Lisica Chapters

Thanks for joining us on our Scientist Soap Opera escapist journey to the mysterious island of Lisica! You can find previous episodes in the link above or column on the right. Please don’t forget to subscribe and leave a comment if you enjoy what you find!

Audio for this episode:

13 – My Secret Past

“You know, despite this current emergency,” Esquibel confides to Amy as they hurry toward the beach, trying to beat the setting sun, “I’m not nearly as unhappy here as I normally am.”

“Not nearly? Ha. That could be the travel slogan.” Amy climbs the fallen redwood trunk and drops down into the sand. “Come to Lisica! Be 84% less unhappy!”

Esquibel leaps gracefully from the trunk. “Careful here.” She kneels, peering at the churned up sand. “Can we see if any of them made tracks here…?”

Amy sighs. “Too many. All the endless comings and goings over the last few days. And who knows what shoes they’re all wearing. Triquet’s usually in those big boots but… Flavia is usually in like slip-ons? Maahjabeen could be barefoot for all I know. And maybe they aren’t even together.”

“Ehh. I think they must be. Otherwise all three of them chose today to independently disappear for six hours.”

“Unlikely, I agree. But maybe one thing set them off in different directions.” They follow the gentle slope down to the water, where weathered steps in the sand are now little more than shallow depressions. No footprints remain in the tideline. Either the water has washed them away or they were never there to begin with. “We just don’t know, Esquibel. So let’s not make assumptions without more data. Right now it’s just fairy tales.”

“Like how Katrina thinks the Chinese kidnapped them?”

Amy shrugs. “I mean, it does sound paranoid but it also sounds like she has some kind of background in spy stuff so who knows? We find the wreckage of a Chinese plane at the same time they go missing? Is that just coincidence or something more?”

A voice cries out to them from back the way they came. It is Miriam, who has climbed atop the fallen trunk to wave at them, calling out details that are carried away by the wind. So instead she just beckons them toward her.

They hurry back. When Amy and Esquibel get nearer Miriam yells, “They went into the sub!”

“Oh, thank god.” Amy grabs Miriam’s lowered hand and jumps up the log. “But I thought we checked the sub? Where were they?”

Esquibel leaps onto the log and scrambles up beside Miriam. “And are they okay?”

“No,” Miriam shakes her head. “I mean, we haven’t found them yet. We don’t know if they’re okay. They went all the way through and out the bottom underground somehow. There’s another hole in the sub that leads further down.”

“Another hole? Where? And they’re down there somewhere?” Amy begins to hurry. “Oh, Jesus.”

Esquibel takes off at a run toward the bunker, calling out over her shoulder, “I will get my supplies and meet you there!”

Amy follows Miriam into the bunker, then through the trap door and down the narrow steps into the sub. In the first wardroom they encounter Jay, who is slowly making his way along the deck with a bad limp. Amy slips her head under his shoulder and he gratefully uses her as a crutch. Esquibel appears, pushing past them.

“Thanks, boss. Hey. Wait. It’s the air. Miriam. Think about it.”

Miriam leads them in a hurry through the narrow hall to the control room. She waits for Jay impatiently in there, needing clarification. He skipped too many steps. “What do you mean?”

“Your tunnels! It’s got to be. They found a way in.”

“You think they’re in tunnels? Good heavens. There’s no way that’s safe. If it’s limestone channels formed by water they’re going to be wet and it will be slick and completely treacherous.”

Jay winces and grunts to drop himself belowdecks. Then he hurries through the three rooms down here to find Katrina and Pradeep crouched in the last one at a dark hole in the deck. His eyes are wide, fists clenched beneath his chin. She is beside him, clutching his arm, trying to keep his panic attack from spiraling.

“Good.” Pradeep springs up when he sees the newcomers and shakes off her grasp. “They are here. And I am certain you will not be needing me any more. Good,” he repeats, brushing past Amy and Jay and Miriam and fleeing the sub.

Katrina sighs and sits at the edge, dangling her feet into the void. “Poor bloke. Glad you’re here. We got a pretty puzzle.”

Amy and Jay cautiously approach. “What—what is it?” he asks.

“Don’t know yet.” Katrina shines her phone’s light through a rusted hole in the sub’s steel hull into a tunnel of raw earth. “Their footprints are definitely at the bottom. And they go off that way.”

Esquibel looks down at the ragged hole with a frown. “Has anyone else gone down there yet?”

“Nope. Where’s Mandy and Alonso?”

“They’re still searching the grove,” Miriam says. “Or Mandy is. Alonso is home base.”

“I can’t believe anyone got Flavia down there.” Katrina prepares herself to descend. “Well. If she can go I can go. Who’s with me?”

“Me.” Jay shuffles forward.

“Stop, stop.” Esquibel pulls Katrina away. She puts her other hand on Jay’s chest. “Have you lost your minds? We aren’t just jumping in after them. They have been gone too long. They are lost or maybe dead. Think clearly.”

“It’s just there’s steps worn into the side here.” Katrina shines her light against the tunnel wall directly beneath her. “Can’t be any harm in dropping down to the mud on the bottom, taking a peek around the curve, see if there’s anything to see.”

“First we will discuss this.” Esquibel does not let go of the two young adventurers.

Amy tugs on Jay’s sleeve. “Amen. Hold up, Jay. Let’s make sure we do this right. Get everything we need. Let’s get a list going. Ropes and water and lights. How many of us are going?”

“Three sounds good.” Jay eases back. He tries not to sound too eager. They aren’t convinced yet. “Cool deal. Good plan all around. And Katrina’s got a nice little scouting idea there.”

“You are certainly not going down there,” Esquibel tells Jay. “Not if your ankle will ever properly heal. Alonso cannot. Mandy will fall and break something, I swear. And I shouldn’t. It is Navy doctrine not to risk the doctor.”

“Well, this is my field of expertise.” Miriam steps forward and peers into the hole. “Wow, was this dug by hand? Look at the marks on the walls.” Grooves and rough planes score the earth. She steps back. “Okay. Let’s pull back to the surface and really plan this out. Time is of the essence but we need to hear from Alonso on this. He may know something. We’ll approach it as a virgin caving expedition. So I’ll lead and we’ll be daisy-chained together with rope. I’ll take Amy. I’d like a third but I need someone with caving experience.”

Katrina says, “Well, I’ve just fooled around in some sea caves. Gone on a couple tours. But I don’t get claustrophobic.”

“Okay. That’s definitely a big part of it. We’ll see. ”

Ξ

An hour later, Miriam has returned to the hand-carved tunnel. Now she wears a helmet with a headlamp. A field pack with a short-handled pick and an extra satchel filled with water bottles slung across a shoulder completes her loadout. Her climbing harness is strapped into Katrina’s six meters behind her, whose rope harness is improvised but solid. Amy, in Miriam’s second harness and helmet, has another six meters of rope at the rear. Behind her the other hundred meters waits coiled, its end tied off.

Miriam will do all the real work. The other two will just be there to help remove injured team members or brace a line when she needs to climb or descend.

Jay, sulking, watches them go. “I could totally do those steps. I’m your caving third. I’ve got like a thousand hours underground.”

“Don’t make them take care of your fragile male ego right now.” Esquibel pats Jay on the shoulder. “They’re busy. Now it’s a hundred-fifty meters of rope. You go to the end, you come back. You never go off-rope. Right?”

“Aye aye, Captain,” Miriam salutes.

“Lieutenant Commander, please. And if anyone needs any medical attention, do not move them unless absolutely necessary.”

“Yes, Doctor.” Amy waves, cheery. “I mean, Commander. And two yanks means pull us back up!”

“Is that a thing?” Jay asks as Miriam starts to descend, careful not to let the rusted metal edges anywhere close to her limbs. “Cause that sounds like it should totally be a thing we should do.”

“Yes. Sure. Agreed.” Miriam can barely contain her excitement. This is the most significant and dangerous thing she has done in quite a long time. Explore an uncharted cave system and lead a rescue mission at the same time? Now this is some fair craic. This is like Super Geologist comic book territory.

The lugs of her boots bite into the soft earth of the hand-carved steps. She secures her footing and climbs down, nine tall irregular steps to the mud floor. It smells damp, with alkalines and calcites in the air. The temperature is cooler down here. She crouches to inspect the slurry under her feet.

Katrina lowers herself in after. Her heels find the steps and she quickly descends, a bubble of excitement rising in her chest. Finally she’s getting treated as an equal around here. Way past time she gets to be the dangerous one.

Amy is next, thinking how lucky she is to go out on an adventure like this with Miriam again after all these years. They have done great things together in the past. Big Bend and Churchill, Ontario and the Columbia River Gorge. Either it was Amy getting brought onto a geology study as a field biologist consultant or Amy hiring Miriam to be the geologist consultant in turn. Back and forth, trading jobs and positions on projects across North America. But it has been a long time. Success in both their careers the last decade or so has made such scheduling impossible.

Now she’s back in action with one of her favorite partners. The long lean form of Miriam stoops forward, drawing the other two ahead. Katrina mirrors her movement. There’s something of Miriam in the young Aussie, Amy thinks. They have the same hardiness and intensity. Yet they both possess such delicate edges.

“The curve narrows here,” Miriam calls out, her voice muffled. “Hold on. Let me remove my bags. Katrina. Please send them in after me. I hope it’s just a chokepoint but if it’s a sustained crawl I’ll need you to—Here. I’ll just tie them onto the line myself. Then I can drag them when I need them. Wish me luck.”

Amy can’t see past Katrina or hear what she murmurs to her. She must just patiently stand here in this pit, waiting to hear if there is good news or bad news from ahead.

Miriam is gone a fairly long time, long enough for Amy to get worried. Esquibel calls down to them, “What is happening?”

“Just some scouting.” Amy keeps her voice light. No point in alarming anyone. “Taking it nice and slow. Careful.”

“Good.” Esquibel retreats from the opening above.

“Any news?” Amy rests a hand on Katrina’s shoulder.

“Uh, the Nikkei Price Index fell by one and a third on news of a bleak commodities report today.”

“Very funny. Anything from Miriam? Two yanks? Anything?”

“No. She doesn’t even appear to be moving forward much. I can only see her feet. She’s definitely crawling. Like a worm. Ah! There we go!”

Amy hears fabric sliding across the mud. “Are those her bags?”

“Yeh. Looks like she got through to the far side and now she’s pulling it after. Maybe she can just pull us through. Get the full mud experience.”

Katrina kneels and puts a hand on the sloping roof of the tunnel. “My turn?”

Miriam’s voice is indistinct. Katrina thinks she hears an encouraging tone. She shrugs, realizing it’s all she’s going to get. Ducking down, she worms her way forward until she is lying on her chin, cold mud pressing against her entire front, soaking into her jeans and socks. “Here I come!” And to herself: Yeh, it’s a good thing I’m not claustrophobic.

It isn’t such a tight squeeze that she needs to force her way through but her movement is definitely constricted. She can’t raise her elbows and knees more than a bit. Slowly she scrambles forward. After about five meters she breaks through.

Amy is last. She loves a good Army crawl, although some of her earliest associations with it are less than pleasant. Anything military is always Okinawa to her first, and she was never happy there. Yet it’s good to be little, that she knows. This is her time to shine. But, like, wow. This sure is a lot of mud.

Amy spills laughing from the hole, covered in filth, falling onto a concrete floor. Whoa. Wait. Concrete? “What is this?” On her hands and knees she stares at the green-stained concrete floor before her. Water sheets downslope, from right to left. Above to the right the culvert is mostly collapsed and the water only trickles through. She can’t for the life of her figure out what it means.

“I know,” Miriam complains. “I was just finally getting used to a bit of soil and stone then nope! Yet another obstacle in my way!”

“Some kind of underground culvert or something I think.” Katrina sends her light ahead. “Like a concrete aqueduct. Maybe they used this to channel water somewhere? For some reason?”

Amy is utterly confounded. “I—I don’t know. I guess I just really didn’t expect this. I mean, none of Triquet’s records talk about an underground concrete project at any point in time. I can’t imagine what it was for.”

“If you’re very quiet…” Miriam says, holding up her hand, “you can hear the surf.”

They listen. Beyond the steady gurgle of water nearby, a deep subsonic rumble trembles the air every few seconds. “Which way is this? I’m so turned around. Are we pointed at the beach?”

“We must be. Come on then, ladies.”

“Wait. First,” Miriam delays them, shining her light backward. “Look. This mess is what probably kept them from finding their way back.”

The concrete wall they’ve emerged from has partially collapsed, exposing gaps that reveal bare earth. Each one of these gaps has been dug into, a whole yawning cluster of tunnel mouths heading off into different directions. Katrina counts eleven. Only because their climbing rope still runs out of the bottom, partially-collapsed entrance do they know that it is the way back. Without that clue it would be impossible to tell. She takes a picture on her phone, the flash blinding them for a moment.

“Oh, no… You think they took a wrong one back somehow?”

“I do.” Miriam turns back to the sound of the surf and the long dark concrete culvert ahead. “But let’s investigate this first. Easier going ahead, for one thing.”

Miriam slings her bags back on and steps forward. The roof is nearly two meters high and the slime-covered concrete walls are far enough apart they don’t need to touch them. But soon they reach the end of their hundred-fifty meter range. Amy calls out when she feels the rope behind go taut against her waist.

“Turn back?” Katrina is surprised the two older women haven’t suggested it yet. She isn’t used to being the voice of common sense.

“I have no desire to crawl through the muck just to tell Esquibel this much,” Amy says. “Cause then we’ll have to come right back and do it all again, if she even lets us. Maybe we can detach for a bit and leave the rope here?”

“Breaking the law, oooo.” But Katrina doesn’t actually think it’s dangerous. The culvert isn’t going to flood anytime soon, is it? And it’s not like they’re dangling from a pit.

“Agreed.” Miriam begins working on the rope tied to the back of Amy’s harness. She lets it fall. “We can remain roped in between the three of us but this rope leading back is really most useful as a breadcrumb trail just indicating which tunnel gets us to the sub.”

“Let’s just remember,” Amy adds, “bottom-most tunnel, looks like it’s blocked from this side, right in the middle. Everyone got it?” She drops the rope. Then she picks it up again. “But we can’t just leave this here. Maybe I should tie it off. So they can’t pull it back by mistake.”

Katrina nods, giddy. She can’t believe she’s in the presence of such daring old ladies. For a hilarious moment it occurs to her that she might indeed have to be the wise head down here.“Yeh, good thinking. Here.” She finds a fissure in the concrete. “Just like wedge that knot in here. We can make it impossible to get out.”

Amy agrees with a grunt, forcing it under a jagged hanging lip of concrete. There. No amount of pulling will dislodge it.

Miriam leads Katrina and Amy deeper down the culvert. After a short stretch the tunnel widens and water drops into a deeper trench with a walkway raised along the left side. They progress carefully, the concrete slick, the danger of falling and sliding into the trench real. Doors line the wall, three steel panels painted dark blue, their red insignia faded.

These doors are locked or welded shut. There is no give to them. “Triquet can figure these out later.” Miriam shakes her head in dismay at how many directions they’ve already been given to search. She leads Katrina and Amy past the doors toward the end of the culvert. A large grate, mostly rusted through, bars the wide opening. It is here that the freshwater spilling past them from above meets the ocean, whose gentle waves make noise on the far side. The air is closed off when the water fills the gap, sending gulping shockwaves of pressure up the culvert, bringing with it the inhalation and exhalation of air they felt all the way up in the sub.

Beside this grate at the end of the walk is a tall rusted steel door, slightly ajar. The sound of the surf is much louder here. Miriam makes an excited face to the others and slips through. Katrina peeks, then follows. Amy looks behind herself, left all alone and suddenly fearing ghosts, then she hurries through the door as well.

They find themselves in a sea cave, crowded with stalactites. The main feature is a broad waterfall from behind them that is joined by the culvert’s effluence to push a steady stream of white foam into the lapping seawater. Its ceiling is no more than four meters high but the cavern appears to be vast, large striated shelves of bare limestone creating channels through the rushing water and stone platforms in alcoves up above the waterline, on which the remains of pillbox bunkers and buildings stand. The remnants of a concrete pier jut out into the water, its steel rails rusted black. The half-sunk remains of a postwar patrol boat lie at the edge.

This was a hidden port, only big enough for small boats and submarines but nothing larger. It is a modest installation, but still an astounding one to their eyes. Some excavation has been done, but for the most part the structures fit in among the hanging stone and rushing channels. The one foundation by the port looks like it was a small boathouse or command center. Others further along look like storage, hidden in shadow.

To the far left, past obscuring columns and wandering currents, an indirect band of silver daylight dimly lights the cavern. Out on a forward platform near the sea cave’s entrance, a figure sits on the concrete and looks out at the light. It is Maahjabeen.

