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  • #7973
    TracyTracy
    Participant

      “Whatever happened to Miss Mossy Trotter, Finnley?” Liz asked, conversationally. She had a good idea what had happened to that innovative story writer, but she wanted to hear what Finnley had to say, before she mentioned it to Godfrey.

      “What to YOU think happened to her?” Finnley responded, in her customary rudely intuitive manner.

      “Sit down on that stool for a minute, and put the feather duster down,” Liz instructed, “And let’s have a talk about this because we both know that the possible ramifications don’t bear thinking about. Now then, sit still for five minutes and tell me everything.”

      Unseen by either of them, Roberto had sidled up to the French windows and was peering inside, listening.

      #7969
      TracyTracy
      Participant

        Gatacre Hall and The Old Book

         

        Gatacre Hall

         

        In the early 1950s my uncle John and his friend, possibly John Clare,  ventured into an abandoned old house while out walking in Shropshire. He (or his friend) saved an old book from the vandalised dereliction and took it home.  Somehow my mother ended up with the book.

         

        Gatacre derelict

         

        I remember that we had the book when we were living in USA, and that my mother said that John didn’t want the book in his house. He had said the abandoned hall had been spooky. The book was heavy and thick with a hard cover. I recall it was a “magazine” which seemed odd to me at the time; a compendium of information. I seem to recall the date 1553, but also recall that it was during the reign of Henry VIII. No doubt one of those recollections is wrong, probably the date.  It was written in English, and had illustrations, presumably woodcuts.

        I found out a few years ago that my mother had sold the book some years before. Had I known she was going to sell it, I’d have first asked her not to, and then at least made a note of the name of it, and taken photographs of it. It seems that she sold the book in Connecticut, USA, probably in the 1980’s.

        My cousin and I were talking about the book and the story. We decided to try and find out which abandoned house it was although we didn’t have much to go on: it was in Shropshire, it was in a state of abandoned dereliction in the early 50s, and it contained antiquarian books.

         

        Gatacre derelict 2

         

        I posted the story on a Shropshire History and Nostalgia facebook group, and almost immediately had a reply from someone whose husband remembered such a place with ancient books and manuscripts all over the floor, and the place was called Gatacre Hall in Claverley, near Bridgnorth. She also said that there was a story that the family had fled to Canada just after WWII, even leaving the dishes on the table.

        The Gatacre family sailing to Canada in 1947:

        Gatacre passenger list

         

        When my cousin heard the name Gatacre Hall she remembered that was the name of the place where her father had found the book.

        I looked into Gatacre Hall online, in the newspaper archives, the usual genealogy sites and google books searches and so on.  The estate had been going downhill with debts for some years. The old squire died in 1911, and his eldest son died in 1916 at the Somme. Another son, Galfrey Gatacre, was already farming in BC, Canada. He was unable to sell Gatacre Hall because of an entail, so he closed the house up. Between 1945-1947 some important pieces of furniture were auctioned, and the rest appears to have been left in the empty house.

         

        Gatacre auction

         

        The family didn’t suddenly flee to Canada leaving the dishes on the table, although it was true that the family were living in Canada.

         

        Gatacre Estate

         

        An interesting thing to note here is that not long after this book was found, my parents moved to BC Canada (where I was born), and a year later my uncle moved to Toronto (where he met his wife).

         

        Captain Gatacre in 1918:

        Galfrey Gatacre

         

         

        The Gatacre library was mentioned in the auction notes of a particular antiquarian book:

        “Provenance: Contemporary ownership inscription and textual annotations of Thomas Gatacre (1533-1593). A younger son of William Gatacre of Gatacre Hall in Shropshire, he studied at the English college at the University of Leuven, where he rejected his Catholic roots and embraced evangelical Protestantism. He studied for eleven years at Oxford, and four years at Magdalene, Cambridge. In 1568 he was ordained deacon and priest by Bishop of London Edmund Grindal, and became domestic chaplain to Robert Dudley, 1st Earl of Leicester and was later collated to the rectory of St Edmund’s, Lombard Street. His scholarly annotations here reference other classical authors including Plato and Plutarch. His extensive library was mentioned in his will.”

