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ART BY JASON WHITE
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1
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MARK MOTHERSBAUGH'S PANDEMIC OIL PAINTINGS
AT MUTATO MUZIKA | PHOTO BY MARK MOTHERSBAUGH
׉	 7cassandra://OeY5tE5FXjhjnCWtdziqdIJldHJhB-W3eQ2C266CppE` dYFז0?G6׉E GOMED
G
DRAG SH
RTMA
& MOR
LEARN MORE AT
DENVERARTMUSEUM.ORG/UNTITLED
5
׉	 7cassandra://12wFZJjye1dQgmxPKrjbcBqTVp1l4cOBC-eP_mKpyVk'` dYFז0?G6dYFז0?G6בCט   u׉׉	 7cassandra://azcz5EbPaiIali1qaOXBmpvBFMg9jwgCXmcZ9qW4x_U `׉	 7cassandra://8itoAO09V0oHw7drq9nubd-m_aocO0mKeabaS6lytDI~`r׉	 7cassandra://A5ZqBb1vt8AKHIn7OyMFRt6mNR7uEoxjh3bWGwYjUyY'` ׉	 7cassandra://FSZAV6ueSKesAFGBKwwUBTcq46PfI_y_11vtFdGyNvc 6PL͠Xd\Fז0?G7ט  u׉׉	 7cassandra://9DbbKuZX6nLa-j9WrEWurYd70s--kb9WIOvx3B7L_kc ~`׉	 7cassandra://mGAtNHwr_lwaxcIdDyNXK1bkNSa7rSQUHVnGdd_ln5sz`r׉	 7cassandra://2YV-xwp1Xu191ORwFvurLU7NttAlOnCMWmbq2AmLvoA"` ׉	 7cassandra://wgciXJ6Ud-ZT0YvscX6gI4DyrxRgMQvhvQ1L22L4QAQ on͠Xd\Fז0?G7׉E(AnD OtheR ObSeRvAtIons
AbOuT LiFe in DyIng TiMeS)
By bRiAn pOlK
AW FUCK, LOOKS LIKE MY LEAST FAVORITE CUSTOMER
SURVIVED COVID AFTER ALL
We hadn’t seen Old Man Lifton since before the Great Lockdown,
and absolutely no one at my job at the coffee shop missed him. He
was always making creepy comments and misogynistic jokes to
my coworkers five decades his younger. He referred to full-grown
adults as “boy” and admonished them for not working harder in
his presence. And he always demanded discounts for everything he
ordered, even though he never tipped once. So when three years went
by and no one had seen a trace of him, we just figured he had become
a Covid statistic. But then yesterday, I was in the back and I heard
someone say, “If they paid you for bein’ a good looker, you’d be rich.” I
recognized the voice immediately. I also knew he was talking to Irene,
No. 115
since she and Matt were on bar shift. (If he had been talking to Matt,
he would have said, “Hey, boy.”) I sighed. Defeated, I walked out to
give Irene a break and tell Mr. Lifton not to talk to the employees
that way. He called me “little man,” gave me a hard time about
raising our prices (since he was last here in 2020), and tried to leave
without paying at all. When I confronted him about the bill — $3.75
for one Americano — he paid me in nickels and pennies. While we’re
still pretty sure Covid claimed the mean lady with the MAGA hat who
always stole all our sugar packets and made Mandy cry a few times,
and the guy who would go on 20 minute sexist/racist/homophobic
tirades about the evils of oat milk, it spared Old Man Lifton. Since
he’s always talking about how great Florida is, maybe he’ll move. It’s
our only hope at this point.
׉	 7cassandra://A5ZqBb1vt8AKHIn7OyMFRt6mNR7uEoxjh3bWGwYjUyY'` dYFז0?G6׉EPIXEL LAND, DESTROYED CITY
exception to the rule. Most weeks I have myself a couple of cocktail
parties where I really throw ‘em back. But now that I’m aging a bit, I’m
beginning to realize I should probably slow down and actually consume
four or five drinks a week for the sake of my own personal quality of life
index. And then I’ll tell my doctor I only have one or two, because for
some reason, I feel like they can’t be trusted with certain information.
I hAD A DREAM ThAT I COULDn’T SLEEP
And now my insomnia has gone meta. What a load of shit.
MY SPOUSE WRAPS ME In BUBBLE WRAP BEFORE I gO
SKATEBOARDIng WITh ThE UnDERSTAnDIng ThAT OnCE
ALL ThE BUBBLES ARE POPPED, I hAVE TO COME hOME
And I’m not allowed to skate after the Urgent Care place closes. I was
lovingly compelled (“forced by my significant other” in other words) to
agree to these conditions in order to fully realize an essential aspect
of my midlife crisis — to claw back a sliver of my former skateboarding
talent. But of course there are other barriers preventing me from
reentering skating culture — namely my knees, heels and lower back
(body parts that must collectively be wondering just what the hell I
think I’m thinking). Also, falling off my skateboard hurts a great
deal more than it did when I was 15, and I wreck more often as well,
because I totally suck at this sport. So yeah, I pop a lot of bubbles on my
protective bubble wrap. Sometimes I make it a half hour (though my
sessions are often much shorter). But thus far I have yet to seriously
injure myself, which I consider a massive success. And until I seriously
maim a body part (or bubble wrap gets prohibitively expensive), I plan
on continuing this pathetic attempt at reliving my childhood well into
my 50s — at which point I’m sure I’ll have to surgically replace a body
part or two.
DO YOU EVER FInD YOURSELF WIShIng ThAT YOU
ShOULDn’T hAVE SWAM SO hARD AS A SPERM CELL?
Have you ever had one of those days where you think, When I was
I FEEL LIKE CURMUDgEOnS LIVE ThE LOngEST BECAUSE
ThEY hAVE A PURPOSE hERE On EARTh
Every day they must wake up and say, “There simply needs to be
more pettiness, anger, bitterness discontentment and hurt feelings
in the world. And by God, I am just the person to make that happen.”
This cosmic technicality to longevity should be called “the asshole
loophole,” and it sure is thriving these days.
MY gOAL IS TO REDUCE MY ALCOhOL COnSUMPTIOn TO ThE
AMOUnT I TELL MY DOCTOR I DRInK
When my doctor asks how many drinks I consume in a week, I always
say, “Oh, I don’t know. Four or five.” This is a lie. I mean sure, there
are weeks when I drink that amount — or even less — but that’s the
a sperm cell, why didn’t I just sort of dog paddle once I made it to
the fallopian tube? Why did I need to be so goddamn ambitious and
penetrate the egg like that? Because I think about it often. I mean, all
those other sperms really wanted to get to that egg as well, and if they
succeeded, I wouldn’t have to go to fucking work every day. It really
puts things in perspective, and it can even lift my mood. For example,
if I’m having a terrible time at work and all the customers are being
horrible and I picture myself as an eager sperm cell, I can’t help but
laugh. Then I realize that almost everyone alive was at one time an
overachiever and I laugh again, because that means that Anthony, the
laziest roommate I ever had, was actually a super ambitious swimmer
at one point. And he doesn’t even know how to swim as an adult (which
begs the question, when did he forget?). Anyway, once I found a way to
inject levity into my own nightmare of existential despair, it made life
a bit lighter and easier to handle. I highly recommend it.
7
׉	 7cassandra://2YV-xwp1Xu191ORwFvurLU7NttAlOnCMWmbq2AmLvoA"` dYFז0?G6dYFז0?G6בCט   u׉׉	 7cassandra://N2eTXb3Kl0fgACJFIS8JOA4Y1PKHCOtNedqt2AHAz_k W`׉	 7cassandra://noWsUyAjFINFuStT2M3-2Bv6-bOfrEDiwntuqtkHMKQom`r׉	 7cassandra://xMIwr8J-SJ4gCbgRVqo2t09vaXeSyshwo2jGiHvaKJk(*` ׉	 7cassandra://xwvmMvtNQfK_Ji3-aP9RYhHEwmjfsmhkyJfhfTG0PnA ͠Xd\Fז0?G7ט  u׉׉	 7cassandra://LNXpSPocAH35D4pVTuoEFa1osJZJTOHDzMMkQSCfUnY q>`׉	 7cassandra://jhac4uJy-crd4mJ_FUiRTMgFvzRu-mWd7n_wNoIZjJk͘`r׉	 7cassandra://l5jbdRuZ_FCloMV7L8baLooAXW8j8NHHOOiDJQgSRUk,` ׉	 7cassandra://N_JHK3sEKwMQNI29JO4rnV4yG5865TSiCMmMZlGdkFs 0͠Xd\Fז0?G7׉E )MOON_PATROL, HYPOTHETICAL MOVIE POSTER 4
׉	 7cassandra://xMIwr8J-SJ4gCbgRVqo2t09vaXeSyshwo2jGiHvaKJk(*` dYFז0?G6׉ES“Burn it,” said Kroth. “Kill the villagers.”
I frowned. “You mean the soldiers.”
“I mean all of them.”
Cara was watching me closely, trident held loosely. Hunch and Hew,
two of the bulbous, malformed ogres Kroth called his Children, were
grinning. Hew swung his oversized cleaver around in an easy circle,
cleft palate leering.
“There’ll be reprisals,” I warned. “The Steel Willows will go ape.
They’ll send— ”
“The Willows will be so desperate for revenge we’ll finally get the
battle we’ve been looking for. Exactly.”
Kroth’s ogres and mercenaries (of which I was one) were already
rounding people up, loud protests audible within the bamboo buildings,
children crying. A man shouted, then screamed. Kroth’s gaze jerked
toward the sound, and he nodded to Hew to investigate. “We don’t
have to do this,” I protested. “Let me question some of these people.
If they know what’s at stake we can find out where they’re hiding.”
