We are Earthseed
The life that perceives itself Changing.
EARTHSEED: THE BOOKS OF THE LIVING SATURDAY, NOVEMBERย 14, 2026
THEย GARFIELDS HAVE BEENย accepted at Olivar.
Theyโll be moving next month. That soon. Iโve known them all my life, and theyโll be gone. Joanne and I have had our differences, but we grew up together. I thought somehow that when I left, she would still be here. Everyone would still be here, frozen in time just as I left them. But no, thatโs fantasy. God is Change.
โDo you want to go?โ I asked her this morning. We had gotten together to pick a few early lemons and navel oranges and some persimmons, almost ripe and brilliant orange. We picked at my house, and then at hers, enjoying the work. The weather was cool. It was good to be outside.
โI have to go,โ she said. โWhat else is there for meโfor anyone. Itโs all going to hell here. You know it is.โ
I stared at her. I guess discussing such things is all right now that she has a way out. โSo you move into another fortress,โ I said.
โItโs a better fortress. It wonโt have people coming over the walls, killing old ladies.โ
โYour mother says all youโll have is an apartment. No yard. No garden.
Youโll have less money, but youโll have to use more of it to buy food.โ โWeโll manage!โ There was a brittle quality to her voice.
I put down the old rake I was using as a fruit picker. It worked fine on the lemons and oranges. โScared?โ I asked.
She put down her own real fruit picker with its awkward extension handle and small fruit-catching basket. It was best for persimmons. She hugged
herself. โIโve lived here, lived with trees and gardens all my life. Iโฆdonโt know how it will be to be shut up in an apartment. It does scare me, but weโll manage. Weโll have to.โ
โYou can come back here if things arenโt what you hope. Your grandparents and your auntโs family will still be here.โ
โHarry will still be here,โ she whispered, looking toward her house. I would have to stop thinking of it as the Garfield house. Harry and Joanne were at least as close as Curtis and I. I hadnโt thought about her leaving him
โwhat that must be like. I like Harry Baiter. I remember being surprised when he and Joanne first started going together. Theyโd lived in the same house all their lives. I had thought of Harry almost as her brother. But they were only first cousins, and against the odds, they had managed to fall in love. Or I thought they had. They hadnโt gone with anyone else for years. Everyone assumed they would get around to marrying when they were a little older.
โMarry him and take him with you,โ I said.
โHe wonโt go,โ she said in that same whisper. โWeโve talked and talked about it. He wants me to stay here with him, get married soon and go north. Justโฆgo with no prospects. Nothing. Itโs crazy.โ
โWhy wonโt he go to Olivar?โ
โHe thinks the way your father does. He thinks Olivarโs a trap. Heโs read about nineteenth and early twentieth century company towns, and he says no matter how great Olivar looks, all weโll get from it in the end is debt and loss of freedom.โ
I knew Harry had sense. โJo,โ I said, โyouโll be of age next year. You could stay here with the Baiters until then and marry. Or you could talk your father into letting you marry now.โ
โAnd then what? Go join the street poor? Stay and stuff more babies into that crowded house. Harry doesnโt have a job, and thereโs no real chance of his getting one that pays money. Are we supposed to live on what Harryโs parents earn? What kind of future is that? None! None at all!โ
Sensible. Conservative and sensible and mature andย wrong.ย Very much in character with Joanne.
Or maybe I was the one who was wrong. Maybe the security Joanne will find in Olivar is the only kind of security to be had for anyone who isnโt rich. To me, though, security in Olivar isnโt much more attractive than the security Keith has finally found in his urn.
I picked a few more lemons and some oranges and wondered what she would do if she knew I was also planning to leave next year. Would she run to her mother again, frightened for me, and eager to have someone protect me from myself? She might. She wants a future she can understand and depend
onโa future that looks a lot like her parentsโ present. I donโt think thatโs possible. Things are changing too much, too fast. Who can fight God?
We put baskets of fruit inside my back door on the porch, then headed for her house.
