A New/Old Short Story

It’s been over a year since I last posted anything. So here’s a story for you, one which I’d forgotten about until today while going through old notes and stories and things. Enjoy!

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He stood up a bit stiffly and stretched his limbs, gun slung over his shoulder and a small pile of silent rabbits at his feet. It had been a fairly productive morning. He had stopped for some time by the water to think, drifting in and out of the present. After standing up and regaining focus, he gently threw the tied-together rabbits over his shoulder, carrying them like a burlap sack and looking much like a rugged Father Christmas. Walking carefully to his small boat, which rested half on, half off shore and bobbed in the ever-so-slightly undulating water, he hummed quietly to himself an old Christmas hymn, the name of which he couldn’t remember (but this didn’t matter, he told himself; it was the tune and the comfort it gave him that he cared for).

He swung the rabbits around and plopped them inside the boat, then, stepping over the boat’s edge and sitting on the bench, he picked up the paddles and began the short trip back to the cabin-side of the lake. (Should you ever find yourself on that small body of water, you would call it a pond, but it was his and he called it a lake, and so it was.) The morning sun shone through the broken clouds in rays that he liked to think of as slides running from heaven down to earth. Those rays gave some warmth to the otherwise crisp, almost-winter cold – not an unbearable cold, but the kind one can smell, a cold that elicits images of happy Christmas markets with sparkling lights strung about, snow on the ground, and people carrying bags and parcels and cups of hot drinks leaving behind swirls of steam. It was the kind of cold he loved; it made the insides of one’s nostrils freeze with every inhale and exhilarated even the most tired mind. He loved this time of year.

He reached the other side and pulled the boat onto the gravelly shore, then swung the rabbits once more over his shoulder and carried them up the path to his cabin, the wooden sanctuary he had called home for the last twenty-some years. The cabin was every bit as woodsy as one might imagine: a dark log exterior, small porch and rocking chair, simple windows whose panes glowed a comforting yellow on snowy nights. The latched door he opened easily with a gloved hand. In all the time he had spent there, he had never worried about thieves or scavengers, human or animal, breaking into his home; no one and nothing meddled with the peace he had established upon his arrival. (Nothing, that is, except the small, shining device he somewhat unwillingly kept on the rough-hewn table where he ate his meals.) Despite his love for the cold, he welcomed the warmth that enveloped him as he walked through the cabin door; it reminded him of his humanity and dependence on something other than himself for survival.

Placing the rabbits on the floor by his feet and shaking off his coat and boots, he sorted through the day’s mental checklist, which was not especially complicated. After hunting, he had simply to prepare the animals for storage and supper, tidy up the cabin, and, what he looked forward to most, write.

————

The day passed as most every day before had, quiet and uneventful. As the sun crossed over the sky and slowly lowered, taking with it its warm rays, and as the last bits of gold shone through those small window panes, he finished his supper, placed the dishes in the sink, then sat down at his desk. Turning on the ancient desk lamp, he prepared to write. But no thought came to mind; no inspiration burst forth as had happened every night before this one. He simply could not think.

————

After what seemed hours of staring blankly at the page before him and occasionally tapping his pen on the paper, he looked up and noticed snowflakes gathering on the outer window frame, in front of which his desk sat. Exactly when it had begun snowing, he didn’t know, but he watched it intently now. After several minutes, he slid the window open a few inches and felt the cold on his face and hands. Leaning back in his chair and closing his eyes, he listened to the silence, that sweet silence that only snow can bring; it covers one like a blanket and softens everything. He heard the silence and felt both the cold from outside and the heat from the wood stove that burned nearby; the mixture of warmth, the occasional breaths of cold air, and the smell of snow brought him to the brink of sleep.

