137 - The Mudstone Abyss, Part 3

[LISTEN]

KEVIN: If this had been an actual emergency, this signal would be followed by screaming and chaos. Welcome to Desert Bluffs.

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Hello Desert Bluffs. It's been exactly one week since language resumed functioning. We are all, of course, relieved to finally be able to greet neighbors once again with a friendly "You should smile more!" 

But sometimes with good news comes bad news. It's also been exactly one week since all construction on the Mudstone Abyss was halted. There are still several creeping shadows roaming about the dig site, causing everyone who goes near there to become so overwhelmed with joy that they run away screaming. 

It's unclear why the shadows are still there. We don't know what they want. Some have said they want us to dig no further, and that these shadows are responsible for our loss of language. I think they came out to see the beautiful craftsmanship on our Mudstone Abyss.

Mayor Lauren Mallard called for a halt to construction despite adamant protests from the  media. The media spent the past week constantly texting and calling the mayor, telling her that construction must continue, because it has been the media's dream since childhood to build a grand physical testament to the Smiling God's endless happiness and love. But the mayor has been slow to respond. She's probably busy scheduling contractors to restart work on the monument. 

Maybe the media should try texting the mayor again.... [he's texting] "Why... is construction... still halted... Lauren?" Oh that sounds a bit aggressive. Let's brighten that tone a bit with...   "bleeding-gums emoji... spider with human eyes emoji... cry-laughing emoji..." There we go. 

The mayor and I have been close for a long time. We've had our ups and downs, but I think our more difficult times were back when we used to run a company together. We had some typical disagreements over who was in charge. She thought because she was the president of the company, she should have final say on all decisions. Whereas I knew that I was one of the Smiling God's chosen prophets, and our all-loving devourer would not choose a prophet who made mistakes. 

I believe ceasing construction was a mistake. Certainly our mayor thinks digging the Mudstone Abyss is somehow connected to our loss of language, and I appreciate her concern, but there is  only anecdotal evidence to support this. 

More on this story as it develops. 

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But first I wanted to tell you that Charles and I went out again. Originally, Charles and I were going to go to the opening of the Georgia O'Keefe exhibit at the Desert Bluffs Museum of Art. This exhibit features many of O'Keefe's famous flower paintings, but reimagined as if O'Keefe were a joyous worshipper of the Smiling God. Artists at the museum have painted large smiles and centipedes over O'Keefe's originals, and the result is apparently quite powerful and moving. 

Then Charles and I planned to have another luxurious dinner at Vermillion. But at the last minute, Grandma Josephine and her demons told him they weren’t available to babysit Charles's five-year-old, Donovan, and we couldn't find a babysitter. 

So instead, Charles, Donovan and I spent the day at the Desert Bluffs Spinning Smiles Amusement Park. We rode the Spine Kompressor, the Esophagus Remover, and a brand new roller coaster called Intentional Sepsis. Donovan was really delighted by all the struggling actors dressed in stuffy, unvented animal costumes. Donny got his picture taken with one person dressed as a smiling tortoise. We could hear the man in the costume panting heavily and begging for water.

Donny turned to the tortoise and said, "The sun calls for sacrifice, because the sun loves all that it sees." The man inside rasped "Air. Please. I don’t know where I am. Please." and passed out. Donny giggled right as Charles took the photo. It was actually really adorable. What a great memory to capture. 

We went back to Charles's house and made sandwiches and watched cartoons, but Donny wasn't interested in the television. He just played with his toy planes, zigging and zagging them over his head, turning and swirling them in reckless fits. 

I hope he does not grow up to be a pilot. 

I sat next to Charles on the couch mesmerized by the motion of Donny's planes until Charles and I fell asleep. Around 2am I woke up. Donovan had put himself to bed, and Charles was snoring softly against my shoulder. I carefully stood up and pulled Charles's legs onto the sofa. 

The whole day had made me happy, but not in the way I wanted to be happy about it. Happiness should be something you have, not something you take. I placed a blanket over him and drove home. 

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I'm getting an update that Mayor Lauren Mallard is holding a press conference at City Hall. Let's hear her speech live. 

LAUREN: People of Desert Bluffs, after discussions with City Council, as well as some prominent and very knowledgeable members of the media, I have decided to reopen construction of the Mudstone Abyss. 

