PseudoPod 1032: Flash on the Borderlands LXXVIII (78): Terraeque urbesque recedant
Show Notes
From the author: “Othertongue” began as a pastiche of H.P. Lovecraft’s “The Colour Out of Space,” provoked by real political rhetoric about languages from across the American borders. As it developed, it found its own voice and purpose, growing into its own version of the Weird. I wrote this story in March 2024, and sadly, it has seemed only to get more timely and relevant as the year progressed.
“We didn’t cross the border, the border crossed us.”
Jacob Street
by L. Marie Wood
“Again?”
“Every damn time,” Kate said, running a hand through her hair.
“Aren’t there supposed to be satellites checking the routes all day long? There’s like 30 of them in space, right?”
Kate shook her head because she didn’t know and didn’t care. All she knew was that every time they drove to Jacob Street or anywhere near it, the GPS dropped them right into the bay. It didn’t matter if it was one of those old, clunky box type GPS systems that people used to mount on their dashboards, the touchscreen ones that came with higher-end cars, or an app on a smartphone.
“You’d think we’d know the way by now,” Glenn said under his breath but loud enough for Kate to catch his words on the wind. And they should have. They’d travelled the same route at least four times in the past six years from the same starting point. They did the same things when they went on that route too: started later than expected, both of them procrastinating without meaning to; stopped for breakfast at some roadside dive, always saying they would try someplace new when they got in the car but ending up at the same hazy windowed joint; stopped for flowers and one of those green metal vases with the narwal-like point to dig into the ground… and ended up looking at the little icon for their car lying at the bottom of the bay.
“You’d think,” Kate said and knew she didn’t have to say it, but did anyway, because he didn’t have to say it either but he did. When he said it, it sounded like something… something she didn’t like. ‘We’ sounded a lot like ‘you’ and she didn’t care for it at all. She also didn’t care for the haughtiness of his tone, the condescension. It reeked of accusation, chastisement. Blame.
No, she didn’t like the way it sounded at all. (Continue Reading…)
