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PseudoPod 914: Spirit Husband


Spirit Husband

By Uchechukwu Nwaka


Don’t collect gifts from strangers.

Don’t pick up money on the streets.

Don’t take food in your dream.

The spicy fried exterior of the akara melts over my tongue, and the soft baked beans within seep into my taste buds. The flavour ripples into my teeth and tickles my ears and waters my nose. I stuff my mouth full with three buns before the particles go the wrong way and the coughing begins. The pepper enters my eyes and I rub at them with the heel of my hand.

My eyes scan the wooden table. It’s no bigger than the desks in the orphanage’s classroom where we learned arithmetic and English. A silk tablecloth is draped over its surface, laden with a large ornamental bowl filled with aromatic akara. To my left, a loaf of bread sits on a flat plate, radiating waves of warm goodness. To my right, the steam from a bowl of pap condenses over its transparent cover. There’s a tin of Peak milk and Milo beside it, alongside a large unopened sachet of Dangote sugar.

A jug of kunu occupies the opposite end of the table. I’m not interested in that one right now. It’s the clear pitcher of water that I need.

It’s too far, yet when I reach for it, the distance shrinks and my fingers close around the handle. I drain the water without even a cup, and there’s a soothing calm as the water rolls down my throat.

Do I know that this is a dream already? Yes. Do I keep eating?

Yes.

Even on the best of days I don’t remember much about my mama. I know her skin was dark like mine and that she had a nice smile, but I could never picture her actually smiling. I don’t know whether I inherited my dimples from her or not. I don’t remember her voice either. Not really. Except the words of her mantra.

Don’t collect gifts from strangers.

Don’t pick up money on the streets.

Don’t take food in your dream.

My hand falters over the bowl of pap. It’s as if the host hears the train of my thoughts, because his velvety fingers fall on my shoulder like a gentle breeze. Reminding me not to be shy. That I don’t need to hold back. I turn to look at him. To tell him that I understand, and that the meal is deli—

I wake, breath rushing into my lungs in a gargled choke. The memory of his face feels so vague in my head, like it is eating itself away from my consciousness. Suddenly I cannot remember what kind of lighting made up the ambience, or whether anybody was there at all.

But then I feel the pepper in my throat…

I remember that the orphanage only served bread and pap for dinner—neither of them spicy.

I’ve been… dream eating.


I groan as I grab the headrest of the driver’s seat from the back of the car. It’s been many years since my first dream meal. I squeeze my eyes in pain as a wave of contractions hit me. My water broke two hours ago. A few days too early.

Dele’s eyes track to the rear-view mirror. Beads of perspiration trail down his face—even in the air conditioned vehicle. I purse my lips and brave the contractions. I don’t want to worry him, but he sees the pained look over my face.

He assaults the horn on the steering wheel.

Lagos traffic is a sentience of its own, something that I cannot deal with right now. Dele’s grip on the steering is murderous, and I don’t need to be a psychic to know the thoughts that run behind my husband’s darting eyes. This is my first pregnancy that has come to term in five years. Hell will freeze over before I let myself lose it because of traffic.

“Dele.” I groan. “One-way. Enter the one-way lane.”

“Are you sure, Udo? Things might get rough.”

“Just—” but a sudden contraction forces me to scream, stealing the rest of the sentence from my lips. There’s no way for our car to cross the barrier between lanes. I realize this too late, but Dele has already killed the engine, opening the back door. He stops a keke napep on the other lane, violating a myriad of traffic laws. Then he lifts me with great difficulty. It’s a herculean task to get us both over the pavement, then us into the tricycle, but five minutes later, we’re speeding to the hospital.


Maybe it is because of the stakes on this pregnancy, but I find myself reminiscing a lot. Especially back to that evening on Daruma Crossing, where everything started.

In my head I’m back in the orphanage. It’s past lights out and I turn restlessly on my bed. My stomach rumbles defiantly over the thin soup of egusi and the fist-sized wrap of eba that the orphanage fed us for dinner—too soft to be considered solid food. Lights out also means that Aunty Gloria has taken away the single lamp that serves the wide room where the sixteen children sleep, so everywhere is dark. The house has no generator. Aunty Gloria would have us believe that the house is not receiving enough funds from the government, but I’m one of the older kids. I know she keeps funnelling our money into one Ponzi scheme after the other.

My eyes fix on a cockroach that’s making its way across the wall from a window. I strain my eyes to follow it as it crawls amongst the shadows. Something suddenly taps me on my foot and I jump. Two hands automatically fly to my mouth, stifling my shrieks.

I bite.

“Shh, Udo! Fuck!”

My eyes scan the darkness, looking for the source of the familiar voices. It’s Uba and Frank, the two other orphans my age. My worked up heart slows for a bit. “What are you guys doing?”

“Remember how I told you that there’s a place we can get free food?” Frank said. “I’ve confirmed it. We’re going to get some.”

My stomach rumbles at the mention of food. “Why are you telling me this?”

“Shey hungry no dey do you?” Uba asks in pidgin. Once, Aunty Gloria would have flogged him shitless if she heard him speak like that, but I sense she’s given up on him. On all of us really.

“But you guys are going to Daruma Crossing by this time. Isn’t it late?” I say.

Frank tuts. “Uba why do we have to bring this girl along again?”

“What’s your problem Frank? Am I not allowed to ask questions? Don’t you know that there’s a shrine around that area?”

“We no dey reach any shrine. If you go come, stand up.”

It’s not too difficult to scale the fence that surrounds the orphanage house. Before long, the three of us are on the bush path outside the house limits. There’s no moon visible, leaving us in complete darkness. My heart beats against my chest rapidly as my slippers crush over dried twigs and tiny stones. The sounds of our footsteps create a dissonant harmony with the crickets trilling into the night. Bushes rise around us in both directions—I’m not sure whether they’re cassava or pawpaw. There’s a denseness about them that seems to sponge in the darkness and the crickets’ noise, and their branches sway towards me as if to abduct me into their endless tangle of leaves.

“Hope say you no dey fear. Eh, Udo?”

Uba’s voice reaches me from so far away that I realize the boys are taking a bend in the path ahead. They’ve completely left me behind! I sprint up to meet them, and I don’t need moonlight to see the disdain written all over Frank’s face.

“Walk fast.”

My heart is thumping now like a toad trapped in a bottle. I don’t want to admit it, but I’m scared. Daruma Crossing is quite deserted, even during the day, but the boys will probably never take me along with them again if I don’t keep my complaints to myself. Besides, I’ve never been the best with directions on my own. I ignore the gooseflesh on my neck and focus on my breathlessness instead.

“We’re here.” Frank says.

The road stretches ahead and forks in two directions. The apprehension hits me before my brain can put words to the feeling. We are standing at a T-junction, and this ‘free’ food was arranged neatly at the centre of the ‘T.’

My mama’s mantra rings in my ears as the boys bend over the ceramic casserole dishes. “We can’t eat that,” I say, my voice so hollow that I barely recognize it.

“Why?” Uba asks in utter oblivion.

