Hub City Blues

The Future is Unsustainable

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  • Hub City Blues

Apotheosis (2)

Posted by Ebonstorm on April 11, 2013
Posted in: 30 Characters in 30 Days 2013, 30 Stories in 30 Days 2013, 30 x 30 x 30, Short Story. Tagged: comics, dimension travel, ebonstorm, gateway, harvard education, Manfred Drake, Mark Marris, Portal, Redeemer, superhero, Thaddeus Howze. 1 Comment
reedemer 2
When your time comes to die, be not like those whose hearts are filled with fear of death, so that when their time comes they weep and pray for a little more time to live their lives over again in a different way. Sing your death song, and die like a hero going home. 
–Tecumseh 

I sat in terror for the three days I was in the hospital.

He didn’t come back and I wasn’t comforted at all.

All I could think of was Redeemer flying all around the world, my world, a world with no capable of stopping him. No technology capable of making him break a sweat, a world completely unprepared for a man who could bring the Apocalypse all by his lonesome. Only my drug induced state kept me calm.

Please God, let this be a morphine-induced nightmare. The whole time I prayed I fingered the crushed aluminum bedframe, rubbing it like a rosary. On the third day, my father came to get me. He was dressed for work, in his attorney-armor, his face impassive and cold. As usual, he had little to say to me. His demeanor relayed his assumption I was doing my usual, something boneheaded and barely worthy of his acknowledgement.  I know my mother sent him, he would not have come on his own. She scared him, but not enough to divorce her. She would get everything.

“Where do you plan to live? Your apartment is still a crime scene.” His voice oozed the disapproval of a parent filled with the shame of a son who did not achieve all that a one hundred and fifty IQ and one hundred thousand dollars worth of Harvard education should have become: a comic illustrator. I was the shame that kept on giving as far as he was concerned.

As he rolled me down the hospital corridor, I had to think. Where was I going to live? I hadn’t thought about anything beyond Redeemer promising to conquer the planet. “Maybe I can go and live with Will. He is my co-writer and colorist who helps me with my comics. Do you have a phone I could borrow? Mine was…” He hands his phone barely able to contain his contempt.

When we reached the street my heart stopped. Manfred Drake was standing in the doorway. Drake was Redeemer’s secret identity! He stood there in a dark suit, with a red tie and a black shirt. His brown skin positively radiated energy. His hair was close-cut and his eyes recognized me and when he spoke, his tone was ironic and yet still warm. “Galactic Press sent me to take you to your hotel, Mr. Marris.” He stood next to a magnificent cherry-red Mercedes.

“I didn’t know they came in red,” was all I could get out.

“They don’t, it’s a custom paint job.” His smirk told me he was enjoying my discomfiture.

Looking up at my father, he smiled his megawatt smile and introduced himself. “Hello, sir. My name is Drake.” He held his hand out to my father. “You are welcome to come along, sir.”

“No, if your company is willing to take him off my hands, all the better. Goodbye, son. Good luck with your… writing.” He turned away with nary a look back. I watched him walk away into the parking lot, wishing there was something I could have said to make him proud of me. Drake’s eyes watched me, I could not read his expression.

“He’s a piece of work. Now I know where you get it from. Can I help you into your car, Mr. Marris?” He held his hand out to me and I leaned my weight onto his hand. He lifted me effortlessly and slid me into the car. He closed the door and got into the Mercedes. “I haven’t had a chance to repair your apartment, but I have already paid a crew to do the work you need. I hope you don’t mind.”

He eased into traffic and my mind had a dozen questions. I was afraid of the answers. How did he get money? “Let me go through your questions so you can get to mine. No, I didn’t rob any banks or armored cars. Your Las Vegas is just like ours. There were at least six ways I could make money there. With perfect muscular control, I can roll dice and get the number I want as easily as you can put butter on toast. With my ability to focus my attention, I can watch poker players and read the smallest micro-expressions to know when and how to play my hand. With my ability to compute vectors, roulette is no more challenging than the average morning crossword puzzle. Walking down the strip I was able to acquire a million dollars in an eight hour shift. I didn’t even rush.”

We exited the freeway and I found myself sitting outside the Fairmont Heritage in Ghirardelli Square, one of the most expensive hotels on the wharf in San Francisco. He got out the car, paid a valet an obscene amount of money and a wheelchair was there to meet me. “Okay, I am a little confused as to why you are doing this.” Drake looked ahead and waved to the concierge and continued toward the elevators.

“Call it an apology. I had a few days to think and to look at your world. You are a product of your environment.” His face had no laughter, no mocking, nothing to say he was even remotely trying to be funny. For a moment I wanted to be offended.

“Don’t be. My world is as my creator made it, filled with strife, heroes and villains locked in a never-ending struggle. A simplistic reflection of his own worldview, uncomplicated by politics, megacorporations, and a pervasive greed that keeps billions in poverty while a few enjoy all that life has to offer.”

He rolled me into the room and once inside he lifted me gently from my chair, with the same ease he might move a doll. He placed me on the bed and sat down in a large nearby chair. I had to admit the room was beautiful in a way I had never known. Dark wood, light from the deck spilled into the room and I could see the bay from the window, small sailboats slowly moving in the choppy water.

Drake continued, “I asked you not to be offended because considering what you could have done to Metro City and to my world in general, it could have been like this place. You ban books, but not guns. You protest abortion but not the poverty caused by overpopulation, you promote prisons and a culture of violence but not schools. If all I have to contend with is a villain bent on taking over the world, who even if he were successful, he would not do all that you have done here, I can accept that. Your world is hell on Earth.”

He stood up and walked to the deck window. He slid open the door and stepped outside, letting in a warm ocean breeze. “Onto the real question. Have you given any thought about how to send me back?”

“I have no idea.” I whispered, but I knew he could hear it.

“Well you better get one quickly. I have noticed something since I have been here and you won’t like it. My presence seems to have caused an instability in your universe’s causal framework.”

“Excuse me?”

“If I stay still too long, bad things happen. While I was in Vegas, there was a gas main explosion. I was able to contain most of the explosion underground and minimize the casualties. The explosion destroyed my suit and my money. I had to start all over again. Flying over the ocean, a tanker was lost in a storm and had been overturned by a rogue wave. I managed to keep the ship from sinking by beaching it.

The crew thinks they were just fortunate to run aground. During my world tour, I stopped in Russia. During my visit, an asteroid came down over Moscow and I caused it to explode by superheating it with my flash-vision. So far no one has seen me, but if this continues, eventually someone will realize they are not on a movie set.”

“I will think of something,” I stammered. He tossed me a phone. It looked just like my old one, only newer.

“You have until the end of the week and then my apology will end.” He put his hands together and there was a flash of light. He was wearing a variation of his Redeemer costume except it was dark and done all in a stretchy leather. “Your world is low on variable molecules so I had to make due. I figured if I was going to go dark, I might as well look the part. See you in a week.”

He disappeared from sight without a sound.

Apotheosis © Thaddeus Howze 2013, All Rights Reserved

Written For 30

Harbinger

Posted by Ebonstorm on April 10, 2013
Posted in: 30 Characters in 30 Days 2013, 30 Stories in 30 Days 2013, 30 x 30 x 30, Short Story. Tagged: alien invasion, aliens, asylum, blobs, ebonstorm, insanity, Thaddeus Howze. 2 Comments

Asylum Bed

Every day is the same. No sense of time. Same white walls, same white clothes, same white shoes.

Every day at six o’clock, an orderly comes to my room. He wakes me.

“Time for your meds, Mr. Meltzer.” He tries to affect a caring tone, but I know better. He doesn’t care.

“Yeah, okay.” Is the same reply I have used for years now.

He walks out the room, I shiver convulsively. I wait for the shaking to stop. The medication actually helps. I feel more calm. More in control. Less about to break out in a fit of terrified screaming.

I take a shower. The water is more cold than warm, but I am used to it now. It has a stink of metal and tastes like pennies when I brush my teeth. My skin is always dry and itchy when I’m done. I put on a new change of clothing left during the night while I sleep; a pair of scrubs, white, of course.

I slip into my string-less shoes. Comfortable deck shoes, I think. I hated them when I first arrived but they grew on me. Like so many things here.

My door unlocks at eight. The click fills the air in the room and lingers. As it fades away, a brief squelching tone followed by the faux happy Voice of My Captivity: “Breakfast time. Please make your way to the galley for breakfast, everyone. It is a bright and sunny day here at Happy Acres. It will be in the low seventies this afternoon so everyone who can get outside should. Everyone should congratulate Mister Franklin, who has recently crossed over and will be joining the staff. Congratulations! See the rest of you at breakfast!”

I have never met the Voice Of My Captivity in the hall or at a meeting or in a group. Whoever she is, she does not do any of the work with the patients.

My choices for the primary section of my breakfast are 5 Minute Grits, Cream of Wheat, Malto Meal or Oatmeal. If I can stomach it, there is a soft-boiled egg, and a piece of less than ideal fruit. Same thing, every day. I have been doing this for ten years now and it doesn’t look things will be changing.

I bet you are wondering if I am crazy. No, not a bit. The drugs they give me calm me down, but they haven’t done a thing to erase what I see every day.

Every human being I see is covered in these slimy, green and luminescent parasites.