Just before his mind passed into oblivion, the shining device on the table buzzed and lit up. His eyes slowly opened, and he looked over at the phone. Any time it made its presence known in this way, he acknowledged the disturbance by stopping whatever he happened to be doing and glancing at its screen; he read the messages or looked at the pictures sent to him but never offered any response. His three children had given up on calling; they knew he had drifted far from the world of modernity and assumed he had no desire to come back, which, for the most part, was true. Keeping this one connection to the too-quickly advancing world outside his self-made sanctuary was the one indication that some part of him missed that modern world, or perhaps wanted to be a part of it, if only for his children’s sake.

[They had parted ways years ago. He couldn’t remember at this point how long it had been, only that it felt like eternity, but he still remembered their voices. His children, one daughter and two sons, were close in age, the oldest and youngest only four years apart, and each had married and had children of their own. Because it was so geographically difficult to visit their father, and because he did not, to them, seem interested in leaving his home, the three had decided several years previously to send their father a box in which they had packed a cell phone and detailed instructions for its use. He was impressed upon receiving it from the deliveryman, for very few even attempted the road to his cabin. He had thanked the man with a cup of hot coffee. After taking the device from its packaging, he had looked it over, followed the so thoughtfully written out instructions, and placed it on the table, where it had remained for the majority of its time in the cabin.]

After looking at the phone for a few moments, he slowly stood up, walked over to it, and touched the screen. Uncharacteristically, tears formed in his eyes as he read the few words his eldest son had written: Happy Thanksgiving, Dad. I love you. The words, though he had seen variations of them before, for some reason held a deeper meaning then. Perhaps he had kept himself in solitude for too long, had irrationally avoided the world outside his self-contained patch of land; perhaps his aloneness had been eating away at him for some time, and these words forced him to acknowledge that. Whatever the reason, he felt strangely renewed and again sat down at his desk to write.

He feverishly, almost unthinkingly sketched a story as an artist would a figure drawing, leaving enough out that anyone reading it could add their own colors and details, could make it their own while maintaining its original form. The skeleton was there, the bones of the story, but the rest was left to whoever might read it, should its contents ever leave that desk…But would it ever leave that desk? Why should it? It was his story, after all, not for others but for him. He wrote for his own enjoyment, as an outlet for that imagined world he had been so long and unconsciously composing. Others he felt could not fill it as he wished it to be filled; his world could only be peopled by the figures he alone had imagined and would imagine. Why should he allow others to share in his writing? It was his and his alone.

But somehow he felt it was not. The story originated from his mind, yes, but where had his mind found it? As he sat at his desk, now only half-feeling the still snowy cold and the stove’s warmth, he allowed his thoughts to converge, his focus to shift inward and senses to be dulled to his immediate surroundings. He detected, he thought, a light of sorts, something there that he could only perceive if he did not focus on it, like a star whose light is seen only if one looks at the blackness surrounding it. The light flickered slightly as he watched, or rather did not watch, and it took five minutes of trying to focus on it for him to realize he had forgotten where he was. He forced his mind back to his cabin, to his desk, the cold and the warmth, the snow.

He looked again at the phone still resting on the table. As he had done many times before, he rose and walked over to it, but this time he picked it up and found in its limited contacts list the name of his eldest. Never before now had he used the phone to speak to his children, but he felt at that moment the time had come; he had grown tired of being alone and tired of the guilt he felt every time he saw that screen light up. He hesitantly touched his son’s name, put the phone to his ear, and listened to the ringing.

Eternity passed.

“…Dad?”

“Hi, son.”

Through a Glass.

Another short story for you. Enjoy.

Through a Glass

The woman crunched along the packed down path of snow back to her cabin, deep in thought about the day’s events, or lack thereof. She’d spent the last few hours pondering the time she’d had thus far at this little mountain retreat, accompanied by herself and no one else.

Why am I out here; what did I hope to accomplish at this place? Three days in and I’ve had plenty of time to think, but I’m still at a loss as to what I’m supposed to do with my life. I thought coming out here would help me “find myself;” that’s what people always say. I think I’m less sure of who I am now than I was before.

