Organic Fiction
by Bryce, by ReLeaf

Shoal Creek, 2045

The creek behind Pease Park had become a clock that did not care about numbers. If you stood in the shallows and kept still, your feet would feel the current move forward and backward, like a breath that could not make up its mind. People came to watch it at dusk. Some brought stools and a thermos of hibiscus tea. Some brought questions. I brought a small boy who was me.

He wore a bright yellow T-shirt with a cracked graphic of a dinosaur on a skateboard. His hair stuck up in front, a cowlick that would follow him for decades. He had the quick, darting eyes of a kid who likes to build things, not because an adult told him to, but because the world makes more sense when your hands are full.

“Are you really me,” he said.

“I am,” I said. “Seventy, give or take.”

“You look like my grandpa would look,” he said. “If I had one like that.”

“You do,” I said. “He taught you how to fix a chain on a bike with your fingers and a butter knife. You will not forget that.”

The boy nodded as if he already knew. We stood in the shade of a cedar elm and listened to the water touching limestone. Beneath the surface, a pale mesh like lace glowed with a faint, patient light. The city had learned how to speak to the mycelium and how to listen. In return, the mycelium ran the lights on footbridges, balanced the market gardens, carried weather in whispers, and fed the taste of fresh bread back into the ovens that baked it. The more people used it, the more it thrived, and the more it thrived, the more the city hummed. We called it the Common Thread. Nobody owned it. Everybody tended it.

A grackle on the railing tapped a rhythm that sounded like a question and an answer. It was that kind of afternoon. Up the hill, along Lamar, traffic was slower than it used to be. Drivers did not hurry because they had fewer reasons to run late. Most goods found their way through neighborhood depots that pulsed in step with the fungal network under them. Money had turned into something else. People called it rings. Not like jewelry. Rings like trees have, the count of a year, a memory of rain. When you offered work or care or a story, a ring rippled out from you and into the Thread. When you needed food or a bed or a wrench, a ring came back. Some people said it felt like being carried by a river. Others said it felt like coming home to a kitchen where someone had already set out a bowl with your name.

The boy crouched and picked up a flat stone. He held it with both hands the way you hold a thought you do not want to lose.

“So how do we talk,” he said. “If you’re in the future and I’m here.”

“The creek helps,” I said. “Think of it as a door that forgot to be a wall.”

He skimmed the stone. It kissed the surface three times and then sank. Concentric circles traveled upstream and down. I felt them against my ankles, a gentle tapping, like someone knocking from another room.

“You’re ten,” I said. “There is a book you will read next summer that will make you want to build a tiny city out of cardboard. You will paint lanes for bikes and leave spaces for trees. You will design a library with a glass roof that opens like gills. You will think it’s pretend. Try not to treat it like pretend.”

He squinted at me. His eyes grew careful.

“Does everything get bad first,” he said.

“It gets hard,” I said. “Not in one big crash. In long afternoons. In work that frays your patience. In leaders who talk in circles. In the way a friend can leave without telling you why. But then the creek starts doing this. And people get tired of being hungry next to full dumpsters. They get tired of counting their worth in piles that cast a shadow on their sleep. They pull up the parking lots, one by one. They learn how to grow food in the margins. They decide to stop leaving anyone outside. It is slow, then it is faster than you thought possible.”

He stood and wiped his wet hands on his shirt. A cyclist coasted by on a path that ran right over the creek on a new deck of reclaimed cypress. The deck vibrated with a soft tone, the Thread singing to itself under our feet. The city had learned to drape power lines with vines that ate heat and fed light back to the line. The old bills vanished, replaced by a feed that showed how much your block had given and taken. Blocks kept the numbers low for need and high for care. It felt like a friendly game that never ended, only changed shape.

“What about me,” the boy said.

“You will learn the names of plants,” I said. “Pothos at first. You will nest them in cans you cut with a steady hand. You will grow a thousand from a dozen. You will see that patience is a kind of multiplication. You will build websites that hold the city like a clean bowl. You will fight with code at two in the morning and fall asleep on the couch. You will wake to birds and try again. You will find love and lose it. You will carry that loss to the creek and set it in the water like a small boat. Then you will watch it drift both ways at once. You will keep walking.”

“Do I get mean,” he asked. “Like old people sometimes get.”

“You get plain,” I said. “Like a piece of wood that has been sanded for years. You say what you mean. You rest when you need to. You learn how to listen to someone who is wrong without trying to fix them. Sometimes you still try. That’s fine.”

