To Hunt in Fields by Mark Rich

“Better to hunt in fields for health unbought

Than fee the doctor for a nauseous draught.”

—Dryden


Illustration by Janet Aulisio Dannheiser


“Snow,” Jim Malick said in wonder, shaking his head as he climbed in the cab.

The driver grinned at Jim via the mirror, white teeth bright against a face as dark as his own.

“What do you mean, ‘snow’?” the driver said, with a chuckle in his voice. “As if we haven’t seen snow two months going. Where you been?”

“Belize.”

“Belize. That’s down south a ways.”

“Long ways,” said Jim, feeling the miles in his muscles. His head ached after having subsisted on the closed, stuffy air of the airplane cabin. “Three-oh-four Woodbine Drive,” he said after checking the note from the Exchange.

“Three-oh-four. We’re on our way,” the driver said. “What you doing there, down in Belize? Not getting weather like this, I guess.”

“I was with C.A. Exchange. A little more than a year, I was down there,” Jim said, settling back against cold vinyl. “Helping build up an ag co-op, a farming kind of thing.”

“Yeah? Farming what?”

“Tree farms. Growing trees for bark. Medicine. For other things, too.”

“No kidding.” The car rode smoothly over snow which had accumulated to a depth of a few inches.

Though Jim’s tennis shoes had kept his feet dry enough, he could have wished for warmer clothing.

“I was guessing you were just back from somewhere,” said the driver, “just looking at your clothes.”

“Guess I wasn’t thinking what I was doing. A year away, and I forget what cold feels like.”

“Guess so. Don’t you get sick, now. Bundle up when you get home.”

At 304 Woodbine, Jim paid the driver, hefted his bag, and hurried into the lobby of the apartment complex. C.A. Exchange had arranged that his things be taken out of storage and a room be reserved. After a hot shower he dug into his boxes of clothing, pulling out jacket, scarf, gloves, hat, thick socks and boots. He felt a catch at the back of his throat—an odd feeling, after so long without suffering anything resembling the common cold. The worst problem he had encountered in Belize, besides a couple cases of worms, had involved a scrape with poison-wood. The welts on his skin had felt even worse than they looked.

Some chicken soup would be good, he thought. His thoughts went to Millay’s Diner, down on Fourth. He decided to touch base at the Painesville food co-op first, though. While he needed to get in touch with Dean Hegerman and others at the university, that could wait until tomorrow. Checking in at the co-op would help him feel like he was home. He had friends he wanted to see there, especially Vicki.

Vicki Corona had worked so hard at building the co-op out of its one-room beginnings that she qualified as the heartbeat, if not the heart-throb, of the little store. Tough mind and gentle heart, as King said. Without her the town would have been a lot poorer. For that matter, without her, Jim’s first year at the university in the newly created position of Professor of Ethnoagriculture would have passed much less eventfully, and much less pleasurably. They had become good friends in pinches of time squeezed out of two tight schedules.

Jim had felt insecure about his position at the university, and moreover had been preoccupied by the heavy load of committee work typical of freshman professors. He had paid his dues to the university, taken with a grain of salt the assurance of Dean Hegerman that he was firmly on tenure track, and accepted the position in C.A. Exchange with something of a breath of relief, for all that it meant it would take him all the longer to feel at home in Painesville.

Home. It felt like it, in some ways. He remembered the streets, the white pines that shook their long needles in the winter wind, and the bare arms of dormant maple and birch. He walked up the street and onto the next block, trying to decide if he loved the feeling of cold on his face and in his nostrils, or if it came as too much of a shock. Only the day before he had been comfortable in light clothing in Belmopan, sipping a beer, nibbling peppers, and thinking back on the work of more than a year, now at its end, with not a little sadness.

Had he accomplished much? How could he know?

As he walked, he saw odd markings in the wind-blown snow on the sidewalk, and thought at first they might be chickadee footprints. They followed no organized pattern, however—little gashes, smears and skidmarks in the drifting whiteness. In a few minutes, another gust would obliterate them.

Ahead, a leaf skittered past, leaving more evanescent marks in the snowy surface.

That’s life exactly, Jim thought. Life and effort. Marks that vanish in a second. Blowing leaves, leaving nothing: Nothing our restless, separated sleep: nothing is bitter and is very deep. Thus, Derek Walcott.

“Hey,” said a voice from the street.

Jim, absorbed, had failed to notice the police-car slow beside him. It had passed once a few minutes before, he remembered.