“That’s ebo food.” I say, and suddenly my voice is too loud. It’s too dark and the bushes are too silent.

“Ebo?”

This is worse than picking up money on the streets or taking gifts from strangers. Any of those could potentially cost a person their spirit, let alone food sacrificed at a T-junction.

“Sacrifice. Juju. Shrine food!” I gesture like a maniac as I answer Uba. “Frank! Shouldn’t you know this?”

Frank shrugs and opens one of the casserole dishes. At that exact moment, the wind picks up, and the thick aroma of chicken pepper soup invades my nostrils, my tongue, my throat, and kicks me in the gut. My stomach rumbles greedily and Uba snickers.

“Abeg leave all that juju nonsense for one side. As if no be babalawo go chop the food last last.”

Saliva pools in my mouth. My mama’s mantra resurfaces but I force it down into the depths of my subconscious where the inchoate memories of her reside. Frank rips a large piece of chicken thigh and I break. My hands plunge into the bowl, scooping chunks of meat and thick broth with my fingers. The scalding soup is a welcome sensation as the food enters my mouth, completely erasing the taste of the ‘coloured-water’ egusi soup I had for ‘dinner.’ Uba opens another bowl, and that one is filled with fine pieces of immaculate white yams that seem to give off their own illumination.

I reach for the yams.


The hospital bed presses against my back. A doctor keeps issuing instructions to me. I can barely register most of what he’s saying.

“Madam, I’d like you to push.”

I can feel the child inside me, seeking light. I scream in exertion as the delivery team exchange instructions amongst themselves. I can see Dele too, but just barely. His outline is blurry at the edges, and there are two of him. My vision begins to swim—the exhaustion is getting to me. It won’t be long before my consciousness gives way, so I anchor myself to the monitor beeping steadily behind me. My beacon in darkness as my thoughts wander back to my first dream meal.

“Push, Madam. Push.”

They say you dream about food only when you sleep with an empty stomach. In my experience, that’s not always the case. I see myself then, back in the orphanage, the evening after stealing the ebo food; the entire house smelling of party jollof and chicken. Apparently, one of Aunty Gloria’s schemes had racked in a profit and she decided to treat us. I eat my rice out of the plastic disposable plates. The chicken is amazing. Even though it is mostly strips of meat on tiny chunks of bone, it’s a cut above any kind of food we’d eaten in a very long time. Yet I can’t help but draw comparisons. Aunty Gloria’s feast is not enough for me.

I’ve tasted forbidden fruit. I want more.

That night, curled upon my small, iron bed, I fantasize about the T-junction at Daruma Crossing. The rich pepper soup that some rich fellow seeking more riches placed there to curry supernatural favour. The heavy chicken bits, and how my jaws hurt from chewing so much…

Then I dream.

As dreams go, I do not exactly relive that moment. The food never reaches my mouth. That’s how it always is. A normal dream. I see Uba and Frank eating though. I also notice the piece of chicken in my hand, but I do not attempt to eat it. There is this feeling of an inherent wrongness in eating while not awake. Some say it is a form of defence mechanism to protect our spirits from roaming predatory forces in our most vulnerable moment. Usually, that’s the point when we wake up.

However, I do not.


Instead the dream changes form, and I’m seated at the fanciest table that I’ve ever seen. The décor looks like something out of a movie, but the lighting is faint. There’s a glow of settling dusk in the room, and I notice that the chandeliers have small scented candles within them.

Plates of fruit appear before me, creating a rainbow-like effect against all the grandeur. I pick a slice of pineapple from the plate nearest to me and bite, and the flavour erupts over my tongue.

Don’t take food in your dream.

Apprehension suddenly roils through my gut as the sweet nectar runs down my throat.

This is… real?

That’s when I see him, seated at the far end of the table where I can’t see his face clearly. My heart begins to pound in my chest. What kind of dream am I having?

“Did you enjoy the pepper soup and yams?”

My heart freezes in my chest. I want to shout ‘Jesus,’ but the distance between us vanishes in an instant and his fingers cover my lips. There’s an inhuman sensation about them, like wind, but with the kind of smell you’d notice before a storm. His face—now under the candlelight—is smooth, almost sculpted. His skin reflects the lights like tiles would, and there’s an overwhelming intensity in his depthless black eyes.

“You shouldn’t be saying that name in vain, now should you, Udo?”

“H-how d-do you…?”

His fingers trail down my face, and it’s like a person’s hot breath running over my skin. “Udo. Uba. Frank. I’ve never shared my meals before, and it feels surprisingly… good.” He rises from his chair and spreads his arms over the table. “It’s all yours, and don’t worry, it’s not an illusion.”

My mama says; Don’t collect gifts from strangers.

Don’t pick up money on the streets.

Don’t take food in your dream.

“T-thank you, b-but I think, I think…” but my fingers had taken another slice of pineapple. This time the taste is awakening, and I can only sit on my bed, shivering. My tongue still thrums with that otherworldly taste as I lift my fingers to my face and then to my mouth, praying to whoever would listen that the taste not linger.

But. It. Does.

I pick at my brain to recall the events of that dream, but the second I focus on a memory, it’s gone. Through the window the night breeze picks up, and gooseflesh pulls on all the hairs on my skin.


Memory lane keeps winding along. Now, I think about Dele. We meet sometime after I stop dream eating. I’m in my final year at LASU, and he’s a banker. We hit it off pretty well. Much to my surprise, he doesn’t seem that distraught when I tell him we won’t be able to have sex. Unlike the people I’ve seen in the past, he doesn’t cheat on me because of that decision—I have my ways of telling these things. He seems… serious… about the whole relationship.

He confirms it on my next birthday, with an engagement ring.

“We’re losing contractions.” A doctor says.

“Udo! Udo!” Dele’s voice sounds far away. Desperate.

“Sir we’ll have to ask you to give us the room now.”

“Why? What’s happening?”

“We need to perform a Caesarean section.” An oxygen mask slides over my face. My lower half begins to numb. I want to say something to Dele, but I’m just so tired.


Yam porridge, garnished with ugu and pomo and periwinkles. Ukwa, with sweet corn and an assortment of smoked fish. Jollof rice so red and dishes of chicken larger than anything I’ve ever dreamt in all my life. We go back to Daruma Crossing a few nights after that, but nothing. The T-junction is just lonely and deserted. I refuse to go after that. Kidnappers could be lurking in those bushes after all.

But the strangest thing of all is that nobody ever mentions the dreams, or its charismatic host, Nruka.

On the last night I follow the boys to Daruma Crossing, I finally work up the courage to ask Uba.

“Do you ever dream about food?” I whisper.

“Every day.”

“And what do you eat?”

“Eat? Inside dream? Tufiakwa!” He swings his arm over his head before snapping his fingers to the ground, as though the very motion actually wards off evil. His dramatic reaction pulls Frank’s attention towards us.

“What about Nruka? Never dreamed of him?”

“Who’s Nruka?” Frank asks. I never liked his tone.

“Never mind. He’s an imaginary friend that claims others can see him.”


