Category Archives: Fiction

To Serve Humanity?

by George Opacic

The walls show an outdoor scene of tall green/brown redwoods with soft moss dripping off their lower branches. Shades of green and brown everywhere. Fallen trees nurse new growth. Ferns search for room to spread out. Through the tall canopy, shafts of sunlight slowly march along the uneven floor. Large woodpeckers tap the deeply gnarled bark of cedars, then dash off to another pockmarked tree. In the distance, crows call to each other. The smell is heavenly.

A knobby outcropping of rock nearby has a multicoloured fossil embedded near its top. Lichen and spots of whitish moss cover most of the surface except for the bit of fossilized tree. This has marks across it, as if it has been raked by a great paw.

An old man sits in a comfortable brown recliner, feet up, drinking in the scene before him. Even though he has only a pair of shorts on, he is fully relaxed.

He scratches absently across his slowing heaving belly, rubs an ear then glances to his right. “Can I have a tissue, please? I’m still leaking.”

A hand stretches from behind him with a hanky. “Will this do?” The voice is soft, very reassuring, perhaps female.

The old man, Sam, nods. “Environmentally friendlier.”

The person behind Sam pauses, then, “Than what?”

Sam smiles. “Than paper. Disposable paper…” He adds, “I usually use mine quite a few times before, you know, disposing of it.”

“Oh.” The disapproving tone is noticeable. She has somehow made him feel chagrined.

His mind is, as he calls it, woozy. Sam asks, “Is that why you’re here?”

The person behind him pats Sam’s arm as she takes a step forward.

Her face and body have a covering that appears to be skin, or perhaps something clinging tightly. It holds what Sam can only think of as coloured moss dripping in random patterns between her small breasts and hips. Her hair is only a two-finger-wide circle of moss that drips down her back.

Sam thinks, There may be snow on the roof, but…

He shakes his head to clear those thoughts away.

She smiles down at him, bending slightly toward his face. “Thank you. Perhaps after we’ve completed the metamorphosis.”

Sam stiffens. Read my thoughts?…Oh well. I should’ve expected it.

She nods. “Are you ready? The transfusion will pass into your arteries. You won’t feel anything with the process. But first I need to hear your approval.”

Sighing, Sam thinks again. What do I have to lose? The cancer’ll take me in a few months, or I roll the dice with this lovely weird lady from a future I would not see.

“Yes. Let’s get on with it… Tell me again – in simple terms, what can I expect?”

She takes his hand.

He thinks, Warm.

“The infusion will take about ten minutes. In an hour-and-a-half your body will be in need of deep sleep. Over the following eighteen hours your body will undergo major repairs in all systems. During that time you will be… incontinent. This chair will accept the residue. Then, later, you may wish to have a long, cleansing shower. The waterfall at the edge of this forest will give you full refreshment. After that, your future opens up.”

He is confused, waving at the trees. “Yes, you said that, but this is just a picture, isn’t it?”

“Sort of.” She squeezes his hand lightly. “Ready?”

A sigh. “Yes.”

She nods. “Approval given. Now, adjust your arms to fit onto the chair-arms.”

Sam shifts his body back into the soft chair material and places both arms down into it.

She pulls out wide straps from the outside of each chair-arm and puts them over his arms. Sam unconsciously stiffens.

“These are only to hold you firmly during the infusion process. They will release when that is done.”

Sam nods and gives her a weak smile. As he relaxes, the straps slowly tighten on their own.

He thinks, Part of the process. Take it easy old codger. What have I got to lose?

She nods then touches something on the chair-back. Sam begins to feel a very light tingling in his arms. They become warm. His vision slowly blurs into mottled greens. Noticing it, he shrugs mentally. All is right with the world. The hour-and-a-half have already passed. He sleeps.

In his deep sleep he leaks from his eyes, his nose, his open mouth. She gently dabs at the leaks. Sam’s shorts have mostly dissolved away. She cleans up where they were and tucks his penis down to drip into the spongy chair seat, which soaks up that liquid and the more substantial residue from his bum.