“Hi, officer,” Jim said.

“You’re out walking,” the man said.

“Sure.”

“You know you aren’t supposed to,” the policeman said. The man leaned toward the passenger door, the window of which he had lowered. He looked middle-aged, with the heavy features of a rich diet and a bristly face that hungered toward full beard and mustache. On another day he might have cast the cheeriest smile out the glistening-clean windows of the patrol car. He frowned today as if in imitation of that missing smile. “I could give you a ticket for that,” said his wrong-side-of-bed face. “Less you have your prescription with you.”

“Prescription? What are you talking about?”

“For walking. Don’t act dumb.”

“Dumb? Prescription? For walking?” He wondered to himself, Is this Painesville? Home? Where someone harasses him for walking?

“Sure,” the man said, his eyes widening. Redness mapped the whites as if they had seen a rough night. He leaned back toward his own side, opened his door, and rose to his feet. The effort seemed to take something out of him. His boots squeaked in the fresh snow. “Sure,” he said again as he walked around the car. He leaned against it when he stopped. “And I suppose you’re going to tell me you know nothing about it. I’ve been watching you. You’ve gone a couple blocks, and here you’re still walking.”

“Sure I’m still walking,” Jim said, beginning to feel exasperated. “What else would I be doing?”

“Well, well, you don’t catch the drift at all, do you, my man?” The policeman kicked a boot-toe that looked as new and polished as his expression looked overworked and tired. “You’re breaking a law. That’s what I’m talking about. Walking is a prescribed health activity, buddy. If you go unsupervised, without a prescription, and then you get yourself in trouble, who gets the rap? The city does. So you got to have that prescription. Did you know almost all auto damage involving auto-pedestrian accidents results from non-prescription walking?”

“Huh?” Jim said, disbelieving.

“I’m telling you for your own good,” the man said, pulling a pad from his rear pocket. He uncapped a pen with his teeth, “I haven’t given out one of these yet and I didn’t intend to here, but you’re acting so jack-stupid about this that it’s what I’m going to do.”

“You’re giving me a—”

“Here.”

“A ticket?”

“You just watch it now. Drive next time.”

“You’re crazy!”

“If you want to walk, then get yourself a scrip. And a better attitude, buddy.”

Me get an—”

He stopped himself, swallowing the words before they got out.

“So what do I do now? What if I get stopped again?”

“Then flash your ticket, man. They’ll see you got the message,” the policeman said, shrugging, smiling as if smiling came burdened with regulations and unhappiness. He slipped into his car. “Hang loose.”

“Right,” Jim said. He looked at the tag in his hand. Eighty dollars.

The official representative of Painesville had just met him, to welcome him home. Home, indeed.

The rep drove off, pursued by white ice-swirls in the road. Oddly it made him think of the musica del viento that would swirl behind the procession of a saint carried to chapel. Yo, Saints! he wanted to cry out. Where are you in this cold land?

Jim turned at the next intersection, opting for the diner instead of the coop. If he were to see Vicki again, he wanted to do so in a good mood. Any chances of that had slipped into that car and driven away.

Warm smells of simmering soup and cooking meat and potatoes greeted him at Millay’s. His bad experience already beginning to fade in memory, he gratefully took a stool at the counter beside a man in a checked flannel shirt.

Millie noticed him, her fifty-something crowsfeet deepening in recognition.

“Jim, is it?” she said. “It’s you, isn’t it?”

“Sure is. Good to see you again, Millie.”

“Long time no see, Jim. Long time. You went down a good ways away, didn’t you?”

“Helped set up some farms, that’s right. Way down in Central America.”

“Well, welcome back. What can I bring you?”

“I think I might be getting a cold, coming back into this ice and snow. So I was thinking about some chicken soup.”

A quiet fell over the diner for a second. Talk rose again immediately to wash over it.

Millie shook her head. “Sorry,” she said, sounding genuine in her regret.

The man in the flannel nodded over at him. “You’ve been away for real, I guess. You know some idiot made health claims for chicken soup. Now you can’t order the stuff, less you have the doctor say so.”

“Huh?”

Millie shrugged. “My hands are tied,” she said. “If you got a scrip, no problem.”

“Scrip?”

“Prescription,” the man said. “Frigging F.M.A. found out people were making health claims about chicken-bone soup—big surprise, right? I mean, your grandma probably fed you chicken soup when you got a cold, right? So what happens? The A.M.S. and the drug companies got their way with everything else that people make a health claim about. And chicken soup got sucked up into the damned regulations. Hell, it’s just about getting hard to order a low-fat anything, even, let alone ordering it on whole-wheat. Or a damned bran muffin, for god’s sake.”