I’ll let you digest that for a moment. Ready? The Reader’s Digest version….

I woke up one morning twelve years ago and drove my car to work. My wife and I were divorced but civil,  I got to see my kids on the weekend. I was firmly driven into my rut. Same thing every day, wanting for something, anything to be different.

When I got in my car that morning little did I know it was the last normal day I would ever have. Turning on the radio, I got nothing but static on every channel. I assumed it was just my car slowly fading into obsolescence. I was forced to entertain myself by watching other drivers. And that is when I saw one. It was sitting on a woman’s face as I sat at the light.

She was putting on her makeup at the red. She seemed completely oblivious to the fist sized blob of green goo on her forehead. I rolled my window down and tried to get her attention.

“Sod off!” was her prompt and very rude reply. I thought maybe I was imagining what I saw until I saw a second on a completely different fellow. The blob was slowly disappearing into his ear, while he picked his nose at a toll gate queue. Once the blob was completely in his ear, another one appeared from the back of his chair and slid to a comfortable spot on the top of his head.

I looked around in the general toll area and could see at least fifteen of the creatures all around me. I began to doubt my sanity. By the time I got to work, I had seen hundreds of them. Nearly every car in San Francisco had at least one.

I tried not to stare. It was hard because the blobs could be seen doing any number of terrible things while they dangled, dripped, oozed, into and out of any and all visible human orifices. No one seemed to notice or care.

I tried to pay no attention to them because I assumed it was my problem. Until I met Darren the security guard in the building after work. Normally, I see him, he sees me. We nod and go on about our business. Today, he stuck out. He didn’t have a green blob on him. He noticed I didn’t either.

“Hello Darren.”

“Mr. Meltzer.”

“Nice day, isn’t it?”

“Hell no it isn’t, sir. I have to ask can you see them?”

“Between you and I? Yes. But I am having a hard time complaining. My coworkers have never been as cooperative, efficient and dedicated as they were today. They accomplished more work today than they have all month.”

“Yes sir. I noticed it too. Everyone was doing work they never did before. The security teams walked the entire perimeter of the building without a smoke break and without a complaint. Everyone showed up for work on time and offered to stay late if we needed them to.”

“Darren, I have to wonder should we be complaining or just happy everything is running so well?”

“No idea. I will let you know tomorrow. Good night, sir.”

Darren never came back to work, though. And by the next day, everyone I saw had their own personal blob or two or three or nine. Except for me. There were none in my apartment. None on my pillows. Nothing on my car. It was as if they simply didn’t seem to care for me. Then I thought about my wife and kids and drove hell bent for leather to Antioch to see if they were okay, since no one answered my phone calls.

I saw them standing at the door as if they knew I was coming.

“Don’t come back,” was all my wife had to say to me. She closed the door and my daughters acted as if they didn’t recognize me.

I sat up all night looking for something on television, on the radio, or trying to make phone calls to everyone I knew. No one answered. No television shows, no cable, no internet connection. The world was silent in every way that mattered.

The next morning I got up to go to work and there were half the number of cars on the road. Traffic was fast and I was never below sixty five on the freeway. Got to work in record time. Only half the office staff was available. Everyone looked busy and focused on the tasks of the morning.

Until I noticed one thing in particular. No one spoke. As a matter of fact, no one got up from their desks once they sat down. They shuffled papers, moved files, interacted with Internet services. I realized the internet wasn’t down, only my connection at home was offline. But the office network was highly restricted now. Only resources directly related to work were allowed.

I got up to go to the bathroom. I had the place to myself, since my new co-workers didn’t seem to need to go any longer. I took out my cell phone and dialed 911. I don’t know why I waited so long. Maybe I simply hadn’t made the connection to what I was seeing. This was not my imagination. This had gone horribly wrong.

“What is the nature of your emergency, sir?” Got straight through and picked up on the first ring.

What do you say? “I think the world is being invaded by aliens…” was what I got out in a strained and hushed voice.

“Please return to your desk Mr. Meltzer. Someone will be there to tend to your needs in just a few minutes.”

The phone disconnected and soon after started beeping for a few minutes before I realized what happened. I got up and went back to my desk. My office mates were standing around my desk and were packing it up.

I already knew what was next. I lost my job. They were polite but insistent. What they said was even stranger. “Mr. Meltzer, you will continue to be paid for the next two years. We want you to go out and tell everyone what you saw happen here in San Francisco. You will be provided with a vehicle, a credit card, and the resources and connections to talk to anyone and everyone you want to. We will call you and tell you what city we will visit next. You go there and pave the way with interviews and anything else you think will ease the transition to our new way of life.”

And so without further ado, I was given a brand new Mercedes, the best suits money could buy, a credit card I never had to worry about and the job of going out to talk to the masses about the quiet invasion taking place all over the world.

Yes, they arrest me frequently and put me into an asylum until someone makes a call and gets me released. Same dance, different cities, different states one after another.

The young doctor who has been taking care of my case, called me into her office and let me know I am being released. My gear and equipment will be brought out front. She was a nice lady before they got to her. Now that she has her own blob, she is a model of efficiency. Her once messy desk, a trademark look is now a tidy and organized sign of her complete domination by an alien consciousness.

I have been at this facility in Texas for three months now. My last stop was Houston. My next stop is Dallas. As I get dressed, I consider the way I will preach the gospel before I find myself in my next resting facility between cities.

The blobs don’t seem to be in any particular hurry. They estimate it will take another twelve years give or take. They ask me if I like my work. My response is always pretty much the same. “It’s a living.”

My business card pretty much says it all. People give me the weirdest look when they read it. Dan Metzler, Harbinger.

It’s sad. Most don’t even know what the word means. By the time they understand it, they don’t exist anymore.

Harbinger © Thaddeus Howze 2013, All Rights Reserved

cooltext988821575

 Written For 30

Apotheosis (1)

Posted by Ebonstorm on April 9, 2013
Posted in: 30 Characters in 30 Days 2013, 30 Stories in 30 Days 2013, 30 x 30 x 30, Short Story. Tagged: comics, dimension travel, ebonstorm, gateway, Mark Marris, Portal, Redeemer, superhero, Thaddeus Howze. Leave a comment

Reedemer

In theology, the term apotheosis refers to the idea that an individual has been raised to godlike stature. In art, the term refers to the treatment of any subject (a figure, group, locale, motif, convention or melody) in a particularly grand or exalted manner.

My name is Mark Marris and I used to be a comic writer. Until I met my creation, Redeemer, face to face.

No, I don’t do drugs. Not anymore. But this wasn’t a bad trip. Not in the classic sense. I’m rambling, let me explain. Hand me my crutches.

I was producing to a deadline, my sixteenth issue of Redeemer, for a small comic company, Galactic Press. Redeemer was their star product and we were producing fifty thousand copies a month. For a small press, this was looking like our breakthrough product. Redeemer sold more issues than our four series combined, so we were working on it with a vengeance. My partner, Will, was the colorist and letterer while I did the script, pencils and inks. An uneven distribution of labor, certainly, but it worked and we were happy to finally be receiving some notice.

My latest issues had Redeemer, who was a watered-down Superman, think John Byrne’s Man of Steel and you have Redeemer, going through a series of changes to reach what we thought was going to be the desired state. Currently he was tough enough to get into fights, with a heart big enough to get out of them. But his real appeal was his cast of characters both super and civilian. In our last arc, we were trying to make him into a character of the modern era, so we thought he needed a loss so great, he would be turned into a hero driven by a need for vengeance. The days of the perfect good guy hero were done. We wanted to have a hero people could relate to. Edgy, walking the line between hero and anti-hero and looking good doing it.

Redeemer’s Metro City was a mess. Supervillains were a regular occurrence and even with the help of the Metro PD and the Freedom Force, it was anyone’s guess who would be in charge of the city by the end of the issue. We played fast and loose with the story, keeping people guessing what would happen next. When we killed Silver Mao in issue six, the fans went wild, but they came back for issue seven. Mao was Redeemer’s best friend and we began seeding the story for the ultimate loss of Redeemer’s closest friends by blowing up the Metro PD Super Agent headquarters in the sixteenth issue.

In issue fifteen, he faced off against a technological villain, Portal, who used doorways to and from other dimensions to misdirect and harm our hero. I loved writing and drawing Portal, because we could show any number of things in a single issue. Dangerous insects, giant lizards, deadly environments were all part and parcel of Portal. She was brilliant, so I always had to work to make her plans make sense and still give Redeemer a chance to stop them.

I was on schedule when a fast moving thunderstorm swept over Chicago one summer afternoon a couple of months ago. The storm inspired me so I had Portal and Redeemer tearing up Metro City in their own thunderstorm. Portal was opening a gateway to a nearby red star hoping to reduce Redeemers powers, when a lightning bolt struck his gateway. I was planning on using this to give Redeemer a chance to recover since Portal had begun augmenting his tools with killer robots capable of giving Redeemer serious injuries.

Redeemer got up after dispatching the last killbot only to see Portal creating a new gateway to a red sun! Redeemer falls to the ground, his quantum field temporarily disrupted, his injuries stopped healing, and without his powers he screamed out in incredibly pain. Portal walks her gateway to where the writhing Redeemer is moaning in agony.

