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Rivers Solomon - The Deep

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Rivers Solomon The Deep
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    The Deep
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    Gallery / Saga Press
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  • Year:
    2019
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    New York
  • ISBN:
    978-1-5344-3986-3
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The Deep: summary, description and annotation

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The water-breathing descendants of African slave women tossed overboard have built their own underwater societyand must reclaim the memories of their past to shape their future in this brilliantly imaginative novella inspired by the Hugo Award nominated song The Deep from Daveed Diggs rap group Clipping. Yetu holds the memories for her peoplewater-dwelling descendants of pregnant African slave women thrown overboard by slave ownerswho live idyllic lives in the deep. Their past, too traumatic to be remembered regularly, is forgotten by everyone, save onethe historian. This demanding role has been bestowed on Yetu. Yetu remembers for everyone, and the memories, painful and wonderful, traumatic and terrible and miraculous, are destroying her. And so, she flees to the surface, escaping the memories, the expectations, and the responsibilitiesand discovers a world her people left behind long ago. Yetu will learn more than she ever expected to about her own pastand about the future of her people. If they are all to survive, theyll need to reclaim the memories, reclaim their identityand own who they really are.

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Rivers Solomon

with Daveed Diggs, William Hutson, and Jonathan Snipes

THE DEEP

To the ornery and ill-tempered

R. S.

This book and the song for which its named would not exist without the work of Gerald Donald and James Stinson.

clipping.
1 IT WAS LIKE DREAMING SAID Yetu throat raw Shed been weeping for days - photo 1

1

IT WAS LIKE DREAMING, SAID Yetu, throat raw. Shed been weeping for days, lost in a remembering of one of the first wajinru.

Then wake up, Amaba said, and wake up now. What kind of dream makes someone lurk in shark-dense waters, leaking blood like a fool? If I had not come for you, if I had not found you in time Amaba shook her head, black water sloshing over her face. Do you wish for death? Is that why you do this? You are grown now. Have been grown. You must put those childish whims behind you. Amaba waved her front fins forcefully as she lectured her daughter, the movements troubling the otherwise placid water.

I do not wish for death, said Yetu, resolute despite the quiet of her worn voice.

Then what? What else would make you do something so foolish? Amaba asked, her fins a bevy of movement.

Yetu strained to feel Amabas words over the chorus of ripples, her skin drawn away from the delicate waves of speech and toward the short, powerful pulses brought on by her amabas gesticulations.

Answer me! Amaba said, her tone desperate and screeching.

Most of the time, Yetu kept her senses dulled. As a child, shed learned to shut out what she could of the world, lest it overwhelm her into fits. But now she had to open herself back up, to make her body a wound again so Amabas words would ring against her skin more clearly.

Yetu closed her eyes and honed in on the vibrations of the deep, purposefully resensitizing her scaled skin to the onslaught of the circus that is the sea. It was a matter of reconnecting her brain to her body and lowering the shields shed put in place in her mind to protect herself. As she focused, the world came in. The water grew colder, the pressure more intense, the salt denser. She could parse each granule. Individual crystals of the flaky white mineral scraped against her.

Even though Yetu always kept herself tense against the oceans intrusions, they found their way in; but with her senses freshly unreined, the rush of feeling was dizzying. This was nothing like the faraway throbbing shed grown used to when she threw all her energy into repelling the world outside. The push and pull of nearby currents upended her. The flutter of a school of fangfish reverberated deep in her chest. How did other wajinru manage this all the time?

Where did you go just now? Are you dreaming yet again? asked Amaba, sounding more defeated than angry. Her voice cracked into splintered waves, rough against Yetus skin.

I am here, Amaba. I promise, said Yetu quietly, exhaustedly, though she wasnt sure that was true. Adrift in a memory that wasnt hers, she hadnt been present when shed brought herself to the sharks to be feasted upon. How could she be sure she was here now?

Yetu needed to recover her composure. Shed never done something that dangerous before. She had lost more control of her abilities than shed realized. The rememberings were always drawing her backward into the ancestors memoriesthat was what they were supposed to dobut not at the expense of her life.

