Contrast is a story I started a decade ago and modified a couple of times, then a couple more. I'm not truly happy with it but I doubt I'll ever be, so here it is, such as it is. Jargon and other cultural references have been fished off the Internet, in unabashed ignorance of those respective cultures. If anyone who reads this has any minor corrections to suggest in terms of verisimilitude, you're welcome to comment.
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Contrast
I.
Omar
I was uphill with the goats when
the ifriti, what you call dawn’s children, first came, and it was dusk. It was
the dogs that told me first. They heard the whispers in the air, you know, with
their ears all pointed up and cringing to the ground. Dogs have good ears not
just good noses you know, better than us. The goats were only a little scared
but the dogs whined and tried to hide and I was trying to quiet them down,
talking them down, when I realized I wasn’t the only one talking. I head east
when I’m heading home, or used to when I was heading to my old home, so it came
from up and behind me. It was. Just like that. No steps, no shadows, but I
heard whispers from behind me and was scared, you know, of robbers. Turned
around into dead air.
No, not dead. Wrong word. Living
air. They were talking all around me. It was words, four words repeating but
nothing I could understand. Like they were a world away and just their words
were there with me. Then I backed away behind a rock and it was gone. I hurried
home. Sarim, I suppose it’s alright to say now they killed him, he had a
satellite dish hidden inside the roof of his outhouse. He was already running
to all the houses calling us to see what was happening. You kafirun, you call
them “angels” but that is foolishness and you must stop it. Malaaikah would
separate those of the faith from the unclean, not judge us alike.
Edmund
When dawn’s children first
appeared? I was asleep. I think we all must have been, this whole damn species.
Sarah
I always hear people say that
nobody who watched the sun rise that day when the angels came can see no more.
An’ I keep telling them it ain’t true. I can see, we can all see, but the sight
never changes. It’s just like it was, that one instant, when they broke
through. So now when I walk I’m still walking down the beach road to the old
diner. And no matter where I turn my head, I’m still looking left and seeing
twenty-seven suns breaking out over the Atlantic.
Pietro
Rome was the first. I take pride
in this. First ruin of the new age, ha. It was half a ruin before anyway so it
doesn’t matter, hahaha. You know, I always hated my family dragging me to
church all the time, with that fat priest waving his golden dress around
beneath his stained-glass dawn. I like to think they got the fat man first,
first of all. I like to think they came special for him, and his fat eaten out
of the money of old widows buying heaven for their dead husbands, for him and
his shriveled old cock he used to stick into every pretty young whore who came
to him for absolution. Maybe the children came right through that beautiful,
priceless colored window put up by some other fat letch of a priest two hundred
years ago, all glorious and brilliant, and the old man kneeling at them and
praying at them right before they sliced him, you know, the way they do
everyone. Maybe I wouldn’t hate them so much if they got him first.
Isao
The first thing everyone did was
point their phones up. We didn’t know what dawn’s children looked like yet.
Half the satellites were already down by mid-day, but we still got some news
here and there. We heard of Europe getting hit, and then the United States.
People started going crazy. It seemed like the old and the young got stupidest
the fastest. Toothless old obasan saying the Americans got what they deserved,
and that these were the bosatsu bringing balance back to the world, and whole schools
of brainless thrill seekers all crowding to rooftops with their phones pointed
up at the empty blue sky. They all thought they were going to film a bunch of
cartoon spaceships and demons. Then they went blind and stumbled around while
they split apart three by three, three by three.
Issa
The priest told us the angels
had finally come down. He pointed to his colored pictures on the walls and said
that’s what the children of the dawn looked like. He was wrong. He had a car
and a television and he said the television didn’t work any more, but we knew
he was lying. The village gets quiet at night, and we could hear it through the
walls of his house whenever the electricity was on. Michel said he was lying.
Michel was a drunk you know, used to steal whiskey from the trucks that stopped
at the gas station down the road. He had an idea though, that the priest was
white so he must’ve thought that since the children were white they’d be on his
side. I asked him what they’d do with us blacks and he just laughed into his
bottle and said they’d be like other whites, they wouldn’t care unless we had
diamonds or elephants. Michel was wrong too.
