by submission | Nov 17, 2022 | Story |
Author: Bryan Pastor
“Daddy’s eating carrots. Daddy’s eating carrots.” The children chided Maurin as he walked past them, crunching loudly on the long thin strip of vegetable. He smiled with mock sincerity flashing a smile filled with orange chunks. The children erupted in either laughter or disgust, which he let follow him as he left for his nightly rounds of the compound.
He always ended this daily inspection at his garden, a sparse square of soil he had cultivated over the last half dozen years. He plopped himself down cross legged to begin his visible inspection of the crop; three rows of thin green carrot stalks, two vibrant crimson rows of beets and a mass of leafy green lettuce. The package of seeds, that he traded with a less then reputable merchant for a pair of high-quality binders, had sprouted into a row of neat balls fringed in ruffle.
Jayna crept within arms length, prepared to pounce, when Maurin rolled to his left, sprang back, and began to tickle his youngest into submission. The pair giggled and played, being sure to avoid roughhousing too close to the garden. Exhausted she collapsed into his lap, panting, her breath all but gone in a torrent of laughter.
“Why do you eat them?” she asked, the ulterior purpose of her visit finally revealed.
“Because they taste good.” He replied.
“Taste?”
Maurin smiled at his daughter, tracing his fingers over the triplet of ports nested in her forearm.
“There was a time, long before the long march through the stars when all people had their meals by chewing their food. They raised animals, they grew crops.” He pointed to garden. “They foraged among trees for morsels. Having found these, they applied heat and knives and transformed the different foods into better foods. Then they sat around their tables and shared their meals in a ritual of togetherness, where they talked about the day’s events.”
“I always talk to Fenner when I’m feeding.” Jayna chimed in. “I would talk to you if you ever joined us.” Maurin gave his daughter an insincere stern look and began to tickle her again. She flailed about in protest. An arm, no longer under her control leapt out toward the garden, brushing a single carrot top. She froze immediately, fearing capital punishment. Tears welled into her eyes as she pulled her limbs into her chest as tightly as she could.
“You are more important than a forest of carrots my little turnip.” Maurin soothed his daughter, beginning to rock her, assuring her that there was no anger. He stared as this daughter, putting on his kindest smile and would have begun to tickle her again had not a pale rose blossomed on the far horizon. He placed a single kiss on her head and told her to hustle off to bed.
There would be talk tonight among the elders, the war was getting too close, they couldn’t continue to stay neutral.
For the moment, Maurin sat and stared at his little garden, finally deciding that the lettuce was ready to harvest, curious what it would taste like when he mixed the sereman seed oil with the yeast ferment to dress it.
by submission | Nov 16, 2022 | Story |
Author: Mark Renney
Cartwright’s job was dealing with information, but he wasn’t the one responsible for collecting it. He didn’t garner or gather, didn’t even transcribe the documents. When the documents arrived all of these tasks had already been done. Cartwright’s Employers had stressed that it wasn’t necessary for him to understand the info, how it might relate to things in the big wide world wasn’t his concern. His only task was to familiarise himself with it, to read everything and to look at and study the photos, to listen to the audio tapes and to watch the videos.
His Employer’s instructions had been oblique but, working diligently, Cartwright had managed to do what they ordered. Correlating and categorising, he had built an archive, one that he could navigate almost effortlessly. If and when they came a-calling he was sure that he would be able to find the documents they wanted. Even if their questions were cryptic, and all they could provide were a few key words, Cartwright believed that he would be able to locate the correct files and provide the necessary info. But no-one had come a-calling and in twenty years his system hadn’t been tested. Actually, that’s not quite true. He had on occasion been called upon to redact certain info or someone from the files. And Cartwright had always done this happily and, working with a thick black marker, he blocked out the words one at a time, page after page. The fact that he was able to do this so swiftly and efficiently was evidence at least that his system worked.
When he began, twenty years previously, the job had seemed old-fashioned. He had felt as if he were functioning out of time, even more so as the years progressed.
The info was always hand delivered by couriers, bulky envelopes stuffed with sheets of thin typing paper, the text typed on old word processors. And then there were the cassettes: the C60s and C90s and C120s and the video tapes. Sometimes there was something scrawled in biro on the labels or the index cards and sometimes not.
The video footage was mundane, mostly CCTV captures. Cartwright always made extensive notes, describing anyone who crossed in front of the camera, the cars – colour, make and model, registration plates. He included anything and everything, determined not to miss the tiniest detail. The time and date, weather conditions, street signs, pubs, clubs and restaurants, shops, office blocks, company logos – they were all recorded.
The audio tapes were equally as boring, mostly interviews, men and women describing a particular place or a particular person. As he transcribed Cartwright was struck by how similar their testimony was to his own notes on the video footage.
He included as much incidental detail as possible. Voices, accents and cadence of both the interviewers and their subjects. How much the interviewees had to be coaxed or if they gave up the info unprompted and, most importantly, if and when the voices had appeared on other tapes.
Cartwright had worked hard over the years and he had somehow managed to make something from out of nothing. And now instructions had come down from up above. He was to be retired, his services no longer required. Cartwright wondered what would happen to his archive. Was the info also now redundant to simply languish untouched and untested?
