The clod burst in a cloud of red sand
and the little Martian sand dog ducked quickly into
his burrow. Marilou threw another at the aperture
in the ground and then ran over and with the inside
of her foot she scraped sand into it until it was
filled to the surface. She started to leave,
but stopped.
The little fellow might choke to death,
she thought, it wasn’t his fault she had to
live on Mars. Satisfied that the future of something
was dependent on her whim, she dug the sand from the
hole. His little yellow eyes peered out at her.
“Go on an’ live,” she said magnanimously.
She got up and brushed the sand from
her knees and dress, and walked slowly down the red
road.
The noon sun was relentless; nowhere
was there relief from it. Marilou squinted and
shaded her eyes with her hand. She looked in the
sky for one of those infrequent Martian rain clouds,
but the deep blue was only occasionally spotted by
fragile white puffs. Like the sun, they had no
regard for her, either. They were too concerned
with moving toward the distant mountains, there to
cling momentarily to the peaks and then continue on
their endless route.
Marilou dabbed the moisture from her
forehead with the hem of her dress. “I
know one thing,” she mumbled. “When
I grow up, I’ll get to Earth an’ never
come back to Mars, no matter what!”
She broke into a defiant, cadenced step.
“An’ I won’t care
whether you an’ Mommy like it or not!”
she declared aloud, sticking out her chin at an imaginary
father before her.
Before she realized it, a tiny, lime-washed
stone house appeared not a hundred yards ahead of
her. That was the odd thing about the Martian
midday; something small and miles away would suddenly
become large and very near as you approached it.
The heat waves did it, her father
had told her. “Really?” she had replied,
and you think you know so doggone much,
she had thought.
“Aunt Twylee!” She broke
into a run. By the Joshua trees, through the
stone gateway she ran, and with a leap she lit like
a young frog on the porch. “Hi, Aunt Twylee!”
she said breathlessly.
An ancient Martian woman sat in a
rocking chair in the shade of the porch. She
held a bowl of purple river apples in her lap.
Her papyrus-like hands moved quickly as she shaved
the skin from one. In a matter of seconds it
was peeled. She looked up over her bifocals at
the panting Marilou.
“Gracious, child, you shouldn’t
run like that this time of day,” she said.
“You Earth children aren’t used to our
Martian heat. It’ll make you sick if you
run too much.”
“I don’t care! I
hate Mars! Sometimes I wish I could just get good
an’ sick, so’s I’d get to go home!”
“Marilou, you are a little
tyrant!” Aunt Twylee laughed.
“Watcha’ doin’,
Aunt Twylee?” Marilou asked, getting up from
her frog posture and coming near the old Martian lady’s
chair.
“Oh, peeling apples, dear.
I’m going to make a cobbler this afternoon.”
She dropped the last apple, peeled, into the bowl.
“There, done. Would you like a little cool
apple juice, Marilou?”
“Sure you betcha!
Hey, could I watch you make the cobbler, Aunt Twylee,
could I? Mommy can’t make it for anything it
tastes like glue. Maybe, if I could see how you
do it, maybe I could show her. Do you think?”
“Now, Marilou, your mother must
be a wonderful cook to have raised such a healthy
little girl. I’m sure there’s nothing
she could learn from me,” Aunt Twylee said as
she arose. “Let’s go inside and have
that apple juice.”
The kitchen was dark and cool, and
filled with the odors of the wonderful edibles the
old Martian had created on and in the Earth-made stove.
She opened the Earth-made refrigerator that stood in
the corner and withdrew an Earth-made bottle filled
with Martian apple juice.
Marilou jumped up on the table and sat cross-legged.
“Here, dear.” Aunt Twylee handed
her a glass of the icy liquid.
“Ummm, thanks,” Marilou
said, and gulped down half the contents. “That
tastes dreamy, Aunt Twylee.”
The little girl watched the old Martian
as she lit the oven and gathered the necessary ingredients
for the cobbler. As she bent over to get a bowl
from the shelf beneath Marilou’s perch, her hair
brushed against the child’s knee. Her hair
was soft, soft and white as a puppy’s, soft
and white like the down from a dandelion. She
smiled at Marilou. She always smiled; her pencil-thin
mouth was a perpetual arc.
Marilou drained the glass. “Aunt
Twylee is it true what my daddy says about
the Martians?”
“True? How can I say, dear? I don’t
know what he said.”
“Well, I mean, that when us
Earth people came, you Martians did inf ... infan
...”
“Infanticide?” Aunt Twylee
interrupted, rolling the dough on the board a little
flatter, a little faster.
“Yes, that’s it killed
babies,” Marilou said, and took an apple from
the bowl. “My daddy says you were real primitive,
an’ killed your babies for some silly religious
reason. I think that’s awful! How could
it be religious? God couldn’t like to have
little babies killed!” She took a big bite of
the apple; the juice ran from the corners of her mouth.
“Your daddy is a very intelligent
man, Marilou, but he’s partially wrong.
It is true but not for religious reasons.
It was a necessity. You must remember, dear,
Mars is very arid sterile unable
to sustain many living things. It was
awful, but it was the only way we knew to control
the population.”
Marilou looked down her button nose
as she picked a brown spot from the apple. “Hmmph,
I’ll tell ’im he’s wrong,”
she said. “He thinks he knows so damn much!”
