Kampus, p.31
Fiction River Presents, page 31

Fiction River Presents
Writers Without Borders
Edited by Allyson Longueira
Contents
Introduction
Introduction to “Neutrality”
Neutrality
Introduction to “Because”
Because
Introduction to “Dog Boy Remembers”
Dog Boy Remembers
Introduction to “The Red-Stained Wishing Tree”
The Red-Stained Wishing Tree
Introduction to “The Magnificent Citadel”
The Magnificent Citadel
Introduction to “Impressions in the Snow”
Impressions in the Snow
Introduction to “She Walks in Beauty”
She Walks in Beauty
Introduction to “Magic and Sacrifice”
Magic and Sacrifice
Introduction to “Muggins Rules”
Muggins Rules
Introduction to “Winning the Ocean Pearl”
Winning the Ocean Pearl
Introduction to “Blown”
Blown
Introduction to “Closing the Big Bang”
Closing the Big Bang
Introduction to “The Verdant Gene”
The Verdant Gene
Introduction to “The Moon Was Bitter and Hungry”
The Moon Was Bitter and Hungry
About The Editor
Fiction River: Year Five
Fiction River Presents
Introduction
Visiting Foreign Lands
Like our last volume, Fiction River Presents: Readers’ Choice, this volume also came to life thanks to a stretch goal made in our third Kickstarter campaign.
And I’m so glad it did.
Growing up as the granddaughter of Spanish immigrants, the influence of a non-American culture was ever present. My Ita (my paternal great-grandmother) spoke only Spanish, although my father did not and sadly, neither did I. Well, not really anyway. My father was raised in New York City in a poor neighborhood during an era when there was a lot of prejudice against Puerto Ricans. So, my family changed the pronunciation of our last name to make it sound Italian and my father was not allowed to learn Spanish.
I wish that had not been the case, but I grew up white, not Hispanic, so I can’t assess their choices in a fair and accurate manner.
Still, the Spanish influence remained. We had Caldo Gallego at every family gathering (along with lasagna, which I as a child thought must be Spanish food, too, since we were, you know, Spanish). I studied Spanish in school as soon as I was able and continued through to college. And I longed to go to Spain.
In 1992, I got my chance. My father, an executive with AT&T, was given an international assignment to Madrid, and one of the perks was that the company would fly my sister and me out to visit him twice a year.
Becoming immersed in the Spanish culture was amazing. It did wonders for my fluency, for one, and it brought me closer to my roots.
But most importantly, it broadened my worldview considerably.
I strongly believe that now, more than ever, as technology brings our world closer and closer together, that experiencing other cultures is essential to our human development.
There are many ways to do this. Living in another country is a significant one. But even visiting a Chinatown or a Little Italy, vacationing abroad, or sampling cuisine from lands foreign to you is a start.
As is reading this volume of stories written by talented authors from (or living on) three different continents and six different countries. And the settings for these stories are just as diverse. Finally, the cover art for this volume is from an amazing artist (Philcold, the artist for a number of WMG covers) in yet another country: my beloved Spain.
Thank you to our readers for making this volume possible. I hope you enjoy this international adventure as much as I did creating it.
—Allyson Longueira
Lincoln City, Oregon
August 11, 2017
Introduction to “Neutrality”
Karen L. Abrahamson writes fantasy, mystery and romance fiction. She has appeared in three Fiction River volumes to date: Special Edition: Crime, Universe Between, and Fantastic Detectives. Her well-regarded Cartographer Universe novels include the American Geological Survey urban fantasy series, beginning with Afterburn. Her short story “With One Shoe” was an Arthur Ellis Mystery Award finalist in 2016. In April 2017, her fantasy-mystery novella of 1820s Burma, Death by Effigy, was published by Guardbridge Books of the UK, and its sequel, A Death in Passing will be coming out in September 2017. Her paranormal romance novella, Surviving Safe Harbor, will be released in late September 2017. Currently she is working on an alternate history novel, After Yekaterina, set in Russia. You can find out more about her and her books at www.karenlabrahamson.com.
Karen lives on the west coast of Canada overlooking the ocean, with eagles, bear and orcas for neighbors. As an “air force brat,” she has lived across North America, and the wanderlust in her blood has taken her to many parts of the world. Thankfully, the ocean calms her wandering heart and she can often be found walking the shoreline and listening the waves. She says it’s the perfect setting for a writer, because the ocean tells so many tales. She just needs to listen and write it down.
Once upon a time, Karen worked as a Family Court Counselor in her native Canada. As a mother, I find “Neutrality,” which first appeared in Fiction River Special Edition: Crime, a haunting reminder of what can happen when parents fail to put their children first.
Neutrality
Karen L. Abrahamson
The word came just as I was going to court, in the form of a pink spiral of paper thrust into my hand by the sweet-young-thing court clerk. She then turned with a perky smile for the lawyer next to me and tottered away on her platform shoes back towards the main court office. The lawyer was young, tall, good looking and most of all, male. Me, I was a forty-something family court counselor. So not her type.
