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Saturday, January 17, 2026

Brother's Keeper


About a week after the buffalo run, Loksee heard whispers that his character would soon come under attack.  He had an inkling as to when and why.  As he suspected, around the fire, under the full moon of early spring, Isatai, the tribe’s greatest hunter, announced that it was time for Truth Talk of Loksee’s worth.  Loksee, fifteen years old, stood tall and announced that he brought the tribe vegetables from his garden to accompany the buffalo they’d all had at supper that very evening.  He’d also harvested mushrooms after the recent rain, pounds that would be  delicious in a stew.  He’d dehydrated them and had been developing a recipe pot with Xama, the medicine woman.

Isatai’s grin was unkind as he asked, Do you plan to run away and pick mushrooms and consort with your plants every time we hunt?  

The laughter coming from the fire lit faces was loud and cruel.  Isatai reminded everyone that Loksee’s younger brother, Quanah, had just killed a buffalo while Loksee was out picking berries.  Again, there was uproarious laughter, but none would look Loksee in the eye.  None but Isatai, who sneered, and then flicked his wrist for Loksee to leave, saying, This fire is for hunters and warriors.

Loksee was dizzy as he turned his back on the fire.  He was numb, but his eyes blurred with tears after the shock of the rejection wore off.  He staggered under the bright moonlight to his garden.  Oscillating between hopelessness and frustration, he yanked up his roots and leafy greens.  He slapped his face to quell the pain, but his anguish was so great that he thought about throwing himself into the ravine.  

But then the self loathing and inward pointing arrows began to turn outward as his bitterness paired with outrage.  Isatai had judged him unfairly.  As Loksee’s mind steeped in the sense of profound injustice, he thought about the look in Isatai’s eye, the hatred, the accusation of cowardice beneath that cruel smile.

Five years ago, Isatai had promised Loksee’s father to raise Loksee and Quanah like his own boys if he didn’t come back from the battle in the valley.  Loksee’s father had fought valiantly, but only Toklia returned to report the massacre.  Isatai, trying to do right by his word, had a conversation with the boys, eight and ten.  

You boys will be warriors, like your father, said Isatai.  I will teach you how to kill buffalo, and you will honor--”

I don’t want to kill buffalo, interrupted the ten-year-old Loksee.  He told Isatai that his father’s blood had seeped into the ground like a buffalo’s, and he didn’t want to be part of that cycle of death.  He wanted to continue harvesting plants with Xama.

Loksee remembered how Isatai had looked at him, baffled and uncomprehending.  Every boy dreams of killing buffalo.  Every boy wanted to grow up to be like Isatai.  

I would have died next to you father, gladly, but my foot was broken, said Isatai.  Blood shed, whether from one’s self in battle or a buffalo’s after a hunt, will bring you closer to Panah.

Loksee nodded, and said, I am not so eager to leave this earth and meet Panah.  There is much to learn and many to heal with plant medicine.

From that moment on, Isatai despised Loksee.  The animosity turned to a freeze out, and for five years they’d been strangers, passing one another like ghosts.  That would have been okay, forever, but Loksee knew that Isatai would call for Truth Talk.  But he had never suspected the complete shut out, the unanimity of renunciation.  He thought of those laughing faces, the eyes which would not meet his own.

The combination of shame and rage eclipsed the light within Loksee.  Within the tornado of blackness, Loksee realized there was a way out.  He crept to the outskirts of the forest, where his brother was sleeping, and bashed Quanah’s head in with a rock.  It was the only thing that would restore balance.  There needed to be bloodshed that resulted in pain, but not for Quanah.  It was a big rock, so his brother died instantly.

Let them hate me, but they will also hate Isatai.    

Loksee threw the rock down the ravine.  He gathered his vegetables and dried mushrooms in buffalo skin and hoped they would sustain him as he fled.  Winter was over, so his buffalo-skin cloak and breechcloth would be enough protection against the elements.   

As he tied the corners of the buffalo skin closed with a cord of sinew, he thought about how it was fortunate that Quanah slept far away from the others.  Quanah was a late riser.  Bitkehl wouldn’t discover the body till the sun was at its zenith tomorrow.  There was time to formulate a plan.  He thought of trails over the mountains.  He considered skirting the ravine on the grouse trail.  Instead, he chose the most treacherous route along the river.  Who would scale the cliffs in the moonlight?  

There would be no tracks on the craggy ledges that guided the river to the plains below, but Loksee nearly fell as he navigated a rough stretch quite early on.  He’d climbed the cliff before, but never with a bulging skin clenched between his teeth.  But, with his mind in contortions, Loksee resigned himself to going down with his vegetables into the waters and dying rather than let go of his worth. 

When he’d gone further than ever before, Loksee came to a channel that squeezed the water between two boulders above a ten foot waterfall.  The mist rose up and coated everything, and Loksee found morel mushrooms next to a burnt log on the shore.  Loksee suspected lighting and thanked Pahah for the bolt.  He would have liked to cook these meaty mushrooms, but there was no time for fire, and the scent would give him away.  The leathery mushrooms tasted of the earth and mucus but strengthened his body as he pushed through  thick bushes on the river’s bank.  

When the foliage thinned, the moon sliced at an angle which made the pines cast shadows that pointed at Loksee.  He felt exposed.  When the face of Quanah arose in his mind, he would pick up his pace.  It seemed that everything loomed over him, everything knew what he’d done, and it occurred to Loksee that he could not run from his own mind.  Ever.   

