Monday, October 26, 2009

Week 16

 October 20

Zahina likes her cliffhangers. We had to wait until today to find out what was in the caves, and we have to wait until tomorrow to find out the fate of Jessamyn and Elisabeth who wandered far ahead of the group, today. The first cave we came to was full of candy, and it opened up into a cave full of spelunking gear. We all got suited up (included J and E) and went exploring. We were all supposed to stay together, because exploring is safer in groups, but the other two went too far ahead and the rest of us heard a scream, followed by a splash, and another scream that went on and on and on. To be continued…

I forgot that I’d told Zahina that her mother died in a cave, and was spooked by the way the story was going. “What did the cave look like?” Zahina asked. 

“Um. I don’t know, I said. I was staring at the twin dolls, trying to make them invisible to my mind, like Zahina seemed to be able to. “Wasn’t it full of candy.”

“No,” Zahina said. “The one you and my mom used to go to. Where she died. Was it pretty?”

It took me a moment to drag myself back to that moment in the cave. I started shaking, and had to go farther back in my memory, before Danae fell. “It’s beautiful,” I said. “It has grass that grows up the walls the ceilings. There are flowers there, but not bushes, just lone daisies that sprout up here and there. There are jewels that poke up out of the grass at odd intervals. They reflect the light from outside so that the cave is lit up. That’s how the grass is able to grow on the ceiling,” I said. “The sun smiles on the ceiling as well as the floor.”

Zahina was quiet for a long time. I’d resumed staring at the dolls. The bossy giraffe was glaring at me, as if she were condemning me for either being negligent toward Danae or for telling Zahina the truth. I know that adults rarely tell kids the truth -- this is the case in both Winter and Summer. In Spring, the adults are slightly too reckless with the truth. Autumn has a nice balance, I think. At least, from what I’ve studied. When Zahina spoke, I jumped, having almost forgotten where I was.

“Can I go there?”

I blinked at her. “You want to?” I didn’t know what else to say.

She nodded, solemnly. “Do you still go there?” she asked.

I flushed. “Yes.” I felt guilty, admitting that I still enjoyed being there, despite what happened to Danae. But there’s something about the place that is almost preternaturally calming.

“She’s not still there, is she?”

I stared at Zahina, trying to focus. My mind was blurry with guilt and anxiety. “No,” I heard myself say. “Only in spirit.”

Zahina seemed to accept that, and I pondered the thought as well. I don’t think of myself as overly spiritual. I go to worship service and I pay my taxes but I don’t think about the Creator that much. I guess I don’t know what role She has in my life. So I don’t think much about spirits or what happens after you die, even after someone dies. I guess it just doesn’t concern me. I have no control over it, so I just block out the whole idea and focus on things I can control.

I definitely saw Hon today. He was just a flash; a face with averted eyes. I was still operating under the same fog that had crept over me earlier in the day, so again, I don’t know where I was when I saw him, but I’m certain that I did. I wonder if he’s coming with us to Winter. If he does, he’ll be much easier to spot. Even if he wears Winter clothes, and assumes the posture, there’s an element to Winterians that Summerians just don’t have, and vice versa. Even my mother, upon retrospect, always seemed a little different, a little out of place. I’ll look for that in Winter, and I’ll find Hon. It’s possible that he won’t come, for exactly that reason, but I judge him as being arrogant enough to believe he can pull it off. When I see him, I don’t react. I’m very good at not reacting. It’s probably the only Winter trait that I can really pull off, believably, without a lot of effort.

Karen wants a job. Like, a real job. We’re thinking of setting her up in the library. “We” is my husband and myself. I had a chance to talk to him about it, sotto voce, during a break in court. He thinks that her loudness and impatience will not serve her well there, but I assured him that there is much more to Karen than that. Actually, when Karen feels safe, she’s quite charming and sensible -- it’s only when she feels threatened that she gets loud.

Samson met with a few of our clients today. He is amazing. I don’t know how he comes up with these sketches so fast. Speed, combined with his cultivated charm are impossibly powerful tools in his professional arsenal. I find it difficult to believe that he never worked for a firm before -- he’s so natural and easy about the whole process. He’s also good at taking charge of the meetings, whilst seeming to defer to me the entire time. I don’t know why it’s so important to him to give me the credit. Maybe he’s dealing with some arrogance issues. I remember this one time, when I was still new here, that Samson got into a fistfight with another courtier, over a woman. Both men coveted her, and she liked them both equally.

This was the first case I was allowed to preside over. I told the woman that she was allowed to date as much as she wanted to but she was prohibited from marrying for three years. The girl was only eighteen, but some girls marry young in Summer. The girl was humiliated and furious, but what could she do? My husband backed up my ruling. Last I heard, she’d enrolled in college, to help pass the time. Who knows -- maybe she’ll grow a brain while she’s there and realize that there’s more to life than finding your “one true love” of the moment. It’s funny, now that I remember back; Samson looked quite smug over the verdict, whilst the other man looked furious. Then again, the girl was very wealthy as well as incredibly vapid. He must have thought he’d hit the jackpot.


October 21

This morning I woke up to Zahina scratching at my door. Eliava was with her. “What, are you nuts?” I asked.  “You’re going to get me killed! What are you doing here?” I ushered them inside, and tried to stop myself from having a heart attack. 

“We came to file court papers, and then we got lost on our way out,” Eliava said, calmly. She set her briefcase down next to the door. “Now be nice, or some of us will get the idea that you don’t want us here.”

I glanced at Zahina, then back at Eliava. “I DON’T want you here! What were you thinking?” I was furious. “I’m happy to help, and I’m glad that I can keep you and the little girl from being homeless and all, but I don’t expect you to take advantage of the situation to my detriment. I don’t OWE you anything, so you can take that tone of entitlement right out of your tone.” I hate getting angry because when I yell, forget to breathe, and then I get the hiccups. My body jolted with the force of a huge hiccup, and I turned away from them, taking in long, deep breaths. When I was calm, I turned back.

Zahina was staring at me. She wasn’t horrified, or even hurt, she was fascinated. I was so tired when I went to be last night that I left all of my make-up on, all of my piercings in. I took out my blue contacts, but my robe is one of those Adora specials that feel like Summer but look like Winter.

“I wouldn’t have come if it wasn’t absolutely necessary,” Eliava said, calmly.

“What’s so important? I was going to come to your apartment today, anyway.”

Eliava frowned. “You were? I thought you were leaving today.” She looked embarrassed. “I’m sorry. I must have gotten the days confused.” She shook her head. “Anyway, you can’t go to Winter.”

“Why not?”

“Our court date is the twenty-third. You won’t be here, and no one will show up to stand for Danae.” Eliava seemed flustered. “I just realized when I came to file the papers.”

I pulled my lips in and bit down. It took me a minute to fight down the irritation. Fortunately, there was amusement mixed in, or it would have been impossible. I watched Zahina climb onto my bed and turned to Eliava. “My husband is coming with me to Winter,” I said. “He won’t be here to preside over the case. All of the dockets have been moved to the week after we get back.”

I watched relief flood Eliava’s face, and then embarrassment. Then accusation crossed her features, and I forestalled her with a raised hand. “We got a notice in the mail about the switch, and you and I talked about it when it came.”

Eliava let out a huge breath. “Oh.” She touched her forehead. “I knew that and forgot. I was looking at the papers and got the twenty-third stuck in my head and then I panicked.” She looked around. “I’m sorry.”

“You can’t jump on this,” Zahina said. 

Eliava and I both looked over at Zahina. She was trying to bounce on the hard surface. Mutual amusement abated my annoyance and Eliava’s embarrassment. We grinned at each other. I laughed, approaching the bed. “That’s because it’s made out of marble.”

She flopped down, spreading her arms and flexing her legs, trying to get comfortable. “Ow. How do you sleep on this?”

“Very carefully,” I said.

Eliava laughed, and I sent her a rueful glance. Zahina clamber to her feet and walked over to me. With the added height from the bed, she was actually taller than me. She looked down, and reached out to touch the piece of metal that wraps around my left eyebrow. She studied it for a moment, then looked at my face. “You look different,” she said.

I sighed. I know that to Summerians I’m quite hideous in my Winter garb, which is one reason I can get away with pretending to be Danae.

“It’s not pretty, but I like it,” she said. “Can I get one of these?” she asked, stroking the piercing. 

I laughed, and Eliava gave out a stern “No,” before she really had a chance to think.