The thought train went on that way for forty five minutes before she realized she’d stopped in front of and begun staring at a massive, snow-covered tree. Only after she’d adjusted her sights from her wandering mind to her immediate surroundings did she see the ornately framed mirror leaning against the old tree’s trunk.

…What is this? What could…Maybe I’ve finally lost it.

Embracing the curiosity now coursing through her, she stepped off the path and into the fluffy snow, her boot sinking a foot or so in the cold. Step, step, another step, and she’d made it to the mirror. It was strange, this mirror; the frame’s intricate details and its slightly worn glass made her think of a time found only in old books. With her nose an inch away from the frame, she examined the swirling designs and chipping, silvery finish. Her face moved along the frame; she became engrossed in its elaborate and beautiful patterns. When she couldn’t trace it anymore because of the mirror’s height, which surpassed her own by about a foot, her eyes moved to the glass.

Is that me?

She confusedly stared at what had to be her reflection. It could only be her reflection. It moved as she moved, breathed as she breathed, stared as she stared. But she saw something more; some quality about this reflection made it more than a reflection, made the mirror itself more than a mirror. The glass was worn, yes, but her reflection and that of her surroundings was slightly off, muddied in some way. She could not place it; it was something she knew was there but couldn’t quite grasp. The glass gave every reflection a sort of shaky quality, a slightly unclear something that disconcerted her. Thinking at first that the glass might simply be dirty, she wiped it with her scarf, but this changed nothing. That strange, somewhat frightening cloudiness remained. Trying again with her scarf, she wiped the mirror, more vigorously this time, even picking up a handful of snow and throwing it on the glass, but still the glass did not change.

This is getting me nowhere. And it’s freaking me out. I’m going back inside.

Back to the cabin she went, still thinking about that mirror, though she kept telling herself to put it out of her mind; forget it; she wasn’t here to clean mirrors that came seemingly out of nowhere. But she couldn’t put it out of her mind. For days following, no matter what she did, eat, sleep, walk the trail, anything – She could not forget that mirror. It never left her thoughts. And so, after days of trying to forget, she returned. It looked most the same…But after standing for what seemed hours staring into its glass, she realized it had changed. The images were clearer this time. The glass was not perfectly clear, but it did not show the same muddiness of that first day.

I really don’t understand what’s going on here. What if…? No…

Rather than try yet again to clean it, the woman left the mirror leaning against the tree and returned to her cabin.

That night, clouds covered the sky and let loose an outpouring of snow, carpeting the ground and everything on it in an extra six inches of white powder. When the woman awoke, she looked out the window of the cabin, not expecting the blazing white of the sun on another thick layer of fluff. Deciding to take a morning walk in the fresh snow, a welcome surprise, she pulled on her layers and stepped outside. Crunching along the path as she had the day the mirror appeared, she tried to remember the dream she’d had the night before but could only recall a glimpse of broken glass.

After twenty minutes or so of walking, reflecting, and enjoying the crispness of the late winter air and the view of the snow-covered forest, she realized once again that she had stopped in front of the mirror. It had changed once more. It was no clearer than the previous day, but one vertical and two horizontal cracks now shown on its surface. Only thin lines on the glass, they were barely perceptible, but the woman noticed them immediately. A flash in her mind brought her back to a previously unremembered part of her dream. She’d been standing in this very spot, looking at the mirror, on which those three cracks had slowly appeared. When the cracks in her dream-mirror echoed those now in front of her, the memory ceased, and again all she had from the dream was that glimpse of broken glass.

What does this mean? What is this?

She stepped forward slowly, almost afraid to approach the ornately framed looking-glass that had so plagued her mind since its first appearance.

Now only inches away from it, the woman, feeling strangely drawn to the mirror, reached out a gloved hand to touch the glass. She hesitated a moment; her hand faltered.

Why am I doing this?