“Christ,” Jim said. “You could say water’s good for you, if you’re dehydrated. They going to require a scrip for that?”

“Air, too,” the man said, and shook his head with a resigned shrug of shoulders. “If you live in the big city and have ozone wreaking hell with your lungs, a bit of real air would be as good as medicine, wouldn’t it? And by god they’re going to require a scrip for pure air, I bet you.”

“Can I get you something else instead, Jim?” Millie said.

Out the glass door he saw a familiar car pull up.

“Maybe later,” he said, getting up. “I’ll check back in a bit, OK, Millie? I’m just getting this feeling I better skedaddle.”

“There’s nothing wrong with asking for chicken soup, Jim,” she said.

“Hope not.” Jim grinned nervously as the policeman opened the glass door.

The red-eyed man nodded. “You got taste in eating establishments,” he said.

“I used to,” Jim said, slipping out into the cold again.

Even if his mood had hardly been improved, seeking Vicki sounded a lot more inviting than going back to the apartment and unpacking. Besides, he needed something against this cold. If chicken soup was out of the picture, then he needed something else. The year before, he had visited a local farm that raised cone-flowers, Echninacea angustifolia and E. purpurea. Something along the lines of those Native American remedies might help, if he were to be denied the old European folk-remedy—not to mention the homey comfort—of chicken broth. Besides, finding Vicki would be akin to finding some community again.

Finding community. It struck him that he sought that, as much as anything, in his return.

He looked down the cold winter street at the closed houses with doors sealed, and windows doubled and tripled against the cold with weather-curtains pulled: the walls shut out cold and shut people in, stranding them on islands of individuality. Maybe they found community at Sunday events or weekend evening get-togethers with comfortable crowds of friends, or in pool halls or bars after work, or in bowling leagues or darts leagues. Or their only community might be found in front of the television. What had T.S. Eliot said? With TV, he said, millions of people could listen to the same joke at the same time, and still stay lonesome. Community indeed!

Not that things had worked much differently in C.A. For all the much-touted easy and relaxed pace of the tropics and near-tropics, families lived apart and developed circles of silence around them not so different from the silences surrounding these houses in the drifting snow. Women and children could occupy private spheres that might not open for hours; and men, if they were the ones leaving the house to earn a wage, would return home to enter that quietness, not to bring into it some part of the outside world. A society could be made of endless silences and private views, spaced contiguously without touching.

Jim had failed to do more than make good acquaintance among the men and women associated with the agricultural co-op project—failed, that is, until the first Fiesta. That hit like a wall of water. Instead of a flood that obliterated everything, however, the flood of the Fiesta shocked everything into life. People poured onto the streets, riotously discarding whatever silences had wrapped them twenty-four hours before, shedding whatever had clothed their noisy and exuberant insides. They exploded. Jim found himself exploding likewise alongside men, women and children on a suddenly electrical street, becoming instantaneously part of the community in a socially induced high that immaterially but still profoundly altered his place in the village for the remainder of his year. He found a place: a home. When the individual spheres of silence returned to the families, after the days of fiesta, none of it perturbed Jim: into his own small circle, within himself, he carried the community. He had failed to see where such circles of silence touched, before.

Here he knew no such event happened. Americans warmed towards a few Fiestas, called Holidays: but even as social energies burgeoned and threatened to burst outward at the onset of each one, everyone managed to hold it in, and to pull tightly into their individual households, and to make each a private event contained within four walls. Community, like so much else in America, had become privatized.

Turning onto Holdings Street, two blocks from the food co-op, Jim saw a figure moving in a distinctively furtive way, appearing like a gangling, dark stick from behind a snow-decked pine. The stick-man slipped across the street, where he held himself close against a building wall, scanning the view. He darted across again, to the farther corner.

Then his head clearly turned in Jim’s direction.

He felt exposed and discovered. He pushed down the absurd thought: What if he’s undercover, trying to catch clandestine walkers?

“Hey! Jim! Jim Malick!” said the stick-figure’s full voice.

The man dropped all pretense of concealment, keeping about him only enough guard to glance against traffic to prevent being run down as he crossed the intersection again, running in a beeline until he stood in front of Jim.

“Paul!” said Jim, recognizing his friend.

