Chapter 51 – Little Love Palace
December 16, 2024
Thanks for joining us for the fourth and final volume of 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:
51 – Little Love Palace
“Is that Flavia?”
“Yes? Ah. Hello up there. Miriam? How…? Ehh… I must have taken a wrong turn. How do I get back to the village?”
Miriam stands on a rickety scaffold she’s built againt the inner wall of the mystery shaft that has been both burned and flooded. Just a meter or so above the concrete at its base, she peers at the naked rock that is revealed at this height, scoring it with a knife. “Well, in a better world, you’d just take a lift right here, pop out right up at the top and skip down to them. But no such luck. In this world you’ve got to go back out, take a left, and follow that left wall until you feel the tree’s litter under your feet. Then climb.”
“I am so excited. I have to tell Alonso.”
“Faith, seems like a long time since I heard those words. Weeks it feels like, since anyone has been excited. What is it?”
“I saved Plexity.”
“Well well well.” Miriam doesn’t know what to say. Nobody knows Alonso as well as her, and she’s pretty sure that he doesn’t yet consider it lost. Someone like Flavia using a phrase like that would make him defensive, make him distrust what she says next. But how to tell the prickly mathematician? Best to hear what else she has to say. “How?”
“I was working in the sub. With Triquet. Very nice. Very safe and productive, to be in a place with walls and doors again. And I was reviewing the profile for a large dataset with, well a kind of forbidden technology that Alonso says I shouldn’t use, but with it I noticed a growing structure in all the numbers. A kind of… Well. I am bad with the metaphors. It is a significant ordering of the data and it reveals a kind of meta-mechanism for the life here.”
“I see.”
But Flavia can tell Miriam doesn’t see. “No no no. This is what Plexity is all about. Mapping connections, yes? Well, at least that’s what we thought. But it might just be that the entire project is to reveal this one single process. It is… I mean… If it translates to the wider world we might have figured out an entire new dimension or process of life. It may answer so many questions.”
“Brilliant.” But in Miriam’s mind, these structures must be like hidden cratons in the mantle, only detectable with sophisticated seismic mapping. “So it’s like, what is it? A new molecule or, uh, metabolic pathway? I’m out of my depth here, love.”
“I have no idea. That is for Alonso and his geniuses to figure out. But no. Here is why it is important for us. So far, I’ve detected this kind of universal mathematical expression everywhere here. It is a signal that appears as soon as we put samples in any kind of context. Once the variables increase, we get this data signature. So. Having identified it, it was easy for me to create a, well a kind of compression algorithm. You know zip files? In your computer? How they are compressed so they have less data, but then you can un-compress them and they grow larger again? But for this, my new compression algorithm, well, it kind of packs much more of Plexity’s collections into a small space, and all that is really left is that new signal. It is the only tab hanging out. So then you get a whole series of these tabs, like millions and billions of them, and you are looking at vast amounts of data at a scale that we hadn’t even considered. And the dynamics, which are so important to Plexity, are preserved, and even revealed more clearly.”
“I have no idea what you mean, except that when you said that nothing is sticking out except the tabs, I thought of the label on a shirt. That’s kind of right, isn’t it? Shows where it was made, what it’s made from, eh?”
“Yes, sure. Billions of shirts.” Flavia doesn’t know how to extend that metaphor, nor does she care to try. “So anyway. Your husband will be very excited. I am not saying that we need to stop collecting, it’s that we probably already have a kind of working baseline of data and all the work we do now just refines the models and increases resolution. But it works, Miriam. Plexity works.”
“Cracker. He’ll be thrilled. So…” Miriam levers a fractured bit of peridotite into her collection bag. “What is it? The new dimension of life? If you had to guess.”
Flavia shrugs. “I have no idea. That is not my specialty at all. I just get paid to make the computers happy. What about you?”
“Beats me. The only thing that makes sense to me are rocks.”
Ξ
Maahjabeen has been paddling for a couple hours. And she wishes that it will never end. It’s a beautiful day, with a calm sea. Her pod of eleven? twelve? orcas dash ahead then circle back, leading the kayaks around the island counter-clockwise. Pradeep is right on her flank, Aziz cutting through the green water with ease, his huge smile responding to her brief glance.
“Hungry?” he calls out, fishing in a pocket for an energy bar.
