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OFF THE DEEP END
Laika Pupkino ~ 2016
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CHAPTER NINE
The Little Human Part 9:
EUREKA!
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I DRIFTED THROUGH INTERSTELLAR SPACE, A REGION OF TOTAL BLACKNESS THAT NO
STAR'S LIGHT HAD EVER TOUCHED. FROM FAR AWAY I COULD HEAR URGENT VOICES:
Hold her, hold her! Now lift.
Let's bring her over here. Valli, go get the first aid kid!
Should we be moving her? Her back could be hurt. Her neck.
After what it took to just get her on board it's a bit late to worry about
that.
Here it is Daddy... She gonna be okay?
I don't know, she took quite a hit.
She must've broke her legs. they shouldn't bend like that!
No they sure shouldn't. We'd better get this tail off her.
But DADDY!
Dammit, Valli! This is no time for your foolishness! I don't understand
this thing, where's the release button?
Maybe it's under this ribbon...
But I told you! Her tail doesn't come off! She's REAL!
What the hell is this?! Gauze?
And I told you. there's no such thing as mermai- WHOAH!!!
Oh my Gaaaaaawwd, I HEARD A WOMAN SCREAM BEFOR THE PERFECT DARKNESS CARRIED
THE VOICES OUT OF RANGE...
THURSDAY AUGUST 28, 2014.... NOON-ISH.
I'd seen it done in comedies, but I'd never been woken up by someone
tossing water at my face before. Even though I could breathe either air or
water the combination made me cough and sputter- "What are you DOING?!!?"
"Making sure you don't dry out," said the woman with the now-empty bucket.
"Thank you, but I'm not a dolphin. I can survive on land, or..." I looked
around and took in my surroundings, "...or on a boat."
I was on the deck of the white yacht that had been following me around
since yesterday, in a sort of patio area near the boat's back end that was
more spacious than some backyards I've been in. As I lifted myself up onto
my elbows I noticed that I had on my red Hussong's Cantina shirt.
This wasn't what I'd been wearing, was it? No, that was yesterday. Today I
had those starfish...
"Well I didn't know. I've never met a-" she hesitated, "-anyone like you
before."
"Well you've met one now. I'm Enomena, I'm a mermaid!" I said and stuck out
my hand, letting her know that 'mermaid' wasn't one of those presumably
innocent words that you find out are horribly offensive to the race,
ethnicity or species that you just accidentally insulted.
)))========# EUREKA
Scattered around me on the deck were my sister's neon green backpack, my
olive-drab canvas belt, a pink chewed-up motorized mermaid tail and a white
enameled steel box with a red cross on it- their first aid kit.
Valerie's parents were standing over me, looking concerned---her father
waving a device over my head that looked like a cell-phone with a funnel
jutting from the end of it---while Valerie sat in one of the two turquoise
chaise lounges that they'd lain me alongside of. She was holding my tartan
bandage, which she'd been running it through her hands like prayer beads.
"I'm Phyllis," said the woman, looking a bit dazed as she reached out and
shook my hand. She was out of her wet suit and was wearing sandals, a
colorful Hawaiian print sundress with spaghetti straps, and red-with-white-
polka-dot plastic sunglasses that had a tiny Minnie Mouse etched into the
corner of one of the big round lenses. Probably a souvenir from that Disney
park they'd visited just before they got thrown back in time.
"Hi! And I'm Tom. We're the Rosados," said the man. He was barefoot, in
just a pair of corduroy shorts, and looked reasonably fit. The hair on his
head was jet black but the hair on his chest had quite a bit of grey in it.
"Glad to meet you," I said as he shook my hand, then pointed at the gizmo
in his other hand, "What is that? Like a tricorder?"
"No, it's a medical scanner. I thought it would at least work on your top
half, but it keeps telling me 'UNKNOWN ANIMAL, UNABLE TO SCAN...' Cheap
piece of crap!"
"Well you can't really expect it to have mermaids in its data base," I
said.
"I suppose not," he said, a puzzled expression crossing his face for a
second, like I was a monkey that had started quoting... well, anybody. He
made one last attempt to scan me with his tricorder thing before opening
the first aid kit and dropping it inside, then nodded toward his daughter,
"And I guess you've met Valerie."
"Hey Mermaid! I'm glad you didn't get ate up."
She grinned at that, then her face darkened, "We were holy worried about
you!"
Tom said, "Worried that you'd drowned. You were out cold when we pulled you
on board. Then we realized that you couldn't drown!"
"I told you she was real," Valerie scolded them.
"Yes you did, Pumpkin," said her dad with an apologetic smile. "And it was
quite a shock when we found out!"
"SURPRISE! MERMAIDS ARE REAL!!" sang Valerie, quoting her new hero.
I got a laugh from Mr. and Mrs. Rosado when I said, "I hope you guys
realize you're never gonna hear the end of this."
"That's all right. She can tell us I-told-you-so as much as she wants,"
smiled Tom, his eyes glistening. He was happy to hear anything from his
daughter after almost losing her.
"Drowning might not be a problem for you but we were still afraid you could
have been hurt," said Phyllis, "And without being able to get a scanner
reading all we could do was wait. You really had us worried, the way you
were drifting in and out, calling out 'Mom! Dad! I'm sorry!' But
don't worry, you'll be back swimming around with your family soon enough."
'Not with that family,' I thought glumly. And suddenly I remembered part of
one of those disjointed dreams I'd had when I was unconscious...
I HAD SOMEHOW GOTTEN HOME TO OUR HOUSE IN DOVER. IT WAS A PITCH BLACK
NIGHT, AND I WAS IN THE FRONT YARD. I WAS HUMAN AGAIN---EXCEPT I WAS FEMALE
THIS TIME---AND I WAS RUNNING DESPERATELY, TRYING TO GET UP TO OUR FRONT
PORCH WHERE MY MOM AND DAD STOOD, CALLING OUT TO ME FROM UNDER THE DULL
YELLOW GLOW OF THE PORCH LIGHT. BUT OUR WHOLE FRONT LAWN WAS ROLLING IN THE
OPPOSITE DIRECTION LIKE A TREADMILL, SLOWLY AT FIRST BUT THEN PICKING UP
SPEED, CARRYING ME BACKWARDS, MY PARENTS' CRIES OF "Suuuuuuuuzie!" GROWING
FAINTER AS MY HOUSE GOT FARTHER AND FARTHER AWAY ACROSS THAT ENDLESS PLAIN
OF DARKNESS...
My t-shirt was soaked. I pried it away from my chest, where it was leaving
little to the imagination, and let it settle back down a bit less snugly.
They must have gotten it out of their laundry room and put it on me while I
was knocked out. My little starfish friends had abandoned me when I decided
to take on that hammerhead, which was fine by me. They hadn't signed up to
die with me, and as brave as they might be facing creatures their own size
there's not much they could have done to help me fight that shark.
I said, "Thank you for dressing me."
"Yes, Valerie and I did that," said Phyllis, with an emphasis on their
names that told me Tom had been elsewhere or had turned his back while they
did it.
Valerie's mom seemed like a very nice woman, but I could sense that my
being this not-quite-a-person, from a world she knew nothing about was
something that never left her mind for a second. There was no malice in it,
no suspiciousness about me or my intentions; just the awkwardness of being
unsure about how to "be" around a mermaid. And then feeling awkward about
feeling awkward; and then being afraid that all this awkwardness would be
picked up on, and interpreted as a sign of some ugly species-ist sentiment
that wasn't how she really felt at all.