โWhat will you do?โ she asked me as we walked. โAre you just going to stay here? I meanโฆare you going to stay and marry Curtis?โ
I shrugged and lied. โI donโt know. If I marry anyone, it will be Curtis. But I donโt know about marrying. I donโt want to have children here any more than you do. I know weโll be staying here for a while longer, though. Dad wonโt let Cory even apply to Olivar. Iโm glad of that because I donโt want to go there. But thereโll be other Olivars. Who knows what I might wind up doing?โ That last didnโt feel like a lie.
โYou think thereโll be more privatized cities?โ she asked.
โBound to be if Olivar succeeds. This country is going to be parceled out as a source of cheap labor and cheap land. When people like those in Olivar beg to sell themselves, our surviving cities are bound to wind up the economic colonies of whoever can afford to buy them.โ
โOh, God, there you go again. Youโve always got a disaster up your sleeve.โ
โI see whatโs out there. You see it too. You just deny it.โ
โRemember when you thought starving hordes were going to come crawling over our walls and we would have to run away to the mountains and eat grass?โ
Didย I remember?ย I turned to face her, first angryโfuriousโthen to my own surprise, sad. โIโll miss you,โ I said.
She must have read my feelings. โIโm sorry,โ she whispered.
We hugged each other. I didnโt ask her what she was sorry for, and she didnโt say any more.
Tuesday, November 17, 2026
Dad didnโt come home today. He was due this morning.
I donโt know what that means. I donโt know what to think. Iโm scared to death.
Cory called the college, his friends, fellow ministers, co-workers, the cops, the hospitalsโฆ
Nothing. He isnโt under arrest or sick or injured or deadโat least not as far as anyone knows. None of his friends or colleagues had seen him since he left work early this morning. His bike was working all right. He was all right.
He had ridden off toward home with three co-workers who lived in other
neighborhoods in our area. Each of these said the same thing: That they had left him as usual at River Street where it intersects Durant Road. Thatโs only five blocks from here. Weโre at the tip-end of Durant Road.
So where is he?
Today a group of us, all armed, rode bicycles from home to River Street and down River Street to the college. Five miles in all. We checked side streets, alleys, vacant buildings, every place we could think of. I went. I took Marcus with me because if I hadnโt, he would have gone out alone. I had the Smith & Wesson. Marcus had only his knife. Heโs quick and agile with it, and strong for his age, but heโs never used it on anything alive. If anything had happened to him, I donโt think I would have dared to go home. Cory is already out of her mind with worry. All this on top of losing Keithโฆ I donโt know. Everyone helped. Jay Garfield will be leaving soon, but that didnโt stop him from leading the search. Heโs a good man. He did everything he could think of to find Dad.
Tomorrow weโre going into the hills and canyons. We have to. No one
wants to, but what else can we do?
Wednesday, November 18, 2026
Iโve never seen more squalor, more human remains, more feral dogs than I saw today. I have to write. I have to dump this onto paper. I canโt keep it inside of me. Seeing the dead has never bothered me before, but thisโฆ
We were looking for Dadโs body, of course, though no one said so. I couldnโt deny that reality or avoid thinking about it. Cory checked with the police again, with the hospitals, with everyone we could think of who knew Dad.
Nothing.
So we had to go to the hills. When we go for target practice, we donโt look around, except to ensure safety. We donโt look for what weโd rather not find. Today in groups of three or four, we combed through the area nearest to the top of River Street. I kept Marcus with meโwhich was not easy. What is it in young boys that makes them want to wander off alone and get killed? They get two chin hairs and theyโre trying to prove theyโre men.
โYou watch my back and Iโll watch yours,โ I said. โIโm not going to let you get hurt. Donโt you let me down.โ
He gave me the kind of near-smile that said he knew exactly what I was trying to do, and that he was going to do as he pleased. I got mad and grabbed him by the shoulders.
โDammit, Marcus, how many sisters have you got? How many fathers
have you got!โ I never used even mild profanity with him unless things were very serious. Now, it got his attention.
