by submission | Nov 1, 2012 | Story |
Author : James Bambury
V pricked the side of the universe and giggled as it contracted and spun about in circles.
âDid you see that?â V poked another universe. It collapsed into a space-time singularity and V laughed again. âThat one had more of a fizz. Make some more.â
âAre you going to burst them?â X asked.
âYes.â
âWhat about letting one go for a little longer, just to see what would happen?â
âI am almost certain it wouldnât be as exciting as watching them blow up.â
âWell, I want to see. Will you leave this next one alone? Just for a change?â
âI guess.â
X lit up another universe. It flared outwards in a bubble of quark-gluon plasma that was just coalescing into a soup of particles when V stabbed it. It sputtered and collapsed.
âCome on.â X said.
âYou can always make more,â said V. âI’ll leave the next one alone, I promise.â
X sighed and sparked a new universe. It flared into being and floated between them.
âThis one is nice.â said V.
âYou stand back.â said X.
âI mean it. This one seems a bit different.â
âYou’re just saying that.â
âNo, seriously. You’ve done something interesting with the gravity in this one. There’s just the right textures of galaxies and dark matter in there. I wouldn’t be surprised if there was sentience in there. Remember the last time that happened?â
âI was drunk and lonely. I don’t want to talk about it.â
âThere’s going to be a whole lot of planets in this one.â
âAs if you care about any planet that’s not being engulfed in its own star.â
âI care far more about things than you think. Now, let’s grab some lunch and see how this plays out.â
âFine.â X stood up, turned away and heard the familiar pop of a universe collapsing on itself.
âAfter you said all that you had to just–â X glared. V scrunched the universe into a Planck sized ball and flicked it at X.
âI just had to see your look,â said V, âbut also, have you actually thought about cold death if there was sentience around to experience it? I think I’m being the nice one here.â
X waited for V to leave, then tried to remember what had happened with the gravity on the last universe. X lit a tiny universe and hid it under his seat.
He would catch up with V and start another argument. That would give the stars time to burn. Then heâd send back his main course, spill a drink, do anything to buy some more time while the universe would become pockmarked with evaporating black holes. With a little luck, X would see cold death when they got back from lunch.
by submission | Oct 31, 2012 | Story |
Author : Sierra Corsetti
âHave your cards out and ready for inspection! Anyone holding up the line will be left behind!â
Renee slipped through the throngs of people, patting a pocket here and there. She couldnât take anything now of course, not when she was about to board one of the last transports to the new settlement. The guards may have been dimwitted, but even they would know an eight-year old girl shouldnât be carrying money or other valuables.
Had she a parent or even an older sibling, eyebrows might not be raised. But she was alone now, and she couldnât afford to make mistakes.
Lots of people were making mistakes these days. Renee smiled to herself every time someone got pushed out of line for having a fake ID card. It was so easy to make fake cards that worked, but adults were too stupid to figure out how.
Everyone around her was coughing, and some pressed a variety of masks to their faces. The human race had to survive, but it couldnât anymore with the pollution and near unbearable temperatures now. That was why they were leaving.
âLiftoff is in two hours and thirteen minutes! Letâs move, people!â
The lines continued their slow shuffle, unaffected by the bellowing of the station manager. What they should have done, Renee thought to herself, was chip everyone and have them walk through a scanner. Rather than have to go through individually and swipe each card and visually match the person with the photo that came up on their file.
But, adults were too stupid to think of that. And Renee was glad for it. If she had a chip, it would have been much harder to access her file and wipe her parentsâ crime records off. It might have even been impossible.
They were only taking people with clean records to the new settlement, and even the children of supposed criminals were being left behind. Renee could understand why. They wouldnât want her, a pickpocket, on the new earth, but thanks to her cleverness, they wouldnât know they had her. With luck, they would never find out.
She continued her weaving dance through the lines, until she found a lady with five children near the front of one line. Renee stood near them. The woman didnât notice. The little family swiped their cards and had their identities verified. Renee handed her card to the officer and smiled sweetly when he looked at her for facial recognition.
He grunted and gave her a dismissive nod.
âNext.â
Renee walked up the ramp into the bulky grey transport. She was good at being lucky.
by submission | Oct 30, 2012 | Story |
Author : Daniel
âMother unit, what happens to humans when they die?â The mother unit, 523 as she was usually called, stopped in her work for a second and thought about what her offspring unit had said.
âIs 43 thinking of 1001?â She asked the question lightly, hoping not to upset the young unit.
