The Collected Stories of Carol Emshwiller, Vol. 1

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The Collected Stories of Carol Emshwiller, Vol. 1 Page 82

by Carol Emshwiller


  “Don’t go. Sit down.” It’s in a half crouch already. It goes down into a squat, its stomach on the floor, feet splayed on each side—long-toed, gruesome feet with claws I wouldn’t want to argue with.

  I slide myself around the creature to the stove on the far side. I should have had the dishes washed and put away. Well, no matter, they’re tin. A few more bumps and scratches won’t make any difference.

  No doubt about it, it’s sick. I could even feel that as I move around it. Though how do you know if a reptile is sick? But there’s an odd stickiness to it and I imagine it normally doesn’t have any smell at all.

  “Stay. You’re sick. I’ll make stew. Rest again.”

  It shakes its head. “Mmmmmukst go.”

  “I don’t want to find you out there dead.”

  “Dhuh dhead in here iks worssse for mmgh… mmyou.”

  It shows its teeth. There are lots of them. Is that a grin? Can that be? That the creature has a sense of humor? Rosie seemed to grin, too. I take a chance. I laugh. It opens its mouth wider but there’s no sound. We look each other in the eye. Some kind of understanding, lizard to mammal, passes between us. Then the creature shivers. I pull a blanket off the bunk, big Hudson Bay, but it only covers the creature’s top half like a shawl. It helps to hold it on with those tiny arms, and nods again.

  “I’ll build up the fire and get us something to eat. You just rest.”

  “I hhhelp-puh.”

  “Please don’t.”

  It grins again, mouth wide, that row of teeth gleaming, then huddles close against the wall opposite my kitchen area, trying to make itself small. Still, I step on its toes as I work. When I do, we both say, “Sorry.” “Khsssorry.” We both laugh…. Well, I laugh and it shows its teeth.

  How nice to have somebody…… something around that has a sense of humor. They must have left in some odd rogue genes by mistake.

  I start to make stew. I have lots of dried chanterelles and I hope it likes wild garlic. It watches me as Rosie did, mouth open. I hum a song my grandma taught me. I thought hardly anybody knew that song but me, but then I hear the creature buzzing along with me, no doubt about it, the same song. I look at it. It blinks a slow blink, as if for a wink.

  We eat my hare stew, it out of my wash basin. Licks it clean like Rosie always did. At least it hasn’t lost its appetite.

  “Have you a name other than that Zero Seven on your tag? By the way, I took that off. I had a dog, Rosie. She died. I keep almost calling you Rosie by mistake. It’s the only name I’ve said for years.”

  There’s that smile again. “Rrrrosie is kfine. Kfine.” Then Kfine turns into a cough. I heat up some wild rose hips tea. I always have lots of that.

  Then it stretches out again. I pile on more blankets.

  “Mmmmmnnno mmno. gmdon’t.”

  “I insist. You must stay warm. If the lamp doesn’t bother you I’ll read for a while, but you should sleep. I’ll make the fire high. Wake me if it gets cold. You should be warm.

  (My lamp is just a bowl of volcanic tuff with exactly the right hole in the center. I have a big one and a little one. The oil I’ve rendered even from creatures with not much fat. Even deer.)

  I settle myself with a book. I like having company even if the company takes up most of the room. I think it’s already asleep, but then, “Khind, kh hind ssssir. I like being Rrrrrosie.” (It gargles it out as if it was French.) “Bhut who are mmmm kh you? If khyou don’t mmmmind.”

  “Ben. I’m Ben.”

  “Ah, easy khto kkh ssssay.”

  I think: She. She is a she.

  When I douse the lamp (by putting on the lid) and it’s pitch black in here, I do have a moment when I worry. She is starving. I might be her next meal and a better one than I’ve prepared for her so far, or at least bigger. What’s a little broth and then a little rabbit stew? But I won’t be facing anything my wife and child didn’t face already though my fate might not be as instantaneous as theirs. But I hear her breathing, snuffling, snorting in her sleep just like Rosie. I’m comforted and reassured by her snores.

  Sometime during the night the snow stops. Dawn, in my one and only window, shows a cloudless sky. I watch the oblong of sunlight move down and across the far wall until it lights on her. She’s a bundle of blankets, but what little I can see of her shines out. Certainly she’s not made for a winter climate. Probably most comfortable in a hot place with lots of shiny green leaves to hide in.