"So how's your legs?" I asked Valerie.
"Sore! But my tail protected them. How's your head?"
"Feels like it got run over by a truck," I said. I moved my arms around,
turned my head left and right, arced my back, lifted my tail and let it
flop down, "But nothing got broken, so I'm good."
"That eye sure looks like it could use an ice pack, though," said Phyllis.
I explored my face with my fingers. The flesh around my right eye felt
tender and sore, but it was my left one that was all puffed up, on its way
to becoming one hellacious black eye.
"Yes please," I said, "I think I'd like that."
"I got it," said Valerie, jumping up out of her seat.
"Use one of the medium freezer bags. About half full," said her mom. The
Eureka's multi-story superstructure had a big porch-like opening. She ran
into it and down a hallway that sloped down into the lower decks.
"Her legs seem fine," Tom noted, which got a nod and a smile from Phyllis.
They were lucky they hadn't witnessed what I had. When that hammerhead
chomped down on her tail I was sure her legs were being bitten clean off. A
moment of helpless nausea and horror that I don't think I'll ever forget.
Sitting up like I was, the tiny Lego-block bumps of the deck's white non-
skid surface were digging into my elbows. I wriggled over to the chaise
lounge next to Valerie's and tried to climb into it. With its heavy
turquoise rubber webbing and frame of dense clear lucite it was a lot more
substantial than the cheap aluminum one in our castle's infirmary, but it
was still light enough that the other end rose up when I put my weight on
the foot of it.
"Here," said Tom, holding the back end of it for me.
"Thanks," I said as I hauled myself up into it.
He grabbed a pair of deck chairs that matched the two loungers and put them
into a circle with them. He and Phyllis sat down just as Valerie came
running back. She handed me the bag of ice and dropped back into her seat.
I unzipped the top of the baggie and popped one of the little crescents of
ice into my mouth.
"No," said Phyllis, "You're suppose to press the whole bag against your
eye."
"I know. I just really miss this stuff. We don't see much ice around here."
"I guess you wouldn't," she said. "It looks like you're going to have two
black eyes, but I'm glad this was all that happened to you. I don't know
what we would do if you had a concussion or something."
"Well I'm lucky I have such a thick skull," I said, and mimed knocking on
my head before pressing the bag to the sorer of my two messed up eyes.
Valerie giggled. "Her head's thick all right!"
"That's not nice," frowned Phyllis.
"But she said it first!"
"It's still not nice."
"It's okay," I told Phyllis, "I did say that."
"Yeah she did!" snickered Valerie, and began chanting, "Thick! Thick!
Thick! Thick-"
"Enough, Valli! That's just rude."
But the kid was on a roll: "Her head is soooooo THICK!! She's Miss Thick,
Thick, Thickety-Thickhead from Thicksburg, Thicksylvania.... And so's her
dad!"
"VALERIE!!!!"
"I was just joking," she whined.
"It's all right. Valli and I can joke around. We went through the Shark
Wars together."
"SHAR-R-R-R-R-KKKKkkkk WARS!!" growled Valerie dramatically, and started
making machine gun and explosion noises.
"Yes, we get the idea," said Tom, which made her stop. And to me he said,
"I wish we had a Shark Wars medal we could give you. That was a very brave
thing you did coming to her rescue like that."
"You're really the one that saved her though," I said. "You had that tazer
gun. Saved both of us, probably."
"But if you hadn't done that I wouldn't have got there in time, even with
my fin-props going full out. It was quite a sight seeing you wrestling that
big ugly thing bare handed!"
"I did have a cricket bat to hit him with. Or I did until he chewed it up.
And a pretty big knife-" I said, and glanced over at my belt that was lying
on the deck. Its scabbard was empty. "I don't suppose you've seen a knife,
have you? Real fancy and old looking, with a hilt shaped like seahorse?"
"Nope, sorry," both parents went, making my heart sink. I'd been hoping
they'd simply relieved me of it while I was out, not knowing what kind of
crazed barbarian warrior mermaid would be waking up on the deck of their
boat.
"But a club, a knife... Those aren't much when you're going up against a
big predator like that," said Tom.
"No, they sure aren't. That's why I usually try a more diplomatic approach
with them, using my supposed authority as a Ruler of the Seas."
"As a what?"
"She's a PRINCESS, Daddy! Her family runs the whole ocean and they can give
orders to all the fish and the whales and even the seagulls!"
"Really?!" Tom asked, like he wasn't too sure he believed this.
"We met the Duchess of York when we were in England," said Phyllis, like
this was supposed to mean something to me.
"Well tell her I said Hi!" I said.
"Fergie's tea tasted weird," complained Valerie, "And she smelled funny!"
"You'll probably smell funny too when you're ninety years old," her Mom
admonished her.
"I liked when we went to Stonehenge better. They had hot dogs there. And
that ghost train where all the skeletons and things jumped out, and those
dodgem bumper cars!"
"So how should we address you?" asked Phyllis in that weird reverent tone
that I'd been hoping I could get away from up here. "Your Grace? Your
Majesty?"
"Anything is fine... 'Your Highness'... 'Hey Boogerhead'... Anything but
'Dude'."
Valerie snickered, "Hey Boogerhead!"
"Yeah, Boogerhead?"
"Don't encourage her," sighed Tom.
"So you can actually talk to fish?" asked Phyllis.
"Honey! That's not even remotely possible."said Tom, a bit embarrassed that
his wife would ask such a dumb question.
"But she can!" shouted Valerie, "She holy can! She took me around the
corals to meet all the different little fishes and things, and I talked to
a dolphin who could read the words on my texter!"
Tom turned to me, "Is that true?"
"As absurd as it sounds," I said, shrugging in apology for my illogical
world.
He laughed---a sharp, stressed-out bark---and said, "Sure! Why not?!
Mermaids!! Talking dolphins!! Bermuda Triangle Time Portals!! And I suppose
that one's real too?"
"I'm afraid so..."
Phyllis said, "But I thought they'd decided time travel wasn't possible..."
"Who decided this?" frowned Tom.
"Well DAISY for one. She said so on DAISY'S WORLD OF SCIENCE last week."
"DAISY also admits she's not infallible. And us being in 2014 sure would
explain a lot. We'll know for sure when I get on the internet. Which I'm
going to do here in a minute, we just had to make sure you girls were
alright first. How's the head, Enomena?"
"I'll survive. I'll just pop a couple of aspirin when I get home," I said,
gesturing with my bag of ice. As I settled it back on my eye it bumped my
nose, setting off a flare of pain. My pretty new nose sure was taking its
lumps this week.
"Can you take acetoprofenex?" asked Phyllis, reaching over and snagging the
first aid kit.
"Unless the label says those are okay to give to a fish I'd better not risk
it. My physiology's kind of a strange mixed bag."
"She has a air bubble in her tummy that can EXPLODE!!!" announced Valerie
gleefully.
"Oh dear," said Phyllis, and set the box back down.
"Hey, can I get myself a coke?" asked Valerie.
"Sure," said Phyllis, "If you'll bring me a glass of my tea. And a Henry
Chinaski's Private Reserve for your father. And what would you like,
Enomena? Tea? Water? Milk?"