When Kroth turned back, he held between thumb and forefinger a
small glass vial filled with necroflame, the oily liquid glowing orange
in the dusk. Swallowed, it gave superhuman strength and speed;
exposed to the air, it burst into potent flame. “We don’t need to find
them,” he said. “They’ll find us.” He flicked it casually toward an open
doorway.
“No!” I shouted, hand flashing out. Had the ampule cracked, it would
have set my arm ablaze, but I’d always had good reflexes, and I caught
it whole.
“What are you doing?” Kroth demanded. “Arrest this man!”
In for a penny, in for a pound. I brought the necroflame to my lips, then
hesitated. There had been a time when I’d respected Kroth, known
him for a crafty fighter and strategist, and he could be funny when he
wanted to me. But for weeks now he’d been taking necro whenever we
went into battle. Instead, seeing two Children racing toward me with
axes raised, I tossed it at their feet. Fireworks followed.
“Traitor,” Kroth growled, and with a flick of his wrists, freed the
spring-loaded bayonets hidden in his vambraces. He lunged.
I twisted away, but not before he’d scored a deep cut along my ribs
that made me swear in pain. He’d have skewered me with his other
blade, had Cara not acted instantly to entangle it in her trident. Bless
that warrior woman!
I carried no weapon, for I accompanied the Thirteenth Legion as
an interpreter, but Master Wei-feng had taught me to look for tools
anywhere. I kicked hard at a tall bamboo post holding up a roof, then
wrested it free of the ropes binding it at the top. This took seconds,
but Cara had her hands full, and others were quickly joining the fray. I
thrust my makeshift staff into the warty face of one Child, swept out
the feet from another, did my best to crack Kroth a mighty blow to
his neck. But he must have taken the necroflame already, because he
was freaky fast, and ducked just enough that the blow glanced off his
horned helmet.
I took a hit then myself to the elbow, numbing my left arm. I kicked
out behind me, knocked the pointy-headed Child back, and followed
up with a backswing of the staff tucked under my right arm. Seeing
their commander under attack, an increasing number of Children were
abandoning their assault on the village in favor of trying to take me
and Cara down.
I was altogether glad, then, to see one giant fall, then another, and
a gleaming, shirtless warrior snapping a katana with fierce precision.
“Ray! Help Cara!” The three of us — me, Cara and Ray — were tight.
We’d joined the Legion together, worked together, fought together.
I knew he’d stand by us now. He nodded and danced through the
running figures like a deadly ghost.
With the three of us working together, the tide turned. The Children
were large, but not brave, and as the bodies piled up many of them
simply stood by or hid in the shadows, waiting to see how things
would turn out.
But Kroth didn’t slow. Just before I reached him I saw him crack a vial
of necroflame and suck it into his mouth. His skin glowed. Between
Cara, Ray and myself, we pressed him hard, but rather than tiring, he
seemed to grow faster and stronger than ever. Smoke boiled from his
nostrils, a sulfurous smell rising from his skin. When we wounded
him, flame wept through the cuts. Gasping, I shouted, “Stop, man!
It’s killing you! It’s killing you!”
He turned to look at me over his shoulder, and I reeled back. His eyes
were empty, and I mean literally: sockets and shadows, black smoking
holes. “This is the job,” he said, and with a serpent’s precision, struck
Ray through the heart. My friend gave one astonished look, touched
his bleeding chest in wonder, and fell lifeless to the dirt.
I yelled and swung with my staff, swung again and again, but there
was no need. Kroth was burning. In moments all that was left was
ash.
I woke to “Burning Down the House” on the radio, and the start
screen for FireWorld, the Atari game I’d been playing when I nodded
off, scrolling on the TV. I stared bleakly at the needle, the empty
ampule on the table, the two full ones beside it. Captain Roth. I dreamt
of Cara all the time (she worked as a nurse over at Lyons VA), once in
a while of Ray (taken down by a stray bullet on the Sepon River), but
Kevin Roth I hadn’t thought about in years. Dead of leukemia a few
years back, I’d heard.
This is the job, he’d said, when I asked him if he thought the stuff
was safe. Didn’t even wear gloves. Barrel after barrel, sprayed into
the jungle from the side of a fucking boat. We laughed, talked shit,
smoked cigarettes. They said it caused birth defects.
I reached for the next hit, but the smoking holes where Roth’s eyes
used to be were still looking at me. It ate you from the inside. I forced
myself to stand. Didn’t think about how much I wanted it, didn’t think
about how much more I would want it tomorrow. Flushed it down the
toilet. Felt something fill me up.
9
׉	 7cassandra://l5jbdRuZ_FCloMV7L8baLooAXW8j8NHHOOiDJQgSRUk,` dYFז0?G6dYFז0?G6בCט   u׉׉	 7cassandra://SRtcoMwBwFTb1tK1w3Hj2AhcvvMY9oq7Va2JMNavkfs po`׉	 7cassandra://5IHr1OwshPLC2o0SgKM7fNwpU_iHLdT9wqY3cIMgT4k̀`r׉	 7cassandra://RjmpsVs4UXstJ1PMsBnWSLLBtzYM5HbtKim-SyVEn4k&!` ׉	 7cassandra://_pA63rEIi-SaUnJ2CKuxxk7Qfl-fZTzf8GNAOeIUP20 &͠Xd]Fז0?G7ט  u׉׉	 7cassandra://-Wd_AbrpkFfeGYwbM8fhPxpSXgKCPwZqw9f7m2Z75Vc `׉	 7cassandra://UhsgEOM34IFfHXaq_F4PpRVICeLOP-JIYK07zXE-CPE6`r׉	 7cassandra://l1jGoXXNonxRinG9zwMV4sgmTdRmmwbdIhps24O0f_M` ׉	 7cassandra://8efjgeBqaJUMKkzJgzSIYNXvhXJMYtwVdH8XCn2-Cxc r͠Xd]Fז0?G7׉EqBY HANA ZITTEL
THINNING BLOOD: A MEMOIR OF FAMILY, MYTH, AND IDENTITY BY
LEAH MYERS (2023)
To maintain the title of tribal member in the Jamestown S’Klallam Tribe, according to blood
quantum laws, one must meet the requirement of “one-eighth blood and the ability to
trace your ancestry back to a full-blooded tribal member.” Leah Myers is one-eighth blood,
but knows that this line stops with her. Even if she chose to have children with her partner,
they would just be one-sixteenth, and not recognized. This reckoning and exploration of the
history that surrounds her family and the Jamestown S’Klallam people makes up her candid
and sincere memoir, serving as an essential historical reflection of her lineage.
Myers’ organizes her memoir as an imagined totem pole, with sections representing the
female lineage in her direct line. Each member is represented by an animal and connected
through myth. Her great-grandmother, a full-blooded member of the Jamestown S’Klallam
Tribe, a proud bear; grandmother, a vibrant salmon; and mother, a joyous hummingbird. For
herself, the cunning raven, atop the totem, marking the end of their line.
Throughout her sections, Myers reflects on growing up detached from her people who
reside in the Olympic Peninsula, and the yearning of wanting to find this home. Caught
between two worlds, she struggles with never finding a place, even when she moves to
Washington to connect with her roots. Myers experiences tumultuous relationships, marred
with violence and white racial aggression. She reflects on the deep impacts of media and
harmful, commonplace slurs for Native people that seep through American culture. In the
section “Portrait of a Perfect Native,” Myers rewatches Disney’s Pocahontas, with the
recognition that this depiction was one she idealized growing up, disregarding negative
depictions to finally have someone on screen who looked like her.
Thinning Blood is a raw and honest portrayal of identity woven with ancestry and the
unbreakable bond of heritage and family ties.
POVERTY, BY AMERICA BY MATTHEW DESMOND (2023)
“Poverty persists because some wish and will it to.”
In his first book since 2016’s Evicted: Poverty and Profit in the American City, Matthew
Desmond tackles the baffling question of how, in one of the richest countries in the world,
we can allow people to live in poverty. Desmond suggests throughout his examination that
through the combination of diminished worker’s rights, corrupted government programs
that allow business and the rich to benefit, mass incarceration, continued segregation, and
the misery of late-stage capitalism, we have created a system that keeps the poor from
having any chance at financial gain. His research works to debunk common myths like the one
suggesting that people do not use welfare because they are embarrassed or that education
is the answer to gaining wealth. Instead, he reminds us that poverty exists, because many
choose for it to, not that it is some unavoidable, social ill.
Desmond’s Poverty, by America provides a call to action: to solve one of our greatest
failures, we must reject those choosing to profit off of poverty, expand the safety net
and build community. He points to community organizations doing just that, like People’s
Action, fighting for housing justice and healthcare, or One Fair Wage, working to raise the
minimum wage, and shows how community and support are capable of moving us towards
poverty abolition.
Desmond’s investigation refreshingly reminds us that poverty is a result of choices we have
made, and that so many of us benefit from this system, but that we have the collective
power to destroy it.
No. 115
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PART 1
BY JONNY DESTEFANO & KRYSTI JOMÉI
DESIGN BY JULIANNA BECKERT
ART BY KID KOALA
"Keep it weird, they’ll get it later." — Kid Koala
Montreal-based Kid Koala (Eric San) is a polyartist who isn’t afraid to try new things and take
left turns. A world-renowned scratch DJ, music producer and member of Deltron 3030, he’s
collaborated and toured with Gorillaz, Beastie Boys, Radiohead, A Tribe Called Quest, Dan the
Automator, just to name a few. A film, TV and theater producer and composer, he’s scored
everything from featured films to shows on Cartoon Network to video games, and has globally
toured his own wildly interactive turntable carnivals and productions — Nufonia Must Fall,
The Storyville Mosquito, Space Cadet Headphone Concert and more. He creates graphic novels,
paints, draws, scratchboards, sculpts, the list goes on.
