by submission | Dec 19, 2020 | Story |
Author: Madeline DeCoste
The silence is unbearable. So too is the darkness, so too is the light; all are absolute. The primordial and the pseudo-holy converge from all sides. Like warmth, like humanity, the stars and home are unreachable.
This is the wild, lonesome universe. This is outer space.
The astronautās radio has long since gone quiet. Even the strongest waves cannot come out this far. It was supposed to be an honor. The first manned voyage to OGLE-2014-BLG-0124L, the farthest known planet in the galaxy. It was a solo mission, the less weight the better, and he had been not-so-secretly delighted. Nobody to share the spotlight with, nobody to hog the glory. And then – a navigation miscalculation, a burned-out engine, a lost astronaut waiting to die. He cannot see the sun anymore, cannot pick his out of the millions surrounding him.
The astronaut drifts over to his radio for a last attempt, turning front flips and back flips and barrel rolls on his way. He has so few amusements in this cramped and sterile shuttle.
He says āIs there anyone there?ā
He had meant to say something brave. He tries again.
āIs anybody listening?ā
Nobody answers, not even a burst of static. He is alone, and the utterness of his isolation washes over him, high tide of his last ocean, and he sobs. The tears lift off of his young face and float suspended in the air. The harsh lights of his control panel shatter through them, sending fragments of rainbow scattering over his tomb.
His radio beeps with an incoming call. An incoming call when no living soul – no living thing, soul or no – should be within ten thousand light years of him.
He answers.
āHello?ā
There is a pause, and then the answer comes in no language spoken on Earth. It is melodic and primal and mournful. It is the wind whipping through rubble, a fire razing a prairie, a moon-soaked desert. It is whalesong and hawk-screech and fox-cries. It is the cry of a dying thing who will not die alone.
The song is incomprehensible and it means everything. The astronaut makes his way to the shuttleās little window and peers out. He sees an alien ship, constructed of some purple-maroon material resembling sea glass. It is roughly conical, with three jet-plane-like wings protruding on either side. Pistons extend backward in the same incarnadine sea glass.
He cannot see the alien inside. Perhaps it is microscopic, or gaseous; perhaps the light works on it in different ways; perhaps the ship itself is the alien.
āI see you,ā the astronaut says into his radio. āI see you.ā
This will mean nothing to the alien, but it must be said. More song answers him. The astronautās life support is running out. The alienās must be as well. And though neither can speak to each other, both are certain the other will not leave.
āHi, friend,ā the astronaut says. He is crying again, but he is smiling. The alien drifts closer and gently bumps his ship. They talk for hours, until the lights have gone out and air is hard to come by.
They will be holding hands when the universe takes them.
by submission | Dec 18, 2020 | Story |
Author: Beck Dacus
I watched the luminous tails of thousands of ships decelerating into the Alpha Centauri system from all directions. A stray few of them fell prey to my frag mines, but most maneuvered or blasted their way through. *Good,* I thought. *Keep them cocky.* That, at least, wouldnāt be difficult: humanity was gone. As far as the Nombreva were concerned, theyād won. This was just cleanup.
I couldnāt help myself: I hailed the largest ship with the most powerful drive, the apparent leader of the fleet. Light lag made the response torturously slow.
āWhatās this?ā it guffawed. āNot every day youāre hailed by an automated defense system. Trying to negotiate your release?ā
āRelease to where? You wiped out my masters.ā
āFunnyā I was just about to remind you of that. Why are you still putting up a fight, robot? And such a pitiful one at that.ā
I deployed a swarm of drones from a moon of the inner gas giant. The Nombreva swatted them away like gnats.
āCase in point!ā it boasted.
āIām an automated defense system. Thatās what I do.ā
āQuite right. Well, in that case, weāll be sure to help you get your last payday.ā
*You have no idea,* I thought. The ships were close enough to resolve now; I increased the magnification on my scopes and got a good look at their bristling guns, bright engine nacelles, and broad, sweeping radiator vanes.
*Thatās right. Keep decelerating. Just a little slowerā¦.*
āYou know, my former masters made some pretty incredible things. If I had to give a reason why Iām still fighting, I would say itās because you want the galaxy to forget they ever existed. Not only have you killed every last one of them, but youāve destroyed almost everything theyāve ever made.
āOf course, not as much as you think. Some of those things were just lying dormant.ā
Engines sputtered across the system. Nombreva telescopes flitted between the stars, watching their light simultaneously dim as massive structures moved into place in front of them.
āAmong them are the Dyson power transmitters they built around every star they settled. Powerful enough to send concentrated beams of laser light between star systems⦠and not so dormant after all.ā
I watched as every ship in the system pivoted 180 degrees, switching from decelerating to accelerating orientation, and began burning out of the system.