Two days later Martin’s gang
came through. Our militia had been called off to the city and they hadn’t been
answering calls, so when Martin’s jeeps drove in, there was nobody to stop
them. They dragged the twins out from their grandmother’s house after they’d
shot the old woman and raped them for hours in the middle of the village before
Martin took a knife to their nuts and let them bleed to death. They dragged the
rest of us out to watch and beat us until we told them where we’d each hidden
our money.
He hit too fast to see. By the
time you realized something was happening, you were already just remembering
the images. Martin, split from groin to forehead with a white-hot blowtorch.
The man he was suffocating, the same. The woman lying on the ground, already
dead, was in two pieces before Martin’s body had even started to drop. And then
two seconds pass before we all start to scream. The wind says four words, but
in a language none of us can understand, and in the next instant three more men
fall as they’re turning to run away.
The priest, running towards us
blessing the almighty, crumples to the ground split open by a hand whiter than
he is.
II.
Antoine
The initial reports are now
known to have been incorrect. The attackers do not necessarily work in groups
of three. The triple-targeted attacks which have been observed are instead
believed to come from a single enemy, not instantaneous but separated only by a
few milliseconds. There seems to be no central pattern or strategy. The attacks
only happen during the daytime and only outdoors. They have the capacity to
destroy most vehicles but don’t seem to take notice of them normally. Satellites,
signal stations, relays, wireless routers and any other broadcasting devices,
including mobile telephones, all seem priority targets, though they will kill
anyone out in the open. Land-lines do not seem to attract attention, so we can
still wire some information. The only clear bit of data so far is that light
plays a crucial role in their behavior. Until further notice, none, enlisted or
civilian, are to leave this compound or even the buildings. Even a second
outside can be too long.
This is all we know. We are arranging transport while
we wait for word. Any paper maps anyone brought with them would be of great
help. Sleeping pills will be distributed with today’s rations. You are
dismissed until it’s dark enough to attempt arranging a resupply chain.
Flora
- but he was so beautiful.
No, I don’t know why.
He was only like sitting on the pier, like, looking
out at the sunset.
I told you, I don’t know. I wasn’t doing anything
special, just like, walking home.
No, he didn’t even look at me really.
He was real short, maybe like three feet. Ummm, he
only had like one hand, it looked like, the right one. Or maybe the left. He
either only had like one leg or I couldn’t see the other one. I couldn’t see
his face ‘cause he was like looking away from me I guess. He looked bald,
except his head was funny shaped and squishy and transparent going up like
there was supposed to be more to it on the top but there wasn’t. And then he
sort of stood up and stretched like he was unkinking his back, and then he was like,
gone.
Yeah, there is, like, one more thing. He wasn’t shining
white, like people say. He was flat black until the moment he turned white and
disappeared.
Phillip
I don’t know what to do either.
My parents and my uncle, he was a fish head you know, they all got hit at once
on the fourth or fifth day when it all started. Fuck, I don’t even remember. I
can’t believe I already forgot when it was. They called me on nan’s old
land-line, we all used to laugh at her for keeping that, and said to stay there
that they were coming to get me. Then the next day they got out of the car and
I guess they must’ve thought the sun hadn’t risen yet so it was safe but there
must have been too much light. Just a little too much light. They were just
getting out of the car.
I don’t know. Charlie’s boys are
all gone now, after they did in Terry and his lot. I think they were only
staying around to do that, and after that night they had nothing to do.
Everyone’s going mad and there’s nothing you can do. Or maybe everyone’s going mad
because there’s nothing you can do. Just find a block where the taps and toilets
still work and wait for the canned peas and candy bars to run out. Fuck. I
don’t know.
While we still had the land lines we had something to
wait for. The police would call us up one by one like they did some of you and
tell us the same like they told you, wait and be ready to move, that they were
making a plan. An evacuation plan, yeah. People who’ve been up north say the
electrical places, they got hit and that’s why everything else is going dead
like the phones. Now everybody’s still waiting to move and nobody’s moving.
Maybe when winter comes we can move somewhere else. There’s too much light now.
We need to do something and I don’t know what. Fuck
me, I don’t know. I don’t know.
III.
Jacob
You been up to the stairway?
Stairway to heaven, yeah, ‘s-what people’r callin it. More o’ that angel
bullshit.