His latest endeavor, Creatures of the Late Afternoon, is nothing short of magic. A 20 track,
2-LP record with the album’s gatefold cover doubling as a board game, it comes complete with
150 cut-outable cards, four tour van pieces and a pair of dice, all painted by Kid Koala himself.
The goal is to create your own band by hunting through flea markets to find instruments and
recording equipment, and to write and record heartfelt songs in multiple genres. As you climb
the charts you just might gain enough clout to save the Natural History Museum. Currently on
tour with musical prodigy and “alien from a fantastic planet” Lealani, this MPC/turntable duo
is bringing Creatures to life, which includes some stops in Colorado.
In this two-part interview, we had the honor to chat with Kid Koala about the creation of
Creatures of the Late Afternoon through the pandemic, his ability to balance his ever-expanding
projects, and some guidance for a lifelong journey in staying true to yourself as an artist.
PHOTO BY CORINNE MERRELL
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Krysti Joméi: There we go. Robotics. It’s like a sample.
Jonny DeStefano: It’s like “Robo Hotel.” So funny by the way.
Kid Koala: Do you know Jhonen Vasquez? He was the creator of Invader
Zim. He did a book called Johnny the Homicidal Maniac, Squee!, and all.
Krysti & Jonny: Oh! Yes!
Kid Koala: He’s a good buddy of mine in LA. I met him at Comic Con.
I was just a huge fan of his comic books when I was in college, and I
heard he was doing a signing. I went and there was this huge line all the
way down around the building. So I brought him a cassette, a mixtape
I basically said, yo, big fan of your work. I don’t have anything to sign.
I wanted to give you this tape. Anyway, he listened to the tape, he got
back to me, and we’ve been friends ever since. But he sent me a text
after [Creatures of the Late Afternoon] came out, and he’s like, dude,
stuck in traffic listening to your album. I want to hear a whole album of
just “Robo Hotel.” I want to know what this hotel looks like. I want to
know what the middle spaces are. And I was like, dude, if you draw it,
I’ll record it!
Krysti: I love the lines of “Who’s DJing?”
PHOTO BY AJ KORKIDAKIS
“Someone by the name of Kid Koala.”
Jonny: “Never heard of him.” (laughing)
Kid Koala: It’s all real life. That actually
happened. Well, it happens more
often than I’d like to admit. But
it was one of those things where
I’m going to the States, for instance, and I’m just at immigration. I have
an O-1 Visa, which is as they call it “an alien of extraordinary ability” or
something. I don’t know, surgeons and movie stars and some musicians
and stuff.
Jonny: NASA musicians.
Kid Koala: (laughs) I get to the counter and they say, so I see you have
an O-1 Visa. What do you do? And I’m like, I’m a scratch DJ. And they say,
oh, really? You must be pretty good if you have an O-1. I was like, I don’t
know. Some people think so. I have a bit of an audience here. And then
he goes, what’s your DJ name? And I’m like, Kid Koala. And then he’s like,
I’ve never heard of you. (laughing) I just love the quick cut down. I just
had to put it into a song.
Krysti: So how we went about exploring your new album, we were
listening to your music and I had the best time in the world cutting out
the pieces for the game. And the first thing I was thinking is, I know you
have the hidden game tracks on the record, but did you create the album
for the game or are they two separate entities? Did you create them in
tandem?
Kid Koala: It all began to combine and congeal as it started. Some of
those tracks did begin just from a song or a sonic perspective. It was
just like, I want to try this. During the pandemic I remember acquiring a
Soundcraft Series 1, which was a little mixer that Lee Scratch Perry had
in his studio. It’s one of the first portable consoles, like vintage early era.
I remember seeing all these videos of Lee Scratch Perry where they
were dubbing stuff out, overdriving all the preamps. And so when I found
one, I said, I want to make a turntable ska tune but through this mixer
just to see what kind of mojo it adds. So that would be an example of
something that started as, I just want to try something musically. That
ended up being the “Jump & Shuffle” track.
But once that was done, there’s other tracks that were starting to
come into play. And I think one of the watershed moments for me in
the process was when I was talking to the team behind The Storyville
Mosquito and Nufonia, all these these live puppet film productions that
we’ve been doing in the last 10 years or so.
Jonny: Yeah, those are amazing.
Kid Koala: I can’t wait to bring one to Denver. I really want you guys
to see it. So basically, we had talked about, well, we’re on tour with
Mosquito now, and some of the presenters that have already presented
it are like, hey, what’s next? (laughing) We just spent three years building
this show! Well, I asked the puppeteers, hey, what do you guys want to
do next? Even from a collaborative standpoint, what kind of stuff do you
want to try? And they’re like, oh, it’d be cool if we were were able to break
away from the sort of more sitcom style miniatures and actually have a
No. 115
JONNY'S BAND
KRYSTI'S BAND
׉	 7cassandra://rGOdoQJPfQVhaRqFInjuZz5yCln_TB3B34p_AzLK5U82` dYFז0?G6׉EPHOTO BY CORINNE MERRELL
wider range to play around with on stage. I mean, we do
it very dynamically, but still they’re all huddled under the
table. They’re thinking about something a little more
action-based. It was the real sort of breakthrough moment for me. It’s
like, okay, so what if Creatures of the Late Afternoon is the soundtrack to
the next show and the next show is an action film?
Once that came into play, then I was like, alright, I need a real banger of
an opener for the opening credits. So I worked on the “Here Now” track,
and I’m imagining when you’re sitting in the theater and you hear this
beat come on, and I want to see the letters come into play ... Romeo
... Echo ... it’s spelling out the title of the show and the album. And so
I wanted it to launch off that way. And then once that happened, it
started to tell me what would happen next in the plot.
I had the characters and I had a loose storyline mapped out, but in
typical action movie trope fashion, I said, okay, well, we need the final
third act denouement showdown battle track, you know “Rise of the
Tardigrades.” And we need the moment, the crisis moment, where the
protagonist is not sure whether they can do it. We need the training
moment, but we need the moment where all the creatures rally together
to go up against this common foe. And so it told me what tracks needed
to happen, at what point, in this show that’s not even out yet.
Jonny: That was the feeling we got. Listening to this could easily be a
soundtrack. The way you present it, that makes total sense now.
Kid Koala: I’m glad you picked up on it. I didn’t want it to be overly
explicit that way, like you had to listen to it with that ear open to narrative
or anything. Because some of the songs are just me being my own music
supervisor — I want to write a song here that, if I were to license the song,
it would be a doo-wop style love song. You know what I mean?
Jonny: Like the song about your parents?
Kid Koala: Exactly. So it’s one of those things where there’s two
characters, there’s always a love story, an element of that. That song
[“When U You Say Love”] I’d written for my parents originally, but then I
was like, I think it could work in terms of playing that part of the meeting
and the date montage sequence in the show. And so that’s where it
landed, right there, kind of at the heart of the the record and of the show.
So while I was working on even the storyboards, it’s like, oh, we have
this motorcycle chase sequence. So it really came down to we just
need a short queue to make all this happen. That track “Highs, Lows &
Highways” is just car chase music eventually, but for now, it exists as
an album thing. The answer is, I wasn’t explicitly just scoring this story
because the story was still forming while I was making the music, and it
was informing how the music was going to go, which would then inform
what the story might need next in terms of pacing and energy. And so
that’s really how it came together.
Jonny: That’s got to be good to have so many references to create
something, to know that this could be a puppet show, this is going to be
a game, this is an album, this is my music. To have all these things kind of
guiding you as you go through it must have been helpful.
Kid Koala: Exactly. In a way, it kind of provided the framework of —
it has to work on these multiple levels and I just wanted it to still be a
fun listen. I was picking my kids up from school. We were listening to it
back and forth, I don't know how many months. I remember the day it
released I said, we’re going to listen to this one last time and then you’re
never going to hear this again. (laughing) They know all the words to
“Robo Hotel,” every little thing. They could just recite it now.
But I was there mainly checking mixes and stuff like that and just seeing
how it was flowing as a record to cruise to even. Having that framework
of these characters I had in my mind, how they would interact, what
would happen in the course of a story, even if it was a prototype version
of it at first, was just exactly what you said it was, like a good muse-like
guidance process.
Krysti: I feel like you’re an artist who, it’s not only about telling your
own story, it’s about inviting the listener, the reader, the person into
your world and having them interact with your art. And to see it come
to fruition with a game. When I was sitting there cutting the pieces out,
I was like, man, this is so cathartic. This is so healing. And the fact that
I knew you created it in the pandemic, such a globally traumatic event,
and everything else going on. George Floyd. Me Too. Et cetera. And then
JULIANNA'S BAND
PHOTO BY MIKAEL THEIMER
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interact with while experiencing your music, to me, it was kind of this full
circle healing moment.
Kid Koala: Oh wow. Thank you. It’s the first time I’ve heard that. That’s
very sweet. I think we were all there, just tuned into everything, right?
And my wife and I were just talking about it nonstop. Anything news
all day. Two things that were saving us just as a family unit were board
games and these nature documentaries that my daughters loved. We
were learning about all kinds of creatures, many of them who ended up in
the actual game. I remember one was the desert rain frog. Do you know
about that? (sharing screen) This brought us so much joy.
BBC Narrator: But sometimes more unexpected zones
grab our attention. Like this desert rain frog squeaking
viral sensation. 11 million hits and counting. It sounds
like a dog toy, but actually, this is the sonorous war cry
of a very angry frog.
Kid Koala: Can you believe that?
Krysti: So cute! That’s amazing! Which game character
is it?
Kid Koala: So he’s a drummer. Ruby, my daughter, and I were just so
tripping on this animal so I painted him with some drums. I was drawing
all these creatures we were learning about and sadly, every episode of
a show we’d watch, there’d be this sort of warning at the end saying,
there’s only a handful of these creatures left. And they’ll be extinct
within a few years if we don't change our direction with encroaching on
their habitats and all this stuff. And so that was kind of this sombering
wake-up call. It seemed to be at the tone of every single episode, no
matter how cute and amazing and inspiring the footage was.