As Venus rose in the east above the mountains, the going was easier.  The gulch had widened, and he could trot along the shore without fear of falling into the water that whispered and gurgled contentedly.  In the indigo of predawn, he came to the bridge he’d been warned about since childhood.  It spanned the river and connected the shores of a wagon trail that ran parallel to the base of the mountains.  He knew to avoid these arteries which connected towns to cities.  After the battle in the valley, they were patrolled by men who would kill him on site.  So, again thinking to throw Isatai off his scent, Loksee took the wagon trail.  Always glancing over his shoulder, he traveled along the base of the mountains without seeing hide nor hair of anyone.

Wishing to preserve his sustenance, that following day, Loksee would pause if he spotted something he could eat.  However, just before the second sunset, he decided to dip into his supplies.  He rooted through a rotten log and found plump, white grubs, but instead of simply popping the beetle larvae into his mouth, as he found them, he decided to gather all he could in his cloak.  Then he pounded them into a paste along with a fat yam from his sack.  He mashed it all into a putty on a boulder with a hefty rock.  The gelatinous, semi-sweet stuff wasn’t as good as he’d hoped, but protein starved and famished, Loksee ate at least a half pound of the grubby, yam jam.  And then satiated, exhausted, his body and mind needed to shut down.  He lay under a pine tree, and despite whining mosquitoes, he fell into a deep sleep.  

As the trail bent eastward into a wedge between the mountains the next morning, Loksee smelled smoke.  Cautious, he proceeded until he spotted the small campfire.  The sun had just come over the mountain peaks and shone where Loksee stood on the trail.  The four horses, at least two men, and a large, white tent were nestled under a cliff outcropping which was still in the shade.  About two stones throw from this camp, Loksee had the sun in his face as he called out the only English he knew.

Hell? Loksee hollered, meaning to say hello.

The two men by the fire scrambled to their feet.  One stepped into the sunlight, but with his wide brimmed hat, Loksee couldn’t see his face.  He did see a glint of metal as the man raised his hand.  Was it a knife?  

Hell?  Loksee called out again, this time a little louder.

After a cracking bang, a pine branch behind Loksee’s head exploded.  He couldn’t help the yelp that came out of him, and he crouched and covered his head.  Then he heard a booming voice issuing a reprimand.  He peered out from under his hands.  An enormous man, wearing all black and a stovepipe hat, had emerged from the tent and was chastising the man with the revolver.  He guided the gunslinger back into the shade, and then stepped into the sunlight like an elongated shadow.  He said something, in his deep, rich voice, but Loksee didn’t understand the words.  Only the reassuring tone.

Loksee, his voice cracking, answered back in his own tongue, asking if his vegetables and dried mushrooms were of any worth.    

Everything had fallen out of the buffalo skin that he hadn’t bothered to tie up properly with the sinew after waking up covered in mosquito bites.  It had been a rough start to the day, and his vegetables were strewn about the trail.  He sighed, indicated the mess, and began to gather them back up in his cloak.  Then, after spreading out the skin, he organized his wares in front of himself on the coarse leather.  He sat behind his display with his legs crossed and looked at the man in black and explained his situation, succinctly.

Isatai doesn’t care that my vegetables go well with the buffalo because they don’t bleed and die.  He convinced, unjustly, the tribe to reject me.  To rectify the imbalance, and create a triangle of justice, I killed my brother.  You can kill me, to square things up, or you can accept me and my offering.

The man in black, despite objections from his two companions, Earl and Dale, approached the buffalo skin to take a look.  He had a strange note in his voice as he greeted Loksee.  He pointed to the produce, and Loksee saw that the giant’s finger was thick as a spear and long.  The man in black, noticing this, chuckled, and said something which Loksee guessed was a friendly inquiry.    

Cain, is it you?  Have you wandered to the land of Nod for refuge with your offering of vegetables?

Loksee took these unintelligible questions to mean acceptance when the man in black pulled him to his feet.  With an enormous paw, he slapped Loksee’s back and said something to Earl and Dale about shepherds welcoming lost sheep.

Earl said that Loksee looked more like a goat, and said, Ask him why he was hollering out hell.  

Loksee didn’t understand the words, only that Earl gave him the evil eye as the man in black coaxed him in to share the warmth of the fire.  

A vegetable offering, said the man in black to his cohorts.  We now have something with which to garnish our breakfast beans.  However, brother Earl, you would have incurred a curse from the Almighty if you’d have harmed this one.  Can you not see the mark?

Earl looked Loksee up and down and then to Dale who shrugged.

The man in black erupted in a woofing laughter that made the tent cloth tremble.  The horses whinnied.  The man in black said, If your mind was not closed, you might see with your eyes, brother Earl.

Is that in Mark or Matthew? Dale asked.  He nodded to Loksee with friendly eyes.

Matthew, chapter thirteen, the man in black replied.  

The man in black was a preacher who was slowly making his way north along the mountains.  Well over seven feet tall, he had a genetic disorder that caused him to grow about  a quarter inch a year.  He was 24 now, but he looked closer to 40 and would probably be dead in a decade.  But Earl and Dale, having experienced the preacher’s gift, had dedicated themselves to protecting his ministry.  They knew he was a true apostle because he carried the Holy Spirit in his hands.

Loksee knew nothing of this, only that the preacher was kind and had an undeniable charisma when he spoke.  For the first two months, the preacher didn’t hold a Sunday service.  He always waited for instructions from on high.  

