Zollocco: A Novel of Another Universe (10 page)

BOOK: Zollocco: A Novel of Another Universe
6.07Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
 

During the next few weeks, the Tarnises gave me room and board in exchange for tutoring Neighteeha. I tutored others for more money. Neighteeha had great difficulty speaking Leekimbee, but her writing and reading skills were fine, or so she claimed. This was a perfect set up. I had access to her grammar books, so I could start teaching myself how to read and write Leekimbee. The grammar books were mostly filled with cartoons depicting the words beneath the pictures. After I practiced writing, I would flush my secret efforts down my bedroom trash-toilet. The Tarnises would have found something wrong in a Leekimbee speaker who was illiterate in the tongue! As for flushing my work down the toilet, every room in the apartment except the dining room had a tall, elegant v-shaped, light blue porcelain toilet. The water tanks were attached to the ceiling. The chains dangling from the ceiling tanks had fish shaped handles. Wastebaskets and trashcans were not used. The dining room and living room toilets were even more elegant than those in the other rooms. The lip of the tall vase-shaped bowl was Wedgwood blue and a sea anemone pattern decorated the toilet inside and out. The kitchen toilet was a very practical affair, boxy in shape and large. The kitchen toilet stood on tall rail like legs and had a lid that locked when the toilet was not in use. Mrs. Tarnis was quite amused by my fascination with the toilets. Neighteeha explained the city had an abundance of water, and used it for everything; waste treatment, power, recreation, everything.

 

I found out what The Waves were. One afternoon it suddenly fell dark. The `eyes' on the edges of the street lit up, serving as street lamps. It rained, and was dark for two days. The grocery stores were crowded. Mrs. Tarnis told me everyone was laying in supplies for the week of The Waves.

 

The morning came when Mrs. Tarnis interrupted my tutoring of Neighteeha to announce the arrival of The Waves. Neighteeha let out a hoot, grabbed my hand, and dragged we quickly out of the apartment and through corridor after corridor of the large apartment building. We entered a large room crowded with people standing before a huge, thickly paned window. A bar was set up at the end of the room opposite the window. I saw the first of the waves. A tidal wave was sweeping right toward the city. The enormous mass of water came right through the city, towering above most of the triangular buildings. The waters smashed and tore at the buildings, but the pyramids were strong and the waters failed to destroy them. The wall of water steadily approached, looming over the building we were in. I could no longer see the top of the wall of water. I backed away. I bumped into a handsome young man behind me. He laughed at me.

 

"I take it, you've sever seen The Waves." I covered my face with my hands as the wall of water smashed into our building. When I peeked out from between my fingers I saw my new companion was about half a foot taller than I, carried himself well, had large, gray eyes, a slightly jutting round chin, a drooping mouth, dimples, and straight hair parted on the side.

 


This happens once a pregnancy. You'll get used to it. It only lasts a week. The next really big wave will be a couple hours from now. You see, once a year our planet's four moons cluster together and we get these big waves," the young man explained. "You look like you need something calming. Let's visit the bar."

 

