Authors: Benjamin Parzybok
“You can answer toward me,” the interviewer said.
Jamal turned back, the wormhole thrusting him through its turny tunnel, warping him along and spitting him out again as a single human being, sitting on the edge of a bed, across from a smartly dressed and exceedingly clean white woman who was asking him questions in a businesslike manner, a look of concern on her face that their live interview was slipping out of her grasp.
When the interviewer of the “Woodlawn Rebel,” as they called him, came on, Bea and Zach monitored Renee for reaction. They sa
t tense on the end of the couch. Renee gawked at the television, frozen in a half-stand. Incredulity turned to anger. When the interview was over, Renee walked into the dining room, picked up a chair and against Zach’s cry of protest smashed it over the top of the dining room table until the chair had splintered into an unsatisfactory mallet and the table leaned, partially collapsed.
She picked up another and proceeded to do the same until Zach had hold of her middle and Bea had hold of the chair and still she fought them, cursing and kicking and clawing at them.
They sat her down on the couch where she grumbled and talked to herself, until she stood sharply and yelled, “Fuck!”
“We finish the news.” Bea pinned her shoulder against the couch and talked inches from her face. “We finish the news and then you make a plan.”
Zach nursed a bruised rib and complained about his table and chairs. They watched the weather report. They listened to a city worker speak about water supply and the slow progress of a new desalinization plant. The news anchors discussed the Sherwood situation. Then an anchor said that Jamal Perkins of the Green Rangers would be interviewed at the end of the program, so stay tuned.
“Oh no,” Renee said. “Oh fuck. I’ve got to get back up there!” She got up and paced around the house. Bea tailed her to prevent any new violence.
At the end of the show, minutes before the power went off, they held their breath as Jamal came on, looking sleep-deprived and strung-out, a dirty-looking clinic set up as his background. He turned and stared into the camera. His eyes were wide and for a moment he looked like the most fragile human being Renee had ever seen. He seemed to be staring straight at her. She clutched her fists to her mouth. “Oh god,” she said, and Jamal stared for a fraction of a second more and then turned to look at the interviewer. He smiled and his voice came out strong and confident. He sounded measured and reasonable. He talked about the progress Sherwood had made, the clinics and schools and farms. He turned to let an injured man wave from a bed behind him.
“The secession has come as a sad surprise to us,” Jamal said. “Sherwood is an active citizen-participant government, and we solicit feedback constantly. With every daily water delivery we make, in fact. There has been no indication that Woodlawn residents were displeased, and we have thousands of recent comments from the citizens there. Several days ago several of our staff disappeared in the neighborhood and we became concerned. Rick and I”—he gestured behind him again—“were fired upon and Rick was injured when we went to investigate. And, more telling, we saw city trucks in the neighborhood. It’s my belief that the city is seeding a secession and arming the power-hungry in the neighborhood.”
“We’re running out of time here, Jamal. But quickly—what is Maid Marian’s response and why hasn’t she appeared for an interview? We had an interview request turned down earlier today.”
“Yes, good question. As always, Maid Marian is—”
At that moment the screen went dark and the lights went out and Renee exhaled and said oh my god.
“Go Jamal,” Bea said, “I think he’s my new hero.”
“He did really, really well,” Zach said. “Why is he on and not Gregor? He could have done more city versus Sherwood. Could have mentioned the schools, how Woodlawn’s children will return to lawlessness, et cetera, but all things considered, that was pretty exceptional. I mean, yeah.”
In her mind, Renee continued to see Jamal look at her, as the day darkened and with the power gone. “It felt like he was looking right at me,” she said. “What the fuck is going on up there? Can we go now? Zach,” she snapped, “shit. What can I do to get you ready?”
The mayor obsessively watched every weather report. Much as one troubles a zit beyond the point of bruise, the weather was a bane he wheedled over. Besides, both he and Christopher agreed,
the weatherman was cute. And so they watched the weather like a soap opera, never missing an episode. The weatherman was a nice extra perk, the cherry on top of the mayor’s madness for the subject. The weather had ruined his term, and he studied it for any sign of change.
The man who did the weather was emotional, and for this he was adored. Several times he’d tentatively predicted a change, a condensation or a spring shower, and when it didn’t come to pass he wept during the broadcast. And the remorse, whether real or fabricated, was appreciated. People talked about him like a celebrity. He calmly explained why rain would not come this week, explaining fronts and systems, while tears made their way along the beautiful skin of his cheeks. He really cared, you thought, about us, about delivering to us what we wanted. He tried his best. But unlike the rest of the news, he had nothing under his control. The other reporters could spin an article, create a sensation, put an angle on something, but the weatherman had his reports backed up by hot, dry, incontrovertible facts.
Today’s episode was much like the previous hundreds. The weatherman smiled and spoke his trademark opening: “Ladies and gentlemen, we’ve got some weather today.” It was, by now, a complex smile, one that belied what they’d all been through together, but which also said: We can still do this, we’ll never give up hope. Christopher sat down on the couch sideways with his back to the armrest and the mayor rubbed his feet idly as they watched.
The mayor had been exceedingly tender yesterday with the guilt of his violence still uncomfortable in the house. He’d fixed Christopher breakfast, invited his advice on issues, and in all things he’d been optimistic and kind and tried to act like a mayor ought to act. Dignified, decisive, tuned in, empathetic. Christopher had been gracious about the incident and they’d studiously not spoken of it since.
The weatherman showed satellite imagery of great clouds coming in off of the Pacific. A huge weather system like some foreign invading army on the march. They’d all seen this before. It meant dark days, but the invading army was meant for some other foe. The rain they bore would land east of the Rocky Mountains.