  She feels the sun the moment it touches her. (Thick skinned but infinitely sensitive.) Turns and looks at me. Grins her Rosie-grin. Like Rosie she doesn’t have to say it, it’s all over her face: Hey, a new day. What’s up now? And: Let’s get going.

  “You look better.”

  She nods. Says, “Mmmmm, nnnn. Mmmmm, nnnn.”

  “We’ll go out, if you like. You must feel cramped in here.”

  “Mmmmmmm, nnnn.”

  I’ve jerky and hard tack. We breakfast on that, and more rose hip tea—a pitcher of it for her.

  “Keep a blanket around your shoulders. And I think you’ll have to back out.”

  Like my Rosie was before she got old, this Rosie peers, sniffs, hops up on boulders, jumps for no reason whatsoever, she skips in the bare spots where the snow has blown off. Sings a ho dee ho dee ho kind of song. A young thing that, sick or not, starving or not, can’t sit still. I saw that in my boy.

  I take her to my viewing spot. You can see the whole valley. I often see deer from here.

  As we watch, another of these creatures comes down the valley heading south. I haven’t seen any until this one sitting beside me, and here comes yet another, and then two more not far behind. Driven down from the mountain passes on purpose? Or is it the cold?

  We watch. Not moving. Rosie looks at me, at them, at me. I love that look all young things have, animal or human, of wondering: What’s up? What’s going on? Is everything all right?

  Then those first two turn and trumpet at the others. Rosie’s arms are just long enough for her to cover her ears. (She must hear extraordinarily well to need to do that from way up here.) Hard to tell from this distance, but those others all seem much larger than she is.

  When, a moment later, she takes her fingers from her ears, I ask her,

  “Have you had experiences with others of your own kind before?”

  She nods.

  “The scars.”

  “Mmmnnn.”

  “You weren’t supposed to fight each other.”

  “Mmnnnn.”

  I want to comfort her. Put my arms around this green scaly thing. (My son had an iguana. We never hugged it.) She reaches toward me as if to hug, too. But even those little arms… those claws…. And my head could fit all the way in her mouth, no problem.. I flinch away. I see her eyes turn reptilian—lose their wide childlike look. She says, “Kh… khss sssorry.”

  “No, it’s I who should be… am sorry.”

  I reach and I do hug and let myself be hugged. I get my parka ripped on her claws. Well, it’s not the first rip.

  Far below us, the things fight and trumpet, smash trees, trample brush. I can see, even from up here, spit fly out. There’s no blood. Their hide is too tough.

  They fight with their feet, leaping as cocks do. One is losing. It’s on its back, talons up. Even from way up here, I can see a little herd of panicked deer galloping off toward the hills. Rosie covers her eyes this time and leans over as if she has a stomach-ache. Says, “Mmmmmmmmnnn. Not Kkkh kkh krright.’

  “What were you supposed to do?”

  “Kkh… khill…. Mmmm those like kh you. Khill you.”

  Below us, the creature that was on its back tries to escape but the others leap high and claw at it, pull it down, then one bites the under part of the neck. Now there is blood.

  I turn to see Rosie’s reaction, but she’s not here. Then I see her, way, way back, curled up behind a tree.

  I go back to her. I put my arm around her again. “Old buddy.” Then, “How did you ever t
urn out as you are?”

  “Mmmm mmistake. “Gh gho,” Rosie says, carefully not looking down at them. “Ghho. Mmmmnn… mnnnow!” And she’s already on her way, back to the shack. I follow. Watching her. Her arms, so like ours, look like an afterthought. Obviously there’s a bit of the human in her. I see it in the legs, too. Also in those half-formed ears.

  Those others below could push down my shack in half a minute. I need Rosie on my side. “Stay. I need you. I’ll push out a wall. I’ll make the door bigger.”

  She stops, stares. I wish I knew what’s going on inside that big fierce head of hers.

  “I’ll start getting the logs for it today.”

  “I kh… kh… khelph.”

  But my food won’t last long with her eating washbasins full. Besides, she’s starving. We’ll have to get food first.

  “How have you lived all this time? What have you eaten?”

