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I Want to Share Your Wheat
"I want to share your wheat," said the visitor. Its voice was that of a
demanding know-it-all child, straight out of Bart Simpson, cartoon method actor.
"Rye or oatmeal?" I was trying to concentrate, and hilarity was not my strong
suit at the moment. "That was a joke. You are a psychosis; go away." I was
frustrated. This interruption I did not need.
The visitation on the desktop looked like a drunk gray mouse who took a wrong
turn headed home from a party. It had pointy gray ears topped off with some kind
of headgear that looked like an upside-down colander wrapped up with strings of
those triangular flags that festoon the lots of used car dealerships. He was
wearing green tights.
"I want to share your wheat," repeated the visitor, dipping his head in my
direction. The colander bobbed, the flags flapped.
It was a sunny January morning in our coastal Maine village, and I had just
settled down at the keyboard for the day's exercise in futility. When I'd quit
my job in October and settled in to write my novel, it was all green lights and
blue skies, lollipops and rainbows. Bonnie, my wife, had her job―and Blue Cross
for us both―at the nearby rural elementary school. We'd had four cords of wood
in the shed, and were up to date on the credit cards. Since then, I had turned
out kilobytes of turgid, wordy prose decorated by two-dimensional characters
that not even I cared about.
Then the visitation.
"My wheat. You want to share my wheat. Right. You are a manifestation of mental
complications brought on by the frustration and despair I am currently enjoying.
Get lost."
"They told me you might be difficult. I am a mouse demon, your regional
representative from Sminthian Apollo. Please may I share your wheat?"
There was that magic word. Leaving me to figure things out, the demon became
engrossed with a pad of Post-Its and ambled back and forth across my desktop,
idly tacking them up in no obvious pattern.
While he was strolling and sticking, I called up an Internet search engine and
typed in "Sminthian." An article on Homer's Iliad and a reference to Apollo the
Mouse-god popped on the screen.
"You people have quite a history. Can you speak Greek?"
"I speak what I speak. At the moment, I am fluent in your local patois, buddy."
"I'm very happy for you," I said. "I keep my wheat out back with the buggy
harnesses and the spare axe handles." He didn't get it.
"Thank you very much." And he disappeared. No sulphur, no brimstone, just went.
The Post-Its reassembled themselves into a pad and I continued with my writing.