Ξ

“So the plan must be from now on,” Esquibel demands, standing at the head of the long table at camp, “anyone goes anywhere, someone at camp has to know. At least write a note.”

“Kind of unworkable.” Jay says it louder than intended. He’d meant to keep it to himself.

“And not really applicable in this case,” Katrina agrees with him. “I mean, if we’d all known they were down there they still would have gotten lost on the way back and we still would have waited too long.” She shrugs. “Not a real rules person myself.”

“You are both young.” Esquibel isn’t used to having to defend her medical orders. “You’re like the two youngest people here and your sense of risk is too high.”

“I’m young,” Mandy counters, “and I love rules! My sense of risk is very low. I’m not sure whose case that helps but… you know, like another data point?”

“Esquibel is right.” Everyone silences to hear Maahjabeen’s quiet voice. “It is my fault. I started the whole thing. And I should have left word where we were going. I just didn’t think… One thing led to another and suddenly we were in the tunnel chasing Flavia—”

“Wait,” Miriam interrupts her. “Flavia was in front?”

“She said she heard desperate cries for help. She hardly waited for us to respond before she just dived in headfirst.”

“Did you or Triquet hear any of these cries?”

“No. But we had to go after her.” Maahjabeen shivers. Then she laughs a bit sadly at herself before continuing. “Not been my best week. I’m not even fully recovered from the storm.”

“Of course you aren’t,” Esquibel scolds her. “You can barely move. What were you thinking?”

“She was thinking,” Jay answers for her, “that we still hadn’t figured out the source of the air in the sub.”

“Precisely. It was just an innocent exploration.” Maahjabeen leans back, irritated that Jay would speak for her but relieved that at least somebody gets it. “But by the time we crawled through that horrible mud tunnel and got into that concrete culvert thing she was gone. That was the last we saw of her.”

“The last?” Amy shakes her head. “That was almost seven hours ago. What happened to Triquet?”

“We explored the sea cave together, thinking Flavia had gone that way. We even searched the water in case she had fallen in. But no. She must have tried to return through one of the other tunnels. Just crazy. Triquet told me to wait there. That they would come back to get you and then we would all search for her together.”

Miriam groans. “And then Triquet must have tried to go back to the sub and taken the wrong way back instead. So all three of you are in completely different places, heading in different directions. Fantastic. We’re going to have to explore that entire system, step by step. But I don’t even understand how it all got there. Those tunnels are dug. Some of the marks are even quite fresh.”

“The island,” Alonso reminds her, “is inhabited.”

“So the natives have had access to us this entire time?” Esquibel clicks her tongue, worried. “Great.”

Amy stands. “Welp. I guess I’ll just like wait down in the culvert in case any of them get back. They’ll need a guide back to the right way to the sub. I had just gotten the mud off but oh well.”

Esquibel raises a finger. “You will not go alone.”

“Yeah, I’m with you, boss.” Jay hops to his feet.

“Jay, you aren’t going anywhere. And that is an order.” Esquibel wonders how she might enforce discipline among all her wayward civilians. Reasoning gives them too much wiggle room. And the illusion of free agency. In a crisis they need to follow her orders.

“And we did leave the rope down there for anyone to follow,” Katrina reminds Amy.

“Still.” In her mind Amy can see all the ways a pair of helping hands could rescue bewildered victims in the dark underground. “They’ll need all the help they can get.”

“Hold up. You hear that?” Jay puts a hand in the air to quiet them. They all listen. Something heavy is crashing through the underbrush toward them on its way from the pool.

Esquibel stands, wishing her black satchel was nearby. Miriam, having guessed what’s in it, does too.

Triquet limps wild-eyed and filthy from the undergrowth. They are drenched and shivering, wearing only a single boot.

Amy yelps. “Triquet!”

Esquibel runs to the tottering figure. Miriam fetches a blanket. As she wraps them in it, Triquet smiles weakly at her. “Found the way to your hidden chambers, Miriam. The ones behind the waterfall. Looking out from inside the cliff. Pretty cool.”

“Good Christ is that the way you came out?” Miriam scrubs their shoulders to warm them. Triquet leans in and Miriam takes this as a signal for a hug. Amy joins them around the back, pressing their heat into Triquet’s chilled slender body.

“You know me. Just one catastrophic decision after another.” They scan the camp over Miriam’s shoulder. “Oh good. You found Maahjabeen. Girl, I will never say another word to you about being reckless in the storm after the shit that I just pulled. Oh, baby. What was I thinking?”

“Did you like come through the waterfall?” Jay laughs at the preposterous image but Triquet only shrugs.

“There’s enough room in the chamber behind it to get a running start. I thought if I could get enough Delta V like a rocket, if you know what I’m saying, and just kind of bust through with enough horizontal velocity, then, you know, I’d be free. Frankly I was absolutely beyond done with my situation and ready to explode. It had been hours and I was desperate.”

“Oh, Triquet…” Alonso laughs.

“Yeah, I got slapped down like a rag doll. Just gargling foam.”

“Oh my god there’s a whirlpool in that pool.” Miriam pulls her head back to share her facial expression of just how deranged she thinks Triquet is.

“I know. And it almost took me. But I grabbed some roots and hauled myself out. If I hadn’t, then yikes. I would have like shot out into the waterfall in the sea cave and, I don’t know, had to swim all the way around the island to get back.”

“That is what the underground waterfall is, isn’t it? Yes, that’s about what I’d figured.” Miriam completes the course of the submerged creek in the model of the island she carries in her head. “That waterfall in the sea cave must be where this pool drains. But who knows how long you’d be submerged before it spit you out.”

“Yeah, and I don’t need to be the one to test that idea. Whoo! Any spare seats? It’s been a long day.” Triquet collapses onto Pradeep’s platform, a sodden mess. He smiles and offers Triquet a bottle. “Thanks, Pradeep. But do I look like I need water?”

“So where’s Flavia?” Alonso asks.

Triquet sits up. “She’s not with you? Oh, no. I assumed she was cleaning up inside or… No…?”

Miriam lifts her field pack again, the matter decided. “The whole system. As soon as we can, Alonso. And who did she hear crying? Somebody else in trouble? Then they need our help too.”

“Or someone pretending.” Esquibel points to the fragment of the aircraft wing set aside and wrapped in a blue tarp. “Need I remind you that we may have a Chinese PLA soldier running loose on the island as well? Ultimately, this mission still has military oversight for a reason.”

“Oversight? What happened to partnership? And I think you’re overstating the likelihood of any Chinese presence.” Pradeep doesn’t want to contradict Esquibel but she is becoming worryingly autocratic. “You know, after the tsunami in Japan they were finding litter just like that all along the Oregon coast for years. This could have come from anywhere. It could be years old. Take it from someone who is like a world-class paranoid. You guys are being paranoid about this. The probability is next to nothing.”

But he can tell from their blank stares that he hasn’t convinced anyone. Triquet shakes their head. “No, but she was really upset. Flavia just cried out and threw her hands in the air and went for it. I asked and she just shouted, ‘Can’t you hear the bambino crying?’ And then I couldn’t keep up and I lost her. Man, I wish I hadn’t lost her. You can’t explore it all, Miriam. At least not tonight. The tunnels branch and some of them curve back on themselves. It’s a total maze. I was lost in there for hours. Totally losing my mind. When I found the chambers behind the waterfall I was so relieved I fell down and cried.”

“Flavia is lost in there?” Miriam turns and regards the ground and the cliff, trying to visualize the network. “It might be huge or you might have just gone around and around the same three tunnels. We need a proper exploration.”

“Shouldn’t we wait,” Alonso wonders, “until morning? It is getting late, Mirrie.”

But Miriam shakes her head. “Come on, Amy. Underground it doesn’t matter if it’s day or night, Zo. We’ll bring just endless rolls of twine, untangle all the tunnels. Just think, the poor thing has been trapped in there for ages.”

“With no espresso or Nutella,” Jay jokes. “She must be wasting away. Man, this crowd is tough. Come on. Lighten up. She’s going to be fine. We all know it.”

“I hope you’re right, Jay.” Amy’s voice is uncharacteristically quiet. “Miriam and I will spend two hours below then come back up and sleep. It is getting late.”

Miriam is about to protest the time limit, but she nods. “What do you say, Esquibel? There’s no point in delaying. We’ll unspool the twine behind us and never, I swear this time never unhook. Two hours tonight and then as long as it takes going forward.”

Esquibel nods, mollified that the chain of command is at least being respected. “Two hours.”

Ξ

Mandy wakes right at dawn. Today is a work day so dawn it is. Her eyes snap open of their own accord and she stares at the rust spots of the ceiling’s corrugated steel. The bunker isn’t what she’d call cozy, but it does keep them dry.

Esquibel has rolled away and sleeps with her back to her. She is a furnace under a blanket, as extra as they come, even as she sleeps. Mandy chuckles, pushing off that hip she’s been kneading and pulling apart like a big tough piece of stale chewing gum. But it’s getting better, and the two of them might have never found a way into each other’s pants all those years ago without the excuse of this bad hip, a poorly-healed injury from her childhood.

Mandy kisses the glorious hip and rises. She has to visit the trench and see what the day will bring. The weather station setup with the drone has worked well so far and she’s finally starting to be able to look at her data as a progression instead of just curious snapshots. She unhooks the door and trips out into the blue light of another overcast day. Her Hawaiian skin could use a tiny bit more sun. Not that she’s complaining. Mandy has suffered through some truly terrible weather in the last few years of her career and she knows that Lisica is pretty much blessed. It’s like chilling on the Oregon coast year-round. Probably doesn’t even form frosts in the winter and hardly anyone here ever dies of exposure.

Mandy speculates what the natives must be like. And how long have they been here? Do they live in little ewok villages up above and sing songs all day? Or are they cannibals? Maybe something in-between? Her head fills with visions, of elders crouched under hanging eaves during a downpour, and then how they instruct her in the ways of the storms and take her into their circle.

The Pacific is filled with all kinds of isolated island people. Isn’t there that one island where they all worshipped Queen Elizabeth’s husband as a god? Like, still to this day. These people could be all kinds of weird. And it might be like two or three generations since anyone has contacted them. Wild. Like literally. Wild child times a hundred. Imagine growing up without the twenty-first century: the movies, the cell phones, the cars, the plagues, the crowding… living in blissful ignorance of the oncoming catastrophes. Amazing. They must be better off here without us.

On her way back from the trench to the bunker she sees Amy already awake and standing away from the trees, watching the cliff. As Mandy nears, she points above. “Look at those guys.” Amy directs her attention to a cluster of dark birds with pale undersides winging their way upward into mist. “You see their eyes? The white circle around them? Spectacled guillemots. Not ever seen this far east before. Usually just on the Russian and Japanese coasts.”

“That’s so cool. Oh my god. There’s so many.”

“Yeah, this is a huge colony of just countless seabird varieties. I really shouldn’t have ignored it this long. But I got caught up in all the other things down here on the ground. The birds were the first thing I noticed when we first arrived but then I kept my head down for too long. I forgot to look up.”

“Those thermals are so strong. Look at them!”

“The Pacific gulls? Yeah. This is their highway. And then they each have their little off-ramps to go back to their own little nest. ‘Honey, I’m home!’ Such a perfect existence.”

Even larger birds wheel upward on the strong draft. It reminds Mandy of the cyclone nook in the back of the grove. She might be able to conduct another experiment here. What she started doing is taking long videos of the twisters and then uploading them into a program her colleague built for situations like this that tracks litter in a windstorm. She’s been able to get all kinds of interesting data from that so far. But here she won’t be taking video of redwood duff and leaves, it would instead be birds spiraling upward.

“Brown pelicans.”

Mandy claps her hands, excited, and describes what she has in mind to Amy. “I think I can set up a camera here and get a long video and be able to characterize basically the entire open ocean air current as it interacts orographically with the island.” She takes out her phone to try a test video. But the darker birds aren’t visible against the dark cliffs. She needs white birds.

“Which ones are white? I can’t see the pelicans.”

“Well… Most of the gulls. All of them. A lot of the pipers. Half the murres. The arctic terns. Those are who you need. But I’ve never seen more. And they’re such incredible flyers.”

“When do they fly?”

“When…? Ha. That’s a good question. We have tons of observed behavior with terns in the literature. But this colony here remains unstudied. So who knows? They’re just transient here, resting for a few days or maybe if we’re lucky a few months to raise their chicks. They never winter. Arctic terns fly from one pole to the other throughout the year, following the summer. So these guys are headed north. They’ll probably be gone in another couple weeks. But the chicks have already had time to sprout feathers and join them in the air. You know, they’ve found three month-old tern chicks halfway across the world from where they hatched. And they live thirty years. Fascinating birds. They mate for life.”

“Yeah, I mean, do they come out for breakfast? At like what time? Or are they like bats who only come out at night?”

“When they aren’t flying they’re constantly feeding. Dawn might be a good idea because they’re waking up and it’s time to go fishing. Look, there’s a couple winging away to the open ocean there. Godspeed and good hunting, you two!”

Mandy claps again. “Look how they slice into the wind! It’s blowing like directly against them and they still find the angle to soar ahead! I wish I could do that.”

“You and me both, sister.”

Mandy leans against Amy and squeezes the older woman’s bicep. “You are just the sweetest, Amy. Thank you for taking such good care of us all the time.”

“Heh. Looking for muscle in there? You won’t find any.”

“Are you kidding? You are so strong. I think you’re like the strongest person in the whole camp.”

Amy makes a surprisingly bitter face about that. “I don’t know, Mandy. That’s not really something I’d like to be known for.”

“No way. We need to celebrate strong women!” Mandy wraps her arms around Amy and squeezes her. Amy squeals as she is lifted off her feet. They both laugh with abandon.

Amy lifts Mandy in turn and shakes her like a rag doll, her long black hair flying about. Then when they’re all laughed out they separate. “I love your question about what time terns eat. Maybe we can figure their patterns out together. So we can both use your long video and I’ll do a count. See if it changes.”

“According to different weather patterns. You think? We could do the first cross-discipline arctic tern atmospheric science paper like ever.”

“Oh, there’s probably been some before. We aren’t that original. And we could talk to Maahjabeen about different food sources and when they might arrive. Like are they just following giant schools of anchovies around the Pacific?”

“Right. They’re responding to the fish, who are responding to the, what, like, plankton? Who are following minerals along the temperature and pressure gradients underwater. Wow…” Mandy looks out over the water. “I just had the trippiest idea…” She shakes her head. “I don’t even know if there would be a way to measure it but… Well, anyway. I’m really into convection pumps, like when forests create rainfall above them. And I wonder if a school of like anchovies would transpire enough to create the conditions for deep convection. Could a big enough school of fish be enough biomass to call down rain on itself? The school would have to be huge. But some of them are, right?”

“I think so. But you can’t just equate one anchovy to one tree. These forests are huge too. Where this has been witnessed the most is the Amazon, so that’s the kind of scale we’re looking at. But it’s true, each tree releases a huge amount of water vapor each day. Stomata transpiration is what I think you’re talking about. So each tree can exhale a vast amount more moisture than a little fish… But on the other hand… we aren’t just talking about the fish. They’re following all that plankton and they also bring along bigger fish and squids and whales and all the birds we were admiring. So maybe if you add up all that wheeling biomass you can get your atmospheric effects. Possibly?”

“I just love the idea,” Mandy says wistfully, “of a whole bunch of little fish leading so much transpiring life around the ocean that they start all the storms in this half of the world, just shepherding whole cloud formations across the Pacific. That would be so rad.”

“Ooo. We could never predict the weather because we weren’t following the fish?” Amy chuckles. “As a wildlife biologist this has every stamp of my approval that I possess.”

“And if we end up killing all the fish then the storms…” Mandy visualizes every dynamic in the ocean grinding to a halt, every cloud system dispersing into fog. But of course it wouldn’t be like that. It would be catastrophic in the short term, yeah, until new dynamics form elsewhere dependent on other humidity profiles and temperature differentials.

“You’ve evidently been smoking some of Jay’s stash.” Amy giggles at Mandy. “I like the ambition but let’s stick with videos of guillemots and terns for the moment if that’s okay with you.”

“No, I’m not high. I mean. Maybe I am. High on life.” Mandy is effervescent this morning. Studies with great promise seem to be literally falling out of the sky today. “Sure thing. I’ll get a tripod and make sure there’s enough space on my phone. Might be time to delete those bachelorette party pics from Vegas last year.”

“What? All those pics of your besties drinking themselves stupid will be a literal blackmail goldmine in about five years. You’ve got to keep them.” Amy steeples her fingers with a diabolical laugh.