Meanwhile the world was on fire, flooding everywhere. It was one of
those things that I had to sort of process it in some way or speak to it in
the way I could, which is just through art, again, not too explicitly. But
with Creatures of the Late Afternoon, even as a title, it was about that,
creatures being at the late afternoon if your entire Earth is like a whole
day, the late afternoon means you’re past the midpoint. You might be on
your last lap. And what are you going to do?
So really it was tapping into everything that was going on. And I
remember even with “Things Are Gonna Change,” it was one of those
moments where I was like, oh, there needs to be this call to action track.
I needed somebody with a voice who could just really cut through that.
During the pandemic I was in LA doing something for Cartoon Network
and I spent an extra day there to go meet up with Lealani, who I just
met to record her vocals on that track. And that was the only actual time
I recorded a track during the pandemic. And now Lealani is one of my
favorite people. It was one of those things where she had that kind of
No. 115
riot girl energy.
Jonny: That is a great collaboration by the way.
Krysti: You’re so synergistic with each other.
Kid Koala: She’s this polymath who’s just starting. She’d already done
two albums under The Pezheads, which is her one-girl punk band and
a Lealani album. I was like, how did you get that? I just recorded it in
my studio. I’m like, cool, so we’ll just do it in your studio. I don’t have to
rent another place in LA to record. And she's like, okay, and oh, just so
you know, the studio is my room. I’m like, I’m cool with that. I’ve seen
bedroom studios before, but hers is like a mini museum of modern art
mixed with a quirky 8-bit synth shop mixed with her bedroom. It’s this
tiny room with things on the wall floor-to-ceiling. I was looking around
and was like, where’d you get this piece? She’s like, oh, I did that. Then
there’s this beautiful Cubist thing, a totally different style. And there’s
a photorealistic charcoal drawing and she’s like, oh, yeah, I did that. I’m
like, what the fuck? And she animates. And she records, some of the
songs that we’re playing on tour. I was like, this song is a jam when’d you
write this. She’s like, I wrote that when I was 15. I'm like what? I said,
okay, so where did you record your vocals? She’s like, this is my vocal
booth. And she opens her closet, a little clothing closet, packed with all
her clothes, just real tightly packed. And she’s like, yeah, I just use that to
deaden the sound. (laughing) She had a clipboard with the lyrics, and she
was just screaming into her clothes. And so we did maybe a couple takes,
and then I said, okay, why don’t you do one that’s just super unhinged.
Don’t worry about being off axis on the mic. You just take the mic off and
run around or jump around, do whatever you have to do. Then she really
cut loose on it. And I was like, okay, that’s the lead one right there.
Jonny: It’s so cool, that video where she’s got the MPC going and she’s
got guitar going. And then you’re back there playing the drums. Like two
polymaths just rocking.
Kid Koala: We’re having fun because she is literally a one-person band.
So for The Pezheads stuff that I wanted her to play at the shows too,
I’ll do the drums so that you don't have to start a drum machine and
then pick up your guitar and sing. But alternatively, she’ll be able to take
my Pro Tool sessions and then take out every hit, like drums, bass, key
chords and then map it and play everything live. So we’ve been doing
songs off Creatures that are my songs and she’s not doing vocals on.
She’s able to reassemble them live with no grid, no safety net, literally.
And looks like she’s throwing gang signs or something. (laughing) I don't
even know. But she’s incredible.
Jonny: We’re looking forward to seeing more of where you guys take
that whole endeavor.
Kid Koala: There’s potential here because it’s kind of like a Black Keys
or White Stripes duo mentality only turntables and MPCs. And then the
PHOTOS COURTESY OF KID KOALA
׉	 7cassandra://6NFABP8zJFyODh-wzsxK4iBjdS2-VPOptEcrdZrb13Y.` dYFז0?G6׉Esound palette that she has just on MPCs and on turntables is so wide
anyway. We could maybe tap into some pretty advanced concepts of a
duo playing stuff. But we’ve got a few more shows this summer … Are we
coming to Denver? We're not. In July it’s mainly East Coast … Denver …
I think we’re going to be there with Deltron [3030], actually. At Fiddler's
[Green]. September 8th. We’re going to be opening for Wu-Tang Clan and
Run the Jewels. Deltron is kind of reactivating for that show. Maybe a
couple more in that area around there.
Krysti: Oh my god! That’s going to be so fun! It’s so wild how
multifaceted, multidimensional … I don't even know how to describe you
… all the art that you’re constantly doing. How do you balance all those
projects? What’s the day in the life of Eric? Are you hyperfocusing on one
thing at a time? How do you do it all?
Kid Koala: I mean, you guys know what it’s like. It’s like putting a
magazine out every month. You give yourself that deadline, right?
And then you set up a certain context for the stuff that you want to be
putting out there. And you put it together. Some things go on the super
hot front burner. That would be what I’m hyperfocused on. When you’re
talking about crunch time delivery, that date, I live for that, personally. I
don’t sleep that week. I’m pretty much just like, let’s go!
As you can tell, I’ve lost my voice. I’m still kind of dealing from this whole
launch leading up to April 14th til now or like a month after, and we’re
about to do our last board game event in Montreal on Saturday, and then
I think I get a break. But my breaks will entail recapping or debriefing,
trying to figure out how do we refine, or how do we keep pushing that
idea forward, or what did we learn? I’m always really trying stuff.
To give you an example, we’ve only done three board game events. We
did Toronto, we did Chicago, we did Montreal last week, and we’re going
to do Montreal this weekend. And I would hope that every time we did
it, I learned something so that we figured out how to make that event
better, or how to present it better, or to make it more comfortable for
people. Just from touring, I’ve always learned that you have your show,
you try it out, and then things happen and you remember what that is
and you add it to the next set. And that’s when I find the real progress
kind of happens, at least for the live experiences.
So what did we learn from the board game event? What I learned last
week between Chicago was people need a break. It’s about an hour to
play the game and then maybe 15 minutes to introduce a little kind of
bumper on each side. But somewhere in the middle there, the energy in
the room, you actually need to break it up with something. It’s almost
like you’re on a two hour flight. You would expect a bag of pretzels or
something. And it was something that simple where something flatlined
when we didn’t do that. So the last time I was like let’s bring a tray out of
little snacks. Why didn’t I think of that the first day? But I had never been
to a board game event. But then I think about if we had people for board
games at our house, there’d be snacks all over the place. So it was one of
those things where once you're there, you’re like, oh, duh, let’s do that.
A day in the life … my night times are usually in the studio making music.
When everything’s quiet. My daytimes … right now, we’re working on a
feature film. It’s a CG animated feature film based on Space Cadet, which
is my second graphic novel. And that’s actually my full on day job now.
And then whenever I get a chance, I just try to do a little bit of everything,
but not with any real oh, I have to get this done. Except for the thing that
has to get done next week.
But then on an average day, a little bit of playing in the studio, recording
stuff, learning how the equipment works, or trying a new signal chain
with some guitar pedals. Just trying to see if I can understand what the
palette can be. Because sometimes it’s creating a new type of sound or
tone and be like, oh, I don’t know what I can use that for right now, I don’t
have any open sessions where that would make sense. But it’s good to
know that this device does that sound on it for later.
And then the visual art part, I try to either do a little scratchboarding or
drawing or painting. I mean, a lot more during the pandemic, but that’s
always been a recentering thing for me. And then just hanging out with
the kids, going for bike rides. I found to have more than one project
going at a time is actually healthier for me. It keeps me from getting too
obsessive about one thing and just spiraling into a feedback loop about it.
If I feel that coming on I recognize it pretty quickly now. It’s like, okay, I’m
not making the sort of fun, quick, intuitive decisions. It’s not that I don’t
like the struggle of wrestling with the track, but I do know at some point
if it’s really kicking my ass that I just need to take a break from it and
do something completely on the other spectrum of creativity. It could
be cooking or drawing where I'm literally not even using my ears right
now. And then when I go back to listen to that track, I can objectively and
almost intuitively just react to it.
If you think about it like a stovetop. There’s always three or four things
cooking here at our workshop and in our studio. Which burner we focus
on just depends on what the deadlines are mostly. But then at the same
time, you know what you’re genuinely just inspired to work on at the
moment.
Stay tuned for Part 2 with Kid Koala next month in August's Issue 116.
CREATURES OF THE LATE AFTERNOON IS AVAILABLE AT KIDKOALA.COM
2023 TOUR TICKETS & INFO: KIDKOALA.COM/TOUR
FRI, SEPT 8 — FIDLER’S GREEN AMPHITHEATER, CO: KID KOALA X LEALANI
W/ WU-TANG CLAN, RUN THE JEWELS & DELETION 3030
SAT, SEPT 9 — DILLION AMPHITHEATER, CO: KID KOALA X LEALANI W/ WUTANG
CLAN & DELETION 3030
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was the Keeper of the Chest, the Boy King, the Great Imaginator. It was
his imagination that powered their world, and as the disease dulled
his thoughts, their world fell into disrepair. BRIO bridges collapsed,
construction of the new LEGO tower halted, robots began to rust. In an
instant, a golden age became a depression, and like Benji himself, many
toys struggled to survive.” -Chronicles of the Benji’s Playland: Ages 7 to 9
When Clank arrived home it was dark and quiet. The only light was
the dim glow of their kitchen clock. 11:47. Another 16-hour day. He
sighed and set his toolkit down quietly. Around him he saw a graveyard
of happy moments. A toy car crashed through a wall of blocks. Two
bowls cleaned of grease. A pile of scrap metal that was just beginning
to resemble a dog. All moments he missed.
