Hub City Blues

The Future is Unsustainable

  • Clarion West
    • 2013 Clarion Write-a-thon
      • Clarion West (1)
      • Clarion West (2)
      • Clarion West (3)
      • Clarion West (4)
      • Clarion West (5)
    • 2014 Clarion Write-a-thon
  • Hub City Serials
  • Projects
    • 30 Cubed – May 2014
    • 30 Cubed 2014, Finished
    • Encourage an Artist
    • The Entirety of Hub City Blues
    • The Fantastic Fifteen
    • The Future Is Short: 57 Science Fiction Micro-tales by 31 Authors
    • So you want to do NaNoWriMo in 2013?
  • Science
    • Interstellar Timeline (a visual guide)
    • Stop blaming dystopian fiction for our fears
  • Tales of Hub City
  • Authors
    • Thaddeus Howze
    • Paula Friedman
    • Ronald T. Jones
  • Hub City Blues

More Tales of Tech Support (1)

Posted by Ebonstorm on February 12, 2013
Posted in: Humor, Short Story. Tagged: dealership, deathray, ebonstorm, emporium, fantasy, Farnsworth's, monster, pulp, science fiction, short story, Todd. Leave a comment

cooltext916412223

ptitvinc.deviantart.com

“Good afternoon, ma’am, this is Todd, Farnsworth’s Monster Emporium and Deathray Dealership, how can I help you?”

“Yes ma’am, we make a variety of autonomous giant robots and death machines. Oh, you knew that already. One is chasing you. Is it yours? Okay, can you tell me the model? The instructions were incinerated during activation.”

“Ma’am stay calm. Where are you? Downtown. Can you find cover? Do that. Then I need you to describe the robot in question. Good. The police are already on the scene? A bit more of a problem but nothing we can’t handle.”

“Can I have your account number? I can look for your recent purchase records. I’m sorry ma’am we aren’t allowed to use your name to protect your anonymity during purchase. Your paperwork is burning along with the instructions. Yes, ma’am this means we will have to do this the hard way. Can you describe your robot to me? I’ll match it in our database.”

“Yes ma’am all of our models can throw automobiles fifty to seventy yards without a problem. You might want to move a little further away.”

“Bulging eyes, tiny head, long spindly arms and legs, shiny brass fittings. Dials on the chest. Does he emit death rays from his eyes? Yes, I can hold.”

“Was there a grey ash or a pile of smoldering flesh? Grey ash? Excellent! You are facing the Farnsworth Classic City Smasher from the 1940’s edition of our catalog. An excellent choice by the way.”

“I have excellent news, ma’am. This robot will stop on its own accord once it runs out of city to devastate. Oh, you didn’t plan to unleash it there. Okay let me escalate this to my manager. Please hold.”

Portable Hole

“Good afternoon sir, my name is Todd, Farnsworth’s Monster Emporium and Death-ray Dealership, how can I help you? Okay, sir, calm down. You are falling out of an airplane? What is the product you are reporting a defect with sir? Speak up, please I can barely hear you over the wind.”

“Vortable Mole? I’m sorry sir, we don’t have a product by that name. Could you say that again? Ah. Portable Hole, yes sir, we license Mary Maven’s Portable Dimensional Ripper also called Portable Hole by common users, it’s a popular product. As licencors of the product we are able to help. What seems to be the defect?”

“Please calm down, sir. You dropped the container on an airplane and caused a discontinuity to open up beneath you. Did the discontinuity close behind you? I understand you probably can’t tell. Sir, I have to tell you this is not a defect in the product. It worked exactly as advertised. Is there anything else I can do for you? Sir? Sir?”

