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162 - The Last Pilgrimage, Part 1 of 1

Broadcast on:
13 May 2011
Audio Format:
other

Part 1 of 1

Read the full text at http://flashpulp.com

Tonight, we bring you a fantastic tale of travels, beliefs, and works.

[Music] Welcome to FlashPulp episode 162. Tonight, we present the final pilgrimage, Part 1 of 1. [Music] Tonight's episode is brought to you by Jessica May's Birthday. Happy Birthday, Mrs. President. [Music] Sunday is gloomy, my hours are stumbled out. Give it the shadows I live with are stumbled out. [Music] [Music] FlashPulp is an experiment in broadcasting fresh pulp stories in the modern age. Three to ten minutes of fiction brought to you Monday, Wednesday, and Friday eat names. Tonight, we bring you a fantastic tale of travels, beliefs, and works. The final pilgrimage, Part 1 of 1. Written by J.R.D. Skinner, Art and Narration Biopoponix, an audio produced by Jessica May. [Music] On his 18th birthday, Muckin went on the pilgrimage. His eldest brother had long fancied the journey, but by the time he'd reached a proper age for it, he'd already found himself wed by way of a squalling barren. In truth, when the boy first set from the smattering of sawed huts that had made up his young life, he was little excited for the path ahead. He'd never thought it would come to his living upon the road, and he'd never dreamed higher than a plot of earth to scratch at, and a wife to help eat the returns. Yet, there was no choice. Land had run dry, and seemed to devour the rain as it fell. He came to him to make the fool's journey of finding a god to pray to. Standing at the crest of Big Fall Hill, he ran his wrist across his nose, and blinked away the results of his final goodbyes. In the distance, he could see his mother alongside his brother and new wife. Their arms had grown tired from waving his departure, but they once again raised their hands, knowing this was their final opportunity before the hill swallowed him from view. He would miss them, but was glad they could not discern his tears. They were not the only he'd spill the next year, as each inn and camp reeked of rumour without substance. Most had some word to impart of the gods. There were even those amongst the eldest who claimed to have been in the presence of one in their youth, but all provided directions based on a tale overheard by a cousin's acquaintances butchers nephew, each of forgotten name. Once in the world, it was tempting to drift into a new existence, but he inevitably found there was only a cold welcome for a wandering man, a few means, and his experience came hard one. Two months after the first time he'd laid with a woman, and two months one day after he'd first been forced to kill in self-defence, he'd met a traitor who'd come from the Northlands of Dund. The man wielded a beard of immense size, and his cloak looked as if every meal he'd ever trapped and eaten had been incorporated into its makeup. "Yes," he said, "I've seen the column with my own eyes. Three seasons ago I decided to ride hard south." "There's more demand where they've yet to be." "Do you know which it is?" asked Muggin. The traitor's fingers disappeared within his riot of facial hair. "Aggy, the sower," he replied. "Did...did you see any of his works?" "Yes, hence why I'm here. The prayers of his pilgrims often leave all in better stead, not just the few. I've found when crops are plentiful and pantries are well stocked, people of less interest in bargaining against my toothless scowl." To commemorate the event, Muggin purchased a small rattle from the merchant, hopeful that he would soon be home to share the bauble with his nephew. As way of thanks, he did little haggling. He'd heard of Aggie, often about the yearly fire on Big Fall Hill, on dying day, when the harvest was done and the spirits were said to roam. It was whispered that the sower was one of the greatest of the gods, and his mighty fingers had once corrected the flow of waters as a child might alter a puddle to enhance the course of a twig raft. From the hushed tones of friends and family, he had learned that the deity could see the future, could alter his size to such a proportion as to crush flat his hamlet of origin without thought, could even summon storms to shatter the landscape and drown any who did not believe in his supremacy. These stories filled Muggin's mind in the ninety days he spent overtaking his goal, the column. A thousand souls shuffled in packs across the snow-dusted grass. He'd chased them from a place called Sur, whose inhabitants were still celebrating the return of a pilgrim of their own. Better still to his ears was the news that the gods' recent passing had been accompanied by the raising of a massive barn. The main beam had been the heart of a thousand-year-old tree, and whose colossal girth had been set in place by Aggie's hands and his alone. His third life began then. His plea was heard on the first day, but by those who acted as intermediaries. He was warned vehemently against approaching the gleaming savior that led the band, as any obstruction was ill-regarded. Each misstep was a delay not just from the current destination, but from all those beyond. Order came from a council of sorts, comprised of those who'd furthest traveled, and some who had given up their prayers and sought only to continue the path of hardship. Punctuated by celebration. That was the god's shadow. Each s adjourner knew their position, determined by the tasks necessary to reach their own home. When Muggen first presented his request, he was informed after only a short time that he was 537. Unlearned in numbers, he hadn't understood its meaning, but several moons upon a trek, and in the company of gamblers, taught him math and its uses, including the significance of the