“I think that’s the new world.”
Sandy’s voice was matter-of-fact in a way only she knew how: like she’d discovered a thing she’d forgot the day before but that was now again clear in her mind, indisputable and beyond any reasoning except her own. Which it usually was.
“Hmm?” I surveyed her from the corner of my eye. She lay stretched on the park grass, squinting at the sun and the blue sky above.
“The clouds, they’re the new world”, Sandy clarified. “I mean, just look at them. You can see that there’s, like, a shape to them. Forms in them, like some bits are higher and some lower. Like lowlands and plains and then mountains here and there and they have that thing going on, that, well you know…”
“Topography, you mean?”
“Yeah!” she yelped. “That’s the word! So anyway. They have the topo-thingy to them, just like Earth has. And they have the sky seas around ’em, just like Earth has, sorta. And they’re there, within our reach. That has to mean something. It’s the new world that we will go to once we’ve polluted and messed up Earth too far. And then we’ll just live in the cloud world, I guess.”
I turned my head to give her an are-you-serious-look. “Are you serious?”
“Like a heart attack.” Sandy lounged on the grass, enjoying her train of thought and its ride as it choo-chooed up into the air and into the clouds. “You know me.” She stuck a few fingers into the tangle of her carrot hair.
“Your mom must have drunk bong water while she was pregnant with you. Nobody could – – “
Sandy shook her head and tittered. “Shut up, you dork!” She threw a hasty slap at my shoulder and nudged me playfully.
Laugh bubbled in her throat as fingers dug softly in my skin and she surveyed me with a cocked eyebrow and blew a raspberry at me. “You’re a dork”, she informed me, “and dorks aren’t gonna be cool in the new world so you better be careful.”
“Okay, Cloud Princess”, I smiled back. “If the clouds are the new world, like… I dunno…”
“Like the clouds are the continents and the sky’s the sea between ‘em”, she explained patiently.
“Okay, like that. So what are the thin wispy clouds, then? Ones that are like cotton candy? We couldn’t live on those, could we?”
Her eyes rolled in the duh-motion typical to her. “Duh.” She pulled her knees up and rocked herself into a sitting position, observing the tattered clouds with the airs and graces of an academian tutoring her intellectual subordinate.
“Well, Mr. Dorky McDork, the wisps are the islands and the marshlands. You’re going to have some places with more damp soil down here so you’re bound to have something like that in the new world, too.” Sandy mimed the playing of a banjo and cracked a stupid smile. “Born on the Bayou”, she laughed as she set herself back to the grass. “Dontcha worry, delta child, ah know what ah’m tokin’ ‘bout.”
Her hands lifted to shade her eyes as she considered her future world. “Naturally, you’ll need to be careful in those areas so you won’t drown in the sky oceans”, Sandy admitted, dropping the mock hillbilly drawl. “But that’s just life, dude. Life in the new world.”
“And what about the fact that the clouds are up there?” I pressed her further. “You know, if the sky is the sea, then we’d need to live upside down in the cloud continents, wouldn’t we? Ain’t we gonna fall down, Your Royal Highness?”
Sandy shrugged as if there was no problem. “That’s just a question of point of view, ain’t it. Who says we are right as we are with our feet on the ground and head up towards the sky? It could be that the right way is actually the other way, like with your feet on the clouds and the head towards the Earth.” She laughed. “So don’t think you know it all, wiseass.”
“Fair enough.” With Sandy, it wasn’t so much about thinking outside the box; there was no box to start with. “One last question before I start looking for properties on Sky Mountain: how are we all going to get up there? I mean, all of mankind. Last time I checked, spaceships were expensive and crammed as hell.”
Sandy’s response was to scratch her freckled nose. She had a habit of doing that when she was deep in thought. “It’s going to be a global project, of course”, Sandy weighed her options, “and no doubt all governments are going to have to chip in. But of course they will. Mutual benefit, see.”
She paused and closed her eyes. “I’m not sure quite yet if it’s going to a vast fleet of supermegaspaceships or if a super-elevator to the sky would be the better idea. I mean, the ships would need to come down every now and then and it would mean fuel costs. The elevator would be slower, sure, but more cost-effective. Maybe. I’ll still need to think about it.”
I turned to my side and quietly looked at her. I felt solemn as I watched her think about her project that would save mankind and bring about the new world in the clouds. Sandy wore clothes a size or half a size too small: this was why her bleached denim short shorts and v-necked t-shirt accentuated her form a bit more than was necessary.
I always told her she didn’t need to dress like that, but Sandy had a mind of her own about such things. “Rocking that tight shit makes a girl look goooood. Ain’t nobody that don’t know that”, she pouted to me once after I’d protested against her getting another set of clothes that she was an inch too big for comfort.
And in some ways, I just couldn’t disagree: seeing how the fabrics hugged her body tightly, I regularly found myself thinking how I’d love to unbutton her shorts and tear off that shirt in a frenzy to get to her thighs, to the curve of her hips and the angles of her shoulders. The soft skin and the freckles that marked her in selected places. Gateways to what was her.
Sandy plucked a bit of grass between her fingers and rubbed it absent-mindedly on her thigh, leaving a green stain. “Think I’ll call it Project Staircase”, she mused. “Or Project Sandy’s Staircase, if I’m feeling vain.”
I shifted around to my other side so she wouldn’t see how my eyes welled up with tears.