        Gatacre book 1

        Gatacre book 2

         

        There are thirty four pages in this 1662 book about Thomas Gatacre d 1654:

        1662 book

        gatacre book

        #7966

        “Ricardo!” Amy said with a raised eyebrow and a note of surprise in her voice. “All I’ve ever seen you do so far is lurk in bushes sending secret messages. But I admire your bold assertiveness, I can see you are on a sudden quest to discover your true potential.”   Amy smiled encouragingingly and patted his shoulder.  “The sooner we get the gazebo back the better, The Padre is recovering and anxious to host The Character Building Party.”

        His chest swelling with pride, Ricardo replied that he was very grateful for her support and attention, and would do his best to restore both the gazebo and his independence, but that he was in a quandary about the conflict of interests between his role in the story, and his value fulfilment as a developing character.

        “Yeah that’s a tough one,” Amy said, “But it’s a good question to ask at the party in the gazebo. Hurry and get the gazebo back!”

        #7963

        “Well, I think that proves my point,” remarked Carob with a smirk.

        “What do you mean”, Thiram said crossly, which sounded more like a resigned sigh than a question.

        “Remember what I said? You can’t order a synchronicity, or expect one. They always just happen when you don’t expect it.”

        “She’s right,” Any piped up.  “We can’t just sit here waiting for a coincidence. We have to just carry on regardless until one appears.”

        “Aunt Amy?” Kit asked, “How do we carry on regardless if we don’t know what our story is yet?”

        “What I want to know is this,” Chico said with a twirl of his worry beads, “Who’s coming with me to fetch the gazebo back?” Chico squared his shoulders proudly, glad that his new colourful beads had replaced the urge to spit. He felt in control, a new man. A man to be respected. A leader.

        With an elaborate triple reverse double flip of the worry beads, Chico turned and strode purposefully into the sunset, in the direction of the gazebo.

        #7961

        Amy rushed over to Kit when she saw what had happened and said, “Kit, give me your hat!”

        Tentatively Kit put his hand on his head and sure enough he felt a hat upon it. Carefully he removed it and wonderingly gazed at the cowboy hat.  He loved it! Just looking at the hat was already giving him ideas for his character,  newly baked memories were starting to slide in like a tray of chocolate chip cookies on a baking sheet, pulled out of the oven at the perfect golden melting moment.

        But Amy wants it! I can’t say no to her, but I want to keep it. It’s my first hat! Kit was close to tears.

        “Oh poppet,” Amy said kindly when she noticed his face.  Giving him a quick hug she explained.   “I only want to borrow it, just to keep the Padre happy. He keeps asking where his hat is.  I’ll bring it back as soon as we’ve settled him back at home.”

        The releif was immense, and he graciously surrendered the hat to Aunt Amy. “Did you call me Poppet?” he asked. “Because Thiram just called me Trevor.”

        “To me, you’ll always be Kit,” Amy said as she rushed back to her father. “See you later, Poppet!” she called over her shoulder.

        “What does that mean?” asked Kit, but Amy had gone.

        #7960

        As Chico carried the Memory Pie over to Kit, a breeze shuffled the pages of the script lying abandoned beside the gazebo. No one had noticed it before—maybe it hadn’t been there. The pages were blank. Then they weren’t.

        Kit blinked. “Did you just call me Trevor?”

        “No,” said Chico. But he looked uncertain. “Did I?”

        There was a rumble below them. The gazebo creaked—faint and subtle, like a swedish roll turning in its deep sleep.

        Then—click-clac thank you Sirtak.

        A trapdoor swung open beneath Kit’s feet. But instead of falling, Kit froze mid-air.

        The air flickered. Kit shimmered.

        And now they were wearing sunglasses, holding a cowboy lasso, and speaking in a faint Midwest accent.

        “Sorry, I think I missed my cue. Where are we in the scene?”

        #7957

        Still visibly shaken, Sir Humphrey blinked up at the canopy. “Is it… raining? Is it raining ants?”