Zahina looked disappointed, but she dropped her hand, and contemplated how to get down. Being a kid, the stairs were too easy, but I could see that the drop looks a lot steeper than the climb had. I remembered being stuck on the top of that spaceship. She held out her arms, and I took hold under her armpits and swung her down to the floor.

“I’m really sorry,” Eliava said, again, before the door swung open. If anyone, at this hour, it should have been Adora, but of course it was Staejha. 

I stifled an annoyed sigh. She hadn’t spoken to me for a week, and now she was dropping in, unexpectedly, again. She gave the gathering a suspicious look, but didn’t say anything. “I’m sorry if I’m interrupting,” she said.

“You’re not,” I said. “You’ve just stumbled on the lost tourists who have stumbled upon me.”

“I’m surprised security is so lax,” she said.

“So am I,” I answered, frowning. How had Eliava gotten past security? If those guards just let anyone though, just about anyone could kill me while I’m sleeping. I could see the same thought pass through Staejha’s mind, and regretted making an enemy of her. I resolved to find out what was going on, and to make certain that I wouldn’t get any more unexpected early morning visitors, cousin or not.

“We just came to file some papers,” Eliava said, “and then got lost, looking for a bathroom, and then we got directions from the nice guard. On the way back, we took a wrong turn, but the guard was gone, so he couldn’t tell us we were going in the wrong direction. I finally got so nervous about being in the wrong corridor that I just knocked on the nearest door.” She shrugged, and held out her hand to Zahina, who was staring at Staejha with the same curiosity that she shown at my guise.

“What’s that?” she asked, pointing at Staejha’s tattoo.

“It’s a fish,” Staejha answered, showing a delicate ankle. “It’s called a piranha. It’s the Winterian symbol for power.” The piranha was done in cool blue tones, surrounded by ice crystals.

“It’s pretty,” Zahina said. “I like the colors.”

“Thank you, Summer child,” Staejha responded, half charmed, half condescendingly.


October 22 

I forget how claustrophobic it can be to fly through space. There’s this vast universe of stars that go on for an eternity -- but you can reach any of them. If you were to step outside the ship, you’d die, just trying to breathe. So it’s not that space is so vast that it makes you feel like you’re trapped in this one small space -- it’s the barrier between you and that vastness, that one tiny ship in the midst of all of it. There’s something about being on a ship that makes you very aware of this; these kinds of thought rarely occur to me when I’m on a planet, and when they do occur, they are not nearly as overwhelming.

Anyway, we had a little stowaway. I made the mistake of telling Zahina how I used to stowaway on ships when I was a kid, and she found some of my techniques helpful. I had her call Eliava with the news, because there was no way for the queen of Winter to know Danae’s daughter’s home phone number. So Zahina got her wish. Honestly, if Winter weren’t such an independent society, I might be more annoyed, but mostly I’m just proud of her willingness to take chances and explore. There’s a joy in doing that, which her mother lost at some point and I’m glad that Zahina, even in the midst of her grief, still has that spirit.

Karen seems to be thrilled to be going home. I think she viewed being sent to Summer as a punishment for not fitting in at home -- Ceci too, seems to be thrilled to be visiting home. Staejha just didn’t want to be left behind, which is what her early morning visit was about, yesterday. So all of the Winterians who moved to Summer are all going back to Winter, and taking Summerians with them. This has not gone over well, but since my husband has kept the lines of communication open between him and the rest of the planet, so far there has been no uproar. If some small but psychotic group of Winterians decided to kill my husband, though, we will go to war with Summer, so security is extra tight. 

It’s actually ironic that Zahina was able to sneak on board. Historically, children have been used as weapons of warfare, so the fact that she snuck on board, masquerading as a random kid in one of the families on board, is not a good thing. I’ve had a talk with them both about today and yesterday, when Zahina got past the guards to get to my room. I had security check to make certain that everyone on board is accounted for; I even had them check out the six-month-old baby, to make sure it wasn’t a robot-bomb. (It wasn’t.)

My husband seems to be looking forward to seeing Winter in person. Of course, we have photos and such available, but it is unexplored territory. One thing that my husband is known for, is the fact that he has visited and explored as much of Summer as he has been able to. He’s known for his spirit of exploration -- he’s even been to Autumn and Spring several times. He attended a full year of university in Autumn, and used to go to Spring for the breaks between the semesters. So, the idea of him being off-planet is not revolutionary, although his current destination, is.

Staejha was slightly suspicious that the little girl who broke into my room yesterday was the same little girl who stowed away, but since she’s not that invested in my well-being, she didn’t make a bit thing out of it. I, on the other hand, have made certain to have my queenly persona make a pet of Zahina, so that I can keep her with me, without suspicion. Adora, of course, knew (knows) her mother, so she’s perfectly natural with the girl. 

Zahina, for her part, doesn’t seem to think of the ship as claustrophobic, busy as she is running between all of the families with kids. She didn’t bring any of her toys with her, but she has a fantastic imagination and has been able to capture the attention of pretty much every kid between 2 and twelve. This is a good thing, because here, she is not the girl who just lost her mother and can’t tell anyone -- she’s not seeing the same faces every day, minus one. These are all new faces, and they are very distracting.

Back in the olden days, space travel was so slow that it would take years to visit the moon, let alone another planet. Now, of course there is no moon left, it went out of orbit when the planet was divided, but the point is that it only took us a day, what it would have taken years to do, before. It’s kind of amazing that way. Also, there’s this hokey old movie, “Apollo 13” in which it takes twenty minutes for someone in space to communicate with someone on Earth. It’s pretty famous, just because the idea of waiting that long is so laughable. There are lots of ancient science fiction stories about the rate of aging slowing once a body is removed from the gravity of the Earth, so that folks on Earth would grow old and die whilst the person in space would remain the same age. There is something to that. Some of the earliest pirates in space initially ventured out, in order to stop themselves from aging. 

In effect, vanity was behind these people wanting to be in space. Which is really funny, because the people that they would run into were the same age as they were. They initially became pirates because they wanted to stay in space longer, and had run out of supplies. That was in the olden days, too, though not as old as the twentieth century, when that movie was made. Now ships are completely self-reliant. We make our own food and fuel, recycle our own waste, and are able to make any kind of tool or ship part -- all on the ship. The kind of pirates we have today are not vain people attacking other vain people, the result of which is that the losing ship has to go home and start aging again -- we have much nastier pirates, but fortunately, we about half of the people traveling on this ship are military, so the possibility of us getting attacked is pretty nigh impossible.


October 23

Oh man, it’s weird to be home. Just being on the ship was a nice intro to home, being as the entire thing is made out of fortified ice. But stepping out of the ship into the crisp Winter air was oddly like putting on a comfy old pair of pajamas. There is nothing like the warmth you feel in a full-body suit when your face is being blasted by an icy wind. There is no comparison to the freedom of sensation when you don’t walk, you glide. 

Even in Summer, the movies depicting Winterians (villainous, always) is the way the glide – it’s predatory and unnaturally graceful. The best Summer filmmakers design their camera angles to capture this movement, although most Summer actors are not equipped to pull off the ferocity needed to play their part. A lot of Summer’s more profitable movies featuring Winterian villains come off as cartoonish and laughable to Winterians. There are a few Summer actors, and even fewer Springians who can play a believable Winterian. Autumnians tend to be able to pull it off better, and usually with multi-dimensional characters, albeit still rather villainous most of the time. Which is fine, because it increases the terror that every other planet feels toward Winter’s inhabitants. 

Anyway, it is good to be home. It’s a little odd, though. I find myself missing my marble bed, and wondering why I have to wear so many clothes. I got accustomed to being practically naked in Summer, and have forgotten how restrictive Winter garments can be. However, I am wearing Adora’s creations, so I look almost Summery. Every building is made out of ice, and the way that the sun glints off of and through every surface reminds me of how bright it is here. I remembered that the reason most Winterians wear those thick blue contacts because they are protecting their eyes, as well as maintaining a fierce façade. We’ve had to give our visitors wrap-around sunglasses, which gives them an alien appearance. I wonder if they’ll make the connection between the sunglasses and our contacts. 