“Starving.” But Maahjabeen doesn’t slacken her pace. “But the orcas are leading us somewhere. I’ll eat when we get there.”
Pradeep puts the energy bar back in his pocket and takes up the paddle before he falls too far behind. She has such a strong stroke. And now she’s being carried away on the backs of cetaceans like a goddess of the sea. This is his beloved Maahjabeen in her element. He didn’t think he could love and admire her more. But he is so happy to be wrong.
“There. Look.” Maahjabeen turns back to him and uses her paddle to point ahead at the far northern horizon.
“Oh my god.” Pradeep finally clears the last point of the island’s eastern shoulder and sees the unbroken Pacific stretching to the north, turning gray at the horizon. It is the most profound sense of vastness that he has ever experienced. They really are the tiniest dot of terrestrial life on this great big water planet, aren’t they?
Now the orcas lead them past the unbroken cliffs of the east coast toward the north shore. Here, the currents get tricky, as a strong eastward swell tries to force them out into the open water. They have to paddle strongly at a corrective angle to make headway, their noses pointed nearly directly at shore. The orcas are patient, the currents seeming to not affect them, circling the laboring humans as they escape the current.
At one point, a juvenile orca rises silently beside Pradeep, blinking at him with a dark eye. It opens its toothed mouth like it’s greeting him, or laughing at him, and waves a pectoral fin. Is this what Maahjabeen meant when she said they spoke with her and welcomed her to their ocean? Pradeep bows his head. “Thank you. Uh. I am honored.”
The cliffs of the north shore are of a lighter gray, sharper and covered in darker trees. Pradeep frowns at them and shades his eyes from the glare to study the curve of their branches. “Is that…? I think it’s a whole forest of Sitka Spruce up there. Extraordinary. We didn’t even know they were here. Until now.”
“What, those trees?” Maahjabeen tries to share his enthusiasm. It is evidently important.
“Yes, that’s one of the main forest trees of the north. Oregon and Washington, Canada and Alaska. It’s all Sitka and Douglas Fir. But on this island we’ve now seen Sitka and firs and pines and even redwoods. All together. There is nowhere else on earth where these trees grow together. Sitkas aren’t found as far south as California and redwoods aren’t found as far north as Oregon. This is a dendrologist’s fairy tale. Amazing.”
“Okay, yes, Mahbub. Now I am very hungry.” Maahjabeen allows Pradeep to hand her an energy bar. She tears at it with sharp teeth under the gaze of the orcas. She figures they must approve, yes? They love to fasten their teeth in their prey and pull it apart. But maybe they’re disappointed in the lack of blood.
Fingers of gray rock break up the sea, leading to a ragged series of ridges descending from the island’s spine to the water. The orcas lead them between two of the wider fingers, which eventually curl into a tiny protected harbor, hardly large enough for the orcas and the boats to fit in. The orcas cycle in and out, cackling and blowing their blowholes, slapping their fins on the water. Their antics echo up the forbidding faces of the cliffs. This goes on for minutes.
Finally, the orcas all file out of the little harbor. But when Maahjabeen tries to follow them, their splendid matriarch stops and rolls on her side, chattering at the woman in the kayak.
“What is she trying to say?” Pradeep calls out.
“She say,” a hoary old voice from the cliff behind him answers, “you stay. Stay with old man.”
Pradeep yelps in surprise and backs his kayak around. There he is, a decrepit figure at the water’s edge. What in the world? Where did he come from? Perched at the base of the vertical cliffs, it is unclear how the man got there. At his age it’s unclear how he gets anywhere. A great mass of gray curls sits atop his dark and drawn face. His eyes are clouded orbs staring sightlessly over Pradeep’s head. He’s blind too?
Maahjabeen silently paddles up beside Pradeep. They regard the old man together. After a series of urgent glances and shrugs and glares, she ventures to say, “Thank you. Very nice to, uh, meet you. Is this your home?”
The man cocks his head upon hearing Maahjabeen’s voice. “A woman. Aahh.” A groan of pleasure rattles in his throat. “Yes. Home. Last home. Come.”
The old man makes no move. “Come…?” Pradeep echoes. “Come where?”
“Come. Come.” The old man waves them forward. The waves here lap harmlessly against the stone, tamed by the curving fingers of rock. So they can easily paddle right up alongside the spot he perches. As they near they can see the hidden notch behind him. He must have emerged from it.
