Authors: Fred Strydom
It was not long after that a structured group did arise within the broken collective. Established by a man named Diet Coke, this group quickly became known as the New Past. It was the philosophy of Diet Coke and the New Past that the re-establishing of a society was no longer an option. According to the New Past, the extent to which they had found themselves disabled post-Zero had been precisely because of their reliance on external attachments. It had been their superficial regard for the material things that had inhibited them, many centuries before Day Zero had even occurred.
This pre-Zero period came to be known as the Age of Self, and was denounced as a time of conceit and hollow consumerism. It was “attachment” itself that had crippled the people of the world. It was suggested that the only way to advance was to embrace their disconnection. Materialism was an archaic construct, and only with “detachment” could they hope to prosper.
Word of the new model spread. Most adopted the model with the sense of hope that had once evaded them. They were given meaning like manna from the sky. Within months, several factions of the New Past sprang up around the world. Electronic technology was rebuked, and forbidden. Land ownership was abandoned. Money was forsaken. It was not long before the New Past proposed its most ambitious policy: the separation of the members of biological families. The family nucleus was the seed of tribal culture, and tribal culture had accounted for most of pre-Zero’s afflictions.
It was suggested that in order to attain absolute “detachment,” these self-absorbed, outdated nucleuses would need to give way to Diet Coke’s “One Family” proposal, and the timing couldn’t be better. Most members of families did not remember each other well enough to fully resist, and the factions responded with gusto. Protocols were put in place. Locations were selected. Children were removed from their parents, husbands from their wives, and brothers from their sisters. Like the brave passengers of a boat that floats upon an ocean without the labours of unsynchronised oars, they cast out to the remotest corners of the earth with fellow exiles in the belief that their absolute detachment would propel Humankind into its new evolutionary era, the Age of The Renascence.
Gideon
K
Jenner sat on the porch of his house and drank the last of his beer while he watched the rain. The grey clouds were thickly woven together without a single thinning patch of hope. It had been raining for hours now. K took another sip of his beer and stared out across the dull, mushy land. To the side of the house the two horses stood drenched and motionless in their paddock, blinking their eyes.
Thunder grumbled in the distance.
Behind K the front door of the house hung open. Somewhere inside, his son was keeping himself occupied. Andy was good in that way. He didn’t need much to keep himself busy, and K was grateful for that, if nothing else. He no longer knew what to do for the boy. It was hard enough for K to get himself out of bed in the morning without having to worry about how he’d entertain his only child. Recently, the days had been long, silent and uneventful for them both.
And still, the rain. The hard rain kept coming.
Months had passed since he had stumbled from his AV on that bright morning without a memory in his head. Months since he had begun to rediscover his wife, and his house, and his life. But now his wife was gone and it was just the two of them. K and Andy. The memories that came back to each of them day by weird day did not arrive in any hurry, or any particular order. The day he and his wife had walked back into the house to find Andy curled up on his bed had been a day of hope. Hope that soon everything would make sense and a semblance of the lives they’d once lived could go on. But it hadn’t happened that way. K had remembered Andy as soon as he’d seen him in the photograph, but his wife had not. To her, the boy on the bed, the boy that she had carried in her body for nine months and had taken care of for twelve years, was a stranger, and seemed likely to remain so.
K had tried to convince her that Andy was her son, but in the end it had become clear to the woman she’d never remember. Nor would she remember the young girl who’d been her daughter. After some time, perhaps because of frustration or shame, it had become too much for her to handle; one morning K had awoken to discover the woman he’d vaguely recalled as his wife had left. No note. No goodbye. One unremarkable day she had simply vanished, and K and the boy were left to themselves in that big wooden house on the hill.
K’s own memories were far from complete. In fact, among all the small unrelated fragments that came floating in, it was really only the recollection of having loved his son and dead daughter that returned to him somewhat intact. He did not remember his children as the complex individuals they had undoubtedly once been to him. He knew his son and daughter’s names, that they were indeed his own children, but recalled nothing of the precious stories of their lives that must have once been stitched into his love for them like the patterns that adorn a handmade quilt. The boy was still a stranger. A stranger whom he should continue to love. That’s what something in him said he should do. That was all.
Besides the boy, K couldn’t remember much of own life. In the days that followed the resetting, he scrambled to piece together the puzzle of himself. He studied the objects and artifacts in his home as if they were pieces of evidence left by trickster elves—house spirits that sat in the cracks of the walls and enjoyed the ensuing mayhem and confusion from afar. A picture on the wall. The smell of a cologne. The feel of a soft sweater. But even though these trivial memories came back to him like a few loose coins between the cushions of a couch—worth little but heartening nonetheless—he was not able to put any of it together. His ability to read returned but he struggled to use appliances and technologies in the house. Digital screens hung dead on the walls. Whatever information those machines held within their chips and wires, he hadn’t a clue about how to retrieve it. And even if he knew how to operate them, the passwords and numbered codes that would grant access were gone forever.
The only reason he knew his surname and his initial was because of a plastic card he’d found with his face beside the abbreviated “K Jenner.” Otherwise he’d probably still be nameless. Perhaps it would all come back to him. He hoped he’d wake up one day to find his life restored, but all each new day brought was a meaningless fragment of new knowledge or nothing at all.
K crushed the beer can in his hand and got up from his chair to go inside the house. Dim shadows of rain fell across the walls of his kitchen as he stood at the counter preparing bowls of noodles for his son and himself. After he was done, he took one of the bowls to his son who was lying on the bedroom floor, reading a comic book. He said nothing to the boy. He grabbed another beer from the fridge and returned to the porch to continue watching the rain as he ate. He had no idea how much of the day was left. The sky was too dark to give away the position of the sun. It didn’t matter anyhow. He slurped at his noodles and followed it with a sip of his beer. When he looked back up from his bowl, he was startled to see an old man dressed entirely in black, standing in the rain, staring at him.