āOh, I wouldnāt bother. The light youāre seeing from those stars is years old, as is the light in the beams converging on this system. They arenāt powerful enough to vaporize you at this range, but they *will* saturate your radiators, and running your engines this hot will just kill you sooner. Youāll get out of the system eventually, but itāll be as fried corpses with blown-out reactors.
āWhich brings me back to my original point: these Dyson beams are just one example of the amazing things humans were able to accomplish in their time. But perhaps the most formidable bit of tech they put togetherā¦ā
The whole system went awash with dozens of colors, light from at least as many different stars.
ā…was me.ā
āYouāre insane,ā the ship responded. āYouāll overheat too.ā
āI know,ā I said. That was no lie; I could feel my cryogen coolers working overtime across my various nodes. āBut my job is done. I donāt need to wipe out every trace of you, because no one will remember you anyway. No one ever remembers destroyers.ā The heat sucked the last energy out of my circuits.
āThey remember creators.ā
by submission | Dec 17, 2020 | Story |
Author: John McNeil
A yellow bicycle leans on the sign at the trailhead. Its narrow tires are completely unsuitable for the trail. The sign says “Closed For the Season.” It’s November and there are several inches of snow on the ground. These are just foothills, not mountains, but still. The snow and ice get worse as you go up. What’s a bike doing there?
That’s what Morton Serm is wondering. Middle-aged, balding, Caucasian, he works for the Park District, works at the Visitor Center by the parking lot near the trailhead. Now, during the offseason, there aren’t many visitors.
There are tracks in the snow near the bike, he now notices. Not footprints, but tracks of some kind. Not animal tracks. Sixteen small perfect circles in two rows. They’re printed in the snow in a few places near the bike, near the sign, and going up the trail.
Morton looks back at the parking lot. His car is there. It’s already 3:00 pm, and the sun will go down soon. He’s on the clock till 4:30 pm, but if he left now no one would notice. Stacey had the day off, and no one else is working today. Visitors aren’t likely to stop by this close to sundown, in winter. The phone doesn’t ring much either. He could just drive home. Pretend he never saw the bike.
He sighs and starts walking up the trail, following the tracks. It must be some new winter activity I haven’t heard of, he thinks. Why would you wear shoes with round pegs on the bottom for hiking in the snow? Sort of like the opposite of snowshoeing? Peg shoeing? He can ask when he finds this person. After scolding them for ignoring the sign.
The bicyclist is sitting half-way up the hill. Its two eight-pegged feet are what’s puzzling Morton Serm. They are dangling from a boulder where the bicyclist is sitting, facing a clearing in the forest, having chosen this spot so the last rays of sunshine will fall on its face before the sunset. It is not human, not from Earth. Its hydraulic joints and fiber optic sinews bend and flex. Photovoltaic eyes drink every remaining drop of light before the fast begins at dusk. Up on a hill, it can eat for longer.
Morton Serm rounds a bend in the trail. He can see the bicyclist now. It is wearing loose clothing and its head is blurred by the sunlight. He can’t tell its gender or age. “The trail’s closed,” he calls out.
The bicyclist doesn’t look at him. Morton feels ignored and gets angry. “You’re not supposed to be here,” he shouts, striding closer.
Now the bicyclist turns to him. It prepared for this, learned what to ask a human of Earth: “Do you have a flashlight?”
The question confuses Morton. He stops. He says no. He left his phone in the car. The bicyclist turns to the sun again. Morton lunges forward, but trips and lands on the ground. The bicyclist leaps down from the boulder and pinches Morton’s head between the soles of its feet. “That’s all right,” it says. “You store enough charge for one night.”
The next morning Stacey arrives. Mort’s car is there, but he’s not, and the Center is locked. At the trailhead, there’s a bike and strange tracks. Two rows of eight circles. And footprints in the snow, going up the trail. They’re Morton’s, but why would he head up the closed trail? Stacey sets off after him. The bicyclist will be glad to meet her on a cloudy day.
by submission | Dec 16, 2020 | Story |
Author: Lisa Jade
My batteryās running low.
I jiggle the connection to my hip, hearing a beep as it clicks into place. In a few hours, itāll be light out ā and I can sit at the window and gather some paltry amount of solar charge. It wonāt be much, but with luck, itāll be enough.
I lift my communicator to my lips and start listing names. Ethel35, James61, Millicent18. I say the names of every android whoās ventured into the ruined city over the past two years. Itās pure routine at this point; stating every name, just in case theyāre listening. Just in case, by some miracle, thereās anyone left.
Nothing. I stare at the communicator for another hour, biting my lip. Itās been months of silence, but I still half-expect to hear another voice crackling down the line. I touch the side of the device softly, recalling the last voice I heard. Jemima8.
I stand, dragging the heavy battery pack behind me. The weight sends shivers of pain through my legs, pulling unpleasantly at my connectors. Androids werenāt meant to use battery packs. My body simply isnāt made for this.
