writing novel chapter fiction scifi post-self qoheleth
Dear wasn’t kidding about the smells. Ioan turned eir sensorium’s sensitivity way up. Ey wondered if Dear’s vulpine nose could smell things eirs could not.
Serene had worked wonders here. The smells, the textures, the raw beauty of the place, all well crafted. It was a fine line that she had walked, too. Too far in one direction and the landscape would have become nearly desolate, more foreboding than natural. Any further in the other, and it would’ve been softened too much, would’ve become too well-tended. Cartoonish.
As the two crunched their way through the short, stiff stalks of grass, winding their way around the larger tussocks, Ioan realized that ey was quite taken with the place.
A ridiculous house in the middle of nowhere, a glittering white fox and its partner, the prairie fading off into downs on one side and stretching out to infinity on the other. It had all seemed so contrived when ey had first visited. Too simple. Too one dimensional. Kind of tacky.
But it was all just so well done. So incredibly, skillfully executed. The artistry was in the details, and the details were fractal, continuing down through ever finer layers. The landscape’s perfection was echoed in Dear’s unique sensibilities and its comfortable relationship.
Ioan liked it here.
Ey was dawdling, past the comfortable stage of just enjoying the petrichor being washed in before the storm.
“Sorry, lost in thought.”
“It is alright,” Dear said. “You looked like you needed it.”
“Hmm? Getting lost in thought? Or getting out of the apartment?”
Dear shrugged and smiled.
“Sorry all the same. I’m here now. Will try not to do that again.” Ioan grinned sheepishly. “What did you find out? You seemed almost punchy.”
“I was, definitely. Still am.” The fox grinned. “We seem to have found out who our…ah, who our target is.”
Ioan mulled over the word ‘target’, searching for a better one. Ey couldn’t think of any, so ey nodded. “What do we know?”
“We know a name, and from there we can find a bit of history, which you may be able to help in filling in.”
“Names are good. Something other than Qoheleth?”
“Other than that, yes, but almost certainly connected, probably the same person. I think they’re the same, at least. Not much more than the name, though. No location, no sightings in ages. Some aging — or agéd — resources. A name and some history.”
Ioan gave an impatient gesture with eir hand. “Well, what’s the hold-up?”
Dear’s grin widened. “The hold-up is that I want you to feel some of the excitement that I felt on hearing this from down-tree. I want you excited and invested.”
“I’ve been working twenty hour days on this, I’m pretty fucking invested.”
The grin turned into a laugh. “I know you have. My partner is worried about you.”
Ioan felt heat rise to eir cheeks. “Sorry, I didn’t mean to be a bother being up so much.”
“No, no. We cannot hear you or anything. They are just worried because we do not hear you, or hear from you. We both like you.”
The historian nodded, chastened.
“Do not worry about it, Ioan. It really is fine.” Dear patted eir shoulder. “The name, though. The name is the important thing right now.”
“And the name is?” Ioan’s mind raced. Could Dear even say the name? Was it the poet, miraculously talking through years to the system? That would be exciting.
“Life Breeds Life, But Death Must Now Be Chosen, of the Ode clade.”
Ioan froze.
Dear stopped a few paces ahead and turned, looking intently at em while its tail lashed excitedly behind it.
“They…what?”
“Good.” Dear laughed. “I am glad that I am not the only one who had to pick their jaw up off the ground.”
Ioan stuffed eir hands in eir pockets. Brought them back out to press against eir forehead. Crossed eir arms. Returned eir hands to eir pockets. Suddenly anxious. “I thought you said that Qoheleth couldn’t be from within the clade.”
“And so I believed. For him to share the Name is…a breach. Apostasy of a sort that I thought precluded the very prospect.”
Ioan did not push further, instead relishing the surprise. “It’s a real the-call’s-coming-from-inside-the-house moment.”
Dear tilted its head, ears perked.
“Never mind. Old trivia.” Ioan shook eir head and rocked back on eir heels. “How, though? How’d you get the name?”
“A hunch I had, actually, though someone else dug it up.”
“What was the hunch?”
“‘Signifier.’“
Ioan rifled through eir mental notes on the project. “Signifier…from the first encrypted note? Signifier is the password something something?”
Dear nodded. “Hardly anyone uses it anymore, but signifier used to be what we called the names of long-lived branches. It’s still used here and there among older clades.”
“Right, yeah. Ioan Bălan is my name, Ioan#c1494bf is my signifier.”
“Yes. It fell out of use quickly. Too clumsy a word. I use it now and then, when I can get away with it.”
“Makes sense, yeah. So they’re…”
“They are an Odist, yes. Way, way down-tree. One of the first instances.” Dear’s smile faltered, “We were not very good at record keeping back then. We are not really now, to be honest, but the system is better. We…we did not know that he was still alive.”
“Didn’t know? I thought you all talked to each other. You must, in order to keep the names straight. Wait, ‘he’?”
“Remember, all of our names are chosen from our stanza. I talk with the other nine within my stanza every now and then — some more than others — and we filled out the stanza not long ago.” The fox’s expression grew glassy. “Life Breeds Life…that is the second stanza, first line. They are a conservative bunch. I only know one or two, but I assume that others are out there. And yes, ‘he’. Michelle was a woman, but those early days were heady.”
Ioan nodded, “So the first stanza were the first forked, meaning he was the eleventh fork?”
“The first line from each stanza were the first forked, back when it cost to fork. Like, cost real reputation. Anyway, the first fork of the second stanza — second fork overall — must have just been a little more conservative than the rest of us. Or liberal. It is difficult to discern.”
“I…hmm. May I ask something potentially personal?”
Dear nodded.
“The Odists that don’t want me digging into this too much, the ones you didn’t really talk to, are they from that side of the clade?”
The fox’s ears perked, “To the last, yes. Why?”
“How will, er…”
“Life Breeds Life, But Death Must Now Be Chosen. Just Life is fine, too.”
“How will Life react to the search? To me?”
Dear shrugged and turned its back on Ioan.
The historian stood, quiet and still, and watched as the fox took a few steps deeper into the prairie, crossed its arms and stood straight, staring up into the bruised sky. “To the second bit, I do not know that it matters. They — Life, or Qoheleth, or whatever — are one of us. And even those of us who did not want any outsiders brought on board are only frowning, looking down their noses at the thought, not gathering up arms.”
“And to the first bit?” Ioan pressed. “What do you think he will think of the search?”
“What do I think? Or what do I feel?”
Ioan scuffed eir foot against the grass. The temperature was dropping out on the prairie. It would be an inconvenience to have to slosh back to the house if it rained.
“Both.”
“I think that he would probably get a kick out of it. I know that am. Several of the others are, and the ones who are not just do not care that much or are perhaps more angry than curious.” Dear turned back around. Its arms were held tight against it’s front, guarding. Whether from cold or emotion, Ioan couldn’t tell. “As for what I feel, I feel that it is his game. He is the one running it. But even if it is a game, it is not play. There is no real fun in it, just…snark. Anger. Pride, maybe. It is a game he has worked at perfecting, and he wants us to see that.”
Ioan marveled at the change in Dear, though with this raise in stakes, ey felt some of the same.
The fox’s smile was weak as it added, “He has designs. Designs and reasons.”
Ioan and Dear trudged back to the low block of concrete, a bunker against the storm, as a chill wind swept away the petrichor and brought with it the rain.