As for Loksee didn’t know a lick of English upon meeting the travelers, but both Dale and the man in black remarked at how quickly he was picking up the language.  It seemed he could understand almost everything after only a month.  

One summer afternoon, the preacher came back from a walk, smiling.  He announced, Loksee is to read and recite for the glory of God.  You shall begin at the beginning with Genesis.  Do you understand this, Loksee?

Loksee did, and, just as he was unnaturally gifted when it came to comprehending English, he was quick at memorizing and formulating the letters.  For two days, he worked his way through the alphabet with Dale.  Earl scowled, but Loksee avoided looking at him.  After Isatai, Loksee was accustomed to living in close proximity to someone who hated him.  

And then from the tent, the following evening, the preacher called out for Loksee to sit next to him on the floor.  He thought it best to be grounded when reading from the good book.  Loksee examined the first word: only two characters but much smaller than the letters that Dale would draw for him.

When Loksee pronounced the word ‘in’ on his third attempt, the preacher shouted, Hallelujah!  But then, when Loksee guessed at the word ‘the’, the preacher articulated it for him.  When Loksee tried to repeat it, saying ‘da’ or ‘deh’, the preacher became frustrated.  ‘The’ was the second word of Genesis, and the preacher’s vision had revealed immaculate recitation.  That night’s lesson ended then and there. 

You must practice saying ‘the’ correctly, and we will resume tomorrow evening, said the preacher.  Then, as was his custom, he left the camp to commune with Almighty.  He didn’t return that night because the Holy Spirit had given him a vision of a tragedy which was to come at redemption’s door.  Dale remarked that the preacher’s face was ashen, that he should get some rest.  The preacher conceded and ducked into the tent for a nap.  

Dale stoked the fire and nodded for Loksee to come over.  He explained that he couldn’t help overhearing his problem with pronouncing ‘the’.

Loksee nodded and Dale smiled.

I reckon, if you flick your tongue from between your teeth for the ‘the’ sound, as opposed to the back of the palette, behind the teeth, for a ‘duh’ sound, like this: Dale demonstrated.  

But then Earl, twenty feet away by the horses, told Dale to quit bothering the preacher’s pet.  He doesn’t understand a word you're saying, just spits back words like a parrot.

Dale shot a warning glance at Earl.  They both knew that when the preacher went down after an all-night vigil, only God could wake him up, yet there were certain lines, like besmirching the preacher, that weren’t to be crossed.  

He advised Earl, If Preach chose to adopt this Indian boy, you better adapt to this Indian boy.  You festering about nothing, with ignorant words falling out of you like horse apples, is not acceptable.

Thanks to Dale, Loksee practiced the ‘the’ technique, and learned to articulate in a way the preacher found acceptable the next evening as they sat on the tent floor, bent over Genesis.

It took two moon cycles for Loksee to make it through the first chapter of Genesis without a hitch.  The progress was slow as the preacher would ask him to begin again from the beginning, if, and when, he slipped up. 

In the beginning God created…

In late summer, the nights were hot, and Loksee was sweating as he worked through the second chapter with the preacher.  His focus on elocution was intense, with the new words, but the first chapter rolled off his tongue with ease.  This was because during the day, as Loksee went about harvesting roots and vegetables for the camp, he recited what he knew like a mantra.  He could see the world being created, and although he was more than curious about what would happen next, the preacher never left him alone with the Bible.  He explained that God had a plan.  Then he looked sad and broke eye contact, saying, There’s no hiding from the Almighty, Loksee.  You might not be so eager for the harvest when you find that you will reap what you’ve sewn.  

One morning in early autumn, after the preacher had spent another sleepless night communing with the Almighty, he returned to camp and announced that he was to preach next Sunday.  There was a small town they’d be approaching tomorrow that needed ministering.  The town was losing faith and the Almighty had asked the preacher to restore it with his gift.

Earl and Dale clapped their hands and looked absolutely thrilled.  The preacher, too tired to reflect their exuberance with anything but a slight smile, looked to Loksee.

And, my dear boy, you are to recite.

Although Loksee could say the first two chapters in his sleep, what the preacher was asking seemed like an impossibility.  Dale and Earl had both spoken of the Holy Spirit in the preacher’s hands, his sermons that shook the foundations of the earth, the throngs of people who’d be moved to shout praises.  Loksee was being asked to recite the first two chapters of Genesis in this chaos?  Impossible, but there was no saying no to the preacher.

That Sunday morning, the preacher told Earl and Dale to usher the faithful into the tent.  Because he hadn’t slept again, the preacher’s grim countenance was all-the-more dark and foreboding as he towered behind his pulpit.  

The preacher began with the fall of man, and the sacrifice that was made to save us.

Just as Abel sacrificed a lamb, the preacher said, Christ came down to earth as the lamb of God.  He was not only sacrificed for our redemption but was crucified!  The preacher bellowed.  More than a few gasped.  Everyone shifted.   

After twenty ticks of silence, with the preacher looking from face to face, he resumed in a deep growl.  Many of you believe in redemption but fear those who you believe are beyond God’s grace.  You’ve certainly heard of the Indians attacking wagon trains.  Only five years ago, in what they call the battle in the valley, Comanche not only killed but tortured innocent migrants like yourselves.  An earlier train had attacked them, and so they were seeking vengeance.  A cycle began, but where will it end?