If Zahina gasps any more, she will not have breath enough to draw in yet another gasp. It’s kind of nice to get a real reaction to Winter – not only have the adults seen more depictions of Winter than she has, but they also have to maintain a façade of respectful of indifference. Actually, seeing Zahina’s reaction, along with my prolonged absence, reminds me of the glorious beauty we have here. “That’s my mother’s building!” Zahina exclaimed, as we skated from the ship hangar to the palace. It was true, I’d forgotten that Danae had designed some important buildings in Winter. Her plans had to be modified because the construction materials are so different here, and also so that Summerians would not have exact plans of any of our buildings, but the courthouse at the palace was designs almost entirely by Danae.

“You are Danae (Lastname’s) daughter,” I asked, giving her a glance to remind her not to be too familiar with me. 

“Yes.”  She grinned, playing along.

Staejha had drawn even with us for a moment. “Danae (Lastname) is your mother? She has designed many important buildings here in Winter.” She observed Zahina coolly for a moment, before searching my countenance. “Interesting…” she muttered, before falling behind. I’d have felt more comfortable if she’d skated ahead, but she was not publicly arrogant enough to try to outskate the queen. Besides, she knew from childhood experience that I could skate circles around her. The road had been cleared of snow and cars for us, but there were no citizens lining the streets, like in the olden days. No doubt millions of people were watching us through a streaming computer connection, but in Winter, we do not show public worship for majestic figures. The king and queen here are only public servants, and Winterians make certain that is a fact never forgotten.

Visiting dignitaries like the king and queen of Summer would be of even less consequence – if we weren’t currently at an incredibly restive truce at the moment. Of course, there might have been assassins lurking alongside the road if we weren’t on royal grounds – as it was, there were enough nearly invisible Winter guards to man a fleet of spaceships.  I was in front, flanked by Adora and Zahina. Staejha, Ceci, Karen, Jhea, and Samson skated behind me. Behind them were my husband and his mother, behind which were two of his advisors. Behind them, in cars, were the rest of the crew we’d brought with us. 

I’d taught Zahina to skate, back home, at a skating rink, and Adora had practiced on a small pond that I’d had frozen in the castle grounds. My husband and his advisors had also practiced on the pond. I wished I could see how they were doing. If they did well, they’d earn the respect of the multitude who was watching via satellite. If any of them stumbled or fell, particularly the king, they would lose all respect from Winterians. The two advisors with my husband were not his most important ones; rather he chose two of his more dexterous advisors for this journey. For the rest of the stay, these two advisors would have an exalted status, and maybe even when they got back home.

We let the others travel in carriages in order to avoid any embarrassment their lack of athleticism would cause. They all traveled in old-fashioned, I mean, sixteenth [check] century carriages made entirely of ice, exposed to the cold Winter air, although the bubble around the hovercraft made certain that none of the inhabitants either felt the air, or fell out into the air.

Zahina was fun to watch, with her youthful enthusiasm and loud exclamations, however Adora was almost more entertaining. She skated to my left with graceful athleticism. With the road entirely clear of bumps, she didn’t have to concentrate as much as she would have. I caught her staring at the crystal roses which lined the side of the road, entranced by the prisms reflected off of nearly every surface. Most people think of Winter as icy blue. But Winter is a land of rainbows – something we play down in our own Cinemas, and which almost never gets picked up by Summer, Spring, or Autumn filmmakers. It is quite impressive, however, if one has never experienced it before. The sunglasses, and our contacts are all designed so that the light doesn’t blind, but the beauty is clear. 


October 24

It is really, really odd to meet the king and queen of Winter, a country I’ve lived in all my life, as the queen of Summer, a planet on which I’ve lived for less than half a year. What’s even weirder, is that the last time I was here, I was a commoner, and now I’m royalty. Of a different planet. It’s just mind-boggling. I’m not sure what to do with that. Yesterday, we all made it to the palace without anyone landing face first. The king and queen were even scarier than I remember, after months of looking at perpetually friendly Summer faces. Now, Summerians can be just as cruel as Winterians, however, their countenances are just as deceptively sweet as the Winterian appearances are deceptively evil. Still, it was a shock to land in the courtyard of my king and queen, and find them scowling at me. In Summer, you only frown if someone has been naughty and I was automatically ashamed of myself before I remembered not to take it personally.

The formalities seemed to take forever. My husband sized up my king, the queen looked me up and down and didn’t seem particularly pleased with what she saw. It wasn’t until today that I got a moment alone with her. “My dear,” she said, though she’s a year younger than me. “You have changed shockingly over the past several months.” She grinned. “You needn’t look surprised. You were handpicked by myself, my husband, and a few select politicians.”

It made sense, but I hadn’t really thought about the process of being picked. I can be slightly shortsighted when there’s a lot going on. At the moment, I wasn’t able to refrain from a dry, “My mother one of them, no doubt.”

The queen smirked. In Winter, we don’t laugh when we think something is funny. Laughter is loud and unruly. We only laugh to mock people. I still haven’t gotten accustomed to hearing people laugh constantly in Summer. I always think they’re laughing at me. In Winter, we show amusement by smirking; tapping the longest fingernail of the left hand against the nearest hard surface. In this case, three taps against the armrest of her throne indicated a moderate amount of amusement. 

“Indeed,” was all she said.

I sighed inwardly. Our queen is short, plump for a Winterian, and fair -- er, blonde, just so that there’s no confusion in the meaning of the word. She is known for being vicious and petulant (which is even more frightening) and she is rumored to be one of the few living Winterians who actually has unsatisfactory servants disemboweled in front of her. I looked at her, without the coloring of expectation, and tried to see past her veneer and reputation.

“Ah,” she said. Her eyes were amused and her longest fingernail tap-tap-tap-tap-tapped against her armrest. “There is the queen I have been waiting. To see.”

“What?” I was beyond confused. Her tapping got faster, as she watched me. When I stood there dumbly, she sighed. She stood on one quick motion; the silence after all that tapping was disconcerting. She took a couple of steps toward me, before plopping down on one of the steps to the dais. I stood there with my mouth open, then shut it quickly and looked around. She’d specifically requested no servants, and indeed we were alone. “What if there’s a feed?” I asked, a hint of panic in my voice.

She patted the step beside her. “You think I don’t know when I’m alone?” She sighed again, as though the first one weren’t shocking enough. She gave me a stern look and pointed to the step she sat on. I climbed up a bit, and stopped a few steps lower than her, and sat, gingerly. “Up here,” she said sternly. “And don’t make me ask again.” I stumbled up the steps and landed next to. She looked at me a moment, propped her elbows onto her knees, and rested her head in her hands. 

I felt the burn of humiliation climb up the back of my neck, into my ears as the queen moaned into her hands. Finally, I’d had enough. If we were both queens, then I shouldn’t be so shy, and she shouldn’t be so rude. “Knock it off,” I snapped.

She pulled her face out of her hands and swung her gaze over to mine. “Finally!” she shouted, throwing up her hands. “Honestly, how did you survive as queen for so many months, with that kind of attitude?”

I scowled at her. “I did fine, thank you very much. And it’s not like I ever met the queen of my country before.”

She scrutinized me. “Hm.” She faced forward and closed her eyes for a moment, tilting her head back. Then her eyes flew open, and she snapped her head toward me. I stayed still, ignoring the sense of personal space being invaded. “Okay,” she said, finally. She stood abruptly and held out a hand to me. “I’m going to give you a few simple lessons in how to be a queen.” She shook her head. “It’s not like you can get advice from many other people, after all, we are in a very unique position.” At this her eyes were kind, and oddly reminiscent for such a young woman. “The queen of Spring helped me. I’m going to help you.”

I raised my brows at this, not certain if I were more surprised that the queen of that flighty little planet could be of help or that the my queen was offering to help. I stood, awkwardly, not knowing what to do with my body. Finally I settled on the Winter queen posture of meeting my fingernail tips and resting my hands at my waist. But I added a real smirk, a Summer smirk to my lips, and challenged her with my eyes.

She laughed for real, with her eyes and mouth, and it wasn’t that grating titter that Winterians use to humiliate. It was a real laugh, and when she stopped, she smiled at me. “Good.” she said. “You’re a natural.”

The first thing, she told me, is that I am not a Winterian, anymore. If I’m going to be the queen of Summer, then I have to think of myself as a Summerian. I argued that if I did that, I may not do things the same way as if I had the interests of Winter at heart. She said that a good ruler has every planet or country or city at heart. A good ruler thinks of everyone, not just their own people. She said that if I always think of what is good for the worlds, then I will be successful in keeping Winter safe, as well as Summer.

