Accessing the Future: A Disability-Themed Anthology of Speculative Fiction (22 page)

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Authors: Nicolette Barischoff,A.C. Buchanan,Joyce Chng,Sarah Pinsker

Tags: #Science Fiction, #feminist, #Short Stories, #cyberpunk, #disability

BOOK: Accessing the Future: A Disability-Themed Anthology of Speculative Fiction
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Carla is terrified. She had come to work this morning, has assumed that somehow, order would establish itself, that these outliers of violence would be reabsorbed into the still generally benevolent world of her youth. But no such luck. A study of post-Marxian aesthetics lays open on the bar above her head, the book still where it had been when the first stray bullet had ricocheted its way around the place. The bullet had lodged itself in a big poster, right in the curly ‘g’ of the “What are you grateful for?” caption. Carla isn’t sure, anymore. But the time for understanding has passed. If she wants to survive, she’ll have to leave this little triangle of space behind, and get out of town.

She wills her legs to help her up. She only knows of one way out. The path of least people, far away from the heaving masses of Shattuck and University. Even here, inside the corridor, she can hear the screaming, sirens, helicopters and shots down the street.

She steps out through the wooden portal, past well-trimmed evergreen bushes. The street lies empty, some posters thrown into the street all that tells of what has happened. She runs to her left, runs as fast as she can, toward Cedar Street, its mouth opening onto Shattuck just a few blocks up. She is across Telegraph, walks fast up the street, her side pressed closed to the stores that line the street. She hears a shout behind her. Unintelligible. An angry scream. She runs. The shout does not repeat, nor does the scream, and there are no running feet or roaring motors after her.

She does not let up. Finally, Cedar. She veers around the corner. The clothing store stares at her. Its window has been smashed, and a mannequin bleeds out of the opening, one hand straight, pointing upward, to the place Carla is running toward: the streets out toward Tilden Park, up and out, over the hill and into the far valleys.

At least one of her skills is working for her. With the persistence of a marathon runner, she jogs up, can smell the alluring aroma of Peet’s coffee beans as she passes the original site of the chain store. The smell is stronger than usual. The door yawns open, and the windows have fallen out, too. A small heap of coffee beans has been thrown out onto the street, a curve of black brown pebbles creating a first stony beach bulwark, tenderly ringing their old home.

She pounds past, feels some of the outlier pebbles crack beneath her shoes.

The street begins to tilt upward, out of the coastal zone up toward the Berkeley hills. She’s not even breathing hard yet. To her right, above a straggly community garden, she can see a smoke column: what could be burning and smoking like this at the corner or Center and University? She envisions an effigy of cars, their tires bleeding carbon dust back into the air. She imagines the Goodwill nearby, its doors wide open and its racks empty, old clothes fuelling a new Walpurgis day, warming the homeless folk who called a halt to their invisibility. She pictures the police, having switched allegiances, creating a circle of soil around the bonfire with spades looted from the last hardware stores clinging between the restaurants.

Carla does not wish to participate in whatever new communal festivities are arising out of the ashes out there. She runs on. Veers left, away from the action, and higher up the hill. She passes the rose garden.

The oily sheen of the Bay stretches out to her left. The sun is high now, glinting off the flatness before Mount Tamalpais ends the bay’s reign. The smog is heavy in the air, a haze that just about erases the tops of the Golden Gate. And on the waters, about halfway out to the bridge, Carla sees a ship, and she gasps.

The supply chain is on fire. A giant tanker throws black dense smoke into the sky, a sacrifice, a burnt offering of the dying king drifting away from his people. Carla hears the distant pop of the superheated containers, their sides carving out like lilies, innards spilling into the slick-covered waters below. She imagines electronics, children’s bicycles, sun glasses, all floating then sinking out of sight, and, finally, the demise of an old Ferrari that had made its way all the way from Italy, never to roar to life again, a long ship journey only to be vanquished, to drown in a deep underwater canyon.

Carla stands for a minute, gives her calves a rest. No one is around, the air is deadly still. She reaches out, snaps off a pink and white rose, and inhales.

The girl is going to get away, and Jim is not ok with that. Uh-Huh. No way, little bitch. There is too much going on down University, the city is in flames, and if you get too close, you will get fucking burned. Oh yes, he is not stupid. This here, though, nice and tender, ready for the plucking, roses and all.

