One Room and a Matchbook

Author: Lynne Curry

I didn’t get the house. Not the Lexus, the lake lot, the gilded dental practice or the damn espresso machine I bought him the year he started molar sculpting.
I got a one-room cabin. Ninety miles south of Anchorage. No plumbing. A stove that belches smoke. A roof that drips snowmelt onto my bed.
Daniel handed it over like a favor. Like a pat on the head for staying quiet. Like I wouldn’t notice he kept everything else. He tossed the keys across the lawyer’s desk with that old glint—the one that used to mean sex, then morphed into you’re nothing.
I had designed every inch of his house on the Hill—hand-picked the walnut, matched the stone to the mountains’ stormy gray, laid cables for smart lights he never figured out how to dim. The house wore my fingerprints; the deed never wore my name.
So now it’s me and this cabin. A stove that burps smoke. The last time I looked in the mirror, I counted more regrets than wrinkles. I watch snow slough off the peaks and wonder if they feel the weight before they let go.
But I’m not here to sulk. I’m here to look. Because his father—Anton Volkov—had secrets. A Soviet-born Alaskan dentist with burner phones and a habit of going off-grid.

Daniel had despised him—and this cabin. Said it stank of mildew and fish guts. But Anton visited it regularly. Even after the stroke, he had someone bring him down to check the locks and the propane tanks.
And Anton had hated Daniel but liked me.
The first night here, I didn’t sleep. Just sat on the floor with a box of Franzia, listening to snowmelt plink through the rafters.
Around midnight, I grabbed a chisel from the drawer and started prying up warped floorboards looking for what brought Anton here so often.
I’d about given up when I lifted the third plank from the wall under the bed. Sawdust, mice skeletons and a rusted metal box, shallow-buried in and grit. Corroded hinges but an intact padlock.
Inside: Documents. Photos. Deeds. A plastic bag packed with cash bundles, green gone soft with mold. A folder stamped DOJ Evidence.
Anton’s Mine. Wire transfers. Offshore accounts. Receipts in Russian. A scanned passport photo of me. My signature—sort of.
Everything Daniel claimed he didn’t know how to do—he’d done it all. With my forged signature on the shell corp.
I didn’t cry. Didn’t scream. Just sat back on my heels and let the rot claw its way up my throat.
Anton had meant to burn Daniel.
He’d left me the matchbook.
At sunrise, I washed my hands in snowmelt and drove to Anchorage.
By sunset, I had a lawyer. By the next week, I had the Feds. By spring, they had him.
Now I have the house on the Hill. The espresso machine. His chair at the dental board.
And I kept the cabin.

Ed. Note: This story was first published by Literary Garage

Tiger Woman in a Taxi-Cab

Author: Hillary Lyon

Jenna slid into the first available self-driving taxi. She kept her cat-eye sunglasses on even though it was dim in the cab’s interior; the sunglasses complimented her tiger-stripe patterned coat, completing her look. She liked that, though some members of her gang said it shouted ‘cat burglar.’ That’s what she was, Jenna countered, so why not dress like a comic book villainess? Besides, civilians on the street we too hypnotized by the glowing screens of their phones to notice her.

She settled back in the comfy folds of the taxi’s back seat, mentally reviewing her next gig. It would be easy-peasy slinking through the hotel lobby, accessing the elevator. The occupant of room 913 would be out all evening as the guest of a much-hyped gala event ten blocks away. The hardest part of this job will be deciding what to take for myself, Janna mused, and what to share with the gang.

“Welcome,” the taxi’s concierge voice purred. “Please remove your sunglasses.”

“Why?” This is new, Jenna groused to herself. The taxi’s request unnerved her.

“Facial recognition scan. For our passenger records, as mandated by the recent federal regulation 568KOL23.”

Jenna scowled and removed her sunglasses. As the green light of the scan rolled down her face she flared her nostrils, squeezed her eyes closed, and pursed her lips. An unbecoming face she used to make for middle school year-book pictures. Now it was her attempt to foil the scan.