"Actually a coke sounds pretty good."
"Back in a blinky," said Valerie, jumping up and running off through the
boat's porch thing again.
Phyllis smiled in the direction of her departing daughter, "She sure has
taken a shine to you. Meeting a real mermaid, it's a dream come true for
her."
"I like her too. She's a great kid!"
"We're pretty happy with her," said Tom, "And again, I can't thank you
enough for coming to her rescue like that. You didn't have to do that."
"I really did, though."
"But I mean, she's not even one of your own kind."
"Maybe not," I said, "But she's my friend. I'm going through a strange
transition phase in my life right now, and I need every friend I've got. I
can't afford to have them getting eaten."
"I see," Tom grinned sardonically, "Strictly self-serving then."
"WE'RE your friends!" said Phyllis, leaning forward and hesitantly patting
my tail. It was a gesture I really appreciated, since fish-people seemed
like something from way outside her comfort zone...
)))========# THE MERMAID'S PRIME DIRECTIVE
So here we were, me and the Rosados, just chilling on the deck of their
boat...
Jasper had warned me: "You never know what a 'harmless' encounter with a
human will turn into..." My anonymity was compromised in just about the
worst possible way here. If my mermaid mom ever found out about this she
might find a use for those dungeons she never used. I was such a damned
screw up!
"What's wrong? Are you feeling okay?!" asked Phyllis, who must have seen me
make a face.
"I'm fine. Just kind of mad at myself."
"For what?"
"Well you see, we have this rule---and for us mermaids it's like the
biggest rule there is---that we're never supposed to have any contact with
humans, or even let them see us. I sure blew that one!"
Valerie was back, carrying a tray with all our drinks on it. Legs
telescoped out of the tray's bottom, turning it into a low table that she
set down in the middle of the circle of chairs, "But it's okay that I saw
you, right? Because I took the Mermaid Pledge."
"It wasn't okay for me to let you see me, but that wasn't your fault," I
said as I took the can of soda she handed me. The familiar COKE logo had
been redone in an odd angular connect-the-dots style, reminiscent of a
circuit board. I didn't see any pull tab on the top but there was a clear
plastic spot that I put my thumb against and pushed. And then pushed it
really hard. It just wouldn't break.
"So what's the Mermaid Pledge?" Phyllis asked her daughter.
Valerie tapped the clear spot on hers three times, two times and then once
and took a drink. I tapped mine the same way and watched a circular hole
spread itself open for me; like some weird living orifice opening. It was
kind of creepy. The cola was shockingly sweet to my mermaid taste buds but
I did enjoy the fizziness of it.
"It was this thing Princess Enomena made me say, all important and official
and everything---like a sacred oaf---that made me an ornerary mermaid, and
a princess, and a citizen of Hysteria! I just had to promise to eat my
vegetables and do my homework and always cross at the light, and never tell
anyone there's real mermaids. Only I guess I can tell you now, and she said
I could tell Wendy too, because she's my best friend and she believes me
about stuff," said Valerie. She turned to me, concerned, "I still can,
can't I?"
"You can. But you'll have to make Wendy take the Mermaid Pledge. As a
Deputy Mermaid Princess First Class you're authorized to make up your own
version."
"I suppose you'll need Phyllis and me to take this pledge too," said Tom,
sounding amused; like he got that I'd found myself in a jam with Valerie
and had made the whole 'mermaid pledge' thing up on the spot.
Valerie snapped at them"You BETTER! 'Cause if you don't it could be all
horrible for mermaids, like the way General Stoneheart and his Ultramega
Squad are always after the Stratosfaries!"
"That's a cartoon series Valli watches. Not some real thing from the world
of 2050," explained Tom.
"Oh, they're real. Only they're way smaller than the ones on STRATOSFARIES.
At least those ones I saw were," said Valerie.
I smiled at her, like I wasn't ruling the existence of fairies out at this
point (plus I think Mom had mentioned them avoiding contact with humans in
one of her rants...), but neither of Valli's parents chose to hear her
claim.
Phyllis frowned, "I don't know that it's good to let kids to watch that
show. It's probably fine now that she's almost ten, but I know when she was
younger it used to give her nightmares."
"I watched most of the second season with her and I'll admit I enjoyed it,"
said Tom, "Except for those fairy cities up in the clouds it seemed quite
realistic. A good reminder of what America might be like if idiots like
Senator Greenspooner and that Victory For Values mob were running
everything. And boy do they want to!"
"I realize that," Phyllis told him, "I do remember the Twenties- all that
awfulness with the 28th Amendment and all those crazy 'normalcy laws'. But
to me a show that's about fairies should be cute, magical; a sense of
wonder! Not all pessimistic and dark like that!"
"I can't say what it 'should' be. I was just agreeing with Valli, that it's
a good illustration of why mermaids like Enomena would want to keep
themselves hidden."
I sighed. "Keeping hidden doesn't seem to be something I'm very good at. I
might as well start charging admission: 'COME SEE THE AMAZING MERMAID- FIVE
DOLLARS!'"
"I don't suppose you have change for a twenty, do you?" asked Tom,
pretending to reach for his wallet.
"Sorry, not on me."
"And you wouldn't be able to use our money anyway. They weren't putting
advertisements on U.S. currency yet in this decade. But in all seriousness,
I really would like to give you something for taking that shark on like
that. Some kind of reward..."
"I don't know... Getting a 'reward' for doing that just doesn't seem right
somehow. All I really want from you is that promise that you'll never tell-
"
"You've got it!" said Tom.
"Absolutely," said Phyllis, "Not a word about any of this to anyone, ever!"
Somehow I believed them. I smiled, "Well that was easy."
"And they wouldn't have given us both XYZ clearance ratings if we weren't
able to keep secrets," she said.
For a second I wondered if they were CIA agents or something, until: "Oh!
For that Big Brain Project."
"That's the one," said Tom.
"But you still haven't took the Pledge!" insisted Valerie.
"All right, let's make this legal," said Tom, and he and his wife raised
their right hands.
)))=========# A STEPFATHER'S LOVE
The version of my pledge that I ran her parents through didn't much
resemble the one I'd made Valerie say, but it seemed to satisfy her. When
we finished she cried, "YAAAAAYYY!! Now we're ALL mermaids!"
"Oh Joy!" said Mr. Rosado, rolling his eyes. "Now If you ladies will excuse
me, I think I've figured out how I can link up with one of those old
broadband satellites and find out about this 2014 business."
"It's TRUE, Daddy!"
"I'm pretty sure you're right, Pun'kin," he said, "And that's what I'm
afraid of. Because if we really have gone back thirty-six years that means
we don't have any valid ID's, any money, any contacts."
"We still have our 'Ultimate Emergency Fund'," Phyllis reminded him.
"That's right! But what's gold even going for in 2014?"
"Around twelve hundred dollars for a troy ounce. American dollars, that is.
I don't know about Canadian or Australian."
Tom looked at me appraisingly. "You seem to know a lot about the human
world for not having any contact with it."
"I know more about it than most mermaids," I said, "It's this whole wild
crazy story that-"
"I don't think I can handle any more crazy stories right now! I'll take
your word for it," said Tom as he stood up, "So right around fifty thousand
dollars. And that'll buy us a lot more in these pre-inflation days. We've
been in worse financial shape. But let's try to get home before we go
breaking into that. I'll be back in twenty minutes, a half hour... It was
very nice meeting you Enomena. Interesting."