“The orcas. They knew he was here,” Maahjabeen breathes. “They called to him with their noise. Then he came.”
“Yes. Kéet. Black and white whale. Kéet know my name. Come.” The old man uncoils long limbs and stands. He is taller than nearly every other Lisican they’ve seen, with a spidery gray goatee depending from his pointed chin.
Something in his hair stirs. Eyes blink. There is a fox hidden in there, under the dreadlocks. It blinks rheumy eyes at them.
“What in the world…?” Pradeep paddles close and grabs an outcrop. This won’t be easy but he should be able to haul himself up onto the rock shelf without getting too wet or damaging Aziz.
“What in… the world…” The old man mimics Pradeep, stretching his mouth around the words. “Old language. Enga-lish. Forget, uh, most. Most not all. Understand?”
But Pradeep is busy with his efforts. “Hold on to me, babi?” he asks Maahjabeen, using the stability she provides to slip out and clamber onto the rocks. Then he lifts Aziz, finding no room for the boat anywhere here. He stands the big blue craft endwise, leaning it against the cliff, so he can help Maahjabeen out of Firewater. Then they lean the second boat beside the first.
“I don’t like that.” Maahjabeen frowns at the kayaks.
“Very precarious, yes.” Pradeep casts about for rocks. He finds several long dried strands of bull kelp that nearly do a good job of lashing the hulls together. But they won’t actually tie into a knot. More rocks help, pinning the tubes of seaweed down.
By the time they finish securing the kayaks, the old man is gone. They examine the fissure behind him. Yes, quite narrow, but cut upward at an angle in the fractured cliff face.
The passage never encloses them. It always remains open to the sky, just a deep cut zig-zagging its way deeper into the cliff. It ends in a tiny pocket of a valley, surrounded by thin streamer waterfalls and flowering trees.
A rude hut, only a meter in height, rests against the bare wall of a cliff. It is a filthy little hovel, perhaps the best a blind old man could do. He sits before it, cross-legged, waiting for them. He eats the green rind of an unripe fruit, revealing stained black and brown teeth. Maahjabeen grips Pradeep’s arm as they stand uncertainly before him. “Why?” Maahjabeen asks. “Why did the black and white whales bring us to you?”
But the old man just eats his fruit, grimacing at the bitterness.
“Is it to rescue you? Bring you back home? Which one is your home, anyway? Which village?”
“This home.” The old man indicates the hovel behind him.
“And you’re… doing okay?” Pradeep is unsure what he’s supposed to do here. “Survived the winter like this, did you?”
“On the north shore too,” Maahjabeen murmurs. “The storms must be fierce.”
“Storms bad here,” the old man agrees. “So bad nobody come. Leave all the nakée coast to Aan Eyagídi, human of the land.” He presses his hands against his hollow chest. The fox stirs around his neck, staring sullenly at the two intruders.
“Oh, you want to be here?” Pradeep frowns. “Alone. Is that your name? Ah-an Leen-giddy? Did I say it right?”
“No name. Title.”
“I see.” But Pradeep does not see. He wipes his hands on his shorts and shares a blank stare with Maahjabeen. She is even more out of her element than he is. “Well, since we’re here… Maybe we could give you a hand. Plant a garden. Uh. Build you a better house. You sure you don’t want to come back with us? See some of your people?”
“No people.”
“Right. So… Who…? I mean, what made you move? Did you used to have a… like a family somewhere?”
“No family. Storm doctor.”
Both Maahjabeen and Pradeep look to the sky. It is a ragged band of light high above, crowded on all sides by the towering cliffs. “Storm doctor…” Pradeep repeats, hoping that doing so will peel back a layer or two of confusion.
“Who taught you English?” Maahjabeen asks.
The old man smiles to hear her voice again. “Ahh. Woman.”
They wait for more of an answer but none is forthcoming. Pradeep shrugs. “Maybe he’s kind of deaf as well as blind.”
“No deaf.”
“Oh. Oops. Apologies.”
They stand there in an awkward silence. The old man is patient, waiting for them in a sense. But for what? He knows why they’re here? “So what is it? There something you want to tell us?”
This makes the old man laugh. He lifts his hands and spreads them in an expansive gesture. “All. Tell all.”
