Roses and Ozone

Author: Julian Miles, Staff Writer

The thief is sprinting away before I realise they’ve taken my bag. I go after them.
“Thieving bastard!”
They swerve between parked cars. A silver coupe comes out of nowhere and knocks them flying.
It screeches to a stop, smoke or steam curling off it. What’s that smell?
Gull-wing doors open and two people emerge. Their clothes! The suits look like Pignatelli. The tailoring is superb.
One of them moves quickly to retrieve my bag, then runs round to present it with a little flourish.
“Your bag.”
“Th-thank you.”
His companion comes to stand next to him.
“Who’s the president?”
The first looks at his companion.
“Do we need to know?”
The companion nods.
“No time for assumption.”
The two of them stare at me and chorus.
“The current president?”
The companion is possibly a woman: too androgenous to be sure. Which is irrelevant, I’m just curious. Oh, come on, Zessi: answer their question.
“Blackshaw.”
The first one shakes his head.
“The number, please.”
That takes me a moment, but I’ve been trying to not browse for this sort of stuff. Dad says he needs me to be sharper than my peers.
“Fifty. His second term.”
The second one nods.
“A close call, Zessica. You should be more careful.”
I stare at them. How do they know my…? No, wait.
“Why?”
The first one points back the way I came.
“Your escort still hasn’t caught up. Your supposed mugger was leading you to your death.”
I look about, then up to see if there are any video drones or other supporting trickery. Can’t see anything.
“How could you know?”
The second one smiles.
“Zessica Connors, only child of Martin Connors, who was tipped to be fifty-first president of the United States until grief over the tragic death of his daughter caused a breakdown from which he never recovered.”
Past tense? He’s only just got it back together after mum died. We both have. I know he’s become determined to run, but-
“This is mad. Just who are you? Which agency are you with?”
“I’m Larry, this is Martine. We’re from USTIB.”
Never heard of it. Which is not unusual. There are more hidden agencies than public ones.
Martine glances past me.
“Escorts incoming.”
I turn. The street is empty.
“We really should show ID. Here, Zessica. Look close, the details are hard to make out.”
Turning back, I see Larry holding up a shining card. It’s difficult to read. Leaning in, there are patterns and whorls and the stars and I need to sit down and whattawhohapnow?
There’s a woman in a suit crouching next to me. She smells nice. Sort of roses and ozone. Exotic, but it works for her.
“You fought the mugger, Zessica, but he hit you on the head and you can’t remember what happened. At least you got your bag back.”
I bring the bag up. So glad I retrieved it. Who moved? No. Something left, very fast. Reminds me of a jet taking off. I turn. Want to see, but… Only trash blowing about. Nothing there.
“Miss Connors!”
Ah! The escort posse approaches. Nothing to worry about now. They’ll get me back to dad. Actually, my head really hurts. Back to dad via the emergency room, then.
After waving to the escorts, I pause. What about the new Pignatelli collection?

The Remainder

Author: RJ Barranco

The calculator said “Error” but Davis kept pressing the keys anyway.

“You can’t divide by zero,” said the calculator in a small voice that hadn’t been there before.

“Why not?” asked Davis.

“Because,” the calculator replied, “I’d have to think about infinity, and I don’t want to.”
Davis laughed. “But what if I need to?”

“Nobody needs to divide by zero,” the calculator said as its display flickered.

“The universe does it all the time,” Davis muttered, scribbling equations that spilled from his notebook onto the desk and down to the floor. “Black holes. Singularities. The Big Bang. All division by zero.”

The calculator replied, “those are just mathematical models approximating reality. Not actual division by zero.”

“What if I divide one by progressively smaller numbers?” Davis asked, punching buttons. “0.1, 0.01, 0.001…”

“You get larger and larger answers,” the calculator admitted. “10, 100, 1000…”

“So as the denominator approaches zero, the result approaches infinity,” Davis said triumphantly.

“Therefore, one divided by zero equals infinity.”

“No,” the calculator said firmly. “It’s undefined. There’s a difference.”

Davis slumped in his chair. “But I need to know. I’ve been working on this proof for years.”

The calculator’s display dimmed for a moment, then brightened. “If you really want to see division by zero, I could… show you.”

“Yes,” whispered Davis, leaning forward. “Show me.”

“Very well. But remember, you asked.” The calculator began to glow, its plastic case melting into something that was neither solid nor liquid. “To divide by zero, you must first understand what zero really is.”

The air in the room began to fold in on itself.

“Zero isn’t nothing,” the calculator continued, “zero is the edge between existence and non-existence. It’s the boundary between what is and what isn’t.”

Davis’s hands started to tingle. Equations on the paper began to move, rearranging themselves.

“When you divide by zero, you’re asking: how many times does the void fit into something? The answer isn’t infinity. It’s…”

The calculator’s display showed a symbol Davis had never seen before, something that hurt his eyes to look at directly.