There’s one fruit that Nruka serves after every meal. It has a luscious blood-red rind, like a berry, but the size of an orange. Most times I look forward to the fruit beyond everything else. To the way it pulls my senses apart and rearranges them so that I can taste with my fingertips and feel the warmth of the candle with my eyes. And I can taste him with all my body, smiling beautifully as the shadows of the lights play over his face while he watches me shudder under the fruit’s effects.

“What’s this called?”

“Soul fruit.”

“It tastes so good!”

“Doesn’t it?” He kisses me suddenly. Heat rushes over my body and it’s like my head is filled with hissing steam from a kettle. His tongue tastes like soul fruit nectar too, and I feel like I’m losing myself. Light-headedness sways the room to the side as his hands run over my body, each touch electrifying. I’m overstimulated already from the soul fruit, and it doesn’t help that Nruka’s hands are striking a fever within me. His mouth trails from mine, to my neck, then my breasts. Before I can breathe I’m on the table, and Nruka towers over me now. Something ripples under his porcelain skin for the briefest second.

“Udo, you are a virgin, correct?”

But I’m breathing too hard to respond. I nod. He falls on me right then, on the table. My mama’s mantra has long been silenced, but I wish it had surfaced in that brief second when I had seen something crawl beneath his perfection. The gust of wind that blew the lights out with a wailing of a million sorrows.


“We can’t keep doing this Nruka.” I pull the sheets to myself and cover my body. Over the years—with Aunty Gloria’s legal adoption of the older kids and my subsequent emancipation —I didn’t need to eat in my sleep anymore. Instead, on most nights Nruka appeared, we had sex.

“I’m serious with Dele and he’s serious with me. I’ve kept myself for you for so long… as you asked. But we’re getting married soon.”

Nruka pulls me to himself, but there’s resistance in me.

“Udo, I’ve been here for you since the harsh days of the orphanage. When you didn’t have anything to eat!”

“And I’ve been faithful, have I not?” The air is sharper now, dry like harmattan breeze. “You said I couldn’t sleep with any other man. And I haven’t. But this is marriage. It’s sacred.”

“And this is not?”

The temperature of the room drops, and for the first time in a while, the goose bumps come crawling back, like an army of spiders over my flesh.

“This is marriage Udo,” he towers over me now, pulling the sheets away from my body with inhuman strength. “You are mine.”

“P-please,” I croak, but his hands are cold and his grip is like iron. My mama’s words scream in my head now. The mantra endless in a tone of scorn. It is not my mama’s voice I hear in my head as Nruka forces himself on me.

Don’t collect gifts from strangers.

Don’t pick up money on the streets.

Don’t take food in your dream.

The voice is mine.


I am broken after the first miscarriage. I stay indoors for weeks, almost crippled by the depression. Dele tries his best to cheer me up. It’s not an uncommon occurrence, he says. We can always try again. My dreams suddenly become quiet after Nruka declares me his wife, and the fear of that… spirit… turns me into an insomniac. He’s never appeared during afternoon naps, so I change my sleeping patterns. When I start losing weight, Dele attributes it to the depression. We make love and then I lie awake for hours, staring into the ceiling.

Into the darkness.

After the second miscarriage, the doctor tells us that everything is normal. We are both fine. Nothing is wrong. He asks us if we have any habits that might be affecting our health. I don’t mention the myriad pills I swallow every night to escape slumber.

Before this pregnancy, I receive the most unusual visitor.

Frank and I grew apart after he left the orphanage. I haven’t heard from him since then. When he turns up in front of my flat, I can tell something is wrong…

“She’s haemorrhaging.” The doctor’s voice cuts through the haze of my memories. “Can we see the baby yet?”

“Sir, I’m sorry you can’t be here.” Someone else yells.

I can’t get my vision to stop swimming. The light-headedness forces my eyelids closed. At an impossibly far distance, I see Dele trying to push against a nurse by the door.


Frank’s dressed smart. His full hair is combed but just barely. When I look closer, I see the yellow deposits on his teeth; his blackened lips. The whites of his eyes are dull—reddish or yellowish or both. The fabric of his clothes is thin and hanging on the last thread, and under the ceiling fan the shirt billows over the frame of a thin, sickly man.

“What happened to you, Frank?” I ask.

“My life went to hell, Udo.” His eyes dart about, and I imagine they will fall on the portraits of myself and Dele, or on the wallpaper, but he’s too nervous to even register anything.

“Talk to me Frank. You look like a mess!”

“You got married huh? Seems like things are going pretty well for you.” He fiddles with his collar and I notice his fingernails are bitten short. Too short. “What about Uba? Is he okay?”

“Of course he is.” I actually don’t know. “Why wouldn’t he be?”

“She said that it’s been you all this time,” Frank says, his eyes manic. “That I should find you. It’s all your fault.”

My pulse quickens. “Who said that?”

“The prophetess. I went to one church to understand why my life has gone so wrong. Why nothing ever worked for me from the moment I left the orphanage.”

I want to scoff at him. He has all the markings of an addict who cannot sustain his poison. Was this some twisted way for him to—

“She said I ate the ebo to a powerful spirit.”

My blood turns to ice in my veins.

“The woman could see everything. Down to how many of us ate the food. That there was a girl among us. That was you, Udo!”

His eyeballs are wide now, bulging. I rub my palms over my skirt; they are clammy and cold.

“She said that one of us was under the spirit’s favour. And that person has been the one shielding us ever since. You’re flourishing! You’re the one!”

My heart is drumming uncontrollably under my mouth. “W-why not ask Uba. Why not?”

“Uba is still living with Aunty Gloria, for fuck’s sake!” His voice devolves into an unnatural scream. “Does that sound like somebody who is doing fine?”

Spittle flies from his mouth as he yells. “Uba was doing small-time Yahoo-Yahoo and he was nabbed by the EFCC. For Christ’s sake he had to hide inside one of Aunty Gloria’s Ghana bags when they came to her house to detain him.”

Cold sweat rolls into my eyes and stings like the venom of a dozen serpents. “I-I didn’t know.”

“You have to help us, Udo. This is on you.”

“What?” Sudden anger courses into my blood like fire. “I told you that night that we shouldn’t have taken that food! Did you listen? No?”

“Udo, don’t you see?”

“Fuck what you see!” I scream. “I’ve lost two pregnancies. Don’t you dare come into my house telling me some bullshit about how I’m flourishing!”

“Udo—”

“GET OUT!”


The doctors’ voices break through my haze. “Okay! We’re almost there. We’re almost there!”

Ah they’re still at it? The monitors are a little too loud. Is that normal? Is it over yet? Am I still dreaming?


“Your babies dey trapped,” the prophetess tells me in a violent blend of English and Yoruba and pidgin. Frank is outside the tent; I can see his shadow pacing around the entrance.

“Trapped? How? The doctor told me everything is fine.”

The woman—her face has more lines than crumpled paper—shakes her head sagely. “If everything dey fine my dear, you for no come here.”

“So what do you mean by my babies being trapped?”