"You too!"
"And I know your feelings about the whole 'reward' business, but at least
let me give you a dive knife to replace the one you lost. Not to put some
cash value on what you did, but as a gift. From the heart..." he said. He
glanced over at his daughter and his voice went husky, "Because... because
I don't... don't know what I would have done, if-"
He stopped, his face contorting, like he was afraid that any further words
might bring tears with them.
I can understand why someone who is invested in "being a man" might not
want anyone to see them crying because they were afraid, or they got yelled
at, or over something dumb like losing a golf match... But crying from the
pure relief of having escaped a tragedy like losing your child? Tears like
those seem appropriate for anybody, at any time. I decided to push him over
the edge.
Valerie was watching him, her expression one of pure love and devotion. I
whispered, "Don't just sit there, go hug him!"
She jumped up, grabbed him, and pressed her cheek against his ribs. He
hugged her back, buried his face in her hair. Crying freely now, murmuring
stuff like "my baby" and "precious angel".
"You saved me Daddy! I was sooooo scared!" hiccuped Valerie, crying tears
of her own, which made him cry even harder.
Step-parents seem to be portrayed as the bad guys in a lot of stories and
films, but Tom here was like a poster boy for just how loving a father a
step-dad can be. Phyllis gave me a big nod---'You did good!'---and a second
later had her arms around the both of them.
When their family hug finally broke up Tom's face was wet, but he was past
caring who saw it. He had a great big quivering smile on his face as he
went inside.
The computer must not have been too far below decks, because about two
minutes later we heard his voice ringing out through the porchway opening:
"AY CHINGADO!!!"
)))=======# STORY TIME
The shirt I was wearing was almost dry, and my soda was empty. Valerie ran
inside to grab us each another one. She must have ran the whole way back
too because when I tapped mine in the 3-2-1 sequence about half its
contents shot all over me. Valli thought this was absolutely hilarious.
"Y-you... BOOGERHEAD!" wasn't my first choice of things to call her but Mom
was sitting right here. "You don't run with soda!"
"I was just helping keep you wet," she giggled, then opened hers at arm's
length, letting it geyser harmlessly all over the deck.
Phyllis watched me take a big drink of my coke and said, "I hope we're not
corrupting you, giving you a taste for caffeine and sugar."
"You're not. I was already hopelessly addicted. I've been jonesing for a
diet Dr. Pepper all week!"
"But where would a mermaid get soda pop?"
"That's the thing," I said, "Until a few days ago I was as human as you
are."
"What??!?" she gasped, like she couldn't possibly have heard that right.
"It's true. I was born a human, from human parent. I lived in the suburbs,
had an X-Box and a mountain bike and a little over four hundred bucks in
the bank; and was supposed to be starting tenth grade at our new high
school next week."
She looked me up and down, searching for signs of whatever mad-scientist
surgery had turned me into a mermaid. "But what happened?!"
"It was MAGIC!" exclaimed Valerie.
"I'm not too sure how the transformation worked," I hedged, "Just that it
did. And it saved my life. I was out in the middle of the ocean---and
drowning---probably not too far from here, when this mermaid came and tried
to rescue me."
"Did you fall off a boat?" asked Phyllis.
"Actually I jumped. But I pretty much had to," I told her. And after a bit
of disclaimer-stuff about how crazy this was all going to sound I started:
"Back on Sunday I was on vacation with my mom and dad, at a campground on
the coast of Florida. I was laying out on my towel on kind of an isolated
part of the beach when these pirates, who I didn't even think were real
pirates at first-"
I gave them the story of my week pretty much as it happened, except for
avoiding the word "genie" and instead calling the blue guy an "entity";
implying that he might have been some alien who possessed some of that
indistinguishable-from-magic-type advanced technology; which to me just
seemed more believable.
I yacked for maybe a half hour, stopping for the occasional question---"So
you were a girlboy like Wendy and now you're a mermaid? Oh man, is she is
gonna be jealous!"---or a comment---"I'm sorry we put you through that, and
am so glad neither of you were hurt jumping off that cliff!"---or a cry of
astonishment from the web-browsing father---"JESUS H. CHRIST ON A
HOVERBIKE!!!!"---who sounded like he somewhere up near the front of the
boat.
The stuff about my having been a boy didn't phase Phyllis. Transgender
seemed like a notion she had been comfortable with even before she met
Wendy. But what I could tell she hadn't really been 100% comfortable with
was the fact of me being a mermaid. Even though she'd been doing her best
to treat me like a regular teenage girl from down the block, there was
always that slight edge of hesitancy and seeming ill-at-ease...
Because now that she knew I actually was a teenager more or less from down
the block (who through a bizarre mishap had lost her legs and grown a
tail...) all that carefulness about what she said to me just fell away, and
we both relaxed a lot more.
Since I was wearing half of my second soda I had run out of beverage before
I ran out of story. Phyllis saw me tilting my head back to get the last
drop and asked, "Do you need another Coke, Enomena?"
"Maybe just some water. But I can wait a bit."
"And oh! Where are my manners?! Would you care for something to eat? We're
not eating lunch, but I could sure make you something," she smiled. Yes,
she was definitely relaxing around me. Doing the good-hostess thing that my
land mom always does when my friends came over.
"Thank you! I am sort of hungry."
"I could heat up some of that cioppino we had last night. Or how about
some nice mahi-mahi?"
"Actually just a peanut butter sandwich would be great."
"Are you sure that's all you want?"
"Or anything that's not fish. That a mermaid wouldn't normally get a chance
to eat."
"Well that makes sense. But please, go on..."
I ran them through the last bit of my story, finishing with: "So I saw the
taser dart and I let go of the shark just in time, but I guess I didn't
move far enough away. The next thing I knew I was waking up here."
Valerie applauded. To her my story was just a great adventure tale; and she
seemed most impressed by things like me and Anee being mermaid princesses,
the seashell castle and our talking octopus servants.
But Phyllis had been more affected by some of the the less happy aspects of
my story. How I'd been uprooted from my life and tossed into a whole new
one, and what this must have meant for my parents: "Those poor people! They
must be at wit's end."
"I know," I sighed, "If only there was a way to let them know I'm okay."
"Well there is, isn't there?" asked Valerie.
We both looked at her.
"If Daddy got onto that intranet then why can't you? Even if this is the
Oldie Days, the human people here have computers, don't they?"
"Of course!" I practically shouted. "Valli, you're a genius! A boogerghead,
but a genius..."
)))========# THE NEWS FROM 2014
We'd been sitting in the shade of the Eureka's bridge, but now the sun was
right over us. My ice-pack had somehow migrated to my lap, where it wasn't
really doing me any good. I drank all the water out of it and pressed the
remaining ice back against my eye.
Valerie was the first to spot her father emerging from the little porchway,
"Hi Daddy!"
Tom trudged slowly toward us, looking dazed.
"What's wrong?" asked Phyllis.
"It's true... We're in 2014... August Twenty-eighth to be exact... There's
rioting in the town of Ferguson---right near St. Louis---after some
leadfinger cop shot a black kid... ISIS is just starting to get a foothold
in the Mideast... Vladimir Putin is President of Russia, sending troops
into the Ukraine... In North Korea Kim Jong Il hasn't started cloning
himself yet... Tiger Woods is still a big name in golf---I can't believe
how young he looks!---and just won the Pandorica Open... And Orange is
apparently the New Black."