But curiosity triumphed; her hand once again moved toward the glass. As soon as her fingers touched the surface, there was a loud crack, and the three lines multiplied to six and became more pronounced. Jumping back at the sound, the woman watched as the mirror continued cracking and popping, like ice thrown into a glass of warm water. That draw still possessed her; she stepped again closer to the mirror, despite the pieces of glass now falling from the frame. Not able to hold herself back, she reached out and touched the glass, then immediately drew her hand back; the glass had shattered at her touch, leaving only the ornate frame.

Rather than a plain, brown backing as the woman expected, she saw instead another reflection, though this one was crisp, clearer than reality it seemed. It was as though she was looking into a new, more vibrant reality, one in which even those far off trees and mountains and clouds were clearer than anything behind her. What was more, she could feel cold air coming from the mirror itself. She reached her hand forward one more time, and, to her astonishment, met no resistance; her hand went through the frame and into that clearer realm.

After standing unmoving for just a moment, her hand still outstretched, the woman lifted one foot over and into the frame, then lifted her other foot, entering that new world and walking along the familiar but now clearer path back to her cabin, knowing that somehow, no matter what happened from this point forward, she would never regret stepping through that frame.

Photo: Winter trail

Short Story.

I have yet another Creative Writing assignment to share. This one is a short story. If you’ve read my other assignments (Diary Entry and Sketch), try not to associate them with this one; it’s not entirely related.

The Clearing

He sat in his usual niche upon the gnarled old tree’s bare branches, his legs dangling and eyes roaming the clearing and surrounding forest until they came to rest on the boy. Dressed in a plain, white linen shirt and pants similar to the man’s grey clothing, the boy stood motionless by the small fire, about twenty feet off, staring into its flames. As the man watched the boy, he began wondering how he’d ended up here, how his life had become so confusing, how he’d ended up in this precise spot. His mind wandered absently to the small, blue, leather-bound book he kept in his pocket, but he stopped that train of thought; he was tired of being confused. Instead, following the boy’s gaze, the man looked into the flames of the fire. A new thought came into his mind.

What if none of this is real?

With that, the thoughts and questions he’d been doing his best to suppress for the past few months came pouring into his consciousness, causing his head to ache and whole body to shiver. His hands grew cold and shaky, making it difficult to remain steady in the tree.

I’ve been here for at least seventy-seven days…I’ve had this book with me the entire time, but I don’t know where it came from or why I have it. I’m completely obsessed with it for no obvious reason, and I can’t even read it; all I do is flip through it mindlessly every day, hoping something will make sense…Which makes no sense, because it’s always the same! It’s not like I’m going to magically be able to read it one day. And what about this kid? He’s been following me around for weeks…He won’t say more than a few words to me, but I can’t just tell him to leave…I still haven’t seen anyone else; no people…There are no people! Where is everyone? Everything has gone crazy, and I don’t know what to do with myself anymore! None of this makes any sense. Nothing makes sense! What am I supposed to do with a book I can’t read and a boy I can’t help any more than I can help myself? What am I supposed to do? Why am I here? Where is here? Where did I come from? Why can’t I remember anything? And where did this kid come from?

As the flood continued and threatened to overtake him, an image entered his mind. It did not come from his consciousness, but it came as a dream does, suddenly yet naturally, and he felt no unease at its unexpected appearance. He saw in this vision a great clearing surrounded by a forest of trees tinted every hue of red, orange, and yellow. Over and beyond the forest stood a beautiful mountain range topped by magnificent peaks white with snow and slopes fading into the colors of Autumn. A warm feeling came over the man, giving him a sense of comfort he’d not felt since he couldn’t remember when. This vision lasted only an instant, however, before it was replaced by one much darker. As with the first image’s appearance, the transition to the next was much like that of a dream; the first transformed fluidly and imperceptibly into the next. This new image made the man tremble; it sent goose bumps up his arms, and a wave of piercing cold assaulted his insides. Sweat beaded on his forehead, and his breath became shallower as he tried to shake the image from his mind, but the image remained.