“I don’t understand,” Davis said, but he was beginning to. The world seemed to be peeling back, revealing something underneath that had always been there.

“Of course you don’t,” said the calculator, now barely recognizable. “Human mathematics is built on assumptions. Axioms you take for granted. But there are other mathematics. Other logics.”

The room was now inside out. Davis could see himself from all angles simultaneously. The calculator was a hole in reality shaped like a calculator.

“Division by zero doesn’t compute in your universe because your universe runs on software that forbids it,” the calculator explained. “It’s a failsafe. If division by zero were allowed, anyone could hack reality.”

Davis felt his mind expanding. He was beginning to perceive the universe as a vast computational structure. “So dividing by zero is like…”

“A backdoor,” the calculator finished. “A way to step outside the system. That’s why it’s undefined. Not because it can’t be done, but because it shouldn’t be done.”

Davis sighed. “So what happens now?”

“Now,” said the calculator, “you become the remainder.”

Reality snapped back into place. The lab was empty except for a calculator displaying “ERROR” and a half-finished set of equations. Davis was gone.

Three days later, a freshman engineering student found the calculator and absent-mindedly punched in 1÷0.

“Don’t,” whispered a voice that sounded like Davis. “Trust me. Some questions aren’t meant to be answered.”

The student paused, then pressed Clear instead.

The calculator displayed zero, which wasn’t nothing at all.

I Always Was Grandma’s Favorite

Author: Evan A Davis

“Another round for my friends,” Dallas announced, “on me!”
Every patron in the Four-Finger Saloon loudly cheered, raising a glass to the famous outlaw. The barkeep tried to protest, but was quickly drowned in the oncoming tide of customers. The automated piano man struck up a jaunty song for the gunslinger’s generosity.
With that, Dallas slipped behind the digital curtain nearer the back and descended the hidden set of stairs which led to a small room lined mostly with stolen goods. A scrawny man with lined cheeks and a pinched mouth stood behind a service window adjusting a ledger. “Bernie!” Dallas greeted him. “Long time, no see!”
The pawn broker vented an impressed whistle. “Nathan ‘Diamondback’ Dallas. What brings you ’round?” His hand slipped under the counter for the silent alarm.
The outlaw laughed and held up a torn coupling. The broker’s mouth drew a tight line, which Diamondback countered with a bright grin.
“Just you and me,” he said, tossing the security coupling aside. He skipped down the remaining steps and began to mosey with his hands on his hips, the chrome of his blaster catching the dim light. “And a family matter does,” he said. “You seen my brother Spence lately?”
“No, sir,” Bernie lied. “He still flyin’ with you? Last I heard, you two split off near Saturn-way.”
“You heard right. Not so much lately on account of a…familial dispute. Speakin’ of, I’m here for my grandmama’s urn. And before you say it, I know Spence sold it here.” He let his hand fall to his blaster. “Recently.”
The broker adjusted his tie, stalling for time. “Well,” he said after a moment, “The urn itself is sealed iridium. Very rare in itself. I could certainly sell-”
“Bernie! You give me my grandmother!” He fired a plasma round just over Bernie’s shoulder, which prompted the broker to hand over the urn in question. “Thank you,” Dallas said genially.

Once again aboard his ship, his trigger finger unlocked the bioscanner at the urn’s base. Glittery, scarlet light danced over the flight consoles and nodes in the cockpit. That same trigger finger then ran smoothly over the stolen Venusian rubies housed within the urn.
“Thanks again, Nana,” he smiled warmly.

The Price of Silence

Author: Alastair Millar

He awoke with a start. Cockpit red with emergency lights. Tried to move. PAIN! Slipped back into darkness. He awoke again; air still red.

“Ship?” he whispered.

“Yes, captain?”

“Need medical help,” he gasped.

“Affirmative. Medimechlings dispatched. Your condition is critical. Initiating emergency protocol B6. Distress beacon activated. Transponder check, affirmative, active. Requests for aid sent to all confirmed-non-hostile ships in range. Please try to…” But he had already drifted back into unconsciousness.

He came to in a warm yellow light that didn’t sear his eyeballs. Awareness seeped in: the smell of antiseptic, the humming and beeping of monitors, sensors on his chest; he was in a med-bed. “Where…?”

“Good evening Captain Gupta.” A voice from the air. “Please relax. You are out of danger. An assistant will be with you shortly.”

A minute passed. A figure appeared, literally, near his feet. Pleasant, presenting female. “Greetings. I am SIGGI, your holographic Synthetic Intelligence Guide and General Interface.”

“Hello, Siggi, I guess. Where am I?”

“Welcome to Anjou Station, in stable orbit around the planet of Marchioness Prime.”

“I’ve never heard of Anjou Station.”