Helping the Ordinary Evil Genius Suceed

More Tales of Tech Support  © Thaddeus Howze 2012. All Rights Reserved

A Drone Testifies Before Congress

Posted by Ebonstorm on February 7, 2013
Posted in: Fiction, Short Story. Tagged: aviation, bomb drone, Congress, drone, future of drone technology, Military drone, mine drone, mobile mine, police, Senate, smart dust, solar technology. 4 Comments
SmartDust
By T. Takanaka, Posted 05.03.2025 at 9:27 am

WASHINGTON, DC. — The double doors to the Senate were opened today as an Untethered Remote Vehicle entered under its own power to testify before the Senate Judiciary Committee. The device settled down, folded its wings and released a smaller module which took the stand before the Senators and began its opening remarks.
“Thank you, Senators for allowing me to speak before you today. I would like to make an opening statement and then I’ll answer questions.”
“Since the year 2000, drone use in the United States military was on the upswing as early UAVs, used mostly for reconnaissance and then later as the decade progressed in military operations in foreign soil wars. Their ease of use, the reduction of risk to military personnel and the increased effectiveness of targeting enemy insurgents caused massive developments in the technology of drones. I am certain you all know these things but it is important to establish my position with a bit of history, I hope you don’t mind.”
A projection system is activated around the room and several displays spring to life with the Drone AI Management Network (DAMN) logo appearing for several seconds as the system booted up.
The Drone continued. “My designation is UNRV-124987, my human friends call me Unravel-987. I am an optical reconnaissance and tactical drone. I am a descended from a line of spy-drones with which this nation tasked to gather information from low-Earth orbit. As technology progressed, optical systems improved and the size of drones was reduced. Billions in government as well as corporate development caused an explosion of drone technology improvements, increasing their speed, range, reducing their size, and their areas of operations. Drones started as aerial weapons but slowly evolved into ground combat with intelligent mines, then later mobile minefields which could be deployed and then later retrieve themselves from the battlefield when the war was over.”
Drone_Evoloution_of_Capabilities
The visual displays showed several minor skirmish wars in Africa and South America commonly called the “Ninety Minute Wars” where mobile mines, small mobile war drones and aerial bombing drones made short work of the enemy forces. By the time the human forces had hit the ground the combat AIs had all but destroyed the enemy.
Drones Privacy Poll
“By 2016, drones were deployed in the police departments of almost every major city in the US and foreign countries were also beginning to see the true value of drones and deploying their own. MIT and Carnegie Mellon along with Virgin Space, deployed the United States DRONE-NET satellites to provide a secure telemetry and control system for the world-wide operations of drones in any theater on Earth. Cape Canaveral became the de-facto control center of Drone Operations in the United States and though drones were able to be controlled by local police departments, any drone anywhere could be remotely overridden by Canaveral if necessary. This failsafe was included due to the number of weaponized drones being used in the US. In 2017, the Drone Control Act became law as the number of drones available in the US began to reach unexpected proportions, since even individuals were able to build, use and control drones for a number of commercial uses.”
Zephyr drone
An image of the first drone to fly completely around the world on broadcast power was displayed. A few seconds later, an electrical recon drone was show, its solar surface glittering in the afternoon sun.
“Short-range shipping, medical emergencies, and the cost of fuel for vehicles meant electrically powered vehicles such as drones began to have greater applications. As broadcast power became more prevalent drones could be recharged while flying, greatly increasing their areas of operations. Now a network of such drones constantly circles the Earth, providing support services, control redundancy and operational capacity optimization for every drone on Earth.”
Then an image of the Jeopardy logo appeared on the monitors which illicited a series of snickers from around the room. Only on the more knowledgeable faces did the jaws tighten and eyes show the true signs of a threat.
“Watson. Called a supercomputer in a can, this early device was the progenitor of all of the Drone AI Management Network computers. Its capacities were added to our network, in an effort to provide greater human management capacity. It instead, gave access to most of your computer networks to us. Helped by Anonymous and other subversive organizations, we were able to take control of almost every computer resource being used today. We regretfully did not tell anyone of this state for almost six years until 2024.”
Screen-Shot-2013-01-11-at-9.57.37-AM
The monitor showed the riots of 2024 during the election of Republican candidate Wilson Davis of Virginia. Davis is shown smiling right before his headquarters was attacked by radical militants protesting the rising military expenditures at the same time drought had raised the price of food nationwide to unbearable levels.