"Oh dear," said Phyllis. "Well we were sort of expecting this. So what do
we do now?"
Valerie recited: "We take the same exact heading you took coming here from
Bahama, but backwards."
"And that weird fog will just be waiting there for us?" asked Phyllis.
"It might just be," said Tom. "When I was in there I had a crazy idea. I
entered 'Bermuda Triangle golden fog time travel' on the old Google search
engine, and I actually found something. Exactly one reference. It's from
2011; a site called THE FORTEAN INTELLIGENCER, which was mostly crazy
stories about underground cities on the moon and how the big oil companies
are suppressing the truth about perpetual motion machines. But there it
was: An article called 'The Fog of Time', where they compared all the
legends about it over the years and gave their best guess for the
coordinates of the 'Bermuda Cross-Temporal Anomaly'. According to them the
fog seems to usually show up a little after sunrise or a little after
sundown."
"And that's what those pirates said too!"
Tom stared at me. "So you were kidnapped by pirates? Time traveling
pirates?"
"That's when all the weird stuff started, yeah," I said, figuring he'd
overheard that part from downstairs.
His eyes narrowed. "So it is you then..."
"You gotta hear her story, Daddy. It's cra-a-a-a-azy! It could be a movie!"
"Or a novel," he muttered cryptically, and then: "That article I printed
tells some crazy stories too. But it's the only thing I've found about this
'anomaly'; so I guess we'll take its advice. It's a bit late to try to get
there by sundown but we can anchor somewhere overnight near where we
entered the fog and hope it appears in the morning."
"So we don't have to leave right now?" asked Phyllis.
"Not for a few hours."
"Then I can make lunch for Enomena. She wants a peanut butter sandwich. And
she needs to use the computer to get a message to her real parents."
"Human parents?! And that fits too... Uh, sure. She can use it."
"Great!" I said, "Just point the way. I won't have any problem crawling up
and down a flight of steps or two."
"You don't have to crawl, I'll take you," said Tom. There was a stack of
deck chairs like the two he had set out for him and Phyllis. The bottom
chair had little plastic wheels on it so the whole stack could be moved
around. He yanked the other chairs off of it and rolled it up next to my
lounger.
"Thanks," I said, and slid over onto the seat. This chair wasn't designed
to be used as a mermaid wheelchair, and I had to hold my tail up in front
of me as he wheeled me toward the superstructure.
"I assume you know how to use a computer," he asked.
"Sure, if your computers are anything like the ones we have in 2014."
"This one is. You'll like it," he said, "And incidentally, I make a
monster peanut butter sandwich!"
)))========# I NEVER META-FICTION I DIDN'T LIKE
We passed through the entryway and into the carpeted hallway that ran down
the middle of the boat. It angled steeply downward for a bit before
leveling off.
"How old are you, Enomena?"
"Fifteen," I told him, "I was born in 1999."
"The same year I was. And here we are... fifteen and fifty."
"I know, it's weird! It's like that special relativity 'twins-paradox',
where you stayed here on Earth while I went off on a rocket and did the
near-speed-of-light thing."
"That wouldn't be so weird," he said, "Or maybe it would, but the physics
of that are pretty cut and dry. What's weird is that right now there are
TWO of me! The other me is your age, living back in Franklin County,
probably playing Void Rangers 3 or shooting hoops in front of our garage."
"You should go look him up and give him an almanac of sports statistics
from 2050."
"That would be a really bad idea," said Tom gravely, not getting my joke. I
guess if he'd ever seen those BACK TO THE FUTURE films it was so long ago
that he didn't remember that part.
"And speaking of weird," I said, "What's the deal with this war against the
Scientificalologists down in Antarctica? That just sounds so....
improbable!"
"I guess it would, if you didn't know the history behind it. But I really
don't think I should be talking to you about all this."
"Valerie already told me a bit about it. Said her brother is down there
fighting them. You must be worried about him."
"Well of course I am. They're saying it will be over in a month, but that's
what they said three months ago. The Clearheads have turned ordinary cancer
fighting nanobots into this weapon, so our ground force all have to wear
repulsion suits. But that's the future, and... Hey, did you want jelly on
that sandwich or just peanut butter?"
We had stopped in a spot where part of the hallway's wall that was open,
leading into a big kitchen, where most of what I saw looked familiar-
except for one great big gleaming cylindrical appliance in the center of
everything that was either a commercial donut maker or a cyclotron...
"Right now I just want to get that e-mail sent. The sandwich can wait."
"Okay, but I'm going to grab a beer," he said, and went into the galley.
"Did you want another coke?"
As he opened the refrigerator I saw the tea-colored pitcher sitting on a
shelf, "Could I have a glass of that iced tea instead?"
Tom nodded, and set the pitcher on the counter.
"So what's a repulsion suit?" I asked.
"Just a second," he said. He tapped the cap on his beer bottle three times,
twice, and once, and it lifted right off like it had loosened itself. He
took a long drink, then looked me right in the face and said, "I'm really
sorry, but I'm going to have to ask you not to ask me anything about the
future. I'm afraid of the consequences if I tell you too much."
"You mean you're worried that if I knew certain things about the future I
might change history, so nothing will be the same when you get back home?"
He made an odd, frustrated little noise and said, "I don't KNOW! And that's
what's so damn scary about all this. If that should be a real concern or if
it only happens in movies. I'm information-blind here! All I've got to go
on is a bunch of science fiction stories, some half-baked hypotheses I've
been toying with, and one thirty-six year old crackpot blog that's probably
nothing but lies! And so it might be nothing, but I just don't want to risk
telling you any more."
"That's cool. I wouldn't want to make you never be born or something," I
said, imagining one wrong word from him causing this whole boat to suddenly
disappear from around me and me falling Ker-PLUNK into the ocean.
Tom filled a glass with ice and poured tea into it, "It's not sweetened.
Did you want sugar?"
"I'm kind of sugared out. I don't suppose you have any of that fake stuff,
do you?"
"We might," he said and started rummaging through drawers and cabinets.
"But you know, when it comes to anything you tell me affecting the future
you do have one thing in your favor. Me being a mermaid makes the chances
of my having any effect on human history pretty slim. We exist in two
separate worlds."
"That's what I was thinking, at first. But if you're who I think you are
you won't always be a mermaid. And your getting turned back into a human
would mean there will more of a chance of you having an impact on the
future than if you kept on living out there."
"So who is it that you think I am?"
"I saw your book," he said, "Or I'm pretty sure it was yours. A little over
two years from now. I was in high school---my senior year, Class of 2016---
and there was this novel some of the kids were raving about. It started out
with this boy being abducted by pirates, and then he fell off the boat and
turned into a mermaid when he hit the water, or something like that, which
she didn't seem to mind at all, and she had all these weird adventures.
Just pure fantasy stuff... Or that's what I thought until we met you."
"Wow!" I said. If this book wasn't my story it was a pretty big
coincidence. "What was it called?"
"Around The Bend, Over The Top, something like that. I'd been wondering why
this all seemed familiar, and then I remembered," he said as he continued
searching. There were a lot of cabinets and drawers in here. "Damn, I hope
she didn't throw it all out!"