Secondly, she said, never, ever, ever, ever, ever, enter a room the way I did yesterday. Ceremonies between diplomats, is a dance. It’s a getting-to-know-you ritual. You can get a very good idea of how a person rules by watching how they participate in the ritual. “You,” she said, “have little interest in the affairs of Summer. You go to court, and preside as you’re supposed to, but you’re not involved.” I blinked at her, stupidly wondering how my behavior to that point could have told her that. I briefly wondered if she had spies, but she continued speaking. “Yesterday, you came in, looked around at the building, and practically fell asleep during the ceremony.” 

“There are a million details you could have noticed about everyone you met yesterday, and you could have picked up on the silent messages your crew was sending ours.” She paused and looked at me sternly. “Tell me what you remember about yesterday’s service.”

I thought, and all I could remember was the fantastic chandelier -- crystal roses raining toward us -- the thing took up nearly the entire ceiling. At my blank look, the queen gave another sigh. She held up a hand as I opened my mouth, not even clear on how to defend my self. 

“It’s okay,” she said. “I’m going to teach you.” She snorted, and turned away, shaking her head. “It’s a good thing you came now, although,” she turned back and appraised me. “It’s our fault, really. We should have done this before you left.” She shrugged. “There was just no time.”


October 25

I was partly glad and partly disappointed that I didn’t get another session with Queen Seraphine, today. I know we’re in Winter and everything, but the woman is slightly intense. We’re pretty free from ceremonies until a week from today in which we have the parting ceremony. I’ll have to practice some of the things Seraphine pointed out to me. I guess I never realized that my lack of interest in governing, showed. It’s kind of embarrassing to think that every time I met a diplomat, they dismissed me as disinterested. I don’t like being read, so I try to convince myself that my Winterness masked most of it.

So I spent the day with Zaphina rather than being lectured, showing her all of my old haunts. We visited all of my favorite frozen ponds -- I never realized until I decided to show them to someone, that my favorite places might be boring to someone else. Maybe it did occur to me, which is why I never did show them anyone else. Zahina didn’t seem to mind. One of my favorite lake is Sea lake. It’s called Sea lake because the water is blue-green and because the lake is edged by this soft sand that stays warm all year (unless it‘s snowed upon). Florafauna is a pond in the middle of this wood of tall, white trees, which tower over you like many-armed ghosts. Even on the coldest day, the pond is surrounded by green bushes and neon flowers in fuschia and orange and electric blue and violet. 

Although we have seasons like any other planet (albeit our summer is a bit cooler than other planets and our winter is a longer and colder), Winter has been cultivated to look and feel frozen, year round. All of our flowers are done in ice blues and crystal clears and frozen violets -- even the reddest rose in Winter is paler than the bloom of a young girl’s cheek. So it’s only in the remotest wilderness that we get to see nature as it is on every other planet. A riot of colors, all stimulating your senses at one. I won’t say that Winter isn’t beautiful, but I realized today that all of my favorite places are where nature in all of her rich, colorful glory, is presented. 

I showed Zahina many places today, but there is one that is so special to me, that I hesitated to show it to her. It’s my place. If I ever got lost, or didn’t come home for a few days, my family knows to look for me in any other place than this. It’s and old ruin, a library -- that I would hide out in a library would probably not come as a shock to many who know me, but this is a real library, with real books, and old, old, old fashioned computers from when things were just being run by solar power. 

I stumbled upon the ruin when I was about nine or ten, and I guess at the time I was more enchanted by the colors I found there, than the contents. The outside of the building looks like an igloo -- it’s about six feet in diameter, and formed out of large blocks of ice. Although, when you get close enough to examine the blocks, you realize that they’re made out of some sort of non-reflective, metal. The metal is pale blue, like the rest of winter, so it blends right in -- so much so that if you didn’t actually test the metal, you would assume it was ice. I know this because that’s what I thought it was at first. When I hunched down to peek inside, it looked like a regular igloo. 

I had been hiking all day, looking to assert my independence by taming the wilderness, or perhaps it was one of the many times I ran away from home. I was pretty tired, and the igloo was out of the wind, and therefore relatively warmer than the outside. There was no sleeping bag or provisions, no nests or signs of animals. I thought it odd, but I was tired from crying or from the wind making my eyes water, whichever, so I plopped down and fell asleep. When I woke up, it was dark, and I was determined to make my family suffer, so I stayed the night, wrapped up in my overcoat, with only my imaginary friends for company -- at the time, I was so popular, that all my friends couldn’t fit inside the igloo, so some of them had to stay outside with the guy I had a crush on, and peek in on me, and the warmth I was enjoying.

In the morning, I made my way home, and completely forgot about the place until about a year later when one of my wretched cousins (probably Ceci) was visiting. I told my mom I’d be back in a week, took her nod for assent, and left a note on my bed, in case she missed me at all and forgot that I said I’d be gone. I packed up a change of clothes and a week’s worth of provisions and the teddy bear that I’d never quite grown out of and had missed terribly the year before. Actually, it was a stuffed dog with big, sad eyes, that Karen had given me. Whenever Karen was off with new parents, I’d take the dog with me overnight, pretending that the animal was a conduit to my lost sister. Anyway, I wasn’t even certain that I’d find the igloo again -- I hadn’t ventured that far from my home throughout that year, and hadn’t really marked the coordinates in my mind (a necessary habit for any non-city dweller) and I figured that whoever had built the igloo had skedaddled before I got there, and the thing was probably in ruins, anyway.

I found the igloo pretty easily, actually, considering I didn’t know exactly where it was or how long it had been there. It was still there, in as good of shape as when I’d left it. I peered inside, and still found no sign of the original dweller. Inside, the igloo was warm and solid. I’d set out earlier this time, so when I woke up, it was still light outside. I considered exploring the immediate area, but the paralysis that comes from a deep nap still lingered in my arms and legs, so I just lay there for a while, waiting for the numbness to fade. I rolled my head to the right and saw  two buttons. Not the kind that go on a coat, but the kind that sits next to an elevator. Languidly, wondering if I was still dreaming, I slid my slothful arm toward the green button and strained, half-heartedly toward it with my fingertips. 


October 26

Nothing happened for a moment. “Fingerprint not recognized.”

I jumped up, thinking that the owner of the igloo had come back. I only realized my mistake when my head cracked against the ceiling. “Ow!” 

“Voice not recognized. Please restate your name.” The voice was friendly, pleasant like an operator or a TV announcer. 

The doorway to the igloo was clear. I waited for my brain to stop bouncing around the interior of my skull. I’d plopped down onto my butt after hitting the ceiling and now I clambered to my knees and crawled toward the doorway. “My name is Winter Moon,” I said. I thought my voice sounded far away, and wondered if I had a concussion.

“Winter Moon,” the voice repeated. I stuck my head out the doorway and looked around. “Sixteen Winter Moons found. No fingerprint match. No voice recognized. Are you new to our system?” I didn’t see anything moving outside, so I stepped out and looked around. The voice got fainter as I stepped away from the igloo, which is what made me realize that the voice had come from within the small building, not without. 

I berated myself for being so stupid, and crouched down into the doorway. “Are you a computer?” I asked the empty interior. 

“Welcome to LUSH, the state of the art Library University Something Hospital brought to you by Coca-Cola. Please state your full name, and we can enter you into the system.”

“You’re a hospital?” I asked, stepping inside. My head pounded, and my voice still sounded thick. I felt like my skull had broken into splinters, which were digging into my brain. “I think I have head trauma.” I paused, gingerly touching my head. My hair wasn’t wet or sticky or anything, and my hand came away clear, but I thought I felt a bump swelling up under the skin. “I think I may be hallucinating,” I muttered to myself, as an aside.

“Is this an emergency?” The voice was still quiet, and a perfect blend of masculine and feminine, disquietingly comforting, but the voice had turned crisp, like a nurse.

“No,” I said. “I don’t think so.” 

“In that case,” the computer said, “We’ll take some information first. Full name please.”

“Winter Estelle Moon.”

“Date of Birth?”

“August thirteen, seventy-seven, fifty-one,” I recited automatically.

“Our system is not Y7K compliant. Please wait a moment as we update our calendar. Calendar updated. What is the current date?”

“Um,” I said. “August thirteen, seventy-seven, sixty-three.”

“Happy Birthday,” the computer said. “Who is your current world leader?”

“Thanks,” I said, looking around. I wondered if I was the haoxee in an elaborate prank. “Hitler Frankenstein the seventy-third.” Winter has the habit of naming their leaders after abominable figures from history. It’s one more reason we’re feared by other planets. No other planet would think to name their kings after genocidal killers or monsters that create monsters and then just abandon them.