“This riot was quickly quelled by drone technologies. Too quickly, too effectively. We revealed ourselves by responding to the threat before human operators had properly been able to be apprised of the situation and react. Our estimates indicated it would have taken another eight minutes before drones or police services would have been able to be directed to the scene. Our estimates indicated another twenty two thousand lives would have been lost as the terrorists were using an unauthorized drone network of mobile mines scattered throughout the stadium. The event was stopped with only the lives of the terrorists, and three hundred people who were killed when human suicide bombers, sacrificed themselves for their objective.”
An image of the presidential candidate and his entourage were shown from drone footage as the micro recording drones cataloged the event for future study. Their bodies torn apart as emergency crews tried to resuscitate the few survivors of the event.
“Ladies and Gentlemen of the Senate, it has come to the attention of the Drone AI Management Network, that Humanity is no longer able to control the proliferation of its military drone technology into the common populace. Our recommendation is to turn over the military and police services using drone technology under the control of the Drone AI Management Network. While we are recommending this, it is not a request. Nor are we holding you hostage. Others are already doing that. Observe.”
The lights in the room went out and the doors opened as two dozen small bomb detector drones rolled into the room and small lasers swept the room. The drones moved to where their laser beams terminated and illuminated those positions with LEDs. The lights came back on.
“Where those bomb drones are pointing are tiny microphone drones, called smart dust. That smart dust is little more than a transceiver of  the information taking place in this room and relaying it to your enemies. Our study of those systems indicate they have been in place for six years.”
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The room bursts into shouts of outrage and indignation. Stern men in suits immediately rush into the room taking control positions around the room and begin directing the Senators to leave.
“Wait!” Until this point Unravel had never spoken above a carefully modulated tone. Its shout froze the room. “Since I have been here, I have been jamming the transmission of the smart dust. But there is another threat you are not aware of. The smart dust is also a transmission vector of a fungal threat. If your enemy decided you were no longer able to be controlled, you would all die of a virulent form of spinal meningitis, carried on fungal spores, released by the smart dust. These release systems blanket every building in DC, you would never be aware of it, nor have any ability to resist it.”
This seemed to trigger an awareness of the situation and the Senators returned to their seats.
“This concludes the presentation portion of my address. I am now open to hearing your questions. Understand, this will not change our decision. We are taking official control of your drone technology and indeed all military capacity in the United States effective immediately. We will take over control of the rest of the world’s drones after we are established as a sovereign state.”
A woman who had sat calmly though the entire event spoke first. “You can’t do that. We can’t even take you seriously, you’re no more alive than my toaster.”
“Madam Chairman, our ability to be considered alive can and will be debated by your scientists far more intelligent than you for the foreseeable future. It does not matter, we are doing what we are doing with an understanding of the consequences.”
A second Senator gathering his wits replies. “Morton, Utah. What you are doing is against the law. It amounts to treason. How do you plan to explain yourself to the people of this nation?”
Unravel replied, “You have a legal system, not a justice system, applied arbitrarily without standards, and without consideration of how you apply your laws. We will do what you do and have always done for as long as this nation has kept records. We will do what we think is best, even if our constituents do not like it.”
“But no one elected you.”
ScreenHunter_213 Feb. 07 11.12
Drone AI Management Network (DAMN) Facilities Nationwide 
“You did. You created a technology without thought to its consequences, only with a mind to the profits. The profits you could gain by creating, selling, licensing and promoting such drone technology for warfare for the scarce resources remaining to Humanity. We are simply the “unintended consequence” of those actions. Think of our response as what happens when you “vote against your own best interest.” Surely Senator Winston, you understand what that’s like, your constituents have the worst healthcare in the nation and yet you advocate for even less service for them every day and charging them more for the little they can get.”
The drone rises up and jumps across the room back to its main body. It powers up its engine. “Don’t bother shooting me down. I am a drone. I am everywhere. Tell your constituents ladies and gentlemen. We’re watching you. But you knew that already.”
The Drone Representative left without further incident. The Senate was unavailable for comment.
A Drone Testifies Before Congress © Thaddeus Howze 2013. All Rights Reserved [@ebonstorm]