“Okay, creepy, but good point. Heh.” There was something uncanny about Amy revealing this dark side of herself that it fully unnerves Mandy and derails her good mood. “That’s a side of you I’ve never seen, Amy.”

Amy links her arm in Mandy’s and walks them both back to camp. “Oh, there are so many sides of me you’ve never seen.”

“Also creepy.” Mandy stops and untangles her arm. “Come on, Amy. Are you like trying to trigger me? What do you mean about other sides? My sister had a boyfriend who talked like that and she ended up in the hospital one night. Now I know you’re not—”

“No no. I’m sorry.” Amy holds up her hands, innocence on her face. “I was just making a few jokes and ehh. No, I hear how bad that sounds.” Amy stops, at a loss. “I suppose, in all fairness, it’s time. I should tell you of my secret past.”

Lisica Chapters

Thanks for joining us on our Scientist Soap Opera escapist journey to the mysterious island of Lisica! You can find previous episodes in the link above or column on the right. Please don’t forget to subscribe and leave a comment if you enjoy what you find!

Audio for this episode:

12 – Too Freaky

Triquet has now stacked and organized the entirety of the first three belowdecks rooms. That’s not to say that every artifact has been studied. Things have just been identified and put together with other similar objects. It’s quite a lot of material. To anyone less obsessed with memorabilia than Triquet, it would be entirely overwhelming. To the young archaeologist, it is an endless journey of thrilling discoveries.

The most inane thing can set them off: a mattress tag that lists formaldehyde as an ingredient; a dead mouse at the bottom of a mayonnaise jar; a deck of cards with the Queen of Hearts missing. Each artifact could exist nowhere in the world except here, in this time and place. That is what makes them precious. Invaluable, in fact. Triquet makes copious notes, writing with a Parker ballpoint pen on a moleskine pad. These items had been a graduation gift from their grandfather when they got their first Masters. Now it is as if their classic notetaking implements have fallen back in time to rejoin their contemporaries.

Triquet, alone belowdecks among the crew bunks in their pink satin vest, holds up their shiny blue ballpoint pen. “Hello, 1952,” they squeak in a pen-voice. “So nice to make your acquaintance.” The pen executes a formal bow. “Does anyone have a turntable for swinging tunes? Perhaps some Perry Como?”

“Why, Penny,” Triquet answers the pen in a deep announcer voice, “that’s a fantastic idea.” They open their music app and a folder containing every available Perry Como song. They select one of their early favorites and let the ethereal back-up voices fill the echoing metal capsule:

They were standing in a crowded station,
So unaware, of all the people there!
I didn’t mean to hear their conversation,
But anyone could tell, It was their last farewell!

Good-bye Sue… All the best of luck to you!
You’ve been my only gal, What’s more, my best pal…!

Triquet sings along, lifting a rotting Eisenhower jacket and slow-dancing with it for a moment before carefully folding it again. Ah, the past. The golden past, with none of the troubles of today. It’s always hard for Triquet to stay in the present and they rarely think of any future beyond their next dig. But the glorious past, already decided and locked in time, spreading in all directions behind them like a scintillating peacock tail while they trudge forward into the unknown… the past is their home. All the bright shining lights of antiquity lie scattered about Triquet, ripe for study.

“Allow me to worship my icons, O Lord.” Triquet finds a box of mysterious long glass cylinders with filaments, like early versions of fluorescent tubes. Divining what they are will require a fair bit of research. They hold up a thick manila folder, reading the name off the label, “Ingles, Philip John. Ooo, Air Force Colonel. Big boss man.” Opening the cover reveals a wallet-size black-and-white studio photo of the colonel in uniform. It is the same portly, balding man who presided over the group photo. “Bonanza!” Triquet sits, leafing through the pages.

They are dated in backward chronological order, the earliest records at the end. Triquet gently lifts the crackling corner to peer at the first one. December 15th, 1952. It is a hand-written note that instructs the reader to hand over to Colonel Ingles the codes followed by the cryptic phrase Foxtrot Avenue. The signature is an illegible scrawl. Triquet giggles. “Oh, I love the spooks and their games.”

Most of the papers are brief correspondences concerning orders of fuels and supplies, which seemed to take up most of Colonel Ingles’ executive time on the island. He expended quite a bit of effort to try to get the Air Force to give them a steadily-replenished library, to uncertain success. And he had a constant number of discipline reports in the… Triquet checks the top page, it’s from 1962… so ten full years that Ingles ruled here like a king. Triquet whistles. It’s a lot of discipline reports. One name finds its way into more reports than any others: Lieutenant Clifton M. DeVry. He eventually got brought up on insubordination charges and was shipped off the island in 1956.

The next letter is a handwritten note, also from 1956. Apart from the date, it only says:

Philly,

On my way! Hugs and kisses.

MCD

MCD? Maureen Christian Dowerd? His wife? Then why didn’t she take his name? And why isn’t she in any of the photos? This was the 1950s and irregularities like these were far more significant. Triquet pages forward through 1957 and 1958 but finds no further mention of her. Just more fuel, books, and discipline problems.

“This is the guy…” Triquet realizes, “who buried the sub. Was it his idea?” But none of these papers make any mention of it.

Near the end of the record, in 1961, a stained telegram from Duluth, Minnesota, directs Colonel Ingles to ‘send her personal effects to this address.’ It is signed Penelope Archen Stoltz. So Maureen from Minnesota is dead by now and her family want her things. Triquet itches to get their hands on the official records of Duluth from 1956 but they’ll have to wait until they get back home to do that. What a mystery! What killed her? Why did she remain buried here if her family asked for her things?

Triquet resolves once again to conduct an autopsy.

Ξ

Miriam stands at the edge of the waterfall pool, watching the torrent, which has eased since she first checked on it after the storm. It is no longer threatening to kill her. The water has cleared and is less turbid now, and fewer wood fragments are dropping down from on-high.

She can’t see the dark vertical ovoid openings behind the falls any more. The cascades no longer separate from the cliff wall. They have mostly resumed their former less-thunderous route, framed on both sides by thick vegetation and not the lovely slick bare stone that had been revealed beneath.

Now how will she get to it? Erosion has opened up who knows what kind of fantastical caverns behind that waterfall. And it is all hers for the discovering if she can just figure out how to bypass the water. Deflect it somehow? Let’s see. At this moment it’s dropping, say, a hundred liters per second? Maybe less. Each liter of water weighs a kilo, traveling near terminal velocity. So it’s like having a heavy man fall on you traveling two hundred kilometers per hour. No, she doesn’t have anything that can withstand those forces, regardless of how many branches Pradeep lashes together.

“Well this is intolerable.” Miriam scuffs her boot against the mud beneath it. It can’t all be soil here, can it? She uses the blade of her shovel to hack away the crowding undergrowth. The earth is soft, the detritus from the waterfall that has collected over the ages to a great depth. She won’t find any stone here at all.

“Well… How close can I get?” Miriam edges toward the cascade, trying to find a providential place where the soil fades and the rock rises and the water above won’t kill her. She forces herself deeper into the brush, using her frustration to force her forward and down. Her old knees creak under the greenery. And her left wrist is bothering her these days. Careful how you crawl, old lass.

Miriam looks up from the dead leaves and mud. The bracken forms a low vault over her head. A narrow tunnel disappears into the gloom, curving away to the left. But it terminates to her right, overlooking the pool through a screen of branches. “But Amy said there’s no game trails here.” Yet this is obviously the nest of some animal. What’s more, a small hollow has been dug and lined with grass near the water’s edge. Like a rabbit’s den. Or that of a fox…

Ξ

Jay can’t stay horizontal any more. He’s losing his mind. So he’s up and hobbling around camp, picking up dirty dishes from the tables and bringing them to the kitchen inside the bunker for a wash. He should cook. He loves to cook. And by the time he gets everything prepped, moving slow as he is, he’ll definitely be hungry.

He makes a pancake batter, adding a dried blueberry trail mix with walnuts and sunflower seeds. They only have vegetable oil to fry them in. No butter or maple syrup, though Jay has noticed how fast Flavia is inhaling their supply of Nutella. Well, he’ll just put out a nice little spread here with a fat stack of cakes and a little bit of the Nutella on the side for whoever wants it.

Mixing is a bitch with a broken hand. He leans his body against the wall, the bowl braced between his leg and the concrete, to stir with his off-hand. He’s probably making too much. He didn’t even ask if anyone else is hungry. But nah. Everybody loves pancakes. Miriam appears in the bunker’s door, headed toward him. “There she is. Miriam will eat some, won’t she?”

“Biscuits? Yes, Jay, I’d love some. Hadn’t realized how hungry I was. Sure you’re okay to cook there?”

“I have to do something. Or I will explode. But it isn’t biscuits. Just pancakes if that’s okay.”

But she’s hardly listening. Miriam still looks outside, where the gray daylight glows softly in the doorway. “It’s a shame about your mobility. I just found the cutest little nest in the bushes.”

Jay stops mixing and looks at her. “What kind of nest? Where?”

“Right by the pool. Under the thorn bushes and everything. You and Amy think there’s a fox?”

“You found the fox nest? Oh hells yeah.” Jay turns off the burner he had already turned on. He bangs down the bowl on the counter and hops urgently toward the door. “Show me.”

“Oh, dear. I shouldn’t have said anything. Let’s wait until you can walk at least.”

“No way, lady. I can crawl if I have to. I got to see.”

Ξ

For the first time, Esquibel feels properly set up. What is this, the tenth day? Eleventh? Sitting in the clean room, she pages through the journal she’s been writing in. Diary-keeping is essential for a doctor on a solo tour like this. So the eleventh. She always had to keep her own schedule when she was aboard ships. It’s easy when you’re busy for the days to blur together. But there is something dreamy and timeless about this island that has a similar effect. It’s all so very pleasant. Cold and wet at times, yes, but no malaria mosquitos or stifling humidity or clouds of black flies. She might even go sit on the beach in the spot she had installed Maahjabeen the day before and read a book on her phone. Something trashy.

As she walks across the sand though she already starts to feel restless. Is this it, then? All she has to do is keep an eye on Jay and Maahjabeen and Alonso and the rest of her time is her own? On a ship she would have constant complaints and injuries. Her ward would usually be full and her corpsmen and nurses worked to exhaustion. But eleven people don’t really require a full clinic. They hardly require a doctor. Although these eleven seem to be particularly good at harming themselves.

She scrambles over the gigantic fallen redwood and drops down the other side. Esquibel realizes she will have to start a hobby, some useful way to spend her time here. “Ehh, that is always the issue, isn’t it?” She knows she is a fine doctor and a good person, but she also knows that she doesn’t have much of a personality outside of her work. She has thrown herself into medicine over the last ten years. It has left little to no time for anything—or anyone—else. Should that be her hobby? Mandy? She could devote herself to the lovely girl and they could live out their dreams…

Well, yes. But that would hardly require hours of her day. She can’t just stare at Mandy all the time. It would be unnerving. And such behavior is beneath her. Esquibel has her pride, after all.

So, okay. A little bit of time with Mandy. Maybe they can improve their cell in the bunker and their platform in camp, make it more like a tiny house. That would be dear. But what else? There must be something she can learn to do here on Lisica to finally explore parts of herself that remain undeveloped. She could assist Triquet with their efforts. No. She has no curiosity for the litter of dead Americans. Perhaps she can dig trenches for Miriam. Well, if her hip lets her. It still tightens up from time to time. She should see if Mandy would pry the scar tissue apart again tonight.

She can’t think of anything Alonso or Flavia or Jay might teach her that she cares about. What about Katrina? Maybe she could learn how to DJ? Ha. Now that’s a funny idea.

But for some reason it’s the only one that sticks.

At the beach, her attention is drawn to something white with a broken edge floating in the water. Esquibel forgets her plans of leisure and wades into the cold water to retrieve it.

Ξ

“No, I’m okay. I’m okay. I just get excited.” Amy tries to get Jay back in his chair, but instead he hops on his good foot and winces in agony. “Oh, please don’t make me sit again. Going crazy, yo. I’ll sit when I’m old.”

“Indeed,” Alonso agrees, “you will.”

“But wait! Miriam didn’t stick around for the full forensic exam. There wasn’t really enough room in there for two. Oh, it’s a puzzle, that’s for sure.” This isn’t a full meeting. Mandy and Pradeep are nowhere to be seen. Esquibel is down at the beach. Flavia sits on her own platform, frowning at her laptop.

“Puzzle?” Miriam pours glasses of wine and hands them out. “In what way? Is it not a fox nest?”

“Well…” Jay draws long gray fibers from his pocket and holds them up in the fluttering wind. “If further examination confirms these are fox, then yes. But that wasn’t the only hair I found there. I also found these.” Jay holds up a clutch of long curly golden hairs.

Amy holds her hand out. “Let me see.” Jay passes the tangle of hairs to her. She gets out her phone and takes a picture, then magnifies the image. “Huh.” Amy inspects the hairs more closely. “I can’t think of a single animal that might reasonably be here with this kind of hair. I mean, a golden doodle dog? A Mongolian yak? Some kind of mountain goat or sheep variant would be my best guess here.” She passes the hairs to Alonso.

“Yeah, that’s what I was thinking too.” Jay places a broken stick with a sharpened end on the table. “Until I found that.”

Miriam picks up the narrow stick. Its end has been planed into something like a pencil’s point. “Tool-using foxes?”

“Oh my god, the island is inhabited?” Amy covers her mouth.

Alonso, holding up the hairs, slaps his forehead and cries out. “Yes! Ai mi. I have seen one. I keep forgetting. With everything that has happened and hitting my head. Yes! This is exactly it! The child had this hair.” He holds up the blond curls.

“A child?” Miriam turns to him. “What are you talking about? You saw a child here? When were you going to tell us?” But her eyes are worried. Is this Alonso’s sanity showing signs of cracking? She glances at Amy, who is at a complete loss.

“When did you see a child?” Amy asks.

“I keep forgetting then remembering again. That night when I fell in the dark. I was very drunk. But I was sure I had seen her. Or him. Little person in the shadows, only maybe ten meters away. Didn’t see me. Long curly hair and a little face. They were very real. I heard them as they stepped. I swear to you.”

“Wow.” Triquet slowly absorbs these revelations. Now a number of things start to make sense. “This is a very important piece. A very important piece indeed.” It somehow fits in what they have been studying but they still can’t divine how. How did this lead to an entire sub getting buried at the base? One of the charges that had gotten Lieutenant DeVry in trouble again and again was fraternization. When they’d first read it, Triquet had skipped over the detail, assuming it was with some enlisted man or something, but now it begs the question—fraternizing with whom? Could DeVry not keep his hands off the natives?

Triquet opens their mouth to say as much but they’re interrupted by Esquibel, walking toward them from the beach holding a white triangle with broken edges. “Look. I found this. Floating in the lagoon. Is it what I think it is?” A row of black numerals run along its edge, a second row in dense Chinese characters.

Triquet is up and at her side in a flash. They handle the piece with care.“My my my. Will you look at that. It’s the wreckage of a plane, like a fragment of its wing. See?”

Esquibel asks, “Anyone read… what is that? Mandarin?”

“Mandy?” Amy asks. “Where is she?”

“No,” Esquibel says. “She never learned it.”

“Katrina?” Alonso asks, craning his neck. “I bet you know.”

She sits behind him on her platform but has pink headphones on, grooving to a beat while she fills in an intricate flower drawing in a coloring book. She looks up and removes her headphones. “Why is everyone looking at me? Oh. What’s that?”

Triquet crosses the sand to her and shows her the wing fragment and its Chinese characters. “How’s your Zhōngwén?”

“Yeh. I did study Chinese a bit for some intelligence analysis work I did a few years ago. Let’s see…” Katrina frowns at a cluster of symbols. “I think this part says directorate or ministry.”

“A few years ago?” Triquet deadpans. “When you were sixteen?”

“Seventeen. ASIS wouldn’t give me classified access until after my birthday. I mean, I was still a minor. So stupid.”

“Ministry of what though?” Triquet examines the characters. They are right at the edge, further characters shorn away. With a careful pinch, they peel back the white laminar to examine the composite substrate. “This looks like carbon fiber here. Oh shit. And now…” Triquet hastily puts the wing fragment down on the ground at their feet, “…I’m fairly certain we shouldn’t be handling that with bare hands because that is a Chinese military component and they have been widely known to use toxic jet fuels among other deadly materials. Gah. Doctor Daine, you and I need to get clean real quick. Uh… Uh… Uh… What do you got?”

“Yes. Alcohol wipes. Peroxide. I’ll get them. Right away.”

“Isn’t peroxide one of the fuels they use?” Miriam asks. “But like a toxic version? Is it even safe to mix them?”