Yeah man, they’s buildin it. Don’t ask me how cause
shit I ain’t never seen ‘em do fuck-all but cut people open. You can sneak up
there though, at night. Didn’t have the balls to get too close to it to touch
it, but whatever they’s usin it ain’t steel. I know steel man, I done worked steel
all my life, an’ I’s tellin you, no way no tower o’ steel get that cold on a
summer night.
Yeah, ‘cold’, man, fuck! You get within fifty feet o’
it and it feels like it’s suckin the heat outta ya! Ground frozen all around it
like it’s winter an’ yer eyes playin’ tricks on you like yer lookin’ through a
fishtank. Can’t even see it up close, everything goes darker’n night around it.
Fuck Jesus man, forget him, Jesus ain’t got nothin’ to
do with this shit. Cause shit, if these’re angels man, where’s the fuckin harps
an’ goodwill an’ shit?
What army man? Y’hear about Reynolds? Major Reynolds?
Well he ain’t just that no more, now he’s fuckin ‘senator’ Reynolds. Ain’t
nobody arguin with his tanks. Y’hear shit about ‘em now, too, like that kid came
through here a while back? Talked some shit to one of Reynolds’ crew, an the
next day they knocked him out, drove him out to the field in a tank then threw
him out for the children to take him.
Shit man, I dunno, fuckin’ dawnies slice anyone, don’t
they?
Of the United States man, yeah, of the whole damn
thing. Him and a couple air force generals is what I hear, they just called
themselves senators one day.
Well if you find any real ones, go ask ‘em.
Phillip
Alright listen up! Results from
the Leeds job are in. The cold-suits worked! They got out safe, heading ba-
- I said they’re headi-
Alright, quiet! They’re heading back tomorrow night. They only got
one foot of the thing and it’s still standing on two but it’s more’n anyone
else has done including the goddamn bleedin’ tank regiment!
…
Quiet down! Soon as we get enough smoke canisters and boomjuice,
we’re blasting the other collector array, up near Newcastle, probably about fifty
days from now. New place, keep moving, keep to the underground and storm drains
where we can, keep out of the light, keep ‘em off guard, gonna try for two feet
of the thing now and bring it down!
We’ll
show these bastards how to kill.
We’ll fucking show ‘em!
Maria
Two more months they say. And
we’re starving, the few of us left, on half meals while they drill from San
Diego with those big earth bores. Nobody got the guts anymore to go above. We
knew when the corn was ready last month. We’d marked it down on the calendar,
we wanted to go up and get it all, but even at night now they can get you. Like
light from heaven, top of the stairway a week’s walk away, and it’ll pick you
off before you even realize it. So they talked a lot, Miguel and Jesus and the
rest and they talked about going up and they talked all the roads they were
gonna take and they puffed out their chests like game cocks and they just kept
talking night after night. Finally they went up a few times and came back an
hour or three later, saying the gas stations were all empty and we couldn’t do
anything without gas for the tractors. So they talked again the next night and
the next and yelled at each other and that’s when Jesus got knifed and everyone
saw it but nobody’s talking about it.
So finally I said, look, let’s just get all the gas we
have left in one tractor, just one, and get out there. Let’s get what we can.
We’ll gather it by hand like they used to, it can’t be that hard, it’s better
than going into the winter with what we had left. It’d be better than starving.
Maybe we dig holes in the field and sleep in them through the day out of sight.
Something. I stood there by the door calling them out and nobody stood with me,
nobody even got up. They all sat and stared down at the ground like there isn’t
just ground in every direction now. I tried the next night and the next and the
next and then Miguel finally went off with a few of the younger ones, but they
never came back. So the month passed, and we’re still waiting. We just tore off
the calendar page.
We tried. I guess that’s what I’m saying. We tried. Dios
mio, we tried. But I’m saying… I guess what they sent me here to say is, we
don’t have enough left; we don’t have any more to spare for you. I’m sorry. I’m
so sorry. If they don’t get here with the drills…
Antoine
You tell me, Edmund! You tell
me, you and your goddamn brain trust. We dug you out of that rotting neon-lit
pit while you were eating your own lab rats, and don’t fucking say you weren’t
doing it like the others were, I saw what was in your locker!
