You know, maybe that lobster bloke ain’t all that bad, I thought as I power walked through Tropica Village. People I’d never t before were smiling and waving at , which was a welco change from the usual suspicion and derision I faced. Guess they’ve heard about the coffee machine coming in hot . . .
Before I even realized it, I reached Steven and Ruby’s . . .
tailors? Tailorors? Whatever, I reached the clothes shop. The second coffee was kicking in, and in retrospect, it may not have been the best idea to subject this new body to who knew how many shots of coffee for the first ti.
Ah well, it’s gonna be a productive day, baby! I paused. Did I just call myself baby in the third person? Definitely too much coffee . . .
“Hello, Fischer!” Steven greeted, skull-dragging out of my questionable introspection.
“G’day, mate! How are ya?”
“I’m great, thanks! Is it true you’re buying Sue a coffee machine?”
“Not , George is, but you’re goddamn right she’s getting a coffee machine, Steven! The people need it!”
He gave a funny look. “Are you all right, Fischer?”
“Yeah, why mate?”
“You seem a little off? And your hands are shaking.”
I looked down. “Huh. They are, aren’t they? How ’bout that? Anyway, I need a hat, Steven. What you got for ?”
“Oh, right. What did you have in mind?”
“Straw hat, wide brim, red band around it.”
If you’re gonna wear a straw hat anyway, you may as well look like the future king of the pirates while doing it.
“Hmmm, we’ve got a few different types of straw hats, but we don’t have any spare red fabric at the mont . . .” He looked around the store. “I could steal so from one of those red shirts if you don’t mind waiting—”
“Forget it.” I waved the half-ford suggestion away. “It’s probably an intellectual property infringent waiting to happen. Let’s just go with a plain straw hat—I do want the wide brim, though. Real wide.”
“O-okay. One mont . . .”
He walked out back, returning with two boxes stacked atop each other. “We’ve got two different types of straw hats in. Which one would you . . . Fischer?”
“Yeah, Steven?”
“You sure you’re all right?”
I realized I was bouncing on my heels at an erratic pace. I stopped. “Yeah, sorry, I think I had one too many coffees, but they were free, so what was I gonna say, no? I’m only human, Steven.”
“Ah, I get it now,” he said with a laugh. “You should see Ruby when she has an extra pot of tea in the morning. So, you wouldn’t recomnd having two when Sue’s machine gets here?”
“What? Oh, no, I’d absolutely recomnd it.” I leaned over the boxes. “Now let’s have a look at these hats . . .”
I walked out of the clothes shop with a spanking new hat, which Steven had refused paynt for, saying sothing about the coffee machine, or the passiona pastries? Honestly, I forget. I was thinking about like five other things at the ti.
I jogged to Thomas’s tool store, stopping by Sue’s for my complintary baked good.
“Fischer!” He gave a broad smile, his glorious mustache lending it even more joy. “Back for more tools, lad? What do you need?”
“Thomas! How are ya, mate? Your mustache is looking on point, by the way!”
He cocked his head. “Thank . . . you?”
“No worries, mate, I’m just calling it how I see it. I’m looking for an axe. You got anything?”
“Of course! What’s it for?”
“Trees. Lots of trees.”
“That I can do!” He walked around the counter, stepping to the back left of the store. He picked out the biggest axe on the wall, holding it out to . “On the house, Fischer. It’s the least I can do after the pastries and coffee machine!”
“Oh, thanks mate, I appreciate it!”
“How did you get George to agree to that, anyway?”
He held out the axe, and I took it. It felt light in my hands, but then again, everything seed light to this new body of mine.
“Honestly, mate, I just asked him. I feel bad for the bloke—he seems super anxious.”
“Anxious?” Thomas raised an eyebrow and gave a wry smile. “I’ve heard our village lord called a lot of things, but I’ve never heard it said that he’s anxious . . .”
“Yeah, mate.” I nodded—rather emphatically, by my estimation. “Debilitating social anxiety, poor thing. Oh, do you know what the go is with logging trees? Like, do I need to do it on my land, or is it chill if I just go willy-nilly chopping them down past my property line?”
Thomas cocked his head. “Er—you want to know if you can log trees in the forest?”
“Yeah, that’s the one.”
“What’s it for?”
“Big fuckin’ fence, mate. Maybe a stable or sothing down the line? You know, I haven’t really thought about it that much, but definitely a fence.”
“Aye, that’s no issue. As long as you’re not selling and it’s for use on your land, crown laws permit logging. You can’t log within five hundred ters of a settlent, but if you do it past the land you bought, that’s well within your rights.”
I bead a smile. “Thanks so much, Thomas—and cheers for the axe! Bye!”
“You’re welco!” he yelled at my already leaving back. “Bye, Fischer!”
I took off running back ho—axe in hand, and a smile on my face.
I thought I’d miss the use of Sergeant Snips’s violently capable claws, but as it turned out, my concern was entirely misplaced. Like a caffeinated chainsaw, I made my way through countless trees in the forest beyond my property line with reckless abandon. A single swing was enough to cut halfway through saplings, fully grown trees being felled by a few more swings.