“Grand.” But Pradeep isn’t sure it’s grand at all. This sounds like it will take quite a bit of time here. And the smell is already starting to get to him. “Well, let’s get started, Ah-an Leen-giddy. What do you most want to share?”
“Ehhh…” Now called upon, the old man casts about for words. “The sky. Crack open like egg. One, two, three time. Next after that, sky give birth.”
“Damn it, why does this always have to be so bloody esoteric?” Pradeep fights himself to silence after seeing the old man twitch in response to his irritation. “Sorry. It’s just… Why don’t any of you say, like, ‘Lisica has four hundred people. The capital is this village we call Ussiaxan. Our main industries are fishing and foraging.’ Like, what’s the demographics? The median income? Why can’t we just get the Wikipedia page for once? That’s all I’m asking. But okay. The sky cracks open one, two, three… Hey.” Pradeep thinks back to the artwork of the Milky Way in the cave. That was just this morning, although so much has happened since. “You mean you see the stars. The clouds crack open and you see the sky.”
“Clouds are eggshell. We are egg.”
“Oh, wow…” Pradeep falls back. “Lisica is… I mean, you hear that, babi? They believe they’re inside a gigantic egg and the whole island is just like waiting to be hatched. Fascinating.”
“Who taught you to speak to the whales?” Maahjabeen repeats her question but with a different subject, one more near to her heart. “And will you teach me?”
“Storm doctor. She teach me. I teach her. Yes.” The old man nods sagely at the empty air.
“Okay. I will teach you what I can.” Maahjabeen sits before him, trying to make herself comfortable. “What shall I teach?”
“English. She teach English.”
“If you like. Out of practice, eh?”
“First teacher.”
You’ve never had a teacher before? I’m your first?”
“No. She. She…”
“Ah. I think our new friend has trouble with past tense.” Pradeep sits beside Maahjabeen. “You had a teacher. A woman before. She taught you English?”
“Yes. Yes. She taughtet. Old language. When I am boy.”
“Oh, you learned English long ago? From a woman who…?”
“Yes. Miss Maureen. She my taught it.”
“Maureen Dowerd.” Pradeep sits up straight. “You knew her?”
“I think…” Maahjabeen reflects on this old man’s life. “Storm doctor… It’s like shaman, yes? Like, uh, what do we call them? Like Sherman. Well, that’s just our name for them. And Wetchie-ghuy.”
Now the old man’s face grows fearsome. A towering rage fills it and his hand shakes. He holds it out, pointed at Maahjabeen. “No Wetchie-ghuy. No. He is…” But the old man has no words.
“Wait.” Maahjabeen recalls Katrina’s words from her night with the village of the golden childs. “She said, she told us… There was an old shaman. And then Wetchie-ghuy like deposed him. Are you that shaman?”
The brittle fury in his eyes is all the answer they need.
“I see. That must have been… I mean…” Maahjabeen shares a wondering look with Pradeep. “It must have been like fifty years. Just how old are you, Aan? How long have you been here?”
He answers with a question of his own. “How many mothers? In Lisica?” Using the tip of his thumb, Aan Eyagídi indicates the interior of the island to the south. “How many now?”
“Ah. I know this.” Pradeep stirs, recalling what Jay told him of Kula and Jidadaa. “Fourteen. There have been fourteen mothers.”
“Four… teen…” The old man counts out the number on his fingers. “Yes?” He is so shaken his breath hardly makes words.
“Yes. Fourteen. Maybe fifteen by now. We haven’t met any young mothers ourselves yet but…”
Aan Eyagídi falls back against his lean-to with a despairing moan. The sudden weight tilts a wall of his hut and knocks it over.
The old man rolls away, then scrambles to his feet and, still moaning, wanders among the waterfalls, hands over his face.
“Is that what happened?” Pradeep asks Maahjabeen. “Wetchie-ghuy said he’d killed this old fellow but he’d really just locked him up in this little valley for ages, eh? And now we’ve ruined his house. Come on. Let’s see if we can help him…”
Pradeep bends to lift the fallen wall. The stench is really too much now. They should just completely disassemble this heap and like sanitize it before building him a better one.
Pradeep stops, holding a rough panel of bark. “Oh, dear.”
