First Peter scooped another little melon ball of flesh from his arm and fed it
gently into Second Timothy’s joyful, upturned lips. When Second Timothy had
licked his older brother’s fingers clean, First Peter went to the medicine
cabinet for bandages and scissors. Right arm days are hard for a middle child.
When he’d neatly trimmed the dressing, First Peter gathered Second Timothy up
to his lap with his pitted left arm. He ran his fingers through the boy’s dark
hair, humming as the sea drove its armies against the rocks all round the
house of stone, as Father’s calf lowed on the hill. First Peter had taught and
fed and sent six siblings to the war in the western sky, and though he was a
second son and a priest with a sacred duty, he did not want Second Timothy to
go.
We should love universally and without favor, he knew, and we should disdain
the things of the present world that is ever passing away. But he loved Second
Timothy, all bruised knees and sharp shins and sweat and the smell of worms,
and he did not want to see him go into the sky to fight the storm of birds and
never return. In every other one of his siblings First Peter saw an absence
already, already the passing away, but in Second Timothy there was only
presence.
Second Timothy covered First Peter with kisses, pressed tenderly on the
bandage when it slipped and the blood showed, then drummed a happy cadence on
his older brother’s thigh. He jumped up and ran outside, a bright and lively
blur against the seal-grey shingle, the pounding sea, the lowering stonewashed
sky.
First Peter went to the door to watch him throwing stones against the grey
surface of the water. His mother was on the porch with the girls, sewing the
sharkskin suit all sleek and toothy that Second Timothy would wear to the
west. It was nearly finished, he saw sadly, and First Timothy's hair had grown
long and his head hollow. It would not be long. He went and blessed his
mother, who looked up at him and hummed through stitched lips.
She patted a place by her knee and First Peter sat down beside her. He winced
as she took her needle and sewed the holes in his right arm together. First
Peter, when he was younger, thought that mothers must be happy and proud to
see their children float away to war, must be relieved even that they were
gone from this offensive spit of rock. But now with this heaviness in his own
heart he thought that mothers might be saddened even by the ascension of their
sons. He watched her fingers pressing the holes in his arms together and had
the thought that she might be saddened even by him. He found himself
wondering for the first time what things she kept sewn up in her heart. Of
course she could never say. Maybe that was for the best.
First Peter went back inside. He cracked the door of the huge cold pot-bellied
iron stove where three dozen archaeopteryxes fluttered madly in the ashes,
banging their beaks against the storm-facing side and crying
war, war, ever-war. First Peter fished out two dead ones and set them
on the counter for the girls to pluck. There was one with a broken wing, still
alive. A strange one, that First Peter had noticed before. He grabbed it and
set it on the slate floor. It hopped toward the window on the far side of the
house and First Peter shook his head in wonder.
Every archaeopteryx longed to fly to where the ravens and the crows held
court, to the great maelstrom from which the devil birds strove to reach the
Holy Isle, to kill what birds they could, as every ancestor wishes to kill his
degenerate descendants. But this one kept stubbornly hopping toward the east.
Watching it struggle across the floor in opposition to all reason, First Peter
had a dizzy sense of things going wrong, of the order being broken. He prayed
that it meant that things at last were changing, that this wounded creature
was a harbinger, and that soon the whole swirling avian maelstrom would be
swept away into the rising sun and scatter down in a hurtless shower of ash
and feather.
Then the war would be over, and the skies would clear, and no more children
would fly west. Perhaps First Peter's arms and legs and sides would have time
to truly heal and would never again weep blood in the agonizing night. Perhaps
even James would have rest then and walk across still waters as though on dry
land. Perhaps the women's lips would be loosed at last, and they would sing
along with every broken stone that the good days had arrived, and Father would
come down from the pastures with the fatted calf, and there would be peace at
last.
Or perhaps it was a stupid broken-winged antecessor-bird whose walnut brain
had grown confused–through many desperate clangs against iron walls–about who
even his enemies were, what even his final purpose was.
First Peter went up to the chapel room and prayed for their final victory.
After a time, he heard James come into the house, and First Peter went down to
him in the room with the big stone table. The skin beneath his elder brother’s
tunic was still shining, though crusted here and there with water, salt, and
blood. He smelt strongly of the sea. With his hook hand he pulled a wrapped
bundle of sharkflesh from his creel, and First Peter set it out on plates for
the two of them. James's huge arm muscles quivered with exhaustion as he ate.
First Peter thought his whole body trembled with a storm inside.
"How did the ocean carry you?" First Peter asked, according to the old
formula. Like the grim no-news of the war, James's answer never varied.
"By boat and not by faith," grunted James, his head bent to his meal. "But I
got a big one today. Will nourish you and Third John and the rest well when
Second Timothy's gone."