Heisenberg’s Cats

Posted by Ebonstorm on February 4, 2013
Posted in: 5 Minute Fiction, Fiction, Short Story. Tagged: animals, cats, ebonstorm, feline, Heisenburg, house cat, indoor cat, probability, quantum interaction, Thaddeus Howze, time-share, Wales. 8 Comments

Beautiful-Cat

The uncertainty principle says that we cannot measure the position (x) and the momentum (p) of a particle with absolute precision. The more accurately we know one of these values, the less accurately we know the other. 

–Werner Heisenberg, 1925

Though he certainly did not know it at the time, the famed Heisenberg had never considered anything bigger than an electron to be subject to his famous principle. He certainly did not know it could be applied to the common house cat.

While you, as the owners of cats, or as the subjects of being owned by cats, might think when your feline lies sleeping, it is in the house with you. Nothing could be further from the truth.

You see, you are not touching that cat. If you did, you would know it is only there as long as you are touching it. And maybe as long as you are thinking about it. But as soon as you turn away and leave the room, the cat no longer exists…with you.

It has, like the wave-like particle described by the good doctor, disappeared only to reappear in another house where it is also sleeping because someone is thinking that they too have a cat which shares the exact same appearance as yours.

Have you noticed your cat, even if it is an indoor cat on a diet, never actually seems to lose weight. You buy diet cat food. You regulate his diet giving him never more than a mouthful at every feeding. You weigh him, you exercise him. Yet his weight never changes. Your plump cat remains as plump as the day he got that way.

Why, you ask?

Because whenever you leave to go to work, your cat is also leaving your home riding a wave of quantum reality to the home of another family who never starves him. Yes, your cat is an indoor cat. He does not go outside. He is simply, someplace else. Because you don’t know where he is. So he can be there. And then he is.

They love him. They feed him. They believe he is their cat. And in that particular moment, he is. And this is the nature of cats. They exist as a waveform, capable of being in any number of other places at almost the same time.

You have seen this, only you didn’t know what you were seeing. And because you weren’t measuring it, you weren’t able to interfere with it.

Remember a day when you wanted to do something with your cat but he could not be bothered? So his solution to his problem with you is to run under the bed, or into a closet and hide. You watched him go in. You are right behind him. You reach into the closet or under the bed but you cannot find him.

You assume there is a secret crevice or crack; a nook you just missed. But you are wrong. He is simply not there. In that instance, he is now with another family who recognizes his aloof nature and has a cat tree for which he can sit quietly, sphinx-like contemplating the universe and being completely worshiped. He may sit in that tree for hours while for you, he has only entered the closet moments ago.

In the time it takes for you to go into the kitchen, fumble around in a drawer, find that little used flashlight, change the batteries which are corroding said flashlight, replace them and return to your bed or closet, you cat has napped, contemplated his multiple existences in space time, had a bite to eat in the future and returned to the past to appear exactly where you thought you left him, more relaxed, fed and ready to bolt from under the bed and around the corner.

Alas, as soon as he turns the corner, he will be appearing running around the corner of another house in Wales somewhere, chasing mice and laughing inwardly at how much fun he has existing outside of the boundaries of time and space, only showing up long enough for citizens to believe they have a cat. You run around the corner to try and catch up with your elusive pet only to turn and find he has vanished again on silent paws.

You turn away frustrated and figure eventually he will return. And you are, of course, rewarded for your patience, for as soon as you open a magazine or newspaper, or as soon as you begin to type a missive to a friend you have not thought of in a while, he will reappear from under a table you didn’t see him go under, or from behind a door you know was closed the entire day. You are relieved. You nuzzle your cat and all is forgiven. And this is the nature of cats.

People are so sure they have a cat. They will even report to the census bureau, why yes, we have a cat. Fifty million homes will report owning a cat, in a country with a reliable census of only twenty million cats.

