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I was sitting in my apartment with my wife and daughter. It started in fog. Loud speakers mounted on unseen vehicles boomed into our homes a monotone message: Stay inside.

The television only showed cartoons with a running caption: Stay inside. The telephone was dead. The networks were all down. We watched from the window, fog on the streets, blue skies ahead. The fog lasted for days. Fog in the rain. Fog in the sunshine. Every quarter hour, the same monotone recording,heartless and insistent: Stay inside. We watched cartoons. We ate our frozen food. Eventually we were just drinking water from the tap. We had no food to eat. My wife knocked on our neighbor’s doors; she said she heard a stir, but no answer. From my window in the distance I heard a staccato crack.

While the fog continued, I grew impatient. After what felt like a week, I stepped onto to my balcony despite the warnings to stay inside. The fog rose higher than our building, but I could still make out the sun and wisps of sky. When I looked down all I saw was grey. By now, my wife could not get out of bed and my daughter would not stop crying. The fog was not a poison, or if it was, I was at least not dead. The apparent benignity of the fog convinced me, or I convinced myself, to escape my home and find food for my family.

I stepped quickly as I opened the glass door to exit my building. On my walk down the flights of stairs I encountered no one. At the doorway the fog was thicker. With neither odor nor ill effect I took a chance to venture to the nearby grocery store. Even from outside, I could hear my daughter wail. Indeed, from outside I could hear the faint roar of thousands of hungry children from throughout the neighborhood. My first step out of the building, I almost fell on my face. The concrete step I could not see through the fog and my foot missed it in my haste. I caught myself on a banister. Hunger had not banished my reflexes though it dulled my muscle’s memory. In the distance the sound trucks blared the same message: Stay Inside.

I had a short conversation with my wife before I left the house. She had been fearful of the increasingly constant bursts of percussion accompanied by sharp echoes. Sometimes a single crack, sometimes three or four, sometimes from multiple sources in a discordant rhythm. She said anyone knows that sound. No matter who you are. You know what that sound is. She said We are all going to die. I told her I would never let anyone hurt her. She said I could do nothing. She stared with red eyes and dried tears at the cat and mouse dancing on the television screen. I watched the caption scroll: Stay Inside.

 

As I walked further from my building, I felt gloom and deep worry. What if I get lost and cannot get home? I had left the house with only an outline of a plan:

Go to the store.

Buy food.

If there is no one in the store, steal food.

Go home.

 

I had all of our cash in my wallet, enough for a week’s worth of food under normal conditions. We would make this last a month if we had to. I would buy cans of tuna, cans of vegetables, cans of chicken, pasta, anything I could get, I would buy. Now I worried, what use is this money if I can’t find my way there and my way back. I crouched to the ground. I would feel my way there, using the memories of streets, trees and bushes. After a few minutes I was practically crawling. I could trace with my hands the contours of the street. I would go north on this path and find main street by feeling for the larger street light posts on the broader avenues. Every intersection I stopped and listened for traffic. Neither the crunch of tires nor the padding of footsteps. The well insulated homes betrayed not a sound.

 

I crouched and crawled my way through what had always been a brisk brief walk. Alone in my thoughts, I let my mind wander. The last few months had been a time of great conflict. The politicians were accusing each other of disloyalty or dictatorship. The media had been at a fever pitch of vitriol, airing every allegation rival outlets exposing disturbing facts: theft, lies and violence. In the streets the game looked rather different. Most folk had been out of work. Some folk had been out of work for years. It did not look like jobs were coming back. It did not take long for it stop being a news story. After two years, the statistics were no longer reported. Instead it shifted to the question, what to do with the sad sacks, the malingerers and the dimwitted. Some wanted them sent to labor camps up north, some suggested retraining in “the arts”. In the end they mostly survived by various poorly executed government schemes and their wits, agricultural subsidy cards, ration cards, credit cards and payday loans. I imagine there some as charity and I imagine others as by crime. Somehow they all mostly survived. Or almost survived. I could not tell. I worked a technical branch of the communications system. My job was important enough. I never experienced any poverty.

 

There were periodic flare ups of agitation on the popular message boards and communication portals on the network. Conspiracy theories and xenophobia made up most of the content. There was so much of it that the network generally retained these threads for weeks. There was also talk of a strategy of tension, a cleansing, and a renewal and on the other side, a people’s war and foci of struggle. I avoided politics entirely in conversation, but I paid close attention to the furious debate occurring on the network. I noted the contrast between the general consensus in the media and the fiery and heady conflict on the network. 

 

The tension had been relatively little bearing on my life until the occupation of the financial district by disgruntled students at the end of the summer. Some politicians had immediately advocated a military assault. Indeed the students were initially subject to sniper fire. The local authorities brokered a stalemate and the situation appeared to be peaceful. The network was abuzz with chatter, the occupied building would be firebombed, and the occupation was spreading and taking hold. Ordinary folk were unimpressed with the occupiers. I thought of them as foolish, naïve but I admired their bravery. I did not think they would last much longer than a week, but the stalemate dragged on.

