The Cache and Other Stories
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About this ebook
A cache implies a hidden treasure, although what we find inside is not always what we hope for or expect. Sometimes it’s less; sometimes more; sometimes nothing we’ve ever imagined.
The eleven stories and two poems in this collection feature all manner of unusual things found in strange places; an alien ship in a forest hideaway, ghosts inside a computer network, a distraught goddess in a detective’s office, a teenage busker on a space station. The treasures are varied as well, from lost genomes and altered memories to alien alliances and self-discovery.
Whatever waits to be discovered, these stories suggest that sometimes the search is the important part...
Sherry D. Ramsey
Sherry D. Ramsey is a speculative fiction writer, editor, publisher, creativity addict and self-confessed internet geek. When she's not writing, she makes jewelry, gardens, hones her creative procrastination skills on social media, and consumes far more coffee and chocolate than is likely good for her. Her debut novel, One's Aspect to the Sun, was published by Tyche Books in late 2013 and was awarded the Book Publishers of Alberta "Book of the Year" Award for Speculative Fiction. The sequel, Dark Beneath the Moon, is due out from Tyche in 2015. Her other books include To Unimagined Shores—Collected Stories. With her partners at Third Person Press (http://www.thirdpersonpress.com), she has co-edited five anthologies of regional short fiction to date. Her short fiction and poetry have appeared in numerous publications and anthologies in North America and beyond. Every November she disappears into the strange realm of National Novel Writing Month and emerges gasping at the end, clutching something resembling a novel. A member of the Writer's Federation of Nova Scotia Writer's Council, Sherry is also a past Vice-President and Secretary-Treasurer of SF Canada, Canada's national association for Speculative Fiction Professionals. You can visit Sherry online www.sherrydramsey.com, find her on Facebook, and follow her on Twitter @sdramsey.
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The Cache and Other Stories - Sherry D. Ramsey
The Cache
and Other Stories
Sherry D. Ramsey
First Published in 2017
Compilation © Sherry D. Ramsey 2017
Cover Artwork © Sherry D. Ramsey 2017
All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced, copied, scanned, stored in a retrieval system, recorded or transmitted, in any form or by any means, without prior written permission from the author.
This book contains works of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are the products of the author's imagination. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, entities or settings, is unintentional, coincidental, and entirely attributable to the vagaries of the multiverse and fluctuations in the space-time continuum.
Ramsey, Sherry D., 1963-, author
The Cache and Other Stories / Sherry D. Ramsey
Email: sherrydramsey@gmail.com
Web: www.sherrydramsey.com
Cape Breton, Nova Scotia, Canada
The Cache and Other Stories
Print ISBN: 978-0-9938973-7-5
Ebook ISBN: 978-0-9938973-9-9
All work reprinted with permission of the author.
Upload
first appeared in Aiofe’s Kiss, June 2003
Ghosts and Dark Objects
first appeared in Astropoetica, Winter 2005
The Cache
first appeared in Unearthed: The Speculative Elements v. 3, Third Person Press, Canada, 2012
ePrayer
first appeared in Grey Area: 13 Ghost Stories, Third Person Press, Canada, 2013
B.R.A.N.E., Inc.
first appeared in Flashpoint: The Speculative Elements v. 4, Third Person Press, 2014
Alien Gifts
first appeared in 2016 Young Explorer's Adventure Guide, Dreaming Robot Press, 2015
Addicted to Love
first appeared in Mystery Weekly Magazine, July 2016
Other Books by Sherry D. Ramsey
The Nearspace Series
One’s Aspect to the Sun
Dark Beneath the Moon
Beyond the Sentinel Stars
(forthcoming)
The Seventh Crow
Magica Incognita Series
The Murder Prophet
The Chaos Assassin
(forthcoming)
To Unimagined Shores – Collected Stories
Dedication
For my dear aunt, Mary Hay,
who always encouraged me
to keep going.
Acknowledgments
Despite the persistent perception of writing as a lonely pursuit, the acknowledgments section in almost every book lists countless people whom the author recognizes as helping them along their writing journey. This one is no exception.
The stories in this collection unarguably represent many hours spent sitting alone at my desk (or walking at my treadmill desk), and yet they also represent months and years of quiet and unwavering support from my husband, Terry, my children, Emily and Mark, and the rest of my family. Some of these stories would not exist at all without the ongoing encouragement (and occasional prodding) of my dear friends and partners at Third Person Press, Julie Serroul and Nancy Waldman. And these stories often took shape with the help of input and critique from my fellow writers, in groups and at meetings both online and off.
