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PseudoPod 1029: Feeding the Choke-Tree

Show Notes

Okja

 


Feeding the Choke-Tree

by R.J. Gerard


“Straws,” I said. “Why straws?”

“Because they’re cute, obviously,” said Foreman. “Don’t you think?”

I squinted at them. Nearly a dozen were inching around his feet. As I watched, one flopped onto his boot, looking like a second shoelace.

I guessed you could have called them cute—if you happened to be an overeducated, underemployed geneticist like Foreman. Really, they looked like worms: thin, whiplike creatures that were nearly featureless except for a light coat of fuzz and a hole at each end. The mouth and … butt, I supposed. A rust-colored sac sat on the floor: the pod they had hatched from.

“Tell me about them,” I said, hoping Foreman wouldn’t notice I hadn’t answered his question. He stooped and picked up the worm on his boot. It drooped, like it was playing dead.

“They go limp when you handle them, like Ragdoll cats,” he said. “That wasn’t easy to engineer. It’s hard to get that gene expression in an invertebrate. Hand me that Coke?”

There was a bottle of soda on the table. I passed it to him. He unscrewed the cap and dropped the worm in, half-submerging it. When he took his hand away, it came back to life. Its head, or possibly butt—I couldn’t tell which end was poking out—flailed around blindly.

“It’s searching for my mouth,” Foreman explained. “They’re attracted to warmth.”

Foreman held the bottle closer to his face. With a frantic twitch, the worm found its way between his lips. Foreman’s cheeks hollowed as he sucked. The soda’s level dropped. I could hear something—a faint, keening whine, just on the edge of my hearing. It was the worm.

I drummed my fingers against the arm of my chair. Foreman slurped the last drop of soda and set down the bottle. The worm had gone stiff and rigid. Its muscles had seized up.

“You invented biological straws,” I said.

Maybe Foreman saw the doubt in my face, because his own fell. “Drawing liquid through them doesn’t hurt them,” he said. “I engineered them to find the sensation pleasurable. If you don’t use one for a few days, it actually gets sick. It stops eating, it—”

“What do they eat?” I noticed that a few of them had teeth ringing the round holes of their mouths. Those reminded me of lampreys.

“They derive some nutrition from what you drink through them, but I’ve been supplementing that with sugar water.”

“Foreman,” I said, “I love you, man, but … this is weird. I hate that this exists.” I noticed another straw trying to inch its way onto the cuff of my jeans and kicked it away. Foreman scooped it up, eyes hurt, and let it scoot across his knuckles. It blended in with the barbed-wire tattoos that wound their way down his arms, which had always seemed so charmingly incongruous with his otherwise quiet and geeky vibe.

“Why don’t you like them?” he said.

“I just don’t see what was wrong with plastic straws.”

“They aren’t very environmental.”

“That’s why I have a metal straw. It gets me a discount at Starbucks.”

Foreman shrugged. “I just want to live in a livelier world.”


On the way out of Foreman’s house, I stopped by his choke-tree, which he kept in his garage. Properly speaking, I should be writing CC-HoK, but I’m allergic to inscrutable, committee-designed acronyms, and do you have any idea what that stands for? No, really, be honest. The second C stands for chromosomal, that’s all anyone ever remembers.

Foreman’s latest obsession stood under an array of UV lights, rooted in a tub of jelly. The letters on the side said Vin3, the company that he’d bought the thing from. The tree was half as tall as I was, which seemed like rapid growth. I’d been there when Foreman had unboxed it three months earlier, and it’d barely reached my knees.

Most of its branches were heavy with pods, like swollen grapefruit. I assumed that the largest held more straws. The pods on its lower branches, which were smaller, were presumably incubating some other project.

I flicked one of them. My phone buzzed. It was Foreman.

Please don’t do that, his text said. He was watching me via security cam.

Sorry, I sent back.

The pod I’d flicked was trembling. I wondered what was inside. I wondered what Foreman was feeding his tree for it to grow so fast.


Foreman invited me over again two weeks later and I got one of my questions answered. The straws were still there, off in a terrarium in the corner. There was also a headless dog curled on the carpet. Except for the glaring omission at the end of its neck, which ended in a puckered, thoroughly upsetting orifice, it looked like a Pomeranian.

I met Foreman’s eyes. “What the hell is this?”

“No, you’ll like this one. See my bag?”

He had a satchel—a purse, really—slung over his shoulder. “Yes.”

