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Intervention

“The squash is almost ready,” she says, when she hears me come in. “Go ahead and sit down.”

As I enter the dining room I notice that my plate is half-covered with cheese, a huge pyramid of cheese, built with large cubes nearly two inches square. I stare at the cheese. She brings in the squash and sees me looking at the cheese.

“They weren’t supposed to be that big,” she tells me.

“Why are they?” I ask.

She looks at me. “Fate intervened.”

With those words, I see three ancient women: one measuring out lengths of string, another marking those lengths on enormous blocks of cheese, the third carving the cheese into cubes with a long dark knife.

“Something wrong?”

“No,” I say, “I was just imagining the Cheese Fates.”

“I said Fate, not fates.” The edge in her voice startles me.

We sit down to eat.

“They still might melt,” she says.

I look puzzled.

“On the squash.”

I put a couple of the cubes on my squash. Islands now, in the soft, steamy yellow, the orange cubes seem out of place, unnatural.

The cheese is not melting.

I poke at the cheese with my fork, pressing it deeper into the squash.

“They sure are big,” I say.

“Fate intervened,” she says again, but this time not to me.

I glance at her, then look back at my plate. I begin to hope the cheese will never melt, and that if it doesn’t, perhaps the dark knife will never carve again.

++

Dirk Stratton is a writer who wonders why anyone really needs to know that it is quite likely he has a pirate or two hanging from the branches
of his genealogical tree. Or how old he is. Or where he went to school. Or
that he currently resides in Mead, Washington and is working on a book
about a dog named Lewis.

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