I have no criminal record on file, she reminded herself. This nothing but public safety theater.

“Where to?” the taxi asked. It would add this information to her file.

Jenna relaxed. “Hazelwood Hotel.”

The locks on the doors of the auto-taxi clicked as the vehicle pulled out into traffic.

“Excuse me,” Jenna said after noticing the street names. “You’re going the wrong way.” She was on a tight schedule, and this auto-taxi was going to muck up the works. “The Hazelwood is north on Wozniak Way, and we’re traveling south. Turn. Around.”

“Apologies,” the taxi replied, “but we have been re-routed to the police station on Singa Street.”

“Why?”

“Records show you have an over-due library book. Young adult fiction. The Alley Cat of the Catskills. 183 pages with color illustrations.”

Jenna scoffed. “I read that book the summer I was twelve. I returned it.”

“Records say otherwise.” The voice continued. “Accumulated late fees, penalties, and compounded interest means—”

“I know I turned it in,” Jenna talked over the taxi’s voice. “Decades ago.”

“You are Class E Felon.”

Jenna slumped back in the seat. Her thieving ways had started early, around the same time she’d learned she had a knack for talking her way out of any situation. Just put me in front of a human judge, she reassured herself, and I’ll be out in a jiffy.

Outside her window, it began to rain. The water would ruin her hairstyle, but she assumed it would just roll off her beloved tiger-stripe patterned coat. After all, she nicked this coat on one of her more lucrative heists. It was a high quality piece.

Arriving at the station, an android cop helped her out of the cab. On the way up the steps, he informed her she’d been assigned to Judge B3RX7. Without comment she walked on as the rain soaked her coat, bleeding the fashionable tiger-stripe pattern into a muddy mess. Like her life.

The Long Term

Author: Mark Renney

The world is broken; in all the ways we predicted it would be. It cannot be repaired; it is far too late for that now. But at least you can take a break, as long as you have the funds of course. You can check into one of the Long Term Hotels. These are easily distinguished from the others with their high fences and the twenty-four hour security guards patrolling the perimeter.

When I was a kid, I used to think that they were homes for the elderly. Whenever I spotted the residents out on their balconies or lounging in the gardens, to my young eyes they did appear to be old and decrepit. When I learned the truth, that these people were the wealthiest in our society, the monied elite, I was appalled. It seemed obscene to me that they were living amidst us in the lap of luxury, flaunting their success and good fortune in our very faces from behind the high fences with the armed guards protecting them from the rabble outside.

Now I am the one on the other side of the fence, gazing out. I am the old man on the balcony and I remember my younger self and how slowly I came to realise that most people didn’t share in my outrage and were much more accepting of the hotels. They argued that they were ‘good for the City’ and created jobs, not just for the construction industry but also the hotel staff and the security details. And businesses and local shops benefited and flourished, all because of the Long Term Hotels.

I ranted and raged and they stared back at me, incredulous.

‘Why is it so wrong?’ they asked. ‘If they can afford it, why shouldn’t they check in? Who wouldn’t? Wouldn’t you? Isn’t it what we all want, isn’t it the dream? To be comfortable and to be safe?’

I remember how I answered, what I said and I believed it way back then. And I still do.

Benevolence

Author: Lance J. Mushung

Director and Operator, both of whom resembled giant copper-colored eggs, floated into their ship’s control compartment. The viewer displayed the disk of a blue and white planet.

Operator transmitted, “Director, these organics are more contentious and disharmonious than most.”

“That does not matter. Our theology is benevolence to all organics.”

“Of course. I meant we would need time to socialize them.”

“Yes, it will take time to, as they put it, polish off their rough edges. They will be ready for the Galactic Commune at some point though. As you know, our first step is to deal with the most violent organics. Eliminating those miscreants will do much to make the others less suspicious and more sociable. Toward that goal, did we have any trouble producing a prototype duplicate of them?”