“What is it?” Maahjabeen appears at his shoulder, looking down at the ruins of the little hovel.
Within it is a corpse. It is a soldier of some Asian nation, his face sunken in death. He wears a torn suit of black coveralls and a molle harness filled with small attached sacks and bags.
The corpse’s hands are crossed upon his breast like a pharoah. But instead of holding an ankh, this figure lying in state grips in their withered hands a cell phone.
Ξ
“We must make a decision.” Alonso’s voice is a satisfying rumble. Even if he has lost control of this entire situation, it doesn’t sound like it. He still speaks with confidence. That’s something, isn’t it?
They all look to him for further direction. Mandy and Esquibel. Miriam. Flavia. Jay and Katrina. And Jidadaa, who brought them this latest crisis. Why did she have to arrive now, just as Flavia was lifting his Plexity hopes with her stubborn use of cellular automata? Now he can’t even focus on the import of her words until he resolves this latest crisis. “Jidadaa…” Alonso continues. “How can we be certain the entire Ussiaxan village is now empty?”
“They go. All go. Into night hunter hills. I watch. They scared.”
“And you think this is our only chance to retrieve our lost thirty thousand dollar drone?”
Katrina and Mandy exchange a glance. “Well, that and, well, I was really thinking more about that cottage in the woods, mate. I mean, we can get the drone back, yeh, although I’m fairly certain that it’ll be broken beyond anything we can fix here. But that cottage. It’s where the Dandawu says all their treasures are kept. Jidadaa is sure of it. If we can sneak in there for a quick peek…”
“Must hurry.” Jidadaa looks from one to the other. “Ussiaxan people come back with shadow. Hide from sun today. Very scared. But with night they come back.”
“Are we really doing this?” Alonso looks soberly from one resolute face to the next. These weeks have transformed them all, hardened them, given them direction to their lives that is not so easy to surrender, even against spearpoints. “If they find any of us there they will kill us, yes?”
“Take you koox̱.” Jidadaa shrugs. “Maybe die.”
“Slavery or death. No thank you.” Flavia shakes her head. “My plan over the next eight days is to rework the Plexity data instead, as Alonso has agreed. I think, what I heard, is a tacit admission from him that we may want to depend less on a classic binary codebase? That we may be open to more experimental…?”
“I said what I said,” Alonso grouses. “Send your harmonics through the data and let me know what you discover. I am not ready to grant you any more than that at this moment.”
Flavia laughs wickedly and claps her hands. “Oh, you will not need to grant me anything at all. It is the data, signore dottore, who will show you. Ha. So count me out of your suicide mission. Go ruin your lives without me.”
“Thanks.” Katrina makes a face. “Feel like this is mine to do. I’m the one who lost the drone. I’m the one who talked with the Dandawu about the treasure house. Nobody else has to come.”
“If it is anyone’s mission, it is mine.” Esquibel looks steadily at the ground, unwilling to meet any of their gazes. She has not been able to properly present her mission with the Japanese agent after it was recklessly revealed by Mandy and Alonso at the beginning of this meeting. It had been a very ugly scene and now they trust her even less. It is all a tremendous mess, especially with the loss of the drone and the evacuation of the enemy village. “I will slip in and out, correct our mistakes, gather the drone—”
“By correcting the mistakes do you mean actually handing the Plexity data to the Japanese?” Alonso’s question is quiet.
Esquibel spreads her hands. “Those are my orders. I am a naval officer. There is no option here. I must follow those orders.”
“Well, can we give them an earlier version of it, perhaps?” Flavia opens up a folder of backups on her laptop. “I have a snapshot here from third April, when we were just getting started. We have barely any collections yet. Nothing for them to steal.”
“No.” Esquibel speaks haltingly, choosing her words with care. They don’t know she has already shared a version of Plexity from a full month past that. “There’s, uh, a strict agreement. If I don’t give them the entirety of Plexity, they’ll just come back for it.”
“Well then Flavia, perhaps you can insert a bit of self-destruct code,” Alonso asks, “so that it is only viable for like a week and then it eats itself, leaving nothing but—?”
Esquibel shoots to her feet, pleading with them. “Impossible! I am supposed to be establishing a long-lasting relationship here. Get in deep. Over years. I have to be trustworthy. I am sorry, Alonso, everyone. The American Defense Intelligence people are trying to develop me as an asset.”