        “It’s not rain,” muttered Thiram, checking his gizmos. “Not this time. It’s like… gazebo fallout. I’d venture from dreams hardening midair.”

        Kit shuffled closer to Amy, speaking barely above a whisper. “Aunt Amy, is it always like this?”

        Amy sighed, pinched the bridge of her nose, and said, “No, sweetheart. Sometimes it’s worse.”

        “Right then,” declared Carob, making frantic gestures in the air, as though she’d been sparring the weather. “We need to triangulate the trajectory of the gazebo, locate the Sabulmantium, and get Sir Humphrey a hat before his dignity leaks out his ears.”

        “I feel like Garibaldi,” Sir Humphrey murmured, dazedly stroking his forehead.

        “Do you remember who Garibaldi is?” Chico asked, narrowing his eyes.

        “No,” the Padre confessed. “But I’m quite certain he’d never have let his gazebo just float off like that.”

        Meanwhile, Madam Auringa had reappeared behind a curtain of mist smelling faintly of durian and burnt cinnamon.

        “The Sabulmantium has been disturbed,” she intoned. “Intent without anchor will now spill into unintended things. Mice shall hold council. Socks will invert themselves. Lost loves shall write letters that burn before reading.”
        “Typical,” muttered Thiram. “We poke one artifact and the entire logic stack collapses.”

        Kit raised a trembling hand. “Does that mean I’m allowed to choose my name again?”

        “No,” said Amy, “But you might be able to remember your original one—depending on how many sand spirals the Sabulmantium spins.”

        “I told you,” Chico interjected, gesturing vaguely at where the gazebo had vanished over the treetops. “It was no solar kettle. You were all too busy caffeinating to notice. But it was focusing something. That sand’s shifting intent like wind on a curtain.”

        “And we’ve just blown it open,” said Carob.

        “Yup,” said Amy. “Guess we’re going gazebo-chasing.”

        #7955

        The wind picked up just as Thiram adjusted the gazebo’s solar kettle. At first, he blamed the rising draft on Carob’s sighing—but quickly figured out that this one had… velocity.

        Then the scent came floating by: jasmine, hair spray, and over-steeped calamansi tea.

        A gust of hot air blew through the plantation clearing, swirling snack wrappers and curling Amy’s page corners. From the vortex stepped a woman, sequins ablaze, eyeliner undefeated.

        She wore a velvet shawl patterned like a satellite weather map.

        “Did someone say Auringa?” she cooed, gliding forward as her three crystal balls rotated lazily around her hips like obedient moons.
        Madam Auringa?” Kit asked, wide-eyed.

        Thiram’s devices were starting to bip, checking for facts. “Madam Auringa claims to have been born during a literal typhoon in the Visayas, with a twin sister who “vanished into the eye.” She’s been forecasting mischief, breakups, and supernatural infestations ever since…”

        Carob raised an eyebrow. “Source?”

        Humphrey harrumphed: “We don’t usually invite atmospheric phenomena!”

        Doctor Madam Auringa, Psychic Climatologist and Typhoon Romantic,” the woman corrected, removing a laminated badge from her ample bosom. “Bachelor of Arts in Forecasted Love and Atmospheric Vibes. I am both the typhoon… and its early warning system.”

        “Is she… floating?” Amy whispered.

        “No,” said Chico solemnly, “She’s just wearing platform sandals on a bed of mulch.”

        Auringa snapped her fingers. A steamy demitasse of kopi luwak materialized midair and plopped neatly into her hand. It wasn’t for drink, although the expensive brevage born of civet feces had an irrepressible appeal —it was for her only to be peered into.

        “This coffee is trembling,” she murmured. “It fears a betrayal. A rendezvous gone sideways. A gazebo… compromised.”

        Carob reached for her notes. “I knew the gazebo had a hidden floor hatch.”

        Madam Auringa raised one bejeweled finger. “But I have come with warning and invitation. The skies have spoken: the Typhoon Auring approaches. And it brings… revelations. Some shall find passion. Others—ant infestations.”

        “Did she just say passion or fashion?” Thiram mumbled.

        “Both,” Madam Auringa confirmed, winking at him with terrifying precision.