He walked slowly to his kids’ room and peaked inside. Nut and Bolt
lay soundly asleep, their favorite book sitting on the night stand beside
No. 115
them. A part of him wanted to go and wake them up, to steal a moment
of sleep so that they may spend some time together, if only a moment.
But he knew he’d only feel all the more guilty in the morning. He closed
the door quietly and whispered, “Goodnight, boys.”
When Clank climbed into bed his wife, Machina, turned away from him
in her sleep. There was a time she had sympathy for him. He’d come
home to find her waiting with dinner, and they’d sit together while she
told him of all the adventures her and the boys had that day. But her
sympathy had waned, and stories became admonishments. “They’re
working you too hard, mi amor.” “You’re not home enough.” “The kids
miss you.” Now she said nothing at all, and somehow that felt so much
worse to Clank. It made him angry.
He lay awake in bed beside her, stewing in his anger. How could she
not understand? This was what he had to do. He’d give anything to
be at home with her and the kids, but that just wasn’t the way things
worked now that the Boy King was ill. And sure, he hadn’t told her that
׉	 7cassandra://IfovUaHGipHWJ9Hl38gekxrBpgcdA6CCR6wegQVW1DY(` dYFז0?G6׉Eitheir rent had gone up, or that the auto shop was under water, or that
his customers could barely afford to pay him. He hadn’t told her these
things because it was not her burden to bear. It was his. And as he
reminded himself of this, his anger fell back upon himself. How could
he allow himself to miss so much of their childhood?
It was the mark of any good robot not to dwell on anger, but to
transform it into something useful, something practical. And as Clank
lay awake staring at the ceiling above, an idea began to take shape
in his mind. It started as a silly thought, an impossibility. And yet it
stuck, like an earworm repeating itself over and over again, until an
absurd plan, an embarrassing plan, an immoral plan formed in his head.
Something Clank never thought he’d do. Something he wasn’t sure he
wasn’t sure he could do. And yet the more he thought of this plan, the
more the pieces seemed to fall into place, the more it started to make
sense.
You see, there was one toy that Benji, the Keeper of the Chest, the Boy
King, the Great Imaginator, cherished more than any other. It was a Hot
Wheels replica of Evel Knievel’s stunt car given to him by his father.
The car more than lived up to its reputation. It could outpace any other
Hot Wheel no matter the loops or curves or jumps put before it. The car
was legend in Benji’s eyes, and therefore treasured through all of the
playland. Even in this time of sickness it was kept under close guard in
Benji’s palace, awaiting his return.
It was the most valuable thing in their world, but were something
to happen to the car … Clank thought. Were something to break …
something only he could fix … the palace would have to hire him! They
had money, they had buckets and buckets of money. And they’d do
anything to liven Benji’s spirits … This was the plan that formed in
Clank’s mind. It was a plan born from desperation, from a bot who
could not bear the idea of his kids growing up without him there. And
the more he thought about it, the more he plotted and schemed, the
more the plan took on a life on its own.
19
ERIC JOYNER, DETAINED - ERICJOYNER.COM
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Benji’s palace at midnight. A pair of velociraptors stalked the grounds
before him, bright lights swooping across the field. Clank knew stealth
was not one of his strengths. He was big and bulky and in his old age no
amount of WD-40 could fix the creaking in his joints. But the truth was
most Hot Wheels these days were more digital than physical. He just
had to get close enough for the little antenna strapped to his chest to
broadcast a signal out to the car.
Slowly he crawled across the castle grounds, creeping closer until his
radar dinged. He could sense the car. He kept still, very still, as he began
to upload the program he’d spent the last week writing. It was a simple
bit of code, something that would force the car to full throttle the next
time someone turned it on. A spotlight swept over him as the upload
hit 50 percent, and he felt the fan in his chest whirring.
“Did you see that?” One of the raptors asked.
“See what?”
“Something out in the lawn … ”
Come on, come on.
75 percent.
“There! Did you see? Something glimmered out there.”
“Well go check it out then.”
Clank could see one of the raptors stalking toward him. He cursed
himself for not stripping off his reflectors. The uploaded ticked up to
95 percent as the raptor drew closer, the spotlight now holding still
over his boxy chest. Clank couldn’t decide whether to run or play dead.
He was not cut out for this. He shouldn’t be here. Why was he here?
How had he let himself get so carried away? But as Clank’s thoughts
spiraled, the upload finished. And though he thought he had set the
program to wait for ignition, he had actually set it to run instantly upon
upload.
The raptors both spun around, startled by the cacophonous rumbling
that had erupted from inside the castle. There was a smattering of
crashes and clashes until seconds later the car burst out through the
palace’s stone wall flying through the air across the grounds, smoke
already pluming from its engine. As the car hurtled forward into the
woods, Clank turned and ran. He ran and ran and ran, his thoughts an
empty void of panic, until he found himself rounding the corner of his
street. He waited for his fan to cool and quiet, then slipped back into
his own home, into his own bed.
He lay there in shock, as if it had all just been some terrible dream.
His eyes bore into the same specks of ceiling from which his plan had
been born. Only this time his thoughts did not race with possibility of
triumph but disaster. Had they seen him run into the woods? Did they
follow him? He flinched at every creak of their home. He was sure they’d
be here for him any minute, to arrest him, to take him away. He did this
to spend more time with his children, and now he was going to be taken
from them forever. He wondered how he could have been so stupid.
But dawn came without incident. And as much as he wanted to lay
there in bed until Machina woke up, to confess everything to her, he
knew he had to keep up appearances. He had to get to work. So he put
on his jumpsuit and picked up his toolkit and left for the auto shop just
as he would any other day. When he arrived, Benji’s prized possession
was already there, sitting in a smoking heap in front of his garage.
Beside the wreckage was a little green soldier, one of the guards from
No. 115
inside the castle walls.
“Are you Clank?” The soldier asked.
“I am,” Clank said, trying to suppress his nerves.
“Good. I’m told you’re the only person who might be able to fix this.”
Clank glanced at the pile of bent metal and burnt rubber and asked,
“What happened?”
The soldier sighed. “We don’t know.”
Clank felt a wave of relief crash over him, until—
“But one of our guards says they saw something in the grass just
before the incident. They’re working with the detectives now.”
“Oh … oh, well that’s good.”
There was an awkward silence before the soldier asked, “So, do you
think you can fix it?”
Clank knew he could fix it. He could fix anything. But he told the
soldier he needed to assess the damage first. The soldier agreed to
come back later. And with that, Clank went to work as if it was any
other day. Except what others saw as a smoldering wreck, Clank saw
as a giant pile of cash, a ticket out of the toil and drudgery his life
had become these past months. He catalogued every bit of damage
thoroughly, in meticulous detail. And as he focused on his work, the
threat of being caught seemed to fade.
Until the soldier returned.
“Do you have good news for me?” The soldier asked.
“Yes and no,” Clank said. “I can fix it — but it’s not gonna be cheap.”
He handed the soldier the ledger, his golden ticket back home to his
family, and the soldier nodded his agreement before handing it back.
“Whatever it takes,” he said.
Clank couldn’t believe it. Was it actually working? Was he actually
going to get away with this? For a moment he felt light, felt giddy. His
stupid, terrible, immoral plan was actually going to work!
Then, just as the soldier was about to leave, he turned and said, “We
found who did it, by the way. It was Ratchet. Our guard is certain of
it.”
“Oh,” Clank said. “Well good. Glad you caught him.”
The soldier left, leaving Clank to sit in quiet realization. He had been
so myopically obsessed with the fear of his own capture, he hadn’t
stopped to consider that someone else may take the fall. And not
just any someone else, but Ratchet. His neighbor. A bot he used to
sit on the porch and drink grease with while their kids played in the
yard. Could he just let that happen? He looked back at the ledger in
his hand, and the numbers scrawled across it. He could live on this
for years … Exhausted by the toll this day had taken on him, Clank
decided to head home, to sleep on it.
When Clank arrived home, he could see their living room bathed in
the golden evening light. Through the window he saw his kids chasing
each other around the couch while his wife tinkered with the tiny scrap
dog they were building. It was a magical sight, one he had not seen in
too long, one that warmed every circuit board he had. He opened the
storm door to step inside and saw a newspaper jammed in there. The
headline read: “RATCHET ARRESTED FOR CAUSING TRAUMA TO
BENJI.” Clank held it in his hand for a moment, looking at Ratchet in
the lineup of suspects. “I’m sorry, neighbor,” he whispered to himself
before tossing the paper into the bushes. And then, for the first time
in months, Clank went inside to have dinner with his family.
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9ׁHhttp://DENVER.KIKI.SEׁׁЈ׉E CELEBRATING QUEER CULTURE AND NIGHTLIFE
THROUGHOUT THE YEARS AND MEOW WOLF’S
PARTNERSHIP WITH HOUSE OF FLORA.
BY QUINN FATI + ERIN BARNES
PHOTOS BY EVAN BENALLY ATWOOD
PHOTOS COURTESY OF VALENTINO VALENTINE
No. 115
׉	 7cassandra://FTDPVgDNyXhHN-iTh9HEj78KW1QJ6toBfWjg3VdrmZIo` dYFז0?G6׉EtWe all remember the first time we ever saw Paris is Burning. A queer
cinema class in college, a gathering of friends at a sleepover in high
school, at the behest of your best friend telling you repeatedly, “You
have to see this, I can’t describe it but it’s the most incredible doc
I’ve ever seen.” I was witness to it in surgical recovery at home, 16
years old, scrolling Netflix, freshly out as trans. Bearing witness to it
was revolutionary. As I would later go on to discover the problematic
actions of the director, its impact was undeniable. A constant stream
of YouTube videos became a household mainstay — videos of Leiomy,
Willi Ninja, Octavia St. Laurent vs Carmen Xtravaganza in FQ — it was
the media I became obsessed with.