  “Ghhophers mmm mostly. When mmmwere gh hophers. Khrabbits. When them. When kh llleaves, leaves. Mmmmushrooms. Rrrroots. Mmmmbark nnnot good but kh ate it. Khfish. Hhhard to kh kfish when kh h ice.”

  We climb higher than my shack so Rosie can fish. The streams up there are too fast to freeze over. She uses her foot. Hooks them on a claw. Her arms seem even too small to help with balancing. It’s her big green head and the half of her leftover tail, waving from side to side, that balances her as she reaches. She gets seven.

  “Kkhfried?” she says. “In khfat? With khh kh corn mmmeal? Like Mmmmmama? Mushka?”

  “You betcha. You had a mama?”

  “Mmmmmnnnn. Mmmmmm. Mmone kh like mmyou.”

  She bounces off down the path ahead of me, singing an oolie, oolie, doodlie do kind of song. I guess she’s no longer sick. Or she’s too happy to care. And certainly not thinking about those others fighting in the valley.

  (I’m carrying the fish. I strung them through their gills on to a willow stick. I hadn’t brought my stringer. I guess I don’t have to worry about getting enough food for her. Yet she was starving. Perhaps she doesn’t like things raw?)

  Back home we eat fried fish. I eat two and Rosie eats five. She watches as I cook just as the dog did, exact same expression, mouth half open. A dog sort of smile. We settle down afterward and I read to her from one of my books: Moby Dick. (I only brought three.) I read that to my son and wife, one on each side of me, and all of us on the couch. Rosie lies, head toward me, eyes almost shut, commenting now and then, her voice breathy, like one would imagine a snake would talk. I’m sitting on my cot. We sip our rosehips tea. We’re both covered with blankets.

  Then, “Time’s up,” I say. “You need sleep.” But she doesn’t want us to stop reading. “I insist,” I say. She groans. “I kh kread. You ssssleep.” She reaches for the book with those womanly shiny green fingers. I put it down and take her hand. “Ooobie baloobie, do it,” I say. (Ooobie baloobie is another of her songs.) She laughs. (It’s more like panting than laughing, but so hard I think she must be little more than seven years old B her equivalent of seven—to think that’s so funny.) But she settles down right after. Says, “Kh… koh khay.” Wraps her little arms around herself. I tuck the blankets closer and douse the lamp with its lid.

  This time I don’t worry if I might be her next meal, but I have a hard time sleeping anyway. I keep wondering what might happen it those others find my shack. They could break it down just leaning on it by mistake.

  Since they all seem to be coming down, we’ll go up. We’ll take some supplies to the pass and hide. I’ve spent the night there many a time. We’ll be all right as long as there isn’t another storm that goes on for days and days. At least we’ll have fish.

  I always did like camping out. The view is always worth more than the discomfort. Besides I do without right here every day. It never bothers me, washing up in a washbowl or an icy stream. Only here is it worth the bother of looking out the window.

  Or now, at Rosie, too. She really is quite beautiful, her yellow underbelly and the darker green along the ridge of her back. She’s even reddish in spots.

  Rosie hears them first, wakes me with her, “Kh… kh… kh.” There’s sounds of crashing through the brush. A tree splintering. From the look of the big dipper, straight out my little north window, it’s probably three or four A.M.

  They’re coming closer. For sure they saw our smoke and smelled us. They push on our walls. I hear them breathe and hiss. No, it’s only one, I think only one, pushing the wall on one side. The caulking falls out. Rosie braces herself against that wall to hold it. She picks up the rhythm of the other’s pushing, leans when it pushes. It works, the wall holds. At one point there’s a large hole where the caulking’s gone and I see the creature looking in—one light greenish eye like Rosie’s. The thing gives a throaty hiss. Rosie answers with the same hiss. It gives up. We hear it smashing away. We look at each other.

  “You did it!”

  Rosie’s mouth is open in that smile that looks so much like my old Rosie’s and she nods yes so hard I’m thinking she’ll put her neck out of joint. “Kh khdid! Khdid!”

  “Pack up. We’ll go camp out up beyond where we fished.”

  She goes right for the frying pan and the bag of corn meal and puts them in her vest pockets. She’s still nodding yes but she stops when I tell her we have to bring blankets and a tarp. “Kh… kh… kh…. Kno! Nnnnnooo!”