        She added ominously “May asim pa ako!”. Thiram’s looked at his translator with doubt : “You… still have a sour taste?”

        She tittered, “don’t be silly”. “It means ‘I’ve still got zest’…” her sultry glance disturbing even the ants.

        #7954

        Another one!  A random distant memory wafted into Amy’s mind.  Uncle Jack always used to say GATZ e bo.  Amy could picture his smile when he said it, and how his wife always smiled back at him and chuckled. Amy wondered if she’d even known the story behind that or if it had always been a private joke between them.

        “What’s been going on with my gazebo?” Amy’s father rushed into the scene. So that’s what he looks like. Amy couldn’t take her eyes off him, until Carob elbowed her in the neck.

        “Sorry, I meant to elbow you in the ribs, but I’m so tall,” Carob said pointlessly, in an attempt to stop Amy staring at her father as if she’d never seen him before.

        Thiram started to explain the situation with the gazebo to Amy’s father, after first introducing him to Kit, the new arrival.  “Humphrey, meet Kit, our new LBGYEQCXOJMFKHHVZ story character. Kit, this is Amy’s father who we sometimes refer to as The Padre.”

        “Pleased to meet you, ” Kit said politely, quaking a little at the stern glare from the old man. What on earth is he wearing?  A tweed suit and a deerstalker, in this heat!  How do I know that’s what they’re called?  Kit wondered, quaking a little more at the strangeness of it all.

        “Never mind all that now!” Humphrey interrupted Thiram’s explanation.

        Still as rude as ever! Amy thought.

        “I’ve too much to think about, but I’ll tell you this: I’ve planned a character building meeting in the gazebo, and you are all invited. As a matter of fact,” Humphrey continued, “You are all obliged to attend.  If you choose not to ~ well, you know what happened last time!”

        “What happened last time?” asked Carob, leaning forward in anticipation of an elucidating response, but Humphrey merely glared at her.

        Amy sniggered, and Humphrey shot her a lopsided smile.  “YOU know what happened in Jack’s GATZ e bo, don’t you, my girl?”

        Where were those random memories when you wanted them? Amy had no idea what he was talking about.

        “Who else is invited, Humph? asked Chico, resisting the urge to spit.

        “My good man,” Humphrey said with a withering look. “Sir Humphrey’s the name to you.”

        Sir? what’s he on about now?  wondered Amy.  Does that make me a Lady?

        “Who else is invited, Padre?” Amy echoed.

        Humphrey pulled a scroll tied with a purple ribbon out of his waistcoat pocket and unfurled it.    Clearing his throat importantly, he read the list to all assembled.

        Juan and Dolores Valdez.
        Godric, the Swedish barman
        Malathion and Glyphosate, Thiram’s triplet brothers.  Mal and Glyph for short.
        Liz Tattler
        Miss Bossy Pants
        Goat Horned Draugaskald

        “Did I forget anyone?” Humphrey asked, peering over his spectacles as he looked at each of the characters.  “You lot,” he said, “Amy, Carob, Thiram, Chico, Kit and Ricardo: you will be expected to play hosts, so you might want to start thinking about refreshments. And not,” he said with a strong authoritarian air, “Not just coffee!  A good range of beverages. And snacks.”

        Thiram, leaning against a tree, started whistling the theme tune to Gone With The Wind. Tossing an irritated glance in his direction, Carob roughly gathered up her mass of frizzy curls and tethered it all in a tight pony tail.  I still don’t know what happened before, she fumed silently.  The latest developments where making her nervous. Would they find out her secret?

        “You guys,” called Chico, who had wandered over to the gazebo. “It’s full of ants.”

        #7953

        Carob was the first to find the flyer. It had been pinned to the banyan tree with a teaspoon, flapping just slightly in the wind like it knew how ridiculous it was.

        FIVE HURT IN GAZEBO DRAMA
        Local Brewmaster Suspected. Coffee Stains Incriminating.

        She tapped it twice and announced to no one in particular, “I told you gazebos were structurally hostile.”