Ballroom was created out of necessity, the need for black and brown
queer people to have their own space. At the time of its inception,
the traction of pageants began to really take off. We can reference
the inner workings of these early pageants to one of my favorite
documentaries of all time, The Queen. The Miss All-American Camp
Beauty Pageant is not what makes the documentary so spectacular
however. At the climax of the doc, Crystal LaBeija (who would go on
to form the Royal House of LaBeija, as seen in Paris is Burning) has
what I can only call a master class in reading. She (rightly so) calls the
pageant rigged, that all the “true beauties” stayed home because
they knew the pageant would be rigged for the white queen. LaBeija,
in her righteous and poignant monologue, defines why ballroom was
created. Ballroom was formed as a reaction to the racist systems
that the pageant circuit was formed on. Black and brown queers
demanded their own space as well, and thus created the ballroom
scene in direct response. Wherever black and brown queers spread
across the nation, ballroom came with them.
In the 2010s, before the arrival of Kiki House of Flora in Denver
and Valentino Valentine’s recruitment by its legendary founding
Fxther Passa Flora, Valentine took the initiative to establish and
curate Denver KiKi Sessions. Although there were some ballroomadjacent
events happening before and during this time, it is crucial
to differentiate Denver KiKi Sessions from these events. While
the city witnessed various performances and showcases related to
the ballroom scene, Denver KiKi Sessions were specifically created
to provide the queer community with a unique opportunity. These
sessions allowed individuals to delve into ballroom culture through
research, knowledge sharing and active participation in vogue
sessions.
Enter Valentino Valentine, who opened a chapter of the Kiki House
of Flora in Denver, ensuring that as house mother, the family became
the premiere Kiki House in the city, solidifying its place in the scene.
Valentine, who is of Haitian descent, constantly found themselves
curating their own scenes and art collectives to empower not only
themselves, but others who looked like them, who came from similar
backgrounds of intentional misunderstandings, and to create space
in this world for them and who they loved. As the house mother of
the Denver chapter of the Kiki House of Flora, Valentine was not
only actively involved in the local Kiki scene but also participated in
balls alongside the Portland chapter. Additionally, they embarked on
tours, competing state to state with the Denver chapter, fostering
and creating a space where queer individuals in Denver could not only
be acknowledged but also flourish.
The challenge of curating a black and brown queer space was and
still is to challenge whiteness. Bars often failed to recognize their
responsibility to create spaces that felt safe to everyone who wasn’t
white despite wanting black and brown entertainment. While
the support from these establishments can serve as catalysts for
unlocking possibilities and opportunities, the house demonstrated
its ability to flourish autonomously and establish a distinct presence
within the public sphere.
“Queer culture and nightlife are where we find our friends and
family,” explains Valentine. “We seek a sense of communion on the
dance floor, which serves as our church and outlet for expression
and release. There exists a longstanding history between queer
individuals and their connection to nightlife, club culture and dance
floors.”
The Kiki House of Flora fosters an environment of learning, growth
and community as all houses do. Drawing from valuable guidance
received from icon Diva Davanna Mugler and the legendary Malik
Mugler in New York, Valentine has hosted ballroom workshops in
Denver, offering individuals invaluable opportunities to delve into
the art of vogue fem, and the captivating world of ballroom culture.
Under the mentorship of esteemed figures like legendary Cameo
Balenciaga, participants have been able to immerse themselves in
these workshops, further enriching their understanding and skills.
The Kiki House of Flora hosted their first ball in 2020, garnering
recognition from the queer community at large. We immediately
offered to fly members of the house to our Santa Fe exhibition,
House of Eternal Return. However, that was brought to a screeching
halt with the pandemic. Once we established and opened
Convergence Station in 2021, we invited the Kiki House of Flora to
continue throwing balls in our venue, The Perplexiplex. The Nintendo
Ball was one of the most successful events seen by our venue, and
we continue to have a beautiful partnership this year, hosting the
Storybook Ball on June 17th.
If someone is interested in getting involved in ballroom or
participating in a house, it just takes reaching out and attending
House of Flora events. Many ballroom events are still thriving
underground, and are passed through word of mouth and social
media. Additionally, there is a Facebook group called Denver Kiki
Sessions that provides resources related to ballroom, including
terminology, films and books.
“Reach out,” says Valentine. “We wanna know who you are.
Sometimes it does feel intimidating. But we wanna get to know you
especially if this is something you want to do.”
Ballroom culture has a deep legacy in queer history, influencing
fashion, dance, social activism and creating community. It has
provided black and brown queer people a space to exist as talented
individuals, with resilience and creativity, seen as they are. To be in
community with those around you who look like and fully understand
you as a whole of your parts, ballroom cultivates friendships,
relationships, love, and community out of necessity and flourishes
as each person comes together to contribute and pay homage to,
with that same love.
“People don’t receive enough praise in general, and especially in this
scene,” says Valentine. “Ballroom is a celebration of yourself to the
highest degree.”
FOLLOW VALENTINO VALENTINE ON INSTAGRAM: @VALENTINOVALENTIN
LEARN MORE ABOUT DENVER KIKI SESSIONS: @DENVER.KIKI.SESSIONS
& KIKI’S HOUSE OF FLORA DENVER: @KIKIHOUSEOFFLORA
׉	 7cassandra://6i8gJWTE2USGFJDIN3l1pUhYd0UqlJSjVaIZoLRGTwQ` dYFז0?G6dYFז0?G6בCט   u׉׉	 7cassandra://YQMlUhgARc-MEm6CoxUIwCaO12V-ZuxHpnmow6lL1T0 N`׉	 7cassandra://2g-fbidHCXkF__p3N0uUQlL_CT85cnFRLECN2x_nz-Yu`r׉	 7cassandra://LTMykdzUA05Kt9lDB25abCBQTuMHPdohDdJ0CF-LYesS` ׉	 7cassandra://pxuzI7qmL5ZQQczGb2wpRBaNKyCy4lHdFuqAKZACsXw L͠XdaFז0?G75ט  u׉׉	 7cassandra://xx1OJDG3bm2VjLatgBtpi7tAdYyE74MKoEiO2OWkT-w 8`׉	 7cassandra://HOMBOQ_pJJQ98p4SVuzIpjX6wXt29RRl7vq7ENqskC8i`r׉	 7cassandra://MzkyNvY25YB4FT36q42kxligyLnel6AXpBfMt3CMcBA!#` ׉	 7cassandra://2OQ16jDxIQLh8vLfqcsus0m_zUy-SMC_7vsRb8sdtMc 
)͠XdaFז0?G76נdaFז0?G78 gށ̼	9ׁH !mailto:WEREWOLFRADARPOD@GMAIL.COMׁׁЈ׉Eolast dance
with buried jane
BY NATE BALDING
Hustler: It’s not just a wet magazine people have
wildly claimed to have found in the woods before the
invention of the internet. It’s also a full-on profession
for people with the absolute moxie to operate tricky mind
games on marks and rubes, perhaps no more fully than during
the onset of the Great Depression. And perhaps one of the
greatest players in the game was Corinne Nienstedt, aka Gloria
Graves, the Buried Alive Girl.
It was the 1930s. A nation had rallied around goulash and johnnycakes;
movies were short and bread lines were long. In a prototypical version of
quiet quitting many laborers were engaged in screaming layoffs. It was a
perfect environment for cheap entertainment and there was unanimity
that endurance contests were the hottest thing since the inside of
an iron lung. Gloria Graves would go down as the most famous of the
persons charging 10 cents to take a peek at the smiling face of someone
who’d been buried alive. But she was only one among many.
One of the first was Lois Shirk. She’d just graduated high school and
it was time to get to draw an income. Being a young woman of course
meant that the only position society was ready to accept her in the
workforce was on her back. So when her family needed some cash she
decided it best to humor them and be interred beneath 8 feet of soil at
the Lincoln Lawn Miniature Golf Course in Gettysburg in 1933. It simply
made the most sense.
A short time later an out-of-work vaudeville comic emerged: Irwin
Westheimer — whose stage name was Billy West because, much like
Lois Shirk, the public wasn’t overly prepared to engage with a performer
named Irwin. Who could possibly have predicted that the same public
would get super-hard into the American Nazi Party just a few years later.
Billy was buried at Ocean View on the Jersey Shore and, similarly to the
cast of MTV’s eponymous television show, was sponsored by the color
orange. To this day he holds the world record for most Orange Crush —
the local bottler being the event sponsor — consumed while buried alive.
That sounds like a made-up fact but is, in fact, a regular true one.
Gloria Graves was first buried in 1935 to commemorate the opening
of Ocean Park Beach in Santa Monica. Even more craven was the sidehustle
of her “manager,” Mr. Q, and his wife, Florence, who posed as
Graves’ nurse for the duration. Mr. Q, like a psychotic Tony Robbins who
knows all the secret reasons you can’t beat a carnie on their home turf,
claimed to have invented a form of self-hypnosis that allowed a person
to overcome any obstacle; a claim he used to manipulate the minds of
depressed people everywhere who just wanted something to believe
in. Oprah would have hired the shit out of him. Supposedly Graves was
utilizing this self-hypnosis to prove the ultimate truth of mind-overmatter
and, seemingly, it worked. She spent 92 days, 5 hours and 28
minutes beneath 5 tons of sand and a viewing port where some 72,693
people paid a dime a piece to have short little conversations with the
woman living very much at the beach, amounting to just over $150,000
when adjusted for inflation.
No. 115
According to the nefarious Mr. Q, during that time she received 27
marriage proposals, 13,652 offers for a date, 27 job offers from nurse to
movie star, 7 books on exercise, 5 offers to join churches and 14 to join
the Communist Party, proving once and for all that if you fuck up the
name attached to the quote, Lenin could reasonably say he was more
popular than Jesus.