I do not give one single
solitary shit if the Incans ate guinea pigs you overeducated moron, the point
is you need to pull your damn weight! We could’ve saved three hundred people in
the time it took to get the ten of you out of your little ivory bunker. We need
two things from you now, no, yesterday. We need workable supply solutions and
we need information. They are not
interested in talking. We can’t ask them.
So now it’s your turn. You figure it out!
Why are they here?
Edmund
I had never thought they’d do it.
We’d given them the key, but it was so unthinkable, for any of us with any
moral capacity whatsoever.
Darkness. Whatever the children truly are, however
many aeons ahead of us they are in terms of scientific advancement, they are
dependent on the sun. It was logical to fight them using darkness. And so we
did: high-refraction aerosols, insulated suits, night-time raids, smoke screens
across a hundred kilometers. Blowing up the collector arrays to try to starve
them out, yes. But not this.
Hell,
not this.
They’re not even coordinating, they’re not even
hitting the solar arrays at all. They’re just bombing the cities, our own
cities. I don’t think it can even be called a government anymore. Maybe it’s
not even the warlords. It’s the staff of those places, I’m telling you. Months,
years now of mental pressure and isolation. They’re finally snapping.
And it’s not even working, hell! Did you see the video
from yesterday? From Chicago? It’s incredible. Four of them standing right at
ground zero, just soaking it in. And it almost makes sense if you think about
their past behavior, almost, until you remember the sun, remember the Earth’s -
No, you can’t see them clearly. Just shadows, since
they’d switched into their absorption metabolism.
You know what’s funny? My grandfather had a bomb
shelter.
Sarah
There was… I was crying because
of the… because my foot hit something. My foot hit it.
Yes, outside their door. You…
know, then. Yeah… yeah, I was the one who found it.
They didn’t even bother hiding
him, hiding their… never even a name. Right outside their door.
… … …
Sorry, I’m sorry. Hoo. I’m
sorry, I’m ok now. I’m ok. Yeah, I’ll tell you.
I don’t bother with socks now in
my sandals. Got used to the cold down here, even when the radiator grid fails.
I almost stubbed my toe on it, except it was so soft. Soft and small and cold.
One touch of my toe and I knew what it –he was. I don’t know why I bent down to
feel it.
Their door opened and I smelled
both their breaths above me while I was crouching down there over it, like a,
like some animal at their garbage. The twenty-seven suns were all dancing so I
was probably crying already. Can’t remember. He couldn’t say anything. Just
swallowed. She whispered “it’s not crying anymore” and they closed the door
again.
He wasn’t even a terat like the
others! Do you understand? It’s the only reason I didn’t take him in earlier.
Didn’t think I had to. He wasn’t a terat. They were never up in the dust, never
near a stairway, neither of them. Their chromosomes or whatever are perfect. He
was perfect, like his sister. Ten fingers, ten toes, but not listless like her.
Not just eating and rolling in his crib. I’d touched him before. I’d held him
so many times whenever they asked for help, whenever I could help. They say he
cried too much, but he always went quiet when I talked to him up close and
blessed him, he’d touch my face trying to see me through the dark. Like I saw
his bony little face with my fingers past the suns of the first dawn, I’d bend
down and he’d see my face with his ten perfect little fingers through the dark.
Oh, God!
A girl would get them more
rations, to grow up healthy on the inside to bear more children, to rebuild,
like that damn Canuck in his filthy old army uniform keeps saying. And he was
small, I know, and too thin already, and he cried and kept them all awake, and
always wanted to feel new things and they were both always too tired. They
wanted another fat, quiet one instead.
In the hallway, I picked him up
and, and, and, his neck, his head… w-wobbled, totally quiet. I don’t remember
much after that, except crying.
Someone else came and took him
out of my hands, took him to the composter like the terat from last month, and
the one before that, and the one before that.
They used to leave them in the
woods, back in the old days, except we don’t have woods anymore. Nowhere to
run, nowhere to hide our shame. He would’ve loved the woods, I just know it. I
imagine his tiny little hands running over moss, leaves and tree bark like they
used to over my face. Feeling. He was crying for lack of feeling.