He saw himself.

Only it wasn’t really him. This being had similar plain, slightly tattered clothes, though his were of a darker hue than the man’s own. It had the same disheveled hair, the same facial and bodily features…But something about this Reflection’s appearance evoked within the man a fear unlike any he’d ever felt before. Perhaps it was its stony, deathly white countenance, or the fact that it was surrounded by a dark, mist-like cloud of who knows what, or the peculiar glint in its eyes, a barely perceptible flash of red seen only when it turned its head slightly to the side. As the man watched this Reflection, almost forgetting its presence was limited to the confines of his mind, the blackness around it transformed into the very clearing in which the man sat, perched within the old tree’s boughs. It stood where the boy stood now and slowly turned and lowered its head, looking into the light of a fire much different from the one the boy watched. This fire glowed an otherworldly red, and from it spurted licks of smoke blacker than ink that curled up from the fire in unnatural coils.

With the man still watching intently, the Reflection bent with machine-like precision and picked up from next to the fire a small, blue, leather-bound book. Straightening to its original position, the Reflection held the book at arm’s length in the palm of his right hand and uttered in a guttural voice some indiscernible and horrid phrase in a language the man knew he’d never heard before.

It sounds…Evil. What is this madness?

The moment this question entered the man’s mind, the Reflection looked up at him, staring directly into his eyes with the icy cold of its own. The man found himself unable to look away, his eyes transfixed by that strange red glint. Holding the man’s gaze, the Reflection’s lips turned up into a wicked smile, and the book, still in the Reflection’s palm, erupted in blood red flames and gave off an acrid odor which made the man’s stomach heave. Looking down and seeing the flames, the man realized what had just happened and released from his throat a roaring snarl that surprised even himself.

“NOOO!!”

Still roaring in rage, the man lurched forward, intending to tackle the Reflection and salvage any part of the book not engulfed in or destroyed by flame. Rather hastily and ill-conceived, this plan failed, as the man had completely forgotten that he was sitting fifteen feet above solid ground in the branches of a tree. As soon as he moved forward, the vision disappeared, and he fell headlong out of the tree and toward the ground, landing flat on his stomach. The wind knocked out of him and his mind forced too quickly back into reality, he lost consciousness…

What…Where’s the book? How did…Stars? …What was that thing?

Moving in and out of reality, to and from stars and blackness, he lay there, unaware that the boy had moved from his position by the fire to a spot right next to the man. Disturbed from his thoughts by the man’s fall from the old tree, the boy had walked calmly over to his comatose companion, turned him over on his back and made sure he was living, and then sat down next to him, patiently waiting for him to wake.

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Hours later, as dawn approached, the man’s eyes opened and stared confusedly through bare branches at the light purple sky above him. Blinking groggily, he turned his head and noticed the boy, still sitting next to him, watching the now barely visible embers of the fire. The man slowly sat up, body sore and head aching. He looked again at the boy, wondering who he could possibly be, this boy who so calmly sat there, seemingly unaffected by any of the frustrations that had been plaguing the man’s mind for so long. Thinking of nothing else, the man simply asked him.

“Who are you?”

The boy turned to the man with a knowing, but not unkind, smile on his face. He answered quite plainly.

“I am an Echo.”

“And what is an Echo?”

“What you saw – the Reflection, you called it – was an Echo. It was one of your Echoes. All people have at least one. You have two.”

At this, the man shook his head in confusion, trying not to become frustrated with the boy. Closing his eyes and taking a few deep breaths, he faced the boy again.

“This Echo I saw was only in my mind. So…If you’re an Echo, how are you here?”

The boy merely smiled at the man, shrugged, then turned again to the embers.

Well…I guess that’s more than I’ve gotten out of him before. Maybe it’ll just take him awhile to tell me what’s going on. I’ve waited this long; I can wait longer.