We ordered some Forsythia wine, to celebrate my first experience of The Waves.
Trying to impress me with his worldly knowledge, the young man said, "Forsythia wine is scarce because the bushes are hard to catch. I've heard stories that the bushes have even tried attacking people, but surely that is just a myth."
His words gave me a flash recollection of those yellowbeast-bushes chasing and cornering me. I cringed inwardly at the memory. However, the supreme good looks of my companion successfully chased away all unpleasant memories.
"Yes, I know they are hard to catch," I said, carefully restraining myself although the temptation to launch into the story of fleeing from the forsythia was strong. This restraint of mine and the good looks of Yartem, the young man, ensured our romantic involvement. Our affair was at its most idyllic during that Week of the Waves. As I nervously sipped my forsythia wine thinking we would all be drowned for sure, Yartem confidently drank his wine and explained that Gretern "The City of Waves," went on vacation once each pregnancy when The Waves came. Each building became automatically sealed. The apartment buildings had their own theaters, movie houses, bars, churches, gymnasiums, and Wave viewing rooms.
During the remainder of the Week of Waves, Yartem came to fetch me each afternoon, and we went to the entertainments. Since there is a custom in Gretern that every door within each isolated building is open to all other of the building's residents for dinner during the Week of Waves, Yartem and I ate with a new set of people every night. Often we found ourselves visiting strangers. At every meal there was soup.
Neighteeha, her boyfriend and I hosted a dinner in Yartem's studio apartment. Floods of people came. We stirred and ladled out pots of seafood stew. We laced the stew with forsythia wine, and the sweet smell of yellow blossoms steamed above the pots in great clouds. We sucked this steam, deprived of its inebriating effects, into our lungs and laughed and laughed. Our guests couldn't seem to get enough of the stew or of our silly jokes. They, like The Waves, came crowding again and again to rob our pots of contents. In the small sea of faces that buoyed up and down from the seats, bowl in hand for more soup; there was one man who for some reason reminded me of Raiboothnar.
The last night of the Week of the Waves, the gargantuan walls of foam-crested water rushed crashing through the city time and time again. As is the tradition, the Wave room was crammed with people who intended to stay the night to celebrate and to watch the Waves. Time after time the stars and the moons were blocked from view by the glistening, crashing waters. At dawn, the sun shone through the Waves, transforming each one into a huge conglomeration of prisms. At the moment the Waves crashed against our building the large strong window looked like stained glass coming to turbulent life. Streams of light tumbled through the room, bathing each of us in magnificence. Gradually, The Waves grew smaller, and came farther apart. The sun climbed higher in the murky sky. At last the waters returned to the seabed, no longer pushing walls of water through the city. The sea became still and colorless. The sun hid its yellow behind clouds. Only a distant, faint rainbow remained of the colors that had been so glorious and full. The buildings were unsealed, and everyone went back to work.
I got a part-time job in a Leekimbee bookstore to augment my tutoring income. I was able to do a lot of reading in the bookstore. At first reading, Leekimbee was difficult, but I kept forcing myself until I became proficient. I read of the interlinked solar systems called Imenkapur in a history text.

 

Imenkapur consists of two solar systems, which form a colossal oscillating x, with a star at the center of each system. This was first discovered in the early Sans Forest Period. Three contemporary ivilizations on different worlds, the Bread Civilization, the Oceanic Civilization, and the Laser Civilization made the discovery independently of each other. This discovery led the imaginative in the three civilizations to speculate human life might exist elsewhere within Imenkapur: The Bread Civilization, being very philosophically advanced, discovered the structure of Imenkapur through mere visual observations. The philosophical implications of planets from another solar system regularly seen in the Bread Peoples' sky-lines was strongly for the existence of human life quite nearby. The Bread Civilization therefore filled unmanned spacecraft with bread formed into human shapes, and launched the spacecraft to the planets, which glowed red in their skylines. To the Bread Peoples red was a color of good fortune. The planets, which glowed blue in their skylines, they distrusted as malefic forces. The Oceanic Civilization, suffering from a dwindling source of dry land, used their great ship building technology to build a huge lightweight spaceship to bring metals and bedrock back to their planet. The Laser Civilization developed transporters to exile criminals to planets distant from themselves, and send families to homestead neighboring planets. Eventually these three Civilizations found hard evidence of the existence of each other. Records show a Laser family transported to a planet found one third of the planet carved away by an Oceanic spaceship, and near the excavation a small space capsule filled with bread from the Bread Civilization. The Laser and Bread Civilizations were part of the same solar system and so they established a vocal contact with each other long before they were able to communicate with the Oceanic Civilization. This communication was effected through the means of Lasers. The Bread and Laser Civilizations, half a light-pregnancy away from each other, pooled their knowledge. The result was the extensive and accurate mapping of the two solar systems, the charting of the best paths for interplanetary journeys, the blooming of cross cultural achievement, as well as advancements in medicine. The Oceanic Civilization, using only manned spacecraft, slowly mapped and charted Imenkapur autonomously, and with great accuracy. The Oceanic Civilization remained unaware for six generations of the existence of the other two civilizations. During those six generations, the Bread Civilization colonized planets their mystics recommended. Also during that time, the technologies of the Bread and Laser Civilizations advanced at an intense rate. The mystics of the Bread Civilization had deemed the periodically viewed Oceanic spacecraft `malefic presences', and the Laser people had directly encountered the ravages inflicted on planets by the Oceanic scavenging ships. Therefore, the Bread and Laser Peoples agreed to protect each other from Oceanic spacecraft. The Bread Civilization used hypnosis and hallucinatory techniques to keep the scavenging Oceanic ships away from the planets held by them and the Laser people. The Laser people used vast holograms to confuse and deter the Oceanic spaceships. The day came, however, when an Oceanic spaceship with a course set for the largest planet of the Bread Civilization came within transport range of a Laser planet. The Laser people transported themselves onto the ship, killed the Oceanics, and pirated the spacecraft with the intent to establish a direct physical commerce with their allies the Bread People. Unfortunately, the direct contact between the two civilizations resulted in the decimation of three quarters of the Bread population, due to a virus carried by the immune Laser people. The temptation to conquer the weakened Bread people proved too strong to the Laser, and the Laser people conquered the central ruling planet of the Bread people. The Bread people became enslaved to the Laser people. The Oceanic people received the distress call from their pirated spacecraft. Nationalistic pride demanded revenge on both Laser and Bread people. The blasters that were part of every Oceanic scavenging ship were used as weapons against the Laser and Bread people. This commenced The Interplanetary Wars. The few surviving Bread people were enslaved by the Laser and in danger of total annihilation by the Oceanic. Bread Mystics urged a new alliance, one with the Oceanic people, who like the Bread people, were innocent victims seeking a just revenge of the Laser people. The Oceanic people saw the political significance of freeing an enslaved people and agreed to the Alliance. The addition of the Bread Civilization's sophological techniques to the fray between the Oceanic and Laser people led to an escalation of the warfare. The age of Genocide began. I closed the book and looked up meditating on what I had just read.