The city is soundless. Like it has been for over two years. There was a time when it was bursting with life. A bustling metropolis, occupied by both Humans and Androids. The crumbling building around me was a Repair Centre, hidden far from the rest of the city. After all, it was considered āinappropriateā to see an Android in a state of disrepair.
I cast my eyes over the darkened structures outside, tracing the lines of silent skyscrapers. To this day, I donāt know what happened to all the people. Iād arrived here after a minor charging issue, to be kept out of sight while awaiting a new battery, so I was absent for the catalyst. All I know is that within three weeks of being here, the whole city fell entirely silent.
The other Androids didnāt last long. Many ventured out to find their loved ones, never to return. Others tried to stick it out, but were too damaged to function without the repair supply chain. After several months, we all but stopped searching.
My battery pack beeps again and I curse under my breath, scowling at the hateful thing.
By the time my internal battery fully gave up, there were only a few of us left. They hooked me up to the last external pack we had ā but it left me hindered, unable to move beyond the range of the Repair Centre.
Jemima8 was the last to leave. Sheād pulled me close, vowing to find a replacement battery and bring it back for me. She assured me that everything would be alright, as long as we had each other.
That was ten months ago.
I stare into the city, tempted to grab the communicator again. Perhaps, if I just said all their names one more timeā¦
Something hot pricks my eyes.
Theyāll come back eventually, right? They have to.
I canāt possibly be alone out here.
My chest tightens. I bite back a sob.
I barely hear the crackle of the communicator.
Then, it comes again. I lift my head, staring at it. Disbelieving. I bring it to my lips.
āH-hello?ā
Thereās nobody out there, surely. My batteryās lower than ever, so it must be messing with me. Hell, maybe Iām losing my mind. Nothing would surprise me at this point.
So when the line crackles again, my whole body is ablaze with excitement.
āHey,ā says a strange, sickeningly familiar tone, āstill need that battery?ā
by submission | Dec 13, 2020 | Story |
Author: Leo James Topp
Out of my office window, the colony ship sits low in the sky. The Test of Time. Sleek and flat, a shimmer along its underbelly, the viewing deckās dome sat on top⦠I should be working.
I know itās a marketing technique, parking it over the city, just the right height for clouds to break around its hull.
On my workstation display, I pull up the tab I always have open.
SIGN UP TODAY!
ONLY 1051 PLACES LEFT!
751 PEOPLE LOOKING AT THIS PAGE RIGHT NOW!!!
Fingers hover over REGISTER NOW.
But what would I tell Ellen?
āDonāt look at that on your work machine, mate. HRāll think youāre doing a runner without notice!ā
Swivel my chair round. A smile stretches up one side of Garyās face.
āJust a bit of research, mate, keep on top of the market. Commercial awareness.ā
āCan you imagine though?ā He says, āOne way ticket, some barely terraformed tundra, trying to scratch out a living from GM crops they wonāt even approve for disaster relief. No thanks!ā
āI guess people think if youāre scratching out a living, at least youāre creating something from scratch,ā I want to stay.
What I actually say is: āI know, right? Sounds grim.ā
He wanders off to the coffee machine. I close the tab, reveal the desktop background.
ANDERSON RECYCLING TECHNOLOGIES
KEEPING EARTH LIVABLE
My phone lies face up on the desk. One quick call to Ellen, get her to set me straight.
But what if she does set me straight?
Or what if she backs the idea, then I have to go?
It would be flipping a coin to see if I was disappointed with the result.
It would be making someone else responsible for my decision.
I should stay. Could I really leave?
I pull up a tax return, but suddenly the idea of another form, another calculation, another word, starts a vibration in my head, ringing in my ears. I canāt hold the words and the numbers together. The insides of my eyelids dance with floaters.
Another day, another week, another year of this.
The Test of Time. Bulky cargo carriers scud back and forth across the sky, merging in and out of traffic, up to the shipās hold.
On the balconies and roof terraces of surrounding buildings, tiny figures lean against railings, cocktail glasses or coffee cups or cigarettes in hand, looking out towards the ship.
Smooth chrome delta, hundreds of metres across, a thousand metres up. Birds drift along its length.
I open my work messages (27 unread), hit AUTOREPLY.
āI am currently out of the office andā¦ā
Delete.
āThank you for your message. Please note that I have now left the company and your messageā¦ā
Delete.
The sun glimmers on the Test of Timeās hull.
897 PLACES LEFT!
SIGN UP NOW!
LAST CHANCE!!!
āIāve left this crappy planet behind now. All we do here is re-use the same old rubbish over and over until we die. You should come alongā¦ā
Delete.
āAs long as I can remember, Iāve looked up at the stars and seen space to make something from the ground up, space to make something fresh. Space to make something of myself.
Life has never been bad on this planet, and I hope you continue to enjoy life here on a world that has already been built. Iāve decided I want life to be good or bad or both, but never not-bad.
Please note that I will not be returning. My messages will not be monitored in my absence.
Goodbye.ā