The weatherman got flustered by a computer glitch that showed him moving his hand over a blank green screen. He made a joke about how they’d all memorized this weather anyway, and to just close your eyes and imagine it. Christopher looked over at the mayor and smiled, and there was warmth there and the mayor felt relieved.
But when the mayor’s Woodlawn rebel came on, the evening fell apart. Christopher faced forward, leaned in toward the TV. He could not bring himself to look at the mayor. Before the interview finished, he got up and walked out of the room.
The mayor stayed. After the interview, there were a few how-I’m-surviving-the-drought stories, depressing shit with ridiculously sunny commentary by the newscaster. Next, a police officer talked about a downtown robbery that’d been prevented. There was news on a controversial housing-assistance program, and a teenager weighed in with some sort of home-school essay the mayor couldn’t make heads or tails of.
In the air the weight of an argument that hadn’t yet happened lay heavily upon him. He sat on the couch and clenched his teeth and felt sick about it, wishing he were ten thousand miles away, in some swampy, drenched country.
The one thing that eased his mind was the lack of a Maid Marian interview. He would have the last word for tonight, at least in the airwaves if not the bedroom. His Woodlawn rebel’s speech would sink into the minds of the populace. They would talk about it, the word
Sherwood
taking on a darker, crueler connotation. They would dream of the terrors that awaited them in that strange country. They would think well of the city for taking Woodlawn back in, for making the city stronger and bigger and slightly more whole.
But then, midway through, the news announced that Jamal Perkins would be interviewed on behalf of Sherwood.
“What?” The mayor stood up and wondered what new trick was this. “
Who?
” The mayor self-consciously glanced out his window. It was twilight and from his window at the far expanse of city he could make out Sherwood. He yelled for Christopher. The mayor pointed to the TV where they were showing some story about “a company that was making a difference.”
“Who the hell is Jamal Perkins?” the mayor said. “They’re going to interview him for Sherwood.”
Christopher and the mayor sat on the couch and waited through several more stories and the irritating chit-chat of the news anchors.
The news cut to a clinic hospital–type place where, the mayor couldn’t help but notice, there were several empty beds, very much unlike their hospitals.
“Bastards,” he said. “I bet they shoveled some people out of those beds for the camera shot.”
The journalist explained she would now interview the captain of the Green Rangers.
“But that’s Gregor Perk—” the mayor said.
“That’s Gregor Perkins’s kid,” Christopher said.
The journalist asked the first question and the cameraman focused on Jamal’s face. His hair was unkempt and wooly, and there was an obvious stain of dirt around his collar. But most stunning was the look he gave the camera. A full five seconds of emptiness, with no sound and no movement, as though they’d slapped a picture of him up on the screen. His subtle movements, and a single startling blink, made it particularly queer and jolting.
“Whoa,” Christopher said.
The mayor didn’t hear anything for the first minute as he recovered from the shock of that look. He had looked right at him, addressing the mayor specifically, looking straight into his morality, willing him to do right by the world, to steward the city by the highest standards. “Did you see that?” the mayor said stupidly.
“Shhh,” Christopher said.
The mayor tuned back in and saw that the man was an eloquent bastard, like his own Woodlawn rebel, the difference being that you believed what this one was saying.
“Where the hell is Maid Marian?” the mayor said, uncomfortable with this new enemy, another public face to the country. His Woodlawn rebel would stick in the people’s minds, he knew, but the message was vastly less powerful by this dude’s appearance.
The mayor wished only to go to bed now, a tiredness at the whole fight overwhelming him.
The newscaster asked for Maid Marian’s response. Jamal started to answer but the screen went dark, the lights turned off and the house was quiet. The mayor and Christopher sat in the dark staring at the TV, and then the hum of the generator sounded and the lights came back on and Christopher stood up and stretched.
“I think I’ll turn in early tonight,” he said, and the mayor could hear the false notes, the strained syllables, the eagerness to disappear into sleep as quickly as possible, and he knew that they must each stake out their own outposts tonight.
“I’m going to finish up a little work,” the mayor said.
They nodded and smiled and Christopher reached out his fingers and the mayor touched his fingertips to Christopher’s and then Christopher was gone.
The mayor sat on the couch and stared into the TV where Jamal had so recently stared back out at him, seeing only his own distant reflection in the dark screen now.
At what Nevel guessed to be around three or four in the morning he woke to a great banging in his house. He listened to it from bed with a half-conscious fear, as the sound morphed itself out of his dreams—his body being slammed into a wall—
oomph oomph
—to a gre
at creature’s footsteps—
blam blam
—and then finally to the horrible realization that someone was actually pounding at the front door.
“Cora,” he said and shook her arm. Cora was, and always had been, like their kids, the type of sleeper who could sleep through a meteor impact. He shook her again but she kept at it. There was no way he would answer that door with her asleep. The banging got more insistent and he wondered if he could wait them out. Who the fuck knocks at this hour? Someone committing a crime would go through a window, no?
Finally, Nevel grabbed his gun and tied a towel around his waist and descended the stairs.
Through the door’s front window he saw it was Zach and he realized something terrible must have happened with the agency or perhaps they had a project due he’d forgotten about. Suddenly he feared this was a far larger nightmare than even his subconscious mind could spin.
“What do you want?” Nevel said through the glass.
“Open the door, Nevel,” Zach said and gave it one more bang to emphasize his point.
Nevel worked the locks and pulled it open. “Sorry, did you—were you here for a while?”
“Yes, a very long time.”
“Is there? What is there?” Nevel blinked rapidly to try to get his eyes to work properly.
“You’re not awake yet, dorkus.” Zach pushed sideways through the door. He was very aware of the slumbering border guards at the corner and of talking to Nevel in close quarters with the man only wearing a towel and a gun. “Nice outfit,” he said.
“Why are you here?”