Standing back periodically, she nods. “A fine specimen.” Examining his face, “Cannot meld into your thoughts yet. When you wake up…”

………………………………………………

Sam is walking groggily along a narrow path though the forest. He stumbles as he tries to lift a leg over a newly fallen tree. The small log’s root ball sticks up incongruously not far away.

She grabs his arm to steady him. “You’re still weak… Now. This is important. Think not what you could do. Think only what you want to do.”

Sam contemplates the log before him. Then he decides, and jumps over it easily. The glow in his face is infectious.

She claps her hands. “That was delightful to see! I knew it wouldn’t take you long.”

Then she leaps over the log to grab his arm before he can move on. Staring into his eyes she takes on a serious tone. “And this is even more important.” She holds both Sam’s arms to settle him down. “Listen. This is more than important. Yes?…”

He gazes into her eyes, waking out of his old wooz, thinking, She’s the loveliest creature I’ve ever met.

Her thought comes back to his mind. Stop and listen.

Her voice blends in his mind with what he hears. “Your first test was being chosen. You will understand the criteria later. Your second test was surviving the metamorphosis. That part is done. Now, you must survive what is the hardest part. Your mind can wander off into realms of ego and fantasy. You have been judged to have the potential to keep that under control. But it is not a trait in your genes as much a state of being. This you will learn better shortly. For now, please… please, for your sake and for mine, please remember that your new life is not yours. It is humanity’s. You are now living for the future of all humanity.”

Sam has a slowly moving shockwave creeping across his mind. He stumbles into a turn to sit on the log. It creaks and vibrates under his weight.

Ruefully, “You spoke of a quid-pro-quo.” Sam thinks back to their meetings. At first, he thought she was a doctor. A weird doctor with tattoos absolutely everywhere under her lab coat. At their meeting he was quite prepared to walk out of the clinic when he saw her. Now he remembers that her face was about the only surface of her body untattooed.

Her seemingly tattooed face smiles, thinking, Yes. It was uncomfortable for me. But your potential was… worth it.

They smile at each other. He thinks, I love you inside my mind. Then, wondering, Is there a place where I can be private?

She nods, Yes. I will teach you that. For now it’s important that we make it safely to the waterfall.

That’s when Sam is about ask for a towel but he looks down at his body to see it covered, like hers, with that special skin. “Huh.”

On their way along the path, they think to each other.

What’s so special about the waterfall?

It is the destination but it is more the journey. Your mind needs to catch up with your new body. You will find limits and boundaries – few but critical boundaries.

How far?

Another hour.

I could not have made it, yesterday.

The two make it to the waterfall, unharmed, unscratched, untired.

………………………………………………

The Antichrist of Stanley Park – Prologue

copyright(c)George Opacic 2016

Prologue

Kugaaruk, Nunavut

Spring

 

On the edge of the northern town, nestled among rocks and light brown sand, a peeling pre-fab’s door creaks to let out an older Inuk hunter. Dressed in an open seal-skin coat and with its parka flopping on his back, he strides smoothly past his twenty-two year old son. The hunter is preparing his wooden sled for a last excursion on the spring ice.

A tin can of water he carries is carefully held inside the flap of his coat against the cold. The hunter’s son sits sideways on a yellow snowmobile. He shakes his head at his father.

The light wooden and bone sled is tightly strapped together with leather strips. It is lying runners up. The old hunter pulls a folded cloth from an inside pocket and shakes it free of lint. The cold wind carries the lint away from the sled.

Overhead, the sharp blue sky has a sun in it, though there is no heat in its rays. Downslope from his little home on the edge of the community, a rocky shore can be seen running into a choppy Pelly Bay. The last of this season’s growler ice floes still sway on the ocean between Kugaaruk and rocky islands that are an easy boat ride away. In the distance, the sea is covered in old ice that has heaved everywhere into a treacherous landscape.