I would also be remiss if I didn’t mention the help of my daughter, Emily Ramsey, who assisted me immensely with proofreading and layout of the collection in its final form.
So alone, yes; but lonely, never.
SDR
June, 2017
The Cache
The GPS beeped. A few feet in front of me, Ricky whooped, startling something small in the underbrush. It skittered away, unseen, through the carpet of dead leaves. The dog immediately shoved his nose under some brush, straining at the leash. I tugged him back.
Don’t drop it!
I yelped, because as usual, the kid seemed unable to keep himself still like a normal human being. I already regretted letting him carry my GPS. He looked ready to dash into the underbrush himself in search of the cache.
I’m not going to drop it, Danny,
he reproached me, holding it out so I could see how tightly he held it, and that the strap was still looped around his wrist. I took his hand and turned it so I could see the screen.
Arriving at Gully’s River West. Below that, it displayed the coordinates.
I eased the gadget away from the kid. He relinquished it reluctantly. Okay, we’re here. Now, you’re not going to find the cache by jumping up and down like a maniac. This is the part of geocaching where you really have to pay attention and concentrate.
I expected my words to fall on deaf ears, but surprisingly, Ricky stood still.
So once the GPS says we’re here, it’s gotta be somewhere close, right?
he asked, peering into the forest around us.
Yeah, but that doesn’t mean it’s going to be easy to find. It could be up in a tree, or hidden inside a rotted log, or tucked under some bushes in a container covered with camo—
How big is it?
Ricky interrupted me.
I sighed. One second.
I punched commands on the GPS and details of the cache came up on the screen. Hmmm. This might be a tricky one. All it says is, ‘Low to the ground, it will be found, you won’t need a shovel, but dig around.’ It’s a container about four inches by five inches.
How big is that?
I demonstrated, cupping my hands.
Ricky frowned. But it’s not actually buried.
Duffy, the big lab, must have understood the word buried
because he started pawing at a spot on the ground. Geez, his paws were muddy enough already from this sorry excuse for a trail—not much more than a path—without having him start an excavation project. My truck would be a mess. I yanked him back. I’d done that so many times already today that my shoulder throbbed. No, you’re not allowed to actually bury geocaches,
I said, because they’re usually not on your own land. The idea is not to disturb anything—
Okay, Danny, I’ve got it.
He bent down, staring at the ground, taking small slow steps.
I have to admit I was kind of amazed. When Celia suggested I take her dog and her kid geocaching with me, I’d expected a total nightmare. I loved Celia, but I wasn’t exactly in love with her dependents. The house always seemed to be full of kids and dogs, even when it was just Ricky and Duffy. I haven’t been around a lot of nine-year-olds, so maybe they’re all like that, but let’s just say if Ricky was twins I would have been out of there long ago, Celia or no Celia.
Duffy whined and pulled at the leash, wanting to follow the kid, so I slipped the clasp loose. He wouldn’t stray too far and my shoulder needed a break. He proved me wrong immediately by plunging into the brush where we’d heard the noise earlier. I shut my eyes and sighed.
Hey, Danny, is this something?
Ricky had pulled aside a low-hanging pine branch to reveal a discarded water bottle. Mud spattered the outside, so I guess he might have thought something could be hidden inside.
I shook my head. Naw, that’s just garbage. We’re looking for a box, remember? And a geocache is going to be closed up tight so that the stuff inside doesn’t get wet. That bottle doesn’t even have a cap.
The kid let the branch fall back into place. This is hard.
"We’ve barely even started looking. Listen, think about where you would hide something around here if you wanted to make it kind of hard to find, but not impossible."
Duffy barked, once, and I heard a rumbling whine that could be the motor of an ATV. Geez, even in the woods that dog could find a car to chase. It sounded like he’d managed to get a good distance away in only a minute.
Duffy, come back, boy,
I yelled.
Here, Duffy, Duffy, Duffy,
Ricky hollered, cupping his hands around his mouth.
Keep to the side of the trail. I thought I heard an ATV coming,
I warned him, but no vehicle materialized.
The dog barked again.
Why’d you let him off the leash, Danny? Mom never does that.
I sighed. I was asking myself the same thing.
