There was blood. Blood! For a little while, but it seemed
longer - relatively speaking it was probably seconds - she heard nothing. She saw
nothing but the blood that rapidly pooled beneath her left elbow, on the
tarmac. Then, a tapping noise and something hard clattered on the hard walkway.
Footsteps falling away and fading out….

She
looked at her watch. Daylight would be done over soon enough. Still time for a
bit of wall ball, just to clear her mind. Technically this was her day
off. The door was open, but nobody was
around, so Nessay rummaged through the bag she had stored in the office and
pulled out some shorts and a t-shirt. She pulled off her shoes, and her office
cloths, then redressed quickly, looking over her shoulder the whole time. There
was a small wall court behind the field headquarters and she could be out
hitting a ball in minutes, just needed a water bottle her equipment. Stepping
out the door she rubbed her shoe on the metal threshold and felt a curious
scraping. Nessay leaned on the jamb and bent her knee, grabbing an ankle to
scope the sole of her shoe. Her eyes widened as she spied something small and
round lodged into the treads of her sneaker: one of those damned metally balls,
she thought. “Feathers and duck beaks,” she swore out loud. “Oh Gods of
Thunder, cook me with a Cuban. This day’s amuck!” Nessay felt a pinge of guilt
for the business she’d given Jocu’le.
Too many mucks in a row, Nessay had had it. She undressed and redressed, not giving a flip if anyone was around or not, and packed up. The little ball, made of what she didn’t know, Nessay dropped into her pocket and zipped it in. She rubbed her pants and felt the hard pill snugged in, safe
and tight. Better than in a rickety metal desk with no locks,
she thought. “A drink!” she said, and
headed out, dropping the note in the box by her boss’s door. She knocked in
case he was there, and then skipped out into the dust, sipping on her bottle
contently.
Getting
from here to there was easier, and quicker, then the trip out to the site. The
field office was in a small row of low buildings that was cut into a rock shelf
in a sea of sand. It was a small compound just a mile beyond the city of
Willowy. The dust stroked the sheltering poplars and whistled through the antennae
and sand etched dishes spoking up from the offices. Nessay straddled her
electric animal and trotted out of the hollow toward home. Her room was in one
of many little houses that bubbled up like puffy white fungi, encircling the
outskirts of the Willowy storm wall. The ever present gales of sand and grit
mostly slipped around the clay drenched mounds, of course transporting bits of
the structures down the way to settle on someone else’s porches and window
sills. Nessay thought about things like the dust and porches and even pianos,
though she’d never seen one except in pictures. But if there was one around
here, somewhere, there would surely be dust on it, wouldn’t there?
Just
down the road she turned off and moved down a slight slope. There was a rock abutment
a hundred yards out, and it looked West over the dunes and a mostly unobstructed
view. Well, no wall ball, but no reason not to watch the sunset. Nessay got
down from her beast and dropped over the wall, shrugging down and splayed out
comfortably to enjoy the show. She was just in time. The golden orb was dipping
into the dissipating dust cover and sinking through the shifting dunes. Colors
crept up and spread out over the horizon, twinkling off the wind whipped sand
prisms. Nessay loved that most about this place, the desert. She stayed there
until the night sky covered the dunes like a blanket. A thick, cotton spread of
stars and galaxies. Maybe a planet two, but Nessay didn’t know which little bright
pinpricks were their closest neighbors. That star was a little blue, that one a
bit red… oh never mind.
It was
plenty dark as she got back to home. The roads became harder and freer of sand
closer to town, and she braked a little as her animal winded among the
habitats. Metal on metal squealed, the rotating hooves clattered on the bricks,
and her white home popped into view. She cozied up the electric animal to its
stall and swung down, pulling her bag smoothly off the pommel. Her room was an
open space, nearly 500 square feet divided between a bedroom and living space,
in a shared dome house.
Nessay
walked around the curved dome to the second door, her sneakers kicking up
silent dust from the concrete pad when she heard a sound, a click, then nothing
but night. She wondered, she thought about it, but not too much. Is that blood?
What would become of the little round ball, she remembered, in her pocket? Her
one arm was bent, the other seemed to be under her leg?, and she could just
brush her pant pocket, feeling the mysterious little thing there, but it seemed
to dissolve beneath her touch. Then Nessay died.
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goto Part 3
3 comments:
Awww. There should be no death for anyone who says something like this: "Feathers and duck beaks. Oh Gods of Thunder, cook me with a Cuban. This day’s amuck!” Love it!
mouth like a sailor, that girl!
Ruh roh.
There's a paragraph split into two for some reason. And then, typo, third-to-last paragraph: "Maybe a planet two"
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