The son is zipped tightly into a bright green nylon coat whose artificial fur hood tries to keep his face warm. New yellow leather boots and dark green insulated nylon pants all seem to make little rubbing noises even as he sits there in the frigid spring air. He wipes his nose ineffectually with a nylon sleeve.

“Dad, I don’t know why you refuse to get modern. I can help you to screw on the plastic strips to those runners. It’ll make you go easier – the dogs won’t have to work so hard. I don’t know why you want to keep dogs, anyway. Get with the times, dad.”

Carrying on with long established motions, the hunter dips the cloth into his tin can of water. He carefully rubs the wet cloth along a runner, starting from the front. Keeping the application of water smooth and thin, it freezes quickly onto the runner. Each application is merged with the next one so that the surface stays smooth. His work is hypnotic to the young man. As the first coat is finished, the hunter goes back to do it again. Rousing from his trance, the son sniffs and shakes his head, “All this time you waste…”

“My son, ice is more slippery than your plastic. And when that southern material chips or breaks on a rock, can you smooth it down, two days away, with the weight of a seal, in a blizzard? No. My iced runners are strong. If they chip, when I stop for tea I will make more water and smooth my runners again. Wherever I am.”

He looks pointedly at this son’s scratched up snowmobile skis. “And when I take such care with my qamutik and my other important tools, I treat them with respect.”

The young man squirms in his seat. A creak of the door alerts him to his mother emerging from the house. She is dressed in her bright clothes. Closing the door securely, she speaks to both her husband and her son. “I’m going to the church for a while. I don’t want you two arguing while I’m away. OK?”

Her son nods, head down, “Yes mom.”

As she disappears down the lane the old hunter mumbles, “Bingo.” He turns back to exchange a grin with his son.

Hesitating to bring up a sore point, the hunter starts quietly, “That new friend of yours, Mikey – we welcomed him to our place and fed him our best food. He spat it out. He gave you, not me, a bag that was full of many new things from the south. The far-seeing glasses…”

“Binoculars, dad.”

“…can be very useful on a trek.” He nods. “What is that other envelope and secret bag you are holding for him?”

Eyes down, “Nothing, dad. Just something to pass on to somebody on the next airplane. He gave me that contract. I will work for him.” He beams, sitting up straight. “And he gave me a secret mission…” then trails off, remembering the word “secret”.

Still holding the can of water under his coat the hunter shakes his head slowly, knowing that his son is not going down a path that will benefit him. “It is good to learn the ways of qallunaat, the southern people. Learn what they know and what they value. They have much to offer you. But you must also learn who you are and what the land will do to you. It may be that you will not need to hunt seals for your food. Your new friend, and the store,” he nods in the direction of the prominent new two-storey building in the middle of Kugaaruk, “they bring many tasty things. Some of it is food, and some of it may satisfy your tummy. But you must know that it is southern food, made for southern tummies that do not fuel you against this Arctic cold. Like those boots that you gave so many hides for. The southern animal of their hide…”

“They call it moose, dad.” He kicks at a chunk of sand and snow that is still frozen solid.

“Moose – has not walked on the tundra. Its hide will not protect you when you walk on the tundra. Seal or caribou is the only hide for kamiit that can keep you warm when the sun goes down.”

He applies more thin layers of water to the runner.

“My son, the words of the southern people carry many meanings. We have not walked on their land and they have only winged their way over ours. Some of their words carry great danger. It is not the same danger that we might see on the ice. The danger in their words, that we think must be innocent, comes from a land that has accepted violence over pieces of paper. I did not see paper until I was your age. Now paper rules everything, even here on our land. They do not know our land and you do not know their land. Southern people think that words on paper are the only thing that is important.

“I will tell you the truth that you must remember. The man who does not learn to understand and respect the land will too soon become part of it.”

He sees no reaction from his son. “If that does not impress you, my son, I must add one more thing I have learned. The worst thing that can happen to you is if the land rejects your contribution to its life-force.”