As the preacher paused, he noted looks of concern.

However, the preacher said, extending his club of an index finger, and wagging it over each word of his question:  Are they not our brothers and sisters? 

None in the tent answered, all eyes wide, some looking very hard and hurt. 

Are they doomed to forever walk in darkness?  Can they not be saved?

The preacher’s voice was soft but firm as he insisted, We must begin again to believe that Christ’s blood was shed for all mankind.

That was Loksee’s cue, and there were jostlings and murmurs as he came out from behind a curtain and stood next to the preacher.  Although he’d traveled in a western style shirt and dungarees the past several months, he emerged in the breechcloth and buffalo skin cloak that he’d fled his tribe in.  

Loksee looked out at the two dozen faces in attendance.  He was nervous as he began.

In the beginning God created the Heavens and the Earth…

Loksee plowed through what he’d committed to memory as the preacher spoke over the top of him about redemption for all.  He reminded the congregation of God’s infinite mercy and asked for ‘Amens’.  With momentum, the spirit moving through the room, a few present shouted praises.  The preacher, already a giant, seemed to grow as he worked up a proper fervor, roaring with hallelujahs that reverberated like thunder.  Loksee was midway through the second chapter when the preacher began to clap.  Earl and Dale struck up a hymn to the preacher’s rhythm.  It was about being washed in the blood of the lamb, and on the third pass, everyone was singing it, clapping, dancing, and the tent was getting hot.    

Dale and Earl’s voices harmonized, and Loksee was impressed by the way they’d move from hymn to hymn, looping catchy melodies that everyone could clap and stomp to.  But finally, when everyone was dripping with sweat, the preacher mopped his brow and said that perhaps he could bestow unto the faithful a parting gift.

That was Dale’s cue, and he posted himself a few steps in front of the preacher with his hat off.  Earl walked up to him and got a coin from his pocket and dropped it into the hat.  Dale took the coin out and shook his head and handed it back to Earl.  He made a motion for paper, rubbing his thumb and forefinger together.  The congregation, loose and relaxed, laughed as Earl made an exasperated expression.  But then he retrieved a dollar from his wallet and put it in Dale’s hat.  A smattering of laughter followed by an air of solemnity which seemed to sweep across the room.  The parting gift.  Some knew about it, but nobody more than Earl and Dale.  

Earl heaved a nervous sigh, readying himself.  He shook his hands out.  

The congregation was leaning forward and wide-eyed as Earl took a knee in front of the preacher.  And then, the preacher’s voice erupted in a blast of unintelligible syllables as his hand encircled Earl’s head.

Standing three feet away, Loksee felt something like electricity in the air come off the preacher.  Earl went stiff, and Dale helped him not topple over.  As he was lowered to the floor, Loksee became apprehensive.  Earl wasn’t breathing.  But then, by the smile on Earl’s face, radiant when he came to, and slowly got to his feet, Loksee saw that the preacher had good medicine in his hands.   

So it was with the congregation, who, seeing how Earl was so obviously rejuvenated and refreshed, decided to fork over a day’s wage for the preacher’s gift.  In the end, after Dale received the gift and motioned to Loksee, the preacher shook his head.  He offered no explanation as to why Loksee wasn’t offered the gift other than a sad look which made Loksee’s heart ache.     

The next morning, the preacher woke them early and said they needed to make haste.  A town in the plains needed him.  

A week later, there was a similar sermon, and then they zigzagged around the base of the mountains, as the Almighty saw fit.  In early autumn, after a minute of Earl lying prone on the floor of the tent, the congregation looked unsure about lining up.  But after Earl recovered and got to his feet, Dale waved at a tentative looking woman in the front.  The preacher nodded to her.  

She said she only had fifty cents, but a man in the back of the tent said he’d pay for her to receive the preacher’s gift.  He was one of the skeptical newspaper men who thought it was all a sham.  However, after she went stiff, and rose up stammering blessings, a line formed.  Even the non believers understood that this was an opportunity to get the preacher’s giant paw encircling their heads for a buck, if nothing else.  Some held back until witnessing Jim Bob, a no-nonsense farmer, go stiff and then rise to his feet with a hoot and a holler and a Glory to God, grinning from ear to ear.

That night the air was cool and crisp.  The full moon of the harvest rose up, crimson from all the smoke.  Farms in the valley were burning chaff after the harvest.  Loksee was happy to serve a dish of squash that everyone found delightful.  When he remarked on the moon being beautiful, the preacher seemed withdrawn and distant.  He sounded depressed when he led Loksee into the tent to begin the fourth chapter of Genesis.

You won’t be starting over tonight, the preacher told Loksee.

Loksee spent about five minutes on the fourth chapter, glancing up to the preacher as he sounded out the words.  Stumbling, and not having to start from the top, was so highly unusual.  The preacher looked glum as Loksee pieced together the story of Cain and Abel.  And, as he knew would happen, Loksee suddenly stopped.

Loksee flushed.  His heart began pounding, and he found that his palms were suddenly slick with sweat.  He opened his mouth but faltered.

Yes, Loksee, the preacher said.  He reached out his hand and wrapped his fingers around Loksee’s skull, as if it were no larger than an apple.

Loksee trembled and asked, How does this book know what I…” He trailed off.  His flesh felt assaulted with pins and pricks.