Due in part to the extremely dangerous practice of people who were
getting buried alive just for love of the game — notably madman Jack
Loreen, an Alaskan lumberjack who roller skated from New York to
Miami before moving to San Francisco to be buried multiple times,
and Harry Morrison, the “Human Groundhog” who did 120 days
before emerging to see his shadow and ensure six more weeks of
hospitalization — endurance contests of all kinds were outlawed in
cities across the country. So when ‘ol Q, shortly after releasing a series
of breadcrumbs about the coming storm on 8chan, convinced Gloria to
go for one more — this time in an empty lot in Koreatown — she only
lasted 192 hours before a pair of detectives rolled up to let her know
that she was under arrest. She replied, “You got jellybeans for brains
flatfoot? I ain’t under arrest, I’m under the ground! Oink oink bacon
boys!” It may have been less invective but in the movie this will be a
bold artistic choice.
Mr. Q and Ms. Graves were arraigned and, at trial, she produced her
coffin to explain the mechanics of being buried alive. Apparently 1)
Get in the coffin; and 2) Stay in the coffin were concepts too esoteric
to believe. The arresting detective disagreed that her entombment
was anything but a scam and the judge agreed, fining them both
$50 or about $1,100 in 2023 money. The initial complaint, however,
was incorrectly filed and an appellate court threw out the decision,
provoking the LA Times to print the headline: “Buried-Alive Girl Wins
in Appeal from Penalty” proving that as long as you almost die for your
art you, too, can make it in Hollywood.
The Gloria Graves name disappeared from history and Corinne
Nienstedt returned to her life to pursue her dream in aviation,
becoming a member of the Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASP)
where she was one of the few women to put her stylish pump on the
throat of the Hun and smash over that career horizon at a cool 300
miles per unburied hour.
HAVE QUESTIONS ABOUT THE PARANORMAL?
SEND THEM TO: WEREWOLFRADARPOD@GMAIL.COM OR TWITTER: @WEREWOLFRADAR.
IT’S A BIG, WEIRD WORLD. DON’T BE SCARED. BE PREPARED.
ART BY LOULOU02
׉	 7cassandra://LTMykdzUA05Kt9lDB25abCBQTuMHPdohDdJ0CF-LYesS` dYFז0?G6׉EART BY GRANMONDO
25
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By Zac Dunn
The 2x4 face he wore was firm and correct
His crippled grip slipped on the
Cold metal surfaces
Cast of ore
Dug from the
Blood red dirt
Anvil to the hand on purpose
As a gaggle of gnomes feed him
appetizers and refreshments
Grimace sucker punched the Grinch
Knocking in his stupid face
Like a rotten pumpkin
SLOWLY FILLING
THE GOPHER HOLE IN YOUR SOUL
He exclaimed
Salacious relations
Tinder moments
So sloppy yet ambitious a
Peppermint swizzle
stick of longevity
morosely moaning and
Meticulously manhandling
the mushy membrane
So plump and round yet profoundly
Red as a slappy anniversary
Mercifully serving a meanerval
Crown made entirely of
Hot wing bones
Haphazardly thrown by filthy paws
No. 115
Double six and six three
Double eight and snake eyes
The Bucktooth bandito rolling low
In the hearse turned the corner and
slowly let out three words
FUDD PUKE FEET
Then ate another peyote button and
Leaned further back in his seat
Luckily the passengers would all
Slumber forever and ever
As the night crawled forward
Into the Everglades of the misty morning haze
He removed the sleeping beauties at the end of the pier and slid their
cadavers into cool blue expanse eyeing the fins breaking the
liquid surface’s plane
A thrashing conflagration erupted as they
Consumed the flesh he’d gifted to them
As the sun slowly rose
Casting an eternal shadow from the
weathered wooden tips of the dock
The mighty white sharks all
Turned and ran silent then deep
To the quiet depth
Happy to be full today
And free to dream tomorrow
With their eyes wide open still
Slinking ever lower
To their safe quiet space in the ocean deep
Swimming closer and closer to the place
Where the sharks sleep
ART BY BIZ56
׉	 7cassandra://HLjIcv9P9Xd-MSBZYjkd6D_FpEa4-itGjZU4o7rIotU*`` dYFז0?G6׉EAfterlife as an aura photo booth
by Kailey Tedesco
i keep sinning
contained in stairwells. furniture,
all caned, drops to its knees,
prays. this is a confessional:
do you see
the checkerboard
of a man lensed in red?
underneath his chair: bubblegum,
chewed, still wet.
deeper under: sharks homemaking
shipwrecks, craving
blood in more ways than one. their wood
cake-cut, not splintered.
that’s where my face is.
deep
inside the woodgrain & the murk.
it’s coming forward blue-lipped foamed
in the color of too many paints,
all of its insides floating to the surface—
too bogged
to identify.
in a few hours no one will be able to recall
how my shape fit,
sitting in its own temperature.
27
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9ׁH *http://QUEENCITYSOUNDSANDART.WORDPRESS.COMׁׁЈ׉EBY
TOM
MURPHY
DESTINY BOND – BE MY VENGEANCE
Excepting opening track “Chew” and closing number “Harmony,” all
these songs are under two minutes in classic hardcore vein. And there
isn’t a wasted moment in Destiny Bond’s exploration and confrontation
of the constraining, orthodox, binary worldview of gender and how that
mindset often extends to other realms of life. But the use of language
and undeniable melodic hooks really humanizes the music even as it
goes off the deep end of intense sonic catharsis. In “The Glow” we hear
an endearing expression of how finding one’s community can enrich
everyone’s existence in the line “the world was dark before but now we
brought the glow.” Every song has its own identity and character and
embodies that spirit without being obvious or contrived. Hardcore can
be monolithic, but this Destiny Bond album has more in common with
the diversity of style in The Shape of Punk To Come than the narrow
range of the average straightedge record and because of that, its range
of expression and nuance hits with great poignancy as well as power.
KILTRO – UNDERBELLY
Chris Bowers tapped into a deep place in his consciousness in
conceiving and arranging the ideas for the music on this album. It is
clearly expertly composed with meticulous details but never once
feels like anything but intuitive — from the textural percussion to the
ambient atmospheric elements, the delicate elegance of the guitar
work, Bowers’ own luminous yet often ethereal vocals, and winding
synth melodies that swell and suddenly fade like a waking memory
welling up for attention in a dream. Every bit of the song has this
aspect as each is brought to the forefront of your attention in the
mix, only to drift off as the slow parade of musical ideas and themes
course through like figures in an experimental piece of cinema that is
more impressionistic than figurative. And with a mood and spirit of
examining the deeper significance of insights, gleaned from a period
of extended introspection the likes of which were imposed by long
stretches of the early pandemic out of which this batch of songwriting
came. Kiltro pushes those nuggets of personal and spiritual truths as
drivers of an expansion of what not just psychedelic rock or folk can
sound like, but the form and structure of pop itself, so that the music
has an immediacy of familiarity mixed with a fascinating mystique.
ROBOT TENNIS CLUB – IF THESE WALLS COULD
TALK, YOU WOULDN’T LISTEN
These songs sound like a lifetime of having classic rock forced onto
you and instead of rejecting it all entirely, you learn how to turn the
songcraft and musicianly chops into a vehicle for commenting on
relationships and identity from a modern perspective. There is a lot of
hurt and frustration channeled into the performances and exorcised
in the lyrics, at least a little, by the act of putting heavy feelings out
of one’s head into a work of creativity. The self-doubt, the suppressed
anger, coming to terms with your limitations, shortcomings and
mistakes all find their way into the lyrics sung by Laura Steadman. And
it is all given the welcome context of having compassion for the flaws
and failure and set to wonderfully eclectic music that rocks hard like
“Here I Go (Again),” sprawling into melancholic space as on “The Nut.”
STEADY CIRCUITS – PHYSICALIA
The clarity of tone and arrangements of “Earth Music” is truly a
palette cleanser for the mind to start out this album. It immediately
feels like a new chapter for the songwriting of Mike Marchant whose
early experimental and psychedelic rock bands sculpted a more
maximalist approach to songwriting into heartfelt nuggets of great
emotional power. The latter aspect remains here but every detail of
sound is so well integrated and mixed you’re immediately immersed in
a journey of personal rediscovery with a sense of what really matters,
including a sense of wonder at life and the world when you’re not as
derailed by the usual distractions. The percussive and saturated synth
melodies that permeate each song should appeal to fans of Clark, early
Washed Out and Black Moth Super Rainbow.
FOR MORE, VISIT QUEENCITYSOUNDSANDART.WORDPRESS.COM
No. 115
ART BY KARMIM NEWBLE
׉	 7cassandra://PBOfm6jSunmFgRb96y4hNKyCGr_jJh3zcAaBrYtKEtQ+O` dYFז0?G6׉E A SLICE OF OUR FAMILY IS GONE,
WE LOVE YOU BRENT AND WILL
HOLD YOU IN OUR HEART, FRIEND.
LOVE BENNY BLANCO'S.