The woman squeezes my hands in hers and gives a pained yelp. “Ye. Madam your spirit husband no go allow those children to leave. You have anger it.”

My heart pumps cold blood through my body. “S-spirit husband?”

“A very powerful spirit. O lagbara gan. And the spirit don dey chop the destinies of you and your friends wey chop his ebo.”

I bite the inside of my cheeks to keep myself from hyperventilating.

“But there get way for you to collect your children back. But that one na if you get the mind to enter spirit world. That same place where you dey always chop away your destiny. Where you dey fornicate with that demon. If not, no child go grow inside your womb, because that spirit go continue to steal them.”

“What should I do?”

“Fast. You no go chop food for seven days and seven nights. No water. The spirit strong die! You go buy holy water. I fit provide that one, na just one-fifty thousand naira. Anointing oil too, same price. And some other things I go provide. But you must prepare your mind.”

“For what?”

Her raspy voice hollows into a painful croak.

“Because you fit die inside there if you no ready yourself.”


The crying sounds of a baby fill the operating room. It ignites something within my chest, piercing through the daze of exhaustion and anaesthesia, through the sounds of the monitors. Tears film over my eyes, duplicating the already doubled images. I put out my hands to receive my baby, but the staff are chattering. The images are refusing to focus.

And in the space between all the people and at the point where all of them become one, someone stands silently, sculpted in marble and granite, looking down on all of us.

The mask suddenly becomes too tight for my face. I struggle against the oxygen mask and the nurses grab my hand. I’m screaming, thrashing, and Nruka looks at me. His expressionless façade cracks like an egg as he smiles with marble teeth.

I beg to see my baby.


Oh the stakes on this child are high indeed.

I remember descending into the spirit world under the prophetess’ guidance. The spirit world is darkness. A swimming darkness that I sink into. I hold my breath and thread the waves. A tree stands within the depths, with infinite branches that span into the black waters and vanish.

I draw towards the tree.

The branches are quiet pieces of bone, each linked to the joints of the next, like they are seeking refuge from the deep. Some branches bear fruit—pulsing red fist-sized berries that I recognize.

Soul fruits.

The trunk is sculpted of slowly moving skeletons, almost a hundred meters thick. Some of the skeletons have flesh on them, slowly rotting away as they moan into the waters. Bile crawls over my tongue and my gut twists uncomfortably.

That’s when I see Uba.

Or what looks like Uba. He is tangled in a mass of bones, and his flesh is desiccated and leather-like. I panic, reaching towards him. The other skeletons reach out, bones snapping in threatening arcs. There will be no salvation for him as long as it was denied them.

My God.

I see Frank, and he is impaled by arms and legs and drying out even faster than Uba. The limbs that pierce him coalesce into an outer branch, and at its tip, a soul fruit suckles to life.

I claw at my tongue and almost vomit as revulsion gouges my throat.

Higher up the tree there are bigger soul fruits. I swim towards them and there is life pulsing within each one, curled in foetal positions. My chest constricts in anguish.

I reach for my children, three in all, trapped inside the perverse fruits Nruka grows for his own twisted delight. The branches lash at me but I fight back. They crumble when my blows connect and I thank the prophetess for the gruelling one week fast. My hands curl over the fruits.

“Udo. You finally came back.”

The familiar icy voice stops me in my tracks.

I turn to face Nruka, but he is something else now. A serpent with fins and gills that ooze a stale black ink. It pollutes the water with a stench that I imagine would fester in greed and jealousy and spite. Walking over people for self-gratification.

Walking over me.

“So this is your true self?” I say. “I’ve been very foolish.”

“You are mine, Udo,” he smiles. That black liquid seeps out with every syllable. “You are my wife. The sooner you understand that; the sooner your suffering will end.”

“I rebuke you.” I grab my children. “I rebuke you, Nruka.”

He doesn’t make any move to stop me.

“You can sense it, can’t you? I came prepared. I do not belong to you, Nruka! Over my dead body!”

I turn my back and flee, my children in my arms. The spirit does not dare follow.


My baby’s cries permeate the delivery room. My arms tremble as I reach desperately for my child. “It’s a girl, Madam,” one doctor says, handling her gently. I grab my baby from him, and my heart jumps.

She’s beautiful.

But…

But Nruka is still in the corner, and his perfect teeth have devolved into the serrated dentition of the beast in the sea. Conceit radiates from him in sickening waves.

Why?

The doctor has been saying something for a while now. All I hear is ‘Madam. Madam.’ They’re trying to take my baby from me. My child.

No.

I remember my mama’s mantra. I will teach it to this child. I will sing it to her every day so she never falls prey to any spirit. I clutch the bawling child to my chest and her cries soften. I hush my baby, oh so beautiful, as the world quietens around me. I do not see the blood pooled between my legs, or the frenzy of the doctors trying to stop the bleeding, regulate my blood pressure, save my life. I do not see Dele by my side, holding on for dear life as the medics move around him, unable to get him out.

All I see is Nruka’s jagged sneer, mouthing the words “You can keep the child, but you are mine. ‘Over my dead body,’ wasn’t it?”

I do not hear the machines flatlining. Or Ebube crying anymore. Ah, Ebube. That’ll be such a beautiful name.

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PseudoPod 913: The Vengeance Of Nitocris


The Vengeance Of Nitocris

by Tennessee Williams


Hushed were the streets of many-peopled Thebes. Those few who passed through them moved with the shadowy fleetness of bats near dawn, and bent their faces from the sky as if fearful of seeing what in their fancies might be hovering there. Weird, high-noted incantations of a wailing sound were audible through the barred doors. On corners groups of naked and bleeding priests cast themselves repeatedly and with loud cries upon the rough stones of the walks. Even dogs and cats and oxen seemed impressed by some strange menace and foreboding and cowered and slunk dejectedly. All Thebes was in dread. And indeed there was cause for their dread and for their wails of lamentation. A terrible sacrilege had been committed. In all the annals of Egypt none more monstrous was recorded.

Five days had the altar fires of the god of gods, Osiris, been left unburning. Even for one moment to allow darkness upon the altars of the god was considered by the priests to be a great offense against him. Whole years of famine had been known to result from such an offense. But now the altar fires had been deliberately extinguished, and left extinguished for five days. It was an unspeakable sacrilege. (Continue Reading…)

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PseudoPod 912: The Eidolonpterist


The Eidolonpterist

by Elizabeth Guilt


I was climbing through the window of a ruined castle the only time the police ever caught me. I turned out my bag to show them everything I carried: a torch, pencils, notebooks. I flipped through one book, holding up sketches: the Convolvulus Hawk-moth, the Swallow-tailed moth, the Light Grey Tortrix – Cnephasia incertana, you know, just look at the cross-bands on the forewings…

The police sniggered, and let me go with a warning not to trespass again. I am white, and educated, and well-spoken; I hated myself even as I played up the accent. But they let me go.

I was patient, and polite; it was just a matter of waiting until they grew bored with questioning me. I was used to waiting. (Continue Reading…)

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PseudoPod 911: Flash on the Borderlands LXIX: Children of Melpomene

Show Notes

Spoiler

Nice

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 “You, sir, should unmask. Indeed it’s time. We all have laid aside disguise but you.”