I called the dog one more time but there was no sound of him crashing back. Just keep looking, and we’ll get him after we find the cache. He won’t go far.
Whoever had hidden this cache was a jerk, because it sure wasn’t easy to find. My back was aching in minutes as we looked under every bush and low branch, pushed aside drifts of fallen leaves, and peered into the dark recesses of hollowed-out deadfall. My backpack felt like it held lead weights, not a few sandwiches and hiking supplies. I’d hoped the cache wouldn’t be too hard to find and the kid could spot it himself. Then we could eat the lunch Celia had packed for us and be home early with everyone happy. I should have known it wouldn’t be that easy.
Duffy barked again and Ricky stood up, stretching on tiptoes to see over a tangle of scrubby bushes. Duffy sounds like he found something. Maybe it’s the cache!
It wouldn’t be that far from the coordinates,
I said, but the kid was right. The dog’s barking had taken on an insistent tone. A come-here-and-look tone. I stretched a kink out of my back. But okay, let’s go and get him, and then we can concentrate on the cache better. If we go back a bit, I think there was a clearer—
But Ricky had already pushed into the brush, heedless that there could be thorns or mudholes or insect nests that I’d have to rescue him from. No sense in calling him back, so I shut up and followed him. Duffy’s barking was easy to follow, and once through the initial bushes the space opened up a lot, the way it tends to under an evergreen canopy. Brown and orange needles carpeted the ground, which was also sprinkled liberally with pinecones and dotted with lichen-smeared stones. We still couldn’t see Duffy.
Typically, Ricky started running, even though the ground was uneven and I figured a half-buried root would send him flying any second. Slow down. Duffy isn’t going anywhere.
He didn’t stop, though, so I broke into a half-jog to keep him in sight. Celia might forgive me if I lost the dog—might—but not if I lost the kid.
Only a minute or so later I heard Ricky yell, Duffy!
and then I saw him, too. He ran toward Ricky, then turned and rushed back to whatever he’d found. Mud spattered all up his legs and the underside of his belly, and his golden snout had a generous coating as well. I squeezed my eyes shut for a second, heaved a deep breath, and pressed on.
Danny, this is so cool!
Ricky hollered back to me. I wondered whether the dog had found a dead bird or an ancient cow bone. The kid would think almost anything was cool.
But as I got closer I saw that it was neither of those things. I couldn’t exactly say what it was, either. The dog barked again and Ricky bent down toward the thing. Don’t touch that!
I yelled, and he jumped back.
He glared at me as I caught up to him and the dog. I shook my head. I just want you to be careful until I see what this is,
I said, but he still looked mad. I ignored him and looked at the thing poking out of a muddy hole in the ground.
It looked kind of like an oxygen cylinder you’d use with a cutting torch—a big grey canister, or at least the top half of one. About three feet of it showed above the ground, but I couldn’t tell how deep it went. It was about eight inches in diameter, and on the side facing us, a groove with a narrow slot at the centre ran the length of the thing. It was too dark inside the slot to see anything. On top of the cylinder, instead of pressure gauges and regulators, a ring of dark glass surrounded something that resembled a small solar panel. I walked all the way around it. On the far side, a little hatch stood open, revealing an LCD-type screen about three inches square. The strangest thing about it was that despite sprouting out of the muddy ground like some weird plant, there wasn’t a speck of dirt on it.
Is it the geocache?
Ricky asked, breathless.
No way,
I said. It’s nothing like the description and it’s nothing like any cache I’ve ever seen.
Maybe it’s a bomb.
My heart gave a big bang in my chest because although I hadn’t thought of that, it did kind of look like some kind of missile. After a second I shook my head. I don’t think so. Who the hell—the heck—would put a bomb out here? There’s nothing to blow up except a bunch of trees.
Well, what is it?
I squatted down and put out a tentative hand to touch it. It was cold enough that the air close to it felt noticeably chill. When my fingertips got within about two inches of the surface, it beeped one strident, high-pitched note, and blue-white light flashed from the glass ring at the top. Startled, I tried to stand and jump back at the same time and ended up falling on my butt in the mud. Ricky burst out laughing and I bit down on a word Celia wouldn’t have liked.
We’d better get out of here and leave this thing alone,
I said. I wasn’t going to tell Ricky, but the thing had me sort of spooked. I shook my hand. My fingertips tingled with cold, even though I hadn’t actually touched the cylinder. There had to be a logical explanation for it, but it gave me a vibe I didn’t like.