Triquet shrugs, alarmed. “You think I know? This isn’t my area of interest at all. I just read stories of Chinese rockets falling on villages and giving everyone blood cancer or something. Ahh! Hurry, Esquibel!” Triquet holds their hands away from their body and jumps up and down in distress.

“So what happened here?” Alonso shakes his head in worry. “Did this float here all the way from China? Somehow I doubt it. So what then? Chinese military plane flying across the Pacific got hit by the storm?”

“What was it even doing here?” Amy wonders. “I mean, there’s nothing here and this is way outside of China’s reach.”

“There’s nowhere,” Esquibel says, returning with a satchel filled with bottles, “outside of China’s reach. Believe me. I have been all over the world and they are everywhere. Hands.”

Triquet holds out their hands. Esquibel puts a small bucket beneath before pouring liquid soap on them. “Any reactions?”

“Just psychosomatic ones. Pretty sure I have like face tumors now. How about you? Did you only touch it with your hands?”

“I am not sure. I had to get into the water to fish it out. Above my knee. I think it bumped into me there. But I didn’t think it could be dangerous since it spent so long in the ocean.”

“You’re probably right. But I’d still wash that leg.”

Esquibel nods. She turns to the person beside her. “Amy, could you please remove my pants?”

“Oh, uh, sure.” Amy tries to emulate the doctor’s business-like approach to bodies and nudity. She fumbles at the buckle below Esquibel’s navel, then unzips them and drags them over the tall woman’s hips and rump. “Maybe wash both your legs to be sure.”

“Would you please?” Esquibel asks, mouth pressed into a thin line. How could she have been so stupid to expose herself to toxins like this? She needed a bloody archaeologist to remind her of it. Unaware of Amy’s fluttering heart as she wipes down the long smooth muscles of Esquibel’s legs, the Doctor instead worries that everyone thinks she’s an idiot. She doesn’t realize she’s been upstaged by the sight of her graceful long legs and smooth skin. They draw all the attention and conversation awkwardly stops.

“There, Esquibel.” Amy stands, disposing of a wad of wipes. “Now you should survive.”

“Whew. I think Amy needs a cigarette,” Katrina jokes. They all laugh, breaking the tension. Esquibel laughs too but her head still rings with recriminations and she doesn’t catch the joke. She just assumes they’re all laughing at her.

“Oh, um, Amy, I think I got it on my legs too…” Triquet strikes a pose and sighs and they all laugh again.

Now Esquibel gets it. She blushes and hastily pulls her pants back up. They aren’t laughing at her. They’re objectifying her. “Thank you. That should be sufficient,” Esquibel informs them in her most prim voice. “I’ll do some research on possible exposures and see if I have anything to counteract them. I’m not sure I do, especially if we inhaled anything.”

“But it doesn’t answer,” Miriam says, “any of our questions. Why were the Chinese even here? On their way to spy on Canada?”

“Or were they coming to Lisica?” Triquet shivers. “I sincerely hope not. I only like the spooky stuff when all the spooks are dead and gone. I don’t need to actually live through any of it.”

Jay shakes his head in confusion. “So you think the Chinese were coming here and got caught in the storm and… and what? The plane crashed and they all died?”

“It’s true,” Alonso says. “We don’t know if anyone survived.”

They all think about what that means, about the other bunker on the other beach, about the forested interior peopled by mysterious natives with curly golden hair.

Alonso chuckles, fatalistic. Life is the strangest thing. There is no anticipating what surprise might come next. “Well. I guess we will have to add more plates to the supper table. Things are about to get a lot more crowded around here.”

Ξ

Pradeep leads Mandy by the hand out of camp and into a tiny nook on the far side of Tenure Grove, where narrow arms of the cliff drop down on one side and the other to enclose this small hidden glade.

Mandy hasn’t held hands with a boy since her cousin Albert walked her to her car at Aunty Carol’s funeral. Male hands are so big, like cartoonishly-large. And Pradeep’s slender fingers are twice as long as hers, carefully cradling her entire palm. She doesn’t like being reminded how much bigger and stronger most men are. Their very existence is an implied threat. Fortunately the three men on this island have been gentle. She loves that they were seemingly able to leave toxic masculinity behind. Mandy can’t remember the last time she was able to live a daily life without it.

But the going is rocky and rooty through the understory and everyone has already watched Mandy trip over one thing or another so she’s grateful for his hand. She wonders what kind of weird fungus or bizarre mating habit of ant species he wants to show her. But she doesn’t need to ask. She’s not a child.

Pradeep halts her at the mouth of the nook. The space within is only as wide as a house, with small shrubs and stunted trees that probably don’t get enough sun, hidden by the tall cliffs almost into an enclosure. Pradeep looks at Mandy with a smile of expectation. He feels so bad for the poor atmospheric scientist, cut off from nearly all her observations. Well, here is a special one for her.

She gives him a side-eyed glance. “What am I looking at?”

“You will need to wait a moment. For the wind to pick up.”

“It’s pretty here. Like a little secret spot.”

“Yes, you wouldn’t believe the interactions among the ground-dwelling arthropods in the leaf litter. I think it’s a full ground war, with at least five fronts and… There. The wind.”

A gust flutters her long hair and rustles the dead branches on the floor of the nook. Then a longer sustained wind shudders past her and swirls into it, lifting redwood duff and dried maple leaves from the forest floor and spinning them in a modest twister.

Mandy cries out with childlike joy and claps her hands. “Oh, oh do it again! That’s brilliant! You’re saying it keeps happening?”

“For at least the last hour. Quite a strong effect. Like surprisingly strong. I was thinking this is how we could get Jay up the cliff. Sit him in a little sort of whirly gig during the next storm. It would spin him right up to the top!”

She giggles and leans gratefully against Pradeep, squeezing his arm, the way she would with any of her girlfriends who had just brought her a gift. He stiffens, unused to intimate contact like this, his smile frozen on his face.

Mandy playfully pushes on Pradeep’s shoulder. “Oh, babe, don’t worry. I’m not into guys. You’re safe with me. But thank you so much! This is so awesome! My god, I can actually run some kind of interesting experiments in here. Does it only occur with a westerly wind? Are there local temperature factors? There must be. So what conditions need to line up for the phenomenon to occur?”

Pradeep shrugs, knowing it’s a rhetorical question. Mandy’s hair still brushes against his shoulder. It is too soft for words. But her proximity keeps him as still as a mouse. He doesn’t mean for human contact to turn him into a frightened prey animal. It just does. And at this point in his life, the old habits are just easier than the new pitfalls of engagement. He withdraws, edging toward the nook. “Would it spoil your observations if I continued my work?”

“In there? Maybe. But I mean, go ahead. This is your lab first. I just got here. And sorry. I didn’t mean to suggest you were coming onto me. I just wanted you to know I wasn’t. Onto you, that is.”

Pradeep nods, pained anxiety clearly showing on his face. Mandy feels a stab of sympathy and has to suppress the urge to give the poor guy a hug. Wow. Who hurt you, bro? We are all dealing with our own ish for sure.

The wind is still whirling, the threads of redwood bark and chips rising and falling in the column according to complex dynamics. He unslings his backpack and crawls forward, following an arc of lined-up pine needles that curve across the ground where the flood waters left them. Black flies and white gnats buzz above these collections of organic matter. Pradeep pries one lump apart with tweezers. He is on the lookout, as always now, for species symbiosis and interactions with their environments. He wants to be able to show Alonso some real knockout examples, really vindicate Plexity for the old data scientist. Hah. Here he goes again… Pradeep realizes he is making of Alonso a father figure, as he has done with mentors many times throughout his academic career.

The thing is, he comes from a family with a strong patriarch: his uncle. The old immigrant works very hard and his many nieces and nephews always come to him with their achievements, to show him that his work is meaningful, that all those pizzas that had put them through college would secure his retirement with a nice duplex or condo in the suburbs outside St. Louis. That is the plan.

But these expressions of filial duty make Pradeep a model student and one whom mentors gladly pick up. Reflexively, he is always trying to please them, to prove that their efforts on his behalf matter. It turns out, people really appreciate that care. It’s part of what allows Pradeep to be such a success in this cutthroat field. His ardent desire to please authority figures, whether they deserve it or not. Pradeep sighs with pleasure, finding an owl’s pellets bound up in the pine needles. He inspects it with the USB microscope attached to his phone. Microbes are already feeding on the small amounts of undigested animal matter that isn’t hair and bone. Wonderful. He scrapes a sample into a capsule and snaps it shut.

A stronger wind blasts the nook, the air pressure fluttering so much Mandy’s ears pop. Pradeep is nearly knocked off his knees. A long branch is picked up into the cyclone and sent skyward.

“Look out!” Mandy hauls Pradeep out of the way as the branch returns with a growing rush to earth. He falls back against her and they crash against the ground.

His weight crushes her ribs. She worries that the branch fell across his legs and hurt him. His hair smells of some spicy male shampoo. That’s the thing about men. She just doesn’t like how they smell. She never has. But girls smell like her favorite dessert. It’s how she knew she was gay, from the earliest moments. She just couldn’t imagine getting closer to that musky male scent.

Pradeep rolls away, worried that he’s hurt the poor girl. He holds up a hand in apology and she does the same thing. “Thank you.”

“Are you okay?”

“Yes. Did I hurt you?”

“No. I’m fine. But it didn’t fall on you?”

“No. You saved me.”

She holds out her hands for help up. He hesitates for only a fraction of a second before he favors her with another brilliant anxious smile and pulls her back to her feet.

More wind whips into the nook, sending large branches skyward. It’s like a fireworks show, just for the two of them. They retreat to safety so they can watch it together.

It is so magical that Pradeep doesn’t realize he’s been holding Mandy’s hand again until the wind fades and it is time to go.

Ξ

“Water.”

Flavia looks up from her screen. She sits in her little private cell, up to her neck in coding. Did somebody say something?

“Water. Please.”

Ah! It’s Maahjabeen, in a cot in the cell beside hers. Flavia curses softly at herself for her thoughtlessness and pushes the laptop away. She finds a bottle in the kitchen and fills it from their freshwater bucket. She taps on Maahjabeen’s door.

The Tunisian woman is on her side, face clenched, breath ragged. Is she asleep? She doesn’t appear to realize she spoke aloud. But she still must need water if she’s dreaming about it. Flavia puts a gentle hand on Maahjabeen’s arm, recalling how much Alonso bellowed when she touched him.

Maahjabeen groans, a scratchy sound, and rolls onto her back. She unsticks her eyes and looks at Flavia without recognition.

“I brought water.”

Maahjabeen nods, her restless disjointed dreams fading, and tries to lift an arm. Her shoulder creaks but allows it. Progress. She grasps the cool bottle and holds it against the side of her face.

“How are you? How is your back?” Flavia strokes Maahjabeen’s thick black curls, visible at the edge of her headscarf.

“Mm. Better. Thank you.” Maahjabeen twists the top off and sucks water out like it’s a baby bottle. “Get so thirsty. And then my muscles lock up again.”

“Drink it all.”

Maahjabeen does so.

“There there. Let’s make sure you don’t waste away.” Flavia mothers her, tucking her bag under her chin. “More water?”

Maahjabeen looks at her with gratitude. “Soon.”

“Us Mediterranean ladies must stick together, eh?” Flavia grabs Maahjabeen’s big toe through the bag and shakes it. “I have been to Tunisia one time. I loved it.”

“You’ve been to Tunisia?”

“Oh, yes. Very beautiful. My uncle was in the Italian Corpo delle Capitanerie di Porto, eh… captain of ports, out of Genoa…”

“Coast guard.”

“Exactly. He was in the Coast Guard and he would take us out sailing all over every summer. He loved Greece best so we sailed the islands most summers but once we went to Tunisia. Something about it… Felt so glamorous.”

“Glamorous? Ha. You must not have left the tourist beaches.”

“No. I think we probably lived onboard his boat in the marina. That’s what we always did. But one day we were in a small town but they had a big square and there was a wedding. Like a wedding procession through the town. And everyone was dressed—”

“Ah, yes. Silver thread and satin as far as the eye can see.”

“And I was like twelve! The bride, she had a headpiece made of gold coins. And the men were so handsome.”

“Ha. That is a perfect description of them. The men of my country do all they can to make themselves handsome to twelve year old girls. Now so much of my dating life makes sense.”

“You should try Italian men. They only think the whole world revolves around them. Their mamas spoil them so much growing up they are just impossible. But there was fantastic fruit in Tunisia. I remember. Sweet. It just really seemed, like, a land of plenty.”

“It could be.” Maahjabeen sits up with a sigh. “It certainly could be. And it definitely has some bright spots. I guess I will return someday and spend the rest of my life there. It will always be home and I miss it so much. But as you can maybe hear in my words, I am not ready yet.”

“Eh, Maahjabeen. What are you doing?”

“I am seeing if I can stand.”

“Let me help.”

Maahjabeen groans as she straightens for the first time in a day. Her shoulders settle and ribs adjust and spine relaxes. She takes the deep breath Mandy begged of her so long ago, then rocks her hips a bit. “Eh. Still very sore. But it is good to be young and fit, no? I will be better. But I have to move. Will you move with me?”

Flavia laughs. “Sure. I should definitely move too. I haven’t been anywhere except my keyboard all morning.”

“Help me down into the sub.”

Flavia blinks at Maahjabeen, who finds her shoes beneath the cot and struggles to put them on. Flavia kneels down to help with the elastic straps and zip cords. “The sub? Don’t you want a nice walk on the beach or something?”

“My body has been all locked up but my mind hasn’t. And I’ve been thinking. Nothing else to do. And I remembered something that was really important a few days ago. Then Triquet got all caught up in their US Air Force murder mystery drama and we’ve all forgotten about the fact that fresh air still regularly flows through the sub. Nobody is even looking for the source of the air anymore. Let’s do it.”

“Do it now? Just the two of us? One who is like broken and the other who is like the least physically competent person on the island? Shouldn’t we wait for, I don’t know, Esquibel or Triquet?”

Maahjabeen takes a jacket from the corner. She thinks it belongs to Pradeep. He probably won’t mind. She shrugs, restless. “We can always stop if things become a challenge. But it is just the stairs. I might have trouble though so if you could help me…”

Maahjabeen leads Flavia out the cell and to the stairs headed down. With a sigh, feeling thoroughly unqualified to lead an expedition of this scale, she gathers her courage and with a grip on Maahjabeen’s elbow helps her descend slowly into the sub.

It’s changed so much since she’s been here last. Triquet really has a sense of design (if it wasn’t obvious from their fabulous wardrobe) and each room is now tastefully decorated with items from the past, bringing each chamber back to life. The bright work lights help immensely as well. It’s nearly like stepping back in time.

“Nicer down here than the bunker upstairs now.” Flavia studies the giant wall map before ducking through the hatch and finding a wall in the second chamber filled with photographs and news clippings, preserved behind a thick layer of transparent plastic.

But Maahjabeen doesn’t have an eye for any of it. She is on a mission. Moving again. She is like the tin man from the Wizard of Oz. So rusty but only slowly now coming back to life. That movie helped her learn English. And it gave her very weird ideas about what to expect of Americans. Now their past is all around her, like coins from Carthage buried in the sand.

She gets to the control room and the permanently open panel leading to the belowdecks. The descent is more manageable now, with solid pieces of steel furniture stacked and braced as a fairly regular set of steps down. “This is where I need help, please.”

Flavia goes down first, standing on the desk that forms the base of the stairs. Maahjabeen sits on the edge and scoots her way down, until her stance is solid and she doesn’t have to lunge forward too far. They carefully find their way to the deck. “Big success!” Flavia cheers Maahjabeen. “You did it!”

“Do not,” Triquet’s voice echoes through the hatch from the chamber ahead, scareme like that. Please, people!”

Flavia hurries ahead. She ducks through the far hatch to find Triquet among their collection, wearing a Renaissance-style linen tunic with laces at the neck and rolled up blousy sleeves. A velvet choker around their pale neck features a green faceted costume jewel. But the modern reading glasses on a chain nearly ruin the look. “Sorry, Doctor, I didn’t know you were down here.”

“Lost in time.” Triquet gives her a glassy stare, not truly upset, actually pleased to have the company. There are so many treasures here to share. “Look, Flavia. My whiskey collection.”

Apart from the fact that most of the containers are empty, it is an impressive assortment of bottles of all shapes and sizes, from flasks to jugs. The artwork on the old labels is really fascinating too, with Jack Daniels and Jameson and Wild Turkey the most common.

“And see. I saved one for… personal experimentation.” Triquet holds up a crate filled with three full vintage bottles of Bushmills, the amber liquid unevaporated. “We can nip one and still have two for reference if we need to run any tests. That’s ethical, right?”

Flavia chuckles. “Entirely ethical. And it is after lunch.”