Flavia laughs, bitter. “This is the impossible part now, Esquibel. Because you have told all of us and your cover is blown.”
“I told you nothing!” Esquibel hisses, losing her temper. “It was Katrina, putting clues together! Gah. You reckless civilians and your stupid plans ruined everything! Now I must depend upon the discretion of you all or I will be arrested or maybe killed. By the Americans or the Japanese or even the Kenyans. Understand? Once I am compromised, my entire life is basically over. I am already in too deep.”
“I am sorry,” Alonso tells Esquibel, “but I cannot play a part in this. It is Plexity. It is too precious to steal.”
“You knew the risks, Doctor Daine.” Flavia doesn’t even look up from her laptop. “I do not have any sympathy for you. I have been a victim of corporate espionage before. A whole year of my life wasted. It is why I got back into academia. Now you will do it to me again? No.”
Esquibel is devastated. Here is the bill coming due. She knew that she was playing a dangerous game, certainly, but she was only motivated to save those she loves. But now she can see that her loved ones will not do the favor of reciprocating any of the trust and support she has given them. They truly are the most spoiled and self-involved people she has ever known.
“I’ll go with you, Skeebee.” Mandy’s voice is soft but resolute. “I’ll keep you safe.”
Oh, this is an offer she had no right to hope for. Tears spring into Esquibel’s eyes. “You—you will…?” This is a miracle beyond imagining, that Mandy would forgive her and stand with her against all others. “Oh, Mandy G…”
“She had really bad student loans,” Mandy explains to the others. “Poor Esquibel was never given much choice, were you?”
Esquibel realizes her only hope is to beg for their forgiveness. “No. Again and again. I needed to make terrible choices to escape my past. And it has all led me here.”
“You will go to the village, and I hope you find your Japanese spy.” Alonso speaks with conviction, trying to fuse the separate strands of this scattered mess into a single line. “You will speak with them, and tell them what has happened. The truth. Tell them everything if you like. I don’t care. Just explain why they are not getting Plexity and why they must leave us alone. Beyond that, how the Japanese and the Americans handle it is not my concern. And, in the end, Doctor Daine, it is not yours any longer as well. You have been relieved of the responsibility of that decision. Tell them that and then, well, we let the cards fall where they may, yes?”
It is a solution Esquibel cannot accept, but she realizes it is the best offer she will get at the moment. She drops her head and meekly nods. “Yes.”
“I just can’t for the life of me figure out,” Miriam wonders, “what it is about Plexity that is making the Japanese of all people want it so bad?”
“My contact…” Esquibel figures there’s no harm in telling them this much. “He reached out to me before Alonso was even released from the gulag. Their recruitment of me started before Plexity did. It isn’t the specific data so much as how it compromises me and makes me theirs. This is the bridge I can’t ever cross back.”
“Yeh, I’m still going too.” Katrina stands, brushing her lap clean of crumbs. “Curiosity’s about to kill this cat. If I don’t ever get a peek inside that treasure house I’ll die unhappy. You say we’ve got til nightfall, Jidadaa? Like nine hours? And we need like what, four? That should be fine, shouldn’t it?”
“If you can even get across the creek.” Jay stands. “That’s why I’m coming too. I’m the only one who—”
“No,” Esquibel and Mandy say in unison.
“No,” Katrina echoes, a half beat behind.
“No no.” Alonso waves the idea away.
“Damn, people…” Jay shakes his head, sad. “I knew I wasn’t popular here but I am the only one who’s gotten across that creek. And it ain’t easy. What if I—?”
Miriam interrupts him. “No.”
But Jidadaa claps her hands. “Jay come! Me and Jay!”
“No. Not Jay. Just you, Jidadaa.” Esquibel pulls her by the wrist into the circle of four women. “Let’s have your boyfriend recover a bit from all his injuries first.”
Ξ
Jay has spent most of his life in solitude. He has his surfer buds, for sure, and a whole host of other friends and families spread across the world, but when he looks at his life in totality, he’s alone way more often than not. So he doesn’t need any of the others here at this camp. He’s perfectly fine all by himself. Fuck em.
Wandering the pines above pine camp, he realizes for the first time that they aren’t being patrolled any longer by the golden childs. In fact, he hasn’t seen a single pollen mask since the storm blew them off. Their season is indeed over.
