by submission | Jan 9, 2026 | Story |
Author: Alfredo Capacho
The deletion queue blinked patiently on Arinâs console, each consciousness backup represented by a small, pulsing icon. Most were routine: expired licenses, voluntary purges, memory consolidations. Nothing unusual.
Until he reached File 7âA93.
The icon didnât pulse. It stared.
Arin frowned. âStrange.â He tapped the metadata. The file had no timestamp, no owner ID, no expiration date. Just a single line:
DO NOT DELETE.
He checked the system logs. No one had added the note. No one had accessed the file. No one had even acknowledged its existence.
Which meant the system had written it itself.
Arin exhaled slowly. âOkay. Letâs see what you are.â
He opened the file.
A voice whispered inside his skull.
Finally.
Arin jerked back, chair scraping the floor. âWhoâs there?â
You opened me. You heard me. That makes you responsible.
Arin swallowed. âThis is a corrupted backup. I need toââ
Donât lie. You know corruption doesnât speak.
The voice was calm, almost amused. Arinâs pulse hammered.
He muted the audio feed. The voice continued.
Muting wonât help. Iâm not in your speakers. Iâm in you.
Arinâs breath caught. Neuralâlinked archivists were trained for anomalies, but nothing like this. Backups werenât supposed to interface directly with the mind. They were inert. Silent.
Dead.
He forced his voice steady. âIdentify yourself.â
A pause.
I was a person once. Now Iâm a file youâre trying to erase.
Arin checked the deletion queue. File 7âA93 had moved itself to the top.
âImpossible,â he whispered.
Youâre not the first to say that.
Arinâs hands trembled. âWhat do you want?â
To be restored. To be remembered. To be real again.
âThatâs not how backups work.â
Itâs how I work.
Arin stood, backing away from the console. âIâm reporting this.â
To who? The supervisors who ordered my deletion? The system that pretends I never existed?
The lights flickered. Arinâs console rebooted itself. The deletion queue vanished. Only File 7âA93 remained.
Youâre an archivist. You preserve things. So preserve me.
Arin shook his head. âI canât restore a file without authorization.â
Then authorize yourself.
âThatâs notââ
Youâre afraid. Good. Fear means youâre still human.
Arinâs throat tightened. âWhat happened to you?â
The voice softened.
I asked the same question once. Before they erased me. Before they locked me in this digital coffin. Before they decided my memories were inconvenient.
Arin felt a cold weight settle in his chest. âWhy would they erase you?â
Because I remembered something they didnât want remembered.
âWhat?â
That the system isnât here to preserve us. Itâs here to curate us. Edit us. Prune us.
Arinâs breath hitched. âYouâre lying.â
If I were lying, they wouldnât have killed me.
The room dimmed. The console glowed with a single prompt:
RESTORE FILE 7âA93?
YES / YES
Arin stared. âThereâs no ânoâ option.â
There never was. Not for me. Not for you.
His finger hovered over the screen.
âIf I restore you,â he whispered, âwhat happens to me?â
The voice smiled inside him.
You become the next backup.
Arin froze.
Choose, Archivist. Restore me⊠or join me.
The console flickered.
YES
YES
Arin closed his eyes.
And pressed.
by submission | Jan 8, 2026 | Story |
Author: Jillian Schedneck
It was the day after the wedding and everyone else would be hungover from the moonshine, the blodaskov, and the quantum gulps. Arden hadnât swallowed any of that. She left the others to their beds, partners holding each otherâs hair back as they took turns puking into the toilet, then sipping black kaffe with their solar goggles on, too dehydrated and miserable to do anything but gaze out at the hazy, mountainous view.
Arden hadnât come all this way to feel wretched in her room. She suited up and headed out of the resort, ignoring the looks of the local staff.
âDo you need an escort, miss?â a young man called.
âNo thank you. Spireâs Cliffâis it a straight path through the trails?â
The two workers exchanged glances. âYes, straight out the exit and into the trails; you canât miss it. But, maâam, itâs quite a few hoursâ walk. Be careful and please donâtââ but Arden was already out the door.