He can’t cry anymore, so maybe
that’s why I can’t stop. I don’t know. What are we rebuilding?
Wai
Give us food and water.
Yes, we kill. Does not matter, we kill. But food for
all, yes?
We come in boat under sea. Fifty.
Yes. One hundred in every. Some die, but enough of us.
We do anything for you, good workers, you see.
No, no, no, Peking blow up. Like your coasts. Nuclear,
you know? No Singapore either, no Seoul, no Tokyo. Nuclear. Boom. No rivers
either. Dust in water. Nuclear. Like your Thames.
No, no. We come from Europe now. Many stairway. Too
much dark around. Nothing else left.
Africa? No. No nuclear, less cloud, even more stairway.
Boats go back tomorrow, bring more. Workers for you,
yes? They listen to me. No worry. We work. We kill. We cross west. New York blow
up, but maybe in the gulf.
IV.
Edmund
So, the, errr, “shroomery” as
the younger crowd has christened it, report is ready. Agaricus weight is up
about ten percent over last month. We’ve also isolated a mellea strain that’s
doing great on all those dead trees you’ve been dropping on us when you
collapse the topsoil. We’d like you to funnel the wood to us instead of letting
people burn it. Yes, I know it helps morale but the smoke is playing havoc with
the air filters anyway. The practice should never have been allowed to become
so popular in these enclosed spaces in the first place. It’s not logi- yes,
alright. Yes, sir.
The algae supplement we’re shipping from the seaside
filters is helping and as for animal protein, everyone seems to have stopped
calling them earthworms but the paste is in high demand nonetheless. Here, I
can’t say we’re doing so well. Yield is diminishing, the algal blooms are too
unpredictable without being able to monitor the sea surface and… it won’t last.
The cloud cover is deepening. We have no way of synthesizing all the
microelements. We can’t keep the whole system going.
Maybe another ten years.
No, it’s not that long. I know it sounds long because
we’ve been living so many years day by day, but ten years is nothing. You have
to start thinking long term. Listen, malnutrition and sensory deprivation on a
population-scale is not something we can so easily ‘repair’ later on. We can
only compensate so much. The effects over time, the decrease in quality of-
I know we don’t have problems with outright teratogeny
anymore but something lingered. Maybe not even genetic. Maybe cultural.
Yes, but look, remember I told you about the foxes…
yes, the foxes. It only took-
Yes. Yes, sir.
…
Yes, there’s something else. Have you looked at the kids?
I mean really gone to the crèche and sat there looking them over, seeing how
they… how they act, in general?
Phillip
Listen to my words, fighters!
Listen to the truth. We are born into darkness before we ever see the light! In
our mothers’ wombs we know the truth of our natures, and that truth is night.
Bring night with you wherever you go, by cloud and shade, and your enemies
shall be defeated. Our true essence is to be buried, as in the womb, the source
of our life. We are anathema to the hated ones, the children of dawn. We are
begat in darkness while they bathe in the light. Their attack upon us is
carried upon the false promises of the past age, of light and metal spires. Our
way is into the womb of our mother earth, into the darkness where our own true
power resides. It is only by embracing darkness that we can drive out the light.
Work tirelessly, thinking always of our countless dead at the hands of dawn’s
children. Fight fearlessly, knowing the death that hesitation brings. All those
who do not join in the fight will fall alongside the children!
Follow me, my brothers and sisters, and we shall one night,
when we are worthy, know victory in
darkness!
Antoine
Mains four and seventeen must be
abandoned. We still don’t know where they’re crossing the Atlantic. We think
they’re using British cave systems as natural underwater ports for all those
submarines.
Dawn’s children themselves seem to have pulled back to
Africa and South America, staying more within the tropics. For all it’s worth,
the dust cover does seem to have weakened them. But what a price, my god what a
price.
Here’s something we don’t want spread around. It would
kill morale. We never got a single damn one of them. Twenty-seven suns broke
out at the first dawn, and twenty-seven children are still roaming the earth.
It’s confirmed now, been for years. Up in Greenland, before we lost contact,
they catalogued the radiation the children give off when they travel. The
pattern they emit at their point of arrival is different for each one, and
there are twenty-seven different patterns. We’re still catching flashes through
the periscopes, always the same twenty-seven flashes. Sarah got one thing right
after all.