Masks

by Orrin Grey


“You were his friend, right?”

His granddaughter’s voice on the other end of the phone, her words clear and free from static. I wait to answer, don’t want to, because how do I say, “I don’t know?” For months now, he has been coming over to my house to play xiangqi two or three nights a week while we drink hard cider and talk about bullshit. Does that make us friends, or just two lonely old guys with nobody else to talk to?

Whatever I feel in my heart, what comes out of my mouth is bound to be an affirmative, because what else can I say? And besides, she is so far away—London, of all places, with children of her own that I can hear in the background—while I am so close—his own townhouse just two doors down from mine, only empty spaces between us, because this neighborhood is dying, just as he was dying, just as we all are dying. One uncomfortable phone call at a time.

She hasn’t said the words, but the implication is clear in her voice. If I don’t do it, men will come. Strangers. Impersonal men who will throw it all into boxes and, from there, who knows? The Goodwill? The landfill? No place where it matters. No place where it will be appreciated.

Am I the old man’s friend? I don’t think so. Do I want to do it? No. So why do I say yes into the receiver, my voice bounced across thousands of miles to his granddaughter in London?

The answer is guilt. No more noble a motive than that. (Continue Reading…)

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PseudoPod 910: Lidless Eyes That See


Lidless Eyes That See

By Geneve Flynn


We are silently going mad, the boy and I.

The first sign was when he brought me the red silk handkerchief. It was folded and tied like the most perfect furoshiki-cloth wrapping, as if he meant to give me something precious, something with meaning.

Here is what I found instead. Seven pieces of a broken denture, fragments of palate glistening pink as freshly chewed bubble gum, and wire that still shone gold, cradling teeth as jagged and yellow as fossilised popcorn.

With a wordless cry, I crushed them under my boot, grinding the molars to ochre pebbles and chalk. He did not seem to mind, and returned to picking his way carefully through the ruins of the supermarket. (Continue Reading…)

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PseudoPod 909: The Witch in the Whale Bone Hut


The Witch in the Whale Bone Hut

by B.C. Kelsey


Four massive ribs held the hut together, two forming a thick arch near the front door. The bones were pockmarked and yellow, no doubt leftovers from the town’s glory days during the height of the whaling industry.

Jamie’s heart sank as he stared at the bones. They had once belonged to a beautiful creature, needled to death by harpoons and stripped of its skin. As he passed under the arch, he found himself wondering what that whale had seen all those years ago, swimming through depths he would never reach. Whatever it had seen or thought or felt, it was all gone now, stripped away with its flesh. Reduced to bone. The knot in his belly tightened at the thought. For the umpteenth time, Jamie wondered why he’d come here, what had drawn him back to this place. Everyone in his life was gone and, in a moment of desperate loneliness, he’d thought of this hut. Of Maggie. (Continue Reading…)

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PseudoPod 908: Bring Them All Into the Light


Bring Them All Into the Light

by Dan Coxon


Heathen

They’re on holiday when he sees the cottage. Julie and Nico are bickering in the back seat, Maggie searching through the glovebox for something – anything – that might shut them up for five minutes. He rubbernecks as they pass it at speed, pulls into a lane half a mile up the road.

“What are you stopping for?” Maggie asks, feeding an audiobook into the stereo.

“Nothing. Just want to check something out,” Rob replies.

He almost misses the cottage again, but the For Sale sign peeks above the dry-stone wall just in time, alerting him to hit the brakes. There’s a gravel layby for parking, so he pulls into it and kills the engine. The building is only small, walls of piled stone, a thatched roof that looks mouldy in places, sticking up in tufts like a hairstyle gone wrong. The front door is painted white, worn away to the bare wood in patches. There’s a large garden at the rear, sweeping away from the road and partway up the hill behind it. He thinks he sees a path and a gate. A trail leads up the slope. (Continue Reading…)

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PseudoPod 907: Rare Providers


Rare Providers

by Ariel Marken Jack


I like to hunt in the campground that sprouted from the outskirts of our town before we lived here. It’s hard to tell just where the town ends now that the world has grown wild, but there’s not much beyond the campground apart from trees and the scrub and grass growing up through the broken roads. We’re lucky we found a town that hadn’t invested in strip malls or stamped-out housing developments. People here must have liked parks more than parking lots, because the green came back fast once everyone was gone.

Sometimes when I go hunting, I find bones. I don’t know who they were, but they hid in the outhouses, cabins, and trailers, squeezing under the tables in the burned-out picnic shelters and the crawlspace under the camp office cabin. Hiding didn’t save them from whatever happened here, but I respect the effort. I’ve tried to imagine what they were like. It’s a nice town, what’s left of it. Some of them might have been nice people.

I find Lana rolling out pie crust when I get in. My pack is brimming with glossy nuts, orange-gold chanterelles, and a brace of the fat grey squirrels that swarm the oaks when the acorns start to ripen. Her walnut-black hair is piled on top of her head, a few loose strands coiling around the side of her neck. She doesn’t look up when the door creaks, so I track my muddy boots onto the linoleum. I like the way she blushes and squeaks when she wants to pretend she’s too angry to laugh at my mischief.

“Christine!” She shrieks like the tiny brass bird that perches on the spout of the tea kettle I scavenged next door. I feel like whistling myself. If she can get this mad about mud, it’s one of her good days. “Get out of my clean kitchen, you monster!”

She brandishes the marble rolling pin. The force of her outrage resembles a steam train more closely than a kettle. I backtrack and shuck my boots off on the porch. I leave the rest of my hunting duds out there too. She can’t mask her face well enough to hide how the outrage transforms to interest when she sees I’m not wearing anything dirty anymore. I dodge her floury hands and make a break for the bath.

It’s been sunny for days, and the sweet rainwater steams coming out of the tap. I treasure these late-summer evenings when the tin tank I painted black and put up on the roof can soak up enough rays to simmer the day’s work off my skin. I hope it rains again before the tank runs dry. I can’t be happy without my baths. The little pleasures in life mean more now that we can’t take them for granted. I soak until the water goes cold, reading one of the tattered Westerns we found in the house across from the church. The redolence of baking fruit wafts upstairs like a blessing. I never got the appeal of these stories, but Lana adores them. I think it’s something about the grimy heroes, all stylish boots and moral justification. I wonder if she’d prefer a cowboy or a mountain man, or an Old West lawman with a shining star-shaped badge. Maybe it’s the way they’re all such rare providers, at least for the one good woman each book is allowed to hold. Maybe it’s the way they’re all so quick on the draw, always ready to protect that good woman from interlopers. I wonder if she sees me like one of her Western heroes. I don’t know if bringing home squirrels lives up to that fantasy.

