Friday, February 27, 2015

Thursday, February 26, 2015

Cartographer


Droplets rested on black trees. The air was light, and to get a good breath you really had to struggle. But people survived. It was day two, and the eternal night was gone. Now they had a good long day ahead. Many of them would make it through, and in good health too. But their science couldn't keep everyone around. They were half an hour through through and Aalam was fourteen minutes old; by no means the first.
The arid dirt whipped itself up into a dust devil behind him. Dark yellow soil filled the soles of his shoes. He wasn't going anywhere in particular; just wandering. There where many places yet to be discovered and explored. Aalam fit a mask over his face, so that he could get more air and go a little faster. He jumped into a canyon in a dusty cloud of dirt, and landed softly. There were no trees here; this place hadn't yet been reached.

The sinuous, contorted shapes of the rocks had a certain wonder about them that he didn't want muffled by trees. But that wasn't for him to decide. Yet. He scrambled up a large stone without any fear of falling. The landscape was filled with huge, smooth mountains and sharp dips. Also trees, in places. Yellow was the color that dominated. Dark, smooth yellow. People said it was a calming color. The houses were everywhere. They were made to blend in though, so they didn't stand out. There was enough atmosphere above for a light purple sky.
He sat down in a dip at the very tip of the rock. Leaned back into the crumbly stone. The sun was like a blanket. A rock fell into the canyon. He looked up. Someone was walking along the edge. Aalam watched the person for a while until she disappeared behind a rock. After a while, the waking world and dream began to blur, so he forced himself to get up and start toward home.
Along the way was a forest of dwarf trees. They reached up to his shoulders, brushing past him easily. They were very soft. He heard voices ahead. When he reached them he realized it was one of the houses in the ground. There was no one else close, so he tapped on the ground above them with his foot and ducked under the trees. He found a huge rock that was at least twenty feet high and stuck his hands into a crack. The door opened easily.
Aalam lived by himself. He had a family, but he had chosen to live alone because he liked seclusion. There were two levels in the house, connected by a rope trailing down from a hole in the ceiling of the first one. He walked over to his computer screen and unclipped a black box from the side of his jumpsuit and dropped it into the slot to empty into the database. His task was to map out all of the uncharted land here. The table to his right was covered in equipment. One more thing, the mask was added to the table.

While a drink was brewing for him, he sat down and began switching the perspective for the video he had taken to areal. The video was long, so it took a while. The drink finished before processing was done. On the screen was a wide trail that wound around in a vaguely straight line. He zoomed in and typed up a note about a mineral deposit he had found interesting.
It was tempting to just delete the canyon or make it look like trees were already there. But some people had already tried that, and he didn't want to share their fate. He did delete the girl though. The edit was small and he made sure it was untraceable. The other cartographers did that too. That way, it was harder to be watched. Some people deliberately wandered into the map so that the authority didn't get suspicious. Those people were payed generously, even though they never asked for money.
He zoomed out and collected his trail to put in the map. When he had it hovering over the correct place he noticed that most of what he'd worked on was already mapped. The section assimilated onto the map, overlapping some things. That would just mean more information, so he wasn't mad. Whoever had mapped before him had put notes in, and he read them. There was something moving in the trees.
Upon closer inspection it was revealed to be a person. He copied that section and changed it back to land view. There he was, in the trees. Somebody had followed him. And put him...on the map. It was easy to delete; he had the code. But somebody had put him on the map. He was incredulous. A quick search gave him names and locations of all of the cartographers near him.
He found the computer address of the most likely culprit: ”FOX21,” and angrily asked why he had not been deleted. FOX21 answered quickly in audio:”Sorry. I didn't see you.”
“You followed me.” He said.
“No I didn't. You're being a baby.”
He heard a finger on a computer screen from her audio. And then the sound went out. She had changed the address.
Aalam sighed. He was probably just being paranoid. But she had followed him, which was bad enough, but she didn't even delete him. Maybe she was spying for the authorities. But then, they probably already watched them. They said that everyone had to be cataloged so that they could make “informed decisions.” He could kind of see the logic in that. But they could live with just one or two people off their grid.
The rotation was not quite over. It was hard to tell, of course, but everybody had watches and things. And their biological clocks. Of course he had to use that time for mapping. But he could have some food and a nap without any trouble. The hydroponics lab was on the level above. He jumped and grabbed the rope, then climbed up, locking it between his knees like his parents had taught him. The plants were green up there.

That was because radiation was filtered for the healthiest plants possible. It was set up in racks. They were a twelve by twelve grid and the plants grew in the squares, with containers full of the water and other things necessary for their existence right below, where they grew. There was a glass cover over each rack that filtered the light.
He reached under and unhooked the water container for a potato plant, careful to support the roots in one gloved hand while he cut off two large potatoes. After they were each cut in half, he fed them into the shredder and dropped them all in a pan. It was a self heating pan, so he could take it anywhere. He slid down to the first floor and let it cook on his lap, with a plastic board protecting him from the heat.
Aalam woke up and immediately knew that something was wrong. Of course. He had overslept. Outside, everything was quiet and the stars silently radiated light through the tiny holes in the rock wall. This time always creeped him out so that he usually didn't miss the curfew. It took less than five minutes for him to fall asleep, curled up under his covers with the hole leading to the first floor covered by one of his cooking appliances. Yeah, he was paranoid.
A buzzing in his ear brought him back. He rotated back in. There were twelve revolutions of the clock left before he had to get back to work. The clocks were amazing. Coming to this place, they had to reconfigure time, but they went a step further and designed 3dTIME. They were made up of two rings, one over the other like a sphere that had been chopped up in a really weird way. Floating inside the cage of the 3dTIMe was a little ball that made them turn slowly with a radio signal. It looked like an atom. At least, the old model, Bohr's.
He removed a touchscreen from the wall in front of him and found a book to read. After two revolutions, he realized he wasn't being careful with his time. With a swipe of his finger across the screen, the default breakfast mixed itself up and declared itself ready with a chime. He leaned over and opened up his desk to take it. The default breakfast wasn't without options. Maybe that made it something other than a default. Today, he had it made as a drink to be efficient.
The last revolution came around quickly, and he jumped down the hole. When the box was turned on, he looked at the map for a new place, found one and ran out into the stars. The authorities had instructed them to turn their heads a lot and get as much land as possible, but after a while of that it was realized that the distances warped the map. He instead focused on the detail in the small slice of the map that he was making. He stopped and looked closely at a shimmering rock. It was probably just a small sampling of the bigger deposit likely right under his feet. He made an audio note about that. A dozen small vials were clipped to his arms and he took of one so that he could take a dirt sample. The dirt analyzers would like that.
A scraping of feet on rock made him pause. There was somebody behind him. Probably taking video. And he didn't feel like he would be deleted. Quietly, he slipped a small gun out of his bag. Not lethal; it was issued to mappers for the crazies that occasionally popped up. The person got a little bit closer. Just about close enough to shoot, he thought. Quickly, he turned around with the gun pointed straight at...somebody.

Disclaimer thing(not sure if I need to, but I'll just play it safe) I don't own any of the photographs.



Artificial age~Sonnet

Think deeply.

Is it true?
Ancient forms
Dwarfed by you
Crown is shorn
It is old
It is young
Easy sold
It is done
Twisted, gnarled, chemical
Paradox
Towering soul
shallow rocks
Time invested
Age digested