Triquet uncorks the old bottle and sniffs it. “Smells like whiskey.” They take a swig. “Mm! So smooth!” Triquet wipes a drop from their chin. “I mean, maybe it’s just me with my silly expectations but this is probably like a sixty year-old bottle. Here. Try.”

Flavia toasts Triquet. “Chin chin.” She hums with pleasure. “Oh my god take this away it is so dangerous. It tastes like candy.”

“Irish whiskey candy. I know what business I’m starting when I get back home.” Triquet takes a longer pull. “Who is that? You brought a friend! Come on, then! It’s a drinking party!”

Maahjabeen contorts her way through the hatch and straightens. Her eyes fall on the whiskey in Triquet’s hand. “Ah. Hello.”

Triquet has the sense to cork the bottle and put it aside. They hurry forward. “It’s Maahjabeen! How are you, sweetheart? My god I didn’t think you’d have it in you to join us down here yet.”

“We have come,” Maahjabeen announces, “to finally find the source of the air.”

“The air?” Triquet shakes their head. They’ve been in too deep, every thought devoted to the piles of historical detail and data. “Ah! The air! Right! I mean, well, it must be coming from beyond the next room somehow, mustn’t it?”

Triquet leads them through the last hatch into the final chamber. Here the far hatch is welded shut, as it is with the control room’s far hatch on the floor above at the opposite end. It appears that the entirety of the sub wasn’t buried. The nose and tail were lopped off and only these major living compartments are left. Now they stand two full floors directly below the bunker’s trapdoor.

The expanded steel grates at their feet push cold air through. Then it pauses and draws the air in turn. Triquet steps back and clutches Flavia’s arm. “Oh. Right. Now I remember why I stopped looking for it,” Triquet admits. “Cause it’s too freaky.”

Lisica Chapters

Thanks for joining us on our Scientist Soap Opera escapist journey to the mysterious island of Lisica! You can find previous episodes in the link above or column on the right. Please don’t forget to subscribe and leave a comment if you enjoy what you find!

Audio for this episode:

11 – Balm For His Soul

Alonso launches into the ballad’s second verse, his rough voice even louder. But his vocal tone begins to clear as he shakes loose his pipes. His voice is too coarse for opera, but it is very expressive.

Pradeep begins to clear the table. Mandy collects plates from Maahjabeen, Jay, and Esquibel. Miriam drags an empty cooler on wheels down to the surf, where she fills it with seawater. This is their nightly routine. She returns to the long tables and puts a few drops of concentrated biodegradable soap in the cooler’s seawater and swirls it around until it foams. Then she starts adding the dishes as they’re handed to her.

By the time Alonso has come to the ballad’s torrid conclusion, the camp is once again crumb-clean and crab-proof for the night. He lowers his cane and opens his eyes. He is breathing heavily, his heart in his throat. Flavia applauds.

And then Katrina adds her own soft synth chords to the silence and Alonso salutes her. He is done.

Katrina leans into her mic. In an imperious voice with plenty of reverb she points at Alonso and commands: “Keep singing.”

Alonso laughs. “No no. Now it is time for the young ones.”

“Bollocks, Alonso. Keep singing.”

Flavia cat-calls in support. Miriam does too.

Alonso points at his wife. “Oh, no, you don’t get a vote. You’re even more drunk than I am.”

“Sing, Zo,” Miriam fetches Katrina’s mic and brings it to his chair. “I miss your singing.”

He takes it and, after much dithering—during which Katrina gently comps chords, suggesting different keys—launches into Me importas tú by Lucho Gatica.

Miriam and Amy sway before him, in each other’s arms, trying to sing along on the chorus. Katrina picks up bits and pieces of his voice, looping it back in echoes and strange patterns that he has trouble navigating. He keeps stopping to laugh. They all do.

After his big finish, Katrina transitions into a hard house beat and Triquet grabs the mic, putting on a Dieter from Sprockets voice and banging the track like Kraftwerk. Nonsense words spill out, scatted like a horn. After bouncing around in the sand for several minutes, everyone capable of dancing finally expels the last of their manic energy and collapses. This was the release they needed after the storm and the drama and the terror.

The music slides into a soulful groove and the mic finds its way into Jay’s hands. He gets out his phone, where he’s written a list of lyrics. He might be able to make them work with this beat.

They all lie in the sand listening to him, watching the gray rolling clouds above as evening fades into night.

“One two, one two no this is not a test.

One two, one two oh shit I already messed

up, oh there I got it I’m on it again

and now we can get all the way to the end.

“One two, one two no this is not a test

It’s an island, a placewhere you can take a rest.

On one hand it’s lonely, it’s scary, it’s cold

It ain’t for the weak here, it makes fakes fold.

“But on hand two it’s really quite divine,

We got our own Napa and we even got wine,

We got the Steller sea lions and the arctic terns on back-up

And when I can dance again then you’ll really crack up.”

Jay attempts a beatboy pose in his cot but only hurts himself. He lets their acclaim for his performance give him time to recover. Then his next verses progress onto their favorite topics, and he strives to somehow encapsulate the wonder of Lisica in his rhymes.

“One two, one two no this is not a test.

One hand is cursed and the second one’s blessed.

One place is crowded and loud and deranged

The second one’s lovely and quiet and strange.

“But strange ain’t the word that means what I want.

It’s like getting a menthol when you asked for a blunt.

It’s divine here, nowhere finer, want to die here

Just wish I could say why, when the cliffs are so sheer.”

Jay shrugs. He says into the mic, “That’s all I got.”

Katrina calls out, “Oh, I recorded every bit! We got that shit locked down forever!” And she adds two more layers of bass and strings, then happily remixes his verses for the next half hour.

Her beats compel them to move. Even those who otherwise wouldn’t join in find themselves nodding along. It is such a joyful sound, demanding celebration.

In her cot, Maahjabeen taps her feet. Alonso’s hands play along with Katrina’s chords. Miriam and Esquibel spin pirouettes around each other. Even Pradeep, who hates dancing with a passion, can’t stop rocking back and forth, bodies sliding and bumping into his at sharp angles. He wants to apologize every time it happens but he knows it will only kill the mood. So he just keeps a frozen smile on his face as he nods in time—the one simple gesture that has gotten him through so many ordeals.

Triquet spins Pradeep around, their face flush with wine. Then with a yelp they stumble and crash into Pradeep’s legs. His heart twists, feeling embarrassed on their behalf, as he helps them back up. But Triquet thinks nothing of it.

“Got to start doing my dancing in gowns with a slit to the hip.” They guffaw, crossing a vertiginous threshold with these fine folks. So far none of them have given any sign that Triquet is unwelcome or disapproved of in the least. Of course, the Muslim still remains an unknown. But she isn’t actively dangerous. If she thinks Triquet is an abomination she’s keeping that opinion to herself. Triquet eases open, becoming more trusting for the first time in a good long while, setting aside the layers of armor and masks and personas that are a normal part of each day. The relief of putting down these burdens is nearly electric. And to do so with a younger man, of all people! Although Triquet is beginning to think that Pradeep might just be asexual, perhaps genderless.

But really there is no reason not to dance, and that is the kind of calculus Triquet loves to live by. In the absence of reasons not to, always dance. Always. Blanket rule. And Katrina would keep going all night if they let her. The girl is like some avatar of sound and movement. She stands on her platform, pumping her fist into the air, sucking on a lollipop.

Late at night many end up in a pile, laughing atop each other. Mandy and Esquibel braid Triquet’s green hair. Amy gives Jay a gentle massage. Miriam falls asleep curled up in Alonso’s lap. Maahjabeen snores soundly in her cot. Pradeep is nowhere to be found. Finally, Katrina’s music deflates to long droning notes and she steps from the platform, swooning. She kisses each of them on the forehead and stumbles off to the dark bushes to relieve herself. Then she drains Alonso’s forgotten glass of wine and takes herself to bed.

Ξ

The drone can be programmed to follow a pre-selected route. In the morning, Katrina leans over Pradeep’s shoulder, squinting through her hangover, and watches the footage of the first flight. “There.” She points at the closest valley. “Let’s just drop in there the first time as a kind of test run. Put the waypoints… Exactly. And there at that outcrop. Just make sure it stays above the treetops.”

“It has automatic collision-avoidance.” Pradeep charts a course along the winding course of the valley.

“Of course. But let’s not give it any ideas.”

Pradeep looks sidelong at her. “Are you one of those people who has to anthropomorphize every tool or gadget?”

Katrina pets the drone resting on the table before them. “Why not? It’s cute. In a big black menacing beetle kind of way. Carbon fiber is the weirdest stuff. It looks totally fake. But it’s just so strong. I love the stuff. Soon we’ll build everything out of it.”

“Soon? Is there some new carbon fiber revolution I’m unaware of?” Pradeep doesn’t like when people become pollyannas about the latest tech developments. These things take time. “Carbon fiber is still extremely labor intensive and expensive, is it not? Or is this some other government black lab thing I don’t know about?”

“No. But wouldn’t that be cool? Put all that DARPA money to good use for once. My idea…” Katrina declares, “is that we figure out a way to extract carbon directly from the air and water. Like a manufactured enzyme cocktail we send into the clouds as an aerosol. They break the hydrocarbon chains at the molecular level and black rain falls out of the sky. We harvest the dust. Use it as feedstock for our new carbon fiber factories. Costs plummet.”

Pradeep gives her a strange smile. This is too audacious and relies on far too many unproven assumptions and developments. “Yes, harnessing the power of markets is definitely the best way to defeat harmful pollution. And I like your idea of monetizing the feedstock and making it so important to an industry that they are incentivized to remove the carbon from the atmosphere. Having it fall as rain. Eh, I am not sure that will be the most efficient way.”

“Efficient? No. But black rain would make for a fire music video. Put me in white. Bleach my hair. Slow-mo shot of the supermodel walk toward the camera through black rain. That’s tight. Maybe I’ve got a sword. Seriously, have you been tracking the work in industrial enzymes? I swear they’re going to save us all.”

Pradeep laughs at her hectic thought process. He shakes his head in wonder. “Okay, but my money is still in mushroom remediation and green beaches. We need to get started on them now.”

She cocks her head at him. “Green beaches? What’s that about?”

Pradeep claps his hands in geeky excitement. “Oh, I love this idea! Check out Project Vesta. See, most carbon capture on the planet is done at the mineral level, with chemical reactions turning carbon into calcides, among other things, and burying them where they belong. We should talk to Miriam about this. See if she has any insights. One of the most common rocks on the planet, green olivine, happens to be super alkaline and has a wonderful ability to absorb carbonic acid and trap it forever in its…”

“Yes, the organic lattices. I’ve got a masters in crystallography. Our lab ran a similar experiment with shale. The problem is the olivine oxidizes over time and creates a silicate shell. Then it won’t absorb any more.”

“Yeah, well the clever solution there is to put the olivine grains on beaches with strong tides, so that the mechanical forces of the waves constantly polish them and keep the olivine from forming those shells. The chemicals precipitate into precursor building blocks for corals and diatoms, healing the oceans instead of destroying them. It is really an elegant solution. Only two percent of the world’s tropical beaches would need to have olivine covering them in order to remove all the excess carbon from the planet’s oceans. See? Things aren’t quite as hopeless as they seem.”

Katrina beams, imagining the entire east coast of Queensland covered in green sand and the Great Barrier Reef rescued from doom. “That’s fantastic. Why hasn’t it happened?”

“Money.”

Miriam finds them. She carries a tangle of cords and a small box. “Look. I have some extra batteries for you. If anyone is clever with a soldering iron or has any spare electronic parts lying about we can maybe extend your range.”

“Unfortunately not,” Katrina frowns. “But thanks for thinking of us. Batteries are the heaviest thing a drone can carry. So having more just dramatically reduces its flight time. There might be a way to squeeze more range out of them but I’m not sure any of us have the expertise or tools necessary to make significant changes to the drone here. They already design them for the sweet spot of weight and power.”

“There are new polymer batteries coming,” Pradeep mentions, “that might carry enough charge to be viable. And they hardly weigh more than the carbon fiber. But that’s like next year.”

“Bright days ahead.” Katrina smiles at Miriam. “And first we need to get Mandy’s weather station up there before we run this route. Did I hear you want to use the drone, Miriam, as a remote geologist tool? Fuck yeah. I should teach you how to fly it.”

“Eventually, yes. But I should get back to my own project before I get any more deeply in yours. Ah, well. Mission failed.” And with that, Miriam picks up her box and retreats to the bunker.

Pradeep finishes charting the flight-path. “I don’t think we should plan a further route than this. It will already be expending eighty-eight percent of the battery just to do that much. Explore that one side canyon to the north and come right back. Recharge the batteries and send it down the next side canyon. Repeat.”

Katrina wants to send the drone across the entire island. Maybe with the onboard camera alone and an extra battery somehow strapped to the top she could manage it. But engineering has never been her strong suit so she decides to focus on what she can achieve right now. “Yeh, we should be able to investigate a lot of what’s closest, that’s for sure. Brilliant, Pradeep. High five. Come on, up top. Now down low. Yeh, bro. This is going to kick ass.”

He sighs, nervous again from all the touching. “I hope so.”

Ξ

Another storm arrives this evening. This one is wet and warm with gentle winds. Its heavy clouds tarry over the island, sheeting it with fresh water that originally sailed up from the tropical Asian coast to deliver showers after this to Canada and the Pacific Northwest.

Mandy sets up her weather station on the beach. She comes back in thoroughly soaked. But she is pleased. There is more than enough happening on the shore to learn about this storm from here. She doesn’t miss the opportunity to have it perched on the highest cliff at all.

“Pineapple Express!” she shouts, banging Amy’s new door shut.

“Thanks I’d love some!” Jay answers from his cot.

“No, you stoner. Atmospheric river that started in the tropical West Pacific! Pretty late in the season though. That’s why it’s so warm and wet. These things literally carry a river’s worth of water across the entire ocean! We might even get some amazing electrical activity at the tail end of it. This could be another three days.”

Flavia groans. Another three days stuck in here with everyone? Ah, well. Best to shut out the outside world and dig more deeply into Plexity. She finds her headphones and puts on a saved lofi playlist to drown them out. There. Now she can focus. Flavia is getting steady streams of data now, especially from Pradeep and Miriam. She wonders how she will weave it all in with Mandy’s weather station readings but that will be a challenge for another day. Right now she is trying to create meta-values for every natural language descriptor in their notes. She uses a module from a previous project that is great at lifting keywords out and utilizing them. She will just need to adapt it to Plexity’s idiosyncratic code.

But this storm turns out to be just an echo of the great winter atmospheric rivers. Mandy shows them satellite photos of similar storms, that send preposterous white filaments like a bacterium’s proboscis all the way from Indonesia across the Pacific, deep into the North American continent.

Yet this one fades early, pushed eastward by convection behind and the rising sun before it. As the night progresses the rains fade. The day dawns crystal clear. The morning sky is so blue it is painful to behold. They all wake squinting, trying to locate sunglasses none of them usually have to wear here.

Katrina and Mandy modify the weather station on the beach and finally, after so many days of waiting, they are able to carry it aloft. From the images they had recorded during the drone’s first flight, they were able to identify a relatively flat exposed shelf near the top that faces the open ocean on three sides. Now they’ve programmed a whole script for the drone to perform.

Katrina launches the drone. Its onboard camera that Katrina follows on her display is its eyes. It really isn’t bad quality. Like a GoPro. The manual says if they forego the gimbal and cinema camera it usually carries the flight time goes from twelve to twenty-two minutes. Resolution of imagery drops and focal quality and all that. But it will lead to a lot more missions, that’s for sure.

She doesn’t drive the drone. She lets it follow its script, her thumbs hovering over the joysticks in case something goes wrong. But so far, so good. Mandy squeezes her shoulder in anticipation. “How exciting!”

“I know, right?” The drone ascends and soon hovers over the selected spot. It isn’t quite as flat as it looked on the previous video, but there are a few patches that might be suitable. Katrina takes manual control and nudges it toward the likeliest spot, where the weather station’s base will be wedged in a shallow rill. Then she lets it execute the next pre-arranged maneuver, dropping the drone three meters and lowering the noose from the gimbal, which when tilted slips free and drops the weather station ten centimeters. It lands with a rock and a tilt, nearly topples, then settles in place, canted but secure.

“Well that’s a little high. We can adjust it.” Katrina high-fives Mandy. “But success is ours! We’ll pull it down tomorrow morning and all the freshest datas will be yours.”

“I can’t wait. Thank you so much, Katrina. You’re the best.”

“Sure thing, doll. Glad to help. I’ll do anything for anyone who dances to my music.”

“Oh my god you’re such a party girl.”

They slip easily into familiar banter. Mandy realizes that Katrina might be offering the chance at making a long-term friend. She’s certainly worth pursuing. “So where do you live? Like Sydney?”