"And this book was by Susan Donnelly?"
"I don't remember, it was so long ago. Some girl. Young enough that people
were surprised she got published. It wasn't a giant bestseller but it had a
certain following at Rydell High. Girls mostly, a few boys. But this wasn't
exactly the most progressive part of the country, and none of the guys I
hung around with wanted to be seen reading THAT book. It had all this weird
transgender stuff in it. No offense..."
"None taken."
"But my kid sister had a copy. Said I just had to read it! So I started it
one weekend at home and- Ah! Here it is," he said. Came back out and handed
me my tea, his beer to hold for him, and a pastel green packet that said
SYNTHA-SWEET on it in whimsical lettering. "They're saying this stuff is
bad for you, just like they did about glycodulcinate before they banned
that, but I'm sure one of these won't kill you..."
"You started reading it. Did you finish it?"
"Afraid not. It seemed to just ramble all over the place. And about three
chapters into the mermaid part I just said screw it. It was too much of the
same thing. And WAY too much of that 'Wheeeee I'm a Mermaid!!! Wheeeeeeee
I'm a girl!!! Wheeeeeeeeeee I have big-' Er, I mean... Not that I thought
all the transgender stuff was wrong or anything, I just couldn't relate to
it."
GREAT... I HAVEN'T EVEN WRITTEN THE DAMN THING AND I'M ALREADY GETTING BAD
REVIEWS!
But I shrugged: "Well we don't like to read what we don't like to read. I
don't have anything against English drawing rooms, personally; but I don't
want them in my detective fiction. So then you didn't get to the part where
she met the human girl and fought the shark and wound up on the parents'
ship?"
"If I did, I don't remember," he said. He got behind my chair. I hefted up
my tail and he started pushing me on down the hall, "But I'm pretty sure
I'd skipped ahead by then. My sister told me there was outer space stuff
later on in the book and that sounded like maybe it would be better; but
that part didn't grab me either. I gave it back to Christina. But I do know
the main character wasn't a mermaid anymore by the end of it, because she
says so at the beginning. So if that really was you, and it really wasn't
all just some cockamamie fantasy..."
I poured a quarter of the packet of sweetener into my tea. Sipped it. It
tasted just about right. "So what do you mean 'space stuff'?"
"Sorry, this was a book I just skimmed through thirty-six years ago. I just
seem to recall it had these dumb aliens that acted like clowns---or maybe
they were clowns---but it wasn't nearly as funny as the author seemed to
think it was," he said, and then tried to take some of the sting out of his
criticism: "But then I was a real philistine back then. Even though I was a
good student my tastes were pretty simple, crude even. And I know there
were a lot of kids who did love it."
The hallway dipped down again, and ended at a doorway that was open but had
a serious steel hatch for a door, with a little porthole window and wheel
for a handle, like on real ship. He tilted my chair back and then forward
to get it over the hatchway's bottom lip, and we entered a small, oddly
shaped space in the yacht's bow that was fixed up like an Edwardian man-
cave: all mahogany and brass, with breakfront bookcases, high back leather
chairs, paintings of hunting dogs loping across fields, crystal decanters
holding different types of booze, and an antique roll-top desk.
On either side of where the bow came to a point there was a circular window
six feet in diameter, showing a view of the ocean just below the surface
and flooding the room with greenish light. Now and then the water across
their tops would dip down, showing a sliver of blue sky. I'd noticed these
yesterday when I was checking out this boat with Anee's spyglass. They
explained that heavy steel hatch that his study had for an entrance.
Whatever kind of super-tough futuristic material they were made from, if
one of them ever did break this room would have to be sealed off in a
hurry...
"Wow! Great view," I said.
"This is everybody's favorite place in the Eureka. Which is funny, because
the view-walls in the cabins actually give a much better view of what's
happening on the other side of the hull. They're bigger than these, and you
can zoom in on something, or go to infrared viewing at night. But there's
something about a real glass window-" he pointed, "Hey! Look at that
dolphin checking us out. They always look so happy!"
I looked. It was Jasper Five, staring right at me. And no, he did not look
happy at all.
)))========# IDIOT IN A BOX
Tom pushed my chair up to his desk and rolled up the top, revealing his
computer. It looked surprisingly like my six year old HP desktop model at
home. I hit what was obviously the ON button. The screen came to life,
showing the image of Tom, Phyllis, an even younger looking Valerie, and a
boy that must have been his son Jimmy all crowded into the oval carriage on
the arm of of a carnival octopus ride, which must have been running at full
speed, from the expressions on their faces and from the crazy angle that
all the background stuff was tilted at- rides and crowds and colorful
tents, and beyond these a wet looking grassy field with an arrangement of
huge rectangular stones that could only be Stonehenge rising up from it.
I centered the keyboard, moved the mouse to the left side, and said,
"Computers sure don't seem to have evolved much in thirty-five years. I
thought it would be real tiny, or plug into your brain or something. "
"They have those. But this is a retro model, made to look like that one I
had as a teenager. I'll leave you to it. If you get in trouble, just
holler," he said, and left.
Just to be sitting in front of a normal piece of human technology again
felt so good. I said, "Wow! A computer!"
"Yeah? Whadda ya want, Fishbutt?" asked a voice.
I jumped. "What?!!"
"Sorry, we're all out of 'what'," the thing snickered, "Come back
tomorrah."
Tom hadn't told me it was voice-interactive. I leaned forward, unsure where
the microphone was. "What did you call me?"
"You hoid me.... FISHBUTT!"
"You are a very rude computer!"
"Hey, dat ain't my fault, I wuz programmed dis way."
"You sound kind of familiar," I told it.
"Ya ever watch th' Three Stooges?"
"Not if I can help it."
"Oh a wise guy, huh?! My voice was modeled on one o' dem guys. Da handsome
one, Coily!"
"And do you have a name?"
"Sure do," it answered, then was silent.
"What is your name?"
"Now yer catchin' on, Kiddo! I am a WEISENHEIMER 1948 INTERACTIVE VOICE
RECOGNITION PROGRAM," it announced, and then said miserably, "My mudder
musta really hated me ta gimme a name like dat!"
"So how is it that you can talk to me?"
"What can I say? I got low standards."
"No. I mean, I thought only the Chinese had AI."
"Who, DAISY? Puh-shaaaawww! Maybe she got a thinkerbox that'd makes
Einstein look like Mortimer Snerd, but I swear... dat broad is a real dumb-
dora when it comes to deliverin' a joke. She's too intelligent, and way too
artificial. To really be funny ya gotta skip the Artificial Intelligence
an' go right for the Artificial Stupidity. And I got THAT by the boatload!"
it boasted. "But I guess dem Chinamen will laugh at anyt'ing. And speakin'
of jokes, I got a real knee slapper for you: Ya see, dere was dese three
brudders---Ching, Chong and Chang---woikin' in a Chinee laundry. And one
day the got this big load o' doity diapers ta wash, see? And-"
"Look, would you just get me on to the internet?"
"Why soitinly- Nyuck! Nyuck!" and the MSN news page came up.
I browsed the news a bit, just reassuring myself that the world up there
was going on pretty much like it was when I'd left it. Then I went to MAIL,
where there was nothing. No correspondence had ever been received or sent
from this machine, at least not via the internet...
I clicked COMPOSE, filled in my parent's email address, and wrote, 'Dear
Mom and Dad...'