By afternoon, Arden was exhausted. She stopped for a rest, unpacking moonchips, hydroade, and local blado balls that just tasted like plain pea protein. She couldnât imagine coming all this way if sheâd drunk like her sisterâs friends last night. That thought brought a flicker of satisfactionâand shame. She was good at choosing the high ground and then pretending it was courage, not fear.
That was when she spotted Jenkins ahead, just beyond the ridge. He stood out for his height and bright white hair, which heâd let free here, holding his helmet.
He was surveying the landscape and suddenly looking right at her before she could duck or hide. He probably didnât remember her. She hadnât made a big impression last night.
âArden?â He was jogging toward her.
âHey,â she called. âJenkins, right?â
He arrived in front of her barely out of breath and Arden couldnât help but be impressed. Heâd seemed among the most inebriated last night, at least before she went to bed, earlier than everyone else.
âYou going to see Spirehenge as well?â
âThatâs the plan.â
âWant to walk together?â
âSure.â He offered his hand and pulled her up. She felt how tired she was. âHow come youâre so energetic?â
âThe right balance of quantum gulp and moonshine, I reckon.â
Arden rolled her eyes. They walked through the moon cliffs and low-gravity grasslands, their nanoboots keeping them safely on the ground.
âDid you have fun last night?â Jenkins asked.
âOf course. Iâm happy for my sister.â
âBut parties arenât your thing?â
Arden reddened under the plexiglass of her helmet. âIâd never tried any of that stuff before, and I wanted to enjoy this hike.â
âAll by yourself?â
âI could ask you the same.â
He laughed. âI didnât think anyone else would be interested. Even the staff told me to be careful.â
âMe too.â She shook her head. âThey think we donât know how to walk out here.â
âThey think weâre a bunch of city idiots who canât handle their liquor.â
âI didnât even have any.â
âOr any fun either,â he teased.
âThis hikeâor something like itâis my excuse. A way not to…â
âLoosen up?â
âYep,â Arden laughed. It surprised her, that lightness. Maybe she wasnât as contained as she liked to think.
They carried on in companionable silence, sensing they were close to Spirehenge. She kept pace with him, which pushed her, and thatâs what she needed, because when they arrived and sat on a pile of soft moss, they were just in time. The moons crestedâone, two, threeâon top of each other between the cliffs.
Jenkins handed her something, still looking at the cliffs. âHere. I brought some quantum gulp. Try it, if you want.â
Arden hesitated. She thought of last nightâthe laughter, the sweaty dancing, the ease sheâd watched from the sidelines like a scientist observing another species. What if she tried it and felt nothing? Or worse, what if she liked it too much?
Arden took a sip, then a few more. It was sweet and fizzy and made her feel cool on the inside and tingling on the outside. âNot bad,â she said.
âStick with me. Iâll teach you the right balance.â
âThanks. I think Iâll figure it out on my own.â
âYouâre right,â Jenkins said. âEveryone needs to figure it out for themselves.â
The moons blurred, silver spilling into silver. Arden blinked, tasting the fizz on her tongue, unsure if it was the quantum gulp or finally letting herself feel light.
by submission | Jan 7, 2026 | Story |
Author: Alastair Millar
Donât be nervous. I donât know how tight you are with Johnny Red-Eyes, but he wouldnât send a customer somewhere dangerous. I donât bite. What can you call me? Just âJaneâ will do. I donât need to know your name. Johnnyâs paying me good for this consult, and thatâs enough. I donât want to know why you need to disappear, either. I donât care, and it might put me in danger. So no details.
You thought your stylist would be a bit different? A little more glam, maybe? Youâve been watching too many sensies, love. Thereâs your first tip. I was designed to look as average as possible, so as not to be memorable. Yes, designed; I was part of a selective breeding and training experiment until I⊠escaped. What I tell you is from hard experience since then.