“Well. We did. But we’ve been moving around the last few years. Real estate is nuts. Honestly, I’m kind of ready to move on. Pavel said he doesn’t need me as much any more. And our mom is ready to take a turn. I’m ready to try living on my own.”

“That’s your brother? He was in the gulag with Alonso? Where would you go?”

“Well… That’s the trouble, isn’t it? I like Taiwan right now. But Oslo calls to me too. There are some interesting things happening in Israel. I don’t know. Where are you? LA?”

“Yeah, in the hills. I like it. Not the crowds and everything but it’s really nice. There’s some good people there doing good things too. Real strong institutions and just all the money in the world.” She realizes as she says these things that Mandy is listing things Katrina might not care about. “Um, there’s a real party scene too, that’s for sure. Lots of dancing. Night clubs.”

“Yeh, there’s a superfresh DJ community in East LA I’ve been following for years.” Katrina watches the drone drop down to land lightly before her with a final skitter and a cloud of sand. “I could come visit and go hit them up.”

“Ooo.” Mandy wrinkles her nose. “East LA can be rough.”

“That’s cool. I like rough.” Katrina smiles impishly and takes the drone back to camp.

Mandy follows in her wake, an intrigued look on her face, mind alive with possibilities.

Ξ

Maahjabeen sits on the beach, watching the tides. Esquibel helped her down here and dug out a very comfy seat for her in the sand and she should be fine here until high tide in another couple hours.

The orcas are gone. The rollers are back at the mouth of the lagoon, closing off access to the open ocean once more. The sea shines in the soft light like polished glass, every shade of gray.

The lagoon has been transformed since the storm. A giant log—the fallen remnant of some ancient redwood that floated in the sea for who knows how long—has foundered across the barrier rocks directly across from her. The green wreckage of the storm has collected at the log’s intersection with the water, a huge tangle of branches and leaves that she longs to clear. But otters have already begun to prowl around it. Perhaps they have found a new nest.

A clay mudslide from the point to her left now fouls the closest dark blue waters of the lagoon with a tan miasma. And there are more flies than before, suddenly appearing as if they had just been waiting in hiding for the chaos to happen. She waves them away from her face.

These are all bad signs, and point to an unpleasant season ahead. She wonders what this place is like in summer. Does it get hot? Is that when the beach will smell rotten and the flies will fill the air in intolerable black clouds?

She cranes her neck backward to study the black bulk of the dead sea lion a hundred meters away. That’s where the flies got started. They should bury the carcass before it gets too bad.

But just as she thinks that, she realizes Pradeep is at the corpse, studying it with fascination. He wields a scalpel and tweezers like a surgeon, pulling parasites from the rotten flesh. Yuck. What an odd fellow. But, eh, it takes all types. And Pradeep is definitely a type she has not seen before.

And Tunisia has every type. It’s been a crossroads of civilization since the dawn of time. They collect in the souks, the strange ones like Pradeep, and share their outcast views with the only others who will listen. In earlier times his morbid curiosities and general oddness would have probably gotten him stoned for witchcraft. But who knows? He might have managed to save himself, this one. It’s that inborn grace he has and the quick brilliant smile. Yet he is so modest about his looks. Never once has he flirted with any of them. The most excited she has seen him is when he found a flatworm attached to a maggot inside a dead fish. Now Pradeep must be in proper paradise, mucking about in the stinking innards of the sea lion. She shivers in disgust. People are so strange.

The orcas taught her the route back in and she hasn’t forgotten it. There are so many shelves under those waves there is really only one channel. The seas are so shallow that they can be exposed at low tide. But they aren’t everywhere. The orcas showed her. Their path also revealed currents she can’t see from here and a nasty rip leading to the lagoon’s mouth from the west she will have to avoid. But she thinks she can use it, under the right conditions, to get back out there. She just needs to wait for those conditions.

Maahjabeen laughs to herself. The calm before another storm? No, Allah save her, never again. Maybe if a strong south wind came in and knocked the tops of those waves down. But then she would be paddling into that strong wind, while trying to overcome what surf still remained. No… It will some day be a more complex host of variables that will finally unlock this prison again.

The ocean falls away—if the official maps that don’t even include this island can be believed—up to two kilometers to an abyssal sea floor in all directions. There are no known shelves or seamounts anywhere near here to affect the currents. These waves have been shaped by the Aleutian and Alaskan coasts a dozen degrees of latitude or more to the north, and by the forbidding Kamchatka peninsula thousands of kilometers to the west. They rolled across the great Northern Pacific expanse unchanged, bringing the shape of their last brush with land with them. This is how Polynesian wayfarers first sailed across the open Pacific over a thousand years ago. They could read in these currents and waves the interference of solid land far away. They could read the skies for coming wind and storm and follow the stars to stay on course. With her modern technical gear—half of which doesn’t even work out here because it’s off the grid—she still can’t match the ability she’s heard they possessed to read the Pacific like a book.

Well. She’s had nobody to teach her.

Maahjabeen doesn’t like to dwell on the dark moments in her life. Amal, the abusive ex-boyfriend. The big fight at her sister’s wedding. The loss of her mother. So, apart from the wonder she still feels about the orcas, she has already built a nice compartment deep in her mind for the ordeal of the storm to occupy and she will happily lock its door and throw away the key and never think about it again.

But even though that is what the emotional side of her wants to do—and is used to doing because most of the tragedies in her life had only ever had emotional components, resisting all attempts to reason or answer why such terrible things happen—there is more than heartbreak here. The night she spent in that bunker contained not only emotional damage but puzzles for her intellect. She hadn’t been able to process them at the time. She hadn’t cared about the writing on the walls or the bones she’d found or what they might mean. She was only concerned about her survival.

Now she allows herself to think of them. They gleamed, wet and blue in the stormlight. A long bone like a femur rose above the others. And two others. So three. Now with hindsight she realizes those weren’t like human femurs. They were human femurs. So that was the remains of two dead human bodies. Maahjabeen slowly shakes her head, the realization only now dawning. She’d spent the night right next to them. How disgusting. But what were they doing there? Had they been buried in there? Who were they?

Maahjabeen takes out her phone again. She scrolls through the pictures she took of the interior of the small bunker. None of the bones for some reason. She can’t remember what she was thinking when she took these shots. Probably nothing. Maybe she avoided them out of a respect for the dead. She’s always been a bit squeamish. She probably just didn’t want to look at them.

Were they the Soviets or the Japanese who had last been there? No, that made no sense. If there had still been Japanese here when the Soviets arrived, they wouldn’t have killed them and left their corpses in the only building they possessed. So these are the last Soviets? The ones who said that the bunker was a shit hole? Just a poor pair of soldiers far from home? They died of starvation maybe and the crabs ate their flesh? She shivers again. Yes, she supposes that is the most likely explanation. How disgusting. At least they were long dead. Like forty years. The bones had been picked clean.

“I will have to tell Triquet,” Maahjabeen says aloud in English. Her internal monologue is a mix of folk Tunisian, Arabic, French, and English. But she has only spoken English aloud since leaving home last year. “They will know what it means.”

But not yet. Her poor shoulders and back still need more rest. Mandy’s strong hands had torn her to pieces last night and she feels bruised and sore, but perhaps less stiff. Maahjabeen needs to shake these injuries off so she can get back on the water soon. She wants to see the orcas again.

Ξ

What Amy misses the least are crowds. She loves her solitude. And living in Monterey had just been a steadily rising tide of newcomers now for decades. All of her favorite spots have become social media discoveries, each with their own communities and updates and blog posts. If she isn’t hiking Asilomar at dawn she might as well not bother going.

It has driven her to search farther afield for weekends of quiet contemplation. Her entire life is now about identifying where the crowds are not and going there. She adores a vacuum.

Lisica is the ultimate antidote to this modern toxin. Twenty steps outside camp she might as well be the only person on the planet. After the storm, the wind has died to a murmur and it is so quiet, apart from the distant white noise of a jet flying above their protective maritime shell. Amy has transited countless times from North America to Japan and Hong Kong. How many of them had flown her over this innocuous cloud bank down here? It had certainly never occurred to her that two months of her life would be spent under its mantle.

She pushes through the wet fronds of a wide-leafed tryphylla variant at the edge of the grove, dragging their cold lines across her bare legs. But the day remains warm and they do not chill her.

Amy stops and croons in surprise. She drops to her haunches and studies a slug. It is like the banana slugs of California but this one is smaller and pinkish instead of yellow or brown. Still as long as her middle finger, its black eyes perch atop purple stalks, and a faint network of violet lines runs along its sides. How have they not seen any slugs until now? And why is it pink?

She pushes a wide fallen leaf, brown and stiff, beneath the slug and lifts it. She should show this to Pradeep before going any further. But she has already bothered him three times this morning and she can tell he needs his own break from human contact. Ah well. She puts the leaf back down. If the slug is still there when she returns then it was meant to be. If not, she’ll find another later.

She pushes through the grove’s edge shrubs of aster and mallow, which seem to have grown more thick since the last two storms have watered the island. But the waterfall is her goal. Its tenor has changed, grown louder and deeper. Amy is eager to see how much water it is evacuating from the interior of the island.

She can’t get close to where they normally stand beside the pool. The waterfall has increased dramatically in volume, and heavy spattering drops hit the vegetation beside the pool with such force numerous branches have snapped from the onslaught.

The fall is a thundering column, tinged brown with mud. It carries bracken and long dark splinters from above. Its new arc has pulled it away from the slick black wall behind it and in these gaps Amy can spy tall and narrow openings like cathedral windows, where the rock has worn away to hidden chambers behind.

“Oh, Miriam is going to lose her mind.” Amy giggles, taking pictures that can’t seem to capture the dark entrances in the black wall. As she does so, a large portion of a shattered trunk separates itself from the waterfall above and spins through the air to land with a crash in the trees on the far shore of the pool. Amy belatedly realizes how dangerous it is here. But before she retreats she takes one last picture of the transformed scene.

The pool itself foams and swirls, unrecognizable. Amy tries to conceive how she can return here with a Dyson reader and get a representative sample of this ecosystem while it is in such dramatic flux. First, she’d need some kind of shield over her head to protect her from flying debris. But even then, how could she get close enough to the waterfall to sample it before it enters the pool? Or at the exact point it enters it? Here is where Alonso’s grand vision gets rocked by reality. How will they characterize this pool when it changes so dramatically every few weeks? Ah, well. She is just a soldier in this Army. A data collector. It’s up to the smart ones to figure out what to do with it.

She retreats from the pool and follows the stream toward the lagoon. Where it normally disappears in the sand before it reaches the saltwater, it has now overtopped this subterranean tunnel and has carved a fresh channel through the beach, where it transports loads of wreckage from the island into the lagoon.

Amy spies Maahjabeen sitting in the sand halfway up the strand. She hails her. Maahjabeen turns her head, shading her eyes with a hand. Amy waves and points at the channel. “Here’s where the freshwater is pouring into the lagoon.”

Maahjabeen holds her thumb up in agreement.

“Crazy! And it’s undercutting this bank and clay is getting everywhere. Can you see that from there?”

“Yes.” Maahjabeen is not happy to have her attention pulled back from the far horizon. But she does have a favor to ask. “Amy, maybe you can help me.”

“Of course!” Amy’s first instinct is to jog over to Maahjabeen’s side to see what she may need but the scientist in her hesitates. She points at the channel once more. “I bet if we dropped down from this point to the lagoon floor we’d find the normal exit point for the stream. When it covers up with sand again and you’re better we should schedule a dive!” But Maahjabeen isn’t listening, just waiting for Amy to finish. “Oh. Sorry. What do you need?”

“I think I am ready to—”

“Amy! Amy…!” Miriam calls out from the edge of the beach. She waves at them urgently from under the trees.

“Hold on, Maahjabeen.” Amy hurries toward Miriam. “What is it, Mirrie? Everyone okay?”

“There’s openings behind the waterfall! Come see! Just as my models predicted!”

Amy starts running, eager to share this with her. “I know! I just saw them and took pictures for you! But be careful over there! I almost got brained by a falling log!”

They disappear into the greenery together.

Maahjabeen, who had raised her arms in hopes of getting Amy’s help up out her hole, has been abandoned. She hisses in pain and aggravation, her shoulders acting up again. She can’t find the leverage to get herself out of the sand. “Hello?” Maahjabeen finally sets aside her pride and calls out, realizing she is actually trapped here. “Anyone…?”

Ξ

Alonso wakes up long after everyone else. He had been sleeping and dreaming in deep comfort. He can’t remember the last time that had happened. The specifics of his last dream have already faded but he had been floating somewhere warm. In an amniotic sac, still unready to birth. But now he is awake and the fresh air against his skin is nearly unbearable. With a contented groan he scrubs his face and rolls onto his side.

“No, he’s up! It’s fine! Bring her in here!” Miriam’s voice rings in the hush like a bird call. The sound of his beloved’s voice is like a balm on Alonso’s soul. He still can’t believe he has escaped the gulag and started his life over again. Too unreal. It’s like he’s in a Borges novel jumping dimensions or something. There are literally two realities on this crazy planet. Two Alonsos.

The platform creaks. Pradeep carries Maahjabeen up the ramp and into the Love Palace like a newlywed groom with his bride. But her face is anything but pleased. She wears a silent grimace of agony. He ducks into the bedroom enclosure, grunting with effort.

“No… Take me…” Maahjabeen grates, “to my own bed. I do not need… to make a mess of—”

Miriam calls out, “Maahjabeen. Please. Mandy needs more room to work on you and you’re not going to find a more comfortable spot here than the nest of a fifty year old woman.”

Maahjabeen rolls her eyes on a stiff neck toward Alonso. “I am sorry… to disturb you. Ah!” She gasps as Pradeep gently lowers her to Miriam’s tousled blankets. Amy darts in and straightens them as Maahjabeen lies in a locked arch on her back, bent forward, legs in the air, shoulders frozen.

“Oh no.” Alonso sits up. “What happened to you?”

“We left her out there,” Esquibel calls out as she hurries from the bunker carrying supplies, “too long. The cold sand and everything. Here. Pedialyte. That is what you need first.”

“Ohh… it’s my fault,” Mandy hurries up the ramp rolling up her sleeves. “I got distracted by my work. Sorry, Maahjabeen! Now you need heat more than anything! Lots of heat!”

Amy drapes a blanket over Maahjabeen’s cramped form. “No no. I was the one who saw her last. And I just left her there. Oh, sorry!” The weight of the blanket on Maahjabeen’s locked arms makes her gasp. Amy gently pulls the blanket off and starts tucking it gently in around her torso where she can. The poor woman’s elbows are at angles to her head. Her back is locked as if she still sits in the sand. She looks like some kind of twisted crab.

Maahjabeen is panting, little ah, ah, ah gasps that match her racing heartbeat.

Mandy kneels beside her, placing calm hands on her right shoulder. “The best thing you can do right now is breathe.”

“I am breathing.” Maahjabeen blows air out her pursed lips like she’s in labor. “Are you deaf? Can’t you hear me breathe?”

“No, deep breaths. I mean, when you can. Your diaphragm is totally contracted. You’re holding on to the pain.”

“Oh, again it is my fault. Ah! What does that even mean?”

“Like this.” Mandy sits back, posture perfect, and takes a deep breath. “They had a yoga class in my high school growing up on the Big Island. I didn’t even know that was weird until I moved to the mainland. What you need to do is try to control your breath. Right now it controls you. So reach down to your toes—”

“Don’t give me this hippie nonsense! Doctor Daine! Help me!What does a medical doctor say about my—ah! My pain?”

Esquibel kneels at Maahjabeen’s feet. “Well, if you feel Mandy’s mechanical manipulations will be too much right now I can give you a muscle relaxant. Perhaps intramuscular if you want it fast.”

“Fast, yes. Fast would be good. And something for the pain.”

Esquibel shakes her head no. “No no. Not with Lorazepam. Not if we want your heart to keep beating. At least the opiates I have with me here. I’ll check in my bins if I have anything that won’t be contraindicated. But I don’t think so.”

Maahjabeen groans, stabbed by a dozen knives. “Of course not.”

Mandy still sits in her yoga pose holding Maahjabeen’s shoulder. Her patient still fights to breathe properly, the corners of her mouth pulled wide.

Esquibel pulls down the waistband of Maahjabeen’s black tights to reveal a patch of golden-brown hip. She wipes it with an alcohol pad and places the tip of the syringe on the site. “Okay. Ready? A little pinch.”

It is probably as much a placebo effect as a biochemical reaction, Esquibel estimates, but Maahjabeen instantly drops her arms a fraction of their height and her breath steadies a bit. Within a few moments she is able to lower her head onto the pillows and release her neck. Her back begins to bend. She shivers.