 

When the media started to report on the occupation, the politicians began to grow more combative. They competed to be heard to attack the occupation. Regardless of the earlier party affiliations, they functionally broke into two camps: The extermists, who wanted to eliminate the occupation by lethal force and the constitutionalists who sought a political solution. The media seemed to prefer the extermists, since they were more confident and spoke in tones of common sense. The constitutionalists seemed to be focused on legal aspects and were quite boring on television. On the streets the occupation grew. The unemployed started to recognize each other. Large open meetings were held throughout the city. More and more folks joined these meetings. In the warm fall nights, beers and guitars would accompany the tales of woe. Folks were bitter and they were not alone.

 

As it started to get cold, the politicians had turned to personal attacks, the constitutionalists defending their positions by exposing the crimes of the extermists. The constitutionalists were not without sin. Soon the media was saturated. It was around this time that the network had come to a consensus, “ain't none of them you can trust.” It was also at this time that the network, and the public meetings and the low whispers began to hum: “general strike.”

It was in this context that we were struck by fog. Without any facts, my wife understood the danger. The fog, the cartoons and crack-crack-crack all told her the same thing. For me, I was not one for theories but I agreed that someone was in trouble.

 

In my distraction, I had grabbed what appeared to be an ankle. I reached up and felt a calf and a knee. I was quickly struck with what I now know was a rifle butt. I heard the familiar crack and with the echo, I felt a burning sensation in my side. I gasped a “wait…” but the first shot was followed by others. I never even heard their report. And I never had a chance to think that I failed. That my wife was alone without food and I could not bring her any. I did not get a chance to even think the feeling of regret. I never even saw it coming.

Stay Inside

I am not looking forward to the winter, since my job is entirely outdoors and the mountains are colder than the city. But the whole thing has made a man of me so I can't complain. at least that's what i tell myself.

Worms

 

Crusader at the inn

Drunkard spreads the word

To arms for the lord

Let not only nobles revel in glory

Lack of funds hold back the mission

The Jews shall bear the costs, let the moneylenders furnish the goods

Let the moneylenders be plundered. We go in rags for the glory of God. Let all unbelievers drown in blood.

Let no heathen live in our land as we march for God. We ragged force of common righteous heroes shall not hunger while they live with silver and gold lining pockets and in hidden places. We common sense men who bring our family and all we own shall not tolerate the breathing jew in our midst.

 

Hungary

 

You have marched on our lands and stolen chickens, goats, bread and wine from the villages under the protection of the King. His majesty is wise. His majesty is aware of the plunder, rape and murder you drag across christendom. Your holy mission and your bloody journey are well known. You may stay here as long as you surrender your arms. You shall not bear swords in the lands of the wise and merciful king.

 

Belgrade

 

Trapped far from home. Hunger continues to drive our desperate band to plunder our christian brothers and we fly from burning village to walled city. Without help and without friend. We march and follow the rivers bend. The foes we face are still not the enemies we seek. They flee and we fled we hunt and are hunted. Still animated by the Holy fire. We yearn to burn the heathen, fear not the inevitable so long as it hastens the coming of our Lord. Let us not dies here in Christendom. Let our souls animate our hands long enough to conquer the holy Land from the heathen with our arms sharp and quick.

 

Constantinople

 

Though warned of danger by the timid empty hearted emperor. Though persuasive and learned are the words of this noble leader, we march by the star of the lord, with hearts ready and fearless, with our wives and hungry donkeys and broken wagons, with cracked shields, bloody clothes, with ragged and lame comrades laid low by plague, with all that we have to help and to hinder,we heed no warning. We press on to redeem our mortgaged souls. Let the common man enjoy the glory that greedy princes would horde.

 

Anatolia

 

Reports of infidel movements near the edge of the woods were confirmed and warriors deployed in ambush. The force was crushed with minimal resistance. The infidels were in large part cowards, unprepared for the tactics of surprise, the infidel was dispatched and routed. In pursuit a village of infidel barbarians was discovered by our men. Though the infidels were put to sword to satisfy the countrymen upon whom the infidel had preyed for the past weeks, in his merciful wisdom, Allah instructed your servant to spare the womenfolk. As salum alaikum.  

The story of Cassandra begins on a Friday but starts on a Thursday. Thursday night is traditionally the night when Canadian college students go out drinking together. This Thursday was the first of the pub nights of the year. A warm September night, It was a night of re-acquaintance and alcohol. At the end of it all we went back to Dania’s house. Dania had earlier invited me to her apartment so that I could wake up early for my morning class on campus. Dania’s path had crossed mine two years earlier at an all-night dance club near the waterfront. She wore a red dress and we danced past dawn to electronic music.  Our romance was on hold for years while she dated a diminutive farm boy turned intellectual. On this Thursday she was single.