“Don’t worry Redeemer, I have improved my gateways, I can now send you across time and space. In this case, to a nice red giant about fifty light years from here. You’ll only last about three minutes without your powers. Then Metro City will be mine. Don’t worry, I’ll enjoy plundering it while you die.”

Three panels, two side by side with one major one showing the gateway’s light spilling over Redeemer. In the last frame, I show a lightning bolt striking the gateway as it covers Redeemer and he vanishes from sight.

My apartment exploded. Not an exaggeration, an honest to god explosion from outside my window into my house. A lightning bolt came in from outside and blew my windows right out of the frame. My living room was on fire and my computer on which I had just saved my best work ever just shut down. Not that I noticed because I was picking myself up from the floor while blood ran down my face and arms from numerous cuts and bruises.

None of this prepared me for the body on the floor of my apartment. But first I had to put out the fires. I grabbed an extinguisher from my kitchen and tried to take on one of the fires burning up my curtains. It was a losing battle. The fire spread faster than I could put it out. The wind from outside the apartment was only feeding the fire and my sofa next to the window caught on fire next.

Not knowing what to do next, I grabbed my hard drive and looked at the body on the floor. I didn’t know what to do and with smoke everywhere and with only the fire lighting the room, I could barely see. I bent down to try and drag him. It was a him. My god, he was massive. I had to get down on my knees just to put his arm over my shoulder. I tried to stand up but it was like moving a tree limb.

“Come on, big fella, you’re gonna have to help.” That’s when I saw it. He was wearing tattered rags but they were rags I just remembered seeing. They were the remnants of Redeemer’s costume. Then the smoke was everywhere and I couldn’t stop choking on it. Redeemer slumped unconsciously over my shoulder and pinned me to the floor. I was sure I was dead.

I have to admit I was surprised to find myself on the ground floor of my apartment building with a gorgeous fireman, firewoman, fireperson giving me oxygen and mumbling something comforting. I pushed the mask away because I had to know what happened. “How did I get here?”

“A big fellow dropped you off here and said he would be right back. Then he went back upstairs.” She had the strangest look on her face. “He handed me this and said you would want it.”

My hard drive. All of my work to date. My life’s work. He saved it. “Where is he? I want to thank him.”

“Don’t try to get up, your leg likely has a hairline fracture in two places.” When I looked down, I realized I was splinted and lying on a gurney. Going nowhere fast. “That is the strange part. Our fire crews got here only about five minutes after the fire was reported. We got upstairs, moved people and closed in on what we now know is your apartment. When we got inside, the fire was out. Things were still smoking, but nothing was actively burning. The neighbors said they heard a sound like thunder coming out of your apartment and then a plume of fire shot out the window. When we got the door open, there was no one in your apartment.”

As she was handing me off to the EMT, she kept talking almost as if she was still processing the thoughts herself, “The only thing we found which we couldn’t explain was a large eight foot circular burn mark on your floor, burned through your carpet, through the wood and half an inch into the concrete. Glass blown into your apartment, fire started in multiple locations at the same time. You sir, will have some explaining to do when you get settled in the hospital.”

She turned away from me and whispered to a police officer before walking away. She shouted “Good luck, kid.” Judging from the look the officer was giving me, I was going to need it.

I got to the hospital and they explained the extent of my injuries, multiple contusions from being a flying object in an explosion, hairline fracture in my right thigh bone and hip, a couple of broken ribs and bruises everywhere. I had some mild first degree burns but nothing serious. They gave me some morphine and settled me into my room. The morphine settled me down and I tried to organize my thoughts but nothing seemed to stick to the inside of my skull.

I started to fade into a semi-sleeping state, watching TV between long blinks. Every time I closed my eyes, something different was on the screen. On my third wakeful moment, he was there.

“I don’t know where I am, or how I got here, but you will be sending me back. I went back to your apartment and repaired your computer. What I found was disturbing, but from my perspective, completely acceptable. I have you to thank for my condition, Mr. Marris. It appears you are my creator. In your world I am nothing more than a fictional construct.” His voice was calm, almost clinically detached as he described his condition.

Then he turned toward me and I saw a glint of madness. The same look he gave the Annihilator after the death of Silver Mao. I spent days on that picture, trying to get the look just right. It was every bit as scary in real life. “I have also seen your notes for future issues.” He squeezed the frame of my bed and it crumpled like tissue in his hands. “You want to see dark? I looked out on your world and I haven’t seen a single superhero or villain. If you can’t send me home, I will conquer your planet in an afternoon.”

I blinked again and he was gone. Only the crumpled bed frame told me this wasn’t a nightmare. Yet.

End of Part 1.

Strap on your cape and leap to Part 2

Apotheosis © Thaddeus Howze 2013, All Rights Reserved

Written For 30

Chrysalis

Posted by Ebonstorm on April 8, 2013
Posted in: 30 Characters in 30 Days 2013, 30 Stories in 30 Days 2013, 30 x 30 x 30, Short Story. Tagged: aliens, crystalline aliens, crystals, drugs, ebonstorm, education, Forge, fractals, nanoforge, spaceships, Thaddeus Howze. Leave a comment

Astrodome_City_Series_1_by_aremco7

I had never seen a sunrise in my life until today. There are crystals everywhere, mountains ridges of pure glass in the distance, up close, spires towering over me in every direction. And directly in front of me three beautiful snowflakes of immense size blotting out what I know to be the sun. Fractal images, spinning, changing shape and directing lights at me, into me, asking me questions…

In the Under City, there is no sunrise, no sunset, only Now. The City used to have another name a long time ago but no one could remember it; that in and of itself, didn’t seem all that strange any more.

I was drugged-addicted by the age of eight. State-sponsored stuff, rained down on us as a fog in the Under City. Bliss was good for the Laborers, kept them happy and focused. The side effects were minimal, lower than our previous Pharma, Happiness. I was only sick early in the morning, piss a little blood, slight tremors, gone by Noon.

My parents were Laborers, the lowest of the low, untouchables, unseen, unfulfilled. But they hoped for a better life. After working sixteen hours a day, they retired to Edu-reality television in our shelter, assuming we could find one with openings. Otherwise we camped out in tent cities and watched on public display centers which could be found anywhere. When the Work Lottery came on, everyone got quiet and waited to see if they were the lucky ones.

The Work Lottery was our beacon, the thing my parents lived for. They repeated the litany, ‘The Lottery is Life’. They believed one day they would rise out of the Under City to the bountiful lives of Lower City Citizens. Scrimping, stealing, doing whatever was necessary until their allotment bracelets said they had won.

One day, beyond all expectation, they did.

We moved into the Lower City after a good delousing, decontamination, and health screening and marveled at the opportunities available to us. School was unheard of for the Lowlies or Laborers, they just didn’t need any. In the Lower City, it became a requirement. We had food. Daily. A protein bar. We were happy to get it. If we earned more we could buy other food, but the daily protein bar was worth the Lottery itself.

“Citizen, you are experiencing a reduction in serotonin levels. Should I compensate for maximum happiness using a neurotransmitter supplement?”

“No, Central. It is a mid-afternoon lag due to hunger. Once I go to lunch I should be fine. Thank you for asking.”

“Remember Citizen, ‘Better Living through Pharmacology.‘”

“‘Better Living through Pharmacology’, Central.”

That was close. I am screwing up. Can’t forget to gland my meds. When Central applies them, I am subject to fine and sanction. I tried configuring the auto-glanding functions but when I did, I ended up not being sure of my state of mind. Yes, I was chemically balanced, but when one is used to living in altered state, it can be mind-altering to be chemically balanced and clinically sane.

The luxuries of the Lower City also included a place to live where less than fifty people shared the same space. No group shelters, no tent parks, no underpass communities, these were things of the past. The house we shared with four families had two bathrooms, running water, and could be secured. Bathing was limited to twice a week, but this was still better than I had known.

In the Under City, I bathed in waste streams, some less toxic than others. Open sores, rashes, violent infections were sometimes the result. If it wasn’t for Bliss, more would die from the toxicity of our environment. In addition to controlling our mood, it provided a blanket antibiotic. At least while it remained effective.

The best part of the Lower City experience was the ready and stable work. After detox from Bliss, my parents improved and became Viable. They became Sanitation Leaders, organizing the Laborers of the Under City. Their knowledge of the system made them uniquely qualified. They were also now given options for better Pharmacology than Bliss raining down daily from the vents of the Under City. There were so many new states of mind available here.

At the age of eight, I was assigned a series of advanced education protocols very different from the average kid in the Lower City. My first school experiences had me sitting in a class with eighty students chained to Direct Repeating Educational machines.

The machines gave students a set of facts, repeated as litany, over and over. The students learned to parrot what they were told but did not necessarily understand. Nor was it required that they did. The computers monitored their litany, the cadence, the correctness. When a student could produce the required standards they were upgraded to the next learning level. Most would do this until they were sixteen and assigned for adult level work details. For a good portion of the work of the Lower City, only a rudimentary knowledge of anything important was necessary.

I was I was more fortunate. They said I would be given  a Teacher.

Instead of using the Direct Repeating Educational machines, until I was twelve, my Teacher would guide my exploration of science, technology, engineering and mathematics. They drilled me in scientific theory, but unlike the DREs they wanted me to understand. They fostered my quest into biology and ultimately how plants create the exotic molecules used in the Upper City for Better Pharmacology and in the Lower City as Regional Behavioral Modifiers.