โDonโt worry,โ he muttered. โIโll help.โ
Then we found the arm. Marcus was the one who spotted itโsomething dark lying just off the trail we were following. It was hung up in the low branches of a scrub oak.
The arm was fresh and wholeโa hand, a lower, and an upper arm. A black manโs arm, just the color of my fatherโs where color could be seen. It was slashed and cut all over, yet still powerful lookingโlong-boned, long- fingered, yet muscular and massiveโฆ Familiar?
Smooth, white bone stuck out at the shoulder end. The arm had been cut off with a sharp knife. The bone wasnโt broken. And, yes. It could have been his.
Marcus threw up when he saw it. I made myself examine it, search it for
something familiar, for certainty. Jay Garfield tried to stop me, and I shoved him away and told him to go to hell. Iโm sorry for that, and I told him so later. But I had to know. And yet, I still donโt know. The arm was too slashed and covered in dried blood. I couldnโt tell. Jay Garfield took fingerprints in his pocket notebook, but we left the arm itself. How could we take that back to Cory?
And we kept searching. What else could we do? George Hsu found a rattlesnake. It didnโt bite anyone and we didnโt kill it. I donโt think anyone was in a mood to kill things.
We saw dogs, but they kept away from us. I even saw a cat watching us from under a bush. Cats either run like hell or crouch and freeze. Theyโre interesting to watch, somehow. Or, at any other time, theyโd be interesting.
Then someone began to scream. Iโve never heard screams like that before
โon and on. A man, screaming, begging, praying: โNo! No more! Oh, God, no more, please. Jesus, Jesus, Jesus,ย please!โย Then there were wordless, grating cries and high, horrible mewling.
It was a manโs voice, not like my fatherโs but not that different from his. We couldnโt locate the source. The echoes bounced around the canyon, confusing us, sending us first in one direction, then in another. The canyon was full of loose rock and spiny, vicious plants that kept us on the pathways where there were pathways.
The screaming stopped, then began again as a kind of horrible, bubbling noise.
I had let myself fall back to the end of the line of us by then. I wasnโt in trouble. Sound doesnโt trigger my sharing. I have to see another person in pain before I do any sharing. And this was one Iโd doย anythingย to avoid
seeing.
Marcus dropped back beside me and whispered, โYou okay?โ
โYeah,โ I said. โI just donโt want to know anything about whatโs happening to that man.โ
โKeith,โ he said. โI know,โ I agreed.
We walked our bikes behind the others, watching the back trail. Kayla Talcott dropped back to see if we were all right. She hadnโt wanted us to come, but since we had come, she had come, she had kept an eye on us. Sheโs like that.
โIt doesnโt sound like your daddy,โ she said. โDoesnโt sound like him at all.โ Kayla is from Texas like my biological mother. Sometimes she sounded as though sheโd never left, and sometimes she sounded as though sheโd never been near any part of the south. She seemed to be able to turn the accent on and off. She tended to turn it on for comforting people, and for threatening to kill them. Sometimes when Iโm with Curtis, I see her in his face and wonder what kind of relativeโwhat kind of mother-in-lawโshe would make. Today I think both Marcus and I were glad she was there. We needed to be close to someone with her kind of mothering strength.
The horrible noise ended. Maybe the poor man was dead and out of his misery. I hope so.
We never found him. We found human bones and animal bones. We found the rotting corpses of five people scattered among the boulders. We found the cold remains of a fire with a human femur and two human skulls lying among the ashes.
At last, we came home and wrapped our community wall around us and huddled in our illusions of security.
Sunday, November 22, 2026
No one has found my father. Almost every adult in the neighborhood has spent some time looking. Richard Moss didnโt, but his oldest son and daughter did. Wardell Parrish didnโt, but his sister and oldest nephew did. I donโt know what else people could have done. If I did know, I would be out doing it.
And yet nothing, nothing, nothing! The police never came up with any sign of him. He never turned up anywhere. Heโs vanished, gone. Even the severed armโs fingerprints werenโt his.