        Amy poked her head out of the linen drying shed. “No, you said they were ‘liminal spaces for domestic deceit.’ That’s not the same as a health hazard.”

        “You ever been in a gazebo during a high wind with someone named Derek? Exactly.”

        Ricardo ran past them at an awkward crouch, muttering into a device. “…confirming perimeter breach… one is wearing a caftan, possibly hallucinating… I repeat, gazebo situation is active.”

        Chico wandered in from the side trail, his shirt unbuttoned, leaf in mouth, mumbling to Kit. “I don’t know what happened. There was a conversation about frothed chalk and cheese, and then everything… rotated.”

        Kit looked solemn. “Aunt Amy, he sat on it.”

        “He sat on the gazebo?” Amy blinked.

        “No. On the incident.”

        Kit offered no further explanation.

        From the underbrush, a low groan emerged. Thiram’s voice, faint: “Someone built a gazebo over the generator hatch. There are no stairs. I fell in.”

        Amy sighed. “Goddammit, Thiram.”

        Carob smirked. “Gazebo’d.”

        #7949

        One too many cups of coffee and I should know better by now, Amy realised after tossing and turning in her crumpled bed through the strange dark hours of the night, wondering if someone had spiked her wine with cocaine or if she was having a heart attack or a nervous breakdown.  They all say to just breathe, she thought, But that is the last thing you should focus on when you’re hyperventilating.  You should forget your breathing entirely when you can’t control it.  After several hours of imagining herself in the death throes of some dire terminal physical malfunction, she fell asleep, only to be woken up by a strong need to piss like a racehorse.  Don’t open your eyes more than you need to, don’t wake up too much, she told herself as she lurched blindly to the privy.

        Latte! Fucking Latte! what a stupid word for coffee with milk.  Amy hated the word latte, it was so pretentious and stupid. Revolting anyway, putting milk in coffee, made inexpressibly worse by calling the bloody thing JUST MILK in another language. Why not call it Milch or Leche or молоко or γάλα or 牛奶 or sữa or दूध….

        Amy flushed the toilet, wide awake and irritated, but never the less grateful for the realisation that her discomfort was nothing more than an ooverdoose of cafoone.

        #7940
        Yurara FamelikiYurara Fameliki
        Participant

          The Cofficionados Theme Song “Dont Trust a Goat with a Plan

           

           

          [Verse]
          Goat in a bow tie whispers
          “Trust me
          My dear”
          A plan in its hooves but intentions unclear
          Guard the coffee belt like a treasure map’s end
          Four bandits are plotting to twist and upend

          [Chorus]
          Don’t trust a goat with a plan
          My friend
          They’ll sip your dreams while you defend
          Lucid nights sabotaged mid-spin
          By cofficionados sneaking in

          [Verse 2]
          Carob in shadows
          No cocoa in sight
          Thiram with whispers that steal your midnight
          Amy’s sweet smile hides beans of deceit
          Chico grinds chaos
          The bitter elite

          [Bridge]
          Sleep-parachute breaches
          Reverse dreams collide
          They’ve hijacked your pillow for the wildest ride
          Beware the saboteurs that seep in deep
          Between dripping espresso and REM sleep

          [Chorus]
          Don’t trust a goat with a plan
          My friend
          They’ll sip your dreams while you defend
          Lucid nights sabotaged mid-spin
          By cofficionados sneaking in

          [Verse 3]
          Pour your resistance in a steaming haze
          Shield the roast aroma from their forking ways
          The bandits want dominion over your grind
          But you’ll wake alert with their schemes left behind

          #7934

          Feeling somewhat disgruntled at revealing so much of her raw new floundering character and yet learning so very little about the mysterious Thiram, Amy undertook a little side project and attempted to find out who THira I think I’ll leave that typo there  was by the conventional means of a simple search.

          There were a number of exciting possibilities:

          Thiram, directeur de Gelec Energy, gère avec sérénité la “ruée” sur ses groupes électrogènes…

          Thiram, developer and PSC member of many OsGeo projects: OpenLayers; GeoExt….

          Thiram,  Director of the Systems Engineering Division at the Canadian Nuclear….