Foreman fished inside and extracted a dog’s head, which blinked at me. It was alive. He stooped and pressed it against the body, and with a sucking sound, the two fused. The now-whole dog picked itself up and thumped its tail.

“Dude,” I said. “No.”

“I think this has real commercial potential,” Foreman said. “If you have a large pet, it’s hard to travel, right? But what if you could have a body grown at your destination, pop off your dog’s head, and reattach it when you touched down?”

“Isn’t that … cruel?”

“Of course not.” Foreman’s voice had a familiar wounded tone. “I would never engineer a trait if it hurt the animal. When you remove the head, it just goes to sleep. It’s less stressful than being stowed in the cargo hold of a jet.”

I actually saw the logic … but. But but. “I don’t want you to take the wrong way, but no one is going to adopt a dog like this, Foreman. Ever. Why are you using your choke-tree to make such weird things?” I thought of one of our other former classmates, Ashley H., who’d used one to create bees that made hyper-fragrant honey. I’d heard she was making a fortune on Etsy.

“I just wish we lived in—”

“A livelier world,” I interrupted. “Right?”

Foreman nodded. His eyes were radiant, like he was thrilled I understood, which I didn’t.

I stopped by his choke-tree again on the way out. He accompanied me this time, probably to make sure I didn’t flick any more pods. The tree was clearly thriving. It had grown by at least three feet, and its emerald leaves were resplendent under the growth lights. There was new fruit on its lowest ring of branches.

I frowned at Foreman. As healthy as his tree was, he looked rather the opposite. There were dark splotches under his eyes, and the coils of his tattoos stood out starkly against his arms.

“How much time have you been spending in here?” I said.

“It’s just a hobby.”

“Your tree’s so productive. How much are you spending on feeding it?” Vin3 priced their saplings surprisingly low, but their fertilizer prices were exorbitant. That was how they got you.

“Not as much as you’d think,” said Foreman. “I haven’t had to buy feed since I got it.”


After that, Foreman’s invitations got more and more frequent. I visited him once, twice, and sometimes even three times a week. I was tempted to demur—unlike him, I actually had a job and some semblance of a social life—but I never did. Being his friend was exhausting, but we had a history; without our weekly tutoring sessions, I never would have made it through grad school.

Every time I visited, Foreman’s garage was littered with more ruptured choke-pods. Every time, he had a new breed of critter to show off. Once, his house was full of squat arthropods that reminded me of horseshoe crabs. They trundled around, catching dust in the bristles that rimmed their shells. Biological Roombas.

The next visit, he showed me guppy-like fish, which lived in a new tank that sat next to the straws’ terrarium. They periodically came to the surface and took heaving gulps, then dove and belched clouds of silvery bubbles from their gills.

“Carbonation,” he said. “For making soda water.”

“Is that sanitary?” I said. He just beamed at me.

This went on for weeks. After a while, arguably too long, I got concerned. Whatever Foreman said, he must have been spending a fortune on fertilizer—and cash aside, what about his investment of time? He had no job, no girlfriend, and a master’s from a very competitive program. This was what he was spending his days on?

Every time I stopped by, Foreman was a little thinner and more haggard, his skin paler and his tattoos darker. As for his creations … they were certainly unique, but I noticed that they were growing steadily less practical. When he showed me living scarves (reptiles with long, diaphanous frills that they instinctively draped around your neck when you perched them on your shoulder), he wasn’t able to tell me a single advantage they had over real scarves.

“Foreman …” I said.

“I know. No one’s going to buy them. That’s okay. I just want to live in a livelier world.”

“So you’ve said.”

The grin that spread between Foreman’s hollow cheeks didn’t look healthy. I left, disconcerted. Halfway home, I pulled over, turned the car around, and drove back, determined to put my foot down. Foreman’s door was unlocked, but he wasn’t in the house. I headed through his kitchen to his garage, twisted the knob, and pulled the door open.

Foreman was squatting by his choke-tree with his arm extended. Three of his straw-things were hanging from the back of his hand, making their soft keening noise, and two were inside his wrist. They’d latched onto his skin—they were the ones that had teeth—and I could see the muscles that ringed their bodies rippling as they drank. Threads of deep red trickled from their ends. Foreman’s blood was pooling in the jelly that the choke-tree grew from, seeping down to its roots.

“Foreman!” I yelled.