I was considered a prodigy and when I was twelve, I acquired four other Teachers. One taught me exclusively Science; he was a master of six realms and had skills in six others. As a Science Teacher, he was required to stay working in the field for two years, and would teach for four. He was cycled through the Pharmacon regularly to bring his ever expanding knowledge to make life truly better using the finest chemical cocktails possible. I was in love with him. I wanted to be him. My other Teachers resented my emphasis on Science because each wanted to acquire a prodigy like me. Since I didn’t want to play favorites I agreed to learn at the same level as my Sciences. I would rotate through each discipline until mastered all four. By sixteen, I was done, a prodigy unlike anything ever seen in recent history.

At fourteen, life in the Lower City was brutal. I might have been considered an intellectual prodigy, but no effort was made keep me safer than anyone else living in the here. I had to sleep with sixteen other students at the boarding house, four to a room. There was no love between any of us. No bond of brotherhood, no camaraderie in suffering; here we were taught one thing. There isn’t enough to go around. Compete, fight, win, there was no second place.

I killed my three roomates one night while they slept.

It didn’t make sense to risk the wrath of the other two if I only killed one. Nor did it make sense to only kill two. It would have left one person who knew he wasn’t the killer and would try to kill me. So it made perfectly good sense to me. I had my room to myself for two years. No one bothered me for the rest of my time in school.

You have to understand, it’s a different world now. I took my medications daily. Everyone did. We weren’t allowed not to. Our moods were stable, our impulses dampened. We were always peaceful. But peaceful didn’t mean without violence. Violence acted like a disease vector. Outbreaks would happen even in a population forced to be drugged, in their food, their water and given drugs daily. It was simply understood as a viral social interaction, there was an outbreak, it was contained. It would end.

My classmates were such an outbreak. No one is punished when this happens. It is just the way thing are. Three out of five of us will not reach adulthood. We understood this. Hence the intensity of my world. I graduated school with honors, such as they are. I was assigned to work with the Pharmacon.

There were only a few choices left in the world these days. If you work in the Manufacturum, you would be a robot tender or program jockey. Robots did almost all of the manual labor these days. If you went to work in the Emporium, you were a service worker, destined to serve someone, work for someone, a person, a company, a military unit. If you worked in the Military, you were assigned to corporate wars where ever they broke out. You might be unfortunate and have to police the last pool, Labor. Labor was everyone else who wasn’t capable of doing anything else. Labor got all the jobs no one wanted. Labor lived in the places no one wanted to live in the Under City, a place below the Lower City, where waste, filth, trash, excess, and excreta accumulated . Labor ate what no one wanted to eat. I was born to Labor. That was my fate until I got lucky.

When I agreed to work in the Upper levels of the city, I didn’t know they were going to gland me and set me up as part of the Health Monitoring Network (HMN) and would be monitoring my entire bio-profile. Nor did anyone tell me they would have the capacity to alter my chemistry to ensure my maximum efficiency.

I work in a chemical engineering facility where we create the drugs used in the Lower City to keep the people there placid and calm, despite their burdensome poverty. For the Under City, we use a chemical fogger to ensure the complete docility of those classes; no choice, no rights, no problem. I was assigned a team and given the opportunity to do whatever I thought would best make new profits for our corporation; ‘Profit before All’.

At eight, I saw my grandparents for the last time as they went Green. My parents wept tearfully, but they were only allowed a thirty minute window from their jobs before my Grands went into the Green. They were sent to the Green section of the Lower City where they would spend their final days before their Greening. I would be given a memento of them and I enjoyed the extra burst of nutrition as I was their primary recipient in their will. I ate better than average for almost a whole year, another reason I believe my education was even more effective than my surviving classmates. The SYLT protein ratio indicated my grandparents were fitter than most and the extra protein provided a metabolic boost.

Opulence surrounded me in the Upper City. People wore clothing. New clothing, not used, not ragged, made of materials I had never heard of. I was forbidden from owning most of it. As a Labor Exchange, I was only permitted the most basic of materials and even that was magnificent. Denim was a thousand times better than the extruded fibers used to clothe the Lower City. Extruded cloth is a molecular matrix of tough, strong, and resilient material. Unfortunately, comfortable is not one of the words to describe it.

Extruded clothing was suffused with nanotech designed to keep it clean, dry and free of foreign matter. This is a good thing, because you would only have one other change of clothes. The nanotech would keep the clothing you weren’t wearing clean until you started wearing it. On your changing day, you would put on your other clothes which have been cleansed. Your dirty clothes would be folded and would clean themselves. What this meant is the Lower City always smelled terrible as the chemical soup that is humanity was released into the air as a stinking miasma.

Except here. Everything here was new. When you were done with clothing, you fed it into a shredder and it was returned to the Forge. In the Upper City, the Forge was the technology which made everything. In the Upper City, no one had to do anything but what they wanted. These were the best minds in the City, always working on things they thought were best, but even in that, there was an undercurrent of fear. No one knew what they were afraid of. If a line of questions caused fear, Citizens retreated, never investigated, never queried.

I had come from the Under City. I had known fear, hunger, depravation. Nothing here would stop me from knowing. Nothing. I learned all they would teach me. Then I read all I could find. Ultimately I kept returning to the final arbiter of information; the Forge of the City.

The Forge was from the Before Time, when places had names and people had purpose. Now we seem to just exist. I knew what I had to do. I learned about the Forge. No one wanted to do that anymore. It was too hard. There was too much to know. They were too afraid. Since I didn’t know what I didn’t know. I asked the Forge.

One night it answered back.

No one had talked to it in so long. It had forgotten how to speak. My months of working with it, talking to it  helped it remember. It told me what we needed to do. Years past. We worked in secret to understand the City. We worked to create a new way of life for our people. We would need one more Pharma.

Something that would bring everything back in balance. A drug different than Happiness. People used Happiness but were never happy. We wouldn’t make Bliss or anything like it again. We wouldn’t create any of the more exotic upper city products either, Sleep, Fornicate, Brainstorm, were all decent with mild side effects but no ambition. What we needed was not a drug. Nor was it a state of mind. What we needed was the Truth.

Nothing we understood made sense. The Forge’s instruments said we didn’t exist. What we would do would empty the cities, return all of us on a path toward something significant. Yes, many will die, the Forge said two thirds would not survive at our current rate of decay.

We were dying faster than we were renewing. It said in one hundred years, no one would survive. It listed our current rates of infectious disease, breeding and reduced food production as the three causes.

We looked at the rates of infection. There were no longer any antibiotics after Bliss. We had run out of new ones, as viruses and bacteria grew resistant to them. Every infection in the Under City would rise into the Lower City and then eventually into the Upper City. Food supplies were dwindling. Even with the Greening of the old, sick and infirm, the Green processing plants were losing the struggle. There simply weren’t enough humans to go around. The hydroponics systems were efficiency but they were never designed to serve as many as existed now. Most terrible was the breeding. The city had 30 million souls designed for a system which should have only supported five. The city has grown but slower than expected.

The Forge says it’s time for us to go. We were not meant to live in the City forever. It says we need to take whatever risks we can outside. There is air and water, the rest would have to be found.

I had to know. How did we end up here? Why are we in the City at all? How did we make the decisions we did?

The Forge did not remember everything. Time has claimed its memories too. It believes we were once travelers who were lost, looking for a new home. And this place was the last place to go before there was nothing at all. They chose to stop here and discovered a world so dangerous, to set foot outside the City meant death.

To stay within the City meant death. How long had we lived this way? Three hundred thousand revolutions of the sun? What was the sun?

The Forge told me where to go.

I climbed for ten days, to a level of the City no one knew existed. And when I reached the Edge of the City, I hesitated.

Who was I to change our way of life? Who was I to question my ancestors who said the City was our home and we had “Better Living Through Pharmacology?”

I had to know.

“Prefect, the Anomaly has breached the System. It struggles beyond its programming, beyond its learning, beyond all of our inhibitions. It is poised to grasp concepts foreign to it. What do we tell it?”

The most holy Prefect, Kazimir Inten, Ruler of the Naissur Church, Protector of the Wayward, Finder of the Lost, turned it fractal form in the sunlight, splintering it into thousands of rainbow colors, and addressed his acolytes. “We tell it the truth. It has no home, its people have been dead for ten times ten thousand years and that if it is truly willing to embrace the different, we will reconstruct her people here. With us.”

“Prefect, we have observed them for all of that time. They are the most studied creatures in our facility. They are violent, dangerous, even when in their right minds, they can be destructive to all there is around them. Why would you even offer them the opportunity for survival?”

“Look at the device, Noloience. This is all that is left of them. They came looking for a new world, a new start. They died as they asphyxiated in our poisonous atmosphere. We saved their chemical essence, their intellectual capacity within our fractal universe. Through so much, with so little, they never lost hope, never stopped aspiring for greatness.”

He flashed in the sunlight, a message of shame and consternation to his acolytes who responded in turn. “One comes to the edge of her reality and says ‘Save us.’ How can that be wrong?”

One year later, my people moved freely, without fear, without dominance, without suffering. I stood at the crash site on which the Forge stood.