The preacher, appraising Loksee’s distress with a look of compassion, said, You can not hide from the Almighty, Loksee.  Then he leaned his head back and spoke a tangle of syllables, his voice seeming to fill everything.  Loksee went stiff.  He had no concept of time or space, only that the universe was a vibrating string of love and hope and salvation.

The obsidian blade was so sharp that Loksee didn’t feel it.  His first sensation was the hot liquid pouring down the side of his neck.  He pressed a palm against the wound and whirled around, but his shock subsided as he recognized the face of Isatai.

I forgive you, said Loksee.

This is for the life you robbed of Quanah, Isatai said, and plunged the blade into the other side of Loksee’s neck.

The preacher lifted the Bible from Loksee’s lap.  He began to read where Loksee had left off on the tenth verse:  Thy brother’s blood crieth to me from the ground.  

You thought I would not find you? Isatai demanded, but Loksee was already gone.

Isatai pulled the body out of the tent.  Dale and Earl wrapped the exsanguinated corpse in canvas and secured it on Isatai’s horse.  

After finishing the fourth chapter, the preacher emerged from the tent.  He informed Isatai that he’d incurred a curse.  Loksee bore the mark of Cain.

Uncomprehending, Isatai was expressionless as he looked up at the preacher.  He said nothing before turning.  They watched him lead his horse into the night.  Then they looked at the pile of pelts Isatai had brought in exchange for Loksee.

No one said a word as the preacher stoked the fire and tossed the pelts, one by one, into the flames.  

Thursday, January 15, 2026

Good Woman Murdered



 




They were wedged into the corner booth at Wendy’s, the unofficial break sanctuary, vinyl cracked and sticky with years of spilled Frosty, when the conversation circled back—again—to Rene Good. Everyone had a version of what happened, Maya thought, like a Rorschach blot soaked in blood. The footage had gone beyond viral; it had crossed into something permanent, something etched. You watched it and were told not to trust your eyes, Orwellian double-think. 

“This shit freaks me out,” Maya said, tapping the table her manicured nail that had survived three double shifts in a week after asking for time off, but none of that had to do with the topic of their obsession, always looking for updates on the case of Rene Good. 

“We all saw it," Maya said, "Rene was panicked, trying to leave, car swerves and bumps the guy who shoots her in the face, I mean... Everyone has seen it, but thebshit I hear?"

Tasha leaned back, hoodie half-zipped, moonstone necklace glinting under fluorescent lights. “It’s the spin. That’s the part that feels unreal. Like the murder is flexible, but the explanation is rigid. Felt his life was in danger, case closed. Seriously?”

Gary slid into the booth sideways, all elbows and purpose, wrists thin but strong from years of hauling fry baskets and yanking open freezer doors. With a back flick of his wrist, a long fingered hand of Gary shoo'd two customers who looked at their table with smiling question marks.

“Nope. Break,” Gary said. “Go commune with the counter, but thank you for choosing Wendys!"

The customers retreated. Gary settled in, grabbed a stray fry, and said, “Okay. Continue radicalizing.”

“Trump said he hopes the ICE officer recovers,” Tasha said quietly.

Maya barked a laugh. “From what? The emotional burden of consequences?”

Gary shook his head. “Orwell would be furious. Or impressed. Hard to say.”

“It’s full Ministry of Truth now,” Tasha said. “No prosecution. Everyone saw the video. Rene hits the gas, the car bumps the officer, and suddenly she’s ‘that bitch.’ Head shot. Two more. End of story—but the story keeps going.”

“And the platform’s called Truth Social,” Maya said. “Like satire just gave up.”

“I asked ChatGPT what it takes to be an ICE officer,” Maya went on. “Bachelor’s degree, or ‘equivalent experience.’ Which apparently means: you’ve existed. You’ve had jobs. Congratulations—here’s a badge.”

“Sixty-two grand a year,” Gary said. “Plus a fifty-thousand-dollar signing bonus.”

Tasha stared. “Fifty just to sign up? Can you blame them?"

“We actually have to blame them,” Gary said. “But apparently murder comes with no cost, so if we factor in the percs of a presidential pardon when you shoot someone in the face, I mean, it's just that we don't respect those individuals.”

"Who is we?" Tasha asked, but Gary dismissed her with a wrist-flick.

“And then you’re deployed,” Maya said, “rolling around in tax-funded SUVs, detaining people because paperwork vibes are off. Seventy-two hours in a cold room. No blankets. No need to trust a license. ‘We’ll look into it.’”

Tasha snorted. “Guess stop, ho.”

The fryer beeped somewhere in the distance, capitalism bells of transactional commerce ringing. Gary stood, braced work-worn wrists on the table, and sighed.

“Alright,” he said. “Break’s over. Put your faces back on.”

Maya slid out of the booth. “Smile?”

“With contempt,” Gary said.

They went back to the counter knowing the world was unraveling, the system was lying out loud, and the Frosty machine—miraculously—still worked. Which, for now, seemed to be the only thing holding the timeline together


Wednesday, January 14, 2026

The Spiritual Commodity

 



My Gas Got Siphoned on The Seaview Lawn Song:
https://youtu.be/B4wldNZued0?si=uLy9ioCE8rBy_qvM


March 1, 2024

I was chanting Sanskrit mantras while handcycling past the Seaview bus stop when a grumpy older gentleman with a sun-dried face—let’s call him Dale—announced that it was not a good morning.

Some somabitch had siphoned the gas out of his truck.

“Probably to fund his meth habit,” Dale said. “Now I gotta walk down here, take the bus, buy gas and a locking cap. Unbelievable.”