  “Yes! It’s colder up there. You need shelter as much as I do. Maybe more so.”

  Like Rosie, she gives up easily. “Kh… kh-kho kay.” I don’t know what I’d do if she didn’t. She helps me roll the blankets in the tarp. Says, “I kh kcarry mmmmthat.”

  I have to stop her from taking her books and her fancy green rock. She insists she can carry all the things we need and those too.

  “I kh likhe ghrrrrreeeen.”

  “That’s good. Then you like yourself.”

  She starts up, hop, skip, and jump… even with all that to carry. I can’t believe it, she’s leaping from rock to rock—even across talus. I keep telling her that stuff is unstable. “Dangerous even for you,” I say, but she does it anyway. The rocks do teeter, but she’s sure-footed. That leaping doesn’t last long, thank goodness. She doesn’t realize how much all that weight she’s carrying will tire her. I warned her, but since when do the young listen to warnings of that sort. She’s jumped and skipped and leaped until now she lags behind and blows like a horse at every other step. I take the tarp and blankets from her. I’d take that frying pan, too, but she won’t let me. “Kh… kan do it. I kan!”

  I don’t let Rosie stop until the halfway spot. “We’ll get up where we can see,” I say, “then we’ll rest.”

  “Oh pf… pfhooo,” she says, but she goes on, sighing now.

  “You can do it. Fifty more steps.”

  A few minutes later we put down our bundles, Rosie takes off her vest, and we climb out to the edge of the scarp we just zigzagged up to see what we can see. And it’s as I feared, they’ve found my cabin. Looks like there’s not much left of it already, walls pushed in, roof collapsed. I had doused the fire but there must have been some cinders left. A fire has started, at the cabin and on the ground around it.

  She sits as I sit, legs hanging over. How much like a human she is. Sometimes you don’t see it at all, but in certain positions you do. Now she looks as if she’s going to cry. (Can they cry? Only humans, seals, and sea birds have tears. Anyway, you don’t need tears for sadness.) I feel like crying, too. Rosie can tell just like my old Rosie could. We lean against each other.

  “At least your stones are all right.”

  She doesn’t even answer with an mmmnrmn.

  I look to see if any trees are waving around down there from being bumped into, but there’s nothing. Odd.

  After we start on up, Rosie is droopy, not only tired but sad. She thunks along. I feel sorry that she jumped and hopped so much in the beginning. My other Rosie was like that. She never realized she had to save her strength.

  Most of my talking
has been to keep her going. “Count steps. Maybe a hundred more.” “Come on, poor tired friend.” “See that rock? We’ll stop just beyond that.” Now I mumble to myself—about when I’ll be back to sift through my things. I didn’t bring any souvenirs of my wife and child. When I fled out here… escaped… I didn’t even want pictures. I was running away from memories. Of course memories come and go as they please.

  Just around the corner and we’ll be able to see the little lake I’m heading for, the stepping stones crossing the creek that pours down from it, beyond, the trees and boulders where I had hoped to hide us this first night, but I decide we have to stop now. We stand… that is, I stand, Rosie collapses. We’re both too tired to get out food other than jerky. I tuck Rosie in under an overhang. Just her big back end with the half bitten off tail hanging out. I cover her with blankets and the tarp. She’s asleep before she can finish her jerky. I pick the chunk out of her mouth to save it for breakfast.

  In the morning I wake to the sound of a helicopter. I know right away. Why… why didn’t I suspect before? Rosie not only had an ear tag, but she has a chip imbedded in her neck.

  There’s no place for a helicopter to land, the mountains are too closed in and too many boulders, but we’re not safe anyway. There could be more things in Rosie’s neck than just an ID chip. That could be why we didn’t hear those creatures down there anymore.

  Rosie’s in an exhausted sleep. “You have to wake up. Now. I have to get your chip out.” I don’t mention what else might be there. Those others may have been disposed of… without a trace, I’ll bet. Or little traces scattered all over the place so no one will know there ever were creatures like this.

  “Did you know you have a chip?”

  I feel around Rosie’s neck.

  “Hang on, friend, this will hurt.”

  I don’t care about those others, but I’d never like the forest without Rosie in it, skipping and hopping along, picking flowers, collecting green rocks or glittery fool’s gold, singing, “doodlie do” songs.

 

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