn't tried
this one on me before, has he?" "Nope." "He likes me." If
he had restrained himself from
doing the worst to me until now, he must like me
on some level. Otherwise, why not try the
most extreme methods first? He still
hadn't tried the nasty ones that Peterson had just
mentioned. I sensed a certain
reluctance on Shilling's part.
"Sure, he likes you, but he
can't have you around, Morty. You keep screwing up
important things for him. You gotta get
out and stay out. You understand?
Bullets next time, probably."
"I understand," I said. At
least some part of me understood. I wasn't sure how
long that would last.
"You got awful
big," Peterson said when we reached his quarters in one of the
cabanas by the pool. The
little man who had come down to the acid bath with him
had faded away from us as soon as we
left the basement, almost before I saw his
face in the light and added it to my memory
files of everything to do with
Shilling. "I don't know what I got that might fit you."
"I
don't know how I got bigger, Pete." "How does anything happen with you? It's
all a
mystery." He flipped through the clothes in his closet, searched his
dresser, came up with
a big tie-dyed T-shirt and some baggy navy-blue swim
trunks. I tried them on, and they fit
-- barely. I could turn my fingers into
screwdrivers; it seemed to me I ought to be able to
shrink myself, but I thought
and thought at myself and couldn't make myself smaller. I
tried ooshing some of
me out to my arms and legs, and that worked a little bit. My hands
and feet got
bigger and the parts of myself that were really constricted by the clothes got
somewhat smaller.
Peterson watched my efforts for a little while before turning away. I
shrugged
and shimmied and surged and finally got the clothes to feel comfortable. I had
this
urge to stick an eye out and look at myself, but I thought that might be
going too far. Of
the people I had met since my birth from the back of a
Cadillac, Peterson was one of the
most tolerant, but I couldn't figure out
whether he would understand about eyestalks.
I
wandered through his house and found a mirror instead. I wasn't sure about the
results of
my self-tailoring. I supposed weirder-looking people wandered the
streets of L.A. Or
perhaps not.
Peterson said, "Here's twenty bucks. Use at least some of it as bus fare to
get
as far away from here as possible."
"Thanks." "I'm gonna tell the boss we finally got
rid of you. Don't make a liar
outta me, Morty."
I wanted to promise him I wouldn't, but I
never made promises anymore. Something
in me made me break them all the time.
He patted my
shoulder a couple of times, reaching up to do it, and escorted me
down to the secret gate
at the far end of the grounds, making it all right with
the security guards there to let me
out.
I wandered down the winding roads of Beverly Hills, heading toward Sunset and
wondering
what to do. If only I could talk to my mother, the car. It might have
been able to tell me
something about who I had been before, and maybe out of
that information I would be able to
find someplace or something to draw me away
from Shilling. Too bad this idea hadn't come to
me until I was banned from the
estate.
Maybe if I found another mint-green Coupe de Ville...
I had never tried talking
to cars before. I found a busy intersection with long lights and
stood in the
crosswalk facing traffic, saying hello to Hondas and Hyundais and Mercedes and
BMWs, Fords and Chryslers and Mercury Bobcats. Most of them ignored me except to
honk their
horns. It wasn't a language I understood, but I kept trying.
Police stopped to talk to me a
couple of times, told me to move along. I finally
climbed on a bus the way Peterson had
told me to, but the bus driver wouldn't
take my twenty. I went into a store and bought a
postcard, then jumped on
another bus and used correct change.
I ended up in Chinatown a
while later, still searching and restless and not
having any idea what to do with myself.
Escaping seemed to be what I was best
at, but I only did that when provoked, and whatever I
was doing now wasn't
provoking enough for anybody to put me somewhere I could escape from.
I wondered
if I should try to be more provoking. The police could help me get locked up
again,
I was pretty sure.
I went into a restaurant and had some dim sum even though I didn't much
need to
get bigger. I wondered why I had been tied up and locked in the trunk of a car.
