This week they found a rock on Mars, which itself isn’t so
unlikely Buzz supposed, the entire planet is rocks, really but it was what the
rock did that was so amazing to everyone, or maybe it was not so much what the
rock did that was amazing but it was what everyone else did, or did not do,
that made the rock seem so amazing.
“This rock, what it did was it was there,” Buzz said to the
bus driver in the morning, and the bus driver looked at him and looked at his
bus pass and shrugged. “That’s really
all but that seems amazing to people because earlier the rock was not there, and then it was there, in
pictures beamed back (I think) from Mars? Which is to say that I think they
were pictures and not videos that were beamed back,” Buzz told the lady next to
him on the bus.
She nodded.
“So: this rock that was not there and was there is amazing
people to the point of lawsuits, which is a true fact I also read this week,”
Buzz wrote on his blog, which he did at work on the network computers before he
started working. Once,
Buzz’s supervisor had said to Buzz that Buzz really oughtn’t use work computers to write on his blog because they could
track what he did and what if the higher-ups told him (by which Buzz knew the
supervisor meant him-supervisor, not him-Buzz) told him to fire Buzz? Just don’t do it, Buzz had been told, but the
supervisor had quit to take a job at a mortgage brokerage and Buzz heard the
mortgage brokerage had gone under so he supposed the man had moved to New
Mexico.
“A man filed a lawsuit against NASA over the Not There There
Rock and so I read about that, too,” Buzz wrote, but it was nearly 8:00 and he
had to leave the post unfinished while he put on his headset and began calling
people to ask them questions about stuff other people wanted to know
about: this week, it was whether they (the people he called) were looking for work and if so what type
of work they were looking for, as well as 17 questions about themselves like
were they white or married or had kids or all three?
At lunch, Buzz looked at the menu above the heads of the
cashiers, deciding between several different kinds of bread and several
different kinds of dressing and several different kinds of vegetables he could
put on his sandwich, making all the decisions before he got up to the bored looking
heavy-set woman who recognized him but didn’t know his name, although he knew
hers.
“I’ll have the Italian bread,” he told her, and reflected on
how they hadn’t offered that kind of bread last week but they did now.
Throughout the afternoon Buzz was distracted with his
thoughts about the Not There There Rock, and he didn’t really pay attention to
what the people told him, clicking things on his computer and saving the
results almost automatically white black employed unemployed 53 years old 27
years old married single divorced kids no kids.
For a while, he imagined that he was the Mars Rover, that there was a
delay between when he told his hands to do something and when they did
something, he would try to remember the answers to the questions and enter them
10, 15 seconds later, but he was getting lost in the answers, couldn’t keep
track, and didn’t want to get them wrong.
Somebody thought it was important to know how many 20-33 year olds with
kids were seeking work, and so he wanted to get that information to that person.
During the afternoon break, when his autodialer gave him 15
minutes of peace, he looked up more about the lawsuit over the Mars rock.
“Did you see this?” he asked Peter in the next cubicle,
leaning back. Peter looked back at him quizzically,
sipping at his soda. “This guy is suing
NASA to try to get them to prove that the rock isn’t a rock but it’s a kind of
mushroom.”
Peter shrugged. “It
takes all kinds,” he said.
Buzz put more onto his blog, adding the part about the rock
maybe being a mushroom and how the lawsuit guy thought that NASA was secretly
trying to seed Mars with life through cryogenically frozen specimens it was now
dropping onto the planet from the rover.
Then he made 72 more phone calls before it was 5:00 and his
autodialer stopped. No overtime this
week. He grabbed his bag and shut down
his computer, put the headset onto the desk, and looked at Peter.
“What’re you doing tonight?” he asked.
It was Tuesday.
“Nothing much, I guess,” Peter said, and Buzz wondered about
that expression as he stood outside the building, waving to Peter as Peter got
into his old car, while Buzz waited for the 5:20 bus. Nothing
much.
Buzz got off at the library, which would be open until 9
p.m. He took the books from his bag, dropped
them into the return slot, smiled back at the college-aged girl behind the desk
who smiled at him as he came in, and went to the computer area, where he was
able to get on a computer right away.