From the north, a slow wind came through the pecans, smelling of tortillas and damp stone. The Thread pulsed. Nearby, two teenagers balanced on a log over a narrow run of water, holding hands, laughing when their shoes touched the surface and sent up little bursts of light. I remembered other decades when a light like that meant an alert, a bill due, a warning in an app, a red dot that pulled your attention one more time than you had to give. This glow was nothing like that. It said here you are. It said we noticed your step.

“People say time is a line,” the boy said. “Like a road.”

I shook my head.

“Time is a creek in a city that finally learned its own name,” I said. “Some days it flows toward the past. Some days it slides into the next hour before you can catch it. Most days it does both, and you learn to hold two feelings at once without dropping either.”

“What two feelings,” he said.

“Fear and a clear morning,” I said.

He looked at his hands. He looked at mine. He lifted his chin. It was a movement I knew from photographs and mirrors. It was small and stubborn, like a seed that refuses to doubt dirt. He was not trying to look brave for me. He was trying to make room in his throat for his breath.

“Like this,” he said.

“Exactly,” I said. “You will need that.”

We walked along the bank. The footing was better than it used to be. The city had replaced broken concrete with pavers that let rain soak in. Between the stones, mint grew in tight little patches, giving off a clean scent when your heel pressed them. We passed a kiosk where people sent recipes back and forth through the Thread. A woman in a straw hat swapped a month of compost turning for a set of sharpened chisels. A man taught a class under the trees about how to read the weather by the taste of the air, then took rings of gratitude from the crowd and sent most of them to a shelter that had turned into a school that had turned into a set of studios that never closed. The studios were warm at night without burning anything. The Thread did that. Use made energy, and energy made more use. Nobody called it magic. They called it normal.

“Do we still have money,” the boy said.

“We have memory,” I said. “The Thread remembers the work and the joy, the meals served and the gutters cleared, the lullabies and the lunches. It returns what you seed. You can keep numbers in a wallet if you want. You can also keep apples in your pocket and that might be better.”

He thought about that. He had a way of staring at a problem as if it had a knob that would give if he put his thumb in the right place. It would serve him later. It would also keep him awake on nights when he should sleep. He would learn to close the lid of the day and say that is enough for now.

“You said there is a transition,” he said. “You said it is difficult and imminent. When does it start.”

“It started before you asked,” I said. “It starts every time someone chooses to carry more than their share up a flight of stairs and does not ask for applause. It starts when a city lets go of a habit. When a kid refuses to be embarrassed about caring. When a creek decides not to hurry. When a network under our feet says, I am here, use me, and we answer, we will.”

He nodded, then scuffed the dirt with his sneaker, drawing a circle without looking down. He did that when he was thinking. He drew on any surface that would take a mark. His teachers would either love him or ask him to stop. Sometimes both.

“Does the world get better,” he said. “Like really better, not pretend.”

“It does,” I said. “Not in a straight line. In rings. The city stops throwing people away. The food tastes like the place it came from. The air has a small sweetness on cold mornings. You still cry in kitchens. You still wait for phone calls that never arrive. You still stand at windows and the sky does not tell you what to do. But the floor under your feet is steadier. You are less alone in your questions.”

He looked up at me, measuring the shape of my answer. I could see him decide to believe most of it and keep a corner of doubt in his pocket for later. That was wise.

“Will I still like riding my bike,” he said.

“You will like it more,” I said. “You will ride to meet friends under a canopy of solar leaves that sound like a river. You will ride to the library where the doors open because the floor recognized your step and gave you a small song. You will ride to the creek on nights when the water throws the moon back at itself and wonder how you stayed away this long.”

“Do we ever leave Austin,” he said.

“We leave and come back,” I said. “We learn other sidewalks. We miss this one. We bring back seeds, recipes, patches of code, a phrase in another language that makes our throat sit differently. The Thread learns those too.”

We stopped where the bank widened into a small gravel beach. On a boulder someone had hammered a plaque out of tin. The letters were simple. It said LISTEN HERE. Below the words was a mapping of lines that looked like a subway map in a city with only one line that always doubled back to itself. People had started to trace conversations on the plaque with their fingers, leaving a polish where countless touches had taken the dullness off the metal.

“Can I ask one more thing,” he said. “Do we do the right thing. Not every time. Mostly.”

“We try,” I said. “We fail. We try again. We build systems that make it easier to do the right thing than the lazy thing. We ask our neighbors what they need, not what we think they should need. We learn that abundance feels better when it moves. We let go of a few fears. We carry a few that are worth carrying.”

He looked at the water. He put his hand on the rock with the plaque and he listened. He did not look back at me for a long time. The glow under the surface brightened, as if a long slow thought had reached the end of itself and wanted to rest. I felt the current turn. My ankles knew it first.

“Do I have to go,” he said.