Jim likes roses: he remembers roses in the band tattoos emblazoned on Kevin’s walls, his older brother’s pad, deep down in the dungeon of their Ohio paradise. He and his brother had dragged their racing gear all over Columbus’s non-existing town center, sticking it to the po-lice man, swinging in the wind. Roses, and heavy bass, and tinkering with washed-out family cars till they hang like low-riders and boomed through town.

Kevin didn’t make it out of Ohio. His ass got kicked one night in a drag race, the revved up Mazda folded into a hunk of metal and plastic stuffing. And right in there, Kevin.

Jim had stood by the side of the Mazda, could see some of his spray paint patches, not quite as accomplished as Kevin’s. He could see his brother’s head, resting on what remained of the steering wheel. He can still remember the muscular arm across his own breast bone, Howard, one of Kevin’s mates, dragging him backward, away from the car. He still hears the sound of his sneakers on the rough asphalt, half-carted away, remembers the weave in Howard’s old jean jacket. He still smells the stink of hot gas one tick before he sees Kevin’s hair go up around his head in a halo of fire, the head jerking upright for one final time, as if he is alive—was he alive? And then the car rocks back on its heels and yowls with the fire searing through its heart.

Jim’s Keds got all scratched up, fouled by road dust, heat, and the mud by the side of the road. He still wears them, right now, long past their preppy shine and into the deeper rock-n-roll, sneaking up on little Miss Sunshine with the rose in her hand.

Carla holds the rose between thumb and forefinger, carefully, attending to her beating heart, stilling it, like her coaches have taught her. Her head snaps to the left, sensing movement. Blond dreadlock boy is coming up sideways, coming at her like a crab, scurrying across the street. Grey sweatshirt with hoodie, cigarette slim jeans, half street kid, half street cool. Not exactly threatening, not on a normal fine day, not with the flow of the city around them. But today, in the middle of riots, fancy homes up on the hill with shut faces and turned away eyes? A different story. Not an ending she wants to wait for. She inhales the rose’s perfume, tosses the flower, and picks up her speed again. A few vast sprints put her well out of reach of the crab, even as he abandons all nonchalance and lunges for her.

“Bitch!” he screams, and she, normally well terrified by confrontation, bellows.

“Wanker!” A deep and satisfying vibration of her diaphragm.

22 hours to the founding of the new desert oasis. Howard drives on, unperturbed. His wheels, a gallon bottle of water next to his seat, two big bags of Doritos, and two six-packs tucked away in the cooler in the bed of the pick-up. He had left the landscaping job in Oakland’s Lake Merritt Park right on the dot, at 2pm, shift change. Till then, he’d been in his usual haze, picking up and packing out garbage all morning long, ears and eyes closed to all else. But it hadn’t been easy: life on the waterfront had been quite a bit more hectic than usual, what with screaming sirens and joyriders flooring and wrecking cars all about, with lots of people running, not for fun or stamina, but with fear and abandon. He’d seen someone with a TV set in his arms, obviously looted. And when he did straighten, looked toward the horizon, he had seen a plume of black smoke, from somewhere near Broadway. Huh.

On the stroke of two, he had put away his tools. There wouldn’t be cash for him, he knew, and he was a bit doubtful if the city’s check would come through this time. He contemplated driving over to his digs, but, his ears full of the siren’s wail, he decided against it. He climbed in, hands on his steering wheel, and nosed her out and up, back streets to the road over the hill, ready to plunge down near Orinda. Time to get out.

At the turn-off to Tilden Park, he surprised himself by braking for a hitchhiker. She was good-looking, sure, but he wasn’t that kind of man, and she had also looked frightened and strong. Not a bad combination. He could tell that she had run far, had seen her calf muscles bulging and the sweat outlining her arms and neck. Mousy, small woman, but steely, in her own way.

“Where to?”

“Just out of here. I just came up from Berkeley. It’s dangerous out there.”

“Okay. Buckle up, and here we go. Direction outta here.”

They had talked just a little bit, after the first fifteen minutes saw them safely past Walnut Creek, and onto the road to the Martinez Bridge. Fifteen minutes of companionable silence, and of the concentration needed to make it past a herd of fleeing cars, keeping the pickup lined up and ready.

So here they are, rolling. The bridge, and then the turn-off to Vacaville. Past the prison exits. Howard avoids looking at the exit sign, floors the accelerator a bit. He knows people in there, a hot hell hole. He’s escaping.