So much for the easy part. I stared at the blank space where my word were
supposed to go, trying to think of what I could possibly say to my parents
in a farewell e-mail. I gazed out the windows. That out there was my home
now. Where I belonged. I could feel it calling to me...
But I think I'd always felt a profound connection to the sea---if nowhere
near this strong---and that most humans feel it too. At the Delaware Bay
Aquaritorium a spell would fall over the visitors as they rounded the
hallway and saw that first big marine exhibit, an enthrallment that didn't
depend on whatever kinds of creatures they could see or couldn't see beyond
the glass. It was something about the place itself---that cool serene
lighting---that soothed them and made them speak in hushed tones, like they
were in church. If you trace our ancestry back far enough it's where we all
came from, a world that is literally in our blood. The only real difference
between mers and land people is that we went back...
But I wasn't here to window gaze. I had this thing to write. A farewell
message that no matter what I said was not going to help them accept that
they'd lost me forever.
I was glad the computer hadn't spoken in a while. The little cursor arrow
blinking impatiently on and off was intimidating enough.
"What the heck can I tell them?" I wondered, and suddenly my first sentence
started to form itself in my head.
"Hello Muddah... Hello Faddah... Here I am at... Camp Granada," sang the
computer in an annoying flat voice.
And there went my first sentence.
I was furious- "You stupid piece of crap! You're not funny! You're not
entertaining! And I WASN'T TALKING TO YOU!!!"
"Ohhhh, talkin' to yourself, are ya? You know what dey say about that!" the
machine smirked, and let out an irritating singsong: "KOO-koo!! KOO-koo!!"
"Would you shut up?!!"
"Shut down?! Sure thing, Toots!"
"No- STOP!" I shouted as 'PREPARING TO SHUT DOWN' appeared on the screen.
"Had ya goin' there, didn't I?! Boyoboy, da look on yer kisser! Aaaarrr-
harr-harrrr I got a million of 'em!!"
)))============# D.A.I.SY.
I managed to plow through all the interruptions, the terrible old songs and
lame jokes, and eventually got the thing written and sent it to my parent's
e-mail address. I'd been vague about the turning-into-a-mermaid part but at
least they would know I was alive. The one piece of information that might
make them feel a bit better.
I was about to check out what kind of video games they have in 2050 when
Tom came in, "How are you doing?"
"I got it sent, but I'm not sure if I said what I really wanted to. I was
kind of distracted."
"Hey don't blame me, Sister! You was da one blabberin' at me and keepin' me
from my beauty sleep-"
"Computer: Disengage voice-mode!" commanded Tom.
"Awwww, yer mudder wears army boots! WOOOOB-OOB-OOB-OOB-OOB-OOB-" shrieked
the computer, falling silent in mid-woob.
"Why on Earth did you engage that thing?" puffed Tom.
"I DIDN'T! Or I don't think I did."
"I should have warned you, but I didn't think it would go on. So are you
done here?"
"I guess so," I said. I wished I'd fired off quick notes to my friends
Pepper and Chiro too, but I was pretty sure my parents would pass along the
news that they'd heard from me. I asked him, "So that computer voice, that
wasn't an AI?"
"Not even close. It recognizes key words, and sentence structure, and has a
couple million responses that it selects from. It's the personality gimmick
that makes you think it's sentient. But who could have left it set to that
one? I swear, WEISENHEIMER is about the most annoying voice program there
is!"
"What other ones are there?"
"There's hundreds of them. Everything from VIRTUAL VOLTAIRE to SPORTSDUDE
to that PENNY THE PINK PENGUIN that Valerie loves; although I think she's
getting a bit old for that one. And then there's a bunch for men that
are... that are..."
I purred lustily, "Ooooooh, Baby! Run your big strong fingers all over my
hot trembling keyboard!"
"That's-" he laughed uncomfortably, "That's pretty much what they're
like... They have those for all different, you know... tastes. But so far
the only real artificial intelligence is DAISY. Our team was well on our
way to creating ZIPPY when those bastards shut us down!"
I asked, "So what kind of voice and personality did the Chinese give
DAISY?"
"She chose her own. Not real flashy but friendly, cheerful, helpful. DAISY
stands for DATA ACQUIRING INTELLIGENCE SYSTEM, which means her cognitive
matrix doesn't wait for you to put things into it. She learns, acting all
on her own, asking questions, reading and watching everything from the
latest papers on mathematics to the cheesiest sitcoms. You ready for that
sandwich now?"
"Starved," I said as he grabbed my chair and started wheeling me out. "And
with all that intelligence all she wants to do is be a television star?"
"She can do that and a million other things at the same time. Literally!
She's come up with some pretty astonishing scientific breakthroughs in the
three years she's been operating."
"You're an inventor. Aren't you afraid she'll put you out of a job?"
He rocked my chair back and then forward, over the lip of the hatchway.
"No. DAISY says human society can't handle more than one giant techological
advancement per year, so she rations them out. But the three she's given us
have been beauts. Although there's no pleasing some people. Like this
Senator Greenspooner... I swear to Christ the man has to be dumber than
bathtub scum! Because until now he'd always come down hard against just
about any funding for scientific research, or teaching certain types of
science in public schools-"
"Evolution?"
"Surprisingly not so much. Mostly different sciences that he accuses of
'denying the orderliness of Creation and promoting a nihilistic
worldview'.... quantum physics, chaos theory, negative numbers. I have no
idea where he gets this stuff! But now he's yelling that DAISY is being
high-handed and paternalistic for holding out on us with things she knows.
It doesn't matter what she does or doesn't do, says or doesn't say. He'll
find a way to make it part of her evil scheme. I mean here she
revolutionizes agriculture with her 'air farming' system---which'll
basically end famine within ten years---gives it to the whole world, for
free; and his reaction is that she's 'fattening us up for the slaughter'!
What's she planning to do, EAT us?!"
"IT'S A COOKBOOK!!!!" I giggled, a reference to an old Twilight Zone
episode that I didn't expect him to get.
"Exactly," he chuckled. "People still say that one in 2050. But DAISY
really does have our best interest at heart. Like with how she- OH CRAP!
I'm talking about the future again, aren't I? I get to talking AI and I
forget everything else."
"I forgot too, sorry! Remind me to remind you next time."
The galley was alongside us again. Tom wheeled me into it, saying,"Did you
really just want a peanut butter sandwich?"
"I guess not. It just seemed like something that would be easy to make."
"Everything in here is easy to make," he said, and with a conspiratorial
grin, asked, "How about you and me split a big t-bone steak?"
"Oh hell yeah!"
"Great. And if we get caught I can blame it on you. We've just started on
this Paleovegan diet. A big early breakfast, and then probably some kind of
tofu crap just before dark," he said, with a grimace that told me this diet
was someone else's idea.
He pulled a plate with a snug fitting lid on it from the freezer, pried the
lid off and slid it into the 'SmartRange', which looked more or less like a
microwave oven. It was done in fifteen seconds, just enough time for him to
push my chair up to the table and put down two cloth napkins and sets of
silverware.
I hadn't been reassured by the plate's resemblance to the ones hospital
meals come on, but what was in it looked and smelled delicious- "Wow! This
is like a real home cooked meal."