It was 9:30 and the lino-floored hallway loomed full of well-dressed lawyers in bad-news-hushed conversation with their Applicant and Respondent clients. The quiet voices seemed to rustle around the baseboards like frantic mice and the air carried the noxious odor of sweaty fear. Some of the clients wore an omnipresent defeat as if they’d subconsciously already conceded the battle that waited beyond the courtroom doors. And these were battles that went to the death—the no-holds-barred battles of custody and access. Me?
Think of me as a slightly overweight Solomon. I’m the neutral one who makes the courtroom recommendations.
I simply accepted the message and slipped inside the courtroom as the call to order occurred. I stood with the others at the back of the wood-paneled room, inhaling the poison and angry perfume off the heated bodies. Family Court. It sounds so pleasant. As if families could just sit themselves down and come to some pleasant agreement. But that wasn’t the case. The cases in this room were the hardest, the roughest. The cases that tried every neutral bone in my body, for who do you recommend get care and custody of a child when neither parent is fit for the job and when children cared for by the state are passed from stranger to stranger as if they were homeless?
I knew. I’d done enough investigations into who should have custody of a child and who should visit.
Judge McHale swept his red and black robes behind him and seated himself on the walnut grained bench that loomed judgment. Of course the walnut wasn’t any more real than the justice he had to give out. Family Court is like that, sort of a thin veneer of justice pasted on the jumbled plasterboard remains of a family. But McHale tried, unlike other Provincial Court judges sentenced to preside over family court. At least this one tried.
He was an older man, nearing retirement, his blonde hair faded grey and gone thin at the top. His body bulking out around the belly as if to make up for the hair loss. But the best thing about him was his eyes. They were kind and he looked like he cared. I even think it was mostly for the kids.
He nodded at the lawyers and at me and then the court clerk called the first case. I looked down at the message.
Casey Turner filled the ‘to’ slot. That was me.
Merissa Sandu, filled the ‘from’ slot. She was the lawyer for the Applicant in the case I was here on. Come to think of it, it wasn’t like Merissa not to be here right on time. I craned my neck around looking for Rick Hunt, her client, and his unrepresented ex-wife respondent, Natalie Hunt, or as she was known on the street, Mouse. Neither was present and that didn’t bode well, though perhaps wasn’t unexpected. Neither of them was exactly reliable. Then I read on and got the gist of just how bad it was.
Rick in hospital—serious. Natalie in custody. Set case over for 48 hours to sort this out.
What the heck? A little bead of cold sweat ran down my back. I wasn’t a lawyer. I didn’t work for Merissa Sandhu’s firm. I was just the government-employed Family Counselor who had done the custody and access study after mediation failed.
Judge McHale was referring the unhappy looking thirty-something couple before him to mediation, the lawyers thanked him, and I was pleased that I wasn’t doing mediation anymore. This looked like a bad one, the two parties both with their heels dug into hating the other for whatever discord their family was in. She started for the rear of the courtroom first, then her husband went after her, hands clenched as if he’d held a dagger he would use it. Have fun with that one, I thought to the mediation staff. At least in my world I don’t ha
But then Judge McHale looked in my direction. “Ms. Turner, I believe your case is next on the docket but we appear to be missing a lawyer and both our parties. Can you shed any light on the situation?”
I stepped forward to answer, carefully composing words for the courtroom.
“Your honor we’re here, on behalf of our daughter. She’s been detained elsewhere.”
I spun around at the unexpected voices and recognized Natalie Hunt’s parents, Quinn and Jeffrey McGuire, standing at the back of the room. They weren’t supposed to be here, but I guess they couldn’t help themselves.
I should have seen them when I first came in; they were hard to miss. Jeffrey McGuire had a buzz cut head, dark determined eyes, and stood about six foot six. He was an ex-cop from Vancouver City Police and still had the muscle across his shoulders, and the slow-hipped way of moving that went with years of walking the beat. Quinn, on the other hand, was physically an older version of her dark-haired daughter: just as slight of build at no more than five foot four, with the same overlong nose and darting eyes like a bird. There the similarity between mother and daughter ended. Where Natalie’s body and face held the exhausted defeat of her lifestyle as a heroin addict and prostitute, Quinn showed the restless fire of the endlessly driven. I had to wonder what role Quinn had played in driving her daughter’s collapse into the drug addict’s oblivion. When I’d interviewed Quinn McGuire she’d been one of the most contrite mothers I’d ever known.
But the ‘why’ of how people get to where they do doesn’t really matter in my line of work. My focus is reporting the facts of what is.
As I turned back to McHale I felt the weight of Quinn’s stare on my back and a trickle of sweat run between my breasts. The woman was something and so was her husband. Formidable, sprang to mind.