Seemed
ridiculous and useless to me now. I could have oozed out of there in
seconds. Why had I
lain there, frying in the sweat- and fear-smelling desert
darkness, until Shilling popped
the lid and let me out? What had my former self
been planning? Or, more to the point, what
had the people who put my former self
in that car trunk been planning?
If only I could talk
to that car. I could talk to Peterson or Shilling, I
supposed. I got a bunch of change from
a gift shop and went to a pay phone, then
dialed Shilling's private line. "This is Morty,"
I said.
He hung up. I dialed again. "Don't hang up."
He hung up. Dialed again. "I just have
a question." "That bastard Peterson swore
you were dead!" "You sure he didn't say I was
gone?" "Huh?" He was quiet for a
minute or two, but he didn't hang up. "I'm gone, Boss. I
just have a question.
Who sold you that car?" "I don't deal with details like that. Ask
Peterson. The
bastard." "I don't have a number for him."
He swore some more, said, "Try
Unemployment!" and cursed a few minutes longer,
then told me a number to call.
"I'm sorry I
messed up your party, Boss," I said. "I don't know what got into
me."
"It better be the last
time, Morty! Or the next time will be the last!" "I'm
trying to stay away," I said. "One
way or another you will," he said. He hung
up. I dialed the number he gave me and Peterson
answered. When he heard my
voice, he groaned.
"Just a question," I said. "How did you get
this number?" "I asked Shilling."
"Morty! You're supposed to be dead! He has to kill me
now!" "I told him I was
staying away." "Get off the line. I have to leave!" "Pete, who sold
you the
Caddy I came in?" "Some chiseler in Vegas named Vinny Furness. Good-bye!" He
hung
up.
I wondered if he were really in trouble. I thought about Shilling for a little
while and
decided that a guy who could hand me a drink filled with arsenic, have
me shot in the head
with a .45, feed me to piranhas until they died of
indigestion, buckle me into a chair and
put a few million volts through me, and
drop me in a vat of acid might do some serious
damage to Peterson. I liked
Peterson. He had always been nice to me.
So I caught a bus back
to Beverly Hills. I asked the guards at the secret gate
if Pete had come through there, but
they told me, after some persuading, that he
hadn't made it that far, that he was now in
the basement up at the house. They
shot me a few times while I was crossing the grounds
toward the house, but I
made my back into some really hard kind of rubber that bounced the
bullets off.
I got to the basement through one of the escape hatches I had discovered while
exploring one day, and headed for the torture level in hopes that Shilling would
deal with
Peterson there instead of taking him lower.
Peterson was strapped to the big chair in the
first room, the room with the big
scary tools like pinchers and branding irons, mostly show
for people who would
scare easy, Pete had told me himself when he was trying his best to
train me.
Shilling was sitting in the comfortable observation chair, watching through his
dark glasses as the shadowy little man who had come to the lower levels with
Peterson to
check on me in the acid vat held a glowing iron rod up to Peterson's
face.
Peterson shook
his head, sweating a lot. "There's nothing you can do to get rid
of Morty, Boss," he said.
"You know that and I know that. Getting him to leave
under his own steam seemed like the
best option."
"You irritate me," said Shilling. He sounded irritated. "I'm sorry, Boss."
"Baldwin, give him a kiss of heat to help him remember how irritated I am," said
Shilling.
"Baldwin, don't," I said, stepping into the room. "Gaw damn, Morty, didn't I
tell you to go
away and stay away?" Peterson yelled.
"Yeah, but I got you in trouble. Come on." I walked
over and grabbed the iron
rod by the hot end, wrenching it out of the small guy's grip and
tossing it over
my shoulder into a corner. Then I unbuckled all of the straps holding
Peterson
into the chair and picked him up. He was sweaty and limp and trembling. And he
had
told me the red-hot iron rods were kid stuff. Made me wonder.
