Pseudopod 398: Prince Of Flowersby
Elizabeth Hand.
“Prince of Flowers” was Hand’s first published story. It appeared in
Twilight Zone Magazine in 1988, was subsequently reprinted in
The Year’s Best Horror and has appeared in various anthologies since then, as well as in her story collection
LAST SUMMER AT MARS HILL. “Much of the story is drawn from my own experiences working at the
Smithsonian Institution in the 1970s-1980s. I was at the
National Air & Space Museum, not the National History Museum, but spent as much time in the latter as I could. In those days, a Smithsonian ID badge allowed you to access all areas — not any more, alas.”
ELIZABETH HAND is the author of numerous award-winning novels and collections of short fiction, as well as a longtime reviewer and critic whose work has appeared in the
Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, Salon, and many other publications.
Your reader –
Christiana Ellis – is an award-winning writer and podcaster, currently living in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Her podcast novel,
Nina Kimberly the Merciless was both an inaugural nominee for the
2006 Parsec Award for Best Speculative Fiction: Long Form, as well as a finalist for a
2006 Podcast Peer Award. Nina Kimberly the Merciless is available in print from
Dragon Moon Press. Christiana is also the writer, producer and star of
Space Casey seasons 1 and 2, an audio-drama miniseries which won the
Gold Mark Time Award for
Best Science Fiction Audio Production by
the American Society for Science Fiction Audio and the
2008 Parsec Award for
Best Science Fiction Audio Drama. In between major projects, Christiana is also the creator and talent of many other podcast productions including
Talking About Survivor,
Hey, Want to Watch a Movie? and
Christiana’s Shallow Thoughts.
Space Casey Season 2, available at spacecasey.com will have just completed by the time this posts.
As mentioned by Al, please consider throwing a few bucks to the
Bobby Lombardi Fundraiser.
“As she opened the box, dried flowers, seeds, and wood shavings cascaded into her lap. She inhaled, closing her eyes, and imagined blue water and firelight, sweet-smelling seeds exploding in the embers. She sneezed and opened her eyes to a cloud of dust wafting from the crate like smoke. Very carefully she worked her fingers into the fragrant excelsior, kneading the petals gently until she grasped something brittle and solid. She drew this out in a flurry of dead flowers.
It was a puppet: not a toy, but a gorgeously costumed figure, spindly arms clattering with glass and bone circlets, batik robes heavy with embroidery and beadwork. Long whittled pegs formed its torso and arms and the rods that swiveled it back and forth, so that its robes rippled tremulously, like a swallowtail’s wings. Held at arm’s length it gazed scornfully down at Helen, its face glinting with gilt paint. Sinuous vines twisted around each jointed arm. Flowers glowed within the rich threads of its robe, orchids blossoming in the folds of indigo cloth.
Loveliest of all was its face, the curve of cheeks and chin so gracefully arched it might have been cast in gold rather than coaxed from wood. Helen brushed it with a finger: the glossy white paint gleamed as though still wet. She touched the carmine bow that formed its mouth, traced the jet-black lashes stippled across its brow, like a regiment of ants. The smooth wood felt warm to her touch as she stroked it with her fingertips. A courtesan might have perfected its sphinx’s smile; but in the tide of petals Helen discovered a slip of paper covered with spidery characters. Beneath the straggling script another hand had shaped clumsy block letters spelling out the name PRINCE OF FLOWERS.
Once, perhaps, an imperial concubine had entertained herself with its fey posturing, and so passed the wet silences of a long green season. For the rest of the afternoon it was Helen’s toy. She posed it and sent its robes dancing in the twilit room, the frail arms and tiny wrists twitching in a marionette’s waltz.”
Listen to this week's Pseudopod.