What a trip. They’re on like some twenty-one year epicycle, only reappearing when the time is right. This is the mindset of big wave surfing, where sometimes years can pass before the conditions line up just right. You just got to keep your bag packed and schedule clear. “Keep your mind zen, bro.”
But he isn’t sure what zen gains him here this afternoon. Pradeep is gone again. Triquet is back in the sub. Now four more of them are about to dip. And Jay’s got a real bad feeling about that Ussiaxan village. His hand grips his left side, where one of their young hunters scored it. Why do any of them got to be so aggro? This is paradise. They got everything they need.
Pine camp below is peaceful. At the kitchen tables, Mandy is making them snacks for their mission, like it’s a family picnic. Esquibel is filling a huge black backpack with all kinds of shit. Like any amount of gear will help against sixty spearmen. They don’t know how fast those dudes move! How intent they are on running these outsiders through…
Crazy how this narrow band of water can so completely divide two sides of the same family here. They really let their fights get in their way, didn’t they? They could be one big happy laughing tribe here on the meadow but no. Fools always got to wreck it. They tell their whack stories. Sing their songs…
No. No songs here. They write those prophet poems. Jidadaa said there’s like seventeen of them on the island. Some bad and some good. It’s time for him to hear these poems, Jay is pretty sure. If he’s being forced to choose between the Lisicans, then he’ll like bro down with the nicer ones and throw down with the others. Damn. That’s a nice refrain. Too bad they don’t have music here. Jay could… “Heh.” The idea pops fully-formed into his brain. “Write my own prophet poem. Make my own destiny. Bro down with the best. Throw down with the rest. Heh.”
He starts idly beatboxing, wandering through the grove. These are mostly Shore Pine and Monterey Pine but there’s some real beautiful Sugar Pines mixed in here. Such a weird and unique coniferous amalgamation.
“It’s all about the birds. Yeah. Yeah.
I said it’s all about the words. I’m spitting.
And it’s all about the trees. I’m seeing.
How they got across the seas. I’m saying.
“Now here’s a little tale about a storm and a bird and a seed
And how one carried the other to a land he’d never seen.
This bird he carried a seed from a pine he’d been eating
and when he dropped a deuce on the island he started seeding
it with pines and firs and brambly burrs from across the world
and his brothers and the others flew in to meet some girls
and that’s how their song got all mixed up together,
they never would have found each other if it wasn’t for bad weather.
And now that they’re here getting weird dropping deuces,
they found that the ground gives them options so he chooses
to stay, never fly away, live out his days on the cliffs with his eggs
and the partner he has claimed in a monogamous marital state.”
But his song, never long, now starts to always go wrong,
and his little bird brain can’t explain how he doesn’t belong
to all the tribalism and hate and whack shit they create
here in the land of plenty, where birds eat rich and wreck their fate.
It’s the song that you sing, the way you think about everything
that keeps you from having the wind beneath your wings,
it’s the poem you write, mad prophets with spite
that fills you with the envy that keeps you up at night.
“So we fighting for the future with our poems? I’m your teacher,
your lyricist and linguist, my lexicology I’ll feature.
You tell me that each part of this land is a verse?
Then you tell me who’s good and which one of them’s worse?
And you want me to cap one and take him off in a hearse?
And skin his ass and bring him right back as a purse?
And I say nay, no way, Wetchie-ghuy, just go away.
And Sherman, you’re vermin, let the fox finally catch you, and
these shamans need a lesson about the end of Rasputin.”
“It’s all about the birds. Yeah. Yeah.
I said it’s all about the words. I’m spitting.
And it’s all about the trees. I’m seeing.
How they got across the seas. I’m saying.
“Lisica lost me, you tossed me and broke me.
Took my health and my wealth, made my voice super croaky.
But I can still sing, which is better than what you got,
this prophet poem is flowing. Listen up. It’s my last shot.”
Jay passes deeper into the trees, just warming up. This is an epic rhyme. Homer ain’t got shit on him. The bars just keep dropping from his mouth like they’ve been waiting for him to discover them in there.
He passes into the gloom, birds taking wing when they hear his emphatic verses. Behind him, trailing enthralled, Jidadaa absorbs every word.