"Morty!" said Shilling. "What
the hell happened to you?" "What do you mean?"
"When did you turn into a giant?" "Last
night or this morning, Boss, I'm not
sure." Maybe the dim sum had helped. My clothes were
too tight again, and I'd
eaten a lot of different kinds of dumplings.
"Do you know how
stupid you look?" "I have some idea," I said.
"Do you know how good you could look with the
right wardrobe?" "No." "Do you
know how to drive a car?" "I don't know. I bet I could
learn," I said, wondering
if this would get me closer to the Coupe de Ville.
"You can't seem
to attack people, but you could protect people, couldn't you? I
mean, here you are trying
to protect that asshole Peterson."
"Could be." "You still loyal to me, Morty?" "Sure,
Boss." "Still loyal, still
stupid, and even better, a giant," Shilling muttered. "Tell you
what, Morty. You
can have Peterson as your own personal toy. He takes you down to my
tailor, and
we get you some really nice duds. He teaches you to drive. You don't ever get
drunk or high again, and you leave my customers alone. You drive me places, and
you act as
my bodyguard when I ask you to. Whaddya say?" Then he muttered, "If
there's any way to mess
this up, he'll find it. I wonder how he could possibly
mess this up?"
"Bodyguard?" "Guard my
body. If you can throw people in the pool, you could keep
people off me, couldn't you? You
don't have to hurt them, just keep them from
hurting me."
"Okay," I said. I could be near
him and maybe he wouldn't all the time be trying
new methods of torture or murder on me.
And I could talk to the Caddy. Not that
it was likely to do any good.
"Go get
decent-looking," he said, flipping his hand at me and Peterson. Peterson
was still shaky,
so I carried him out. I set him down when we got to the garage.
There were twelve cars
inside the garage and more in the other garage. Peterson
leaned against a dark green Jaguar
while I walked over to the Coupe de Ville.
I sat on the cement in front of it. "Mom?" I
said. The car just sat there. "Do
you remember me?" It didn't say anything. "Do you
remember where I came from?"
"The back door of the Kalahari Motel in Las Vegas," said a
voice. "Probably."
The voice sounded like Peterson's. I glanced at him. He still looked
wobbly.
"What do you mean?" "I mean the guy I got the car from, he worked with people
who
headquartered in the Kalahari, and when they want to get rid of people they
send them out
the back door."
"Do you know who I am?" "Nobody knows who you are, Morty. And I mean that.
Nobody." "Not even me," I said. "Not even you." "Come on, Pete. Let's go to Las
Vegas," I
said, standing up. He was breathing almost normally. He stared at me,
his eyes bugging out.
"The tailor...the car...driving lessons. . ."
"You can teach me to drive on the way." He
shook his head and he kept shaking
his head while I piled him into a cherry-red
convertible, opened the garage
door, hot-wired the car, and drove the car down the driveway
to the main gate.
Interesting. I seemed to know how to drive. Security called up to the
house and
Shilling told them they could let me out, because the gate opened.
It took
Peterson miles and miles to settle down. He tried to grab the wheel, he
tried reasoning
with me, he tried screaming at me to stop, he tried to jump out
of the car. I stretched out
a jelly-boned arm and dragged him back in, then
fastened his seatbelt. He sat shivering in
the passenger seat and stared at my
arm for a while after that.
When he got over it, he
tried to make me feel guilty by telling me I was signing
his death warrant. That gave me
pause. What was I doing? Why? And why was I
doing it to Peterson, who had always been nice
to me?
Who was I, the one doing these things? If the answer came to me, would I hate
it?
I
pulled into a truckstop in the mountains as night fell. Peterson looked too
shaky to go on
without some sort of necessary thing, and food or coffee were the
only things I could
figure.
I ordered him a couple of hamburgers and me a couple more, even though I didn't
feel
hungry.