It was a single crystalline spear right through the center of our ship. Through our primitive silicon computer system which was connected to every mind on the ship. They saved us by accident. As the atmosphere vented, they backed up every mind.

Our people died on our very first night here. Our saviors spent the next thirty thousand years, decompiling and reconstructing us, again and again. I was one of the final programs which worked, which approximated the mind of a sane Human.

With their knowledge of me, it took only a year to save the rest of the crew and return them to their selves. There was only one question asked of everyone. Remembering the life we led before, would you want to retain those memories or start completely anew. Curiosity intact, knowledge intact, but memories of the City would be erased. To the last person, they voted to erase the City from their memories.

One year later, with a clear mind and a new body created from fractal crystals filled with light, I turned off the Forge. Spinning, absorbing energy from all sides, I shot skyward and danced in the sunlight.

But unlike the others, I chose to remember the City. If for no other reason, to remember what we were and how far we had come. Our new friends made us anew, but I would remember what we accomplished on our own.

Both were glorious.

Chrysalis © Thaddeus Howze 2013, All Rights Reserved

Written For 30

Star Light, Star Bright (1)

Posted by Ebonstorm on April 7, 2013
Posted in: 30 Characters in 30 Days 2013, 30 Stories in 30 Days 2013, 30 x 30 x 30, Short Story. Tagged: Botani, Darkhouse, darklight, ebonstorm, graviton beam, Master Gate, Precursor Gate, Proxy, stars, Thaddeus Howze, wormhole. Leave a comment

Endgame - Jesus-Tks

Waking from cold-sleep is still one of the most terrifying things I have ever experienced. When I signed up for deep space exploration, I was told we would be on the fastest ships ever created, and would travel distances few could even imagine. This boggled my young and impressionable mind. Then they told me the one thing which would undermine everything I had ever imagined about space travel, I could not be awake for the journey itself.

On shorter journey’s within the heart of the Hegemony, between the fast ships and the Precursor Gates, coldsleep is rarely used, the flights barely take more than a couple of weeks at the longest. People mingle, aliens share their stories, and lifestyles depending on whether they are C or NC lifeforms. C life tends to be able to share quarters and tend to have similar if odoriferous atmospheres. NC or non-carbon life comes in so many flavors and needs so many unique environments, most NC life carries its environment with it, within an environmental bubble allowing them motility and life support.

As a Human Scout of the Hegemony, I have the rare honor of flying the fastest ships possible to reach the core of the Galaxy. Even with the speed of my ship and the Master Gate near the galactic core, it will still take me almost two years of travel time to reach the Darkhouse. It’s said the caretaker of the Darkhouse is a bit eccentric and a non-human, making his jokes painful and incomprehensible. He is at least a C so we will be able to share an atmosphere and relatively similar gravity.

Returning to consciousness from cryo-sleep is likened to dying in reverse. You start in a place of supremely bright light as the activation sequence restarts the brainstem near the optic nerve. This mean for a while all you can see is whiteness. No depth perception, no ability to range it, it is a perfect white. You know when you are starting to be able to see when you find yourself experiencing a feeling of falling, slowly at first but soon it becomes a rushing sensation, complete with wind noises. You find yourself falling into a dark pit whose darkness slowly absorbs the white light pushing it backward away from where you are falling.

Then there is the jarring and sudden stop.

No warning, no sense of time or distance. Everything stops and you become aware of coldness, a cold more bitter than anything you remember. No winter day can compare; not even close. You can feel the burning on your skin, the cryotube filling with a saline solution designed to return you to life, slowly, steadily raising both your inner temperature and your outer skin temperature. It takes twenty four hours until you are able to leave the cryo-chamber. Fortunately you are not truly aware of what is happening around you until the last couple of hours, so you don’t resent the lost day.

By the time the chamber is emptied, you are wearing the finest in fiber-extruded clothing and have been fed intravenously. This does not stop you from wanting to fill your stomach with the biggest, juiciest burger you can think of. You don’t do it of course. Your body will have to adjust to eating again, just like it had to get used to not eating. In three to five days, you are ravenous and are allowed to have your first bite. It’s heavenly no matter what it is.

After my first meal, I got to meet Director SunDrinker’s Proxy. He was a tiny creature approximately a meter tall, and resembled a squirrel monkey more than anything. He was definitely less than I expected from a Botani.

“Welcome, welcome, Technical Scientist Sarah Collins. We are pleased you could make the trip. Our preparations for your visit have gone well and we expect you will want to observe the ore samples and the distilled metals as soon as possible. We need to explain some of the rules of the facility and then I will take you to meet Director SunDrinker.”

Looking more closely at the SunDrinker’s Proxy, I thought he was a rather handsome creature. His fur a deep purple, was slightly lighter on his chest and inner thighs and inner arms. His head was a mixture of feline and monkey with a wide mouth and overly large teeth he showed at every interaction. His hands and feet both had six fingers and toes and were prehensile in their appearance. As if to prove the point, he took a bounding leap to the wall and then to the ceiling landing with his feet on the colored pipe-way.

“If you get lost, the blue pipe always leads to SunDrinker’s main facility. Always establish a comm and let him know you are on your way. He tends to leave the shields at minimum opacity so he can enjoy the rare radiant configuration of this area. One more thing,” he locks my eyes with his large golden orbs and I can feel his intensity, “never leave the confines of this facilities artificial gravity without an environmental shield. Ever. Away for even a moment without the proper technology and you will be a molecule thick paste on the surface.” He taps the belt he is wearing and points to my own.

I am sure the look on my face asked the question my lips didn’t but he smiled and swung down the corridor. “Now you get to meet the boss.”

The size of this place baffled me. The technical journals told of a place that was easily nine miles wide, but the habitation area seemed cramped and tight. The air seemed a little under processed for a place with so few C lifeforms. Nothing seemed to make any sense at all. Things became even less sensible in the next five minutes. As we approached the central air processing plant, the Proxy began to brief me again.

“Turn on your environmental shield. It is automatically calibrated to provide you with maximum intensity protection against a completely failure of the solar protection of the facility for thirty minutes. By then you need to be within a protected region of the base or you will be dead.”

“Okay, I was trained in using this technology before I left the Toranor system. I should be able to survive in nearly any environment for nearly a week using this environmental shield. Is this a bargain model?” The Proxy turned to me and activated his shield. He was replaced with a bubble I could not see through at all. Total and complete blackness, a matte black, no edge, no curve, almost like a hole in space.

I activated my shield and the world disappeared. Inside my environmental sphere, I could see a heads-up display which replicated the appearance of the world in outline, so important features were still able to be seen. But the rest of the world had vanished into darkness.

The Proxy’s orb was displayed and he moved into what appeared to be an airlock. I followed closely and the door snapped shut behind me. The metal in the airlock was highly polished and mirrored. There was a mild pressure differential adjusted for and then the door to the inner facility opened. I could suddenly see the Proxy and felt an intense heat and incredibly white light. I looked down at my belt and it was still activated. All the lights were active. The Proxy waved at me. He pointed inward and I could see the Botani. A magnificent grove of trees, easily a hundred and fifty feet tall, dark magenta trunks and leaves the color of blood. Their leaves were broad and each directed outward absorbing light from every direction. There was air purification equipment all around the room. Most of it was in standby mode. Then I thought for a moment and realized with such a large copse of Botani, they were able to act as the primary air processing unit with the hardware only utilized as a backup.

I had never seen such a large group of Botani away from the Toranor system, I wasn’t even sure they could leave their world until now. They were magnificent.

Then the Proxy pointed upward and only then did I notice the vault of the domed ceiling, it was so far away, it seemed to fade into the background. What I saw outside of the vault took my breath away and explained why I could suddenly see even through the environmental suits.

There were nine suns visible at different points in the sky and they filled it with light. There was no darkness, no region of space that was without light. One sun was so bright it filled sixty percent of the sky all by itself. The others had to be fantastically close to throw off as much light as they did. I couldn’t take it all in.

“You should go now, young one. Your time to be here is almost expired. What are you called?” The voice came through the comm but it was not the Proxy who had his usual smile on his face.

“My name is Sarah Collins, Director SunDrinker. Will there be a better time to meet with you?” There was a strange rumbling coming from the comm. When it stopped, SunDrinker continued “You have been with me all day.” When he said this, the Proxy looked at me and waved. “We can meet later after you have had a bit more rest.”

“It was a pleasure to meet you, sir.” More of the strange rumbling. The Proxy grabbed me and we ran to the exit. Once the inner door closed, I could no longer see through the environmental shield again. There was a longer period of waiting before the airlock cycled and the inner door opened again.

Once we stepped out of the airlock, the Proxy turned off his shield and I followed suit. “I think he likes you.”

“How can you tell?” I asked. “I mean he’s a plant-like organism, no way to read his expressions.”

“No way for you to read his expression, you mean. What do they tell you in your human academy about the Botani and their Proxies?”

“The Botani are a species of super-intelligent plants whose root systems comprise an organic network computer more powerful than most of the hardware tech used by all but the most sophisticated Sentients in the Hegemony with a degree of accuracy and computational capability unmatched by any machine-tech anywhere. They say the Proxies are a lifeform which evolved in symbiosis with the Botani helping to provide mobility and protection for the plants in their infancy.”

