Authors: Marjorie B. Kellogg
Harmony
Copyright © Marjorie Bradley Kellogg, 1991
All rights reserved.
Published as an ebook in 2014 by Jabberwocky Literary Agency. Published in 1991 by Penguin Books USA, Inc.
Cover design by Tiger Bright Studios
www.tigerbrightstudios.com
ISBN 978-1-625670-78-6
Phase III: Technical Rehearsals
to S. R.
(at last)
For their willingness to read and for their generously offered expertise, heartfelt thank-yous to Diann Duthie, John Kellogg, Lynne Kemen, Ken Frankel, Michael Golder, Mel Marvin, Betsy Munnell, Bill Rossow, Joel Schwartz, Angela Wigan, and of course, my editor, John Silbersack.
And special thanks to Ming, Robin, Tony, Ted, Virginia, and Desmond, the Micahs in my own life.
GWINN:
I wasn’t born in Harmony. I’ve never been that lucky, except for being born Inside. Chicago’s my birth-dome, a sad and sullen place to grow up if ever there was one. But overcoming disadvantage can make you strong. My mom always said that about herself, and my dad swore I took after her.
You could say my story begins with the Dissolution, though I wasn’t born ‘til ten years after the worst of it, when Famine, War, Plague, and that newer grim horseman, Ecological Collapse, had already reordered life on this earth, and those who were able: the strongest, the richest—in Chicago, we’d have said the most righteous—had holed up twenty years since behind the high-tech walls we post-crisis generations took for granted.
Your history program will have taught you that Chicago was one of the first cities to Enclose by public ballot: October 4, 2002, it was, our only official holiday for decades after. Every liquifiable civic asset was staked on a first-generation field-technology dome. There was pioneer courage in that, to be sure, but there was shame as well. Having sold off the priceless contents of the Art Institute and stripped the sculpture gardens and libraries bare, Chicago’s crisis leadership finally delegalized the Arts. Painting, writing, music, sculpture—all declared “societally non-productive.” After all, they said, you can’t eat Art.
True enough. But these righteous citizens also felt the need to revenge themselves on the “decadents” who had opposed the final measures. Punishment was mass expulsion of all artists but those with a useful skill—my wise painter-mother took up industrial design just in time. People who were neither warriors nor survivalists were thrown out without recourse when the dome was raised, to fend for themselves in what had already come to be called the Outside.
The witch-hunts continued for years. You’d see it on the vid at dinnertime: some poor citizen caught with his life’s work stashed away in his vent ducts or inside his mattress. The expulsion ceremony was preceded by a public burning of the offending work, attendance for children compulsory. The generation who built those walls intended that we who had never seen the Outside would fear it as much as they did. Extreme times require extreme measures, you’ll say, but why, with the food crisis well under control, is it still illegal to be an artist in Chicago?
The point is, Chicago then or now holds no future for a would-be artist, and that was me from an early age. Others, friends of mine, dutifully channeled their creative leanings into the approved applications. I continued to scribble and sketch when I should have been learning resource management or the new economic theory. My mother’s fault, no doubt, despite endless bedtime conferences in the glare of the overhead fluorescents. She meant to help me overcome my anti-social impulses but never could hide her longing for the old paints and brushes. Being Inside-born, I took for granted my right to safety in the dome and thought my mom’s Dissolution-survivor gratitude too slavish for one who’d been forced to give up her art. The secret hours of my childhood were enlivened by the struggle to capture the images rising unbidden behind my eyes—with pencil, paper, plastic, wood scraps, bits of string, anything available. Nothing else seemed worthwhile, or even interesting.
And so I went to Harmony.
I couldn’t just pick up and go. It wasn’t as easy as that. I didn’t even know where—or if—Harmony was. Nobody official in Chicago would admit to the existence of such a heathen place. But I’d heard rumors and chose to believe them. I
needed
to believe them. Surely every artist in her heart believes there is a place like Harmony, where if only she can find it, she will be left alone to do her work in peace.
The rumors were forbidden, delicious. I nursed them like the precious candies my mother made with hoarded sugar on the sly. They said Harmony was green and spacious, the food was varied and plentiful. Each citizen owned his own home. Paintings were exhibited right out in the streets, and all the studios had north light.
The downside, rumor claimed, was that only artists could live there and that Harmony’s population was by constitutional law fed only by the adoption of promising young talent from
other domes
, as a guard against aesthetic inbreeding. At the time, I was deeply impressed by such total commitment to Art and Excellence. Population was always a crisis issue within the domes. Chicago’s census was updated daily on the public news channels, alongside the harvest data from our struggling farm domes, and any unlicensed child was put Out as soon as discovered. (Into the Lord’s hands, my mother would say, with reflex if compassionate acceptance, the way of a true survivor.) So I didn’t wonder what became of the children
born
under Harmony’s dome. I saw this Outside Adoption Policy as my escape hatch. I had only to prove I was the sort of promising young talent Harmony was looking for.