The pie turns out to be rhubarb. It’s long out of season, but the attic is brimming with jars of dried fruits and vegetables. I built a solar dehydrator last spring, and Lana put it to good use. She always wanted to be the kind of person who put food by for winter. In that respect, our new life is her dream come true. She filled the cellar with canning our first two years here. She was so proud of herself I could barely stand how happy it made me feel. Then we ran out of canning lids. I searched, and found a few more, but I had to get creative to keep her from crumbling. It’s best for her if she keeps busy. I’m the same way, but it’s easier for me. There’s always something to build or scavenge or stalk. I don’t need to think about things the way she does. “Good pie,” I say. She knows, but I try to make sure she feels appreciated. “Is that squirrel fat in the crust?” She shakes her head. “Lard from the tin you found a few months back. It’s all gone now.” I take another bite. The pie is delicious. I wonder if I should explain about the lard, but she worries so much. What she doesn’t know doesn’t have to hurt her.

If I’m honest, it wasn’t hard for me when the world got emptier. It was a relief. I’m not like Lana. I’m more like the seeds she saves when I forage through our town’s old gardens gone wild. People talked about what was happening like it was the end of everything, but for me it was a beginning. Any seed would know, if seeds knew anything, that being saved isn’t enough to survive. You need the right soil if you’re going to put down roots and learn to grow.

I’ve put down more roots in this town than I expected. I think I’ve grown a lot since we moved in. I’ve grown a lot of secrets, too. There’s no one here to tell, apart from Lana. I tell her what makes sense for her to know, but there’s some knowledge she doesn’t need. Like the lard. Like the fact that I was about to break things off with her when the world started shifting so fast that no one with the power to do anything about it could keep up. I loved her back then, but it felt like something was missing. I was only waiting because I couldn’t bear to hurt her. I waited so long that everything around us fell apart, and then I had to find her a safe place to live before I left. We hiked for months, hiding from strangers because we couldn’t tell who we could trust. Everything got easier after most people were gone. By the time we found the perfect town—isolated, largely undamaged—I couldn’t remember why I had wanted to leave.

I’m about to beg for more pie when someone knocks at the kitchen door. We don’t get many visitors. Our neighbours are owls, raccoons, feral cats. Maybe this used to be the kind of town where people drop by unannounced to borrow sugar, but those days are gone. This is our town now. My town. I worked too hard to get us here—to keep us alive on the road, through all the cold nights, blistered feet, starvation, and terror—to let anyone try and take it away.

Lana gets up to answer the door—it’s reflexive, she can’t help herself—and I motion for her to wait while I get in position. We have a deal. I let her be hospitable, and she lets me make sure it doesn’t come back to bite us. My shotgun lives in the living room closet. I found it at the campground office. It doesn’t have shells, but the action still pumps. The sound should be a deterrent. I hang back behind the big armchair and nod for Lana to do what she has to do.

She steps closer to the door. “Who is it? Friend or foe?” I like the way she always says that—it’s cute—but I wonder if she thinks a foe is likely to be straightforward about their intentions. “Friend.” A man’s voice. I don’t like that. “May I come in? I’m all out of water.” He must have seen the smoke from our chimney. We’re lucky we found a house with a wood-burning cookstove and a working fireplace, but I hate how visible they make our life.

Lana looks to me for permission. I shrug. It’s up to her. She opens the door, careful to stand aside. He comes in slowly, empty hands spread wide. The fact that he thinks about showing he’s not a threat makes me trust him less. “Hi, I’m Tony. Thanks for letting me in.”

She shuts the door. I don’t think the stranger sees me. He looks around, but the living room is dark, and I’m crouched low behind the chair. She stays out of reach—good girl—as she points him toward the table. “Have a seat.” He does what he’s told, keeping his hands above the table. I can’t see a weapon, and he doesn’t look strong—he looks dehydrated, exhausted, as run down as we were when we found this town—but looks can deceive.

He beams when Lana asks if he’s hungry. “Starving.” She gives him a big smile back and gets him a glass of water and a plate of squirrel and onions. He eats like someone who hasn’t seen food in a while. It’s petty, but I’m pleased when she doesn’t offer him pie.

I don’t like how Tony stares at Lana once his bowl and glass are empty. I can’t interpret the stare. Maybe he’s just excited to talk to another person, one who isn’t either dying or trying to kill him. Maybe he’s not that innocent. I don’t want him thinking she’s alone. I sidle into the kitchen, cradling the shotgun. He looks surprised, but he doesn’t get up from his chair. “Hi there,” he says. “I’m Tony. I guess you were making sure I didn’t hurt your friend. That’s good. Friends should look after each other. This world is so rough.”

“My wife,” I say. She isn’t, but she likes it when I stake my claim. He looks a little more surprised, but he doesn’t seem shocked. A point in his favour. We could have gotten married, before—it had been legal for years—but there were always people who would have opposed it. A disappointing number of them survived. At least for a while. I lower the shotgun.

Tony likes to talk, but he doesn’t have anything new to tell us. All road stories sound the same. We let him ramble until I see Lana swallowing a yawn. “Well, past our bedtime,” I tell him. “You can sleep in the guest room, if you don’t mind being locked in.” I don’t want him in our house, but I also don’t want him wandering around where I can’t keep track of him. “Not at all,” he says. “I understand. Women alone—you are alone, aren’t you? I’m sure you’ve got to be careful.” I don’t like that question, or his assumption that being out here without a man means we’re alone. I also don’t like not knowing if he’s really on his own. I keep Lana behind me while we show him to his room. The shutters outside the windows are locked, so he’s not going anywhere unless he axes the door. We take the shotgun up to bed with us.

I have a harder time than usual getting to sleep. It’s been months since our last visitor. I slow my breathing so it won’t keep Lana awake. I can feel her doing the same. I try not to say it—I know she doesn’t want me to—but my mouth doesn’t want to stay shut. “You always seem so happy when someone new stops by.” I sound resentful. I wish I could keep quiet. “I have to be a good hostess,” she says. “You know how I was raised.”

I do know. The opposite to how I grew up. I was a free-range granola kid, despite my joke of a name. I had a pocketknife, a field guide collection, and parents who never cared if I came home for dinner. She went to Jesus camp, Sunday school, Bible study. Her cousins married out of high school while she was praying to shed her sin so she could stop looking at other girls and wondering how they tasted. She hadn’t spoken to any of them—her family, or the girls she used to look at—in years. She never will again. I hold her tighter. “I can’t imagine what Mama would think if she saw how I live now,” she says. “But I know my grandma would be proud I haven’t forgotten all she taught me about hospitality.”

We make Tony breakfast and fill up his canteens. It’s obvious he’d like to stay longer, but we like our peace and quiet. We stand in the doorway and watch him walk off. I wonder where he’s going. I wonder when I’ll find out if he plans to come back. “Good luck out there,” Lana says, waving goodbye. He waves, too, but he keeps walking. I watch until he’s out of sight. It’ll be a while until he’s out of mind, but I hope we’ve seen the last of him. I don’t like most strangers, but I really don’t like the ones that try to stay.