“Hello!” the man yelled over the sound of the rain. He tugged at his black jacket and trotted towards the porch.
K stood and fixed his eyes on the man.
The man waved a hand, looked up at the sky, and smiled. “I’m sorry to bother you!” he continued. “But you wouldn’t mind if an old traveller took a moment to get out of this terrible weather, would you?”
K turned back to the open house door behind him, and then back to the man, beckoning him with a hand to step onto the porch. The old man nodded and hurried up the steps. He shook out his jacket and ran his hand through his thin white hair. He smiled and rubbed his shoulders. He had a strong, hard face and bright blue eyes rolled up in layers of wrinkled skin. Thin tufts of white hair grew from his ears and a big brown mole on his left eyebrow sprouted a small white tuft of its own, like smoke from a miniature volcano.
K took another sip of his beer.
“I’ve been out there for days,” the man said. “Hierdie weer. This rain just won’t let up, will it? At first you can handle it, but you can take just so much before it starts to drive you a little mad.”
“Let me get you a towel,” K said, and the man nodded. K went inside the house and grabbed a big red towel from the cupboard. As he passed along the corridor he looked in on his son, still on the floor, still reading his comic. He closed the boy’s bedroom door and returned to the porch.
“O, dankie, meneer. That’s perfect,” the old man said, rubbing it hard against his head. He threw it over his shoulders. “So sorry to have bothered you.”
“It’s no bother at all.”
The old man smiled again and looked around for somewhere to sit. K gestured towards a wooden chair and the man took a seat. For a while they simply sat in silence.
K turned and studied the old man again. “Where were you going?” he asked.
“Oh, here and there. I’m a walker, you know. God gave me two feet and I intend to use them till they’re ready to pack in.”
God. K thought about the word. It was a new memory for the day, the idea of God. He hadn’t had a thought about the notion of God until then.
“Where are your things?” K asked. The man carried nothing on him, not even a water bottle, or a plastic bag with a few supplies in it. It may have been a blunt question, but the stranger had asked to share K’s one and only sacred space in the world.
“I don’t need anything. I carry and spread the word of God, and that seems to do me just fine.”
K refrained from saying that at the very least an umbrella would have been a good idea. The word of God wouldn’t keep you dry.
“You see,” the man said, as if reading K’s mind, “I could have packed myself a raincoat or umbrella, but then I wouldn’t have had this wonderful opportunity to meet you. That’s how it works, the way I see it anyway. And when someone like you invites me to take shelter from the inclement weather, the view is sometimes better. I can step out of the storm completely and observe it objectively. I get a chance to think about what a storm is and where it comes from, instead of only
dealing
with it. Dealing with it has its place, and I’ve done that to the bone. Now it’s time to dry off and look back on it. This is the time to acknowledge the storm as a holy thing without begrudging it. Without the lies of despair.”
“You think despair is a lie?”
“It is in God’s country.”
K didn’t respond. He drank his beer.
“You know,” the old man said, “When I came around from the day—the day I forgot everything—God was the one thing I remembered. I actually had a Bible in my hand at the time. Even though I couldn’t read a word of it, even though I recalled nothing of myself or where I had come from, God’s truth was still in me, like the low heat at the centre of a cold stone. Because, you see, God doesn’t need our memories to be real. God exists regardless. Whether we’re asleep. Whether we’re dead. And whether we’re thinking about something else entirely. The truth doesn’t go away when we close our eyes, you know.
“God’s stories came back to me bit by bit. Each time they did it sounded to me precisely the way it must have sounded to the first of the saved: incredible, mind-blowing revelations from a big booming voice in the sky. They were miracles, you know. These slow recollections. And they did not stop coming until I was left with no choice but to get up and share them with the world. And so I started walking. Going from empty head to empty head, telling them the truth. People need that.”
“Do they?”
“Indeed. For instance, you’re here on the hill by yourself, but do you know what’s going on down there below?”
“Where below?”
“In the towns.”
“No, what’s going on?”
“There is a group of people visiting families in your very town. Going into people’s homes and asking them questions. This group call themselves the New Past. They’re keen to know how much people remember of their lives before the resetting. I’ve been told that the group in this particular town is actually one small part of a bigger movement taking place all over the world. They’re very interested in what people are thinking and doing with their lives now that we’ve all been set to zero.
“And on my travels I’ve seen things. Big trucks being filled with men, women and children. You can see their faces through the windows of the trucks, no expression on them at all, they look just like dumb cattle. There are others in the street watching them being driven out of town, and those people don’t have any expressions either, bless them.
“I met a man once while walking and tried to share the word of God with him. But he wouldn’t have any of it. He said my beliefs were archaic. He said my truth was not the truth at all. He said the only memories that had returned to me were the memories of old lies. And then he proceeded to tell me about the real truth, according to him. The truth of the New Past. How we were lost, not because of what we failed to remember, but because we’d been denied the habit of lying to ourselves. Day Zero, he called it, the day we went “cold turkey” on the elaborate lies of our old lives. It was a purging, he said. A means of coming clean of ourselves. He was a very interesting man. I explained to him that the Bible was about the very same principles, really. I said that what he was talking about was what I believed also. We realised after time that we were really talking about the same thing, his beliefs and my own. And then we went our separate ways. It was a beautiful meeting of married minds, really. Him with his side and mine with my own, but realising that our ideas were really one and the same. And the more I thought about it, the more of what he said made sense to me. The old habits of the old lies. The subsequent purging, or as I like to put it, the baptism by amnesia. The same truth, it seems, appears to all in one form or another. Don’t you think?”