Here's a treat: one of my favorite stories from my science fiction/horror/fantasy (no smut ... promise!) collection Love Without Gun Control - from the great Renaissance E Books
Some Assembly
Required
She
hadn't thought about Mark in years – then, suddenly, she did. It wasn't
something obvious, like seeing his face on someone else's who also had pale
blond hair, like burnished steel, or eyes like amber marbles, but something
swift and intangible, like a floating piece of consciousness you remember as
not being fact, reality, but part of a dream half-forgotten.
Lisa
had been standing in the warm sunshine down on Solano Avenue, walking back with
her sister from seeing a movie – something with explosions and lots of male
sweat, details already mostly forgotten. They'd parked far away, and chatted
emptily as they marched back to Lisa's battered little sports car.
He'd
had a tension about him sometimes, an almost tangible armor that would slip
over him. The first time it had happened they'd fought later in the day, Lisa
convinced on some level that she'd been the cause. It had happened, so quickly
and without apparent cause and had lingered for hours, and he hadn't spoken a
word about it. When the same had happened to Lisa, in other relationships, it
usually meant anger at her, a stewing resentment just needing an impetus to
release. Better, she'd learned, to get it out when she wanted to – beat the
fight to the punch.
Hot,
hard sunlight in her eyes and she replied mechanically to Shirley's polite
sisterly banter. Why now – why think of that and Mark... now? The laughter of
children in front of a nearby toy store, an old woman glacially making her way
down the sidewalk in a mechanical walker, a burnished Latino man clipping
branches from a tree in front of a doctor's office.
“Some
people just shouldn't have children,” Shirley said, slipping into the passenger
seat as Lisa absently hunted for the ignition. Lisa looked up, hunting for the
source, and saw the three with the kids: two glowing parents, and a friend. The
parents were young and sleek with their own kind of baby fat – the softness that
Lisa had seen around her other friends that had the innocence and
responsibility of children thrust onto them. “Luckily,” Shirley said, her eyes
obscured by sunglasses, “other people can.”
Their
friend wasn't sleek, wasn't soft. His hair was slightly greasy, his jeans rough
and faded to threads in some places – and even though he was smiling with his
friends and the children he had to accompany, his tension was obvious.
Lisa
knew, that fragment finding it's place in her mind: the why of thinking of
Mark. Yeah, some people shouldn't have children, but other people – good, kind
people – were terrified of them.
****
It
was night by the time she got back to her apartment, parking as usual in the darkness of the alley behind her
building. After an afternoon with Shirley, Mark had faded into a cool
melancholy – a lazy sadness about many things, old and nearly forgotten
boyfriends only some of it.
At
first she thought it was an insect, and fear/disgust/revulsion tingled up and
down her spine. Then she thought it might be a toy – children being up way to
late. Then she picked it up. Looking at it under the washed-out distant lights
from the street beyond, she again thought specifically of one old boyfriend and
brought it inside.
His
breath had been hot – she remembered when it seemed about to scald her neck,
how she'd felt she'd had to move – just a little – from under him, feeling it
almost ready to burn her skin. He always seemed to have a bruise or two,
looking like a swatch of grease on his angular body, from where he'd hurt
himself at work.
The
apartment seemed empty, cold – so she turned on the coffee machine and absently
flicked on the set to keep her company. Her answering machine was beeping one,
one, one in dark red – so she didn't play it, knowing it to be Shirley saying
she'd be late for the movie.
The
little machine wasn't a toy – it had a kind of patched-together, crude look to
it. Putting it down on her kitchen counter it immediately started a hesitant
exploration of its new environment. Smiling despite herself, she lunged to
catch it as it neared an edge – only to have it pull away at the last minute.
It had a couple of small motors, maybe scavenged
from a toy after all. It had wire feelers, and a mysterious cluster of dark
glass panels along its back. Its body seemed to be a piece of an old circuit
board, the green material almost black in some places from being outside for a
long time. It seemed to have eyes, as well, two discs facing forward. Yes,
eyes, as she watched it hunted along her counter-top for light. It had a
battery, a black box along its back, but must have fed, recharged, on what it
could see – eating light through the flat glass panels on its back.
Also
on its back was a cigar tube. Picking it up, Lisa shook it, hearing something
inside. Carefully, she unscrewed it – and a tightly rolled sheet of paper came
out.
****
Mark
was very much in her mind. The gruff rumble of his voice, the deep avalanche of
his laughter. For someone who saw tools as an extension of his self, he liked
surprisingly subtle and sophisticated things. When he was crouched over some
new machine, or under some behemoth of gears and engines, Bach chimed from his
speakers. When he stopped to eat it was usually Sushi or Thai, and while he
enjoyed watching things explode and men sweat on the screen he also had a
complete Win Wenders collection and worshipped Jacques Tati.
The
instructions on the paper were simple, straightforward. Even for someone like
Lisa for whom Mark's terminology had been like listening to an ancient Asiatic
language, she could understand it. It was also obviously a copy of a copy of a
copy of a copy – the pattern of the diagrams in some places blurred by
replication.
She
stayed up for a long time, staring at the instructions and thinking about Mark,
while the little machine patiently explored its new world – charging its
battery from her kitchen lights.
****
The parts were surprisingly easy to find. Two trips to two
different electronic stores. Cheap too – or would have been had she had some of
the tools it required at hand.