Every night since Wednesday, Iโve dreamed that horrible screaming. Iโve gone out twice more with teams hunting through the canyons. Weโve found
nothing but more of the dead and the poorest of the livingโpeople who are all staring eyes and visible bones. My own bones ached in empathy. Sometimes if I sleep for a while without hearing the screaming, I see theseโ the living dead. Iโve always seen them. Iโve never seen them.
A team I wasnโt with found a living child being eaten by dogs. The team killed the dogs, then watched, helpless as the boy died.
I spoke at services this morning. Maybe it was my duty. I donโt know. People came for church, all uncertain and upset, not knowing what they should do. I think they wanted to draw together, and they had years of habit drawing them together at our house on Sunday morning. They were uncertain and hesitant, but they came.
Both Wyatt Talcott and Jay Garfield offered to speak. Both did say a few words, both informally eulogizing my father, though neither admitted that that was what they were doing. I was afraid everyone would do that and the service would become an impossible impromptu funeral. When I stood up, it wasnโt just to say a couple of words. I meant to give them something they could take homeโsomething that might make them feel that enough had been said for today.
I thanked them all for the ongoingโemphasize ongoingโefforts to find my father. Thenโฆwell, then I talked about perseverance. I preached a sermon about perseverance if an unordained kid can be said to preach a sermon. No one was going to stop me. Cory was the only one who might have tried, but Cory was in a kind of walking coma. She wasnโt doing anything she didnโt have to do.
So I preached from Luke, chapter eighteen, verses one through eight: the parable of the importunate widow. Itโs one Iโve always liked. A widow is so persistent in her demands for justice that she overcomes the resistance of a judge who fears neither God nor man. She wears him down.
Moral: The weak can overcome the strong if the weak persist. Persisting isnโt always safe, but itโs often necessary.
My father and the adults present had created and maintained our community in spite of the scarcity and the violence outside. Now, with my father or without him, that community had to go on, hold together, survive. I talked about my nightmares and the source of those nightmares. Some people might not have wanted their kids to hear things like that, but I didnโt care. If Keith had known more, maybe he would still be alive. But I didnโt mention Keith. People could say what happened to Keith was his own fault. No one could say that about Dad. I didnโt want anyone to be able to say it about this community some day.
โThose nightmares of mine are our future if we fail one another,โ I said,
winding up. โStarvation, agony at the hands of people who arenโt human any more. Dismemberment. Death.
โWe have God and we have each other. We have our island community, fragile, and yet a fortress. Sometimes it seems too small and too weak to survive. And like the widow in Christโs parable, its enemies fear neither God nor man. But also like the widow, it persists.ย We persist.ย This is our place, no matter what.โ
That was my message. I left it there, hanging before them with an unfinished feel to it. I could feel them expecting more, then realizing that I wasnโt going to say more, then biting down on what I had said.
At just the right moment, Kayla Talcott began an old song. Others took it up, singing slowly, but with feeling: โWe shall not, we shall not be movedโฆโ I think this might have sounded weak or even pitiful somehow if it had been begun by a lesser voice. I think I might have sang it weakly. Iโm only a fair singer. Kayla, on the other hand, has a big voice, beautiful, clear, and able to do everything she asks of it. Also, Kayla has a reputation for not moving
unless she wants to.
Later, as she was leaving, I thanked her.
She looked at me. Iโd grown past her years ago, and she had to look up. โGood job,โ she said, and nodded and walked away toward her house. I love her.
I got other compliments today, and I think they were sincere. Most said, in one way or another, โYouโre right,โ and โI didnโt know you could preach like that,โ and โYour father would be proud of you.โ
Yeah, I hope so. I did it for him. He built this bunch of houses into a community. And now, heโs probably dead. I wouldnโt let them bury him, but I know. Iโm no good at denial and self-deception. That was Dadโs funeral that I was preachingโhis and the communityโs. Because as much as I want all that I said to be true, it isnโt. Weโll be moved, all right. Itโs just a matter of when, by whom, and in how many pieces.