“Brother,” I said, blessing him, “I wish you luck on your journey.”

I was about to roll on when Glenda—castle-adjacent, aggressively rummaging through her bags—popped up and declared Dale’s complaint balderdash.

“Oh please,” she said. “Obviously it was a confused young man engaging in nonviolent protest.”

“A protest?” Dale asked.

“Against internal combustion engines,” Glenda clarified. “This vigilante hero wants us all to carpool. Or take the bus. To save the planet.”

Her voice was stabby, so I covered my heart. I could help them both. It was time to work.

Dale shifted, irritated. Being told his morning was “balderdash” had clearly activated something deep and Appalachian.

“That ripper isn’t confused or young,” Dale said, straining for calm. “He’s a known thug the cops just catch and release.”

I held space. Charged the air with love and light.

“Oh please,” Glenda said. “He’s probably a victim of a broken home. God knows what abuse he suffered. But his intention is clearly to save tomorrow’s children from the carbon holocaust you people are gassing us with.”

“Excuse me?” Dale said, as her chin indicated him.

I rolled my shoulders and circulated my chi through the seven chakras.

“I see you drive by in your truck,” Glenda continued, eyes narrowing, “and you never pick me—or anyone else—up.”

“I sure don’t,” Dale said.

I constructed a spinning tetrahedral garmatron star above them. I know who you are. I know how you serve. You are free.

“So,” Glenda pressed, “you’re poisoning the air, turning the world into a death camp for future generations, and you won’t help the downtrodden today?”

“The downtrodden,” Dale repeated, glancing at me.

“I’m guessing you sleep as comfortably as a guard in Auschwitz,” Glenda said.

Dale blinked hard. “Just to be clear—you’re calling me a Nazi because I drive a truck and didn’t give you a ride?”

The six-sided star pulsed, exuding healing energy.

“Well, yes,” Glenda said. “Also because I heard you talking to this cripple about an obvious hero who forced you to take the bus.”

“Hero?” Dale croaked.

“You were talking to him like an SS officer talking to a little blonde boy about Jews. I couldn’t let that hate speech go unchecked.”

She turned to me, trembling. “Don’t listen to another word of this fascist brute.”

I breathed understanding while vibrating parallel paradigms to inject levity into this timeline.

“Unbelievable,” Dale said—though I caught the corners of his mouth twitch.

“Well,” I said, sensing a fissure, “blessings to you both. Thank you, Glenda, for calling me a cripple. People still struggle with the correct terminology, and I appreciate the throwback. And Dale—did you hear about Fragilica? Her gas got siphoned too.”

“No, but I know I’m not alone. Gas vampire’s on a tear.”

“She bought a locking cap,” I said gently, “and they punctured her tank and drained it anyway.”

“Hallelujah,” Glenda said.

Dale’s eyes flared. I considered holding space longer—but no. I’d already done enough free labor.

I handcycled up the hill, lungs full of clean air, spirit light. It felt good to serve. To heal hyperdimensionally. Pro bono, for the first time in decades.

Still… I might Venmo Dale for an even hundred. Just to balance the karma. Fair compensation for holding space.

Manifest abundance.
Namaste.
#shantierthanthou


Monday, January 12, 2026

The Thin Blue Line


Hal hadn’t slept well, but as was his routine, he drove down to the Seaview lawn to gaze at the thin blue line where the ocean meets the sky. He was contemplating driving home and crawling back into bed when something thumped against the trunk of his car. He looked back to see a girl with short black hair in an altercation with a guy with blond ropes for hair. Hal could see that the guy was tall and wiry, but not his face, which was obscured by the girl. Hal considered yelling “Hey!” to get them away from his car, but he decided against it. They wouldn’t do any damage, and it was something to watch. He adjusted his rearview mirror when the girl let out a shriek. Overcome by a bout of masculine indignation, Hal opened his door.

“Get away from—” he began, but the dreadlocked guy was already frolicking, skipping rather than running away. As the girl turned to face Hal, he noticed her face was red. He wondered if she’d been slapped or if the rosy coloring was from crying. Her eyes were puffy.

“Are you okay?”

“Will you make love to me?” the girl asked. Both her expression and voice were earnest. Hal couldn’t help but notice her breasts were hardly concealed beneath a faded green tank top. Her black shorts rode high on her thick thighs, and there were a few scrapes on her shins, which prickled with irreverent black hairs. Hal’s observation happened in less than a second, as did his overall assessment. She was from the castle. Then he noticed her pupils, fully dilated, bigger than thumbtacks.

“What drug are you on?” Hal asked.

“It doesn’t matter,” the girl said, and approached Hal with an expression that might have passed for seduction if it weren’t for the rest of her face, which was a mess.

“Was that guy your boyfriend?” Hal asked, trying his best to ignore her slow, sashaying advance. He pivoted his torso and said, “You’re from the castle, right?”

“It doesn’t matter,” the girl said as she sidled closer. “Do you want me?”

“No,” Hal said with an uneasy chuckle, “and could you please step back a bit?”

“Do you want to push me?” the girl asked, her voice hardly more than a whisper. She lowered her eyes and let her index finger slide back and forth across her bottom lip. Then she smiled.

Hal shifted his weight from foot to foot before taking a step back. The girl leaned on his passenger door and began to thrum the top of his car with her fingertips.

“Do you think I’m pretty?”