We all walked together from the Cock’n’bull bar to Dania’s building. Cock’n’bull was the dirty bar on campus at Cork University. It was frequented by the local children of the West Indies and students from the three nearby dorms. My friends and I frequented this bar mostly out of habit but also to dance to the hip-hop and dancehall reggae. Somehow Dania had invited the whole crew back to her house for drinks. So together we stumbled to Dania’s run-down building two blocks east of the City’s most violent ghetto. Her studio apartment on the 14th floor would have had a beautiful view if it were anywhere else in the world. Was it anywhere other than the industrial fringes of the city?

While I joked around with my friends on her terrace, Dania was engrossed in conversation with Brad. Brad was the worst person in the crew. His awful persona tolerated only because he had been around so long and had some tenuous connection to Scooter, the self-appointed leader of the group. Brad was known as “the rich Jew”, in any other setting he would have disappeared long ago, but here he was a big fish in a working-class pond. Brad had black hair and false face that reminded me of the sesame street game show host, Guy Smiley.

At around 3:00 AM, people started to leave, Scooter offered to drive Brad home. To my surprised he declined. Everyone else left, leaving Brad, Dania and myself. Since I had an early class I went to sleep on Dania’s bed. When I woke up I found myself lying next to Dania who was lying next to Brad. “What the hell are you doing here?” I demanded. Before he had the chance to answer I told him to get up and go to the couch. He told me “don’t worry” I was now wide awake. Is this snake going to compromise this girl’s honor in front of me? And in the same bed no less? I noticed his hand slide over her body under the blanket. I raised my fist over his head. “Get the fuck off of her.” He left his hand on her stomach. I knew etiquette dictated further intervention before resorting to violence. I pulled her close to me, in my arms and out of his hands. “Touch her again I’m gonna fuck you up. I’m not kidding.” I growled, loudly enough for him to know how wide awake I was. “OK calm down." he rolled on his side and went to sleep. She took my hand and squeezed it.

I woke up early the next morning with an alertness I’ve seldom felt in the early hours of the day. Brad was gone. Dania sat on her balcony smoking a cigarette. I took a shower and put on some fresh clothes. By the time I was packed and ready go to, Dania was emerging from the balcony. “Come sit with me” She said with her fixed on mine. “I’ve got to go.” I said as I averted my glance. “Just for a moment”, she insisted.

The sun of Indian summer already sat high upon the sky when I stepped onto her cold concrete balcony. She thanked me for the night before. I told her it was only because I cared. I asked her if I could grab a beer from her fridge before I go to class. She said yes and I said goodbye. On the way out I took the last five of her lagers and dropped them into my knapsack.

On my way out of her apartment I met a UPS deliveryman waiting for an elevator. We talked about how elevators are always broken. I told him I was leaving a girls apartment. HE gave me a high five and I did not correct him.

I arrived late to my first early morning Friday course: Intaglio printmaking. Intaglio is a process that uses acid to etch copper plates for use in a rolling press. This course was scheduled for the most inconvenient time that only the most serious artists would muster the discipline to wake up and attend. I was not surprised that the course was almost entirely female. I found a seat on the second table from the entrance, next to a dark haired girl and a preening pretentious artiste with frosted highlights and ambiguous femininity. At break the instructor sent us to purchase our supplies. I noticed the girl with black hair was using crutches. I asked her if she needed a hand getting around. She said “no thank you”. I left to get my supplies.

I sat back down next to the crutch-wielding raven haired beauty. I snuck a few peeks at her, just out of the corner of my eye, while a lesson droned on interminably. Directly in front of me sat Rosemary, a grey haired retiree. She struck up a conversation with me about art, which I steered towards a conversation about personal history. I told her (and all of our neighbors) about my life in New York City, my decision to work in the environmental field and my experiences in the City. Just as the class ended, I shifted towards the silent girl at my side. I asked her how she hurt her knee, she said she had damaged it in a drunken wrestling match the year earlier and had waited a year to get it checked out. She said that most of the bone had since worn down in her knee and it had to be replaced with a metal plate. By the time I asked her, her name, the room was empty save ourselves. Her name was Cassandra.

We both agreed that we should eat something and proceeded to the local Japanese restaurant. During that walk we exchanged pleasantries about school and life. Every time we made eye contact, I told myself, “Don’t blow it”. When we got there, I purchased two chicken katsu’s and two corona beers. Over lunch we discussed politics. I mostly spoke. She mostly listened. She said enough for me to know that she was on the right side.

Since it was a sunny day, I suggested that we sit in the sun. Between the mall with the restaurant and the dorms was grassy knoll that was always bathed in sunlight. We lay out on that hill and watched the world go by. I remembered Dania and offered Cassandra one of her beers. I cautioned her that I normally don’t carry alcohol to school. She said “I don’t give a crap, just give me a damn beer.” Her brother called and told her he would be picking her up. 15 minutes later, he was standing in front of us, fabulous and in a rush. She told him to relax and he told we had to leave right away. She gulped the remains of her beer and set off to go. As she turned around I said: wait, give me your telephone number. Her brother stared skeptically and audibly sighed. She wrote some numbers and in large letters “Cassandra”. In a moment she was gone.

And that is not, how I met your mother.

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Worms
Cassandra
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