As Art was nodding off in the living room with his bugle on his belly, the doorbell rang.
Can you answer the door, Art? said Helen, working at the thread spinning between her needles.
Art set down his bugle, rubbed his eyes, and watched his wife’s long, graceful fingers. He couldn’t tell what she was crafting or thinking. Her fingers tugged, poked and plucked as though each was machinating with its own brain.
Art dashed a few notes down on his music sheet, then opened the front door.
Hello, he said. What is the meaning of this?
‘sup.
Yup.
Yo.
(Nods)
Hey!
Art knew immediately that the Monosyllabists had come to visit. They nudged flaccidly through the door.
Helen? Art called. Hel!
Give them something to drink, Art! she called.
The Monosyllabists were young and slouchy and sported threatening hair. Yet they smiled sometimes and made curious gestures, too. Were they merely skulking loafers? Low-brow flaneurs? They meandered into the kitchen in a loose swarm. Art asked if they would like anything to drink.
Sure.
Yeah.
Cool.
(Shrugs)
Ah!
The Monosyllabists quaffed the variety of tropical fruit juices and caffeinated beverages Art proffered. While they drank, the Monosyllabists milled about the cabinets and the pantry and fondled bags of crunchy food snacks. Concerned the Monosyllabists might consume the vichyssoise Helen had prepared for the garden party later that afternoon, Art suggested they all make tuna fish sandwiches.
Sick.
Ill.
Fire.
(Holds hands up)
Huh!
They all crunched and squished their mouths around tuna salad, tomato, and potato chip sandwiches. They’re certainly strangerous, these Monosyllabists, thought Art. But they know their way around a tuna fish sandwich.
Art made more sandwiches and packed them into a paper bag for the Monosyllabists. OK, see you later! said Art.
Def.
‘kay.
Mrp.
(Stares)
Gee, those were delicious tuna fish sandwiches, Mr. Schnitzle! Thanks for everything, and have a great day!
The Monosyllabist covered his mouth in confused horror. Something shifted around Art. The air seemed to vibrate and crackle. Helen appeared in the kitchen doorway, wide-eyed. She clutched her sewing needles to her chest, and shivered into herself.
***
Decades later, Art lay on a pile of dead, crunchy foliage in his lean-to, hugging a battered and rusted bugle and peeking through the tarp at the endless nuclear winter: The dull orange sun sloughed through the soft gray blanket of poison clouds, the city below shriveled and crumbled under ice and despair, the rabid cry of radioactive wolves howled on the piercing wind; and as he caressed his few remaining memories like the mouthpiece of his horn—beautiful Helen, dream-notes of a lost composition, something about fingers, something about tuna—Art recalled the Monosyllabists’ visit and its shocking end, and it slowly dawned on him, like the Leviathan sun rising up over the horizon…that was the beginning of it all.
Eric Melbye is an associate professor of creative writing at Miami University Regionals in Ohio. He has published fiction and poetry in several literary journals, and a novel, Tru (Flame Books, 2007).