 

"A sad history of misery. Thank Waves the Holy Forests of Ipernia took pity on us and agreed to teach us how to live peacefully." The voice startling me from my musing was Neighteeha. "Since you finish work very soon, I thought I'd drop by and walk you home," she continued. "Yartem wants us to stop in where he lives. He has a new cartoon he wants to show us."

 

Yartem had a job illustrating books. In his spare time he painted and drew cartoons. He always showed me examples of his work. The cartoon he showed us that day was of a little planet which had no life-supporting planets anywhere near it. (A very funny idea to an Imenkapurn). A great whalelike creature swam in the vacuum just outside the little planet's atmosphere. The whale kept trying to yell loudly enough for the people to hear him, but to no avail. The atmosphere was too dense for him to swim into, so he finally gave up and swam away just before the people launched their first spaceship. The people on the planet think they arealone in the Universe. Yartem felt these people must be intrinsically lonely. He saw the cartoon made me sad.

 

"You understand the concept of Loneliness I am trying to depict," he observed.

I couldn't tell Yartem he was drawing his version of my home. To tell anyone would mean capture and being sold as a Zitam.

 

As Neighteeha and I strolled home she remarked, "Yartem sure is a dedicated artist."
I glanced at Neighteeha, struck by her comment. "Yes, he is, isn't he? You are too, dedicated that is; you are as dedicated to opposing the Toelakhan as Yartem is to creating art."
Somewhat embarrassed Neighteeha answered, "Maybe I get carried away sometimes."
I hastened to say, " No, no. I think it is good to be consumed by an ideal. It seems to give you a direction to your life, like Yartem's art gives him a clear direction in life."
Neighteeha asked, "Don't you think everyone has a direction in life? I've always felt my life has had a purpose, and I do feel it is to thwart the cancerous growth of the Toelakhan."
I smiled at the political language Neighteeha always fell into when she spoke of the Toelakhan. "I don't know Neighteeha. Does everyone have a purpose in life? You have found one, and Yartem has found one, but isn't that because you wanted a purpose and selected one, rather than this sort of mystical concept of a special Purpose given you by divine guidance?"
She lifted her eyebrows and waved her head back and forth as she considered the thought, "I think the two work together. I think everyone is born with a need to find a purpose and talents that define what realm that purpose will fall under, and even then, we choose the articulars.
"I don't know Neighteeha," I said with some frustration, "I don't have any purpose."
"Neighteeha said, "I think you have one, you just haven't found it yet."
The whole subject made me very tense and anxious. Surely if my life had a purpose, it would be to help revive the dying planet that was my home. But I had left Earth. I could never go back, and so what could I possibly do? Was my family slowly asphyxiating on a world that had stupidly burnt down all its trees and poisoned its air? Purposes were for those who could hope, who had the luxury of hope. If I had any purpose now, it could only be to enjoy my escape. I changed the ubject to more banal topics.

Other books

Exiled by Workman, Rashelle
Younger by Suzanne Munshower
After Midnight by Kathy Clark
Science Matters by Robert M. Hazen
Bite Me by Christopher Moore
The Lies You Tell by Jamila Allen
Funny Money by James Swain