          Thiram, Actor: Origami. Known for Origami (2017), The Snip (2024) and Catharsis (2011).

          Thiram, Managing Director, Kidou, tel. +33 & 73 %9 9$ 41, e-mail e.lmroine @ cosmoledo. comachamelean

          So many likely possibilities, but what was the connection to port?

          #7931

          Carob wrinkled her nose in distaste and languidly remarked, “Amy, that goaty odour seems to be emanating from your clothing. Does it perchance require laundering?”

          Chico laughed loudly, spitting equally audibly. “Hi,” he said, “The name’s Chico,” emerging from behind the tulip tree.

          Carob winced at the spitting, and Amy writhed a little at being humiliated in front of the man. They both ignored him, and he regretted not staying hidden.

          “I’ve just pegged out two loads of washing, for your information, not that it will dry in this rain,” Amy said, quickly tying her hair back in annoyance. Does this move the story forward? she wondered. Why do I have a smelly character anyway? I’m sweaty, goaty and insecure, how did it happen?

          “Never mind that anyway, have you seen what’s on todays news?” Carob asked, feeling sorry for making Amy uncomfortable.

          “I have,” remarked Chico, with a hopeful expression, but the women ignored him.

          #7913

          Amy wondered afterwards if she should have said “Why is it always my fault” and hoped nobody would think el gran apagón was her fault too.  Another one of the issues with typecasting too soon.

          The rumours and hoaxes were rife even before the electricity came back on.  The crisis of the lack of coffee beans was coming to a head: morning riots were breaking out in the places most affected by the shortage. As soon as the blackouts started, improvised statistics and numbers were cobbled together into snappy psychological colour combination images and plastered everywhere suggesting that the lack of electricity was saving an incomprehensible number of cups of coffee per day, but without causing any coffee related social disorder events.

          Amy had heard that el gran apagón was foretold to occur when the pope died, that it was extraterrestrials, that it was el naranjo and his sidekick effin muck, and all manner of things, but the concerns with the coffee shortage happening at the same time as the blackouts were manifold.

          The population was looking for scapegoats. Oh dear god, what did I say that for.

          #7904

          “What were you saying already?” Thiram asked “I must have zoned out, it happens at times.” He chuckled looking embarrassed. “Not to worry.”

          As the silence settled, Thiram started to blink vigorously to get things back into focus —a trick he’d seen in the Lucid Dreamer 101 manual for beginners. You could never be too sure if this was all a dream. And if it was, then you’d better pay attention to your thoughts in case they’d attract trouble – generally your thoughts were the trouble-makers, but in some cases, also other Lucid Dreamers were.

          Here and now, trouble wasn’t coming, to the contrary. It was all unusually foggy.

          “Well, by the look of it, Amy is not biting into the whole father drama, and prefers to have a self-induced personality crisis…” Carob shrugged. “We can all clearly see what she looks like, obviously. Whether she likes it or not, and I won’t comment further despite how tempting it is.”

          “You’re one to speak.” Amy replied. “Should I give you some drama? Would certainly make things more interesting.”

          Thiram had a thought he needed to share “And I just remember that Chico isn’t probably coming – he still wasn’t over our last fight with Amy bossying and messing the team’s plans because she can’t keep up with modern tech, had to dig a hole, or overcome a ratmaggeddon; something he’d said that had seemed quite final at the time: ‘I’d rather be turned into a donkey than follow you guys around.’ I wouldn’t count on him showing up just yet.”

          “Me? bossying?” Amy did feel enticed to catch that bait this time, and like a familiar trope see it reel out, or like a burning match in front of a dry hay bale, she could almost see the old patterns of getting incensed, and were it would lead.

          “Can we at least agree on a few things about the where, what, why, or shall we all play this one by ear?”

          “Obviously we know. But all the observing essences, do they?” Carob was doing a great impersonation of Chico.

          #7898

          “Sorry I’m late,” said Carob as she crouched down to fuss over Fanella. “I have excuses, but they’re not interesting. I’m feeling a little underdeveloped as a character, so I’m not sure what to say yet.”