“For now,” I said. “There are years you still need to live in order. Algebra and rainy Saturdays and the first time a record makes you feel like a sickness is leaving your chest. There is a friend you will meet under the awning of a shop on a wet day. Do not rush past him. Ask his name twice so you get it right.”

He nodded. He picked up another stone. He held it, then put it in his pocket.

“What about you,” he said. “Are you busy. Do you still work.”

“I tend,” I said. “I tend code and gardens, a small group of people who write strange sentences and pin them on strings between trees. I tend the Thread by using it. I take long walks. I mend things that would break in sad ways if left alone. I try to keep my hands from learning only one shape.”

“That sounds like work,” he said.

“It is,” I said. “But it pays in mornings.”

He smiled. It was quick and sideways. He bent, touched the water, and then he was not there. The ripples went both directions again. My older hand tingled where I had reached for him and stopped short. The grackle cocked its head, as if counting. The cyclist on the deck rolled past without looking up. The woman at the kiosk pinned another recipe to the ledger and the ledger flashed, then settled.

I stood alone on the gravel and listened to the creek continue its steady, unsure breathing. I did not feel sad. I felt a precise kind of hunger, the kind you get when you smell onions in a pan from down the hall. There would be dinner, and it would taste right, and there would be dishes after. The world was not cured, but it had found a practice that kept it from falling apart.

Behind me, a child laughed. Ahead of me, the Thread pulsed, and the lights on the footbridge responded with a low ripple. I lifted my chin, just a little, the way a boy had shown me. Then I stepped into the water until it covered my shoes, and the creek held both directions open long enough for me to feel the weight of them and choose the one that brought me home.

🚮 W.A.S.T.E.: Words Assisting Sustainable Transformation & Ecology

Term Definition
Bryce

A wandering steward of stories and seedlings, moving between libraries and creeks with pockets full of cuttings and unfinished sentences, leaving behind fragments that root themselves into community.

Circular Economy

The linear take-make-waste model is failing. The circular economy offers a regenerative, restorative path.

This section shows how ReLeaf in Austin, Texas, puts that approach to work. Through articles and Organic Fiction, we document practical steps toward sustainable, democratic, and equitable exchange.

ReLeaf helps unlock dormant spaces for shared income and supports Austin’s Zero Waste goals. The team is not only imagining a better future. They are building it.

Picture a city where waste is rare, materials cycle again and again, and success includes social and environmental gains.

Join us as we trace Austin’s shift to a circular economy and consider how the same principles can scale worldwide to create shared prosperity and lasting sustainability.

Creekback

The soft push at your ankles when Shoal Creek sends ripples both upstream and downstream. People feel it as a quiet yes from the past.

Cultural Shift

This section tracks how values, habits, and public space change when a city commits to circular practice. In Austin, neighbors trade skills, repair before buying, and design for reuse. Rings of contribution replace price tags. Libraries, depots, and gardens become the new main street. The mycelial network carries stories, trust, and logistics. Culture moves from me to we without losing room for individual expression.

What you will find here: • Signals: new words, rituals, and cues that mark progress. • Practices: repeatable actions you can start this week. • Places: sites where the change is already visible. • Stories: Organic Fiction that lets readers rehearse the future. • Metrics: simple counts that show whether care is growing.

Use this to learn, copy what works, and leave your own trace. The shift is live. Help steer it.

Grackleclock

The syncopated tapping of grackles that lines up with the city’s time flow. A public rhythm you can set your day to.

Mintstep

The clean snap of scent released by the mint between the pavers along the creek. It signals steady footing and readiness to help.

Ringweather

The shift in the air when a block’s giving outweighs its taking. Windows feel easier to open. Strangers talk like neighbors.

Shoal Creek

Shoal Creek is changing. At the Seaholm Intake, the water and stone hold a new role for the city. Engineers and naturalists are close to confirming a time-bending effect in the current. Short pulses move both downstream and upstream. Standing near the intake leaves people rested and clear, as if a long afternoon just ended.

This site becomes a public time commons. The cooled chambers host sensors and quiet rooms. The walkway links to Central across the water. The mycelium network listens, then routes what the creek gives: steadier attention, better recall, and a calm pace for work and care.

What to expect:

Check-in stones that log a short visit and return a focus interval

Benches that sync with the flow and guide five-minute rest cycles

A simple light on the rail that signals when the current flips

A small desk for field notes and shared observations

Open data on pulse times so neighbors can plan repairs, study, and gatherings

Invitation

Come without hurry. Sit by the intake. Let the water set your pace. Then carry that steadiness back into the city.

Threadglow

A low vibration underfoot when the mycelium network recognizes you. Footbridges answer with a faint light that follows your step.