"Uh, we have a problem." He was back.
"We? We 'have a problem'? So glad you've included yourself in my delusion."
"Alas, someone has made off with your wheat. All you have in your back room is a
washer-dryer combo and a sack of rock salt. I don't share salt; I share wheat.
You lied to me." The demon sat down next to my cup of pencils and drew a paisley
handkerchief from his green tights. His shoulders heaved with overdone sobs as
he did a method actor slump and tried to look dejected. "You never did have the
buggy harnesses and the axe handles, did you? All the time it was just the
washer-dryer combo and the rock salt. Is this one of your 'jokes?' We do not
make jokes where I come from."
He put kerchief to nose and, for an eight-inch figment, executed a mighty honk.
"If you will simply tell me where you keep your wheat, so that I may share it,
we may get on with things."
"Things? You mean if I give you my wheat, you'll barter me a book contract for
my soul?"
"That falls in the category of three wishes and frog kissing―kinky stuff like
that. I'm about sharing wheat. You know, ritual hospitality and all that. When I
grant a boon to such as you, it's usually for a Volvo station wagon. Volvo
wagons are my specialty. After wheat." He honked again, refolded the
handkerchief, and stuffed it back in his tights.
"And I am not a delusion. I am a mouse demon. We bring plague or healing; your
choice." He held his hands behind his back. "Left or right? Choose please. I
have other calls to make."
"I am going certifiable or you are an early sign of senile dementia. Am I
correct in this?"
"Come on, pick a hand."
I eyed both hands warily and the demon delivered an edgy, well, demonic, laugh.
Bart Simpson, kid from hell, had just stuffed a load of toads down Lisa's back.
He brought his hands forward; both were empty.
"The hands thing is my little joke. You don't get a choice."
Maybe I did have a choice. I became cagey, recalling Rumplestiltskin. "Where do
I fit in this agenda of yours: extirpation complete and final, or something more
user-friendly? You could spin my book into gold, or just disappear. Either way
suits me fine. How's about I guess your name and win a prize?"
"My name is Prosper," said the demon. "How's about I guess yours?"
"Listen, if you're selling Volvos, I don't need a car. You're sure you don't buy
souls where you're from?"
"Could be, but first, I must share wheat. But I can tell you where your cat
went. The gray shorthair, half Burmese?"
My wife and I had searched for the cat for over a week, slowly driving around
our little town, stopping, calling. We figured a coyote got him. He was a
champion mouser; we mourned, and then made do with traps. The demon was leading
me, so I went for it. "Okay. Where's the cat?"
"Here's your freebie. After this, we're really dealing. There is a dead cat
under your house―your cat. I contacted his spirit. He ate poison bait at the
neighbor's last August."
"Clayton Dudman?"
"C. Enright Dudman the Third is correct. He was spiking coyotes and got your cat
instead. The cat asks you to forgive him for not coming home. He was dead at the
time, and couldn't make it. He now enjoys life on a happier plane."
"Where the deer and the antelope roam?"
"And seldom is heard a discouraging word, yes, yes. So pleased you still study
the classics in your time. Yes, the cat is in Paradise. As are we mice," he
added brushing a piece of invisible lint from his green union suit.
"Meaning Paradise is where you come from?" Prosper took a deep bow. "That
colander you have on your head doesn't do much to inspire trust in a
supranatural agency."
"The Helmet of Cleptath is mine by right of single combat, a mighty battle over
the cheese of the gods. My opponent and I fought each other to exhaustion.
Everybody was talking about it. With the Helmet I can compress time and
distance; anywhere and anywhen are to me as a trip to the donut shop is to you."
"It's a colander."
"Yes, some might name it thus, in its former, humble existence."
"And the festoons of pennants?"
"Festoons? Oh, these cute little flags. Festive, aren't they? They're from a
used car dealership, Eddie Bartleby's in Bangor, my last stop. They wouldn't
share their wheat, either. Eddie Bartleby made a joke. I did not like that. Now,
they are a crater surrounded by smoldering wreckage and yellow police tape. And
the single combat, by the way, was with Artemis, Sister of Apollo. We were
draining curds together."
"Look, Prosper," I said with an inspired piece of improvisation, "why don't you
check in Clayton Dudman's barn? I'll bet he has a lot of wheat all bagged up.
And yours for the asking." I recalled Clayton laced his storage grain with
anticoagulants to knock off mice and rats. Clayton was big on poisons.
"That's right neighborly of you," said Prosper. And he disappeared again.

The next morning when I went to boot up the computer, Prosper was there by the
cup of pencils.
"Thank you for sharing your wheat," he said, "but I have sad news. Clayton
Dudman has died of a heart attack. Myocardial infarction, to be precise. Quite
apoplectic, that fellow: he should really have had it seen to. I told him that
you had said he would share his wheat, and he insisted all the wheat in his barn
really belonged to you. Right up to the end. A sturdy fellow, that Clayton."
"Uh, just what have you done with the wheat?"
"I took it all home and shared the gift of wheat, as you shared with me. And for
this, you shall be blessed with a boon."
"A boon. Huh. One wish, huh? Well, times are hard all over. And your folk―the
wheat eaters?"
"Mouse demons all," said Prosper. "Anticoagulants are as ketchup to us. The
other chaps loved the poisoned wheat, too. It was they voted you your boon. I,
myself, am in the service of Apollo, god of poetry and envelope flap literature.
Ketchup and the arts are antithetical. Gifted with the colander I wrestled from
Artemis, I shall teach you the enchantments to put just under where it says,
'fold and moisten to seal,' and as Prosper, I shall name thee Caliban and teach
you to sing. That's a Shakespearean reference. Surely one who knows "Home on the
Range" is conversant with the Bard."
"Sing? Oh, you mean write. Write like Shakespeare? Wow. Write what?"
"As a token of our esteem for all the poisoned wheat, we've secured for you a
contract writing advertising blurbs for the inside envelope flaps of credit card
bills. We are mouse demons, and our powers are limited."
"Uh, don't I sign something? A contract with Satan?"
"There are some names we don't utter, buddy. We're the good guys. The paperwork
is complete, no signature necessary. The cat has given his soul for you. He is
happy in Pussy Paradise. And C. Enright Dudman the Third has evened the score
for poisoning the cat. Enjoy the writing job."

Well, that was five years ago, and my writing career has blossomed. Under the
doors and into the mailboxes of America, not a month goes by without every
over-spending, under-funded householder reading my work. Perhaps you've seen my
latest? Discount Cruises and Free CD player-radio combo offer with Platinum Card
upgrade!
copyright 2002 Rob Hunter
I Want to Share Your Wheat
was first published in the September/October 2002 issue of
Demensions-Doorways to Science Fiction and Fantasy