REST IN POWER, BROTHER
Brent Arnold Spader
1977-2023
׉	 7cassandra://tqmnhXgKXm0Dc4lRKKHQWshaiE_0_QT5qGWlAY3bmmg` dYFז0?G6dYFז0?G6בCט   u׉׉	 7cassandra://7gIPmmOuv_KeaIN2Pg5rP8GuWh6EOVk9hrEDSuRfIwE  `׉	 7cassandra://y1S4Vb5mEuwpQAvFpS57NJ4j_mpZrlW27LbD_vArpTAl`r׉	 7cassandra://LXXcqelk-nh4v6bApef6cpbC3cxCE0Cn-_5h3B6ZsHc!@` ׉	 7cassandra://tNYaabqTEJub4clbVO2oj_NahNbOKbAE_ACtkEo3YiM >I͠XddFז0?G7@ט  u׉׉	 7cassandra://XnJl4d1Dg6C8QN1e0d6xdMdjZ-VNjpZ_RJ-MVs_JTj8 %]`׉	 7cassandra://QW4WCGHWNGWKVI-yKbvdnhDFa1258DGthe8YuEkFE1I͓`r׉	 7cassandra://G6j64SCd_nCb9W4YlA2uCE31pcSkoHRGyIancg7HmXA'` ׉	 7cassandra://qQ-oApoKu6H-hMpRoEIzBJYhb6g3OgbOEJwJDnCBO74'4͠XddFז0?G7A׉EOur island, Mills Island, sits in a spot where currents collide, ships crash and
sink.
We’re surrounded by old bones, death. We’re used to it. We remember
our grandfather, the lighthouse keeper, telling us stories of bodies washing
up on the beach in multitudes, victims of shipwreck. The storms have only
worsened over time, we’ve seen to that. With a gathering of eyebrows, the
clenching of fists, and the whispering of words collected in our book, we keep
people away from here, away from our boy.
It was a dream that provoked her passage to the past, her return to her
childhood home on the island. Deep in sleep, her mind produced images
of a terrible storm, the Mills sisters’ darkened house, Henry standing in
shadow. Cassie’s heart exploded in joy as she held her small, unchanged
brother. The house shuddered around them. The floor split beneath their
feet. The walls cracked and groaned and disintegrated. They were falling,
falling. Finally they hit ground. The wind became unbearable. An enormous
wave rose up and caught them and the bones of the house, pulling it all
No. 115
out to sea. Cassie and Henry bobbed at the surface for a time, then sunk,
bound together, slowly descending to the ocean floor. She was not afraid.
Cassie fought through the pounding wind and rain, finally arriving at
the house. She easily recognized its shape, although covered in vines
and other decrepitude, set back from the overgrown trees, settled in tall
whipping grasses. She turned the rusty key and the weathered door swung
back, hitting a wall. She paused in the doorway, the stuffy, familiar smell
stopping her in her tracks. Entering fully, she ran a hand along the hall
table, inspected the dust appearing on her pointer finger, glanced up the
darkened stairway.
She stopped in the kitchen, lit a cigarette beside a cracked window,
simmering in disbelief that she was actually here in this house, on this
island. Heading to the second floor, she approached the stained glass
window on the landing, a lovely floral design her mother made. She peered
out its colored panes to view a large field, and beyond that, the Mills House
perched high up on an opposing cliff.
N
I
C
K
F
L
O
O
K
,
O
U
T
L
O
O
K
-
@
F
L
O
O
K
O
׉	 7cassandra://LXXcqelk-nh4v6bApef6cpbC3cxCE0Cn-_5h3B6ZsHc!@` dYFז0?G6׉EAt the top of the stairs, Henry’s open bedroom door taunted her. Come in!
Come, Cassie. The lighting was dim, the bed, neatly made. His lamp with
its baseball base stood straight on the nightstand. She turned to leave,
pulled the door closed, feeling it strain, spring back as she slammed, forced
it into the frame.
“What the— ” Cassie muttered, then bolted down the stairs.
With little else to do and no electricity or water, she built a fire in the living
room, slapped together a peanut butter and jelly from the few provisions
she bought at the grocery in Point Judith before getting on the ferry. She
cracked and chugged a warm beer, lay down on the always-prickly couch.
Screw oral hygiene. Dreamless dark sleep hit like a wallop.
Since we are aware of all things, we know the boy isn’t right. Something
keeps him in his room. Of course, he will come out to dine with us. He will sit
in his chair and listen to our stories, but every other hour he spends alone. He
stands by his window, watching the slanting rain, crashing waves. He cranes
his neck to view the empty beach adorned with its sharp rocks, terrifying
jewels.
Over the last ten years, the rising water and constant storms drove
tourists and many of the residents away. Cassie found the town mostly
empty, its main drag lined with shuttered shops and restaurants. She
headed to the remaining open bar, Club Soda, every night for dinner, picked
up her old drinking habit. The owner and bartender, Rick, happy to oblige.
“What’s your story?” he asked.
“Oh, your basic shitshow.”
“Heh! Yup. I hear ya. Shitshow. That’s life.”
Buzzed, she waved a hand for him to lean in, come closer.
“Have you ever heard about a kid disappearing? A ten-year-old boy?” she
whisper-slurred, straining above “American Pie” playing on the juke box.
“Nope,” Rick said, shooting soda into an ice-filled glass.
“What about the Mills place — those sisters? That big house at the end
of the Clay Trail?”
“Another round?” Rick asked her,
Cassie placed her spinning head on the sticky bar.
“Can’t you see I’ve had enough?” she said.
“All I see is you sitting there with your empty glass.”
“You’re a real asshole, you know that? God, why’d I keep comin’ in here?”
“Don’t know. Seems like you need it,” he said, pouring another finger of
bourbon into her glass.
“Whaddoyou know about me?” she said, falling off the barstool, kicking
open the door.
We want you to know he came to us willingly. That is very important. Even
now, we conjure and push on him the bad memories, the ugly pictures of his
family. But recently a small crack opened we cannot fill. The wind still obeys
our command of anger, destruction, protection, but there is something
different, a familiar earthy stench, soil. The sister. Cassie. A wayward soul.
Unkempt. Downright slovenly and worthless, happy to drink herself into a
stupor every night, just like our father.
She awoke on the couch, staggered to the bathroom to make herself sick.
On her way back, she picked up cans and newspapers, opened the curtains.
Rain. Always rain. She lifted the window, breathed in the salty air. Maybe
fresh air is the only true cure for a hangover, she wondered, her tongue thick
and dry. She went to fill a glass. She had to stop boozing. She had to stay
away from the bar. Today, she decided, today will be different. “What the
hell am I doing here, anyway?” she said aloud, the walls staring at her in
silence.
Midday, still sober. She stayed quiet, sipped water and soup, slept off the
booze of the days and nights before. She held Henry’s photo, allowed an
onslaught of cleansing tears. She teased the memory of that Halloween
ten years before when, resentfully, she’d agreed to take him trick-ortreating.
She was 16, viewed her much-younger brother as an albatross, a
human symbol of loss, pain, all the problems of her family. They argued, he
ran from her, Spiderman shifting into the tree line. She let him go, turned
away.
At nightfall, Cassie steeled herself against the siren call of Rick, Club
Soda. With every fiber in her being she wanted to head over there and get
plastered. She promised herself that in the morning she’d get on the ferry,
leave this place and its memories. Give up on Henry forever. Tomorrow.
She constantly watched the wind, the sea crashing to the shore. The
house around her creaked, braced itself. She admired the place for hanging
on, continuing to stand. “We can take a beating, that’s for sure,” Cassie
said.
Up on the Mills Hill, a light flickered, pulsing in short, persistent bursts.
Cassie stared in fearful fascination, her heart pounding in her chest.
Luminous fingers reached for her, pulled on her shoulders, enticing her to
come.
She took one deep breath and stormed outside, pulled her bike from the
shed. Pushing against wind and rain, she rode through the deserted town,
the bar’s eyes followed her, the taste of alcohol burned in her throat. Tree
branches reached and slapped and scratched as she bounced onto the
Clay Trail. A gnarled root caused the bike to careen and crash, knocking
her to the ground. She picked up, pushed forward, finally making it to the
shuttered Mills House.
She paced the perimeter, peered in, pulled on windows, leaned her
shoulder hard into doors. She stood back, tilted her head up.
“I know! I know you’re there! I know!” she screamed.
Lightning struck, brightened the attic window for just a split second.
A human outline appeared in her waterlogged vision. In a blink, it
disappeared.
“Henry? Henry!”
“Cassie!!” She recognized her brother’s voice howling with the wind.
“Cassie!!!!!”
She gathered her energy and punched through glass, entering the unlit
house, running upstairs. She stopped, taken aback by her brother, frozen
at ten years old. He held his arms out. She rushed him, wrapped her body
around his.
“You. It’s you,” she said.
So, we must let him go. Now he is with all the others in the sea, where they
all end up, with that sister and all the rest of his worthless family. We tried
to show him another way. We had our time. We won’t forget the good parts,
the story times and art projects and singing. Perhaps we will stop the rains,
smooth out the sea, allow the sun to shine, draw some new life to our island.
Perhaps we will find ourselves another child, perhaps a girl the next time.
How nice.
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@LOSTINTIMEDESIGNS
׉	 7cassandra://o5H-1FF2gIT9xZeFz02nTyMDDs2mZInIbC_QLLZ2NSk` dYFז0?G6׉E׉	 7cassandra://1QB2TpVvdflBaYLQ2EZpxsN3wUqeWGsK-fKxGsvpCtY$` dYFז0?G6dYFז0?G6בCט   u׉׉	 7cassandra://3u_ix5hCdPBwSylBTrN4ElgDtnjYHtvLt2pdWhgN5LA @`׉	 7cassandra://v0QFY7WQRAx67UsSaSOHe7evpct7dFdhhJCZEtXg01gR`r׉	 7cassandra://vEkmz3CJUp6CPIQiTyPnOaFj74tta35KdXKDf3Fcb30s` ׉	 7cassandra://ZE2_hwM2mtQve2RSxWjoIb339mCjjsUJD-Ztfg9bPng z͠XddFז0?G7F׉E׉	 7cassandra://vEkmz3CJUp6CPIQiTyPnOaFj74tta35KdXKDf3Fcb30s` dYFז0?G6׈EdYFז0?G6dYFז0?G6,BIRDY ISSUE 115 dPublished July 2023. Birdy Magazine is Denver's only magazine, available monthly in print or online.dT`nRk