He had just six months but it was long enough to do what he intended to do. He would transfer everything onto his computer and when he had uploaded the entire archive onto the hard drive he would post it on-line. Make it available to all and anyone who was so inclined could then test his system, come rain or come shine.
by Julian Miles | Nov 14, 2022 | Story |
Author: Julian Miles, Staff Writer
“No, Mister Reynolds, we will not reconsider our position.”
Datten winces at the shouted reply.
“No, sir, we are not regulated by that organisation, nor do we answer to the authority your brother chairs.”
The reply to that is loud enough to make people sitting nearby look his way. He shakes his head as he replies.
“It’s clear we’re not going to agree, so I’m going to stop here. Then you can call all the people you’ve mentioned, and be told the same things I’ve told you. Good day, sir.”
He ends the call.
Toliva pushes a tankard across to him: “Was that the chap from Barcelona Cinematics again?”
Datten nods, then drinks, then talks.
“He’s convinced stunt clones will give his film ‘veracity’ and allow him ‘visceral close ups’.”
Toliva shakes his head: “Do none of these maniacal directors read our exclusions before contacting us?”
Datten shrugs.
“Most are convinced we added the ‘no lingering deaths’ clauses to cover ourselves, and don’t bother to enforce them if enough money is offered.”
Toliva’s bracer chimes. He taps it to flip the call to his headware.
“Livewire Clones plc. How can we help your action today?”
He listens, then nods.
“We can certainly help you with that, madam. Please remember that pitched battles and suchlike will still have to be handled by digital effects. Medieval battlefields were brutal environments, and we cannot allow our creations to suffer unduly.”
After pausing to listen to the reply, he gives a wide smile.
“In that case, I think we can fully provision your productions, madam. One moment please.”
He double taps his bracer to hold the call, then leans across to Datten.
“It’s Hammerwood Studios. They’ve got a heroic retelling of three Greek myth cycles updated to be set during the secession wars on Charne and Plurit. They want our kids for a much as possible, and are prepared to offer guarantees backed by independent clone cruelty monitoring. They’ve already got someone from CloneFair involved.”
Datten claps his hands in triumph.
“Finally! A major studio making an action epic with clone stunters.” He stops, then points to Toliva’s bracer: “Make sure they’ve budgeted for a legally compliant cadaver furnace.”
Toliva taps the bracer.
“I have received provisional approval, subject to paperwork review. There is one query, though: what clone disposal measures have you considered?”
He waits for a reply.
“No, madam, it’s just that there are several cheaper units that won’t handle extended burn periods or daily use. We’ve also had cases where local geographic features such as lava flows have been proposed as safe disposal methods. So we have to make sure.”
Toliva listens, then puts the call on hold.
“They’re set on using Sunstar Eighteens with Cressen ash compactors. At least one installation per filming site.”
Datten grins: “That’s what I would have asked for as the number one option, but expected them to bargain us down to something less heinously expensive.”
Toliva looks impressed. He restarts the call.
“That’s what we’d have suggested, so I think we can move on to a face-to-face meeting, site inspection, and discussions of initial logistics. When and where?”
The reply is lengthy, and accompanied by a download.
Toliva raises a fist to Datten.
“Pack your bags, brother. We’re off to the Zygymas System. They’re looking to shoot on Vision, Clarity, and Hope. With multiple sites on each planet.”
Datten whoops and bumps the offered fist.
“May the human fascination with watching bloody death never die.”
by submission | Nov 13, 2022 | Story |
Author: Majoki
I called it Stig for obvious reasons. But, I shouldn’t have had to name it. It should’ve been identical to the other units. Nondescript. Interchangeable.
Like termites, ants, or caterpillars. Creatures that deposit signals in their environment to create a form of indirect communication and leaderless cooperation among themselves.
That’s how the units were designed to behave. Did behave.
All but Stig.
After it consistently lost touch with the other units in the lab and in the field, I studied it closely. Stig would always start out with the other units and appear to be following the path established to reach the programmed goal, but inevitably Stig would veer off on its own. Sometimes in the complete opposite direction of the rest of the units.
I observed how Stig established a separate search grid, methodically mapping the area it had arrived at on its own. It laid down markers as it was programmed, though only randomly did other units respond to its signals.
Stig had me stumped. I ran diagnostics. I wiped its drives. I reinstalled the default software. Stig still wandered off.
So, I began talking to Stig. “Where are you going, little one? What are you looking for? Why don’t you stick with the others?”
And the more time I spent with Stig away from the other units, the more I began to wonder what I was looking for, where I was going, why I hadn’t stuck with others.
My research had led me into a solitary search not unlike Stig’s. I’d never been good at following subtle social signals or indirect behavioral cues. I missed many of these markers.
Perhaps, Stig did as well.
Perhaps, that was the real path to explore. Not how creatures learn to follow one another, but why they sometimes cannot and must strike out on a very different path and boldly map their own way forward.