âYesâŠand other things.â He responded
âWell, there are many ideas where we go when we die. If we believe in what the ancients say, we will go to a massive kingdom where we all can live happily for all eternity.â She smiled warmly at her offspring unit, who she called 43 with deepest affection. She removed a packaged meat ration from her freeze unit and flopped it into the heat sink.
âMother unit, since 43 started school last year, 43 has been under the impression that religion no longer applies to the modern world. The teacher unit, 45-9008-72847-282, said thatâŠâ
523 sighed and tuned him out. This was only way to handle him sometimes. He just didnât understand.. She looked around at her son, 6 feet tall, darkened skin, bald, with a strong jaw like his father unit. She smiled warmly at him. So alive and handsome he was. âWell, what does 43 think?â
He looked quizzically at her. âThatâs the problem. 43 donât know. 43 thought mother unit might. 43 has read nearly every book in the book lending unit, however there is no answer what happens to the corpses 43 sees on the ground everywhere.â
She smiled again. So curious. Like his father unit. Ah, 1001. He had been curious too. She had been content to let things do what they did. Her waste disappeared in the cycle unit. Her rations appeared in her ration unit dispenser. Her work orders appeared on the wall unit. It was all so automatic and made sense. She flipped the meat patties in the heat unit sink. âWell, there are 96 billion humans in the world. 523 guesses there would be a few humans dying quite often. 523 thinks humanity is sending people out in, oh what are they called, geo-globes? Those things are amazing. 523 heard they can maintain humans for generations and generations.â She pressed on a patty and sniffed happily at the sizzle. âAs for the people here, wellâŠ523 doesnât know. 523 figured there was a pick up unit that removed the dead. What they do with them? How can 523 know? At least 523 doesnât have to touch them.â
43 glared at her. â43 wonders about you, 523.â His rudeness in saying her name shocked her into listening to him. â523 doesnât question anything. Today, when 43 went to education assessment, 43 saw 5 dead bodies yet, when 43 returned, they were gone. What happened to them?â
523 groaned. â523 doesnât know. 523 has seen mass funerals. Thereâs a large oven with many ashes inside it. Itâs the usual custom now. It was for 523âs mother. Not a lot of space for graveyards.â
43 frowned and looked at her. âWellâŠperhaps thatâs it then.â He turned and walked out of the door of the living unit space. 523 smiled knowingly. She knew he would never feel fully satisfied until he exhausted every avenue of research. She removed the meat patty from the heat sink and took a bite. She chewed for a minute and swallowed, savoring the sweet aroma and flavor of the patty. She smiled. She had not eaten meat since her mother unit had died 4 years ago. She had forgotten how good it was.
by submission | Oct 29, 2012 | Story |
Author : Desmond Hussey
Sodium lamps paint the night phlorescent orange, reflecting off the oily, wet pavement. Vermin, human and rodent, litter the streets.
I took a wrong turn somewhere and find myself navigating the wretched slums of humanityâs cast offs looking for familiar territory. I glance over my shoulder and catch sight of a man – a dead ringer for Santa Clause without the jolly red suit – puke into his hands.
In the blink of an eye, he spews his dinner through the cracks of his fingers, barely managing to capture his false dentures expelled by the torrent of, what appears to be, curdled milk and beef-n-barley soup. With a quick flick of his wrist he sheds the heavier chunks from his false teeth, then jabs them back into his filthy maw. He doesnât even break his stride. I look away, disgusted.
I turn a corner and nearly trip over another piece of street trash. Another native. Another waste of space.
âTheyâre hee-eer,â he hisses through lips crusty with scabs.
I pick up my pace.
A cab drives by, ignoring my frantic hailing.
When I turn around, a man stares at me from a shadow. Sickly orange light barely highlights the edges of his baseball cap and long coat.
âHow many of us are left? Thatâs what I want to know.â His voice is strained. Tense.
I turn right and keep moving. He follows. âTheyâve been raping us,â he spits. âAnd poisoning us and stealing from us, killing us – for thousands of years!â
Oh great. A talker. Iâm about to become a sounding board for another conspiracy theory.
âI been thinking,â he growls. âI been thinking and I been watching. Keeping track of how many of us are left. Everyday thereâs fewer.â
He becomes animated, loud and sarcastic. ââWhat?â you ask. âWhat of the burgeoning population? What of the billions of people you see everywhere, everyday?ââ His voice lowers to a furtive whisper. âLet me tell you something.â
Here it comes.
âThere is no population crisis.â
I knew it.