Aw, Danny, it’s cool,
Ricky protested. He walked around it, peering at it like I had. He stopped on the side bearing the screen and squinted. Maybe this is something to do with the cache,
he said. These look like more cordates.
Coordinates,
I corrected him, but went around to the other side to look again. I hadn’t noticed it before, but he was right—the screen showed numbers that could easily stand for latitude, longitude, and elevation. Underneath those, a row of symbols I couldn’t read crawled across the screen.
Didn’t you say that sometimes a cache has two or three parts, and it’s like following a treasure map? You have to get one part to get the co-or-din-ates for the next part?
He pronounced coordinates very slowly, but he got it right. Apparently he sometimes did listen to what I told him.
I pulled out the GPS. Yeah, but they’re supposed to say if they’re part of a series.
I pulled up the map of the area. It showed only two caches, the one we’d been looking for and another about half a mile to the south. I don’t think that’s it.
Put the numbers in and see where they lead,
Ricky said. You can do that, right?
They probably don’t lead anywhere. They might not be the right kind of numbers.
Come on, Danny, just try it, please?
Why don’t we go back and find the cache we’re actually looking for? We were probably just about to find it when Duffy started barking.
Come on, please? Maybe this is a secret one that nobody knows about.
I wiped a hand across my face, mainly to stop myself from explaining that a geocache no-one knows about kind of defeats the purpose. It wouldn’t do any good. Once the kid had an idea in his head it was hard to dislodge it. Easier just to humour him.
Okay, okay. Put the leash back on Doofus while I do this.
Haha,
he said, but he took the leash and secured the troublemaking dog.
I punched the numbers from the little screen into the GPS and was only half-surprised when it did plot a course from our current position to the point the numbers indicated.
Ricky must have read something on my face. Can we see where it goes?
It’s probably just some kind of survey equipment. Not likely it leads anywhere interesting. If we go back to the other cache there’ll be cool things in it and you can pick something to keep. Remember I told you, people leave little treasures to swap.
I know, but this is more exciting. It’s a mystery.
And I knew that, in his mind, the lure of a dollar-store toy or a keychain couldn’t compare to this.
I squinted up through the trees at the sun. I couldn’t use the weather or the time as an excuse to say no. Okay, it says it’s about a hundred meters away...that’s about three hundred feet. I guess it’s not that far out of our way.
That doesn’t sound very far at all.
Yeah, if there’s any kind of path between here and there. We’re not going crashing through a ton of underbrush. I’ll make you a deal. We’ll start out, but if the going is too hard we give it up, okay?
Deal.
Stifling a sigh, I hitched my backpack up higher on my shoulders and pointed him in the direction the GPS laid out. Celia’s lunch would have to wait a little longer.
The GPS route led us back to the path we’d followed earlier in the day and it looked like we could continue to follow it. Duffy wasn’t too happy about being back on the leash, and strained ahead until I thought my arm was going to pull out of the socket. He had his nose down like he’d caught a scent, but luckily if I let the leash out long enough that he could walk ahead of me, beside Ricky, he eased off a little.
Normally, I love being in the woods. The shady quiet, broken only by the sound of your own footsteps on the path and a few birds and small animals. The warm, moldery scent of pine and earth and bark and leaves. The cool air giving way to warm spots when the sun breaks through the overhead canopy of greenery. It was one place where I felt at peace, and I usually only wanted the company of a good friend or two, if I wanted any at all. Ricky and the dog—well, they were here with me today on sufferance, but I had to admit that it hadn’t been all bad. It was obvious that Ricky appreciated the forest, so that gave us something we could relate on, even if I still thought he was mostly a little pain-in-the-butt.
Since we’d found the cylinder, though, the walk wasn’t the same. My fingers continued, weirdly, to tingle and ache with that burning cold. The woods were too quiet now, as if every bird and animal that normally lived here had fled. Ricky was too excited by the adventure to pick up on anything. The dog seemed intent on following something only he could scent on the air.
Once again, I thought I heard an ATV somewhere nearby and tugged on the collar of Ricky’s jacket to nudge him off the path, but no vehicle came into sight. There must be a network of trails in the area.
We got to a bend in the path where it skewed left but our destination showed off to the right—only about twenty meters away now. Okay, kid, this is it. Pretty open here so I think we can leave the path again. But go slow, and be careful.