Stig had not followed my lead, but perhaps I could follow its. And develop a new cooperation between disparate beings. A road much less travelled that will make all the difference.
by submission | Nov 12, 2022 | Story |
Author: Tyler Barlass
You rest the stock of the gun on your shoulder, place your finger on the trigger and shoot. You’ve done it so many times that your aim has become impeccable. The bullet whizzes through the cold, barren landscape until it meets its target – the reflective glass visor of a uniformed enemy some 100 yards away. These faceless adversaries had been coined “snatchers” by those who hadn’t been taken. You’ve killed so many that you can’t remember a time that you weren’t fighting these mysterious abductors.
That may not be entirely true. Your memory of when the world died is there somewhere in your head, rattling around in the repressed depths of your mind. You remember being on your back porch, with your best friend, watching monolithic buildings collapsing in the distance. You were young then. You’ve grown up in this new world and the struggles that have come with it. You don’t have the time or energy to get wistful about the past or what might have been. You now spend your days protecting the shoddily assembled camp that you call home, along with an ever-dwindling collection of survivors, from the grasp of the malevolent snatchers. Your friends, camp elders, even children, all taken by these interlopers without warning.
Recently, during an expedition to retrieve supplies from a neighboring camp, you and your fellow protectors were ambushed and everyone, except yourself, was captured and hauled off by the snatchers. You found a way to escape and decided then and there that it was time to stop protecting and start fighting back.
Not far beyond where your most recent quarry had fallen, you approach your destination. In front of you is a sprawling white plastic-walled compound that sits like a gleaming beacon on the charred land and dark sunless sky. Your heart jumps, you’ve never been this close.
The polyethylene walls are thin enough that a long, serrated knife pierces into it without much trouble. You crawl through your makeshift entrance, wincing at bright lights that emanate from above. You cough, the air is different here, it reminds you of your youth. Long forgotten memories, familiar faces, come rushing into your mind.
You ready your rifle and move slowly through the blindingly bright halls. Everything clean, white, pristine. It stands in stark contrast to the dismal, ash-covered living spaces that you’ve gotten so accustomed to. Sounds reverberate from somewhere nearby, you grip your gun tightly.
Turning the corner, you see a man in uniform but he wears no helmet, no visor, no mask, nothing to cover his pale skin. Even from this distance, you can make out his face. You see that his hair is brown like yours but kept short, the shape of his face is round but not plump and his eyes are a deep shade of blue. It stuns you, for you’ve never seen them with their mask off. Based on some of the stories that had been passed around camp, you weren’t sure that the snatchers were even human.
Shouting wakes you from your reverie. The man at the end of the hall notices you, yells something unintelligible, reaches for his own holstered gun and comes running down the hall. Despite your state of bewilderment, you must act. You rest the stock of the gun on your shoulder, place your finger on the trigger and hesitate.
by submission | Nov 11, 2022 | Story |
Author: David C. Nutt
It was good to be back in the Pacific again. Darting through the kelp beds, rolling through the surf, gathering at our sacred rocks. I knew in about 30 days this would wear thin on me. Then it would be back on land. A hike up Shasta, the desert and dawn with a lover, Aspen for some deep powder. Then that would wear thin.
The only thing constant in my life was the stars. When I am in the ocean, from the middle of the pacific, I see them burn bright. On land I climb mountains to be nearer to them. Then back to the sea, and back to the mountains, and then the sea. In both worlds I am no closer to the stars I crave.
Once, while gazing up into the night sky, in the Pacific, a killer whale popped up next to me. I thought that would be it. Too late to react so I just floated there waiting for him to devour me.
Instead, we just floated there. Eye to eye we shared a moment. He rolled over on his side, eye fixed to the stars. We stayed like that for almost an hour, and when the sun started to break over the horizon, we both nodded to each other and went our ways.
A month later I am in San Diego at some cliché college bar. I was attracted to a strange man. I knew something was different about him. I did not let him see me. I followed him. I could tell where he was going, I could sense it… the beach.
He stood on the end of a rocky out cropping. I saw him take off his clothes and fold them to a bundle. I saw him leap to what would be certain death, the tides and surf I knew so well would cut him to ribbons against the reef and rocks. My skin was near by so I slipped it on and went after him, eyes fixed on the spot he would surface. I raced there fast as I could but instead 500 yards out an Orca breached and I panicked. I rolled over and sped back to shore. The Orca followed me and I knew I could not make it. As I leaped to shore, I shed my seal’s skin as the orca devoured it. Skin gone, there was no way back.
I saw the Orca surface just beyond the surf line. He saw me naked, crying on the beach. I cursed him, shook my fist at him, stomped my foot on the sand. The orca buried its head to the waves and began swimming to the beach. At the last possible second, it breached and beached itself with an enormous thud, sliding forward with the last inch of surf. It’s skin split open and the man from the bar burst out, leaving just the skin of the orca which melted away until all that was left was a portion of the dorsal. We stood naked, face to face. He handed me his dorsal and without thinking I took a bite, and then devoured it all. After that we made love.
That was a lifetime ago.
Tomorrow my Orca and I go to the stars. We will stay at the space a station for a month while we train to go to the deep space array. We both know it is a one-way trip but neither of us we can ever be in our oceans again. But that’s OK, for together we have traded the oceans for the stars.