‘Tis the season to
be jelly
Jonathan Elie
walked into the dining room of his semi-subterranean home stretching his arms
before him with conscious delight. It
was good to have arms during the festive season. Maybe there had been a Jesus after all.
It was Christmas
Day and all eight of the remaining family were there at the dining table
including himself. His wife, Lena, the
twins, his father, her mother aunt Enid and uncle Charlie.
They were all
recognisably human. For the moment.
No-one knew what
strange atmospheric quirk had made the human genome so unstable. But instead of producing out-and-out
mutants, the polluted world of 2100 had created a generation of humans who,
when they made contact with a particular set of pollutants, reverted back to various
incarnations of their ancestral forms.
This was because, as one learned professor had explained, the genome
contained bits of where we all came from right back to the origins of life.
The radio was on
constantly even now on Christmas Day so that the regular warnings of chemical
storms could be received and the whole lot of them could decamp into the cellar
in a real emergency.
But Jonathan had
an even better weapon than deep-earth shelter.
He had bought and fitted new anti pollutant filters to all the
ventilators in the building. These were
supposed to filter everything but normal air in either direction and they
seemed to be working for none of the family had reverted for quite a few days.
The whole family
waited as Jonathon said grace. They started
with worm soup, then he carved up the two four-legged turkeys so that they
could get a leg each. This type of
turkey had been bred some ten years before but had only come on the market this
Christmas because the breeders had just figured out a way to catch them.
They had a GM
brussels sprout the size of a basketball to share out, letter potatoes so that
they each had their name on the plate, bouncing peas, and radioactive pudding
to follow.
A howling storm
arose outside. From experience the
family agreed it was going at least 180 miles an hour. Jonathon wasn’t too worried about the house
being damaged, buried as it was halfway inside a hill, (they were all made like
that these days.)
The digital radio
on the side cabinet came to life and the automated Wogan they used for such
events said in a pleasing brogue:
“Sure, and the
weather’s getting up a bit,” meaning that a severe storm was hitting
Scotland. This also applied to chemical
fallout. Jonathon prayed that the new
filters would hold.
They didn’t.
As the family sat
together there was a subtle change in the atmosphere of the room. Jonathan stood up ready to announce their
removal to the sealed cellar supplied by pumped in oxygen. But the first change took place.
Grandfather turned
into a bow-legged caveman while grandmother became a small lemurlike creature
who searched his hairy hide for fleas.
The twins, Castor and Pollux became small, chicken sizeed dinosaurs who
ran around the room squawking excitedly.
Lena reverted to a slothlike creature who promptly hooked on to the
chandelier and hung there upside down dreamily scratching her backside.
Uncle turned into
a lungfish on stilted legs who fell off his seat with a wet plop. Auntie became a small rodent with greenish
fur who squeaked in fear as she ran around avoiding the dinosaurs who snapped
at everything with their serrated teeth.
The walls seemed
to rise around Jonathon and as his arms and legs receded into his body he
realised he was turning back into the most primitive ancestor of all. As his hearing faded he heard the autoWogan
say:
“And now me lads
and lassies, a seasonal hymn, ‘Tis the season to be jolly”.
Jonathon corrected
this wearily in his mind. To be jelly,
he thought, not jolly. Jelly.
He squealched
wearily under the table out of the way and prayed that the children did not
revert back to human form first.
He didn’t want to
be served up with the pudding.