Over nine billion of us dead in the past decades and
we never managed to kill a single one of them. And now these fanatics, stupid
enough to actually want to start a war. Over what? What is there even left to…
Have you seen them? They’re not North or South
American. Most of their equipment’s Russian, Israeli, Chinese, Turkish,
scavenged, all of it. Supposedly they speak some kind of pidgin Mandarin-English,
but there’s nothing of England or China left in them anymore either. A whole
fleet of nuclear incubators - incubating what, I wonder? Malnutrition,
restricted environment, strict selection for group behavior and group survival.
They breed like vermin in those boats. Pulled a pregnant girl out of one of
them, nothing but skin, bones and bulging veins, and a belly as big as the rest
of her. Terat. Tried biting us but she barely had any teeth left. Edmund’s
quacks checked it out, said some had fallen out, some never fully grew in,
others were broken violently. They swear she could not have been older than twelve,
and she looked forty. Who knows what goes on on those submarines. All they have
is the fungus farms on land and whatever they can fish out of the sea without
surfacing. There were no boys. A couple of men, old codgers in their twenties,
but no boys. Just pregnant little girls. We don’t really want to know what
happens to their boys, or their girls who can’t breed. On our end, we held back
that particular demon at the composter.
I feel old. I’ve felt old since
I was a sergeant, since there still were such things as sergeants. Have you
tried explaining old age to your children? We’re the last old people. Four
generations, Edmund says, it only took Belyaev four generations to start
turning foxes into dogs. I have grandchildren now.
Edmund
The troglodytes? They’ll burn themselves out, in time.
It’s untenable. It has to be. We just have to pull back. They have no real
weapons but there are so many of them. They keep coming, will keep coming, but
we can dig in and…
Dig in. What a strange thing to say nowadays.
It has to be untenable, the death throes of our worst
natures. The only other option, well, the only other option is that they’re a
bit ahead of the curve.
Maria
I asked her why she’d name her
daughter something so silly as Eyelid. I asked her as a friend. We have gone
through two husbands each and birthed seven children before between the two of
us and buried three of them and we always gave them Christian names. To
remember. All that she did was to shrug. She said it’s useless. I asked what
is, and she said eyelids, the eyelid is a useless organ. Vestigial. There’s
been less light every year. The power plant is down to one reactor now. All the
electricity’s going to the rice trays and the desalinization plant. Soon we’ll
be down to just the generators and when those burn out…
So she said it’s useless. It’s a
useless name. I thought she might cry but she just walked off. It was lesson
time anyway.
Three generations ago you told
me I’m a schoolteacher now. A world without magazines didn’t need editors. So I
taught. You said to teach in English, one language for one unified species, so
I taught in English. You said to teach math. Ask one of my pupils to recite the
multiplication tables. They walk in tired. They wake up tired, shuffle into the
school tunnel tired, one hand on the wall so they don’t stumble. Whether or not
a tunnel’s lit, they’ve gotten the habit to keep one hand to a wall as they
walk, from when they were toddlers. Rickets. That’s the first thing I think
watching their skinny legs drag past. Makes me wish for blackouts. Used to tell
myself I was imagining, my eyes had gotten bad, the light worse.
I try to tell them why so many
of their classmates died last year, try to explain about cholera and what germs
are and cleanliness and groundwater. They stare at me. Not even at me. They stare
ahead. They move their heads to track the sound of my voice across the room,
but if I raise my hands to gesture it means next to nothing to them. Their eyes
barely shift.
Go ahead, ask them the
multiplication tables. If you recite it for them, they’ll complete one or two
answers, by rote. One multiplication they all know. Three by three. “Three by
three light burns me.” You’ve heard that one, at what passes for night when
they should be sleeping, heard little feet along the corridors chanting that hideous
rhyme? “Three by three, light burns me, three-three-three Children be.” They
can barely add and subtract but they’ve memorized three to the third from that pendeja
Sarah’s babbling about angels.