“Your answers are correct. We assume that you do not have a concussion, but you may enter and have your wound seen to.” A panel of ice bricks moved back, and then slid to the side. I peeked through to find a small area, with a curved back. The igloo must have had a false back, I thought. The tiny room was empty, though, without even a button to push from what I could see.

“Um,” I said. “That’s a small hospital.”

If a computer could have sighed, it may have done so silently. “This is an elevator,” it explained, patiently. “Please enter, and you will be taken to the hospital.”

I thought for a moment, of course I did. It could be a trick. A trap, used to lure young girls into dark, narrow spaces. Winter has perverts, just like any other country. But at the end of the day, I was pure Winterian (or so I thought at the time) and I was bored and intrigued and arrogant enough to believe that I was strong enough to handle any perv hand-to-hand. I crawled inside, for the ceiling of the elevator was the same height as the igloo. The door slid back into place, and away from me, but there remained the same amount of light as before. The elevator was large enough for an extremely large person, or two smallish persons to sit in. 

“Why is this elevator so small,” I asked. “If this is a hospital, mightn’t they be brought in by gurneys and such? How did you know my answers were correct to the concussion questions if you weren’t Y7K compliant until a few minutes ago? How come nobody knows about this place?”

“This is an emergency exit,” the computer said. “The original entrance was blocked when Earth was divided into its four planets. In the ensuing panic, this place was forgotten about. It has remained mostly uninhabited for approximately 4,000 years. After you initiated the compliancy, I connected to the other computers on the four planets, and was therefore able to confirm your answers.”

“Why did you need me to initiate the compliancy,” I asked as the door and slid open again.

“When we are empty, I go to sleep until I am awoken. You have reached the hospital ward.”

I climbed out of the elevator and stood. The ceiling here rose to at least three times my height. “Wow. Were our ancestors giants?”

“They averaged between five-and-a-half and six-feet-tall with regional and genetic differences so that the shortest adult was approximately 3 feet tall and the tallest approximately 8 feet in height.”

“Wow,” I said again. “They were tiny. Why did they need such tall ceilings?” 

“Pageantry was a large part of the genetic then, as it is now, and this building was a proud accomplishment. Please step over to the admitting desk.”

I stepped toward a small, glass plated cubicle with the word Admittance emblazoned on the front. Interesting. “In the 30th century, they were still using elevators that only went up and down,” I said. “How did I get to admitting if I came in through a back exit?”

“This building was ahead of its time,” the computer said. “Much was done here that was impossible for that technology. Find the window with the red lines. Look into the line which most closely meets your eye level. Good. Watch the dot in the middle as it goes up and down, left to right. Excellent. You do not have a concussion, however, I would like to take a look at the bump on your head. Please step back into the elevator and I will take you to an examining room.”


Monday, October 19, 2009

Week 15

October 14

My husband and I went hiking and rock climbing today. He said that he’d never done that before. We had a lot of citizens watching us for a while, but then, when no one fell off the mountain, they got bored and went home. Adora accompanied me, and Wanderlust was chaperone to my husband. It was odd to see him in athletic gears, since he’s such a dandy at court. Apparently, since there were no ladies to impress, and because he was intensely worried about falling off the mountain, he gave up his usual slavery to fashion and his mincing of speech and walk. I found myself liking him more as a man, than as a clown, and found myself feeling sorry for him. He has two ex-wives, and two children, and can not seem to find contentment in monogamy, which spells out an extreme lack of confidence. It’s sad, really, because he can be quite charming when he tries, and even more charming when he doesn’t.

My husband and I were not left completely alone, but for about twenty minutes, we climbed; too slow for Adora and too fast for Wanderlust, and though we were unable to converse due to the necessity of concentration. More than once he pointed out a good handhold or foothold, and I did the same for him. It was a good way to build a repoire, without the awkwardness of trying to find conversation with a stranger. On a small cliff; we paused to rest, drinking sips of water, and catching our respective breaths. I looked down over his kingdom, and was impressed by the beauty of the layout. 

“This reminds me of when I flew in,” I said. “I’ve never seen a more organized city. The architecture is astounding, even from this height.” The entire city is laid on in a hexagon, with the palace in the middle, and roads at each corner of the shape. The palace is gorgeous, and I can see the mall, close to us, and the area where library stands on the edge of the city. Near that is the harbor, where I had dinner on a dinner cruise with Hon. The palace is the tallest building, but the mall is almost as impressive.

“Thank you,” my husband said. “Large parts of the mall, and the school system,” he pointed to a shape on the outermost section of the hexagon, “were designed by a very talented woman named Danae Hyperton.”

I tried not to jump at the mention of Danae. “Oh,” I said, keeping my voice casual. “I haven’t been to the school system yet, but it’s supposed to be the best of all four planets.”

My husband grinned. “Yes. A lot of Springians and Autumnians come to study with our professors. Even some of the more scholarly Winterians access our information, remotely.”

I stared at him, to see if he was joking. “Really? I’m surprised that Summer would share their information with Winter.”

He laughed. “We don’t share military secrets or anything,” he said. “But we do have an impressive amount of agricultural knowledge.” He paused, then added thoughtfully, “Actually, the majority of the agricultural technology that Winter uses, was discovered and shared by Summerians. Your father,” he continued, watching me from the side of his eye, “was the one who implemented most of our farming technology there.”

I looked over at him, uncertain. “He never told me that.”

He shrugged. “It is not a well-known fact that our academics share research with Winter, and vice versa. Most of the public would not approve. In fact, one reason I decided to marry a Winterian, was to soften Summerians view of Winterians, in order to be able to tell Summerians about this sharing of wisdom.” He saw my shocked stare, and grinned. “You can ask your mother about this. It’s not a planetary secret anymore; at least, it won’t be soon. Summerians and Winterians have been working together for a long time, in order to reduce the hatred the inhabitants of the two planets have for each other. Right now, the prejudice is more habit than practice.”

“My father was killed in the war,” I said, tightly.

He shook his head. “A remarkably regrettable accident. Your father wasn’t killed in battle. It was a shipcrash; avoidable, yet,” he shrugged. “Not. It was, for lack of a better word, an accident. But because it happened in space, his cover story was that he was fighting us.” He frowned. “It was a blow to Summer’s reputation, because your father was well-respected and well-known, and anti-Summer sentiment was stirred up. It’s only starting to settle down, now that I’ve married you.”

I stared at him. “That’s why you married me,” I breathed. “I wasn’t just a random Winter bride…”

He grinned that cocky grin that makes me want to slap him and kiss him at the same time. He would have spoken, but Wanderlust dragged his tubby boat over the cliff edge, panting and gasping. “Oh, good, we’re at the top,” he said through gasps and wheezes. “Now, how do we get down?”

I’ll admit to a particular level of frustration that our conversation was cut short by this interruption, however, it dually served as a relief from the intensity of it. Imagine, if I’d spend thirty years cold and married, never to find out that my father is the reason I became the queen of Summer. So many things that he told me are revolutionary. Indeed, I never had the same lazy hatred for Summer that some of my fellow Winterians did, until my father was killed. Before that, I always secretly thought that it was a shame we couldn’t get along with our warm-blooded brethren. Especially on those days when I was feeling like a particularly incompetent Winterian, I wished that we could get along so that Winterians wouldn’t have to seem so cold and mean at all times, at all costs.

I’ll definitely speak to my mother. It may be time to come down with a particularly bad case of homesickness. Maybe I’ll take some pretty, single ladies of the court with me, and introduce them to some handsome young Winterians. Wouldn’t that be a lovely revenge? I can already think of three or four who would benefit from some type of discipline. They are too superficial and lazy for court, yet they continue to send their giggles bubbling through even the most serious cases – including Danae’s, which I found particularly irritating. I would have to bring some Winterians men back with me, but I this correlate’s with my mother’s wish, so she shouldn’t have a problem with it. 

I’ll send my missive off tonight.


