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Jon Armstrong - Yarn

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Jon Armstrong Yarn

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From the neo-feudalistic slubs, the corn-filled world of Tanes youth, to his apprenticeship among the deadly saleswarriors of Seattlehama--the sex-and-shopping capital of the world--to the horrors of a polluted Antarctica, Yarn tells a stylish tale of love, deceit, and memory.Tane Cedar is the master tailor, the supreme outfitter of the wealthy, the beautiful, and the powerful. When an ex-lover, on the run from the authorities, asks him to create a garment from the dangerous and illegal Xi yarn--a psychedelic opiate--to ease her final hours, Tanes world is torn apart.Armed with just his yarn pulls, scissors, Mini-Air-Juki handheld sewing machine, and his wits, Tane journeys through the shadowy underworld where he must untangle the deadlymysteries and machinations of decades of deceit.Following up on his highly acclaimed and Philip K. Dick Award-nominated fashionpunk novel Grey, Jon Armstrong explodes back on the scene with Yarn.

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YARN

Jon Armstrong

night shade Books san Francisco


Yarn 2010 by Jon Armstrong

This edition of Yarn 2010 by Night Shade Books

Cover art by Anthony Palumbo

Cover design by Ian Morin

Interior layout and design by Ross E. Lockhart

Author photo by Pitchaya Sudbanthad

All rights reserved

First Edition

ISBN: 978-1-59780-210-9

Printed in Canada

Night Shade Books http://www.nightshadebooks.com


To Elba and Caroline


Yarn

I woke early, suffocated by a sweaty and prickling sense of apprehension-exactly the feeling of wool against the skin on a warm day. Yet there, in the dark of my bedroom, the sun seemed impossibly far away. What had set this fear in my veins? None of my current design projects were so difficult or important. I was using a new half-micron twill for a suit, but I had tested the fabric extensively and knew its properties. And though the motor-driven ball gown we were creating was complicated, my assistant and I had spent a whole day installing the mechanics and testing it again and again. No, those projects were essentially complete, and I felt good about their look, materials, and function.

It was no use. Neither sleep nor an answer was forthcoming. I rose, wrapped in swirling unease, and prepared for the day. It was still dark as I drove through the obsidian and gold towers of Ros Begas to the studio. And as I walked the two-hundred-meter metal-and-wood meditation-and-exhibition entry hallway that spiraled in from the building entrance to my showroom front door, I went over the fashion consultations I had scheduled for the day, the calls I needed to make to suppliers, the fabric tests I needed to run, and the gathering swarm of details for an upcoming show. In the hallway, I powered-on the fashion exhibits that I had on display: including two fabric bursting automatons and a pilling analysis machine, and stooped to collect a few dust fibers on the dark wood floor.

At the end of the spiral, I paused at a display that held the yarn I had gotten from my father. It rested on black velvet and was lit with a single heterojunction crystal which bathed the thread with a warm, otherworldly glow, recalling the dawn when I'd pulled this strand from my father's pocket so many years ago. But my memories could not linger because someone or something was lurking beyond the next curve, near the showroom doors.

Peeking around the last swell of the wall, I saw a figure draped head-to-toe with dark fabric-the weave was a deep dark charcoal green, with the slight sheen like L-flax-a fiber I never used. While it wasn't completely unusual for someone to come unannounced, the hour and the dress were suspect. Tentatively, I stepped forward, waiting for the visitor to move or speak. At ten feet away, I stopped and as the milliseconds ticked by in silence, began to fear that this was some sort of an attack, that this laundry pile covered an assassin. But even as I catalogued the properties of my jacket, titled Water Hold #11, with both fluid dynamics and charged particle closures, and thought how I might use it to defend myself, my fear seemed misplaced and wrong. I wet my lips. "The showroom is by appointment only."

The head turned slightly. The voice that emerged was tatty and frail. "I lived a fool's life and will come to a fool's end, but I've come to ask a favor."

The skin on my neck and back puckered with goosebumps. "Vada!" The heels of my Celine-Audis clapped percussive notes on the polished wood. "I never thought I'd see you again. Where have you been? What happened? What are you wearing?"

The outline of an arm came away from the torso and touched the door. A moment later after a small, moist click of what I imagined were her gaunt lips, she said, "I'm sorry. I am dying."

My throat tightened. "No." As though simple denial changed anything. She didn't reply. "Where have you been? What happened?"

"I need help."

"Of course," I said. "What happened? Are you in pain?" Without thinking, I reached my hand to hers.

She shrank back, shaking her head. "I need your help."

Anew, I saw the rumpled, rough material that covered her in contrast to the faultless cut, fine texture, and precise stitching of my garments. Shame flooded me. "I never expected to see you again."

"I had my battles, my deceptions, and my gardens of failure." She spoke like it was her slogan.

I gazed where I imagined were her eyes. "I tried to find you. I even hired a detective, but he found nothing." I wished I could see her face. "Three weeks ago, I was in Kong. You'd never believe it, but there're fifty chrome towers and solar plots there on that old muddy hill. It's completely different."

The cloth shook as she nodded. "You look good, Tane. I'm sorry, but I can't stay. They're closing in."

I wondered what she was running from this time. "You must be hungry allow me to at least feed you."

Beneath the cloth, she straightened. "I need a Xi coat."

Xi yarn. Old, immoral, and drug-infused yarn. "That's not a cure." I gestured at the materials of the hallway as evidence of my wealth: the rare lumber, the hand-poured high-carbon concrete, and the custom-built fabric test machines. "What do you really need, Vada? Surgery? I can get satellite organs."

Her head leaned forward. Wrinkles of the fabric covered her face. "They're just No. I can't go on." Her words were so quiet I barely heard. "It's time I just need pure."

She meant pure Xi, the loving, the universal, the erotic, and the dreaming Xi as opposed to the other kind: dark Xi, skreem Xi, nightmare Xi. It occurred to me that she was wearing the basketweave not so much to hide from the authorities but because she had been disfigured by torture. "Listen," I said, stooping to meet her hidden eyes, "come in and sit. Whoever is after you I'm sure we have a few moments." I reached for where I thought I would find her wrist or forearm, but bumped into what was probably her hip and pulled back.

The pile of basketweave turned as if to leave. "Vada," I began, "I guess I was looking for you because I have been thinking about us. The truth is, in some way, there's been no one else."

"I hope you weren't waiting for me!"

"No." I felt small, though the truth was I had not. "I just mean that" I stopped and chided myself for trying to explain.

"Tane I'm sorry. I understand." Her voice warmed. "I think of you, too. We had an incredible affair."

She had overstated it. "We had eight months," I corrected her. "Two hundred and forty outfits and costumes in about as many days." I tried to keep my tone light, but felt it strain.

"You know who I am."

I nodded and smiled politely. It was always about who she was.

In the stillness of the hallway, I could hear her swallow. "I've heard about you and your work. I'm proud of you. You've made wonderful things." She seemed to laugh for an instant, but then I heard what I thought was a tiny, clenched grunt. She was still for a long moment, and when she finally inhaled a convex of the fabric formed over her mouth.

I stepped toward her, fearful she might collapse, but she backed away.

"Can you please make me a Xi coat?" She exhaled a ragged breath. "I just want to die without pain."

I had absolutely no idea where or how I would get the Xi yarn. "I'll do it."

"I'll come back tomorrow night."

"Tomorrow?" I laughed. "Wait, Vada. First of all, I don't think the yarn is even still made. I would have to find someone who somehow still has some, get it here, weave it into cloth, and then make a jacket." I waited for a reply, but none came. Whispering, I said, "Tomorrow is impossible."

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