In my haste, I’d forgotten to get any nails to hold a fence in place, but I shrugged that off, deciding today would be a day for logging. I was selective with the trees chosen, not wanting to have a negative impact on the ecosystem—well, too much of a negative impact. I was removing trees, but I needed a fence, and that was that.
I was chopping down a single species with a light-brown trunk. I didn’t know what they were, but the wood was sturdy. They were the most prevalent trees in the forest by far, and I had no doubt they’d repropagate given ti.
I ca across another of the light-blue trees I’d seen on my bamboo-searching excursion with Snips, and I thought to fell one, but as I swung the axe over my shoulder, a feeling of wrongness flooded . Whether it was because they seed rare, or because the universe was giving a sign, I decided to follow my gut and leave the tree standing.
By the ti the afternoon ca around, I had a ter-high stack of the light-brown trunks on the sands of my land; next to it sat a similarly sized stack of saplings that would serve as the posts.
The exercise was both a ans of getting shit done and working out the caffeine coursing through my veins. I let out a content sigh as I took in the results of my labor.
That’s probably enough for now. I might need more, but I’d rather have too little than too many. I can always go chop more, after all, but I can’t replant a severed trunk.
“Ho, Fischer!” a familiar voice called from behind .
I turned, giving Barry a smile. “How ya going, mate?”
“I’m good.” He gave a concern-filled glance. “Are you well?”
“Uh, yeah mate. Why?”
“I had a few people co looking for . . . they expressed their concern, saying they saw you running through town with an axe and a manic look about you.”
“Oh,” I said with a laugh, fanning my face with my new straw hat. “Yeah, don’t mind that—I was gifted two cups of coffee this morning, and got a little excited about the prospect of building a fence.”
His brow furrowed as he stared at the piles of wood now sitting on what was essentially my lawn. “You . . . chopped all this by yourself? Since this morning?”
“Yeah, mate. Caffeine is a helluva drug. While you’re here . . . can I interest you in so dinner?”
He narrowed his eyes at . “Is it from the sea?”
“ . . . maybe.”
“I’ll keep you company, but I don’t think I’ll partake if it’s all the sa to you.”
“No worries! Your company is more than welco. Let’s get a fire going.”
We walked toward the headland, and as we rounded the corner, I caught sight of my ho.
“Fancy a tour of my humble abode, mate?”
Barry’s jaw dropped, and he looked between and the house with disbelief. “When did you . . .”
“Over the last couple days. Co on, I’ll show ya.”
We walked through the house, and Barry showed an enjoyable amount of awe and confusion.
The cat was out of the bag with George finding out about it, and I’d trusted Barry so far with enough information to bring down. It was only a matter of ti until more people found out, so I saw no harm in letting my friendly neighbor know.
“Where . . . where does the water co from, and where does it go?” he asked, flushing the toilet at my prompting.
“Not too sure, to be honest.”
“It’s like sothing from the stories, Fischer.” He turned a tap on, held his hand under the cool water, and turned it back off. “It’s like magic.”
“It’s called plumbing,” I said with a laugh, “and it’s common where I’m from.”
When we got to the kitchen, I gestured at my lack of a stove. “Haven’t found ti to sort out sowhere to cook, so I’ve just been using a campfire.” I picked up the pot with a crab inside, opening the lid and showing Barry. “This is dinner if you change your mind.”
The crab held its claws up in protest, promising a swift pinch for anyone daring enough to approach.
“Er—no, Fischer . . . thank you, though.”
I shrugged, walking out of the house with the pot and nodding for Barry to follow. “No worries, offers open if you change your mind!”
I set to starting the fire, and Barry sat in contemplative silence.
“How did you do all this, Fischer?”
“Do what, mate?”
“This.” He gestured vaguely at the house, the tal pot, and the surrounding area. “It’s only been days . . . I’ve never seen anything of the like.”
“You have to allow a man a bit of mystery, mate.” I gave him a smile, unable to contain the elation his confused face brought . “Besides, I’d say Sergeant Snips is a bit more amazing than that, wouldn’t you?”
He nodded, giving a deep sigh as the corners of his mouth turned up. “You’re a stalk of wheat, filled with unhusked grains of mystery.”
“That’s quite philosophical, mate, but you’re not wrong. Thanks for accepting and not pushing too hard on the details—I like you, Barry, and I’m glad we’re neighbors.”
He grinned at . “I have a feeling things are going to just get more confusing with you around, but I’m glad you moved in—you’re a source of constant amazent.”
“Glad to hear it, mate. You, uh, might want to turn away for a mont if you’re a bit squeamish.”
With two swift movents, I grabbed the crab and put it on a block of wood with one hand, then dispatched it with the knife in the other before it realized I had even removed it from the pot. I emptied the river water on the sand, put the crab back in the pot, and stood up.
“Back in a mont, mate—need to clean this and get so sea water.”
As the pot boiled, we sat in companionable silence, both lost in the flas of the fire. After twenty or so minutes, I checked my dinner. The shell was a bright pink; it was ready. I took the crab out with a pair of tongs, setting it on the wooden board to cool.
A welcod clacking drew my attention, and Sergeant Snips erged from the river, claws held high, a stream of excited bubbles streaming from her cute little head.
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