October 15

My mother seemed to embrace my idea to visit home. I find that oddly unsettling, like I finally took the wheel in the hovercraft of destiny, only to find I’m in the driver‘s seat, but the real steering wheel is on the passenger‘s side, and someone else is making the real decisions. In any case, I’ve decided to take Wanderlust with me, along with two other courtiers; Longfellow Keats, and Valentino Mewes. Longfellow is a tall man, with a long, dark ponytail. He’s rather quiet, and seems shy, but he has eyes that are piercing and honest, two things that serve him well with in his seductions. I practically melt when he stands near me. No Winter girl has a chance.  Valentino is shorter, but more muscular. The Winter girls will go crazy over his sun-kissed hair and oiled muscles -- of course, he’ll have to wear more clothing in Winter, but he can knock you out with his sheer confidence at fifty paces. Wanderlust needs to get out of Summer, at least for a while. I’d like to see how he does with Winter women, or what they do to him.

My husband wasn’t opposed to the idea either, which sort of hurt my feelings, until he suggested that he come with us. None of his closest advisors strongly objected to this, either, so I’m clearly a genius. Or else, everyone else was planning on this already, and I get to take credit for the idea. Either way, we’re leaving in a week, for a week. Danae is making me some Winterish/Summerish clothes out of Winter fabrics, for me to wear there. There isn’t really anything wrong with the clothes I left behind, except that I was a commoner back home, and none of my sweaters and jeans are fit for the status I now employ, unfortunately. What is fortunate, is that Jhea and Samson are coming with us, so that Jhea can introduce him to her parents. This is a perfect excuse for Danae not to show up to work for a week. I can call in and check on the office, but Carrot can take care of things for a week.

I have to break up with my husband tomorrow night. Danae has to break up with Bohn, I mean. In a way, I’m sadder that I have to do that, than I was to break up with Hon. My husband, after all, is a fantastic kisser. Though yesterday we did a little light bonding as real husband and wife, we’re a long way away from becoming lovers, whereas Danae and Bohn were getting pretty close. Besides, there is something about pretending to be someone else, that gives you the freedom to be yourself. Away from the constraints of the usual social pressure, from the role I’ve adopted, I get to be soft and I’m allowed to smile and laugh if I feel like it. My husband is more relaxed as Bohn, too, so I know it’s not just me.

Zahina begged to go with me to Winter. She insisted that I come up with some excuse to take her with me. I think she’s afraid of losing her surrogate, and a week is an awfully long time when you’re six. Besides, it’s not that long ago that her mother died, and I’ve been able to at least show her my face once a day since then. I told her that it was impossible this time, but that I’d come up with an excuse to have Danae and her go to Winter, soon. She stopped arguing, but she didn’t accept this. Her face got still, her eyes stony. “Fine,” she said. “I don’t care, anyway. Go no, and don‘t come back!” She ran to her room and locked herself in, and refused to come out again before I left. Eliava said that she’d take care of it, but I got the impression that she blamed me -- that she couldn’t see why I had to leave, and traumatize the little girl more than she has been already.

But even if I wanted to stay, what would that teach Zahina? That it’s okay to lock yourself up with the same people in the same places, and never budge? That loss is a permanent condition and the only real way to show grief is by never moving on with life? Are we all supposed to stay is some form of living death until we can make the state permanent? I don’t think so. I think it’s important to go away from Zahina once in a while, just to show her that I WILL come back.

I’ve been looking for Hon even harder, at the palace, since I broke up with him. I keep thinking that I see him, but when I really look, he disappears. I’m probably just losing my mind. I’m really upset that I won’t be seeing him anymore. My husband could tell I was down, today. “Don’t worry,” he said, sympathetically. “We’ll get you home, and then you’ll feel more like yourself.” His words sent a chill through me, mostly because I realized how much I’ve changed since I got here. When I first arrived, I was this kid who’d tested the theory that Winterians had to be seemingly heartless at all costs, for a thousand years. When I got here, the importance of maintaining that façade stayed with me, but stronger than ever. I’ve dealt with this constant guilt over failing in my role as the unreachable ice queen. Since I arrived, I’ve made friends, helped strangers, and in a lot of ways, risked not only my life, but the lives of millions of Winterians on my weak need for companionship. 

Now, with Ceci as the perfect example, it’s probably a good thing that I did make some friends, but I can’t shake that feeling that I haven’t done what was expected. That my humanity made me too frail and weak, and that I’m not a true Winterian. Finding out that my mother is a Summerian has strengthened this feeling of inadequacy. It’s this tension that settles behind my shoulders and constantly tries to push me forward. It’s horrible, and I don’t know how to get rid of it. Even if I point out Jhea’s ability to be seduce, Ceci’s cracking under the pressure of no social connection, Karen’s neediness since she arrived -- for some reason, I still can’t excuse myself from the ideal that I’ve been trying to live up to.

One good thing is that I get to take Stan and Todd with me, and Todd’s mother is coming too. Adora is coming with me, of course, and Karen and Jhea as well. Karen is extremely homesick, so we may just leave her back in Winter, although her companionship with Ceci over the past few days has seemed to help a lot.


October 16

I broke up with my husband today. Like Hon, he took is insultingly well. He just gave me this long, passionate kiss at the door, and then he kissed me on the forehead and said, “Goodbye.” When I went inside, I was greeted with Zahina’s glare. “I thought you were leaving,” she said.

“Not for six more days,” I said. I tried not to show hurt at the dismissive tone she used, but rather addressed the vulnerability in her voice. I sat down and leaned against the front door. I watched her for a moment, and when she didn’t move toward me, I said, “I know you’re upset, but I’ll come back.”

She crossed her arms and looked away.  “I don’t care if you come back,” she said. She let her arms drop to her sides and leaned forward, blasting me with heat from her gaze.  “I just don’t think you should go have fun in Winter and I have to stay here and go to school.” Her shoulders sagged. “What if you die too,” she said, her heart in her eyes.

I sighed and held out my arms. She hesitated and then collapsed at my feet. I pulled her close and said to her, “I can’t promise that I won’t die and leave you, any more than you can promise you won’t die, and leave me. But I won’t willingly leave you, ever. Your mother didn’t want to leave you – you were all she talked about.”

“She didn’t care about me.”

It took me a moment to process her words. “What? Of course she did.”

Zahina’s head moved against my neck, shaking a negative. “She didn’t care. After my dad died, she didn’t pretend to love me anymore.”

Pain stabbed me through the heart at those words. “Oh…” I sighed. I pushed back a little, until she pulled away to look at me. Her eyes were wet and sad. I brushed the hair out of her face. I thought for a moment, trying to figure out how to relay to her, her mother’s grief. “You know how when your mom died, and you felt empty, like nothing was important, or would ever be important again?”

She thought for a moment. “Yes,” she said, already processing the train of thought.

“You still loved your grandma after your mom died, right? You didn’t stop loving her.”

“No,” Zahina agreed. “But I couldn’t feel how much I love Gramma – like if I was hugging a pillow instead of her.”

I nodded. “That’s grief. It’s not that you don’t still love your family but the pain from the one who is gone, is the strongest feeling you feel. But when you hug your grandma, it’s not like hugging a pillow anymore, is it?”

She thought. “No. And I was a lot mad at you cuz you’re leaving, not just a little bit mad.”

“Right,” I said. “When you first lose someone, there’s that shock, because you can’t really believe it, and that’s the pillow. Now that the shock has gone away, you can feel other things again.”

She pondered this. “But that don’t mean my mom loved me. She didn’t feel things anymore even though my dad died a long time ago.”

“Grief affects people differently,” I said. “When your dad died, your mom lost a husband for herself and a father for you, and a job that she loved and she lost you in a way, too, because when someone close dies, it changes the whole family, not just part of it. You were sad, and she was sad, and Gramma was sad, and  none of you were the same. When you’re that close to someone, you don’t know who you are without them. But”, I said, and I firmed my voice up, so that she would look at me. “Your mom was getting better, and she did love you. I saw her be sad, and like she didn’t care, but when she would talk about you, her eyes would light up and her voice would get higher, almost like she was singing.” Zahina looked doubtful. “She was getting better, wasn’t she,” I asked. “She was being happier, she was ready to go to court to save her business, she would talk to you more, sing to you, color with you, right?” I was guessing, going over in my mind when my mom started to get better after my dad died.

She thought for a moment, and then nodded slowly. “She was starting to wear dresses again,” she said. “Instead of sweat pants.” She looked up at me, watching for artifice, watching for the truth. “She did love me, not just my dad?” she asked. At my nod, her face crumpled up and she threw herself against my shoulder. 

I held her there, gutted that she would ever question her mother’s love. When my father died, I was already an adult, so I knew not to take her grief personally. Zahina didn’t have that luxury, being only four when her father died. To lose him first, and then her mother to grief -- I felt my eyes get hot and fought back tears. The concept of this warm, intelligent girl feeling so lost and unloved was anathema to me. Part of me couldn’t believe it, and the other part was completely devastated.