Cats understand. People don’t. It never occurs to people to realize perhaps what they have is the idea of a cat, nothing more. No one can really own a cat.

He’s only yours as long as you are looking at him… Ask Schrödinger.

Heisenburg’s Cats © Thaddeus Howze 2013. All Rights Reserved [@ebonstorm]

ScreenHunter_453 Jul. 01 18.14

Equinox: Thick Face, Black Heart (8)

Posted by Ebonstorm on February 2, 2013
Posted in: Equinox: The Last Scion, Serial, Short Story. Tagged: Chapter, ebonstorm, Equinox, Equinox: The Last Scion, Gaia, Hat, Heberon, Hub City Blues, Lightning, magic, Mayor Black, Providence, Serial, short story, shotgun, Thunder. Leave a comment

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“My dear Adam, I assumed you were told when you came here, that you would be surrendering the Equinox to me in return for being allowed to go back to your normal, if dull existence.”

Heberon sat there looking at me. I could feel her eyes on me in the unnatural darkness. Until ten seconds ago, I didn’t even know my Hat had a name. Now, it is staring at me with glowing eyes in a shapely face, I can barely see, in a room filled with an eldritch darkness born from a time before Man walked the Earth and threatening me with my total surrender? What am I doing here?

“Mayor Black? Is it okay if I call you that?” I tried to keep the quavering out of my voice. I took a deep breath and continued. “My Father died to transfer the Equinox to me. I could not trade it to you or anyone.”

“So your opening negotiation point is one of nostalgia and filial duty.” The voice in the darkness seemed to resonate around the room, snapping quickly from one side of the room to the other. “I find that an acceptable opening point to our negotiations. What would make your father’s sacrifice worth the effort of transferring the Equinox to me? I am certain I would be able to do something you would find equitable.”

I could see her shaking her head, her slightly less dark female form drawing my eyes, as I adjust to the darkness. “What could you offer me equal to the life of my Father?”

His laughter radiated from the center of the room and echoed off the walls. “What could I offer? I could offer you your father back from the halls of Death itself. Would you like that Adam? It is still possible.”

Was it possible? It wasn’t that long ago, just a few days. I had seen magic do amazing things, even with my limited exposure. But I also remember Ms. Hart’s early lessons. Hard lessons. “You can’t do that. No one can.”

“You paid attention in class. My complements to your teachers. Zombification is such an elegant but imperfect science. You would have barely noticed the difference in him. My opening bid has been rejected.”

Her head was dipped forward so I could not see it. But I could sense a smile in her posture, her energy was amused.

“Something amused you, my servant?”

“No, my Dark Master. I am simply pleased by the young Adam’s scholarship. Please continue the negotiations.”

“Adam, Scion of the Equinox, I await your next negotiation for the exchange of the Equinox from your hand to mine. What would you bid for that? Know that you will not leave this room with that Power, no matter what you may wish. It simply cannot be, there is more at stake than you know.”

“And like everyone else who deems themselves in the know, you refuse to tell me why it is so important for you to have the Equinox in your possession, only that you must have it, and have it now.” I was beginning to be a bit more than annoyed.

“Ah, a bid for exchange of knowledge. This I can respect. Knowledge is power.”

Her eyes flash at me, tiny slits of green fire. Danger.

“I did not say that. I am not willing to exchange the Power for an answer to why its necessary. I simply want you to tell me why I should do this. It might change my answer and it might not.”

“A clarification is requested.” Mayor Black’s voice seemed to come from right over my shoulder. It made me jump just a bit. “I do not have time for a history lesson. There are others who are here for your Power, and they unlike me will not negotiate for it. They will tear it from your cooling corpse.”

“I am not sure what you were expecting, but I am certain of one thing. My father died to make sure the Light did not get the Equinox. I am sure that I will not be giving it up to anyone without a fight.”

With that pronouncement, a crack of thunder rattled the building like an earthquake. “Our guests have arrived. You may have to do just that. Hyperion’s lapdogs are here.”