“Maybe I’ll stick around today.” I’d been planning to forage more acorns while the weather is nice. They’re bitter as hell if you eat them raw, but we learned to soak them in water to leach out the tannins. Roasted and pounded into meal, they make great pancakes and pie crust. Ideal sustenance for anyone who loved reading survival manuals as a kid. I wonder if my parents ever dreamed all the field guides and wilderness camps might one day save my life. “No, go on,” Lana says. “You’ll just get in my way. I’m going to do laundry while the sun’s out. You hate laundry.”

I do hate laundry. I’d wear dirty clothes for weeks—for months—to avoid the scrubbing and wringing. Maybe I miss laundry machines the most. I pack the leftover squirrel and onions for lunch and grab my real gun. It’s not the deadliest weapon—practically a toy, a spring piston air rifle I robbed from the gas station once we were sure no one was around to care what we took—but it’s accurate enough for small game. I’ve found a treasure trove of lead pellets in various houses. A few other air guns, too, but this one shoots the straightest. Thank goodness—or badness—for small, rural towns where kids were still playing with guns. Never would have been grateful for that before. It’s been a solid month since we finished the meat I brought home along with that tin of lard. I have to make sure we get enough quality proteins. Might as well thin out the competition for acorns while I’m at it.

It’s dark when I get home. The woods were golden and lovely, and I took my time. My pack is so full I can barely lift it. I’m as rare a provider as any cowboy. I whistle as I repeat my muddy boots on the kitchen floor routine. I’m so busy feeling pleased with myself that I don’t smell what’s cooking until I realize Lana isn’t hissing or squealing over my sins. “Smells great,” I say. “Where’d you find the meat?” “In the freezer in the, um, the yellow house,” she says. “I went for a walk. I think it’s pork.” She’s looking everywhere except at me. I slide my boots off right there. “You okay?” She stirs the stew and stares down into the pot. “Yeah. Just tired.” She dodges my hug and goes to lay the table.

I don’t feel so keen on a bath tonight, but I know she prefers it when I wash up for dinner. She only likes grimy heroes in her yellowed paperbacks. “I’ll just wash my face and put on something clean,” I say. “I’ll be quick. I’m looking forward to hearing about your day. She doesn’t respond.

We eat the stew over wild rice. We gathered that rice together, so it tastes extra good. She doesn’t usually come on foraging trips, but I knew she’d like the marsh. It’s lovely there, full of herons and rustling reeds. Eating that rice reminds me of every perfect day we’ve shared since the world went away. I wonder where she found the meat—she’s never been a hunter—but I don’t really care. It’s delicious. I can taste apples, onions, dandelion greens. I want to lick my bowl, but she doesn’t like that. She’s still too quiet. I won’t tease her tonight.

“You want more?” I serve myself seconds. I worked hard today. I deserve it. She shakes her head. I lick my lips. “How do you make everything taste so good?” She doesn’t answer. I take another bite, chew, swallow. She dissolves into tears.

She won’t let me put my arms around her. “Just let me be, Christine,” she says when I try to stroke her hair. “I don’t want to talk about it. Please, just leave me alone.” I sit beside her and wait for the tears to dry. She makes an awful choking sound and runs upstairs. She knocks her chair over as she goes. She doesn’t stop to pick it up. That scares me. Lana can’t abide untidiness. She’s proud of how perfectly she keeps our house in order. I think about the delicious meat. I think about how we both know there’s nothing worth eating in any freezer in town. There hasn’t been electricity in years.

Lana’s crying in our bedroom. She doesn’t unlock the door when I knock, so I know she really doesn’t want me in there. If privacy is what she wants, I’d better let her have it. I put the leftovers down in the cool cellar, so they’ll keep, then get my candle lantern and head out.

The moon is bright enough I don’t need the candle. A small relief. Light sources are precious. I feel the loss every time we use one up. The unlit lantern’s weight is comforting. It swings from my hand while I stroll to one end of the street and then the other, switching sidewalks to make sure I don’t miss any clues. I’m think I know what I’m looking for, but I don’t know for certain until I reach the church.

The grass grows tall in front of the narrow white building. Someone must have mowed it, before. It’s a tangle of wildness now. I like it this way. I’ve never felt confident that tidiness and godliness have that much in common. The summer-gold stalks and seed heads rattle and whisper in the nighttime breeze. A diagonal swath of flattened plants runs from one corner of the lawn toward the old oak doors. Something heavy’s been dragged through there.

I creak the unlocked doors open and light the candle. There’s a trail of size-five footprints creeping along the dusty vestibule floor, alongside a strip of unexpectedly gleaming floorboards. Whatever was dragged through there must have picked up some dust. I follow the trail back through the sanctuary and wind up in the kitchen. The footprints stop at the walk-in refrigerator where they must have kept food and beverages for church events. I take a deep breath and crank the doors open.

Tony doesn’t look good. He’s missing a leg. Something hit him upside the head much harder than any person could survive. The walk-in’s insulation keeps the worst of the summer heat out, but he won’t keep for long in this weather. I’ll need to deal with the rest of him soon. I scowl at the dead guy—we didn’t need this—and then I head back home to clean up his mess.

Lana’s still crying upstairs. Sobbing is probably better than silence, but it hurts to hear her feeling messed up over a creep like Tony. I knock and wait. “Go away, Christine!” I lean against the door. “I found Tony.”

The crying subsides. I guess the worst part is the fear of being found out. At least, I imagine that’s how it would be. I never had that problem, but then I knew I was doing it to protect the person I love. No one teaches girls that it’s also okay to protect ourselves.

“Lana, I need to show you something.” Silence now. I can’t even hear her breathing. “Please come out.” She sobs again. “Go away!” At least I know she’s listening. I take a deep breath and try to compose a speech. I need to say this right. I need to say what she needs to hear. I need her to hear me, and I need her to understand.

“I’ve been reading your Westerns,” I say. “I’ve been trying to figure out what you like about them. What it is you dream about when you gaze out the window. I’ve tried to imagine being one of your cowboy heroes. Tried to understand if that’s what you want me to be. I know you worry I’ve only stuck with you because you’re here. I know you feel like you have to spoil me with pie and pancakes so I won’t pick up and leave. I see you doing your hair and mending your dresses so there’s no chance I’ll ever see anyone prettier passing through.”

I should have said all this before. I shouldn’t have tried so hard to keep it secret that there was a time I planned to leave. It’s not like she’s stupid. It’s not like she didn’t know.

“Lana.” I hope she’s listening. “I’m not a cowboy. I’m not inclined to roam. It’s been years since I dreamed about hitting the trail. The best thing in my life is coming home to you. I don’t care what you do. I just care about you being okay. Nothing else matters.”

She makes me wait a long time. I don’t blame her. Eventually she sniffles and says “You’re really not mad?” I smile. “Just come out, sweetheart. Everything will be okay.”

The moon’s still high enough to light our way as we walk. I hold her hand, and she doesn’t pull away. She doesn’t ask where we’re going, either, but I can feel her surprise when we don’t stop at the church. I lead her across town and into the campground. She doesn’t like it here, I know. She clings to my arm when the moon disappears behind the clouds.