Something about the way he said it, something in the wet clay set of his eyes,
made First Peter bold. He said, quietly, "I do not want Second Timothy to go."
James's head snapped up. First Peter could see where the shark's rough skin
had rubbed one cheek raw as James had wrestled it down there in the depths.
"Did some sister's stitch slip to put such whispers in your mind?" James
growled. "Or a demon come out of the sky to possess you?" His eyes narrowed.
"Or did you come up with that on your own?"
First Peter's heart pounded: he knew his peril. The clocks in the room ticked
ominously. Far away he could hear the fatted calf's tragic bleating, as if in
warning or compassion for a fellow creature soon to suffer. The
archaeopteryxes’ wings beat vainly against the walls of the stove.
"Forgive me, brother," he said quietly. "If we were never weak, we would not
need faith."
James snorted. "Give yourself a weak moment down there, and you'll be food for
the mako."
First Peter bowed his head, feeling fire in his arm, dull pain in his other
limbs. His downcast eyes were on the sharkbite wounds on his brother’s big
forearms. “It is hard,” he said, in contrition and sympathy together. “God
knows it is hard.”
James slammed his hook down into the cracked wood of the table with a sound
like thunder.
“That is why. Because it is hard. The storms are on the ocean and the
sharks do not sleep. The hungry birds drive toward us in their millions, and
they’ll pluck out our eyes and pick our bones clean. The war must go on. It
must be won. If we are ever to see the good days, we cannot falter for even a
moment. If we do, we are lost.”
"Of course," said First Peter, humbly. But he was James's confessor as well as
his brother, and he knew that James wrestled with more than sharks out there
beyond sight of land. Yet whatever was said in the chapel where James spoke
true was locked as tight as if sewn behind a woman's lips. So he grabbed
James’s hand, the one without the hook, and pressed the broken, chapped flesh
with all the strength his own scooped-out arm could offer.
⚬
First Peter did not sleep well. He never did on right-arm days, and his mind
was more troubled than usual. In dreams he was tossed like James’ boat on the
unforgiving waves. High above it seemed a bird was calling. He could not tell
what it was saying but knew that he wanted to follow where it led.
In the dark before Matins he went down to the stove where all the
archaeopteryxes, save one, lay still. He opened the grate and pushed away the
sleepily ruffling others until he found the foolish broken one and set it on
the floor. It looked at him with big dark eyes, then started hopping toward
the east wall of the stone house.
First Peter walked beside it until it reached the wall. The archaeopteryx
fluttered vainly against the stone, getting once so high as the window where a
swatch of moonlight shone dimly through the eternal fogs. It let out a soft
cry, and First Peter thought it was the cry from his dreams. Worried that it
might wake James or one of the boys, he picked up the struggling archaeopteryx
and held it in his left arm. In the dark he stumbled on a loose slate and,
catching himself with his right arm, reopened one of the melonball wounds.
Wincing, still holding the archaeopteryx under the other arm, he went for the
medicine cabinet, the bindings and the shears. Fighting the creature’s
confused flutterings, he bound the broken wing.
⚬
Right arm, left arm, right thigh, left, right side, child's choice (Second
Timothy always took a little happy nibble of First Peter's chest). Then Sunday
rest and feast on archaeopteryx and shark. At confession James wept for the
lack of faith that kept his nets empty and sent him falling into the selachian
depths. First Peter gave him a light penance: to rewind and clean the clocks.
James fulminated at this easy treatment, but First Peter could see how
exhausted he was and refused to burden him further.
⚬
Two weeks went by and Second Timothy's hair grew that much longer, his head
that much more hollow, everything nearly ready for the great day. First Peter
found himself watching his brother’s every gesture, knowing how foolish it was
to want to hold fast to something whose very value was in its lack of fixity.
There was nothing of the eternal about Second Timothy. He was only here, only
now. First Timothy's memory had grown faint in First Peter’s mind, but he
remembered him as eager for the war, lusting for the sky and the chance to do
violence against the birds and drive them away. Second Timothy was not eager
for anything: all his joy was here already. He was like a boy standing in
bright sunlight at noonday, with no shadow before or behind. This meant
something to First Peter, although in truth he’d never known such noon
sunlight, only the stormy blues and greys and greens, and far away to the
west, the black and rising clouds of the maelstrom and the birds.
First Peter knew before anyone, except maybe Father, that the day had come. He
was up before Matins again, and quiet as a ghost in the dark house under the
drizzling rain, he went to the iron stove. Looking carefully around, he
reached in and took out the fuddled archaeopteryx. With a single sharp gesture
he cut the cast he'd made. The strong-healed wing buffeted First Peter’s face
and caused him to twist, opening the wounds on his side, but he bore the pain
patiently and didn’t make a sound as he shoved the archaeopteryx back in with
its troubled fellows, just before the clocks began to chime.