“Hey, welcome back,” the tall man said. “How was Belize? I got your cards, back there a few months. Sounded like you were having a fine time, though I don’t know about that parrot meat you talked about.”

Jim laughed.

“But I bet you missed this weather,” Paul said.

“Maybe I did, Paul. Maybe I did.”

Paul Ode, a Nigerian, possessed the kind of grin that split his broad face into unequal halves. His high cheeks, wide forehead, and lively eyes made up a face so prone to smiling that Jim could hardly remember any other expression on the man’s face, although surely it had worn others—in fact Jim must have seen others, having sat through so many faculty meetings in his company. Paul Ode taught African and Asian literature and lived in a circle of silence that Jim had only partially penetrated, for all they had been committee buddies.

“I sure missed something else, too,” Jim said. “Something sure changed while I was gone.”

“I bet I know what you’re talking about,” Paul said. “I bet I do. The change. The big change.”

“I just tried to get some chicken soup,” Jim said, feeling the weirdness of what he was saying.

“And you couldn’t.” Paul nodded and then shook his head, his grin having become one of shared puzzlement at the enigma of life in the States. “Let me tell you, things have gotten strange.”

“I guess so.” Jim decided to leave unmentioned Paul’s odd manner of walking only moments before. He fathomed its necessity, anyway: to avoid tickets. Paul had been an inveterate walker, too, eschewing wheels whenever possible.

“Just on my way to see Vicki,” Jim said, “to find out what was going on.”

“Ah.” Paul’s smile widened again while an eyebrow jutted high. “Then let’s go this way.”

“Co-op’s moved?”

“No, but you’ll see. Co-op’s having troubles—”

“It was thriving, last I saw!”

“Yeah, Jim, but there was that big change. So now the co-op has troubles, because half what it was trying to do, the guvvy has spooned under, passing the scrip laws in that busy politicking way it has, trading this for other snafu stuff in the health-care wars.”

“You lost me,” Jim said. “Been speaking Spanish too long. What did you say?”

“The scrip laws. Anytime a health claim is made for a ‘product,’ then scrip’s needed. The Food and Medicine Administration finally pushed it through, after getting up the steam through the eighties and chomping the bit for the last five, six years. Crazy, huh? And the American Medical Society went right along for the ride.”

“Crazy isn’t the word for it. I mean, chicken soup?” Jim looked uncertainly ahead of them. The town still felt strange to him. “So where’re we going?”

Paul grinned. “Where we’re going—think of it as guerrilla HQ.”

“Whatever you say,” Jim said. “What is it really?”

“A restaurant.”

“Restaurant? A guerilla restaurant?”

“Right. Follow me.”

With instructions so simply given, simple execution should have followed, Jim thought. Instead, he found himself picking up speed abruptly then hunching behind a juniper while Paul periscoped his head to scout the prospect. The tall man darted forward, losing footing a moment in the snow around the corner, and then taking a new position between a building and the wide trunk of a thickly knotted tree, an old maple that stood naked but dignified in the heavy weather. Snow fell again, lightly dusting the air.

Two stick figures, furtive but obvious against the white: they must look that way, he thought.

He wondered if the Spartans, with their rheumatism and their damp lowlands, would have taken it kindly if a false Asclepius had stood between them and the waterside willows from which they made their anti-rheumatic decoction. Asclepius, asking for payment for his scrip—insisting on granting permission for people to heal themselves? Hard to conceive! Would the Spartan soldiers have moved evasively to the river, as Paul Ode did through the streets of Painesville, or would they simply have taken out swords and hacked their way past the misguided healer?

And what would indigenous Americans have thought, had the tribal healer stood between the Rhus radicans and the Impatiens capensis, the poison ivy and its specific remedy, the touch-me-not? How could a healer stand between a problem and its cure?

For that matter, Jim thought, what would he have thought had someone insisted on his getting “scrip” after welts and discoloration had spread over both his arms? He would have suffered longer, then—much longer!

Instead, a true Asclepius had appeared, in the form of a small, poutcheeked girl who looked disgusted at Jim’s stupidity. She took him back to where he had brushed the poison-wood. There, in the same thicket as the Metropium browneii, grew Bursura simaruba—the funnily named Gumbo-Limbo, a tree whose inner-bark sap provided effective salve against poisonwood, much as touch-me-not did against poison-ivy.

How could he forget little Pia Calderon, frustrated at this tall Jaime “El Bobo” Malick who knew everything except what was useful?