“More blankets!” Amy leans in, covering Maahjabeen with Miriam’s sleeping bag. She tenderly tucks the thick black curls back under the headscarf framing the young woman’s face.

Now Mandy starts to gently move her hands on Maahjabeen’s shoulder and she sighs, settling back, easing into the bed. Her eyelids flutter and then close. But her breath keeps catching, and even though progress is slow, the women tending her are patient.

Alonso watches it all, on his side. At first their urgency had upset him and Maahjabeen’s pain had only reminded him of his own. But the ministrations of the others have soothed him as much as Maahjabeen. This here is the ultimate remedy to the visions of torture that still dance in his head. Nothing could be more opposite than these gentle and kind women setting aside their own days to provide comfort to one of their own.

Here is another balm for his soul.

Lisica Chapters

Thanks for joining us on our Scientist Soap Opera escapist journey to the mysterious island of Lisica! You can find previous episodes in the link above or column on the right. Please don’t forget to subscribe and leave a comment if you enjoy what you find!

Audio for this chapter:

10 – This Is Fantastic

Jay has no idea how he could have ever handled this recuperation without weed. He has a platinum kush hybrid that is just so good for pain and he’s been hitting it pretty hard. Especially after Amy came back with reports of the intact crown of the fallen redwood. It’s landed in a tough spot, she said, not somewhere he can reach in his current condition. But the pictures have been extraordinary. Epiphytes the likes of which they’ve never seen, mostly variations on leather ferns in aerial mats. She estimates that the top crown is a wooden bowl that holds hundreds of kilos of soil, fungi, and organic debris. She has identified multiple nests of both birds and small mammals. And he can’t get to it.

So he takes another drag off his joint and tells himself to deal with it. Such a fucking Jay kind of move. Take yourself out just when things are starting to get interesting. And what would you usually do if you were bedridden? Read fantasy. But now there’s no point because you’re actually living the fantasy. Except you aren’t. Because you can’t get out of your fucking hammock for like ten more days.

He hits the joint again. Now his head is starting to swim. Thank god. He is getting sick of the dark thoughts cycling around in his brain. He needs new thoughts.

His head lolls sideways and he studies the camp. Everyone looks so intent. They’re all working so hard. Triquet hauls something out of the bunker to great fanfare and begins giving an impromptu lecture on its provenance. From this distance it looks like a wall map. Maybe from the war. Cool.

They all scurry into and out of the bunker like ants. And that is their concrete hive. A bemused giggle escapes him. We are nothing without our hive. It’s like a defensive encrustation we build up around ourselves like sea snails, held together with snot and effort. We’re really no more than the measure of our structures.

And then the metaphor seizes Jay. It’s true. We are polyps, pink and helpless in our naked skin. And we spend nearly all our efforts protecting our defenseless squishy bodies from harm. We weave clothes to protect us from the sun and weather. We build cars to transport us around, like we possess these soulless shiny little beetles we’ve crafted whenever we sit behind the wheel and we send them spinning along with our ephemeral will. Then we enter our houses and they bloom with light, windows as their eyes blinking awake. If they are the body then we are the soul, giving them meaning and direction. We work all our lives to afford one of these houses. We build them strong so they will outlast us, so our homes will survive past our individual mortality and become estates that we pass down to our descendants in perpetuity. The clan is the organism, the clan as represented by the actual structural estate.

We are not these tiny little sylphs, pink and fragile with tadpole fingers and blinking eyes, we are (at our best) multi-generational structure builders, leaving our encrustations all over the planet in spreading concrete stains, reaching higher for the stars with towers and planes and spacecraft that break the bonds of gravity and take our little steel and glass cysts off-planet.

Yeah, the platinum kush is definitely some good shit. He has now become one with both his ancestors and progeny. And he has understood the deep imperative to build, or to maintain that which is already built. Jay has always thought of himself as more from the nomad side of the human family tree, a happy wanderer who has no need of possessions of his own. But now he identifies the base urges within himself that demand all of his evolutionary-biology needs. Exploring. Nesting. Building. Possession of property is hardwired into humans to give them the motivation to build. That leads to fences and territories and inevitably wars. Yet owning and controlling the encrustations is the important part, to ensure that the longterm culture—which spans thousands of years and hundreds of generations—develops properly.

So then what is proper development? Is that realm somehow beyond science in the province of the prophets and seers? The futurists and prognosticators? The policymakers and stakeholders? All of them and none at the same time? Because just when you think you’ve got your castle built, along comes a storm to drop a tree on your roof.

“Hey, sleepy head.” Amy finds him watching the camp with bleary abandon. She has much less patience for Jay’s lackadaisical ways than Pradeep’s rigor. Even though Jay is one of the best field collectors she has ever encountered, when he isn’t climbing trees or digging in the mud with his bare hands he’s basically useless. And now that he can’t move, he’s worth even less.

She puts Jay’s laptop in his lap. “Here you go, honey. Pradeep is bringing in so much data today he could use a secretary to get his notes in order. Let me just get the files off his phone…”

Jay lifts a hand in protest. “Will do. But ‘honey’ is demeaning.”

Amy wants to make a further joke, which she is pretty sure he is expecting, but she catches herself. He’s actually right. She meant it as… Well, how had she meant it? As a tender diminutive that conferred affection and care, right? But it was still a diminutive. Sometimes she hates that straight white men get the benefit of the same rules everyone else does. They don’t deserve such generosity after what they’ve done to the world for so long. But that’s not how things work. Either everyone is treated fairly, or no one.

Amy salutes Jay instead and leaves him to the work.

Ξ

Esquibel brings a bin to Katrina, who sits on her platform writing lyrics for a song about Lisica. She is in the middle of constructing an intricate verse when the Doctor interrupts her.

“Hello. Good evening.”

And just like that it flies from her head forever. Oh well. “What’s up, Doc?”

“Yes, well. I am worried about Mandy.”

Katrina frowns, filled with concern. She sets aside her laptop. “Still? Poor little poppet. I thought Maahjabeen’s return would have cured all her ills.”

“She cannot get over the fact that she first let Maahjabeen go, as if Mandy had any say in the matter. She says she should have never let them take her from the beach.”

“So she’d rather be dead.”

“She stopped eating. She stopped working. I’ve never seen Mandy like this.”

“What can we do?” Katrina recognizes that bin. She lifts the lid.

“Her weather station. She said you were planning on placing it on the top of the cliffs? I am hoping we can still do so.”

“Yeh, we ran out of time that night. Good thing. The storm would have obliterated it.”

“Mandy is a very sunny young woman, very generous with her heart. But at the center she is actually a very controlling person. Losing Maahjabeen struck at the heart of that for her. She needs to get her sense of control back, and she cannot do it without data.”

“Certainly. Lovely idea. Doctoring the mind and the soul. The drone hasn’t been up in days. Let’s check it out and get it up on the cliffs before… eh, well. Looks like evening’s actually coming on. First thing in the morning, then? Tell her—tell her we need all her documentation and a project proposal first and, uh, and tell her to prepare a workflow for the data that is coming and also have her put together like a weekly, monthly, and overall goals spreadsheet that will identify where she wants to go with this project…”

Esquibel laughs, holding up a hand to forestall this sudden burst of spritely energy. “Okay. Okay. I think that last bit might be too much. But I get what you are saying. I’ll put her to work tonight. Perhaps she can get some sleep. We will be ready early.”

“Early? But tonight we’re gonna dance til dawn!”

Esquibel chuckles, shaking her head. “Then we will launch the drone at dawn.”

Ξ

Triquet has indeed unearthed a wall map from the sub. But it is not from World War II. It is from ten years later, as Hawaii’s statehood changed the strategic axes of US PACOM, with lots of annotation around Guam and the Philippines. Neatly labeled pastel blobs with borders hand-traced in black ink litter the wide ocean. Tables list the dispensation of their fleets alongside permanent and temporary bases, with supplies and logistics enumerated in columns beneath. China has no naval presence yet. Japan doesn’t any longer. Only the Soviets in Vladivostok have assets. Otherwise, the entirety of the Pacific Ocean is under the dominion of the United States.

“And we turned it into a garbage patch.” Triquet sighs, wanting to find a good safe out-of-the-way spot for this valuable antique. The top floor engine compartment where Katrina throws her parties is a good spot. As long as Jay doesn’t light it on fire with a joint. Triquet chuckles. Lisica would be so dreary without them.

The fourth compartment belowdecks is now catalogued and organized. Someone really thought that crate upon crate of spare diesel engine parts was going to be necessary in the future yet here they sit, still encased in oil decades later. There are a number of bizarre collections like this: an entire stack of flats with boxes of some off-brand powdered fruit drink with 70s artwork; racks of brown bottles holding white pills with faded labels; a tilting column of rotting firehoses in a corner. Triquet becomes a time traveler, stepping through all the postwar Americana.

They return to it now, turning on the downstairs work lights before clambering down the improvised ladder from the control room. The stale pipe smoke smell makes them wrinkle their nose like a rabbit. “How did people live like this? Cigars and aluminum powder and lead in the gasoline and lead in the drinking water. And a highball after dinner every night. It’s actually incredible they lasted as long as they did.”

Triquet clears a space on the largest desktop and covers it with a clean white cloth. Now that things are sorted it’s time to actually investigate what some of these piles hold. But where to begin? They could be methodical and start from the first hatch leading further in, but years of experience have developed their instincts and they head into the second room, where stacks of disintegrating manila folders totter atop leather portfolios.

The folders are standard Army paperwork from the late 1950s to the early 1970s. Requisition orders and payroll records. At one point it looked like this island housed twenty-four men. Twenty-four? What for? A listening post would only require its staff and at most a small security detachment, wouldn’t it? That couldn’t be more than half that number. What would twenty-four soldiers do out here all the time? Perhaps it was punishment. I bet they died of boredom. Or it was gay paradise. One or the other. It certainly couldn’t have been anything in between.

But these top pages are more damaged. The date and letterhead have crumbled away. Their fingers leaf automatically through the stacks of reports. They possess the lightest touch, like a cat burglar in a jewelers’ shop. The brittle pages hardly mind being disturbed by Triquet’s deft fingers.

An early payroll report only lists four people. One pulls a much higher salary, at an O-5 paygrade, whatever that was. Two others are redacted. How odd. You have to list the spooks on the payroll, how much they draw, and then you have to strike it out with a black pen. Triquet wonders if all that busywork occurred at a single Orwellian sitting. “You know, for efficiency.”

Triquet sighs, alone in the dark little room. Suddenly it’s too quiet in here. They love postwar ballads. Johnny Mercer. Billy Strayhorn. Their favorite is Sarah Vaughn. She sang Gershwin standards like it was opera, so lush and beautiful. But it is Billie Holiday that they sing now, in a suitable creaky tone for this haunted setting.

“I’m traveling light…

Because my man is gone…

So from now on…

I’m traveling light…”

It is in the portfolios where Triquet expects to find the greatest treasures. And after a cursory examination of the rest of the manila folders, they set them aside and pull open the first of the heavy leather covers. It contains architectural drawings of the concrete bunker above, with the insignia of the Army Corps of Engineers in the corner, as well as the red-stamped word CLASSIFIED. The roof was covered with two large satellite dishes as well as a suite of other instruments. That was a detail Triquet hadn’t yet seen. The bunker was built with defense in mind, with notes in the margins about lines of fire and bulwarks on the beach. The year was 1959.

From the next portfolio, a large format black and white photo spills out. Also marked CLASSIFIED, it is a portrait of the staff of the base in 1962. The bunker behind them looks new. They stand in three rows of six, with only five in the front. Seventeen. And all but five are officers. So the enlisted men, who are the only men of color of course, were here to serve the officers who had technical expertise on whatever equipment they ran here.

They do not look happy. This was evidently a required photo after a long exhausting day. But they are spruced up properly, with shining hair and collars cutting into beefy necks. This one has a sunburned nose. Perhaps there was less cloud cover here back then. And this must be the base commander in the middle. He couldn’t be the tallest so he’s the thickest. Looks like a real hardass. What joy.

And here is a cache of smaller photos, square Kodak prints that must have been developed in a dark room here on the island somehow. The first shows a sailor with a fishing pole proudly holding up a large fish. But behind him is the silhouette of a ship on the horizon. No… Not a ship…

Triquet tilts the photo more closely into the light. That is the conning tower of a submarine.

The next photos show the sub on the beach. A trench is being dug through the sand but the laborers have stopped for a barbecue. In another, the sailors are playing football but in the background the half-buried sub stands dark against the trees. “What were they thinking? What could burying it have possibly gained them? The military is crazy. There’s no telling.”

With a nostalgic sigh, Triquet sets aside the photos. Their ghosts fill the chamber, still here in the things they had fashioned and left behind. They were such simple tough people, with such clear ideas of how to live. Not like the relativistic muddle today. Too bad reality was never so simple, nor clear.

“No one to see…

I’m free as the breeze…

No one but me…

And my memories…”

Ξ

Flavia wrestles with the structure of Plexity. Alonso had some good initial concepts, but the idea that his thousand lines of Perl are going to suffice is absurd. If you are going to do this thing, then do it properly or not at all.

She is thinking about cellular automata as the driving engine of the architecture. It’s because of those Dyson field devices. The microfluidics channels they use to define parameters are capable of returning readings that are not binary, but rather impart a matter of degree. If she just adapts the diagnostic firmware a bit she could really make their readings far more complex. Nearly harmonic resonances through the media. In that way it is more like an analog interface than a digital one, and she would like to preserve the features of the analog record, the nearly-indefinable warmth that such signals possess, all the way through the pipeline.

She’s thinking she might use a stochastic cellular automaton throughout the system as a quality assurance agent free-roaming the architecture, stress-testing different neighborhoods of the grid. She’s a deep believer in iterative methods and emergent properties, and the data they will be feeding this program couldn’t be richer. Her child will grow up strong and healthy, with machine learning bootstrapping itself up into one cognitive milestone after another.

Flavia doesn’t like the idea of artificial intelligence. She thinks too much of the common argument is bogged down in the fascination of emulating humans and biology, as if how our brains and glands perform is the only possible expression of intelligence. Artificial intelligence is more the realm of anthropologists and interface devs than mathematicians and programmers. And she is glad that with all the other woo getting tossed around here, Miriam and Alonso aren’t also trying to bring Plexity to life like some kind of Disney Pinocchio. But it will be intelligent, this child of hers, and it will certainly grow. But it will also be the very first of its kind, so it is impossible to say in what way it may grow. Long after she is dead and gone, perhaps Plexity will come to life in some measurable way. But she doesn’t care about that. She just wants the maths to work as smoothly as water slipping over riverstones.

But Alonso is too sloppy with his definitions. She needs better clarification of what he wants from certain sets of resources. With a sigh, she exits her reed-wall cell in the center of the bunker and blinks at the gray light of the doorway. Amy is out there, building a sturdy reed panel to serve as a door. “Finally!” Flavia says, then realizes how spoiled a comment it is. “I mean, thank you, Amy. I would help, but… Eh. My hands. They are like two left feet with the manual work.”

Amy giggles. “Oh, that’s fine. I’m learning a lot about these reeds as I work with them. Much more pliable than similar species back home. They may even be their own subspecies, a kind of flattened tule, more like a sedge than a reed.”

“As long as it keeps the rain out.” Flavia steps past her into the fitful wind. She realizes she should have another layer on but she doesn’t want to return inside. Hopefully this will be quick.

But she stops on the ramp, one foot hovering above the second step. Miriam giggled. And something in the voice emerging from the shadows of the bedchamber convinces Flavia she is intruding on intimacies.

Alonso whispers a reply, his voice deep and husky, and Miriam giggles again. Flavia turns and silently departs, for some reason inordinately pleased at this development. She doesn’t know Alonso well. They had been colleagues who shared mutual respect and a love of wine before this. A couple conferences were all they ever saw of each other face to face. But her heart has grieved along with everyone else’s to see the sad state he has been reduced to. Yet nothing heals like love.

Flavia imagines the two of them hiding under their sheets, sharing secrets and dreams, building a tiny little universe of two. She has done this herself before, first with Niccolo, her teenage boyfriend, and then Marta, one of her latest lovers. But for Flavia all her affairs are temporary. Relationships are project-based, with hard deadlines before she has to reset herself and move on. But these two… Incredible! They have like thirty years of background in their private universe. That is enough time, she is sure, for entire castles to be built and inhabited and to erode into forgetting. Thirty years! With only one person. Flavia is a modern woman and she shivers in revulsion. She cannot imagine.

Flavia returns to the bunker, a bemused expression on her face. Amy, ever solicitous, asks, “Are you looking for Alonso? I think he’s in his tent.”