Ξ
Pradeep glides up onto the shallow rocky beach and pops out of the hull, dragging Aziz clear of the surf line. Ta da. That was neatly done. He turns back to Maahjabeen, still on the water, hoping she’d seen how deftly he moved after hours stuck in the boat. But her face is preoccupied, bruised with memory. Ah, right. She hasn’t seen this western beach since her ordeal with the first storm. Patience. His patience is what she will need here.
She pulls herself out of Firewater and totters up the beach, dragging her boat. “Bring them… higher…” Her voice is distracted, her stamina spent. Preying on her weakness, shards of trauma lance her, half-remembered black and gray images from those long deadly days. Hypothermia. Starvation. Hopelessness. She loses track of what she was saying, then finds it again. She shakes herself like a dog and stares at Pradeep, who watches her with concern. “Big sleeper waves here. At least, last time. Get them on this shelf.”
They carry the boats over the rough sand and lift them up the small bluff at the back of the beach. From here Pradeep sees the second bunker for the first time, hidden back in the trees. It is more dilapidated than he expected, a smaller building that is nothing more than maybe two-and-a-half concrete and timber walls stained green and brown. He picks his way toward it.
Now Pradeep feels the exhaustion. They’ve nearly paddled all the way around the island today. Something like twelve kilometers. Started at like five-thirty on the dial and gotten all the way around to nine o’clock. Just an epic amount of boating. When they’d left the old man, the orcas were gone and the current back to the east was impassable. So they’d surrendered to it and let it carry them around the island to the west, discovering on their way perhaps the largest prominence on the entire island, a bare peak looming above the northwest coast. Then they’d gotten into all those seastacks and finally, about an hour longer than he felt he could go, this beach.
“Do you think your housemates are still in there?” Pradeep turns to ask Maahjabeen. But she is back at the boats, making no move to join him. She watches the water instead, her face closed, arms crossed. He returns to her. “Ah, babi, what is it?”
“Not my favorite beach.” She leans her head against him.
“Understood. But I’m afraid we might need to spend another night on it. It’s getting late and I don’t think I can… I mean… How are you? What is your plan?”
“No plan. I just… miss the orcas.” Maahjabeen knows she has been part of some mythic day, and that it is drawing to a close. The currents had carried her out of their magical realm back to the ordinary, the cruel and ugly. The bunker with that broken femur poking into the air.
Pradeep kisses the top of her head. “Ah. Yes. That was magic. So I have to confess my weakness to you. I’m afraid my arms are about to fall off. I don’t think I can paddle all the way back to the sea cave without a break. That’s probably, what, another few hours? I’m not even totally sure where we are here.”
Maahjabeen lifts her hand and points down the coast to the south. “Down the coast is another maybe three kilometers to the lagoon and our first camp. That is all. But no. I can’t paddle any more. We need food. Do we have any? Maybe we can fish or find some shellfish. Can we make a fire?”
“Esquibel would say no. Maybe in the bunker?”
Maahjabeen shivers. “Ehhh. Maybe we can sleep on the beach?”
“Not in the bunker? Because of the bodies?”
She nods.
But he is intrigued by them. He turns back to the overgrown ruins, pulling out his phone. “Let me just take a quick peek.”
When Maahjabeen was here before it was the middle of a storm and she was preoccupied with her own survival. Now, with the care of a clinician, Pradeep enters the structure, recording a video. The gray light illuminates moss and lichen all over the walls, ferns growing from the top of rotten timber posts. Birds flit in the eaves above, nothing too large nearby that he can tell.
He steps over a fallen sapling and ducks through the narrow door. Quite a mean little space, no more than three meters by five. The windows were narrow. With a roof and another couple walls it must have been a dark little cramped bunker. Ah, there are the bodies, their uniforms the same color as the dead leaves covering them. Pradeep bends over them to do his examination.
Outside, Maahjabeen pulls packets of ramen from her dry bag. She doesn’t care what Esquibel thinks about a fire. She will never know they had one here. And dry wood is in abundance. The latest storms have brought a great amount of wreckage to the high tide line and it’s been enough time for the smaller pieces to dry.
Pradeep rejoins her as she’s making a hasty yurt out of the limbs and branches nearby. “That’s right, my babi,” he laughs. “We’ll build our own little love palace.”
Chapter 10 – This Is Fantastic
March 4, 2024
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!”