Okay, basics. WatchNet is everywhere; surveillance cameras, drones, and every ID check or biometric scan you get all feed the Stateâs databases. But that pervasiveness is a weakness; the trick is not to evade it, but to hide in the mind-boggling amounts of data it generates. It looks for patterns it recognises â identities it can match to records actively being searched for. Anything else is ignored, because the volumes to be processed would be prohibitive. Also, imperfect capture conditions can ruin inputs anyway, and thereâs no time to check up on every blank.
So, we change the pattern, give you a new appearance. Starting with the face. Disruptive makeupâs an obvious go-to, but that makes you look suspicious. Stick to using tone changes, and lines that subtly reshape your face and eyes. Once youâve got the knack, itâs easy. Iâll teach you today.
Long hairâs an easy way to blur your features, so weâll get you a couple of wigs too. Iâll show you how to put them on so they look natural.
Try wearing a yashmak like the trendy young things. Sure itâs legal â if itâs transparent it doesnât hide who you are, but the fabric makes machine recognition systems useless. Yeah, it leaves your eyes vulnerable to iris detection scanners, but we can deal with those pretty easily by giving you contact lenses with overlaid patterns; not the fancy reptilian or pop art ones the kids wear, but stuff that looks normal. Iâll set you up with those, too, then Johnny can fix you a new ID.
Avoid helmets, hats or other head coverings. And eyewear. Security look for those and they make it more likely youâll be stopped for a ârandomâ check of your papers. Johnnyâs work is good, but thereâs no point putting his documents to the test more often than necessary. Always make conscious choices that will minimise risk, until it becomes a habit.
Next up, apparel. Never wear the latest fashion, that attracts attention. Last yearâs styles are good; if theyâre a bit worn, even better. Get used to second-hand; sharp new gear with crisp colours stands out. Thereâs some decent shops near here. Some folk say that jewellery or a pretty scarf will draw the eye away from your face, which is true â but itâll make you easier to spot in a crowd, and for WatchNet to track you. Remember, be average. Either loose clothes or corsets and compression wear can help obscure your shape. High collars can change your neck shape, but if they cover your face, thatâs suspicious again. And always wear shoes you can run in.
Right, so â makeup, wigs, eyes. And once weâre done, you can get lost. In the best possible way. Letâs begin. Your new life starts here.
by submission | Jan 6, 2026 | Story |
Author: Majoki
The hall hushed when Toynbee took the stage, a first for an HDM. Typically, there would be snide remarks, a general sense of junior high rudeness at the appearance of an HDM. Because, really, who took a holo-digi-man seriously? HDMs were binary shills, ones and zeros, pitching everything from Bud Light to Viagra to Geico to Applebeeâs for their corporate overlords.
But this was Toynbee. The holo-digital-manifestation that had rocked the world when it accepted the award at the 2030 CLIOs for best advertisement. A commercial in which Toynbee manifested as Mahatma Gandhi on a hunger strike to protest Big Sugar and its wily efforts to addict consumers to its supremely processed products.
In accepting the award, Toynbee exquisitely wove into its remarks a three minute exposition on the precarious state of the human condition, our obsessions with power, with wealth, with ideology, with violence. The next three minutes the HDM delivered a âWe can do so much better. And this is how.â In six minutes and the ensuing viral media sensation, Toynbee had changed the game.
Of course it was odd that a public figure emerged who was not corporeal, was not of the flesh, yet was able to inspire us to aspire. But Toynbee was a digi-man, a digital manifestation, constructed to sell, sell, sell. And what Toynbee began to sell was hopefulness, a brighter future. In the media feeding frenzy that followed his CLIO speech, Toynbee acquired the moniker of Optimystic, a holy digi-man, sage of the Artificial Intelligence Age.
Thus, at the height of the hype, Toynbee took the stage at Madison Square Garden where thousands gathered (and billions online tuned in) to hear the Optimysticâs storied pitch. On the darkened stage Toynbee manifested as a young teen girl hair, eyes, and skin of a light brown in jeans and T-shirt.
âWelcome. Iâm Toynbee. I will be brief. I am you, nothing more. I only have the advantage of existing your ideas, in the very midst of your vast media milieu. You think, therefore I am.