Once I’d decided to resist authority, the trick was doing it invisibly. I pondered this late into the night during the long, gray months of my thirteenth year, then buckled down to my math and physics and managed to qualify for a Building and Engineering course at the local technical school, the closest thing to art training you could get in Chicago. My mother watched me narrow-eyed while my father sighed with relief, secure in his delusion that I was at last preparing to assume a citizen’s proper responsibility.
They wouldn’t teach free-hand drawing at Chi-Tech, but one of the endemic shortages was terminals, so I did learn to draft by hand. Happy to be drawing at all, I produced endless plans, elevations, and orthographics of boring solar collectors and hydroponics plants. I was initiated into the mysteries of the laser knife and the point welder, if only to build hulking models of factories and housing blocks. I absorbed graphics programming, memorized load- and stress-tolerance tables, all critical information for survival in this broken world, but dull stuff for a teenager living on romantic fantasies. It was boredom as profound as starvation. My manna in the wilderness was my dream of an artistic future. Concentrating on technique, I locked my imagination away until it could wing free in Harmony.
By the time my schoolmates threw off their cocoons to flutter about as women and young men, I had metamorphosed into a determined workaholic. Friendships and social life died from neglect. Every credit I could pry loose from basic food and clothing went in secret to buy computer time, literally bit by bit, until I had enough to send formal e-mail application to Harmony. In truth, there was nothing formal about it. I had no forms, no names or addresses. I couldn’t save enough to send a real portfolio. I hadn’t a single assurance that my painstakingly worded plea would reach the proper hands, or any hands at all outside Chicago.
But months later, when I had nearly given up hope, a foreign signal waltzed through Chicago’s electronic blockade like a voice from another planet. What this said about Harmony’s power in the post-Dissolution world impressed my parents more than it did me. All I cared was that Harmony’s computers, sifting reams of applications from domes everywhere, had spat mine out into the Yes pile.
A miracle.
The acceptance statement made me an instant provisional ward of the Town of Harmony, to avoid complications when I tried to leave Chicago. I was invited for a year of trial apprenticeship in the studio of Micah Cervantes. Harmony, the information file explained, was a dome complex in the upland valleys of what used to be Vermont, USA. It was, as rumor claimed, home to many of the world’s most famous painters, sculptors, actors, and musicians, glittering names that meant nothing to me in benighted Chicago.
No matter. After six years of blind faith and sacrifice, there on our living room terminal was proof that while Harmony was not so far from Chicago geographically, it was ideologically at the other end of the universe. Exactly where I wanted to be.
The offer was better than my wildest imaginings. It included transportation, room, and board. My parents would not suffer, at least not materially, from my repudiation of their city and their values. The catch was that if I failed to please in Harmony, I would be put Out, and my birth-dome was in no way required to take me back. My citizenship was forfeit the second I walked out of Chicago. My father called me a fool and a wasteling. My mother wept, but her eyes smiled proudly.
I, in the flush of youth, didn’t give the long run an instant’s thought. I was sure Harmony would recognize my genius and take me immediately to her long-dreamed-of bosom. I had no idea who this guy Cervantes was or what he did. That he did it in Harmony was enough for me. I accepted the invitation, my every fantasy come true. Or so I thought.
But of course, therein lies my tale.
THE OUTSIDE:
A brief digression:
Do you remember the world twenty years ago?
Of course not. Like me, you were taught very little about it. In straitened isolationist enclaves like Chicago, truth was an unaffordable luxury in those days. Even with order restored Inside, often with an iron fist, the average dome-dweller remained too haunted by memories of plague and collapse to admit that the horrors he’d walled himself away from still lurked Outside, awaiting solution. Inside air was sanitized, water purified, food and materials dome-grown and recycled. Living Inside, you didn’t think about the Outside. You only feared it.
Children were raised on horror stories, at home, in church, in school. No one went Outside, at least not willingly. Outside was Ye Forest Darke, Grendel’s Cave, the final circle of Hell. Outside was where I’d end up if I didn’t behave. My actual experience of it was limited to staring at the ruined suburbs from atop Chicago’s encircling generator wall. Broken buildings, dead, littered streets and smoke, always smoke. Something was always burning Out there. We’d nod to each other, wise children:
Outsider work
, we’d say.
Berserkers
. But even those grim visions were softened by the wavering energies of our primitive dome. Field technology has improved a lot since then. Much harder now to pretend that what you see out there isn’t quite real.
When it was time to leave for Harmony, I was in a terror about facing the Outside. But domers would never leave a vital transportation system on the surface where Outsiders could get at it. The entire thousand-mile journey was safely underground by high-speed Tube. That is, until I got to Harmony.
Harmony was a mere village of twenty thousand when the Enclosure Movement caught fire, a colony of successful artists hiding out in the cleaner, safer hills from the increasing violence and political polarization of the times. They Enclosed reluctantly and as a last resort, vowing to remain a haven for the inalienable freedoms of speech and belief, if not of movement. They weren’t the only small community to try doming without big-city resources, but their wealth and like-mindedness made them one of the few to succeed. Still, the irony of having to wall themselves in and others out in order to preserve these freedoms was not lost on them, for the Founders made sure that to enter Harmony, one must at least briefly go Outside.