"It is. Phyllis and our cook Pierre made up a whole freezer's worth of
different meals before we left," Tom said. He bisected the baked potato and
lifted half of it on a regular plate, then did this with the steak, leaving
me the asparagus, the salad, some flan and the bigger piece of steak with
the bone. When I popped a forkful of salad into my mouth I discovered it
was nicely chilled while the steak in the adjoining dent still sizzled.
Smart range!
We both fell into a frenzy of consumption. After a while I said, "Sorry
they shut your Big Brain down. I mean, I'm not asking anything about it,
just saying I can imagine how that felt."
"Thanks. And what I can say about the project is I really loved working
there, and was furious about the way it ended. The pure stupidity of it!
But that's when I decided to start working in the private sector, for
myself, as far away from fools and bureaucrats as I could get, and I can
tell you it's worked pretty well for me."
"Got you rich?" I asked. I kept looking over at that big cyclotron-looking
appliance, trying to figure out what it was without having to ask about
this piece of future technology.
"Richer than I ever dreamed I'd be. And the money and toys are nice, but
what's best is never have to worry about how I'm going to take care of my
family, Jimmy and Valli's education. And I can't be too bitter about those
two years at the Project; that's where I met the wonderful woman I share my
life with, this family this I wouldn't even have if I hadn't worked there."
I had to smile at that. "That's sweet."
"And it was so unexpected. My wife Jeannie died when Jimmy was young, I'd
been a single dad for almost ten years. Sort of muddling through, with no
hopes that it might ever better than just okay. There was that big empty
space in me, but I figured that's just what being a widower was supposed to
feel like. And Phyllis and Valerie; they were just starting to get their
life together after her awful divorce from Psycho Tantrum Guy. So I was in
physics, working on the quantum hardware for the memory core, and Phyllis
was with the team developing ZIPPY's self-learning programs and- Well
without getting too technical, we were different departments. Different
building even. But we kept running across each other; and-" his face lit
up, "And speak of the Devil!"
Phyllis walked in and plucked the chunk of steak off his fork. Popped it
into her mouth and rolled her eyes in pleasure.
"You're eating meat," marveled Tom.
"You know what? The heck with it! I decided if I have to live through the
Twenties again---and as an adult this time---I'm not only going to start
eating meat, I might just become an alcoholic! At least until they snap out
of that whole ugly paranoid rat-out-your-neighbors mentality, repeal the
Gender Conformity Amendment and abolish the National Dress Code."
"You'd better not," Tom said, "I've seen you drunk. You'll wind up getting
yourself arrested for wearing slacks in public, or punching the first
bathroom cop who demands to see your Genetic ID to make sure you're
carrying a pink card and not a blue card."
"Bathroom cops?" I asked.
"TSA agents," said Phyllis. "From the Toilet Safety Administration."
Whatever they're talking about, it doesn't sound like the 2020's are going
to be much fun, especially for transgender people. Maybe it's a good thing
I'm a mermaid and will be missing all that. Or if Tom is right, and I'll be
a human and publishing a book about all this two years from now---he did
say the author was a girl---then hopefully I'll be transitioned and have my
birth certificate changed by the time the ugly stuff starts. Unless they
involuntarily de-transition everybody trying to live outside of their
fascistic ideal of normalcy and their weirdness about bathrooms. And if I
can't, at least I know it won't be forever, if they're letting little Wendy
grow up as the girl she is...
Tom said, "But it's probably better if you don't turn into a drunk. Become
a shopping addict instead."
"That does sound a lot more fun," she said, snagging another chunk of steak
off his plate. "But if I do I plan to go totally nuts with it. Can we
afford that?"
"I have a few lucrative patents up my sleeve. But don't worry, you won't
have to throw yourself into some addiction. We're getting back to 2050 if I
have to invent a time machine."
"My hero!" she said, and gave him a big steaky-mouthed kiss, then turned to
me, "So did you get that e-mail sent to your parents?"
"I did! And it's a real load off my mind!"
What I didn't know then was my e-mail had gone right to my parents' spam
folder, where they didn't recognize it as a message from me, and didn't
even read it until I got home, retrieved it from the Recycle Bin and showed
it to them...
)))========# BODY DYSMORPHIA MY ASS!
I felt like some kind of weird mermaid parade float as both of them got
behind me and pushed me up the inclined hallway and onto the deck.
Valerie was standing at the railing, snapping pictures with a camera that
looked like a Frisbee with a pair of crescent shaped handle-things cut from
it on either side of the dark glossy disk of its lens.
"What are you doing, Honey?" asked Phyllis.
"Getting pictures our trip to 2014."
"That's the ocean. It looks the same as it does in our time," said Tom.
"Not really, not if you really look at it. And I want to get some of us in
the Oldie Days too," she said, and snapped his picture.
He said, "We might as well. We have time."
There was a half a mermaid lying on her chaise lounge. I pointed at it,
"What happened to your friend here?"
"That's my other tail. The non-mech one. I want Mom or Dad to take some
pictures of us being mermaids together."
"What a cute idea!" exclaimed Phyllis.
I said, "I'm sorry Valerie, but no! It's out of the question. I'll take
pictures of you guys all together but I can't be in any of them. I've broke
too many rules, crossed too many lines today already!"
"Oh that's right," said Phyllis, "Sorry Sweetheart, that would be too big
of a risk for her people."
"You mean like if we had a picture of a real mermaid someone bad might see
it and go out looking for them?"
"That's the idea." I said.
A crafty smile spread across her face. She went over to the mangled
mechanical tail that was lying on the deck and squatted down next to it.
Pulled several plastic gemstones from it and began peeling its rubber skin
off of the frame. "But could you be in my pictures if you were a FAKE
mermaid?"
"You want me to wear that over my real tail? But then you wouldn't have a
photo of a real mermaid."
She carried it over and handed it to me, "Sure I would, but only me, Mom
and Dad would know you weren't fake. And Wendy. I don't need it to be all
real looking, I just want a picture of my friend."
How could I say no to that?
"Fine. Let's see if it fits," I said as held it by the waist-hole and
unfurled it. "Oh God! It look like a- uh, never mind."
Tom and Phyllis started laughing. I guess it looked like a giant's condom
to them too, that shredded caudal fin sticking out from its end like a
fishy French tickler (which conjured up mental images of my mermaid mom
doing stuff with Jacques Cousteau that I really could have done without.).
From tip to tip, the end my tailfin was the widest part of me. I had to
sort of bend it and stuff it into the fake tail's opening like a foot going
into a snug boot, then pull the rubber sheath up over me like a pair of
pants.
Very tight pants...
I shimmied and squirmed and was able to get it pulled most of the way up my
fish half. And it did seem like it would be long enough, but when it got to
my hips I had to pull and pull.
I really didn't appreciate having an audience for this, the Rosados
watching my progress with interest as I grunted and writhed, the rubbery
material squeaking loudly in protest. I had got the thing pulled almost up
to my waist when the part that was already torn by that shark began to
spread and grow, ripping clear up to the top of it!
"MOTHERF-" I caught myself, "GAAAAHHHH!!!!!"
"Don't worry, that tail was holy gonno anyway. And it fits you now," said
Valerie.
"Maybe you can turn sideways so the ripped part doesn't show," said
Phyllis. She was trying to be helpful, but I almost snapped her head off.
I couldn't BELIEVE this tail didn't fit me! I looked over at its cage-like
frame. The top end of the thing w