I’m only in the shed for a minute, but when I come out the moon is back. She’s staring at the light, tears rolling down her cheeks, shining like precious stones. I need to find that girl a diamond. She’ll feel better with my ring on her finger, even if no shows up for our wedding. I never thought to look for jewels when I was ransacking empty houses for tools and candles. That was a mistake. I’ll try to fix it as soon as I can.

When she’s done looking at the moon, I show her what I got from the shed. She looks at the yellowy skull and then at me. “Lana,” I say, “This is Brian. At least it was.” She looks at the skull again. “We met a Brian,” she says. “Our first summer here.” I nod. “You remember how that summer I found a stash of pork that hadn’t gone bad? Even though the power was already a thing of the past?” She goes quiet again, then sighs. “Oh.” I nod. She’s starting to smile. “We ate Brian chops,” she says. “Brian schnitzel. Roast leg of Brian with new potatoes and peas.” “Lucas chops too. Pea soup with Edgar ham. And I smoked up some Julian bacon after we found that book about do-it-yourself butchering. You remember, we had it with acorn pancakes for our anniversary, with the maple syrup we’d boiled down in the spring. Remember how proud of ourselves we were? How we felt like pioneers, like in your books?” The diamonds on her cheeks have dried, leaving only the faintest shimmer of salt on her skin. I put Brian back in my trophy shed and take her home.

Everything looks better in morning light. Lana’s eyes are a little red, but I make a point of telling her she’s the most beautiful thing I’ve ever seen in my life. It might not be completely true—if you’ve ever seen sunrise over a marsh, you know there’s no person on earth half so lovely as the dawn light painting the mirror of still water framed by lilies and reeds—but she’s the most beautiful person I’ll see in whatever remains of this life. She might as well know it.

Eventually we make it out of bed. I brush her hair. I try to braid it, too, until she giggles at my clumsy hands. She didn’t find them so clumsy half an hour ago, but laughter always helps her pull herself together. She puts her hair up high in a sleek knot that makes me want to pull it all right back down. She reaches for one of those little dresses she likes to wear around the house, but I hand her some jeans. “It’s gorgeous outside,” I say. “Why don’t you come look for acorns with me?” I’m sure she’s got chores, but I can’t leave her alone today. Fresh air will do her good. “Really? I won’t slow you down?” I should ask her to come with me more often. She puts on the jeans and a big sun hat and packs a picnic.

It takes her longer to ask than I thought it would. “What happened to Brian?” The knapsack is full of acorns, and we’re looking for a good picnic spot. I didn’t bring the air rifle. There’s plenty of meat down at the church. We’ll smoke it before it spoils. No sense in wasting it. There’s no knowing when another stranger will come to play.

“I didn’t like the way he looked at you,” I tell her. “I couldn’t have him coming around again when you might be alone.” She bites her lip. “Tony came back.” I’d figured he must have. Lana wouldn’t have gone after him. “Did he hurt you?” She shakes her head. “He said he forgot something. He—he wanted to come back in. He wouldn’t let me get a word in edgewise. I was so stupid. I should never have unlocked the door. I ran. I didn’t know what else to do. He caught up with me by the church. And I was still holding the rolling pin. And—and I hit him. And he just fell down.”

I sit on the soft moss and reach for her. She doesn’t pull away. “I didn’t know what to do,” she says again, voice muffled, face pressed into my shoulder. “Shhhh. It’s okay. You did okay. You did fine.” “He just,” she says, “He wouldn’t stop talking. I know it’s wrong but I’m not even sorry.” I pet her hair. I’ve never felt so proud. “We can’t trust anyone these days.”

“He went down so fast, Christine. I only hit him once. And I saw him lying there, and I started thinking about how anemic you got when we tried to be vegan, you know, back when we could pretend there was one way to live right. And…” She stops. I know the rest. I squeeze her so tight I hope she can tell I never want to let go. “We have to eat,” I tell her. “We have as much right to live as anything else.” She sniffles, but it sounds like a token effort. “He just wouldn’t stop talking.” This time she sounds indignant. Probably a good sign.

We take an evening bath together. The rain tank’s running low, so it’s best to economize. She lets me wash her hair while she muses aloud over how she could make a savoury squirrel pie with an acorn-meal crust. “That’s dark,” I say. “Cook ‘em right in their favourite food. I’m for it.” She giggles. I rinse the soap from her hair and find other spots that need my attention. The water goes cold sooner than I’d like.

I’m ravenous when we finally make it downstairs. I fetch the leftover stew from the cellar before I think to wonder if it’s too soon. I pause at the top of the cellar stairs with the pot in my hands. “Is this—do you want me to make something else?” She sighs and shakes her head. “It’s okay, Christine. I guess I always knew what we were eating. All those times some guy came through and then you found meat.” She looks so determined I have to stifle a smile. I head for the stove. “You sure?” “I’m sure. You always say we can’t waste good food. We’re not wasting any now.”

We eat quietly. I still want to lick my bowl, but I won’t tease her. She’s doing so well. I wish I’d already found her that diamond. I’ll go on a quest. I’d like to see it on her finger. I want to see the look in her eyes when she finally believes I’ll never leave her. I scrub the dishes while she cuts the last piece of pie in half. The crust is getting soggy, but it still tastes good.

Lana sits at the table while I wash the pie dish. She’s wearing her thinking face. It’s one of my favourite things she habitually wears, ranking just after nothing at all. She gets up and walks around the kitchen, looking at me sideways. I wait by the sink. I think I finally understand what she likes about the Westerns. It’s not the heroes. It’s the way those people settle in lonely places and do whatever it takes to survive and find some happiness.

“Just to be sure,” she says, “We’ve never eaten any women. Have we, Christine? Not Leah who passed through last winter? Or that nice Jamie who was looking for her sister? I couldn’t bear it if we ate Jamie. You know she wouldn’t have hurt us, even if she did come back to visit like she said she might when she found Jessie. Please say we didn’t.”

I hope she can tell my wounded look is real. I doubt I’d feel bad if we had eaten Jamie, but I want her to believe I care about right and wrong. Maybe I don’t, but I do care what she thinks. I care enough that sometimes I let good meat walk away. Jamie, Ayaka, Sabrina, Priya, Julie, Nala, Debra. Oh, Debra. Debra looked so delicious, and I let her go. I hope Jamie does come back, so Lana never has reason to doubt me. I furrow my brow to deepen the scowl, for comic effect. “What do you think I am, sweetheart? A damn cannibal?”

She laughs. Good. That’s all I wanted. I’m not good at laughing, but I don’t need to be. I don’t care about the world, or anyone in it apart from her. I was never a nice girl. Maybe that makes me a monster. I’m a monster who stays alive, though, and a monster who provides.

I watch her walking around the kitchen, absorbing what I’ve said. I watch as she looks down in time to see her clean bare feet stepping into my dried-up mud footprints. I step back out of reach, just to be safe. I’m careful not to look towards her rolling pin. I’ll have to find her a new one for pies so she can save this one for emergencies. She sees where I’m not looking, but she doesn’t flinch. She just looks at her dirty feet and hands me the mop.