They don’t call themselves children. We’ve made the
word taboo to them. We’ve been such idiots. Even the younger parents don’t use
it. They’ve never adopted the words night and day either, just “sleep-time”
“meal-time” or “lesson-time” and all the other times. That giant clock in the
great hall that Edmund was so proud of, with the glowing dial, they can’t read
it worth a damn. Well, they can, all of them, but they don’t care what six
o’clock is. The hands point to mealtime and then to lesson-time and then to
farming time and digging time and so on. They don’t care one bit about the old
legends about Zeus or Hanuman or Moses. Those are mountain-dwelling spirits. I
tried explaining mountains and they thought I was talking about tunnels going
up. I showed them pictures and they frowned and stared in disbelief. They have
their own oral tradition now. We stopped showing videos of the dawnies a decade
ago, but it was too late. The older ones tell the younger ones and the younger
ones take up the chants. They all know about the angels. They all know what the
angels do to our kind.
There is one sort of legend they
all like: the chthonic dirges, of Tartarus and Sheol and Niflheim, about demons
and shades and goblins digging beneath the world of light. I’ve stopped telling
those stories and it’s too late. They know who opposes the angels. They know
that light murders darkness. The older ones tell the younger ones and the
younger ones…
The youngest ones are the worst,
the toddlers. Their laughter, dios mio. That spastic, throaty cackle they hurl
at each other in the dark! I can’t stand it anymore. You don’t need a
schoolmarm. You need a zookeeper.
Edmund
Do you know, it’s the collector
arrays or so-called ‘stairways’ which gave us the key. Not that the aliens’
behavior makes much sense in the first place. Their main activity has always,
always been manually exterminating us. Why did they not bring some doomsday
device and just scorch the planet? Why did we not bring more cans of
insecticide down here? We found a ten meter wide anthill above tunnel fourteen-twelve,
trying to get at our farms.
For stupidity’s sake! Why are
they even on a planet’s surface to begin with? Have you ever asked yourself
that? No, not the ants, you senile old cracker, the damn children, Dawn’s
Children. You asked me that, a long time ago, a very long time ago, you
remember? Huh? “Why are they here?” Then you forgot about it because it didn’t
matter anymore. All we had was this.
Why would something like them invade a planet’s
surface, bringing nothing with them? We’ve seen no examples of their technology
so far but those collector arrays. They come down here empty-handed and start
building structure after structure to help them feed. Why not just sunbathe in
the sun’s corona? Why dive below a magnetosphere and an ionosphere and cloud
albedo to then just compensate by building solar collector forests, all the
while actively working to displace an existing city-building civilization?
It’s insane. We’re being driven
to extinction by the galaxy’s village idiots.
Except I know, I know the
answer. Hah. We figured it out decades ago, long before the others turned on
each other and died off. Then you stopped asking why and we forgot to tell you.
Want to know the answer? You’ve seen it, you’ve seen the answer grow around
you, generation after generation. See, we were tending the pits one night and began
discussing the stairways -
Sarah
We already know what the angels
say. Four words, it’s all they need. I’ve been staring at those four words for
most of my life now: war, death, famine and pestilence.
V.
Digger
Dios mio. Hear old Ed-mud say
last dig time, ‘fore heart-stop? Say “a bad one all hope, who you into it?” Crazy
old shit, he. Kwahahka!
Biter
Them little thing lots come,
take little food piece away, make one long line from wall to food pits, gotta
put finger on them, quick hard push make stop. Little thing with little legs
tickle if they get on you, then try bite you. Dios mio. Make stop quick all
they or they all try eat you. Them smaller finger, you make stop one-one-one
every finger, feel -crunch-, kwahahakha! One-one-one, make stop three by three,
three-three-three. Lick after. Food.
No. Dios mio. Not know what they
eat when they not breaking food pit. They go underneath. Maybe eat thing
smaller than they, maybe eat it three-three-three. Crunch! Kwahahka!
Scratcher
Hear crazy old shit Un-tun make
heart-stop for he next sleep time, go up up up. Dios mio. Nothin up there.
Crazy old shit. They boss up there. Kwahahka!
Antoine
Better to die climbing to heaven
than ruling hell.
VI.
Ha
fight
run
eat
fuck
fight-run-eat-fuck
VII.
[…]
fight
run
[…]
eat
fuck
[…]
run
[…]
fuck
[…]
eat
[…]
…
[…]
…
[…]
…
∞
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