“It grows here?” he said to Pia. “Why don’t people grow some where it’s handy?”

“Because it grows here.” She said it as if saying that the obvious should be obvious.

“But wouldn’t it be handier—”

“But the poisonwood’s here,” she said.

“Yes, but—”

“They both grow here,” she said, giving her final word.

“Oh, together? They grow in the same place? Do they always?”

She shrugged and headed back down the path.

It made a crazy kind of sense in a way: plants humanly useful grew next to each other. He felt as though he had opened a page from the mechanist Deists with their vision of an interlocked humanity and Universe, or from that States philosopher of the strange, Poe, and his logical economy of nature. Some things argue for design in nature, whether or not design exists.

Rubbing in the Gumbo-Limbo salve, there along the path in the Belizean forest, the argument for design had felt forceful indeed.

Jim shivered behind Paul Ode, and followed him as he sprinted to a snow-covered park, ducking behind a high memorial bench of concrete inset with nobly postured Revolutionary War figures. Jim glanced at them and thought, It’s Boston Tea Party time, folks.

“Come on,” Paul said, motioning and then starting in a run across the park, his boots kicking up plumes of snow.

As they skirted a copse of pines, Jim’s head brushed a low-hanging branch and received its benediction: a load of snow puffed out over his head, a few icy fingers reaching beneath his collar and making him shout in surprise. Paul shot him a curious glance, then powered ahead across the white expanse.

“It’s cold,” Jim said.

“ ’S what winter’s for,” Paul shot back.

“Tell me about this big change you talk about, Paul,” Jim called ahead. “How’d it happen?”

“Madness.”

“Well, sure, it’s madness.”

“I mean literally, Jim,” said Paul, slowing down. Snow puffed around his boots. “Madness in government. It happens every twenty or thirty years, seems like, when morality takes over from ethics, when words matter more than what’s real, when politicians launch their egos on a thick cloud silver-lined with good intentions.”

“Hell, I can see all that, Paul,” Jim said. “But here—I mean, what’s happened? I don’t feel like it’s my country.”

Paul stopped, grinned, and nodded. “Exactly. We wanted it that way.”

“We? Who the hell is ‘we’?”

“Big Congress types and us little roustabout types. Look, Jim. The F.M.A. and the A.M.S. were pushing all through the decade to get a neck-lock on profits from medicine. Any kind of medicine.”

“The A.M.S.? But doctors aren’t that way—”

“I’m not saying anything about doctors. Doctors, individually—they’re mostly a nice bunch. Hell, I got most of this info from Dr. Bagdasarian. You remember thin little Doc Bag, don’t you? Sure you do. That big org that represents doctors, though—all through the eighties it was contributing lots of money to politicians who were pro-smoking and anti-gun control—more than it gave to ones who actually shared ethical concerns with the majority of A.M.S. members. The A.M.S. did it ’cause of economics. It’s a money-driven org. Here at the end of the nineties it’s the same thing. Economics. Money.”

“OK. But you said not only them, but you, too. You said “we.’ ”

Paul grinned. “That’s right. When it looked like this legal hoohah was going to be pushed through by these loonies, some of us jumped on the bandwagon. We made sure that if they were going to regulate beta carotene and saw palmetto berries, they were sure as hell going to have to regulate chicken soup, too. We made sure if they were going to regulate peppermint tea, they had to regulate walking and any other kind of exercise, too. We wanted this, because—hey, duck down!”

Paul grabbed himself behind a snow-capped cedar, dragging Jim with him.

A moment later, a police-car cruised past without slowing.

“Close, huh?” said Jim.

Paul shrugged nonchalantly, peeking over the shrub before leaping to his feet again. “Hey, come on! I see a crowd! Maybe it’s happening!”

“Crowd? Happening?”

“At the restaurant! I think this is it, big-time!”

He went racing ahead through the snow.

“Hold on!” Jim cried, seeing where people milled before a store. Several police-cars had stopped with lights flashing. “What the hell you talking about? You want arrests?”

“Holy shit, yes—and look!”