He jumped, twisting his hand behind his back. More blood spattered on the floor.

“You’re back,” he said. “I didn’t expect—”

“What are you doing?”

“Nothing.”

I grabbed his shoulders and walked him backward, away from the tree. “Don’t lie. I can see what’s happening. Why?”

He pulled away. “I’m helping my choke-tree grow.”

“By feeding it your blood?”

“It helps them thrive,” he said. “If you do it before putting in a new design. Nobody knows why, but it’s an open secret online.”

“I don’t believe you. That’s made up.”

“There’s a Telegram chat, if you want to read about it,” he said miserably. “I’m not cutting myself. I spliced a sequence of DNA from medicinal leeches into the straws.”

I grabbed Foreman’s arm and pulled the straws off his skin with a series of wet pops. “No. I was worried already, but this is too far.” I dropped one of the straws and crushed it with my heel.

Foreman looked down, aghast. “Stop it!”

“Enough is enough.”

Foreman pushed me. Although he was gaunt—and now I knew why, didn’t I?—there was surprising strength in his arms. I lost my balance and fell on my rear.

“I’m trying to help you,” I said.

“Get out!” he yelled. It was, I realized, the first time I’d ever heard him raise his voice.

I wanted to hold my ground, but I wasn’t sure what my endgame was, unless I was going to drag his choke-tree out of the garage and burn it on his lawn. I thought about doing just that, but it had grown too large for me to move. I picked myself up and retreated, contenting myself with punching one of the fleshy sacs hanging from its branches as I passed. It split and showered the floor with black ichor, some component of which had once been Foreman’s blood.


I didn’t hear from Foreman after that. At first, I decided I had to just let whatever was happening … happen. He was an adult, after all. But when the days stretched into weeks, I started to have second thoughts.

I called him, but he didn’t answer. I debated calling his family, but I knew they thought of me as one of his weird university friends and wouldn’t take me seriously. Instead, I drove to his house. Although it was a gloomy day, his windows were dark. I pounded on his door. No response, but at this hour, I was sure he was home. I put my shoulder against it and with a groan, the door swung open.

No sooner did I step in than I was rushed by one of the crab-like critters. I pushed it aside with my foot and blinked, letting my eyes adjust.

Foreman’s house had become a jungle. There were animals everywhere. Hundreds of straws had colonized the floor, and in each corner, the scarf-reptiles had constructed nests out of gutted sofa cushions. There were other creatures I didn’t recognize. Cucumber-sized caterpillars trundled in elliptical loops on the floor. Some kind of gasping bladder swung from the ceiling. On the table, there was a bowl of what I thought were blueberries, but when I approached, they hissed at me and squirted jets of fragrant lavender gas.

It was worse than I was expecting. I cupped my hand around my mouth. “Foreman?”

No response. I was sure he would be in the garage, but even though the door had no lock, it was stuck worse than the front door. After fifteen futile seconds of huffing and puffing, I took a step back and kicked it open.

I saw instantly why it had been so sticky. Foreman’s choke-tree had completely taken over the garage. Its roots had spilled out of its tub and spread across the floor like a carpet. Its trunk and branches had grown just as prodigiously, but they didn’t look right, by which I mean they didn’t even look real. They looked like a copy-and-paste error. Branches grew from branches that grew from branches, creating a fractal stretching from wall to wall. Hundreds of incubation sacs hung from them. As I watched, one burst open and something slithered out. It was covered with too much goo for me to see clearly, but it had two heads and at least three tails.

Foreman was nowhere to be seen.

Except—

No, he was there, suspended in the midst of a particularly dense array of vegetation. For a second, I thought he was just climbing, perhaps trying to get at a hard-to-reach pod, then I saw the branch emerging from his chest like a spit. It had ripped his shirt, but there was no blood anywhere, including, I thought, in his body. His face was pure white. Yet more straws hung from his neck and arms. They were quiet and limp; they’d already drained him dry. Their ends were stuck in deep grooves he’d carved in the smaller branches that encircled him like a halo.

Someone was screaming. It took me a moment to realize it was me. The choke-tree trembled, and for a surreal second, I thought it had joined me, that we were screaming together. The pods hanging from it thrashed, like the whatevers growing in them were disturbed by the sound.


From what I heard, there was a tussle in the coroner’s office about whether to record Foreman’s death as by misadventure or suicide. It came down to what he’d died of. I’d assumed blood loss, but another theory was that he’d gotten tangled in the tree and just hadn’t been able to get back down. Either way, the branch had grown through his body after it had started to decay.