He was going to read about the Mars rock but he read instead
a newer article about the UFO seen on Mars, a photo from Mars that this time
showed a streak of light in the air that was, officially, an unidentified
object so it was a UFO even though UFO to everyone meant flying saucer, Buzz knew, if you said “UFO” you meant it was a
spaceship or something, not just something in the sky that you couldn’t
identify.
His phone vibrated in his pocket and he took it out. He
answered it, quietly, as he got up from his computer and went over to the area
where talking was allowed. Libraries,
when he’d been a kid, didn’t allow any kind of talking. Now, you could eat in them, which seemed weird, eating in a library.
“Hey,” he said.
“Are you coming home?” Jessie asked him.
“Yeah, I wanted to look something up quick,”
“Dinner’s going to get cold.”
“Sorry. I’m at the library.”
“OK,” Jessie sighed.
“How long?”
“A few more minutes?”
“OK,” she said again, this time without the sigh, and Buzz
said he loved her and put away the phone and went back to his computer.
It was more than a few minutes, it was 30 minutes, he
finished up reading about the UFO and finished writing a blog post about the
Mars rock and the lawsuit and the UFO and speculating on what it would be like
if the Rover really was there to seed
Mars with life, noting that because the Rover was so small that would be a
REALLY long project if that was the goal, and then he went outside and flipped
through the new books he’d checked out while he waited for the 6:45 bus.
His phone vibrated again, and he saw the text from Jessie:
WANT TO GO FOR ICE CREAM?
He texted back:
K
And hoped she would know he was doing it as a joke, that
they’d joked in the past about how people were too lazy to even write out whole
abbreviations, abbreviating the
abbreviations themselves, hoped she wouldn’t think he was being a jerk.
He texted then:
WAITING FOR BUS, ON MY WAY
She texted back a little face sticking its tongue out at
him, then followed that with
DINNER IS COLD AND DEAD AND IN THE GROUND.
The books he had taken out of the library were two science
fiction books, one an invasion-of-Earth one and one something about a flight
around the sun by a spaceship, and another book that talked about the history
of the nutmeg trade. It was the latter
one he flipped through.
The bus dropped him a block from their house and he walked
down the street, the sun nearly setting across the lake, making the leaves all
dark black against the sky and putting him already into twilight. The air was warm, and the lake smelled good,
and he liked the way the lights on the houses seemed unnaturally bright, the
houses already dark inside and needing lamps on even though outside it was still almost
day.
Jessie was waiting at the door as he came in, a windbreaker
on. She handed him a sandwich, said
“I’ll push the stroller,” and he dropped his bag down by the piano, took a bite
of the sandwich as they went right back out the door to walk to the frozen
custard stand six blocks away.
The sandwich was bologna, which they hadn’t had yesterday.
She must have gone to the grocery store.
They walked in silence for the first half-block, Buzz eating
his sandwich and wishing he’d grabbed a Coke.
In the stroller, Donald was quiet and probably asleep; nearly 7:15, this
was pushing it for him. The sun was
down, now, and the streetlights were on, the three of them walking in the warm
September night from pool of light to pool of light.
“How’d the interview go?” Jessie asked him.
Buzz shrugged. “I
don’t think I got the job,” he said.
They walked a bit more, and could see the custard stand,
other groups of people or individuals sitting around it, the blue-and-yellow
lights of its sign making them all look a uniform color. When the bus had gone by here 25 minutes
earlier, nobody had been sitting outside.
“Something will come along,” Jessie said.
“Something always does,” Buzz said. He started to tell her
about the Mars rock, and she listened to everything he had to say about it,
which was a lot.
Click here to read more Infinite Monkey stories and essays.
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Click here to read more Infinite Monkey stories and essays.
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4 comments:
I really liked the tone of this one.
Finally!
Good job. I liked it. I almost actually wrote a post about the Mars rock that wasn't, and the lawsuit that was, but decided not to, because that would mean actually writing it, and I'm trying to mostly write other things right now.
And your story covered most of what I was going to talk about anyway - minus my commentary, which would have been like, 'Mushroom aliens are attacking the rover, run it down, run it down!'
So, in other words, yours is better for two reasons, 1) because it's actually better and 2) because your story actually exists.
Great job.
This actually started out as first person and less fictional, and then I changed it around. So I probably stole your idea right out of your mind.
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