“Listen,” Hal explained, “I don’t know you. I don’t know what your deal is, but you need to take it elsewhere. I’m not interested.”

As her expression fell, the girl slumped down on the grass and covered her face with her hands. She began to sob, her shoulders shrugging as she curled into a ball.

Hal asked, “How long have you been out of the psych ward? I assume you recently got out of Hilo Medical and heard about the castle? You’re staying there, right?”

“It doesn’t matter,” the girl said, her voice muffled as she spoke through her hands. Her head was bowed between her knees.

“Did you try to kill yourself, or have you been in and out—”

“Stop!” the girl spat. She lifted her head. Her eyes were bloodshot. “You don’t know me.”

Hal cocked his head as he processed her sudden shift. He looked from her eyes to her ankle, which had a marijuana leaf tattoo, crudely scrawled. “So, you’re either on meth or—”

“It doesn’t matter!” the girl screamed. It was the same blood-curdling scream that had caused Hal to step out of his car. He glanced around the lawn. There was only a woman up by the mailboxes, walking her little dog, within sight. She hadn’t even glanced in their direction.

“Okay, I’m done,” Hal said and made a move to get back into the driver’s seat. The girl, seeing his intention, was quick to spring up and dive into his car. She tried to close the door, but Hal grabbed the door frame.

“Let go!” the girl bellowed.

“Get out of my car!” demanded Hal. The girl suddenly released the door, causing Hal to stumble backward. She lifted herself up and over the center console and into the passenger seat. She buckled herself in. Hal, surprised by her agility, reached into his car, took the keys out of the ignition, and grabbed his phone from the ashtray.

“I’m calling the cops.”

“It doesn’t matter,” the girl said. She pulled off her shorts and squirmed out of her tank top.

“Wuh—what are you doing?” Hal stammered. Unlike her hair-stubbled ankles, her pubic region was cleanly shaven. She turned and pressed her back against the door and spread her legs. Hal noticed a tattoo of a sickle in green and black ink on her inner thigh.

“Will you video me?” the girl asked, her voice sultry as she began to rub herself with her middle and index fingers. Hal looked away, but then he looked back. This couldn’t be happening. He glanced up toward the mailboxes. The woman with the dog was gone.

“You can jerk off to this later,” the girl teased. She let out a soft moan and closed her eyes.

Hal dialed 911. “Yes, I’m on the Seaview lawn and—”

“Sir, I’m having tr—bl heangk…” The operator’s voice glitched before the call was disconnected.

“I’ve got a condom,” said the girl. As she tossed him a Trojan, Hal was at a loss. He flipped over the wrapper. How had she come up with a condom? None of her clothes had pockets, and she clearly hadn’t been wearing underwear or a bra. It suddenly felt too surreal, and Hal became dizzy. Was he hallucinating or getting a contact high from this, this…

“What is your name?”

“It doesn’t matter,” the girl dismissed. “Just video me or fuck me. No more questions.”

“Are you a demon?”

Her eyes flickered with a mischievous gleam before she sing-songed, “And what if I am?”

“Get out of my car,” Hal commanded, keeping his voice calm and even.

“Not until you play with me.”

Hal tapped his phone, but now his screen was black. Impossible. His battery had been fully charged before he left home.

“Let’s go back to your place.”

“Not a chance.” Was she in his mind? Hal felt his heart pounding in his temples and swallowed.

The girl looked at Hal curiously, and then her tone changed. “Fine. Just get in the car.” She swung herself back into a seated position. She crossed her legs.

“No, and I don’t know who you are, or what you are, but this is over. In the name of Jesus Christ, leave!”

The girl rolled her eyes and looked at Hal with something between disgust and disappointment. “If Jesus Christ were here, he’d fuck me.”

“What is your name?” Hal said, trying to muster authority in his voice, but the words came out shaky.

The girl rolled her eyes, turned her head, and stared out the windshield.

“You need to leave,” Hal repeated. A bicyclist passed on the red road, and Hal waved his arms above his head. The bicyclist waved back. Hal couldn’t bring himself to holler out for help. This was embarrassing.

“Look at the thin blue line where the ocean meets the sky,” said the girl. Her voice was dreamy. “That’s why you come here, right?”

“Yes, but…” Hal began, trailing off, taken aback.

“Then just sit next to me. I promise I won’t try to seduce you, but I need your energy. Give me… something.”

The back of Hal’s neck crawled. He shivered. “Are you a succubus?”

“It doesn’t matter.” Without looking at him, she patted his seat. “Sit with me.”

Hal lowered himself into the driver’s seat. As he cleared his mind and observed the thin blue line, he felt the throbbing of sorrow, a pulsing of despair, from the creature seated next to him. Trying his best to remain content, he allowed himself to be fed upon. It was slightly more unpleasant than donating blood, so after a few minutes, when Hal began to ache, he said, “That’s enough.”

“Thank you,” said the girl. She picked up her black shorts and green tank top from the floorboards. Hal nodded to himself as she dressed.

After she closed the door, Hal frowned as he watched her walk across the grass in the direction of the castle.

“That didn’t happen,” Hal mumbled to himself.


 

Teeth and Birds

 


It was well past midnight. The beach had gone private—no tourists, no bonfires, just the slow exhale of the Pacific and the faint mineral smell of black. Alex lay flat on his back like a discarded angel, arms loose, ribs visible under his T-shirt, smiling at nothing in particular. The crescent moon hung low, the edges of the clouds around it bruised pink, like the sky had just been punched and was deciding whether to swell.