"You can't be doing this, Morty," Peterson said after a while, his voice quiet
and
reasonable. His face was white, with gray smudges under his eyes. The
waitress brought us
food and we ate. "You can't be doing things he doesn't tell
you to. He'll find us like
that." He snapped his fingers. "He knows which car
we're in, and he'll have the highway
patrol out looking for us. We should go
back. Maybe it's not too late."
"We can buy clothes
in Las Vegas. Shilling's got a tailor there, doesn't he? And
I'm driving pretty good,
aren't I?"
"I wish you were in little pieces at the bottom of a bunch of different
canyons,"
he said quietly but as if he meant it.
I ate my hamburgers and started on his second one,
which he hadn't touched.
"I'm gonna go phone the boss," he said. When he turned his back on
me I felt
strange, as if all the sand were running out of me. I had a man's name and the
name of a hotel, and I had no guarantees that even if I found out any more
information I
would be closer to knowing about myself. I wasn't like anyone I
had met since I came awake
in that trunk. Maybe there was no one else like me
anywhere.
Now Peterson, whom I had
thought was my friend, was upset with me and wished I
were dead. I couldn't remember him
wishing that before, even when he was trying
to kill me.
Shilling had offered me a job. I
could have stayed in L.A. and had a place to be
and work to do, been near someone I loved.
But I had probably screwed up that
chance too by running away from it.
I bit my plate. It
crunched. A lot. "Stop it, Morty," said Peterson, back from
the phone booth. "People are
staring."
I looked around and realized that truckdrivers and tourists were staring at me.
I bit the plate again. I had lost sand, and this tasted like a decent
replacement.
"Shilling
says it's all right that we're going to Vegas," Peterson said, sitting
down and pretending
he didn't know me, or maybe pretending that he didn't know
what I was doing. "Based on his
tone of voice, I'd say that he's alerting his
connections and they'll take us out into the
desert and shoot us as soon as we
get there. He hates it when people don't do what he tells
them to. He just can't
stand it."
I finished off the plate and ate my glass. Different
consistency and texture
from the plate, but still pretty good.
"Let's ditch the car and head
for Mexico," Peterson said.
"I added the dishes to your bill," said the waitress, dropping
off our check.
"Tasty," I said. My clothes were strangling my mid-portions again. I shifted
lungstuff into my upper arms so I could breathe. The waitress went away.
"Otherwise I'll
spend the rest of my life wondering when I'm going to wander
into a bullet," said Peterson.
"Do you ever," I said, trying to push my stomach in but making my back pop out
into a hunch
instead, "wonder where I came from?"
"You came from hell," he said. "Does that seem likely
to you?" "Well, no,
actually. But then again, nothing seems likely where you're concerned."
"I wonder where I came from." "Forget it, Morty. Nobody knows. Vinny doesn't
know. I called
him after we found you in the Coupe de Ville, and he was just as
surprised as we were, or
he pretended to be. Said he didn't leave any bodies in
the trunk. You won't get anything
more out of him. Anyway, I think somebody had
him killed a couple months ago."
"You said I
came out of the back door of the Kalahari." "Just a guess." He
frowned. "An educated guess.
A lot of people on the road to hell take their
first step from the back door of the
Kalahari. It's a regular dumping site. But
you won't get anything out of anybody at that
hotel, Morty. Nobody will know
anything, no matter who you talk to."
No one knew who I was
or where I had come from. No one. Except maybe me, in some
part of my mind I hadn't
connected to recently.
"Will Shilling really have people waiting to shoot us when we get to
Las Vegas?"
"Yes," he said. "Or maybe they're on their way toward us now." "You want to go
to Mexico." "South America, maybe. Louisiana. Alabama. Someplace Shilling won't
look for
us. He's well connected along the West Coast and in Nevada, and he has
some good
connections in New York, but if we get off his map and go someplace
where we won't bother
him, maybe he'll leave us alone."