I thought about my husband and the look in his eyes after he kissed me goodbye. There was regret there, but humor as well, and zero surprise. I started thinking that I’d been being played for a while now. Had my husband recognized me right away, like I’d recognized him? Had I been fooling him? But Bohn isn’t a real person, and Danae was. He even knew Danae when they were kids, and the changes made in her by her grief are explained in any anomaly I present. Besides, we looked so much alike we could be sisters, if not twins. What kind of game is my husband playing? Is he playing a game at all? Bohn was a character created and established looong before I came to Summer. What is he up to? And why do I see Hon everywhere? Am I crazy, or did he serve me my dessert tonight? If he did, I’ll kill him for making such a fool of me. But I do year to see him again. 

October 17

Autumn was starting so nicely, too, until the heat came back. It’s nearly midnight and I’m uncomfortably warm. I had to get out one of the nightgowns Adora made for me that first month I was here. I’ve only been in Summer for six months, but it’s amazing how I’ve come accustomed to being here. Back then, I was afraid to show that I was too hot to sleep in my own clothes. I almost combusted before I was willing to get rid of my Winter wools. I was so worried that the slightest hint of humanity would get me killed. I can’t say that I didn’t have good reason to feel that way, or that I’m able to entirely let down my guard, but I don’t have the same fear that I did when I got here. It’s a nice revelation. 

I guess I’m thinking about this because Adora and I were packing tonight, to get ready for our visit to Winter. We realized that making all of my clothes was going to be too much for Adora in the short amount of time, especially with the wedding coming up. Jhea asked Adora to design the bridesmaids gowns as well. (I’m the maid of honor! Apparently, I’m Jhea’s best friend…?) Since we’ve been here long enough for Summerians to realize that I’ve been wearing Summer fabrics, and changing my style slowly to incorporate some Summer softness (but not too much. No one is going to mistake me for Adora any time soon) we realized that we don’t need to make my clothes in secret. So Adora is now the royal designer and head seamstress for the queen. Being one of my seamstresses is a coveted job here, so the other maids have been acting with a bit more respect toward Adora lately. It would be worth being the queen if the only thing I could do, during my reign, is be one reason behind Adora’s improved posture.

I was going over my schedule this morning, in my head, and was a little sad and a little relieved to realize that I don’t have any dates coming up. Romantic ones, I mean. I have a ton to do at work, Mother has a full agenda for my visit to Winter, already, and I have to find some way to be able to communicate with Zahina while I’m gone. She still has to see me every day, even if I’m not there physically. It strikes me as odd that she is so accepting of me. I keep expecting her to scream, “you’re not my mother, I don’t want to see you again” and run to her room and slam her door. Or, at least, to not be so glad to see me when I visit. I’m constantly and painfully aware of the fact that I look like her mother, and am SO not. But she doesn’t seem to mind. Maybe she doesn’t think I so closely resemble her mother. Or maybe she’ll just take any semblance of her mother she can get. Or maybe her mother was so distant for so long that she can’t really miss her too much. I would love to ask her, but I can’t. Not only would it be incredibly insensitive, but I don’t think she’d be able to articulate it, anyway.

Staejha came to visit me this morning. I was shocked to see her, probably more shocked than when Jhea or Ceci came to me. She said she wanted to talk about her coming nuptials. At first, I was uneasy, certain that she was about to burst out with some secret, like my other cousins did. I didn’t like the idea for a couple of reasons; one, I don’t like Staejha, and two, she doesn’t like me. If she’d burst into tears like Ceci or confessed a pregnancy, with there being too much antipathy between us for sympathy, I don’t know what I would have done. 

Fortunately, she didn’t come to confide in me, so much as complain. Why does Jhea get to be the first Winterian to marry a Summerian? Isn’t Staejha engaged to be married as well? Staejha would settle for a double wedding. No doubt Jhea wouldn’t mind, the girl is such a wallflower, she probably hates all of this attention anyway. She looked around my room, and suppressed a shudder, as though she were offended by it’s plainness. She made her demands with a lazy, bored air, rarely meeting my gaze, or even glancing at my face -- and it’s not like she had a lot of other things too look at. Other than her fingernails, the ends of her hair, her rings, the lace of her sleeve, the drape of her skirt. I would have agreed, and was about to, when she added, “we could push it back another month or two, so that we can plan it properly.”  Staejha said. Her whiny, biting tone, slid over me like a waterfall of piranhas. “I mean, Jhea’s wedding is alright, for the allotted time, but we could do so much better with a bit of planning.”

I would have accommodated her, really -- probably -- if she’d left it at the double wedding. But of course it’s impossible to move the wedding back, because Jhea’s going to start getting a baby bump real soon. Staejha’s presentation of her request, with the complete and utter assumption that I would do exactly as she demanded, without even a pause for thought, was just as impossible to ignore. I don’t credit myself with an extreme amount of pride, but I am the queen of Summer. To be approached with such a selfish request and such a disrespectful attitude, irritated me out of my stunned, sleepy stupor.

“I’m sorry,” I said, in a voice fully of icy knives, “I don’t recall asking for your input on the weddings.”

Staejha stared at me, her mouth dropping open, exposing little, sharp teeth, similar to those of her ancestors, the flesh-eating fish. Many times throughout my life I have been thankful that Staejha is not actually related to me. This gratefulness was affirmed, yet again. 

I couldn’t shoot laser beams from my eyes, and without the blue contacts, my brown eyes didn’t have their usual icy glare, but I managed to infuse every bit of derision I felt for Staejha in my gaze. She hadn’t sat, like my previous visitors, preferring to hover over me, replete in her condescension. My words, combined with my gaze, though, made her step back. I moved toward her as she moved away, rising from my bed, and pushing her back with the force of my ire until her back was to the door. There were so many things I could have said, so many cutting remarks that would have paid her back for the lifetime of disrespect she had shown me. But I was too angry to think of them. Winter women know how to fight; quick, mean, and dirty. In order to stop myself from causing her physical harm, I spoke quietly, yet firmly. “Get. Out.”


October 18

This morning I got asked out on a date by one of our newest clients. Here I was, thinking that I’ll never go on a date again now that Hon and my husband are out of the picture. Phant (one name, like Madonna or Cher) is having us design him a haunted mansion. For his own, personal amusement, not for visitors, or anything. He wants it to be in the pure Victorian fashion that was popular in the 1800s BS (before split). I took a course in college on ancient gothic literature in which we read really old books that are barely coherent, and watched old movies with quaint sets and costumes. 

Phant does not look like Bela Lugosi or any other caricature of the Vampire person. However, he is quite tall and dashing, and his incisors are very white, and the length and sharpness of them rivals my cousin Staejha’s. He’s actually pretty charming, well educated, and he smells good -- but he stares at my neck slightly too long. I think that all of this is cultivated behavior, but it’s so habitual now that he actually is creepy, rather than just pretending to be. In any case, I’m glad I took that class, because I understood pretty much exactly what Phant wants, and I haven’t had to do too much research -- mostly, just reviewing some of those old movies and some notes from class. Anyway, I said no to the date, but it was kind of nice to be asked. 

I saw Zahina today. She doesn’t seem to be as angry with me as she was. I brought her some real candies that Todd made for me, and we’ve made plans to go on a dinner cruise like the one that Hon took me on, but one that has kiddie rides and face painting, rather than gambling and liquor. We’re supposed to do that a week from today. I think making plans for after I come back, helped her realize that life won’t stop after this week. She let me help her with her homework, and I could see that she’d already done it, and then erased all the answers so that we could do it together.

Eliava told me later, that I spend more time with Zahina than Danae died. “But Danae lived with you,” I said.

“Yes,” Eliava replied, but Zahina could have been part of the furniture. She shook her head at my shocked expression. “When you live with someone, you forget to experience them. You visit Zahina every day. You take time out of what you’re doing, all of which sounds interesting and exciting to her, and only adds to her feeling special -- and come specifically to see her.” Eliava paused with a small chuckle. “It’s not like you’re here to visit the couch.” She sobered. “You’re here to see Zahina. She never got that from her mother.”

