Saturday, November 14, 2009


THE WEDDING OF THE MACHINES

Adrian Korpel
Artwork: Toon Rooymans


The two machines stood hand in hand in the field of sunflowers, facing the little preacher. Their space capsule stood behind them, a giant silver cylinder on a vast cloth of gold. 
"Are you sure this is leegical? " Mara, the female said in a little loudspeaker voice. She was angular, her many rods and bolts lining up to roundness in the center of her skeletal body. 
"You mean 'legal'," the preacher said, "the word is 'legal,' not 'leegical.'" 
The male spoke up now in deep, gruff tones that rattled the tubules of his frame. 
"We studied hard. English not easy for units like we."
"You're doing fine, Hano. But to answer Mara's question -- yes it's legal. As a minister I have the authority to marry all who are part of the Great Web of Being. Are there any other questions?" 
"Tell us about the Great Web of Being." Hano said. 
"By that we mean the passion of the quarks, the cosmic dance of galaxies, everything. But what counts is love." 
"Tell us about love," Mara said, "how people make love?"
"Variously," the preacher said, "touching, stroking, becoming one. It all depends.” 
"Variously, " Hano repeated in a flat voice. 
He telescoped one arm out to Mara and stroked her roundness. His rusty fingers traced a clockwise spiral around her hub, while his spidery legs moved up and down against hers. Jerking up his other arm, he started to tap her head, the whirring vanes inside his body cage spinning faster and faster. Mara's gear eyes slowly rotated and a soft clanging spread through her structure. She craned her head toward the sun and moved it slowly and haltingly around in small steps. Stretching both her hands to the sky, she began to croon a simple melody. Hano joined in counterpoint. Their singing rose in pitch and intensity, then became fragmented and incoherent. After a while they both fell silent. For a few moments the only sound heard was the droning of bees collecting honey in the summer's heat. Then Hano turned to the preacher. 
"Like this?" he asked. 
"I suppose," the preacher said, "sort of. Let's continue. Did you bring the rings?" 
"Did you bring the rings?" Hano said to Mara. 
Abruptly Mara swiveled her head down and started scrutinizing herself. Her hands moved frantically over the recesses in her frame and her eyes scanned left to right, up and down, over her parts. At last she stopped and looked at her fiancee. 
"What needing rings for?" she said, " Is not love counting?

Thursday, November 5, 2009


ONE HAND CLAPPING (First published in Eureka)

Adrian Korpel


After the divorce even the dog belonged to his wife. Not that she had ever liked the dog -- in fact she had always hated it and its slobbering cheerfulness -- but she'd wanted to make sure that her husband felt real loss. And she had been right: he missed the dog, he missed talking to it, missed stroking the big, woolly head on his lap. 
To find consolation he went to a support group for divorced people, but the men were more depressed than he, and the women more bitter than his ex-wife. They would all sit in a circle and sip juice from little cardboard cups. Later they'd step forward one by one and tell their life stories which were depressingly generic and full of grievances against their loved ones. 
Once in a while a speaker would visit them and explain about guilt or co-dependency and the twelve steps to tranquility. For a brief time this provided some hope and cheer, and sometimes it led to an animated discussion about their guilty parents or siblings. On the whole, though, the atmosphere was sorrowful. 
Then one day he met Loraine. She was an invited speaker who lectured about the way of Zen and how it would lead to inner peace and a holistic understanding of the universe. To make that happen you had to shake up your mind, she said. For example, by thinking about impossible things like the smell of music or the sound of one hand clapping, your mind would transcend the false reality of the world and you'd be happy. He didn't really believe that, but Loraine was young and pretty and worth a conversion. 
He started reading up on Zen to impress her, and pretty soon she took him on as a pupil. In the beginning her methods were harsh -- she used to poke him with a sharp stick if he gave a dumb answer -- but things improved quickly when she allowed him to shave his head and wear a saffron robe. After that she made him sit at her feet, and next took his head in her lap and stroked his stubble. 
One day, after much meditation on the Godhead, they disrobed and achieved satori together. He was happier than he had ever been with his dog, and for the first time in his life he experienced the smell of music. For an entire summer he lived in a holistic heaven, a golden nirvana of incense and flowers and the sweet whisper of mantras. 
But then something happened that he could never explain afterward. He started to think of his dog again, and in furtive dreams he would eat cheeseburgers. He watched TV on the sly and began to lose the smell of music. 
The end came when one night, on reaching satori with Loraine, he heard the sound of two hands clapping.