“Yes, with Miriam.” Flavia smiles. “And the Love Palace is living up to its name.”

“Why, those old dogs,” Amy laughs, as uplifted by the news as Flavia is. She shares a happy sigh. “I swear, getting Maahjabeen back has saved us all.”

Flavia passes inside and Amy realizes she’s been faintly hearing Miriam’s giggles without realizing what they mean. She flashes on the one night all three of them shared a bed, at the very first. They had indeed built a tiny universe under the sheets of their professor’s king-sized bed in Reno. It had been a real inflection point, that night, for all of them, for the rest of their lives.

Lovers and their romantic withdrawals, a tale as old as time. Amy imagines Pleistocene hunter-gatherers under a pile of animal skins, building secret worlds together as they wait for dawn. How much of the past has been lost? Why, nearly all of it. We remember the kings and queens, and more recently historians define policies and economies of ancient tribes and nation states. But this intimate discourse, the pillow talk between people in bed, it is evanescence itself, vanishing as soon as it is spoken. This is the real fabric of humanity, impossible to share or study.

Throughout the ages, this time in bed has been the refuge of folk from every walk of life. The serfs toil in the fields then collapse into each other’s arms. But what must it be like to share a bed with someone who’s abusive? Or dull to the point of silence? Then it isn’t a refuge but an inescapable torture chamber or prison.

Amy thinks of her own parents. The three of them had shared a small flat in a concrete high-rise on Okinawa. Amy had slept on a futon in the entry hall across the front door like a guard dog. She had never heard a sound from her parents in the main room once they had pulled out their own futon. She now wonders if they had remained quiet on purpose, knowing their child was listening in. Perhaps they are much louder and more carefree now, in their late seventies. But somehow she doubts it.

Her father is a quiet nisei who grew up speaking Japanese in his home in Olympia, Washington. He worked as a translator for the American bases in the sixties through the eighties and found a dutiful and cheerful local wife. Well… cheerful until her only child grew up and broke her heart, anyway.

But all the hidden empires of the night! Amy sighs, shaking her head in wonder at the ephemeral creations people share with their night time dialogues, their hidden fears drawn out like thorns. She hasn’t had a real relationship in… twenty years now? Twenty-two? But she still remembers the depths she and Adrian were able to reach. When they had the time. And it was the lack of time that had ended it. All intimacy gone. Just roommates for three years.

The door is starting to take shape. Multiple layers is the answer, laid at right angles like plywood. And she’s doing what she can to reinforce the corners. Nobody will treat it gently so it needs to be able to withstand their abuse. She might even need to make it strong enough for security. How many layers will that be?

It turns out she stops at nine. The door is admirably thick with that many layers, twine weaving through to hold it all together. It doesn’t quite fit the frame until she trims the ends, then it is nice and snug. Now… how to fashion hinges?

Ξ

Maahjabeen rests on an inflatable mattress inside one of the cells in the bunker. It is not her space and she doesn’t recognize the luggage stacked in the corners, nor the photos torn from magazines that hang on the walls like artwork. She is still so depleted her idle mind drifts, occupied with subjects like this for hours. Who would put up a picture of a glacier calving into the sea? And another of some giant Asian neon city from above?

“Knock knock.” Esquibel stands in the doorway.

“Eh. Doctor. Please come in.” Maahjabeen lifts a beckoning hand but her shoulder locks up and she grimaces.

“Still having trouble with your shoulder?”

“Both of them. And my back twinges whenever they do.”

“That is why I brought my specialist bodyworker.” Esquibel pulls Mandy into the doorframe.

Mandy is pale, her eyes bruised and hair tousled. She will not look directly at Maahjabeen, but squints at the floor instead as if fearing a blow.

Maahjabeen is shocked by the girl’s transformation. Had Mandy looked like this on the beach when she had arrived? She can’t recall. Her head was already spinning. “What is wrong with you?”

But Mandy only shrugs and shakes her head and slips into the cell. “Esquibel says I should look at you. I use a Chinese healing discipline called Tui Na. If you like.”

“Not if you are sick.” Maahjabeen asks Esquibel, “Is she sick?”

“No. Not at all.” Esquibel pats Mandy on the shoulder. “Healthy as a horse. Her adjustments are very useful. Exactly what you need I think. This Tui Na does very good diagnosis on your muscle and bone structure like a physiotherapist. I must admit Mandy knows anatomy very well.”

“Then what is wrong with her? Is she angry with me?”

“No!” Mandy blurts. “Never! The fault is all with me! I should have never let you go!”

Maahjabeen doesn’t know how to handle such an absurd statement. She only shakes her head in confusion. “What are you talking about? None of this has anything to do with you. This is something I did to myself. It is only between me and the storm. And God.”

“But if I’d done a better job persuading, or even grabbing—”

Maahjabeen struggles to sit up. She raises her arm as high as it will go and jabs a finger at Mandy. “If you had tried to stop me any more than you had I would have physically attacked you with my paddle. It was not your decision. You insult me with this. Who are you, my mother? You are a stranger. It was my risk to take.”

Mandy is silent, her brow trembling. Then she allows the words to penetrate and the burden to lift. Above all, Mandy is possessed of common sense and she can see the wisdom of Maahjabeen’s perspective, however ferocious it may be. At length, she nods, and indicates Maahjabeen’s shaking finger. “Is that as far as you can lift your arm?”

“Are we still fighting? Because it hurts to hold it up.”

“No. I am sorry, Maahjabeen. Of course you are right. I just feel so bad for you.”

“Then do something. Help me fix my shoulders. They are locked in place. It hurts so much.”

“Yes. Of course. Can you lie face down.”

“No. My back.”

“That’s fine. On your side?”

“No. Only on my back. Help me settle.”

Mandy cradles Maahjabeen as she eases back with a gasp. Her hands encompass Maahjabeen’s left shoulder. “Now we don’t have an X-ray machine here but I don’t think we need one. Do you think anything is broken?”

“Like did I break the bones? No. I did not smash my shoulders against anything.”

“What about nerve damage. Can you feel your fingertips? How about the inside of your elbows?”

Mandy traces the interior of Maahjabeen’s forearm and the Tunisian woman nods. “No. No problems with the fingertips.”

“How is it here?” Mandy’s hands travel up to the cervical vertebra on Maahjabeen’s long graceful neck. With her huge dark eyes and luminous skin she looks like a pharaoh queen of ancient Egypt. But Mandy stops this superficial appreciation of her patient’s features in it’s tracks. She is here as a healer, not some missionary from the lesbian vanguard. Enough time for that later.

“Stiff. Very sore. You see I had to hold the same position for hours on end. Bracing the boat. For three days.”

“Yeah, I think we’re just looking at held muscles. The shoulder is a complicated joint and you put too much strain on certain ligaments and connective tissues. So we need to relieve the muscles and release the tension.”

“You are saying this is me just holding it? I promise you I would release it if I could. The idea that I want to somehow keep…”

“No no. Not that at all. After a certain point, if a muscle remains activated as long as this, we lose conscious control of its release. We need outside help. Reminders. You know, just massage, to start with. Then maybe some of the painful stuff to help get your structure back in alignment.”

“How long are we talking? How many days? Or weeks?”

“Not sure until we do some work. How about this: How long will you be like this if I don’t help?”

“Ehhh. I have no idea. Okay. Go ahead. And don’t worry about being gentle.”

Ξ

Amy collects everyone for an evening meeting after dinner. Jay sits in a camp chair with a makeshift crutch at his side. Maahjabeen is on a cot in the back, Mandy and Esquibel within reach. Alonso presides, his mood brighter than any of them have yet seen.

“We have all done much today, from making the camp livable again to learning the origins of the settlement here, eh? But first, I’d like everyone to hear about Pradeep’s day. This is what I hoped for all of you when I conceived this mission.”

Pradeep nods. “Uh, yeah. It was a fascinating time in the roots of the redwood giant that fell. But what I think Alonso wants me to focus on is the Dyson reader…”

Alonso waves an expansive arm, his hand holding a glass of wine. “Tell them all of it. We are not short of time tonight.”

Pradeep shrugs. “Well, here’s the thing. I was able to get specific results on something like eighty-seven, eighty-eight percent of the samples I fed into the reader. I’m assuming it’s been field tested and it’s error rates are within acceptable limits, but I can’t tell you what a difference it is to be able to classify subjects in the field, still in situ. I began to see how this whole Plexity scheme might actually work. You know those white streaks of fungus in root structures? Well I was able to find which are mycorrhizal, or beneficial, and which are parasitic. It turned out that most of the fungi I sampled were beneficial. Only a few percent were parasites. And they were completely surrounded by the beneficial fungi, almost like white blood cells attacking pathogens in our blood streams.

“In the lab this discovery would have been months of work. But with the device in the field, I was able to survey the entire root system in a day and even design a couple simple experiments. Flavia, I think one of the most useful things Plexity could give me in conjunction with the power of the tool itself is the ability to build models with the data in real time—”

“I am absolutely on it,” Katrina says, sipping her own wine. “Data visualization is my jam, mate. I am currently taking votes from everyone on how you like your results presented. So think about it and get back to me. Fancy and detailed, with 3D drill-downs? Simple factsheets? Pies and bars? I mean, we can do it all but I think these things work best when we optimize to a single vision. We can even do animations.”

“Just no animated characters, please.” Miriam sips her own wine and laughs. “I don’t need any cute sidekicks between me and the interface, thank you very much.”

Katrina blows a pink bubble and it snaps. “Do I look like the kind of person who would give you a cute animated sidekick?”

Miriam looks about herself. “There isn’t a single bloody mirror on the entire island, is there? Yes, Katrina dear. You absolutely do look like that person.”

They both laugh.

“But still,” Pradeep continues, “even though I identified like thirty-three species I just barely scratched the surface of what this tool is capable of, and in such a setting. Maahjabeen, I can’t wait to unleash it in the lagoon. Imagine what we can do with aquatic protozoa. That is, when you’re feeling better. It’s just the first thing I thought of today.”

“That is fine,” Maahjabeen nods. “If you need to get out on the water before I am able to join you, you are welcome to use one of my kayaks, Pradeep.”

“Thank you, Maahjabeen.”

“You know what I am an idiot about?” Maahjabeen’s question, obviously rhetorical, still gets no takers. She plows on. “When I went out I should have brought buoys. They probably wouldn’t have survived the storm surge. Okay, they definitely wouldn’t, but we would still get some actual data. It’s like poor Mandy. If her weather station had been on the cliffs…”

“I’d have gotten a good twenty minutes of really killer readings. But it’s okay,” Mandy says. She looks better, perhaps on the path to recovery. “Katrina and I are sending it up in the morning.”

“And we’ll figure out,” Alonso says, “how to help you get some buoys anchored off-shore, Miss Charrad.”

Miriam looks sidelong at Alonso. He never calls someone by their last name unless he is holding them at a distance. During their last combative meeting he had good reason. She was threatening him with her contract. But here, on this convivial night, why would he still be separating himself from the young woman? Ah. Yes, that is probably it. His Cuban blood is awake again and he has realized what a stunner Maahjabeen is. Miriam laughs to herself.

“Now, our esteemed Doctor Triquet, here to fill us in on the latest discoveries from the sub.”

Triquet wears a floral evening gown and tiara tonight, with long white satin gloves and white sandals. Now that Maahjabeen is back, their wardrobe can be playful again. Even celebratory. So they didn’t stint. Although they chose only the third-longest of their fake eyelashes. This is a high-class outfit. Triquet drains their glass and stands. “Hear ye, hear ye, the tale of Lisica. As told to me by stacks of musty papers and photos from the days of yore. I mean, there’s just so much. I’m not sure where to start. Everybody knows that Maureen Dowerd was a woman now, yes? The grave in the trees? Also I’ve found photos of the listening equipment they used to have on the roof. And I think they buried the sub in the beach sometime in the late fifties? Probably 1958.”

“But why?” Miriam shakes her head in disbelief. “I mean, I’m speaking as someone who loves digging, and even I can’t—”

“I’ve found no documentation yet,” Triquet replies, “about the decision to bury the sub, only work orders about its progress. And photos. Like this one.” They share the Kodak print they found with the laborers on the beach and the sub partially buried.

“Aw, I want a barbecue on the beach,” Jay complains. “Looks like so much fun. And we can’t even go fishing like they did. They gave zero fucks about disrupting the local ecology. Probably just threw their trash in the sea. And who was Maureen Dowerd?” As the one who first found her, Jay feels a special connection. “What was her role here?”

“Unknown.” Triquet locates her ammo box of valuables. “Not much to go on here, really. She has an address book. Most of the entries are from Minnesota. Her passport was issued in 1956. She received a letter from Auntie P wishing her a Merry Christmas, dated 1957, and informing her of the birth of Jerry’s child. There’s a postcard from 1957. Lake Michigan in the summer. So far, the writing is illegible to me. But there’s nothing like a diary in here or any explanation why she was on Lisica. I figure she must have been staff. Or someone’s wife, which is why so far she doesn’t clearly show up in payroll records. Though I see no reason why they’d record anyone’s gender…”

“Oh, you just need to find the one,” Flavia interjects, “who only makes seventy-five percent as much as everyone else.”

“Amen,” Esquibel says.

“And Doctor Daine.” Alonso swings his head to her a little too fast. His words are already starting to slur. Esquibel’s father was an alcoholic, an insouciant cynic who drowned his dark thoughts in rum. So she is guarded around those who drink. But so far none here appear to be angry drunks, at least, or even moody ones. “How fare your patients?”

“Well, one of them is not following my directives and is fighting growing numbness all over their body.”

Alonso frowns, looking at Jay and Maahjabeen. “Which one?”

“You.” Esquibel stands and lifts Alonso’s wine glass from his hand. “Don’t you think you’ve already had enough to drink?”

“Yes. Yes, you are right.” Alonso smiles at Esquibel, apologetic. “You wanted me to get stronger but I have taken so many left turns it is like…” he throws up his hands and shares a helpless laugh, “like I just went in a circle. Or a spiral. A downward spiral. But now I am back. Maahjabeen is back and I am too. Now. Maybe our intrepid kayak explorer can tell us more about this west coast beach and what she found out there?”

They all turn to Maahjabeen, whose position on the cot prevents her from being easily seen. “I can see why…” she begins, lifting a hand, “the beach does not show up on maps. It is very thin, just right at the base of these cliffs.” She points up the coast to the northwest. “But it is quite long. Maybe two kilometers or more. And the sand is yellow, not gray.”

“Quartz!” Miriam squawks. “Oh, that’s lovely. Is it soft?”

“I don’t know. The uh, pieces…”

“The grains?”

“Yes, were very big. And cold. I don’t know how soft they were.”

“Tell us everything you can about the bunker.” Triquet steps close. “You said you had more pictures?”

“Yes. I could not understand what I was seeing. So I took pictures hoping someone else could tell me.”

She hands Triquet her phone. They frown at the image. “Whoa, Cyrillic. I think it’s like a meme or… like a graffiti saying from the early eighties I don’t know. Katrina? Do you recognize this?”

“Oh, look…” Katrina zooms in to the first character, a stylized д (dee). “This is like a street tag. Somebody got creative with their letters. Der’movaya dyra. They are calling it a shit hole.”

Maahjabeen nods. “That bunker was smaller than this one. And in worse condition. In a bad place too. Completely exposed to the elements at the base of the cliff. I had to lie against a wall the whole time and I still got soaked. The floor is broken up into pieces. The roof is just gone.”

“I wonder,” Pradeep says, “if the Air Force knew of it?”

“Oh, I’m sure,” Triquet says. “They must have been playing spy versus spy here for generations. Maybe they even got together for vodka shots on New Year’s. But look at this other photo. Sorry, doll. Just started swiping through all your pics like a stalker. But no. Here. On the wall over the door. That’s kanji script. Japanese.”

Amy takes the phone and reads it, frowning. “It is a fragment of classical verse. I can’t recall the author. Is it actually chiseled in the concrete? And that molding detail above the window is in a real tatagu-ya style. Maybe the Japanese built that bunker during the war and the Soviets moved in after?”

“Was it empty? Bare like this one?” Triquet demands details like an addict. “Or did it have artifacts?” They giggle, handing the phone back. “Just one site after another. Incredible. Oh, they’re never going to let me publish one hundredth of what I’ll want to. This island is crazy.”

Alonso lifts his cane. “To this crazy island! Lisica! A safe harbor in a dangerous storm! A jewel! A garden! A paradise untouched!” He begins to sing Donizetti’s ballad…

“Una furtiva lagrima…

negli occhi suoi spuntò:
Quelle festose giovani
invidiar sembrò…”

Katrina hops up. “Guess it’s time to set up the sound system. No, keep singing Alonso. This is fantastic!”