Quin sat a few feet away with his legs splayed, back braced against a coconut tree. Even at rest he looked built for collision—stocky, solid. He was methodically peeling leaves from a fallen coconut frond, braiding them into a rope

Alex chuckled softly, like he’d just remembered a joke he wasn’t sure existed.
“Ever notice,” he said, “how the moon smiles like the Cheshire Cat? And you’re like—damn. Even if I brushed and flossed every day, my teeth would never be that bright.”

Quin didn’t look up. “Can’t say I have,” he said, fingers working the braid. “But my two long-term relationships were like that.”

“Like… the moon?”

“No. Teeth and gums.”

Alex rolled his head toward him. “I’m sorry—what?”

“When I think about it,” Quin continued, completely sincere, “they were temperamentally different. Like teeth and gums are. Almost opposites.”

Alex laughed, a thin, wheezy laugh that turned into a cough. “Quin, I know you’re high, but your brain is connecting dots that do not exist.”

Quin tested the rope—about two feet long now—then smacked it against the base of the coconut tree. Thump.

 “Well, we’re all in long-term relationships with our mouths,” he said. “Namely, our teeth and gums.”

Alex propped himself up on his elbows. “Metaphorically, you’re saying… what?”

Quin finally glanced over, eyes glassy but focused. “Lucy and Linda were my two long-term partners. Linda was a bit of a nympho—like gums that need to be flossed at least three times a week or they get inflamed and cry bloody tears from neglect. They let you know when things are off, you pay with a bit of pain, but gums forgive you if you get back on the maintenance routine.”

Alex squinted. “Did you just compare Linda to your gums?”

“Yes.”

“This is wild,” Alex said, delighted. “But she was my favorite. Linda had an actual personality. Lucy was ice. Linda was spicy. Sensitive, sure—but alive.”

“Gums get inflamed if they’re not attended to,” Quin said. “When’s the last time you flossed?”

Alex winced. “Been a while.”

“Then they’re probably engorged and red instead of light pink and happy. And the minute you thread them, they’ll cry bloody tears.”

“Bleed,” Alex said. “They’ll bleed. Why ‘tears,’ you psycho?” He paused. “But I miss Linda. Where’d she go?”

“With Brad, but it was for the best.”

“Damn.”

“Yeah,” Quin said. Then he sighed. “Gums forgive you if you do the maintenance. Might take two weeks of nightly flossing to make them happy again. But Lucy?” Quin shook his head. “Lucy was like my teeth. Solid. Or so I thought—until we went to couples therapy.”

Alex smiled. “Dental exam.”

“Exactly. All these shadowy recesses I didn’t know about were brought into the light. And unlike Linda, there was no forgiveness for the slow erosion.”

Alex reached into his pocket, pulled out a crumpled joint, and held it up like an offering. “This feels like the right moment.”

Quin shrugged.

Alex lit it, the flame briefly illuminating his sharp cheekbones, then took a careful drag and passed it over. Quin inhaled like he was back in training camp, held it, exhaled toward the moon.

“We all have cavities in our hearts,” Alex said dreamily. “I want love. Not these shallow connections. Something deeper. I lost count, and I don’t think that’s a good thing.”

“If you want that root canal,” Quin said, “it’ll cost ya.” He took the joint back. “I had Lucy yanked like my back molar when she tried to take me to small-claims court for killing her parrot. You remember Enya?”

“The red macaw?” Alex groaned. “That thing was loud. I couldn’t believe you lived with it.”

“Enya had already attacked me once. So the second time, I swatted her down—but then Basil grabbed her and gave her three shakes. Killed her before I could do anything.”

Alex sighed. “Basil…”

“Lucy picks up the bird, leaves in tears. I tell Basil he really screwed the pooch. Two weeks later—bam. Court papers. Five grand.”

Alex laughed. “You represented yourself.”

“I watched some YouTubes. Used ChatGPT. Built a self-defense case.”

“The judge must have hated you.”

“Oh, for sure. But when I showed him the scar on my shoulder—”

“Didn’t you superglue it instead of stitches?”

“Yeah. Anyways, the judge ruled self-defense. Basil and I are off the hook, but I now have to muzzle him on walks.”

Alex blinked. “Do you?”

“Well, yeah. I wouldn’t put it past Lucy to record me without it.”

“You can’t live in fear.”

“Basil doesn’t mind,” Quin said softly. “It’s like he understands.”

“He is a good boy.”

“Everyone tells him that constantly.” Quin stared out at the water. “Wish I could just wag my tail and smile and get along.”

Alex grinned. “Sure. And occasionally defend your master from a killer macaw.”

Quin nodded. “Felt like it was going for my jugular that first time. Tilted my head as the beak raked down my neck before it could dig that hook of bone into my shoulder. Barely a scar now because skin heals. Everything heals except for teeth. There’s no forgiveness with teeth. Or Lucy.”

“And your gums ran off with another man.”

“Something like that.” Quin flicked ash into the sand. “I just want my skeleton to look nice. When the aliens dig us up to judge if we deserve reanimation, they’ll judge us by our teeth.”

Alex laughed. Waves sighed. The moon was shining through cobweb clouds, a bridal veil. An owl screeched. 

Alex said, “What if that’s Enya, reincarnated and about to come at you?”

“Bring it,” said Quin and snapped his coconut-leaf rope.