There was a funeral, of course. I can’t tell you about it. I wasn’t even invited. His family blamed me for what happened. You know: you were his best friend, how did you let it get so bad?—that sort of thing. Like I said, they never liked me.


Foreman’s tree is still there. You can’t see it—they covered his whole house in a plastic tent—but if you drive by, you can still see the outline of its branches poking through the garage door. I’m sure it’s dead by now, with no one feeding it, but it’s there. Apparently, there’s another legal tussle between Vin3 and the bank over who’s responsible for removing it.

That’s probably what saved me from being sued, myself. Apparently, I left the door open and let some of Foreman’s creations escape, which, according to the letter I got from Vin3, was grossly negligent on my part. But they had their hands full with the bank, and I don’t think Foreman’s fruit were viable in the wild, anyway.

With one exception.

The last time it rained, something made me shrug on a coat and go outside. In the puddle that collects in the dip in my yard, I saw dozens of threadlike forms, winding in circles.

Foreman’s straws had made it out. And they could swim. Apparently.

I stood there for a while, watching them. In the puddle, they didn’t look as grotesque as they had in his house. They just looked like animals. I bent and fished one out. It stiffened as I handled it, like it was preparing to let me drink through it.

I didn’t. I tossed it back into the puddle, where it lashed its tail and resumed swimming.

I stuck my hands in my pockets and ducked inside. I was confident no one would ever use Foreman’s straws for their intended purpose. Probably, no one would ever even notice they were any different from the other crawlies that wiggle out of the ground when it rains, and if they were his legacy, I have to say I didn’t think much of it compared to what he could have accomplished over the course of a normal career.

But they were something. In a very small way, he’d made the world a livelier place.

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PseudoPod 1028: All The Eyes That See

Show Notes

From the author: “This story is me once again exploring the absolute weirdness of rural Australia, like I continue to do in my Tales From The Gulp books and elsewhere. It’s a bottomless well of stories for me!”


All the Eyes That See

by Alan Baxter


Sitting on the neatly upholstered chair in the tiny office I try not to let my frustration show. “Really, nothing at all?”

“Not in town.” The real estate agent’s face is apologetic. “With the flower festival on it’s our busiest time of year.”

“There must be something.”

“It’s our own fault, Jim,” Mary says, putting a hand on my knee as she smiles at the agent. “We just don’t have distances like this in England. We under-estimated how far apart things are.”

Sydney to Melbourne is nearly as far as London to Glasgow, but it’s such a speck on the greater map of Australia. This continent is inconceivably huge. That realisation doesn’t help us now, late afternoon in the middle of nowhere. Our decision to take the scenic route has come to bite us. “Is this really such a small town?” I ask.

The man leans back in his chair, still smiling. “We’ve a little over five hundred residents, nearly half of that out on farms all around. In town there’s one hotel and one motel, both packed to the gills. Lots of people travel in.”

“For the flower festival.”

“What about the Carroll place?” (Continue Reading…)

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PseudoPod 1027: This Thing of Darkness


This Thing of Darkness

by Nissa Harlow


7 days to go:

Smoothing down the lush, black dirt with a flat hand, I try to think about the seeds I’ve just planted. They won’t come up for weeks. Which means that they won’t come up at all. When I move the heavy pot to the windowsill above the kitchen sink, the hard clay bottom makes a noise like a skull hitting concrete. I rinse my hands before turning to the cupboard to grab a bottle of ibuprofen.

“Want one?” I ask as I shake out a couple of tablets. Case doesn’t say anything, but when I look up, he’s staring at me. “What?”

“You can’t ignore it.”

“I’m not going to obsess about it,” I say, biting back the “like you” that wants to tack itself on the end of the sentence.

“You’re going to have to come to terms with it.”

“Says who?”

He shrugs. “Do you really want to die without being okay with it?”

“It doesn’t matter what I do before it happens. I won’t care afterward.”

His lips tighten into an argumentative line, but he doesn’t say anything. I suspect he’s made some sort of pact with himself. No fighting with the fiancée in the last days of existence. Or something like that.