Come to me, said Amaba, several paces away. Too weak to argue, Yetu offered no protest. She resigned herself for now to do her amabas biddings. You need medicine, child. And food. When did you last eat?

Yetu didnt remember, but as she took a moment to zero in on the emptiness in her stomach, she was surprised to find the pain of it was a vortex she could easily get lost in. She moved her body, examined its contours. Shed been withering away, and now there was little left of her but the base amounts of outer fat she needed to keep warm in the oceans deepest waters.

As evidenced by her encounter with the sharks, Yetus condition was worsening. With each passing year, she was less and less able to distinguish rememberings from the present.

Eat these. They will help your throat heal, said Amaba, drawing her daughter into her embrace. Yetu floated in the dense, black brine, her amabas fins a lasso about her torso. Come, now. I said eat. Amaba pressed venom leaves into Yetus mouth, humming a made-up lullaby as she did. Water waves from her voice stroked Yetus scales, and though Yetu usually avoided such stimulation, she was pleased to have a tether to the waking world as her connection to it grew more and more precarious. She needed frequent reminders she was more than a vessel for the ancestors memories. She wouldnt let herself disappear. Keep chewing. Thats good. Very good. Now swallow.

Spurred by the promise of pain relief as much as by her amabas prodding, Yetu gagged the medicine down. Venom leaves slithered like slime down her throat and into her belly, and with every swallow she coughed.

See? Isnt that nice? Can you feel it working in you yet?

Cradled in her amabas front fins, Yetu looked but a pup. It was fitting. In this moment, she was as reliant on Amabas care as she had been in infancy. Shed grown from colicky pup into mercurial adolescent into tempestuous adult, still sometimes in need of her amabas deep nurturing.

Given her sensitivity, no one should have been surprised that the rememberings affected Yetu more deeply than previous historians, but then everything surprised wajinru. Their memories faded after weeks or monthsif not through wajinru biological predisposition for forgetfulness, then through sheer force of will. Those cursed with more intact long-term recollection learned how to forget, how to throw themselves into the moment. Only the historian was allowed to remember.

After several moments, the venom leaves took effect, and the pain in Yetus hoarse throat numbed. Other aches soothed too. The stiffness all but disappeared from her neck. Overworked muscles relaxed. Sedated, she could think more clearly now.

Amaba, Yetu said. She was calmer and in a state to better explain what had happened that morning: why shed gone to the sharks, why shed put herself in such danger, why shed threatened the wajinru legacy so selfishly.

If Yetu died doing something reckless and the wajinru were not able to recover her body, the next historian would not be able to harvest the ancestors rememberings from Yetus mind. Bits of the History could be salvaged from the sharks body, assuming they found it, but it was an incredible risk, and no doubt whole sections would be lost.

Worse, the wajinru didnt know who was to succeed Yetu. They may not have had the memories to understand the importance of this fully, but they had an inkling. It had been plain to all for many years that Yetu was a creature on the precipice, and without a successor in place, theyd be lost. Theyd have to improvise.

Previous historians had spent their days roaming the ocean to collect the memories of the living wajinru before they were forgotten. Such a task ensured that the historian understood who was best suited to take on the role after their own death came. In addition to reaching into the minds of wajinru to log the events of the era, historians learned whose minds were electro-sensitive enough to host the rememberings in the future, and shared that information often and repeatedly with other wajinru.

Yetu never did this. The ocean overwhelmed her even when she was in its most quiet portions, and that was before taking on the rememberings. Now that she was the historian, it was even worse, her mind unable to process it all. She couldnt fathom spending her days traveling across the sea only to burden herself with more memories at the end of each journey. Unfortunately for Yetu, when the previous historian had chosen her, hed been so impressed by the sensitivity of her electroreceptors that hed failed to notice her finicky temperament. Yetu loved Bashas memories, loved living inside of his bravery, his tumult. But if ever hed made a mistake, it was choosing Yetu as historian. She couldnt fulfill her most basic of duties. How disappointed he would be in the girl hed chosen. Shed grown up to be so fragile.

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