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Dirt Complaining and Dirt Harkening were a long-buried married couple.
âI havenât minded being dead one bit,â said Dirt Complaining. âBut now weâve got space aliens nosing around. And theyâre curious about totem poles? Why did you men even make those things?â
âWe were great artists,â said Dirt Harkening.
âFools conjuring up cosmic forces.â
âI miss potlatch,â said Dirt Harkening. âThatâs what Iâve missed most, down here in the Earthâs dirt.â
âPotlatch again,â said Dirt Complaining. âHa! All you big chiefs, pretending to be above all wealth, so spiritual, so potent! Whose robes and amulets were you burning and throwing into the sea? Womenâs crafts, womenâs treasures!â
âEasy come, easy go,â said Dirt Harkening. âWith flying saucers in the sky, our whole Earth is in play. But come what may, dear wifeâour squabbles donât matter anymore.â
âThe heirs of our dead flesh still walk the Earth, husband.â
âThe living take no account of us. People have forgotten that sacred truth was captured in the mighty symbolism of our totem poles. Even though the saucers understand.â
âYour totem poles were vulgar,â said Dirt Complaining. âBig phallic brags !â
âWe artists like that sort of thing. A totem pole that stands up good and stiffâvery fine.â
âLetâs see how this ends,â said Dirt Complaining.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
Ida lowered her combat binoculars. She had pale skin, a heart-shaped face and a bob of lustrous dark hair. âItâs a shame that nobody sees the point of our struggle. What if weâre wrong?â
Kalinin adjusted his brimless fur Cossack hat. He was a bony, waxy-skinned warrior with high cheekbones and a great beak of a nose. âYou and I will be heroes,â he said, looking tenderly upon Ida. âOnce we learn how to kill this race of flying saucers.â
âBut the saucers are saving the very Earth that mankind destroyed!â
âIf you wash an apple before eating it, do you do that for the appleâs good?â
Heaped with garbage, a chain of filthy diesel trucks lumbered toward the vast scar of the coal mine, here in the Donbass region of the Ukraine. One after another, with distant groans and screeches, the great trucks dumped their trash. It was high noon, with a glaring sun.
The alien creatures had three primary formsâone for the air, one for the sea, and one fearsome form that infested the Earth itself.
The air invaders resembled classic flying saucers. They haunted Earthâs skylines, absorbing pollutants. In their seagoing form, the saucers took on shapes like whales. They devoured poison gyres of floating plastic with their ivory teeth, and filtered toxins with their dark baleen. And the subterranean saucers were colossal, rubbery, saucer worms. They infested mankindâs mines and landfills, erasing every scrap of poison they found.
Thanks to the aliens, the withered fields and rain forests, stricken by every form of human rapacity, were blooming again. Happy dolphins and gallant tuna swam the open seas. Wild pigs roamed the taiga like the wind. The planetâs molten poles were freezing again as the rising seas receded.
The very largest of the chthonic saucer worms was here in a Donbass coal mine. Kalininâs sworn goal in life was to kill this worm. For weeks, militarized Russian diesel trucks had been dumping nuclear waste into the mine, filling it with choice bait for the saucers. Lured by this bonanza of filth, an armada of the flying saucers had burrowed into the shaft and had merged their bodies to form a vast and lumpy worm.
Sheltered by a rampart of wet sandbags, Kalanin and Ida watched one of the great, silvery saucers fly by overhead. Kalininâs ragtag paramilitary warriors set up a rousing antiaircraft fire