ever-decreasing number that was his place in the sequence of works. Arithmetic was not all, however. At each stop, it seemed he learned some new skill necessary to aid the pilgrim that had besieged the sower for assistance, so that the journey might be expedited. He learned of tillage in animal husbandry and the natural medicines. The god's commands were law, and Aggie instructed his followers to their own best advantage. Uncountied years later, while restoring a tower of ancient provenance, a structure that would allow great vantage for the onset of fires which ravaged the area each fall, Muggen was informed of news he'd been longing to hear. "Three," said Gon, his oldest friend. The speaker cleared his throat before adding, "but the sower has requested your presence." The news explained why the messenger had not grinned to bear the anticipated dispatch. Muggen ran to respond. In recent months, the god had grown quiet in its march, and this newest summons did not seem to bode well to his disciple. As was customary for private conversation, the calm had fallen back some way, allowing the pilgrim to tread alone with his lord. As he spoke, Aggie's voice held crisp surety, as always. "Jesus, man! You really came from the middle of nowhere. I figure we'll be two months over the average job completion time, and that's just to get there." "I apologize," Muggen replied, his lips pale. "Relax, relax." "Listen, the old atomic ticker has only got about that long anyhow. We're gonna make a run for your place, but I don't know how much use I'm gonna be once we get there." "I don't understand." "What I'm trying to tell you is that I've only got enough juice left for a few more jobs, and it's off into the sunset with me." "Only so much one farm-bock can do. Even days like these." "Sure been a pleasure to helping you folks, though." "Now, you're the brightest lad I've seen in a while, and I figure the best thing doing at this point is to talk out your problem, see where you're at, and I might be able to teach you how to fix it yourself." It took Muggen a moment to dissemble his Savior's dialect, but, realizing what was being asked, he was pleased to finally have an opportunity to speak his prayer directly. "The land about my people's homes is barren. Please, have mercy. Bring us water." "Yeah, yeah. Got some rivers nearby?" "Guess a lake's too much to hope for." "What's the water table like?" "You know what to watch for, for that sort of thing?" What came next was a tutorship as rarely received. In the months that followed, Muggen's mind was filled with every category of practical learning that had been otherwise forgotten. The first matter was the written word, as without it the man knew his mind could never contain the breadth and depth of the flow that overcame him. He wrote the history of a terrible plague, and the savage madness that arose in its wake. He devised a calendar to Aggie's specifications, and he charted many stars in their seasonal significances. As his skills grew, he recounted the final pair of heroic acts carried out by the sower. At first was the purification of a well by way of removal of poisons from within the turf, the feet which had required the construction of massive earthworks, and the transference of an artifact to an enclosed crypt, now posted with a warning to never again breach the seal, under dire consequence. The second was establishing a standing orchard of many thousand trees, all with the intention of providing fruit which might curtail a terrible illness of nutrition which had fallen the inhabitants of the surrounding countryside. The time taught Muggen much about the rudimentary's of genetics, and the splicing and tending of timber. In the end, the sower made it as far as Bigfall Hill. He'd been busy imparting minutiae regarding algebraic geometry, and his eager student, with his eyes and quill upon homemade parchment and makeshift tablet, had not recognized the approach as any different than the thousand such he'd seen before. It was only at the peak, with the village spread before him, that he realized he'd arrived. He was Aggie who broke the silence. "Well, Pard, this is my stop. Like I said, you ever happen to run by a Hokkaido electric TU-13 power cell, feel free to run it on by?" "It's an easy install, glows right in my mouth. Pop it down the chute and the internals will take it from there. Otherwise, think I'll just take a rest." "You know, better get cracking on that irrigation system. Won't be nothing but kids' play for ya." They were the gods' closing words. In the years to come, children would play at Aggie's feet, and each dying day the still figure would stand guard at the edge of the fire, as the tails of the sower's undertakings were told. First, though, for the pilgrims came morning, and then, heating their master's last command, the work. Muggen was happy to finally deliver the rattle he'd bought so many years previous, even if it was to his brother's seventh-born. He was pleased, too, to see how the people had fared, even under such circumstances. When the final strut was built, and the flow of nourishment redirected to flood the farmer's thirst, he beamed with the knowledge that they would now prosper. Even with his labor, there was time for tail-telling, and to teach his brother some of what he'd learned upon the road, of numbers, and barn-raising, and tonics. Then, he'd stood to leave. He did not cry this time; he knew he must find the holiest of relics, the battery of resurrection, and that, as he moved across the land, he must spread the wisdom of Aggie, in the Book of the Sower. The column followed. Flashpulp is presented by HTTP colon slash slash Skinner dot FM. The audio and text formats of Flashpulp are released under the Canadian Creative Commons attribution non-commercial 2.5 license. [Music]