Practicing
with the soldering iron, she thought a lot about Mark. She built him, assembled
him from memory as he sent curls of acid smoke up towards the ceiling: tall,
thin – rough but not course, with a
kind
of mechanic's masculinity. Machines had been a special language for him, the
key to a secret world of cause and effect. She remembered how his amber eyes
glowed when he talked about some new project, some new device or construction –
explaining to her innocence the philosophy of its gears, the beauty of its
mechanisms.
She
didn't have any photographs. No letters. They hadn't been together long – two
and a half, maybe three years. She couldn't even remember why they'd broken
up... exactly. She knew a lot of it was because of his passion, and her
revelation that, at best, she'd only be the second most important thing in his
life.
She
burned herself, gesturing clumsily with the iron like it was a pencil or pen
and not a very hot tool. The pain was like a flash in her eyes and she dropped
it – luckily on the table and not on the carpet. After sucking on the inside of
her finger when the iron had touched and almost crying, she breathed deep a few
times and went back to trying to get enough with the unfamiliar tool.
That
fight was very present in her mind. They had gone to a picnic with her sister,
who'd been baby-sitting her friend's six-year-old. Mark hadn't made any noises
when she'd told him about it, but that tension descended on him hard and fast
whenever he was near the kid. Sally was a sweet girl, shy but very smart and
with laughter that sounded like chiming bells. Still, Mark had been terrified.
Lisa
hadn't known that – and so the fight: beat him to it, get it out in the open.
For a long time he just stood there and let her run all over the place trying
to figure out why he was so angry. Finally, he said something – and then
something else, and then she started to understand. That night they'd made love
– and it had been different. Passionate, yes, but also caring – an act to seal
up a wound that had been opened.
When
Shirley came over the next day she saw the mess of electronic parts scattered
on her kitchen counter. “Toaster explode?” she joked, picking up something only
three days before Lisa wouldn't have recognized.
“Just
a hobby,” Lisa said, defensively, feeling as if Shirley had been picking
through her bedside table, commenting on her method of birth control.
“Looks
like something Mark would have put together – spit and bailing wire, couple of
batteries and... viola,
art.
Too bad everyone else just saw it as some bailing wire and lots of spit.”
Mark
hadn't called it art. He might have treated it that way, but he never called it
that. “Yeah,” Lisa said, grabbing her purse, “but that's what he liked to do.”
Then she said, not at all hungry, just to get her sister away, “let's get a
bite, I'm starved.”
“You
think about him... Mark
– a
lot.”
“Sometimes,”
she said, gently moving her sister towards the front door.
“You
weren't together all that long, and it weren't even with him when he, you know,
passed away.” At the door, she paused. “Cancer, wasn’t it?”
“Yes,
cancer–”
“He
didn't leave much behind did he? I think you were the only person who knew him
well – and that's not saying a lot.”
“No,”
she agreed, locking her front door, “not a lot at all.” ****
She
decided to build two of them. That way she could have some practice and not put
too much pressure on herself to get the one-and- only done perfectly. She
burned herself, twice more – but then felt like she was really getting a handle
on the iron. Her nose tickled for a long time from the resin-reek of the
melting solder, but then she started to enjoy it – it was like an incense from
some distant, mechanical land. Something burned in Mark's church.
It
wasn't hate that had tensed him that day in the park around dear little – it
was responsibility. “I was scared. Damn, I hate that – that feeling. Like
walking on glass. They're so fragile, you know. I know what that was like, how
one wrong thing... well, it might not mean anything to me, but to them it could
be how they see the world after. That freaks me out. I'm not ready to do it
right, I guess – I'm too selfish. When I want to do, I want to do it right, to
be there all the time
for them – to really be there for them, to help them. Now, though, the
responsibility scares me.”
“You
just have to let go,” she'd told him, holding him close and feeling his
breathing, hot breathing on the side of her neck. “Other people have the same
fears, but they manage okay. You just have to learn to let go. It's how we go
on – it's how you leave a part of yourself behind. You're just scared because
you only want to leave the best of you behind.”
He'd
nodded, his heavy body moving slightly, too, as his head did. “I know. I just
keep thinking that... maybe I'm not good enough.”
The
first one Lisa built had faltered, as if stricken with a kind of
electronic/mechanical palsy. She went back to the instruction sheet and spent a
few minutes following it's strange course. There, finally she saw it, a stray
wire, a hesitant short. After a quick, skillful jab with the soldering iron it
seemed to work fine.
At
dawn, which seemed appropriate, she took copies she'd made of the instructions,
put them in the cigar tubes she'd bought, attached them to their backs, and let
them go. The original moved across the alley, vanishing quickly off into the
distance. Her first born started off to the right, slowly making its way among
the trash cans and garage doors; the whine of its little electric motors went
on for a long time, until fading into the general background of the city.
The
second born went to the left, darting across the dark asphalt – but then
stopped just about halfway. It stayed there for a minute, spinning slowly as it
sought nutritious sunlight. Finally it stopped its dance and made its way
slowly down the other side of the alley, until vanishing among some parked
cars.
The
tears were a surprise, there before she was even aware she was crying. She
watched her descendants until she felt they were able to make it on their own,
then she wished them well, gave them her love, and went back inside.
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