I know many people are frightened by the shadow beings drifting about the dig site, as well as the ones lurking in and around your homes. But there is nothing to fear. These shadows are merely the impure souls of those devoured, and then later disgorged, by the Smiling God. They're not worthy of your fear.

These shadows don't even have faces. We cannot discern their intentions or feelings. They move around in quick jerks and starts, flickering in and out of our vision, sometimes standing just behind us while slowly tilting their heads. And unless you're looking in a mirror, there's no way you can even see that. 

So I'm not sure why you're all freaking out. Plus they're completely intangible. Watch. There's one right now, passing in front of me. I'm whipping my hand back and forth right through it. It can't do anything. It's just a shadow. It can't even smile.

Construction resumes at 7am sharp on Monday. We've assigned every citizen a daily 8 hour time slot with two 10 minute breaks. We've also hired some clowns to come by to keep everyone smiling. As a former corporate president, I know firsthand how important laughter is for maintaining a healthy work environment. 

Skeleton silverfish. 

What? Silverfish. French press carbuncle.

I can't pillowcase gumsack. 

Plenty of hibiscus!

KEVIN: Ah Mayor Mallard. Such a way with words. Well, you heard her. It's a joyous day! In fact, probably a future holiday. I cannot wait to start digging again next week, Desert Bluffs!

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Let's look now at the Community Calendar. These are probably the last non-construction events we'll have for a couple of weeks. 

On Wednesday afternoon at Morning Bird Records, the Society for Painless Living will be holding a protest march against the construction of the Mudstone Abyss. 

[beat]

Well, I don't usually read press releases for such tiny events, but I guess there might be one or two people who want to exercise their right to assembly. So if this sounds like something you're interested in, I guess you should go to the march and then think about all the joy the Smiling God has given you and question your motives for refusing to appreciate it.

Thursday morning the Citizens for Freewill will host a sit-in at the Sunlite All-Day Diner to demonstrate their opposition to the mayor's order for mandatory labor on the Mudstone Abyss. 

Huh. 

[flipping pages]

Oh this looks better... Thursday afternoon The Natural Smiles Theater Company - I love that name - is opening their new play "The Pit of Ruin." Playwright Danika Lopez says her work is an agitprop parable about the arrogance of religion, government and media. Lopez's play, according to their press materials, tells the story of a bloviating radio host who overreaches his position, enslaving an entire town in order to feed his hunger for religious power. 

I like the sound of this theater company less and less. 

There has to be some community event that's actually fun in here.

Friday morning the People for Clean, Sharp Teeth will be burning Kevin, the radio host, in effigy. 

I don't... understand. 

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I'd like to spend more time on this, explaining to you, dear listeners, that my happiness is not yours to take. I'd like to have all afternoon to teach you about how you must receive your own joy by making joy, rather than destroying others' joy. But I cannot spend any time on this, because I'm getting word that Mayor Mallard has been forcibly removed from her podium at City Hall. 

A large crowd of unsmiling people overtook the mayor and City Council. The crowd used a tattoo gun to draw a permanent frown on the mayor’s face, which effectively exiles her from this community. The crowd is chanting "Peatmoss Handlebars! Peatmoss Handlebars!"

The Police have tried using their bullhorns to call for order, but instead of words, they're emitting bird chirps. Language seems to be failing us again. 

Desert Bluffs, I need you to remain calm. I need you to take a deep breath, and think positive thoughts. Think about the Smiling God, its mammoth wriggling form and thousands of legs emerging from the earth and devouring your body. Envision your whole self nestled in the moist, loving belly of the divine beast. Smile while you do it, Desert Bluffs. Keep Smiling. Keep...

I'm getting a phone call. Ooh. It's from Charles. Maybe he found a baby sitter. 

[answers phone] Hey Charles. I was just thinking about you. You know there's a night club that opened last month. It's called No Exit. I thought maybe we could drop off Donny with Josephine this evening and then....

Uh huh....

So you called to see if I wanted to go to the zoo with you and Donny this afternoon instead?

Um. Well, I was just looking at the weather and I'm not sure if today's the day to.... 

It's not. 

Charles. I have the weather report right here. Listen.

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WEATHER: “Hymn #101” by Joe Pug

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I figured it out, Desert Bluffs. 