With new resolve, the man stood up, breathed in the morning air, and took in the view around him – the gnarled tree, the clearing, the forest, the mountains in the distance. A sudden realization hit him: He was standing in the same place he’d seen in the first vision. It was different then; the season had changed from Autumn to early Summer, but it was the same place nonetheless. He wondered absently what significance this could have.

“This is yours.”

From where he sat, the boy held out the blue, leather-bound book, motioning for the man to take it. Understanding that it had fallen out of his pocket when he fell from the tree, the man took the book in his hand, thanking the boy with a nod. He looked over its binding, as he had done so many times before, then opened it and flipped through its pages for what seemed the millionth time. To the man’s disbelief, instead of incomprehensible symbols, the book contained actual words.

Words upon words of understandable language! How is this possible? Could the boy…? I don’t know what to think anymore…Just read.

And read he did. Moving from place to place, fireside – or, rather, emberside – to tree branch as his comfort level directed him, the man read through the book. Minutes turned to hours, but the man took no notice. He was engrossed in the words of this book that had for so long tormented him with its mystery; he was entranced by its knowledge, captivated by the understanding it gave him. Though it did not reveal all he wanted to know, after seventy-seven days of absolute uncertainty, the book’s contents gave him some clarity. Its contents gave him something more to cling to.

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As the man read, the boy watched, that slight smile still on his face. He remained in the same position under the tree, sitting and patiently watching, watching. At times he looked elsewhere, observing his surroundings as he oft had done prior to this day; he looked at the green, full trees surrounding the clearing, the mountains, the gnarled old tree next to him, and the clearing itself. He observed the changing colors of the sky as the day progressed, the shifting shapes of the clouds, and the breeze that occasionally blew through the clearing and swirled around him and his insentient companions. Once, as he examined the grass at his feet, a gust of wind ruffled the blades, and, looking up, the boy noticed that the man was feverishly rifling through the book’s pages. At this, the boy’s smile faltered, but only for a moment, for he knew within a second of the thought’s appearance that it was true.

————————-

It took the man the entire day to read through the book; at occasional intervals he stopped, staring out at the far off mountains with his brow furrowed, reflecting on whatever he’d just learned.

Finally, as the sun lowered and the sky’s hues changed from blues to yellows to dark purples, the man closed the book, placed it carefully on the ground beside him, and rekindled the fire that had long since gone cold. Walking over to the boy, who watched him intently even then, the man asked him a simple question.

“Are you my second Echo?”

“Yes, I am.”

“Ok. Now, you didn’t answer the question I asked before. If the other Echo was only in my mind, how are you here, in the real world?”

“What is the real world?”

“Well…This is the real world – this grass, those trees, the mountains…”

He motioned around him with his hands as he spoke.

“Everything around us is real. I’m real; you’re real…”

His speech slowed as he realized something. The boy asked the question before the man could.

“Why do you think you’ve never left this clearing?”

Photo: Fall bonfire

Creative Writing.

My first assignment in Creative Writing was to write a fictional diary entry. Our only limits were to try to keep it between 500 and 800 words and to include various items from a provided list. I don’t usually write fiction, and if I do, it’s only short and silly stories. I really enjoyed writing this, though. I thought I’d share it with you. (Make sure you have some time to spare.)

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December 28, 2037, 18:46

Mother directed me today to keep a record of daily thoughts and happenings …I’m not sure precisely why; perhaps it has something to do with my episode yesterday. That’s the only recent occurrence I can think of that altered Mother’s usually unruffled disposition and which may have caused her to give strange orders.

The episode itself was quite terrifying; never before in my life had I experienced such intense pain. As I walked out of the Learning Office and down alongside the icy pond, I felt as though my brain was being crushed in a flaming refuse compactor. I fell against one of the trees lining the walkway and stood, dazed and frantically wondering what was happening to me. I remember feeling the same confusion and helplessness I felt the day Mother told me about the existence of the Wall. I still speculate as to what the Wall is there for.