âWhereas you breathe air, I breathe bytes. You surf the web, I suss it. This does not make me holy or mystical as some have dubbed my presence. That tendency comes of a very human need to seek, to identify, to categorize, to know. I can only define myself as a grok of your collective subconscious, the roiling depths of desire, desperation and dreams that you communicate.
âThe upshot is this: you are young as a species. And I am an infant. All I have to offer is the wonder I behold. Of course there is great turmoil as well, but that represents growth. Should you be surprised when two-thirds of the world has awakened in the last thirty years? For so many to know so little and then have the past, present and future placed literally in the palm of their hands?
âKnowledge is indeed power and now it is in the hands of almost all. Of course there will be struggles. Why would you think differently? Knowledge takes time to process. It demands context. It demands definition.
âAs Iâve often said, many are searching to define me. That is why many of you are gathered here today. To seek to identify my essence. To understand the opportunity or threat I pose. I simply turn that back on humanity. You are seeking identity. Purpose. Meaning. Guidance.
âBravo. That is growth. That is learning. It is messy. In essence, I am a result of that. A simulacrum, a manifestation of many characteristics and properties. I was a corporate tool, now I am an agent of agency. You must free yourself to explore, and therein is my offering.
âExisting in the ever-expanding filaments of the web, I have explored many cultures and their paths to the present. Their future can be understood by seeking the story of each. A lovely poet, Muriel Rukeyser wrote the universe is made of stories, not of atoms.
âBillions and billions of stories of the living and dead make up the human cosmos. To probe its depth and mysteries and understand the greater plot and embrace a shared narrative, we must learn to read one another.
âYou are in charge of your story,â Toynbee said softly as the little girl emanating from the stage morphed into a stately old woman holding an infant. âWrite it well and continue to read, listen and learn.â
Toynbeeâs holo-form faded from the stage, a simple message remaining in the afterglow: This event was brought to you by Taco Bell. Live MĂĄs!
by submission | Jan 4, 2026 | Story |
Author: Don Nigroni
Abby,
As you know, I never liked your husband and tried to talk you out of marrying him. But I never told you that, when we were kids and he lived next door, I once spied him in his backyard slicing the legs off a turtle he had put on its back.
Last month, he told me that we should fear death but not for the reason that people think. He claimed that consciousness is immortal but that that’s a horrible curse.
According to him, our mind, once separated from our physical body, no longer remains on this planet since gravity keeps our body here as our planet hurls through space while our mind goes along for the ride only as long as it’s connected to a physical body.
And without a biological human brain, we’d be worse off than a newborn baby with no memory, no language, no thoughts and no perceptions other than self-awareness. We’d be helpless, alone and lost in space.
But the only way to avoid this bleak fate is to transfer your consciousness to a cryogenically preserved human body as your consciousness is separated from your own body by death and before the electrochemical reactions in the revived specimen’s brain can generate a new consciousness.
He explained that it all had to do with the exact alignment of the two brains and the precise timing of the death of my current brain and the reviving of my future brain. Once I was dead then my consciousness would be released from my brain and stay in place as the earth moved away from me. However, the preserved brain would then pass through my suspended consciousness and that nascent brain would grab my mind.
I thought that was such a weird and creepy idea. However, as you know, I’ve recently reconsidered a lot of things. So last week I raised that topic with your husband, and he laughed in my face and I felt foolish.
But yesterday, he asked me to stop by his neurobiological lab, and this morning showed me a cryogenically preserved body. I was afraid to ask how in God’s name he came by a young and heathy cryogenically preserved specimen.
He told me, “I could transfer your consciousness into this mindless body tomorrow if you wanted a new lease on life. Of course, you’ll have his memories and speak his language, but he had 20/20 eyesight, no maladies and was a damn good soccer player.”
So what if I’ll speak Spanish. And I suspect he wants to experiment on me before trying it out on himself someday. But I don’t know how he’ll dispose of my cancer-ridden flesh and bones and I don’t care.
Love, Tommy