âAt least not for humans. You wanna know something? Little known fact. The actual human population hasnât changed since the Dark Ages. âHow?â you ask. Iâll tell you. People think an alien invasion is coming, right? Ha! Wrong. Itâs already here. The whole global conquest thing happened, like forty thousand years ago. All those corporate cube farmers and sheeple are just human shaped shells. Just meat. Beasts to be ridden by their alien masters. History is a fucking fiction, man! Take a good look around. How many people do you really know?â
He stops walking to emphasize his question. âHow many people do you REALLY know?â He jogs to catch up, keeping pace with me again. Heâs getting manic.
âWhat for? The what for is – theyâre milking every resource this planet has.â He fiercely ticks off fingers. âOil. Trees. Precious metals. Water. Salt. Yeah, sea salt. Weird, right? This takes time. Even ETâs gotta sleep. You know the sickest part? Theyâve convinced us, somewhere along the way, to help them pick our own bones clean for them. Theyâre just waiting. Waiting for us to get everything harvested, processed, organized, centralized, economized. Then theyâre gonna swoop in and beam it all up, Scotty. Poof. Everything. Gone.â He gestures vaguely toward space. âLeaving us here to rot on broken pavement.â
He stops.
âI try telling people. They donât believe me. Nobody believes me.â He yells as I walk away, âBut I think you might.â
I do.
Iâm not worried. Weâll be gone soon.
by submission | Oct 28, 2012 | Story |
Author : Jake Trommer
When the Terran Hegemony declared war on Nouveau Katanga, they werenât lacking for cockyness. General Janssens boasted about how his intrepid soldiers would march over N.K.âs ârabble in armsâ within the week.
As the rabble in question, my colleagues and I begged to differ. Four weeks on and the General realized that we might actually have had a point. As it turns out, when you put out a call for professional soldiers, you donât get the tossers who show up expecting to lounge around in barracks doing nothing. And when you put your conscript infantry up against those professionals then those conscripts are going to get pretty severely mauled.
That wasnât to say that weâd danced our way through the roses; the Terran Hegemony Peacemakers mightâve been conscripts but they could be just as nasty as we were. Iâd had their flank during the Anh Loa Uprising, and had told the President and my fellow officers time and again that they werenât to be taken lightly.
Johann Mueller had begged to differ. And when heâd led the Eighth Commando in a headlong motorized charge on a Peacemaker outpost, theyâd pretty handily torn his lads to shreds. That night weâd found ourselves raising a glass to another fallen comrade that night in the bar.
We werenât in the capitol anymore: with the Hegemony attack happening in full force, combat commanders tended to get rather strange looks when in the rear. Instead our watering hole was the dingy bar in Themala, ten minuteâs drive away from the fighting and notorious for not being able to afford mechanized wait staff.
Dan Carton-Barber, back to the wall like he always insisted on sitting, was the one who made the toast. âTo absent comrades.â
And he and Ian Wicks and I raised our drinks in salute. âHeard the news?â Ian asked after draining his tumbler.
âWhatâs that?â
âThe Hegemony might be hiring on the Rakharans to support their forces.â
âThey wouldnât,â Dan breathed, hand unconsciously tracing the scar jagging across his face. A scar a Rakharan officerâs sword had given him in the Nemean Abyss. âEarthâs always handled her own problems, why hire them?â
He wasnât wrong—the reason men like me had done so well for ourselves was the Hegemonyâs insistence that humans be used to solve human problems, even when their armies werenât sufficient. And men like me had done very well for ourselves.
Ian produced his sidearm, an antique slugthrower, and began to clean the weapon. âTheyâre desperate,â he said simply in his posh drawl. âIf N.K. can break away, God only knows what will happen next. They want to make an example of us.â
Dan fumbled for a cigarette, expression haunted. Those of us whoâd been in the Anh Loa Uprisings had never truly left—nor had it truly left them. âSteady on Dan, thereâs a good chap,â I said quietly, placing a hand on his shoulder. âWeâve faced the lizards before, we can do so again.â
With a will, he tore himself away from whatever memory he was drowning in. âI know, Mike,â he said, blinking. âJust…remembering.â
Even the usually stoic Ian was about to say something there when a noise sounded in the distance, the dull CRUNK of a man-portable mortar. We froze. âOutgoing or incoming?â
The explosion and screams from the column of APCs parked outside answered that. Weapons fire, gun and laser alike, began to sound in the night.
âOffhand,â said Ian, calmly reassembling his pistol, âIâd say incoming.â
As one, we got to our feet. âCome on then,â I said. âTime to stand-to.â