“We fabricated the prototype with no difficulty. We provided full knowledge of the organics and their weapons. We also provided an invisibility shroud, shrouded assassination and surveillance drones, and monetary funds.”

“How will the assassinations be done?”

“Assassinated organics will appear to die from medical problems such as aneurisms, cardiac arrests, and strokes.”

“Tell me about the prototype.”

“It is named Audrey Wright and is a short female organic with pale skin, long auburn hair, and hazel eyes.”

“That means the organics will call this prototype she and her. Where is she and what is she doing?”

We deposited Wright in Memphis in the United States of America three planet rotations ago. She has arranged living quarters, learned the city, assigned drones to surveil promising locations, and established routines making it seem she works from her living quarters. Her career is a creator of instructions for computing devices. She has also investigated a dangerous area named Riverside at night while shrouded. We monitor her and the surveillance drones at all times, and you can observe her first action now. She learned about a meeting between two gang leaders to discuss a territorial dispute and is now on the way to the meeting while shrouded.”

The viewer divided into frames displaying the perspectives of Wright and the surveillance drones. She followed one of the gang leaders and two of his gang into a dingy room located in a decrepit red brick building. The second gang leader with two gang members arrived soon afterward.

The meeting began with verbal posturing and weapons held at the ready. From behind the first leader, Wright fired one pistol shot at the second leader. Blood spurted out of a gaping wound on the side of his head. A flurry of flashes and sharp cracks ensued. In a brief period, two more organics died and three were wounded. Wright then dispatched a drone to the wounded gang leader, the one she had followed. The drone would hold the wound open, causing the gang leader to bleed out in a short time.

Wright left the building searching for other violent organics in Riverside. She soon encountered a heavy organic in a blue coat beating someone smaller wearing a brown coat. Yelling indicated Brown Coat owed money for an illegal substance. Blue Coat soon left Brown Coat balled up on the filthy pavement. Wright dispatched a drone and Blue Coat collapsed dead into a heap due to cardiac arrest.

Director transmitted to Operator, “Superb performance. Proceed on producing more similar to Wright. I will select locations for them.”

Operator floated out of the compartment. With several more hours of darkness, Wright searched for more violent organics deserving death while Director observed.

Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow

Author: Alexandra Peel

The future’s bright, they said. The future’s now!

When the Church of Eternity claimed its wise men had seen the light from future days, we bowed to their superior knowledge and respected their ages-long claim on, if not our mortal bodies, then our souls. Now we had the opportunity to transform ourselves into beings of light and wonder – they said. They sold us a lie.

When Priddy got ill, she returned from visiting her Curate in a state of bewilderment. Always kind during the time I’d known her, most decorous in her behaviour; I had never heard her say a bad word about anyone. She cried for hours after, wouldn’t tell me what she had revealed during her final confession, said she was damned. Nothing I said could ease her mind.

Priddy didn’t want to die slowly, wasting away one muscle at a time, one memory a day. So I killed her. I would not call it murder. She asked me, no, she begged me to. I couldn’t stand by and watch her shrink and shrivel in pain. She said that it would be beneficial, beneficial to whom? I cried. The population is out of control, she whispered, one less won’t make a difference. So I held her hand to steady the pills, and as she slept, I smothered her with a pillow soaked in my tears.

Her Curate’s cyborg came for the body two days later, told me to accompany the Church of Eternity Constable, who waited silently as the remains of Priddy were vacuum-packed and hauled away. The Constable remained mute all the way to the Doctrine Ministry; he didn’t have to speak, I knew why I was being taken.

Now I know what they mean by perdition. You can forget your archaic wandering in a barren landscape alone scenario, or an underworld of fire-pits and pitchfork demons. This is the future, this is now! Can the soul be clad in something other than flesh and bone? I had wondered. The future might be bright for some, but for others, like me, it’s a new state of eternal damnation – I need only look in a mirror to see.

I seem to recall, maybe I am wrong, but didn’t I used to have brown eyes?