“Marilou!” Aunt Twylee
exclaimed as she looked over her glasses. “A
sweet child like you shouldn’t use such language!”
Marilou giggled and popped the remaining
portion of the apple in her mouth.
“Do your parents know where
you are, child?” Aunt Twylee asked, as she took
the bowl from Marilou’s hands. She began
dicing the apples into a dough-lined casserole.
“No, they don’t,”
Marilou replied. She sprayed the air with little
particles of apple as she talked. “Everybody’s
gone to the hills to look for the boys.”
“The boys?” Aunt Twylee
stopped her work and looked at the little girl.
“Yes Jimmy an’
Eddie an’ some of the others disappeared from
the settlement this morning. The men’re
afraid they’ve run off to th’ hills an’
the renegades got ’em.”
“Gracious,” Aunt Twylee
said; her brow knitted into a criss-cross of wrinkles.
“Oh, I know those dopes.
They’re prob’ly down at th’ canals fishin’
or somep’n.”
“Just the same, your mother
will be frantic, dear. You should have told her
where you were going.”
“I don’t care,”
Marilou said with unadulterated honesty. “She’ll
be all right when I get home.”
Aunt Twylee shook her head and clucked her tongue.
“Can I have another glass? Please?”
The old lady poured the glass full
again. And then she sprinkled sugar down among
the apple cubes in the casserole and covered them with
a blanket of dough. She cut an uneven circle
of half moons in it and put it in the oven. “There all
ready to bake, Marilou,” she sighed.
“It looks real yummy, Aunt Twylee.”
“Well, I certainly hope it turns
out good, dear,” she said, wiping her forehead
with her apron. She looked out the open back door.
The landscape was beginning to gray as heavier clouds
moved down from the mountains and pressed the afternoon
heat closer, more oppressively to the ground.
“My, it’s getting hot. I wouldn’t
be a bit surprised if we didn’t get a little
rain this afternoon, Marilou.” She turned
back to the little girl. “Tell me some
more about your daddy, dear. We Martians certainly
owe a lot to men like your father.”
“That’s what he says too.
He says, you Martians would have died out in a few
years, if we hadn’t come here. We’re
so much more civi ... civili ...”
“Civilized?”
“Yeah. He says, we were
so much more ‘civ-ilized’ than you that
we saved your lives when we came here with all our
modern stuff.”
“Well, that’s true enough,
dear. Just look at that wonderful Earth stove,”
Aunt Twylee said, and laughed. “We wouldn’t
be able to bake an apple cobbler like that without
it, would we?”
A rumble of thunder shouldered through
the crowded hot air.
“No. He says, you Martians
are kinda likeable, but you can’t be trusted.
He’s nuts! I like you Martians!”
“Thank you, child, but everyone’s
entitled to his own opinion. Don’t judge
your daddy too severely,” Aunt Twylee said as
she scraped spilled sugar from the table and put little
bits of it on her tongue.
“He says that you’d bite
th’ hand that feeds you. He says, we brought
all these keen things to Mars, an’ that if you
got th’ chance, you’d kill all of us!”
“Gracious,” said Aunt
Twylee as she speared scraps of dough with the point
of her long paring knife.
“He’s a dope!” Marilou said.
Aunt Twylee opened the oven and peeked
in at the cobbler. The aroma of the simmering
apples rushed out and filled the room.
“Could I have some cobbler when
it’s done?” Marilou asked, her mouth filling
with saliva.
“I’m afraid not, child. It’s
getting rather late.”
The thunder rumbled again a little closer,
a little louder.
The old lady washed the blade of the
knife in the sink. “Tell me more of what
your father says, dear,” she said as she adjusted
the bifocals on her thin nose and ran her thumb along
the length of the knife’s blade.
“Oh, nothin’ much more.
He just says that you’d kill us if you had th’
chance. That’s the way the inferior races
always act, he says. They want to kill th’
people that help ’em, ’cause they resent
’em.”
“Very interesting.”
“Well, it isn’t so, is it, Aunt Twylee?”
The room was filled with blinding
blue-white light, and the walls quaked at the sound
of a monstrous thunderclap.
The old Martian glanced nervously
at the clock on the wall. “My, it is
getting late,” she said as she fondled the knife
in her hands.
“You Martians wouldn’t do anything like
that, would you?”
“You want the truth, don’t
you, dear?” Aunt Twylee asked, smiling, as she
walked to the table where Marilou sat.
“’Course I do, Aunt Twylee,” she
said.
Her scream was answered and smothered
by the horrendous roar of the thunder, and the piercing
hiss of the rain that fell in sheets. In great
volumes of water, it fell, as though the heavens were
attempting to wash the sins of man from the universe
and into non-existence in the void beyond the void.
Marilou lay beside the other children.
Aunt Twylee smiled at them, closed the bedroom door
and returned to the kitchen.
The storm had moved on; the thunder
was the faint grumbling of a pacified old man.
What water fell was a monotonous trickle from the
eaves of the lime-washed stone house. Aunt Twylee
washed the blood from the knife and wiped it dry on
her apron. She opened the oven and took out the
browned cobbler. Sweet apple juice bubbled to
the surface through the half moons and burst in delights
of sugary aroma. The sun broke through the thinning
edge of the thunderhead.
Aunt Twylee brushed a lock of her
feathery white hair from her moist cheek. “Gracious,”
she said, “I must tidy up a bit before the others
come.”