⚬
In the blue half-rumor of morning, the whole family gathered before the slate
house. Even James would not go out on the angry waters today. The iron stove
had been dragged outside, and the archaeopteryxes screamed and fluttered in
its belly. Second Timothy stood before the house with his family around him.
His sharkskin suit shone sleekly even under the flat steel sky. Mother's eyes
did not leave him, though in keeping with modesty there was not a hint of
pride to be seen in her gaze. In his hands Second Timothy held the harpoon
that everyone prayed would finally kill enough of the birds to end the war and
bring the good days. A tether secured his right leg to a post of the house,
that he might not drift away before his time.
One by one, the family came to kiss him and fill his head with their love.
First the girls came and pressed their stitched lips to his. First Peter
watched Second Timothy's head swell and wondered that so much love could be
held in the small girls' frames. He felt some sadness that he would never be
able to ask them where it came from, but he put it away.
One moment of weakness, James had said, and we are lost. Then
the boys, youngest to oldest—Third John, Second Peter, Philemon—each kissed
him and filled his head bigger and bigger with their love.
James gave his short rough kiss and made ready with the hook to sever the
tethers. When Mother breathed her love into him, First Peter thought that
Second Timothy's head might burst. Already it was far bigger than First
Timothy’s had been, or any other child’s in memory. But when she pulled back,
he was intact, his eyes distant dots, his smile wide as the ocean.
At last First Peter approached to give the sacred farewell. He drew in a
breath and thought to fill his brother’s head with enough love to take him not
only to the storm of birds but through it, around the world and right back to
them. For an instant he thought that Second Timothy would open his mouth to
say something, let all the love out and make them start all over again, but he
didn't. First Peter worked his way around to Second Timothy’s ear and
whispered, “It is a good day.”
Second Timothy’s balloon head bobbed, perhaps in assent, perhaps only in the
salt-damp wind that streaked his cheeks.
First Peter dragged the stove forward, and as he removed each struggling,
eager archaeopteryx, he tied one of its legs to a length of Timothy’s hair.
He began a hymn and everyone joined in, Mother and the girls humming in
kazoo-like harmony. We give thee but thine own… High up on the hill
they heard a deep bellowing blare, and all turned to see Father holding the
fatted calf, blowing a horn from the calf's own sire and raising his hand in
blessing. It was the thirtieth calf recorded since the war began, and each had
grown old to give its horn without one beloved son returning.
All but the last archaeopteryx was tied to First Peter’s head, and a mighty
wind rose from their westward-willing wings. First Peter tied the last one on
and watched it stretch and unfurl. He nodded once to James and the hook, with
two sharp tocks, cut the tethers. Second Timothy began to rise, and the
archaeopteryxes strained toward the storm.
Quickly First Peter pulled the shears from their place of concealment in his
sleeve and cut through Second Timothy's taut hair. The archaeopteryxes rose,
startlingly unencumbered, into the sky and flew to the darkness in the west,
squawking war, war, ever-war. Only one was tied to the still-smiling
balloon boy. As Second Timothy rose upward it pulled him not west but east, to
where the dawn was breaking, to where the clouds were opening like torn flesh.
First Peter heard the titan thunder of his father’s voice and his footfalls as
he pounded down the hill. He heard the terrified bleating of the calf who
thought perhaps his day had come at last. But First Peter was not watching
them: his eyes were all on the brother he loved, drifting heretic and wild
toward the broken eastern sky.
Then, for a moment, his sight was blocked by the anguished face of brother
James, who raised his hook to rend his heart as he said, “Why, why, why?” and
the sound from his mother’s straining lips was like the cry of that lonely
bird from his dream. Something poured out of him onto the dark ground, but he
felt no pain, only a great tiredness as though he had run a very long way, or
been fighting a long time, though he alone of all Second Timothy’s elder
brothers had never fought a thing. He could scarcely feel the mouths of his
little brothers lapping up sacerdotal blood from his wounds old and new. He
tried to think who now would be the second son, and who now would feed and
teach them, and if they would now lose the war and be devoured by the circling
birds and the gathering storm.
He did not think so. But thoughts would not stay with him, and his vision
filled again with the sun like a fiery coin of red and gold or like the hosts
of dawn arrayed in glory and the feathers of the single archaeopteryx like a
rainbow in the morning, and most of all the huge smiling balloon face of his
brother, floating high and far away.
S.L. Harris is a writer, educator, and sometime archaeologist who can be found
digging in gardens, libraries, tea cabinets, and ancient houses. His fiction
has appeared in venues like
Strange Horizons,
Apex, and
Lightspeed. Originally from Appalachia, he currently lives in the
Midwest with his wife, two children, and many books. You can find him online
at
ifchanceyoucallit.wordpress.com
and
@slharris.bsky.social.