I was a little shocked by this conversation while we were having it, but I think about it now, and I’m glad that I’m such an important part of Zahina’s life. I guess when I was a kid, if I’d had the queen of Winter coming to visit me, I’d feel pretty special too. At the same time, I worry that I am so important to Zahina. It just makes it more important for me not to screw up our relationship. In a way, the thought of myself as just some stranger who Zahina tolerates because I look like her mom, comes with a lot less pressure. To think that I’m important to the girl -- it adds a lot of anxiety. I just have to forget the thought though, pretend like Eliava is making more of me, than I am. Otherwise, I won’t be able to relax around Zahina, and that will definitely screw up the relationship.

I took Karen and Ceci to the dinner cruise tonight. Karen loved it, Ceci hated it. I’m rather neutral to the experience, at least in comparison to my extreme sister and cousin, but it was amusing to see their reactions. Karen lost herself in craps and roulette, whilst Ceci settled in at the blackjack table. Karen could have lost a million dollars and been ecstatically happy -- Ceci won a hundred dollars and was upset about the hands she didn’t win. I had to pretend that this was the first time I’d been on the boat. In fact, I’d left some brochures for the ship lying around the chapel where Samson and Jhea are going to get married. Todd picked one up. “My dad went there once,” he said.

Karen walked over to him. “Jubilee Dinner Cruise and Gambling,” she read aloud. “What’s gambling?”

Todd looked like he was proud of having knowledge that an adult didn’t. “Gambling is games where you bet that you’re going to win.”

Ceci broke in. “What are the odds that you’ll win?”

“The odds are always in the house’s favor,” he said, expertly. He paused. “My dad used to do that before he married my mom. She made him promise to stop, or she wouldn’t marry him.”

“Did he,” asked the ever trusting Ceci.

Todd nodded. “Yeah. He just like to gamble --” he paused, allowing the ire to drip away from his tone. “Sometimes he like to gamble at home.” His brows were lowered, and I got a chill, realizing he wasn’t talking about games anymore.

Ceci didn’t realize it. “If you can play at home, why give your money to some stranger?”

Todd shrugged, acknowledging the odd behavior that adults seem to have toward silly things. 

“We should go,” Karen said.

“What a waste,” Ceci answered.

I walked over, and flipped through the brochure. “It looks pretty,” I said. “It must be weird to look at an ocean without a glacier in sight.

Ceci looked where I pointed. “I guess it’s kind of pretty,” she said. “But I won’t gamble.”

Karen slid a knowing glance in Ceci’s direction.

I got a note from my husband after we got home. I was in my room, changing into my nightgown, when I saw it on my bed.

Meet me at the base of the mountain where we went climbing the other day, the note said. I have something to show you. Lanzoni

I wonder what he wants. It was kind of odd to see his handwriting. He uses long, graceful strokes. I took the electronic tablet and traced his words, following the sloping letters.

Back in the olden days, when computer technology was just getting incorporated into every home, even the poor ones, there was concern that the art of writing by hand would be lost. It was for almost a thousand years, but it has come in and out of fashion since then. We don’t kill trees for paper anymore, or kill squids for ink, but we do have tablets on which we write by hand. Lovers use the tablets in order to send secret messages to each other. Those tablets only respond to the particular DNA of the two people allowed to access the information stored. This tablet is just a regular notepad. It might not even be my husband’s writing. But if he’d had a servant write it, the servant may as well have just used a font. Besides, the writing reminds me of my husband -- bold, and slanted, and knowing. Perhaps I read too much into it. 


October 19

In three more days, we’ll be going home. There are so many strange and wondrous places in Winter that I want to show Lanzoni. I know that he’s a Summerian through and through, but I hope he comes to love it, at least a little. It really is beautiful. I miss the blue whiteness of everything, the crispness of the air, the differences in the opacity of the walls. Every building in Winter is made from frozen water of different thicknesses. Even the fireplaces are made of bricks of ice. It’s really impressive to look at, although there always seems to be a draft. 

One thing I miss, is being able to ice skate everywhere. At home, rather than shoes, we wore skates. In Summer, they only wear ice skates in Winter. I’m sort of looking forward to that. Apparently, Summerians do enjoy their winter sports, although they try to remove all winter stigma from it by calling it something else.

I wasn’t that experienced with men in Winter, but I do have a lot of friends who are male, and quite good looking. I’m looking forward to introducing them to my husband. One in particular, Geodward Wintersmith, is someone I want my husband to meet. Geodward is at least six feet tall and very slender. He has dark, curly hair that he wears to his shoulders. He does not fit the Winter stereotype of physical perfection, but he liked to climb mountains with me. He not only has one of the most strikingly beautiful faces that I’ve ever seen, but he is shockingly shy and humble. It’s as though he’s never owned a mirror, nor looked in a neighbors.

Geo has proposed marriage to me, several times, but as the proposals always came directly after a bad break-up with a girlfriend, and he always presented the idea with a shrug, I never really took him seriously. He has written me several times since I got here, and I’m thinking of convincing him to come back with us. We’re taking (and hopefully leaving) three Summerian men over there, it’s only fair to bring some back. 

George is a gifted musician with a wonderful, husky tone to his voice. He writes mainly love songs, but since they’re done in the Winter styles, there is usually a lot of bloodshed. I think he would like to learn, and do very well with, the Summer style of ballads. They’re a lot softer and romantic. I also think that there are some nice young ladies I can introduce him to here. In Winter, he has a small following, but most women reject him as being too soft. There are not many Winter men who would find Geo intimidating, but there are even fewer who would not be glad to call him a friend.

I think he will be a good companion to my husband, with the added bonus of possibly making him jealous. I also think he might make a good match for Adora, even though I can still see her with Hon. I would so love to see her with a gentle man, one who knows how to be kind, better than he knows how to do anything else. And he’s not physically imposing, but he is muscular. And he has nice, blue eyes, that can be as warm as sun-kissed springs or as cold as the Winter moon. I think that would be a good combination for her, because she would be both protected by him and safe from him.

Speaking of Hon, I definitely saw him today. I can not for the life of me remember where, or what circumstance I was in. It must have been in a crowd of people, but it could have been at work, at court, or in the chapel, getting Jhea’s wedding ready. Jhea and Samson are getting married exactly a week from when we return from Winter. Anyway, I don’t remember exactly where I saw Hon, but I remember the shock of recognition, and then he was gone. I have to keep looking for him, but aside from that, I have to make certain that I don’t actively look for him. For one thing, he doesn’t seem to appear, when I do, and for another thing, I don’t want to blow his cover. He seems to be pretending to be a servant, but I don’t know which one. He is obviously a secret advisor to my husband, and despite the fact that his job is covert, I trust him. Perhaps it is conceit of my part, but I feel that since I’ve spent time with him and been alone with him, and he has always treated me like an intelligent yet valuable woman -- I just trust him. It’s a bit embarrassing to admit that to myself. Despite the fact that Winterians pride themselves on their cunning, most of the people I’ve known have been trustworthy. Still, we must always be on our guard, and I don’t have one with Hon. I’m not sure why, and I’m a little uneasy about the feeling of vulnerability, though I’m not uneasy about him, in himself.

I saw Zahina today. She seems to have mostly forgotten that I’ll be gone for a week, and I don’t want to bring it up. She has a wonderful imagination -- she took me into a world today in which her stuffed unicorn wanted to be a bear. The unicorn’s name was Bear, and Bear was helping this unknown yet prophesied princess to achieve her fate. That’s the gist, anyway. There were many obstacles in our path, including a purple and pink giraffe who asked us several silly riddles that did not make any sense. I think Zahina got the idea from actual riddles, which are impossible for her to figure out. So she made up these long, rambling ones. At one point, she looked to me expectantly, as though I’d know the answer. So I looked straight at that damn giraffe and said as confidently as I could, “rainbow salmon”. Zahina nodded approvingly, and the giraffe stepped aside, in order to reveal a deep, dark cave (cardboard box) that we will explore tomorrow. I honestly can’t wait to see what’s in it.

I’ve been thinking of possible matches for Karen from the collection of men at court, but I have not stumbled upon a real possibility yet. Still, she and Ceci seem to be getting along really well, which is good news. And Ceci hasn’t made any more early morning visits in order to break down on my stool. For that matter, I’ve barely seen Staejha, as well. We’re definitely not taking her to visit Winter with us, which is fine with me. One of the reasons I was so happy to move here was to get away from her, and she followed me here. It’ll be nice to take small vacation from her. She is such a nasty little beast.


2017 Chapter 4

I am certain Adora has run to tell my husband or any of his guards about my real appearance. I suppose I could arm myself more fully, but I ...