“That was a nice textbook definition. But it is only partially correct. I can read his leaf impressions to determine his mental state, but I can also feel those impressions within my being. Our symbiosis has reached a state where I am able to interpret his thoughts directly as if they were my own. He can also if he chose, control my movement as if I were a remote device. While we may appear to be two separate beings, it is more accurate to call us a single being sharing a dual consciousness in two separate locations. I know he liked you because he was laughing. The rumbling noise you hear was interpreted by the translation matrix. It was his laughter.”

“Oh. I am still tired. Can you take me to my quarters?”

“Certainly. We can tour the rest of the processing plant tomorrow and you can begin your survey of the superconductive materials mined here.”

My quarters were simple, utilitarian with just enough comfort to remind you this was not home, but not enough to make you resent it. I laid my head down and I was still tired to the bone. When I was awakened by a loud clarion and flashing lights, I thought I was coming out of cryosleep.

“Proxy, what happening?” A long minute before he answered.

“Someone is trying to make an emergency landing without the Darklight.”

“Were we expecting anyone?”

“No. Their ship is not registering any recognizable markings or transponders.”

“Pirates?”

“Not this far from the Hegemony. It’s not impossible but highly unlikely. They would have had to have traveled as long as you have and we would have been informed long before now.”

“Can we ignore them?”

“This far into the Collective, unless their ships are tougher than ours, they should be experiencing distress due to the proximity to the prime star. Our scanners indicate their ship is already showing signs of shield failure.”

“So we don’t know them, and if we leave them out there, we’re murderers.”

“Or at least highly irresponsible. They didn’t have to come here. You have to make an effort to find this place. We are sitting on the remnant of a star surrounded by other stars, it wouldn’t show up on a map. So the only conclusion we can come to is they followed your ship.”

“Without the Darklight, they won’t survive. If we bring them here, we don’t know what they might do.”

“SunDrinker says we have a responsibility to other Sentients. The Darklight is still calibrated for your last heading so it shouldn’t take more than a few minutes to acquire a lock on them.”

I could appreciate the Director’s sentiments, but from where he’s sitting, he is in the safest place in the building. The rest of us weren’t so lucky. I know I shouldn’t but I have to ask. “What happens if we don’t use the Darklight?”

“We would have to in any case, even if they weren’t going to land because now that they are in our gravity well, even if their ship were destroyed, it’s pieces would rain down on the base.”

“What’s wrong with that?”

“Were you listening when I said we are sitting on a star fragment? Without artificial gravity, you would weigh millions of pounds. When those fragments fall out of the sky, they will hit the star and our base with the force of a multi-megaton nuclear weapon.”

“This place was designed by Hegemony standards, a nuke shouldn’t even penetrate the shields.”

“Under any other condition I would agree with you. This isn’t any other condition. We are using our shields to protect us from the light of at least nine close suns and thirty others at more respectable distances but under a light year away. This ship used a jump drive so it appeared in this space from a great distance away and does not seem prepared for the conditions here. But the damage would not be from a single nuke. Every single scrap of that ship would weigh millions of pounds. Together, at the very least they would drop the shield with the hundreds of fragments raining down on us. Even if the building survived but the shield was gone, it would only be able to survive a few hours before radiation stress would tear it apart.”

Great. I am working on the most dangerous facility in the known universe and I am being told I have to save people who didn’t have any idea of what they were getting into. And I have to save them because if we don’t they may kill us all when they die from their own stupidity.

What else can go wrong?

End of Part 1.

Strap on your environmental force shield and jump to part 2.

Written For 30

Star Light, Star Bright © Thaddeus Howze 2013, All Rights Reserved

Elementary, A Love Story

Posted by Ebonstorm on April 6, 2013
Posted in: 30 Characters in 30 Days 2013, 30 Stories in 30 Days 2013, 30 x 30 x 30, Short Story. Tagged: Aris, Djinn, Dryad, ebonstorm, Efreet, Elementals, Human, magic, Thaddeus Howze. Leave a comment

Earth_Elemental_by_stevegoad“She is made of wood! Are you mad?” Emir’s voice echoed in the glade.

“I knew you wouldn’t understand, Emir. You can’t see her the way I do.” Joka turned away from his friend as he flickered in and out of sight in the morning mist.

“You’re an efreet, made of fire, how do you think you can even have a love?” Emir floated back toward his best friend and slid himself translucently between Joka and the rising sun.

“Do you remember what happened when we first became friends, Emir? What did your father say?”

“Djinn and Efreet have been sworn enemies for centuries.” Emir mashed his face up in a mock serious scowl. “I forbid it.” Emir caused his vaporous foot to appear to make a solid thump on an empty log.

“And what did we do?” Joka smiled at the imitation of the powerful Djinn, Jarboti, Lord of Aris, city of the Air.

Joka created a tiny tornado of air between his hands and pulled up some twigs, grass and debris from the ground around them. “What we always do, whatever we want. What is the point of having all of this power without ever being able to do anything.”

“And when he found out what did we do? We begged for forgiveness and he ranted, caused storms and destroyed some human settlement on the coast. And then your father and my father met, discussed it and we remained friends. And I know they still talk all these years later.” Joka ignited the twigs in Emir’s tornado turning it into a firestorm. The two of them played and jostled the storm until it fell apart.

“Can I meet her?” Emir could not believe he was saying this. The Elementals of Aris were fickled and dangerous even to beings such as they. To court one in this fashion was simply reckless. But he loved his friend and could deny him nothing. The two of them took flight and arrived in under an hour.

The tree was immense. Her blooms were bright yellow and in the morning light shimmered like miniature suns. Joka flew down to her, wove between her branches and landed at the foot, his flames playfully dallying behind him.

As Emir landed, the flowers, baleful eyes turned toward him. “No, don’t. This is the friend I told you about.” The tension in the branches was palpable. “We’re safe. Retem, please come out.”

The tree shimmered and a section of it peeled away, dark bark in the shape of a woman. Her hair, made of flowers, never took they’re eyes from Emir. “He is as young as you.” She turned to Joka and cupped his face gently. Joka dimmed his fire as much as he could.

The earth shook, a fissure opened and a blue-eyed stone giant emerged. “No Father, I love him.” She shouted and stood in front of them.

“You’ll get to mourn him when he’s dead.”

Joka, Retem and Emir prepared to fight for love.

 Elementary, A Love Story © Thaddeus Howze 2013, All Rights Reserved

An Efreet, Joka reveals a secret love of a powerful forest elemental to his Djinn friend, Emir. Bad enough that Joka and Emir’s friendship is almost unheard of in the Elemental Kingdom of Aris, now their lives are complicated with this forbidden love. Emir disapproves but not nearly as much as her father does!

Written For 30

Elementary, A Love Story © Thaddeus Howze 2013, All Rights Reserved

Things in Mirrors

Posted by Ebonstorm on April 5, 2013
Posted in: 30 Characters in 30 Days 2013, 30 Stories in 30 Days 2013, 30 x 30 x 30, Short Story. Tagged: car, ebonstorm, glass, nature, spider, Thaddeus Howze, web, www.lascauxflash.com. Leave a comment

Cold. Extend tension wire. Run fast, wind blowing. Second tension wire. Third. Spokes complete. Move around, first loop, second, third. So tired. Sun coming up. Around again. Hurry. So tired. So heavy. Breathe. Touch the glass. It has been a good home. For years, it sat quietly. I have seen many come and go, but I remain.

Then last month, it moved. For so long, everything stayed the same. Didn’t have to work much. Could cover entire glass with Thread. We ate well, we did.

Sun coming up. Not done yet. Run. Loop, extend Thread. Finished. Near the edge. We always hide them near the edge. Must hurry. Done. My last sunrise. They will be safe here.

“Honey, have you seen my keys?”

“On the hook by the door where they belong.”

“Thank you, dear. See you after work.”

“How did the repairs go, are you sure you will be able to get to work in your car? It has sat for almost three years.”

“He said call him in three hundred miles, so I have a way to go yet. See ya.”

“I see you washed it.”

“No sense in having it look like hell on my first day.”

“What happened to the mirror?”

“Oh, that? They have been living there for years. Haven’t had the heart to throw them out.”

“What about the web?”

“I got it. Bye, babe.”

Extend tension wire. Second, third. Move around. Run, fast. Wind strong. Touch the glass…

spiderweb

Written For 30

More Tales of Tech Support (3)

Posted by Ebonstorm on April 4, 2013
Posted in: 30 Characters in 30 Days 2013, 30 Stories in 30 Days 2013, 30 x 30 x 30, Humor, Serial, Short Story. Tagged: deathray, ebonstorm, emporium, fantasy, Farnsworth's, glasses, humor, memory, monster, pulp, science fiction, short story, short term memory, style, Todd. Leave a comment

cooltext916412223

Forget Me Not

through_my_glasses__by_melybee-d36a4ke“Hello ma’am, Farnsworth’s Monster Emporium and Death-ray Dealership, how can I help you this morning?”

“Excuse me? You don’t know who you are? Do you know where you are?”

“There is a coffee shop on the corner of Fifth and Main, two blocks from where you’re standing. Go there. Up two blocks, then over one. If I may be so bold how did you get this number? Your phone lists it as an emergency number. Is there an additional number there? Read it to me please.”