          “That’s okay,” said Amy. “Just remember … if you don’t tell us who you are early on…” She squinted and glanced around suspiciously. “Others will create you.”

          “I’d rather just slowly percolate.” Carob screwed up her face. “Get it? Percolate?”

          She stood up and slapped a hand to her head as Amy rolled her eyes. “Sorry … ” She patted her head curiously. “Oh wait—do I have curls?”

          “I’d say more like frizzes than curls,” answered Amy.

          Thiram nodded. “Totally frizzled.”

          “Cool … must be the damp weather,” said Carob. She brushed a twig from her coat. The coat was blue-green and only reached her thighs. Many things were too small when you were six foot two.

          “Oh—and I’ve been lucid dreaming in reverse,” she added. “Last night I watched myself un-make and un-drink a cup of coffee.” She gave a quick snort-laugh. “Weirdo”.

          “Was it raining in the dream?” asked Thiram.

          Carob frowned. “Probably… You know how in scary movies they always leave the curtains open, like they want the bad guys to see in? It felt like that.” She shuddered and then smiled brightly. “Anyway, just a dream. Also, I bumped into your father, Amy. He said to tell you: Remember what happened last time.”

          She regarded Amy intently. “What did happen last time?”

          “He worries too much,” said Amy, waving a hand dismissively. “Also, I didn’t even write that in, so how should I know?” She looked out toward the trees. “Where’s Chico?”

          #7893

          “Where are they again?” Thiram was straining as he waited for his friends, or rather colleagues.

          “Typical of them to get us all excited, and then bailing out to some mundane excuses.”

          He started to pace around the shed where they were supposed to meet. He wasn’t clear about all the details, Amy, or Carob would have them. Chico would be here for the ride, but the master plan this time was for the girls to come up with.

          What was happening at the plantation? Something unusual for sure; the Lucid Luddite Dreamers and their Silly Intelligence devices were always looking to disrupt the flows of coffee of the remaining parts where they still grew. That was why their mission was so important. Or so he was told.

          “Bugger… they could at least answer their damn phones… AI might well be everywhere, but you can’t just be all cavemen about it.”

          A rush of ruffled dried leaves and a happy bleating caught his attention at the moment he was about to leave. A panting Amy arrived, with her cream goat “Fanella” in tow —the bleating was from her, obviously. She didn’t take “Finnley”, the black one, she was too unpredictable; Amy would only keep her around for life or death situations that required a fair deal of rude practicality, and a good horn’s ramming.

          “Sorry, sorry!” Amy blurted out in hushed tones. “I couldn’t get away from the Padre. He’s too worried about stuff…”

          Thiram shrugged “at least there’s one. And what about the others?”

          “Oh, what? I’m not the last to arrive? That’s new.”

          Thiram rolled his eyes and gave a twig with fresh leaves to Fanella to eat.

          #7887

          “Amy, don’t go near the coffee plantations. You know what happened last time,” shouted Amy’s father.

          #7881

          Mars Outpost — Welcome to the Wild Wild Waste

          No one had anticipated how long it would take to get a shuttle full of half-motivated, gravity-averse Helix25 passengers to agree on proper footwear.

          “I told you, Claudius, this is the fancy terrain suit. The others make my hips look like reinforced cargo crates,” protested Tilly Nox, wrangling with her buckles near the shuttle airlock.

          “You’re about to step onto a red-rock planet that hasn’t seen visitors since the Asteroid Belt Mining Fiasco,” muttered Claudius, tightening his helmet strap. “Your hips are the least of Mars’ concerns.”

          Behind them, a motley group of Helix25 residents fidgeted with backpacks, oxygen readouts, and wide-eyed anticipation. Veranassessee had allowed a single-day “expedition excursion” for those eager—or stir-crazy—enough to brave Mars’ surface. She’d made it clear it was volunteer-only.

          Most stayed aboard, in orbit of the red planet, looking at its surface from afar to the tune of “eh, gravity, don’t we have enough of that here?” —Finkley had recoiled in horror at the thought of real dust getting through the vents and had insisted on reviewing personally all the airlocks protocols. No way that they’d sullied her pristine halls with Martian dust or any dust when the shuttle would come back. No – way.