Carla, that’s her name. She talks, after a while.

Nervous chatting, for a bit, was it this or that that started the riots, who is right, protesters, tax payers, police. Whatever. He does not give a damn, and, soon, she picks up on it, and lets it go.

“I am thinking Oregon. Up the 5, clear ride, then over at Mount Shasta.”

“I haven’t been there. Sounds good. We’ll need liquids, I imagine, and some food.”

“I have some sleeping bags and pads in the back. We’ll be ok with them. And I’ll stop at a Walmart once we are on the 5. Do you have some cash?”

“I have my credit card with me.”

“And you got credit?”

She looks at him, uncomprehending at first. Then it dawns.

“Yes. Good limit. Unless they stop credit altogether.”

“We better make it to a Walmart fast.”

And they do. Out here, life looks normal. No TV set in sight, and the store is well stocked. They grab two trolleys, fill them up, food and drink and mosquito spray. Howard wishes he’d grabbed a can from his job. But that’s not his way, and Carla seems undisturbed by the prices. She pays. They tank up. Onward.

Past Redding, the road thins. They are now on the 299. To their left, Mount Shasta stands solid, and protective. Howard loves riding under her: he feels the presence, and is reassured. His shoulders drop some more, and he rolls down the window, letting in the heat. His arm hooked over the door, he stretches, and the creases in his neck loosen.

“God’s own country.”

“Militia’s own country.”

“Welcome off the grid, baby.”

“Shall we put the radio on?”

She is getting really nervous now, he can see her twitching in her seat.

They try, for a while, catch relatively little. NPR has a story: riots in the Bay Area, hot spot Berkeley, disturbances in SF and Oakland, short segment, little new info. They feel a bit silly, but then each remembers glimpses of what they saw: Howard, a young girl with a cut on her face, dragged behind a grown man carrying nothing but a big water bottle. Carla, the eyes of the crab by the rose garden, the sly assault.

They turn the radio off. No conversation. They drive, eyes strafing by giant trees and giant mountains, gophers daring to cross the road in a flash of fast living.

Early evening, Howard turns off the road. Pit River camp ground.

“Nice place, pretty small. Not many likely to be around. Good?”

The first words uttered in over an hour. She nods. There’s a whole roadful of emotions swarming over her face as he’s slowing down, and he can see that, at least. She’s thinking.

He’s not, not really: the rocks and the trees, and the squirrels and the sun is all he needs. But when one looks up, stuff happens. So he feels some sadness for this young woman by his side, her insides twisting in wild film strips only she can see.

He wants to tell her about stillness and just looking, but he can’t find the words. All he can do is save her, bring her to the river with him, and offer quiet by the rushing water.

18 hours to the geysering. Howard and Carla drive around the campground, at the bottom of the valley the Pit River, the Achuma, has cut for itself. Large trees and the constant roar of the white water fill their eyes and ears.

They are not quite alone. Two large Campervans share the grounds, and three dome tents peek out from other bays. But there is space for them, and they back the pick-up truck up one of the gravel spurs. Howard unrolls a pad and a sack for himself. Carla decides to stay in the truck bed, an arrangement that works fine for them both.

Soon, they sit by the rushing river, drinking Diet Dr. Pepper out of cans, and gnawing on peanut butter sandwiches assembled with Howard’s pocket knife.

“Where are you driving to, do you know?” Carla asks.

“There’s a place in Oregon, high desert country, by the alkali lakes. There’s a campground there, far away from people, but with reliable water. And hot springs. It’ll be good.”

She nods. Sounds good, as good as any. What they had heard on the radio, snatched from the waves, didn’t sound good, not good at all. Too many weapons, protests, the National Army in the Bay Area, and she had heard about fires at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.

Carla is exhausted. Howard is silent, though he wants to talk, wants so desperately to talk to her, to tell her, to make her see why it is becoming so important to him to keep her safe, and he turns, but he can feel her keeping her distance, he can feel that she can feel his urgency and that it makes her shrink. He retreats, turtling his neck and swiveling away. He plants his feet inches from the waterline. He eats.

The water calms him. He dozes.

His mind glides over accidents, explosions, the fiery scorch of his past. Kevin going up in a glory of fire, a Phoenix in Ohio. His arms hold Kevin’s little brother close, a heart beating next to his own.

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