Duffy already had his nose pointed in that direction. I wondered what he smelled. Anyway, I didn’t need the GPS after we left the path because damned if that dog didn’t lead us straight to another grey canister, identical to the first one.
Identical, except for a little clump of dark earth and green moss sitting on top of the solar panel-thing. Otherwise it was pristine. Duffy got to within a few feet of the cylinder and stood sniffing the air, growling intermittently. He took care not to get too close and I wondered if he’d got a noseful of super-cold air back at the first one. I took a stick and knocked the earthy clump down, then picked it up. The soil was soft and moist, as if it had only recently been dislodged from the forest floor. Thin ice crystals, jagged and translucent, clung to some of the root tendrils.
Ricky squatted beside me as I examined it. It’s like that thing just pushed up out of the ground, isn’t it?
he asked.
Goosebumps prickled my skin. I’d been struck by the same thought, but I wasn’t going to say anything because of course that was impossible. For one thing, if that was the case, it should be covered with dirt and mud.
Nah,
I told Ricky. I know it looks like that, but I don’t think so. It wouldn’t really make sense.
He looked skeptical but stood and walked around it. This one’s got numbers, too. There must be more!
Okay, but are we really going to spend all day doing this? We’ve found two and they’re both the same. I don’t think we need to do it again.
He looked at me over the top of the canister. Don’t you want to know what they are? I told you, it’s a mystery! We have to solve it.
The only mystery to me was what time I was finally going to make it home today. They’re just survey markers or something,
I said. But if you want to find one more, we’ll do that. Then have lunch and head home, okay?
Got the GPS ready?
He read the numbers to me. I noticed that he didn’t actually agree that one more would do it.
The next one was, predictably, about the same distance away as the last one, but off in the general direction where the path had been leading when it headed left.
The trail had deteriorated to something more like a cow path, and I was starting to think it would run out any time. To tell the truth, I hoped it would. But suddenly it opened up at a stream and I realized I’d been hearing the hiss and gurgle of the water for the past few minutes without noticing it. A haphazard line of half-submerged stones offered the only obvious bridge to the other side.
I looked at Ricky with raised eyebrows.
We can make it across that, easy,
he said.
The dog’s going to get wet for sure. And if you slip, your feet will be soaked. We’ll have to go back anyway then, because hiking in wet shoes will give you wicked blisters.
I’m not going to slip, and Duffy’s feet will dry off,
he argued. Anyway, it’ll wash some of the mud off him.
I shrugged. Okay, we’ll give it a try. I’ll go first and you come behind me. Hold my hand and step exactly where I step.
He put his hand in mine confidently. I let the dog out to the extent of his leash to fend for himself. Honestly, the crossing didn’t look that bad, so long as the stones were steady, and I had my good waterproof hiking boots on. A slip wouldn’t be that bad for me.
We went slowly. The sun had disappeared behind a skiff of clouds and a chill breeze blew straight down the stream, raising goosebumps on my arms and back. The dog was on the other shore by the time we were about halfway across. I heard the now-familiar ATV engine rumble and Duffy barked, shattering our concentration and the otherwise eerie silence. The kid jumped and skittered on the stones, one toe skimming the surface of the water. He shrieked and caught at my arm with his free hand. A clutch of birds flushed out of the tree branches above us with a rush of wings, startling him further, and he almost went in.
Luckily, I had a solid footing on two stones and managed to help Ricky catch his balance. I pretty much pulled him along the last few steps, figuring we’d be better off getting across in a hurry. Once there, he leaned forward with his hands on his knees, panting a little.
Stupid dog,
he muttered, and I had to agree.
You okay?
He nodded.
We set off again, although the path shrank even further and low-hanging branches barred the way every few steps. We walked in silence, concentrating on the quickly-disappearing trail.
You want some water?
I asked Ricky, and my voice sounded strangely loud. The kid jumped at the sound of it and then giggled nervously.
Sure.
We stopped and each had a swig from the water bottles I’d insisted we take, and Ricky cupped his hands while I poured some into them for the dog to slurp. He dried his hands on his jeans when Duffy decided he’d had enough and turned his nose to the trail again. Once more, we had to leave the path to find the actual spot, but now that we knew what to look for I spotted the cylinder before we’d gone more than a few feet from the trail.
It held no surprises. Exactly like the others. Even Ricky gave it only a cursory glance before going around to the back to check for