“Your Honor, I’ve just received word from Council that the Applicant is in the hospital. I don’t have the details, but I also understand that the Respondent, Ms. Hunt has, as Mr. McGuire put it, been detained. Council requests the matter be set over for 48 hours.”
I left it there, but held my breath. McHale was an old pro. He could read between the lines, but he could also get pissed off enough to make an order in absentia.
A small flicker of a frown crossed McHale’s face. He didn’t like matters not to proceed as planned and he’d like it even less if a family court matter had led to violence.
“This is highly irregular, Ms. Turner. Please convey to Council that in future they should not expect a neutral Family Justice Counselor to do their job.”
I nodded. My sentiment exactly. Neutrality’s my reputation and they pay me well for it. I turned and left the court.
The case of Rick and Natalie Hunt was the usual sad tale of men and women trying to live together. My investigation and report to the court showed that Rick was a self-employed plumber. He worked hard for a living and had thrown himself into trying to get a business running after spending his twenties running wild on the bar scene in downtown Vancouver. He admitted chipping a little H and to experimenting with cocaine, but all of that, he claimed, was behind him and had been behind him since his marriage and the birth of his five-year-old daughter, Savanna. Too bad it wasn’t all quite true because a little bird told me Rick was still using—sporadically, yes. But still.
Rick had met Natalie during his wild days. They’d both hung at the same grunge bars in the downtown eastside—Rick for relaxation and Natalie looking for the tricks she was pulling to pay for university tuition. At least that was the story she always told and that she told me when I interviewed her in her parent’s upscale home. University is pricey these days. Apparently so pricey that Natalie has been saving up for at least ten years and still has taken no steps to enroll. At the time of the interview she’d said she’d been through addiction treatment and was clean.
Of course that was the fourth time she’d been through treatment and when we talked about her time on the street she got this faraway dreamy look in her eyes that most junkies-on-hiatus have. She’d be back on the streets soon enough if I was any judge of character. She just needed this custody and access thing to be done with first. Because the one thing I would say about Natalie, she did love her daughter.
She was a rotten mother most of the time, fixing while golden-haired Savanna was playing in the next room and going out to turn tricks and leaving Savanna alone, but her daughter meant something to her. She talked about times when things would be better and they’d have the white picket-fenced house and they’d laugh and play and sing together as if Savanna would be five years old forever. But she held on fierce to her dream whenever we talked of Savanna possibly going to live with her father. She wasn’t prepared to give up her dream.
And so the couple failed at mediation. They wanted the court to make the decision for them and neither would back down in their dogged fight for their daughter. Like ships taking on water, there were always going to be times when Natalie or Rick were going to go under. That was the sad thing. Neither one was good for their daughter.
The question I had to answer was which would be better.
When I got back to my office I sank down in my desk chair and considered the three additional messages from Merissa updating me on Rick’s condition. The chair shrilled each time I picked up the messages, each one more dire than the last. When I finally reached her by phone, Merissa, bless her heart, broke down crying. Not the hard fighting lawyer at all. This case had gotten to her, too. There was always one.
“He’s gone, Casey. The bastards did him in good.”
I knew what gone meant. To Rick. To the case. To the world. I inhaled the verbena potpourri I used to hide the omnipresent scent of sour breath and tears. “Hold on a minute. All I’ve got is a cryptic note that he’s in the hospital and Natalie’s been picked up. What the hell happened?”
There came a moment of choked-back sobbing and then the sound of deep swallowed breath. “I’m sorry. It’s just this one got to me, you know. I liked Rick. He was trying. I understood his desire to keep his daughter safe and I appreciated his willingness to fight for that.”
And I could understand that; I had liked Rick, too, as far as it went. “So what happened?”
“He was called out on a job, but it must have been a set-up. He went out to his truck in his garage where someone was waiting for him. His neighbors found him this morning with blood everywhere. He’d been knifed. The EMTs got him to the hospital, but apparently he never really stood a fighting chance. They tried to put him back together but it didn’t work.”
Another sob while I thought about all the families I’d investigated over the years. They were like a long line of humpty dumpties and none of them were ever going to get put back together again. I couldn’t cry about Rick anymore than I could cry for the others. Damned parents fighting each other and using their kids as weapons. The flipping courts played right into it.
“Where does Natalie fit into this?” I asked. “Why’s she in jail?”
“I hear the cops like her for it. She might not have plunged the knife herself, but she had the street connections and just last night she was seen at Rick’s place. Apparently they got into a huge argument about custody and the cops had to be called because of the noise.”
Typical Natalie. She never could do anything low-key—at least that was what Quinn said. I thought a moment longer. “So what happens now?”
Merissa sniffled a little and then a deep breath came through the phone. “I guess it’s over,” said quiet and just a little too sad.
“So mom just takes the kid then?”