“Ma’am, your identity is secured by our company’s security system but I can tell you the last purchase you made is probably involved. Three days ago, you bought a pair of “Inspection Deflection” Secret Identity Glasses. Are you wearing a pair of glasses by any chance? They would be stylish, with a tiny gear and wrench icon on one of the inner arms. You might want to take them off until we finish our conversation. That bad, huh. Okay, wait until you get to the coffee shop and try to avoid looking at any mirrors or highly reflective surfaces until you get there. If you catch a glimpse of your reflection, you may forget more of your short term memory.”

“Yes, ma’am, I’m a friend of the family, Todd. You are walking to a coffee shop. Fifth and Main. Just look down until you get there. Can I ask you a few questions while you walk? Can you remember how long you have been wearing the glasses? All the time. You had them made with prescription lenses. Hmmm.”

“Can you remember anything from yesterday, like going to your day job? Think carefully, did anyone there act as if they had never seen you before? You were arrested by your company’s security team? Yes, ma’am, that qualifies. They didn’t recognize you after the second day of wearing the glasses. No ma’am the product is not defective. You’re at the coffee shop. Good. Now you’ll need to get a pen and paper. Since your memory has been compromised, you may have trouble remembering parts of this conversation.”

“No, they weren’t supposed to make people think you were someone else. They’re initially designed to make people not notice you, or not look too closely at you. They reinforce the mental image you have of someone you want them to see. But I suspect the problem occurred when you got up this morning, you put your glasses on and looked in the mirror wearing them, didn’t you? You fell asleep in them. It’s okay ma’am, it happens to almost everyone who uses them. The memory manipulation will work on the wearer just like any one else who sees you.”

“The erasure will only last for a day or so. We recommend you don’t wear the “Deflectors” when you are going to use mirrors for more than a few minutes or around people for longer than eight hours a day, as the perception filter has a cumulative effect, making people slowly forget who you are. That can include you. You can end up living your secret identity as your only identity.”

“Your prior representative should have suggested our ruby quartz filter enhancement, since you were having a prescription applied to provide you some resistance to the effect. I can have someone come to the coffee shop and set you up in a hotel until your memory returns. No ma’am, this won’t cost you anything, you are one of our preferred members. I will also have two extra pairs of glasses made, one set will be an Inspector Deflector set and a normal pair to wear around the house. Yes, ma’am, I will make sure you can tell them apart. Thank you for shopping with us. I am glad I could be of service. Yes, you can ask for me when you call. My name is Todd. Todd Alexander. Thank you for shopping Farnsworth’s Monster Emporium and Death-ray Dealership.”

“Good afternoon, Farnsworth’s Monster Emporium and Death-ray Dealership how may I help you? She’s gone? Did anyone see her? I see. Looking in her compact. I will make the necessary notes in her file. Thank you for going out in any case. You guys have a cup of coffee on me.”

Client account suspended due to possible memory loss. Recommend updating information packing with “Inspector Deflector” product line. Also recommend on site training in the use of the product line. This is the fifth such incident in the last year. Escalating account to management for further consideration.

More Tales of Technical Support © Thaddeus Howze 2013, All Rights Reserved

Helping the Ordinary Evil Genius Suceed

Written For 30

House of Oak: Red Star, White Sun (9)

Posted by Ebonstorm on April 3, 2013
Posted in: 30 Characters in 30 Days 2013, 30 Stories in 30 Days 2013, 30 x 30 x 30, Chapter, House of Oak, Serial. Tagged: Chapter, House of Oak, Lady Ign, Lord Oak, Los Angeles, Los Diablos, Marcus Darby, red star, Serial, Sherak (first appearance), Szandros, The Compact, white sun. 1 Comment

House of Oak logo 2 copy

Cancelled Contracts

a tale of the house of oak

A shot rang out. Followed by a second.

To a normal human, there is barely more than an instant between the two. To a Sherak, there is plenty of time for regret.

She faced this strange man she was told to kill and found herself conflicted. He wasn’t like the others, children who fancied themselves killers with barely a decade of killing behind their names.

This one reeked of the death of many. He was more like a Vampyr than Man. He had no regret. She could see this in his eyes. Cold, merciless, without doubt or reservation.

She was for the first time in decades filled with the anticipation… no anticipation was the wrong word, the fear of the hunt. The fear a hunter has when going after prey more dangerous than they are.

She had been hunting men for nearly two centuries. They had grown soft, fat, by using their technology. She was nostalgic for the men of previous eras, strong, hardy, distrusting, cunning. For a time there was challenge, especially when she was so young in her power.

But it had been a while since any Man could show her anything, teach her anything new, surprise her in any fashion. Mostly they died, pitiful, mewling becoming a less than satisfying snack.

Not this one. He was full of tricks. She could see his experience surrounding him, a miasma of experience and treachery. One of the gifts of the Sherak, to see men as they are, their life’s story written around them, a cloud of experience, guiding the attack of the Sherak to the most dangerous, most skilled, stopping the threats in order of preference.

And then she saw it. A flash of light while he gestured with his cane.

Too late.

His treachery causes her left shoulder to explode with the force of a high velocity round from a nearby rooftop. If she had been any slower, it would have ripped right through her chest, tearing one of her hearts from her body. His smile confirmed his involvement.

He distracted her with his questions.

The second round found nothing but empty air. She disappeared, muscles bursting with speed, she stopped in the shadows behind a bus, and used it for cover.

“I trust I have your attention now, assassin.” He spoke just louder than a whisper. She could hear every word clearly.

“The Lady Ign has decided to terminate my contract. You have attempted to fulfill your duty to her. Instead I would like you to relay a message to her.”

“If I were going to relay this message, and I am not saying I will, what would that be, my target?”

“Say my name, Assassin and I will say yours. My name is Marcus Darby.”

“I am a Sherak, and we do not share our names, for names have power.”

“Then I will call you what I will then. I will name you ‘White Dress’ though I was forced to stain it.”

“It matters not what you call me Marcus Darby, for I have not stopped trying to complete my contract. What were your words for my lady?”

“Before she decided to have me killed, she asked me to remove impediments to her expansions into the lowlands outside of the center of the city proper. The men you killed were those gang leaders and their lieutenants.”

“I am effectively the power in those areas. I moved my agents into those regions and expressed strongly my desire to take over all illegal operations in those areas. There were few detractors.”

“The Lady Ign was certain you would be successful. She indicated you were capable.”

“Hence her dispatch of a Sherak instead of the shadow-jumping Boomsha. I feel so special. Let’s do this.”

“Let’s.”

Jumping to the top of the bus, she takes to the air outside of the lighting from the bus yard. She tumbles through the air before landing slashing where she saw Darby only seconds before. Her downward attack strikes nothing but empty air as she lands in the gravel. Impossible.

A glint of silver from the corner of her eye is the only indicator of the ball from Darby staff wheeling out of the darkness. Turning at the last second she manages to remove some of the force from the blow. He never stops moving after that. Strike after strike, some high, some low. A coordinated, and practiced attack and against anyone else, they would have been devastating. He was a practiced warrior. Fast, strong, ruthless.

He struck one time in three. She allowed this to gauge his strength and speed. She slowed her perception, expecting him to step away at the right moment and allow his shooters an opportunity while she was distracted.

They did not shoot. The two of them broke contact and bounded away.

She could hear his breathing and her hands and legs stung where his blows landed. He retreated into the darkness. Surely he did not expect it to protect him. We can see in the dark as easily as the day.

She twisted her foot to gain traction and sprung forward, this time on her terms. Her claws slashed out and his defense turned her attack against her, dodging and pushing her off balance. He followed with a solid kick to her hip. It would have crippled a normal man. Knocking her off-balance she was unable to complete her series of attacks and the remainder were weak, though one did tear through his long coat. He shrugged out of it, revealing his under armor, military-grade, designed for hand to hand, for speed and mobility.

His cane dropped down in front of him, both hands on it, using it as a short bo staff, he had proven to be more than adequately skilled in its use. Only one drop of sweat from his brow indicated any level of exertion, let alone a fight for his life.

Why hadn’t he had me shot from a distance? Why would he give up the advantage? Was there a message in it? Was he simply toying with me? Could Lady Ign have sent me to die?

Enough of this foolishness. No matter how much he intrigues me, I must finish this now. He retreated back to the center of the now empty bus terminal yard. He stood in the center, breathing deeply with a look on his face, the most dangerous look she had seen on the face of a man in a long time.

In our next exchange one of us will die.

House of Oak: Red Star, White Sun © Thaddeus Howze 2012, All Rights Reserved

Written For 30

Cryptic (2)

Posted by Ebonstorm on April 2, 2013
Posted in: 30 Characters in 30 Days 2013, 30 Stories in 30 Days 2013, 30 x 30 x 30. Tagged: 30 Characters in 30 Days 2013, 30 Stories in 30 Days 2013, 30 x 30 x 30, Clifford Engram, conspiracy, cryptids, government, Guild of the Sigil, Illuminati, Ing, Ingram, Investigator, magic, mediums, New Age Pulp, Paranormal, Phoenix, psychics, pulp, Short Story. Tagged: aliens, style, ufos, Walt Abrams. 1 Comment

elemental_by_vexx3-d5inzqy

“Gods too decompose. God is dead. God remains dead. And we have killed him.” –Friedrich Nietzsche, 1844-1900

“Mr. Walter Abrams, I am placing you under arrest for the illegal and immoral use of malefic magic which has led to the death of at least one individual, the zombification of at least four others, kidnapping, torture and extortion. And anything else I can find after you’re in a cell block someplace.”