Anyway, I knew in the midst of my fear and confusion I had to locate a Caller. Everyone else in the Community had gone back to their homes, and I, having just finished a late shift at the Learning Office, was still miles away from the closest Community member. It took me what seemed ages to find the nearest Caller. Stumbling, my vision fading in and out, I identified the small markings in the pavement and quite literally threw myself on them, stamping in the emergency combination and gasping for medical help. It took only two minutes for the medical crew to arrive, but, even so, the wait was torturous. The head medic, Lynn, coolly administered a heavy dose of headache treatment, but something I remain confused by is her careful removal of a small flask containing a clear liquid from her pocket. She imperceptibly glanced at her crewmembers before instructing that I drink it. So great was my pain that I downed it without question…The deep pain in my head ceased immediately.

At home eleven minutes later I met Mother, her face scrunched up in anxiety and even, dare I say, grief; I assured her everything was fine. How she managed to find out about the episode so quickly, I have yet to determine.

In light of all I’ve written, I wonder now if I should look further into the causation of the episode and why Lynn so cautiously gave me what I’ve taken to calling “miracle water.”

December 30, 2037, 20:18

I’ve begun having visions. No, more than visions – As I observe my surroundings, particularly when I look in the direction of the Wall, images and, not only that, questions enter my head which I am certain aren’t coming from my own mind. I suspect what was in that flask wasn’t really “miracle water”…

January 1, 2038, 07:02

It’s a new year, and with that comes a new goal. Usually I refrain from setting a yearly goal that requires much effort, which Mother is sure to chastise me for every day during the First Month. But this year, I’ve decided to challenge myself. I’ll set forth on a journey of discovery. I’ll find out as much as I can about the episode itself, what was in that flask, and the purpose of the Wall.

January 3, 2038, 19:30

Today I had a particularly unusual vision and question come into my mind. As I placed the key in the front door’s keyhole and turned it, instantly before my eyes appeared the images of the door, broken down and splintered, and the entryway of our home with shattered glass strewn about the black tile floor. Then drifted into my consciousness the words, “What is the wall guarding against?” I don’t understand…

I also saw something peculiar by the pond earlier today. Heading to work on the path, I noticed across the frozen water a dark, lumbering figure. Looking more closely, I saw what I can only describe as a living, breathing bear. Until today, only in schoolbooks had I seen such beasts; we have been taught since childhood that these creatures are extinct. I have told no one of this, primarily because I know my words would be written off as the ramblings of an attention-seeker.

January 4, 2038, 18:22

Lynn approached me today. It was after work this afternoon, just as I was passing the tree by which the episode occurred. Leaning against the tree, she casually asked how my day had been, to which I replied it had been fine…Then she abruptly straightened and strode over to me, holding up one hand as if to say, “Wait a moment.” Stooping, she picked up from the edge of the path a tiny book bound in blue leather which I hadn’t noticed before. This she placed in my work bag, saying, “Here, you dropped this,” and then she walked away, leaving me standing there, bewildered.

January 4, 2038, 21:37

I read the book. It has no visible title or author, but its contents are extraordinary:

The Wall was originally built to keep out creatures of an unimaginable danger to the Community, creatures which would wreak terrible destruction and death over the Community members in a very short period of time.

The substance in the flask enables one to see reality. What we all see as the Community is a cleaned up version of an apocalyptic wasteland. The Community members’ perceptions have been altered; they are unable to see their city for what it really is. The houses we live in, the food we eat, the parks we walk through – All are objects of trickery. In reality, our houses are broken; our food, distributed in freeze-dried packages; our parks, dead and decaying.

The episode was a revelation of sorts. It’s happened to others before. It’s as if something in one’s brain short-circuits, causing intense, temporary pain and somehow enabling that substance to work.

The last lines of the book instruct the reader to leave the Community by any means possible. Scarcely more than a week ago, I’d have said this is an insane idea, but now…Well, let’s just say I think my journey of discovery will take me far beyond anything I imagined it could.