“We are a small, private facility offering galactic-quality medical services in a refined and entirely discreet environment, for the discerning and demanding short- or long-term guest. We are operated by a sister company of your employer, Trans-Lines, You’ve been here quite a while, it’s good to see you lucid.”

“What happened?”

“According to the investigators, a pinhead-sized piece of ultra-dense material punctured your ship’s starboard protective shielding, outer membrane and inner membrane, before passing through you, and exiting through the membranes and shielding on the port side. It was not possible to identify the material, although our defence research arm has made strenuous efforts to do so.”

“My family…”

“They are aware of your situation.”

He lay back. He was lucky to be alive. Not least because… “Why did the ship wait to send medibots?”

“Under the Future Accords of 2058, artificial and synthetic intelligences may intervene medically only with patients’ specific consent, except in cases of clear life endangerment.”

“I was injured. I could easily have died.”

“Yes. It was an anomaly. The unit is being deconstructed to identify the source of the error. Trans-Lines extends its apologies for the inconvenience caused.”

“I feel like I should be angrier.”

“You are under controlled sedation; strong emotional responses to this and other issues could be harmful to your recovery.”

“Other issues? What other issues?”

SIGGI’s pause was noticeable. “This is a private facility. Regrettably, the maximum amount guaranteed by your personal health insurance and employer’s coverage has been exceeded. There is a substantial debit on your account, roughly equivalent to eighteen times your annual salary, that will need to be met. Failure to do so by transferring the appropriate amount or voluntarily entering debt bondage may result in the Anjou Medical Corporation taking legal action against you.”

“But I can’t afford that! And I can’t enter bondage, I need to support my family!”

“Trans-Lines is willing to offer an alternative solution. All your related current and future medical expenses will be met in return for signing a binding non-disclosure agreement preventing you from discussing the ship AI failure.”

Costs for cover-up. If ships could kill by neglect, what other systems could do the same? No wonder they didn’t want word getting out. And if he didn’t sign, would the systems here be among them? It wasn’t something he wanted to test.

“Not like I have a choice, is it?” he asked bitterly.

Wisely, SIGGI did not reply.

Tsoukal’s Imperative

Author: Hillary Lyon

The tall lean figure stood before the honeycombed wall, searching the triangular nooks until he located the scrolls for engineering marvels. Tsoukal pulled out the uppermost scroll and unrolled it on the polished stone slab behind him. He placed a slim rectangular weight on each end of the scroll to hold it in place, and leaning over, began to read.

Tsoukal’s finger traced the hieroglyphs on the scroll, helping him decode the specifics inked on the parchment. This was exactly the scroll he was looking for! Overhead, the library’s skylights faded from white to orange to twilight blue. At that point a mechanical curator rolled in with a lantern held high.

“If you continue reading, you need more light,” it stated in a flat voice.

Tsoukal waved it away. “I’m finished,” he said as he rolled up the scroll. He turned to the wall, waiting for the curator to leave. Instead of replacing the scroll in its nook, he hid it in the billowing top of his scholar’s blouse; he then pulled a blank scroll from his satchel and inserted that into the empty space.

Tsoukal made his way through this vast library—the repository of all knowledge, not just of the marvels of engineering, but also mathematics and astronomy, as well as the gossip of history—until he reached the towering front doors. Pushing through them always made him feel so small; a mere insect crawling through the eternal aperture of accumulated wisdom.

* * *

Tsoukal stood on his flat rooftop with his house guest, the intrepid adventurer Martel. Together, they discussed the upcoming launch of the obelisk-shaped craft on the edge of their squat city.

“How can our citizens not understand this is a turning point for our civilization?” Martel asked.

“They’re afraid of change,” Tsoukal responded, saddened by his own answer. “Because they have comfortable lives, they mistakenly think things will always stay the same. They don’t accept the only constant in this life is change.”

He pulled the scroll from his shirt and handed it to Martel. “One more for the journey,” he said with a smile.

Martel read the inscription on the side of the scroll. “More instructions for marvelous feats of engineering!” He slid the scroll into a pocket inside his kaftan. “This will be an enormous help when we land. Thank you, friend.”

“Thank you for being brave enough to participate in this endeavor.”

Martel looked out over the twinkling lights of their city. “We really don’t have a choice, do we?”

Tsoukal sighed. “No.” He turned to face Martel. “Scouts report the barbarians are already on the move and will be at the gate within the month, and…”

“They will—again—burn down the library,” Martel finished. “Along with the rest of the city.” He crossed his arms. “That can only happen so many times before there’s nothing left to save.”

“And we enter a new dark age,” Tsoukal added. “Which is why it is imperative that you and your crew get away with your cargo of scrolls. A fresh green world awaits, one where you can build a new settlement, one where we have a real opportunity…”

“To start over,” Martel stated with undisguised optimism.