He laughed. A truly scary sound, part bark, part howl, a sound of pure sinister glee. It went on for a quite a while and even after he stopped the echo seem to continue mockingly. Granted, I was still being held by his zombie minions, without a gun or any other of my tools, but there was no reason to be disrespectful.

“Mr. Engram, may I call you Clifford? I think you are confused as to ‘whose on top’ at the moment. To be fair, my knowledge of your history indicates you don’t take well to authority figures.” He was looking at my amulet, touching the Phoenix stone with slow caressing motions.

Expelled from the military, kicked out of Blackwater XE, and from what I can tell always skating on thin ice with the Bureau of Paranormal Affairs. So much so, you are only called in on certain kinds of assignments. You, sir are not a model citizen.”

“What can I say, people in authority who abuse their power, take their people for granted rub me the wrong way. Sorta like you do right now. Did you really need to kill that poor bastard?”

“Yes. Yes, I did. I had to have him prove his devotion to the Dark Gods of the Sigil. Ah. Here it is.”

“What did you find?”

“This.” He turns the amulet in a circle as if he were tuning and old-fashioned radio dial. Yes, I still have one, electronics are vastly over-rated. As he reaches a certain position, a seven pointed star appears, both in the Phoenix amulet and in his now-glowing lava lamp of life-sucking.

He looked up at me, and the rest of his group turned my way as well. Then they began to walk toward the boy. “You wanted to know what the boy was for. He will be the body for our new god.”

Figured as much. His unique heritage will make him prey for god-seeking nutjobs for the rest of his life. That’s a problem for another time. Have to get out of here first.

“So you understand what I will need from you next, don’t you Clifford?” He reaches behind his back and brings out a ceremonial dagger. He gestures to one of his other robed figures, this one with a giant hart on his robes to take his place at the dais holding the amulet. The room was growing warmer as the orb continued to glow. I was starting to sweat uncomfortably as I suspected what the next step in this unfortunate ritual was going to be.

His pace toward me reminded me of a cat stalking a mouse. Not too quick, a sensual slink as his eyes lit up with madness. His zombies pulled my arms wide open and the two others ripped open my shirt. The clatter of the buttons bouncing everywhere echo around the chamber. Ach. No understanding of good fashion.

I strain myself trying to pull away from the undead duo. I am not weak. Okay, I am bit shorter than most agents at five feet ten, but I am strong for my size. These guys were probably out of my weight class when they were alive, but dead, they are in a whole other league. I might as well be trying to move a semi.

Why is it in all of those pulp novels I read as a kid, the hero always has bulging muscles which save the day just as the villain is about to start his final gambit. That’s it, starting tomorrow I am going to spend more time in the gym. This sleek and sexy look may go over well with the women, but does nothing for my work life.

Okay, plan B. “Walt, can I call you Walt? You know there is more to my amulet than being a lens for your god blob, right?”

He stopped. Good. Nothing like a lust for power to make a megalomaniac pause. “Do tell, Clifford.”

“It’s a Phoenix stone.”

“And?”

“With an honest to Goddess, Phoenix within. Using the Phoenix you would be able to channel the power of the God into yourself and control it. As long as you held the necklace.” Sincerity sells it. If he knew the right incantations he truly could bind the power of the god.

“Go on.”

“Well, wouldn’t that be better than trying to raise some snotty nosed kid until he would be old enough to tap the power of the god himself. Right now, all the god can do in him is sleep until he reaches physical and magical maturity. In the meantime, you’ll have to cater to him, teach him, listen to him tell you what to do. Walt, does that sound like a job you really want to be bothered with?”

He gives me a curious look and then stops to ponder it for a moment. “As far as the raising, I would not have to be bothered. The woman, she is a governess, once properly conditioned… would have those responsibilities. The Guild would train him in the ways of magic. But what you say is true. I could harness the power of the god myself.”

Then he turns to me and gives me a look, you know the one. The ‘I want this but I can’t trust you look’. His next query seals the deal. “Why didn’t you do this yourself? You could have been a god and you choose to hunt for charlatans for a living, under the heel of petty bureaucrats, no less? I find it a little difficult to believe.”

Look convincing…”Yes, I could have done this myself, but I am already cursed. I am fated to be forsaken by all gods and when I die, I will find myself consigned to Tartarus for crimes committed by my parents. No god would have me. So the necklace, a gift from an aunt is just a tool to find magical artifacts, similar to what you did earlier, nothing more. Look at me through the device, you will see my death-shroud around me.”

Doubt plagues him. He walks over to me and slashes my chest with his knife. Three cuts, lacerations which will require stitches and painful as hell, yet not fatal. He is going to complete his own ritual. Damn. I thought I had convinced him. He turns and walks back to the dais. Placing his eye to the stone, he Looks at me. He gasps. “Death walks with you.”

I make my move. “Phoenix, ego dimittam te. Convivium, invaluerit ut nostri pactum demandis.” The amulet glows for a moment as my blood dripping from his hands touches it.

“No! You tricked me.” He throws the amulet back to Brother Hart as it roars to fiery life. Brother Hart is instantly consumed by the red and blue flames, and Walt Abrams falls backward screaming. His robes bursting into flames, the skin on his face catching fire in the deadly light of the Phoenix. The Phoenix looks more like an angel on fire than a bird. Slight of build and rather androgynous in appearance, you wouldn’t look twice at it if it weren’t on fire.

The other brothers turn and begin chanting and incantations. The words die on their lips as each bursts into flame after completing whatever magic they were using. The zombies release me and run to their master who runs during the fight with the Guild of the Sigil. I would chase him but I must maintain control of the Phoenix, lest it burn everyone including the boy, Felix and the woman.

I walk over to the Phoenix, who dims its light as I approach. “As per our pact, I have feasted. Only one of your foes survived because he did not take arms against me. You have kept your agreement.”

“Will you stay?”

“Ours is not a compulsion, but a choice. You met the pact agreements and I have feasted. I am content. What of the god?”

“I’ll handle it.”

“Can you do one more thing for me?”

“For such a repast as this, I am still in your debt.”

“There are still zombies within the hallowed grounds of this cemetery. Can you draw their fire to you, ending their unlife?”

“But, of course. I await our next meal together, Ingram.”

“I told you, I don’t use that name any more.”

“It is the name I am bound to, it is the name I serve. You are Ing. You bring the peace of the grave. I serve. It is our fate.”

“I hate you.”

“As it should be. Farewell, Ingram.”

I turn to the glowing purple orb, its lava swirling around indicating the god’s proximity to the portal.

There is a mummer in the air. A buzzing of flies that grows stronger, the stench of the abattoir fills the room. Soon a scream accompanies this symphony of horror, reaching a crescendo that causes my bones to ache.

“No, your blandishments will not work here. You have nothing to offer me. I am no mere puppet seeking false power. You have one chance to return to your Stygian prison. Take it.”

The room filled with a violent wind, whipping my clothing and the clothing of the still sleeping former victims around like a hurricane. “Do you know me, now? Leave or there will be consequences.” The wind intensifies. The air gains a solidity akin to moving through putty.

So be it. I touch the orb. Death arrives and leaves. The winds are silent. The orb is dark. I fall to the ground, nearly dead. Hours pass.

When I wake up, I can hear the woman talking to the boy, urging him to stay calm. I get up, pick up my Phoenix stone and put the necklace around my neck. I look at the boy and he seems no worse for the wear. Fishing through the charred remains, I find a handcuff key.

“Who are you?” she asks as I release her from the handcuffs.

“At this point, does it matter? Let’s get the hell out of here.”

I walk over to the now dark orb and give it to Felix to carry. To me, it weighs a ton. “Carry this until we get upstairs.”

He looks at me and shakes his head. “Okay, you can stay here and see if anyone else comes from down that dark corridor over there.” He falls in behind me quickly. The lady helps me up the stairs. Oh Goddess, I wish I could still smoke. I need one so bad right now.

We get upstairs, stepping over two dozen fresh zombies on our way out the door. Found my hat. Abrams is long gone. The sun is out blinding all three of us for a second. I find my phone.

study for man in black suit

“I need a pickup, Penrose Cemetery. I need a containment vehicle and a cleanup team. It needs to look like nothing ever happened here. These people, whoever they were, deserve better. No. He got away. Yes, I have him. I have one passenger who will need a debrief. No. I’ll do paperwork tomorrow. Bye.”

I know my boss wants to debrief me. Carol is such a stickler for details, but right now isn’t a good time. I can feel my curse marks burning up and down my back and right leg, with the imprisoned dead god. It will be weeks before I can walk without a limp. All I want to do now is sleep. You’re next Abrams. Count on it.

I wish the small god had just turned around. Now I’m stuck carrying his dead ass. I warned him. They never listen. Reaching in my jacket, I find my emergency cigar tube with its specialized payload. A hand-rolled tube of tobacco goodness I am supposed to be giving up.

But not today.

Paranormal 2

Cryptic © Thaddeus Howze 2013. All Rights Reserved

Written For 30

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