          But for the dozen or so who craved something raw and unfiltered, this was it. Mars: the myth, the mirage, the Far West frontier at the invisible border separating Earthly-like comforts into the wider space without any safety net.

          At the helm of Shuttle Dandelion, Sue Forgelot gave the kind of safety briefing that could both terrify and inspire. “If your oxygen starts blinking red, panic quietly and alert your buddy. If you fall into a crater, forget about taking a selfie, wave your arms and don’t grab on your neighbor. And if you see a sand wyrm, congratulations, you’ve either hit gold or gone mad.”

          Luca Stroud chuckled from the copilot seat. “Didn’t see you so chirpy in a long while. That kind of humour, always the best warning label.”

          They touched down near Outpost Station Delta-6 just as the Martian wind was picking up, sending curls of red dust tumbling like gossip.

          And there she was.

          Leaning against the outpost hatch with a spanner slung across one shoulder, goggles perched on her forehead, Prune watched them disembark with the wary expression of someone spotting tourists traipsing into her backyard garden.

          Sue approached first, grinning behind her helmet. “Prune Curara, I presume?”

          “You presume correctly,” she said, arms crossed. “Let me guess. You’re here to ruin my peace and use my one functioning kettle.”

          Luca offered a warm smile. “We’re only here for a brief scan and a bit of radioactive treasure hunting. Plus, apparently, there’s been a petition to name a Martian dust lizard after you.”

          “That lizard stole my solar panel last year,” Prune replied flatly. “It deserves no honor.”

          Inside, the outpost was cramped, cluttered, and undeniably charming. Hand-drawn maps of Martian magnetic hotspots lined one wall; shelves overflowed with tagged samples, sketchpads, half-disassembled drones, and a single framed photo of a fireplace with something hovering inexplicably above it—a fish?

          “Flying Fish Inn,” Luca whispered to Sue. “Legendary.”

          The crew spent the day fanning out across the region in staggered teams. Sue and Claudius oversaw the scan points, Tilly somehow got her foot stuck in a crevice that definitely wasn’t in the geological briefing, which was surprisingly enough about as much drama they could conjure out.

          Back at the outpost, Prune fielded questions, offered dry warnings, and tried not to get emotionally attached to the odd, bumbling crew now walking through her kingdom.

          Then, near sunset, Veranassessee’s voice crackled over comms: “Curara. We’ll be lifting a crew out tomorrow, but leaving a team behind. With the right material, for all the good Muck’s mining expedition did out on the asteroid belt, it left the red planet riddled with precious rocks. But you, you’ve earned to take a rest, with a ticket back aboard. That’s if you want it. Three months back to Earth via the porkchop plot route. No pressure. Your call.”

          Prune froze. Earth.

          The word sat like an old song on her tongue. Faint. Familiar. Difficult to place.

          She stepped out to the ridge, watching the sun dip low across the dusty plain. Behind her, laughter from the tourists trading their stories of the day —Tilly had rigged a heat plate with steel sticks and somehow convinced people to roast protein foam. Are we wasting oxygen now? Prune felt a weight lift; after such a long time struggling to make ends meet, she now could be free of that duty.

          Prune closed her eyes. In her head, Mater’s voice emerged, raspy and amused: You weren’t meant to settle, sugar. You were meant to stir things up. Even on Mars.

          She let the words tumble through her like sand in her boots.

          She’d conquered her dream, lived it, thrived in it.

          Now people were landing, with their new voices, new messes, new puzzles.

          She could stay. Be the last queen of red rock and salvaged drones.

          Or she could trade one hell of people for another. Again.

          The next morning, with her patched duffel packed and goggles perched properly this time, Prune boarded Shuttle Dandelion with a half-smirk and a shrug.

          “I’m coming,” she told Sue. “Can’t let Earth ruin itself again without at least watching.”

          Sue grinned. “Welcome back to the madhouse.”

          As the shuttle lifted off, Prune looked once, just once, at the red plains she’d called home.

          “Thanks, Mars,” she whispered. “Don’t wait up.”

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