The mob outside city hall has dispersed. They returned Lauren Mallard with her tattooed frown to her position as mayor, but city bylaws prohibit anyone incapable of smiling from serving in that position, so for now, we have no mayor. 

The drifting shadows around the Mudstone Abyss have dissipated, returning to whatever other-otherworld they came from. 

And construction has begun again at the monument dig site, several days ahead of schedule.

I figured it out. 

During our phone call, Charles was getting flustered. I asked what was wrong, and he said Donovan was distracting him by swinging his toy planes around again. I told Charles to focus on us, and not worry about what Donovan was doing. 

"We can't talk about us, Kevin, without worrying about what Donovan is doing," he snapped at me. "Donovan IS us. That's the deal, okay?"

And I was hurt. I wasn't smiling. I don't like criticism. It makes me sad. And then mad. And then confused. 

Listeners, I don't often use strong language, so if your ears are sensitive to vulgarity, turn the volume down for a few seconds…….I HATE not being happy. I hate it. There I said it. I'm sorry. 

I thought about what Charles said. I thought about his teeth, his chest, his hair. His snoring. His smile. I thought about Donovan. I thought about Donovan swinging those toy planes all around, above his head. Like the birds in that dream every one of us has every single night. You know, where the birds zig and zag across a blood red sky, recklessly turning and swirling in panicked fits. 

Donovan's planes were, in fact, moving in the exact same pattern as those birds. 

I figured it out. 

Each movement, each turn, each path of each plane was identical to those birds' paths. Listeners, it's not a dream; it's a message. The shadows do not speak in our mouthy languages, but in shapes and patterns. 

I interrupted Charles to tell him this. I told him to take Donny to the Mudstone Abyss. I told him to bring Donny's planes. 

Charles and Donny approached the shadowy figures. The gathered crowd called to them to stop, to move no closer to the shadows, but all the crowd could yell was "Cabbage Coathangers!" 

Charles then presented Donny to the shadows, and they flickered as he zigged and zagged his planes above his head. 

And then a miracle happened. Glowing dotted lines appeared in the paths of the toy planes. A radiant geometry: triangles, and stars, and hexagons. The shapes began to connect to each other, circles forming spheres; triangles forming pyramids. 

The shadows raised their arms, and disappeared. Donny stopped flying his planes around, but the dotted lines hung in mid-air, an unreadable, but completely comprehensible message to the now silent crowd. 

They figured it out. 

One by one, the people returned to the dig site and began carving the shapes they had just seen into the mudstone. 

As people grew tired and stepped away for rest breaks, they found that their words had returned to them. And when they went back to dig more, they fell silent again, but only because they felt more comfort in their new spatial language of shapes and motion. 

The anger over the construction was no more. Citizens came together, not just out of a common communication, nor for the good of a great monument, but because happiness finally showed itself to them, and they discovered their own paths to peace. Through the pride of choosing hard work for the benefit of all. 

Charles called to tell me how excited he was for me. 

You figured it out, he said. Kevin, you figured it out.

I told him Donny figured it out. He didn't spout a solution in words, but in deeds. 

You should be proud of your son, Charles, I said. I am proud of him.

I didn't say anything else. I need more time to know what else to say. 

Soon, we'll go visit the zoo. Hopefully soon, we'll have a night to ourselves: to drink, to dine, to dance, and late at night, in a quiet home, to dream a dream of diving birds, of love and language. And we will wake up the same people, in a different place. 

The earth will have moved. The clocks will have moved. The sun will not have moved. 

But we will wake, and we will smile, and we will do our best to understand ourselves and others. 

Desert Bluffs, I didn't figure out the language of the Abyss. Donny did. I didn't figure out what the language intended. You did. What I figured out was that I sometimes push too hard. I will do my best to not do that. We are building this monument because you want to. I want to, too, but I'm glad you found your own way here. 

Lauren, tattooed frown scrawled crooked on her face, is standing over the pit and staring at the shapes the dream has shown us, as though reading messages only she could understand. She is muttered strange syllables to herself and staring with obvious malice at the workers in the pit. So even she has found a hobby in this post-mayoral life.

Thank you, Desert Bluffs. I love this town. I'm happy you do too. 

Stay tuned next for the sound a child makes upon seeing a giraffe in real life. 

And as always, until next time, Desert Bluffs, Until next time.

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PROVERB: Kangaroos are deer, abbreviated.