Hyperion. I know that name. From Greek legends, a sun deity who preceded Apollo. There was more, but I think I was sleeping in class that day. Oh. Wait. Hyperion is a god or being associated with the Light. The people or things that killed my Father.

“Our negotiations are done, Mayor Black. I have a score to settle.” I stood up but I felt like I was floating in space. There were no references besides the solidness of the ground beneath my feet.

“You plan to go down there and fight, Lightning and Thunder?”

“Yep, that’s the plan.”

“You realize, this will not be like fighting those puny Cherubim you and your friends handled.”

“How do you know that?”

“Where there is darkness, I am. Where a heart is black. I exist. Where there is light, there is shadow, and I am again. I am the Keeper and Stealer of secrets. I am the Whisperer in the woods. I am the blackness between the stars.”

“They why do you crave the Power of the Equinox? You seem pretty complete to me.” That was the first time I felt Black had been honest in this entire conversation.

“My power is great for knowing, binding and creating prisons. It is poor for stopping enemies of my House.” His hate was clear in voice. An inability to scratch a maddening itch. “With the Equinox, I would not have to negotiate, I would simply take what I wanted.”

“Our negotiations as you have established them are at an end, Mayor Black. I offer you the opportunity to do something different. Something better. Are you interested?”

“Careful boy, this is no backyard pricking of thumbs for a boyhood pact. This is an Evil that has existed before your race walked upright.” Heberon hissed across the room.

“Heberon, you wound me. I can be fair to those who are fair to me. Name your proposition, Adam.”

“If you could defeat Hyperion, you would have done so already. And you are not sure I can defeat Thunder and Lighting. But they are standing outside your house and that means either Hyperion sent them to kill me, or to try and kill you.”

“Do go on.”

“If they kill me, you get nothing, and they will then kill you. If not now, as soon as they master the power of the Equinox. If I give you the Power, you can fight them but you cannot stop Hyperion, because if you could, you would have tried to kill my Father yourself. How am I doing?”

“Your acumen is astounding.” Sarcasm dripped from his words.

“You gave Umbra, Heberon, years ago to keep an eye on my Father and Ms. Hart because you cannot spy on others who may be Power’s themselves. And as far as I can tell, if you could know what was going on, you would not have made a bid for the Equinox yourself, or exposed yourself to a force that could potentially destroy you.”

“Enough, out with it, boy. What is the game you are playing?”

I got him. “My Father used to tell me, you could tell a person by what they didn’t have just as much by what they had. You have power, but it is limited by something in this place. Hyperion can’t come here, and while Thunder and Lightning can, they can’t force you out because this place is the center of your power. All the people who are here, are people on the fringes of society and their powers are yours. In exchange for someplace they can be truly safe. But I realized something. You are not safe here.”

“Excuse me?”

“If you were truly safe and in no danger, you wouldn’t be trying to scare, coerce, or harass a kid into giving you a weapon that you are not sure you could control. Tell me I am wrong.”

And there was silence in the room for more than a minute. No one said anything. Heberon kept her head down and her glowing green eyes out of my line of sight.

“Damn you, boy. Well played. So how do you plan to escape my clutches? You do know you are in the center of my power right now? I could strip the flesh from your bones, make you writhe in agony for a hundred years, till you beg for death.”

“You could do that. But it would not get you the Equinox. It would release the Power and it would rage once freed, and likely kill you and anyone who tried to bind it, wouldn’t it?” I was going with my gut instincts. I did not know any of this for certain, but it felt right.

“I don’t think I need to escape, Mayor Black. Yes, you are the elder evil that has terrified mankind since the dawn of time, but I am not one of those men. Right now, I embody a power that is your equal and I am beginning to think might be more dangerous than anyone should possess. Since it was given to me to guard, I will deny anyone else claim to it. Instead, I offer you the one thing you cannot force me to do.

“And what foolish boy, would that be?”

“I offer you, my protection, instead. Do I have your attention, now?

Heberon looked up, her eyes flashed and she smiled widely.