“Want to get pizza for dinner?” I ask. (Continue Reading…)

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PseudoPod 1026: Thoughts and Prayers


Thoughts and Prayers

by Meg Elison


he’s over by the gym

Maddie’s phone buzzed once and she glanced down and saw the text. She had long schooled her face to not react to notifications, but she had no idea what this was about. When Mrs. Bethel turned her back, Maddie carefully slid out her phone.

The text had come from Daniel, her friend from first period. They often split a large iced latte in the morning, sharing their secret coffee obsession that they both hid from their parents.

Thumb flying in silence, Maddie texted back: ???

Mrs. Bethel’s class was on the far east side of campus, on the basement floor. The gym was on the far west end, so the sound of it didn’t reach them until it was too late.

he’s headed toward the library lockdown your class (Continue Reading…)

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PseudoPod 1025: Impostor Syndrome


Impostor Syndrome

By Gregory Marlow


Looking back, the first red flag was during the job interview, when Chad said their target demographic was males, ages thirteen to seventeen.

“That’s pretty specific,” I said.

He shrugged. “Market research.”

If I had been using the critical thinking skills I obtained from five short years of undergrad, I would have asked why not eighteen or nineteen. If I were using my conscience, I would have questioned the ethics of any product, even a video game, that targeted minors.

I wasn’t using those things to make decisions anymore. I was thinking with my stomach. The same stomach that was eating discount Ramen by the glow of a computer monitor for the last six months, while I begged for my first job opportunity in the game industry.

(Continue Reading…)

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PseudoPod 1024: Flash on the Borderlands LXXVII (77): The Only Enemy You Can’t Live Without


“More salt on the places that never healed” – Holly Green


Witchcraft

By Arthur Machen


‘Rather left the others behind, haven’t we, Miss Custance?’ said the captain, looking back to the gate and the larchwood.

‘I’m afraid we have, Captain Knight. I hope you don’t mind very much, do you?’

‘Mind? Delighted, you know. Sure this damp air isn’t bad for you, Miss Custance?’

‘Oh, d’you think it’s damp? I like it. Ever since I can remember I’ve enjoyed these quiet autumn days. I won’t hear of father’s going anywhere else.’

‘Charmin’ place, the Grange. Don’t wonder you like comin’ down here.’

Captain Knight glanced back again and suddenly chuckled.

‘I say, Miss Custance,’ he said, ‘I believe the whole lot’s lost their way. Don’t see a sign of them. Didn’t we pass another path on the left?’ (Continue Reading…)

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PseudoPod 1023: Grandifolia

Show Notes

‘Grandifolia’ is a PseudoPod original


Grandifolia

By Elliott Gish


The first time I do everything the way I’m supposed to. I wait for the new moon and walk into the woods at midnight. I carry a jar of pig’s blood and wear a wreath of nettles, ignoring as best I can the stinging on my scalp. I tread silently, carefully, one bare foot settling deep into the dirt before I lift the other, until I find what I am looking for.

The tree sprawls lasciviously across the hollow that shelters it, its branches spread wide and low. An American beech, its pale bark gleaming silver in the dark. Fagus grandifolia. That’s the scientific name, Fagus grandifolia, big leaf beech. I looked it up before I came. I don’t know why.

No—that’s a lie. I looked it up to gird my loins with trivia, to guard against the utter foolishness of what I have come here to do.

I pour the blood in a careful circle around the trunk, careful to duck the lowest branches so I don’t dislodge my nettle crown. There’s barely enough. By the time I close the circle only a few stubborn drops slide down the glass.

I back a few feet away and kneel, my knees sinking into damp earth. Closing my eyes, crossing my fingers, I say the words, and I wait. (Continue Reading…)

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PseudoPod 1022: All the Good You Did Not Do


All the Good You Did Not Do

by Jolie Toomajan


When the doors slide open, the screams escape. Saul is summoned from his security podium by the researchers’ howls, and he slides in his formal uniform shoes until he finds them caged in an elevator open to the atrium-style lobby. A young man hauls a woman from the back of the elevator and slams her to the floor. Oh no, she has lost her shoes. The young man tears into the raw meat expanse of her neck with his teeth, ripping strips of flesh and spitting them next to her. He plunges his hands through her body, digging into her guts, and then he snaps his head and he sees Saul and he runs so fast How could anything run that fast and Saul fires his gun When did I reach for my gun and the head collapses in on itself until nothing remains. Is that supposed to happen? What’s left of the man drops to its knees, where it wobbles in an eerie circle as if choosing where to land. It finally tumbles backward. (Continue Reading…)