“Vicki,” Jim said, seeing but not believing his eyes. A crowd of people stood around a storefront that boldly advertised its illegal offerings: “Rose Hip, Peppermint, and Echinacea Tea: NO SCRIP NEEDED. Zinc-Propolis Lozenges: NO SCRIP NEEDED. Garlic Caps: NO SCRIP NEEDED. Wholefoods advice, free of charge: NO LEGAL LICENSE POSSESSED. Bran muffins: NO SCRIP NEEDED. Chicken Soup! Chicken Soup! CHICKEN SOUP! NO SCRIP NEEDED!!! HERE AT VICKI’S VICTUALS & TEAS! HOME OF ILLICIT-BECAUSE-HEALTHFUL BEVERAGES! EAT WELL BECAUSE IT’S GOOD FOR YOU!” They massed around the store carrying placards, some of them no more than sheets of paper: “I Write My Own Scrip,” “Tea for Cups not Cops,” and “Don’t Give In To Uncivil Obedience!” Jim saw little Doc Bag carrying a sign bigger than he was: “Doctors AGAINST Govmntl STUPIDITY.”

A pair of policemen led a proud-looking woman from the restaurant. She smiled grandly and serenely as if to be so led constituted a marvelous accomplishment. She wore her hair pulled back in a scarf, with a black wool coat falling nearly to her ankles. She moved like a queen, escorted toward one of the police cars. She smiled at the shouting crowd around her.

Her eyes widened when she glanced over.

“Jim!” she shouted with a smile as he ran near.

“Vicki! What the heck’s going on?”

“Jim,” she said again. “Hey, glad you made it in time for my arrest!”

“Your arrest? What’s going on?”

She shrugged, still smiling. She looked at the policeman beside her, who nodded at her unspoken question. She stepped away from them, reached out to put one hand on each of his cheeks, and kissed him. “Welcome home,” she said.

“Home? Home? This is home? You’re getting arrested—”

“It’s great, isn’t it?”

She squeezed his cheeks and retreated into the waiting car, waving a hand at the cheering crowd.

“Jim,” said Paul, “hey, this is great, isn’t it? Wow—glad we could be here at the moment it all comes down!”

“But why?”

“Why? Because this is what we want. Listen. If the laws look like they’re going to turn absurd, then you’ve got to make sure they’re absurd—and then challenge them! When people see what’s going on, they realize they’ve abandoned their government—and it spurs them to get involved again! It’s just like you say—you don’t feel like it’s your country any more—so you fight to get it back! Now we just have to get ourselves a walking ticket. That would be icing on the cake.”

“I thought we were trying to avoid getting one, just now.”

“Hell, I was trying to look suspicious, Jim. Trying to get a ticket. We need one. We’ve got an arrest on serving chicken soup, and we’ve got an arrest on selling Echinacea tea. Now if we get a ticket on walking without scrip, then we’re on our way to the High Court three-fold.”

“Well, you know, I guess I already got—well—”

“What you say?”

“I guess I’ve got one already.”

“A what? A ticket?”

“Sure.”

“No!”

Jim held it out. He felt like he held not a ticket from a cop but an admission ticket to a weird and wild fair.

The crowd around them, momentarily silent at the revelation, erupted into a new cheer. Jim realized he stood at its center.

“You want this?” he said.

“Ha ha!” Paul danced around. “Our young professor!”

Jim suddenly thought of his chances at tenure. “But what if the dean hears—”

“I’m behind you. All the way.”

Jim whirled. He hadn’t noticed the man in the blue-grey, knee-length coat. Fat old grey-haired Dean Hegerman. Smiling approvingly.

As soon as he did he felt a blast of cold behind him, and the now-familiar feel of snow going down his neck.

“What the—”

He spun back, just in time to duck before getting a snowball in the face. From the reaction behind him, he judged Hegerman had received the missile. Jim grabbed snow and threw it at Paul. A dozen others plunged gloves into the white and cold, and turned the sidewalk into a blizzard of flying missiles. He caught a glimpse of Doc Bag lobbing a hefty one at a police car.

Somewhere inside him, some irritated part of him stopped itching. Jim thought of tiny Pia, of the poison-wood, and of healing, and shouted one in pure joy at the nonsense of the syllables: “Gumbo-Limbo!”

“What’s that, some new dance?” said Paul just before getting a face-full. Dean Hegerman laughed.

Jim thought then of spheres of silence, dissolving beneath the hot Sun—

And dissolving now again, beneath the blinding flurry of still-falling winter white—

“Fiesta!” he yelled this time, feeling the inanity of the situation melting into something even stranger still but infinitely more comforting.

A jubilant enfilade of disrespectful missiles followed the departing police. One of the cars beeped a horn—then all did, as they disappeared. Vicki waved from a back window.

Community, he thought, laughing amidst the jubilation and the falling, falling snow.

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