It is cold and wet where we live now, in the north, and I
have turned indolent
with winter. I crave strange foods like woodchips and rusted metal and
dead
leaves and used motor oil. I haven't told Pete what I find to eat when I go on
my
walks. He tries not to notice that I am taking up more and more room in our
apartment, but
I know he sees it, because he tells me to only go out late at
night and to walk in the
woods, not in the streets.
I got a job loading freight when we first reached this town.
Pete got an office
job and moved up to management at a small parts supply business. He
still has
his job, but I lost mine. I outgrew it.
Before I left my job, the guys there told
me I was a freak and belonged in a
circus. I asked Pete if maybe this was true. He said it
might not be a bad place
to hide out, but he liked his job and wanted to stay where we
were.
"Do you think I came from a circus?" I asked him. He shook his head. He studied
me,
really studied me, for the length of three muted commercials. He drank more
beer. His show
came back on and he watched it for fifteen minutes, then muted
the TV when more commercials
came on. "You used to be a guy," he said. "I saw
you in the back of that car, and you were
just a guy. A guy in a really bad
Hawaiian shirt and okay blue jeans. I don't know how you
turned into whatever it
is you are now. Maybe it was something you ate. Maybe you got hit
by an alien
ray. Maybe it's some kind of disease that starts up late in life. But I don't
think you came from the circus."
Since that conversation his eyes slide over me. He brings
me strange things from
the supermarket -- bones, tripe, organ meats -- and doesn't seem to
mind that I
eat them without cooking them. He doesn't seem to think about me much at all.
He
talks to me. He tells me about his day. He plays cards with me. Every once in a
while
he'll talk about his life with Shilling. He sits in his recliner in the
evening and drinks
beer and I sit behind him and near him and we watch TV, and I
watch him. He smiles.
I have
wondered more than once if it was an unforgivable thing I did, taking him
away from his
life, forcing him to start over. I don't ask him. I am more glad
than I can say that he
comes home every evening.
I'm not sure what I'm growing into. Since I spend so much time
cooped up in the
apartment alone, I've begun mind experiments, seeking through the pieces
of my
mind for useful information, and occasionally coming up with fragments out of
which I
am assembling a picture. I also study a book Pete got for me from the
library on animals of
the world and try out different shapes, but I haven't
found one that feels right yet. As
long as I have a recognizable face when Pete
gets home from work, he can put up with me.
Yesterday I tried something new. I reached out with a large piece of me, enough
of a piece
to make a whole being, and shaped it like a boy. I put into it all
the things it would need
to function on its own, bones, blood, organs, nerves,
skin, muscle, brain, and what I could
of the intangible in me -- thoughts I have
had, feelings I have felt. I thinned my
connection to it.
It breathed on its own. It opened and closed its eyes. It reached out
with its
little hands and grasped the book of animals. It turned pages and stared down at
the pictures. It looked at me, then. It smiled.
It touched me. It stroked its hands along
my sides, patted my belly. It leaned
against me and closed its eyes.
Almost, I let it go.
But I was afraid it would die. When it came and leaned
against me, I let it right back
inside me, but I did not dissolve its
boundaries.
As soon as Pete left this morning I let
the little boy out again. We talked with
each other. He walked into the other room,
trailing the cord that connected us
to each other. He looked through the refrigerator. He
brought me back some
cottage cheese, which I did not remember wanting, but as soon as he
gave it to
me I knew I had wanted it all along.
This afternoon we talked some more. He
reached out and broke the cord between
us.
He lives. He pushed back inside me but I would
not let him reconnect, even
though he cried.
He got over it. I hope Pete likes him. I wonder
what his name is. Maybe Pete
will figure it out.
Here is what I think: I don't know who I am
or where I came from. Whatever I am,
I can make more of me, and set my children loose to
find their own destinies.
Maybe it's not important to find out who and what I am. Maybe
it's only
important to know that I will go on from here.