Madam Mim
One Big Modern Mess
- Joined
- May 30, 2013
(Title song)
It was hot. Of course, it was always hot, but today was hotter than most days. She supposed it would be summer, if they had summers. She had heard stories about summer from some of the old people, about how it used to be fun for children and meant things like going away to a new and exciting place to relax. Vacation, she thought it was called, but she could never be sure. It sounded like there used to be a lot of things she had never seen before, things like trees and grass; new buildings and fresh, uncracked pavement; water filters and internet; people who had time to do something other than work and scramble to survive. From what she had heard, there weren't any Riders either and she was certain they could all do with a few less bandits in their lives stealing what precious few resources they had.
Lola straightened up and removed her hat, wiping the sweat from her forehead with her bandana before replacing that then the hat. She didn't know what an ozone was, but she knew that there had been one before and a lot fewer people got cancer. The young woman was about to bend to her work again when a breeze stirred and she turned her face toward it. It was dry and hot, but it moved the heat around a little and that was good enough for her. Stooping again, she slid her bucket beneath another arm of the cactus she was working on.
This was how her people lived. There weren't many of them; maybe 25 or 30 at most, but the old-timers had all found each other when this once the radiation levels were safe enough and found themselves a little spot in the wilderness. One of them had had a few seeds and from that had sprung a cactus field and a modestly-sized aloe vera patch. From the way they told it, this place used to be all swamp and a few sparse shells of houses a few miles away indicated people had lived there once. Now they lived here again, but in a dry desert, scraping a living off the land as a testament to the tenacity of the human race; surviving despite having absolutely no reason to.
Lola was distracted from watching the steady trickle of water fall from the tap into the bucket by movement in the corner of her eye. When she looked up she saw a dust cloud in the distance moving at a decent pace. As she shaded her eyes and watched it draw a little closer she could make out a caravan of various old trucks and other off-road vehicles led by a beaten, knackered old camper and it looked like they were heading for town. Lola frowned. What was a caravan like that--six or seven cars at least, plus the Winnebago--doing stopping here? If they wanted to stay the night that would double their population and put a serious strain on their resources. Her parents had taught her to be kind to passing travelers when she could, but there was a line between kindness and self-endangerment. Once the trickle from the cactus had sufficiently slowed, she picked up her bucket and headed back for the small cluster of houses that made up their town, immensely curious about these strangers and the nature of their visit.
It was hot. Of course, it was always hot, but today was hotter than most days. She supposed it would be summer, if they had summers. She had heard stories about summer from some of the old people, about how it used to be fun for children and meant things like going away to a new and exciting place to relax. Vacation, she thought it was called, but she could never be sure. It sounded like there used to be a lot of things she had never seen before, things like trees and grass; new buildings and fresh, uncracked pavement; water filters and internet; people who had time to do something other than work and scramble to survive. From what she had heard, there weren't any Riders either and she was certain they could all do with a few less bandits in their lives stealing what precious few resources they had.
Lola straightened up and removed her hat, wiping the sweat from her forehead with her bandana before replacing that then the hat. She didn't know what an ozone was, but she knew that there had been one before and a lot fewer people got cancer. The young woman was about to bend to her work again when a breeze stirred and she turned her face toward it. It was dry and hot, but it moved the heat around a little and that was good enough for her. Stooping again, she slid her bucket beneath another arm of the cactus she was working on.
This was how her people lived. There weren't many of them; maybe 25 or 30 at most, but the old-timers had all found each other when this once the radiation levels were safe enough and found themselves a little spot in the wilderness. One of them had had a few seeds and from that had sprung a cactus field and a modestly-sized aloe vera patch. From the way they told it, this place used to be all swamp and a few sparse shells of houses a few miles away indicated people had lived there once. Now they lived here again, but in a dry desert, scraping a living off the land as a testament to the tenacity of the human race; surviving despite having absolutely no reason to.
Lola was distracted from watching the steady trickle of water fall from the tap into the bucket by movement in the corner of her eye. When she looked up she saw a dust cloud in the distance moving at a decent pace. As she shaded her eyes and watched it draw a little closer she could make out a caravan of various old trucks and other off-road vehicles led by a beaten, knackered old camper and it looked like they were heading for town. Lola frowned. What was a caravan like that--six or seven cars at least, plus the Winnebago--doing stopping here? If they wanted to stay the night that would double their population and put a serious strain on their resources. Her parents had taught her to be kind to passing travelers when she could, but there was a line between kindness and self-endangerment. Once the trickle from the cactus had sufficiently slowed, she picked up her bucket and headed back for the small cluster of houses that made up their town, immensely curious about these strangers and the nature of their visit.