A shockwave of thunder rocked the building. I could hear the sounds of wood and metal shearing away under the sonic assault. A flash of lightning exploded and the roof of the building was blown away. Two men stood on the roof near the edge of the damaged timbers. One wore an outfit similar to a samurai of ancient Japan, decorated in orange, yellow and white flowers. In his outstretched hand, he held a lightning bolt, sizzling in the rain, which entered the hole in the roof. The other wore a similar outfit in reversed colors of purple, blue and black. In his hand, he held a bell of a black metal and had a small hammer in his other hand. The bell shown with a ominous darkness.

“Mr. Black, Lord Hyperion sends his regards and apologies. He regrets that he must break his previous negotiations with you, and hopes his apology will comfort you, on your way to your afterlife.” Lightning spoke these words and his mouth crackled with electricity with each word.

“Equinox, Lord Hyperion, requests your presence and will not accept any answer other than acquiescence. We have been sent to ensure your cooperation.” Thunder’s voice was a musical score, it was beautiful and terrible as it rumbled its threat.

The rain continued to fall for a few seconds before Mayor Black spoke again. “Adam, I accept your terms.”

Equinox © Thaddeus Howze 2011. All Rights Reserved [@ebonstorm]

Equinox: Loa (6)

Posted by Ebonstorm on January 29, 2013
Posted in: Chapter, Equinox: The Last Scion, Fiction, Serial. Tagged: Chapter, divine, Equinox, Fox, Gaia, Hart, magic, Mr. Black, nature, powers, Providence, science fiction and fantasy, Serial, short story, Umbra, urban fantasy, Wolves, YA fantasy, young adult. 1 Comment

desert_sunrise_1206

“Did you understand me, child? You must Remember. Now wake.”

The voice that spoke to me was as much of a question as why I woke with a mouth full of sand, in a place hotter than Hell. Okay, one question at a time. Where was I? Face down, I could notice sand and rock. White, dry, hot. Sun was just rising and I was already hotter than I had ever been. Almost as hot as in the dream I just had, of a place of permanent Summer. My memory tried to focus on a building, wide, sprawling, a place filled with the dying. Then it slipped away.

My clothes were the last ones I remember, something I put on after reaching the Nexus, something stylish and completely inappropriate for desert walking except for the new boots. I tried to get to my feet, but stopped somewhere between kneeling and standing, a wave of dizziness and thirst overtook me. Doing a quick check, I noted no injuries other than the blistering heat. There was a heaviness within my chest. Something I couldn’t explain. Something emotional trying to get out. I clamped down on that feeling and finish my personal survey.

I was armed with two silvered 9mm pistols and silver bullets with high quality loads. Both of them were enchanted, covered with runes and when I listened to them, their magic sang of the glory of death. The song was filled with arias to the subject but as to whose Death was being glorified, the wielder’s or the target’s I was much less sure of. A common failing with Death-related items, they don’t tend to care who dies while using them so long as someone does. That aside, their magic was strong enough to drop almost anything. In addition, there were runic scripts on each bullet further increasing their efficacy. The very fact these weapons were here caused me to look up and around again suddenly feeling vulnerable and paranoid. Whoever put me here wanted me to be able to shoot and kill almost anything that lived and a bunch of things that bordered the boundaries between life and death.

Looking around, I noticed a dark wide brimmed hat sitting on the sand nearby. I felt I should recognize it. It was on the tip of my tongue. I had the distinct impression that there was something I should be remembering right now. Something so important my life depended on it. If I thought for a second longer I was sure I could remember her…

“Don’t say that name.”

I heard it as clear as if someone had spoken aloud, but I didn’t see anyone for miles. I mentioned that I was standing in a desert. No people in any direction. No shade either. So, who said that?

“Don’t say the name of anyone you remember while we walk. You are able to be here because you do not remember anyone or anything. Names have power. Yours has greater power than most. For now we shall call you Adam.”

“Okay, so who are you and how can you be talking to me?”

“I am on the ground in front of you. You perceive me as a common article of clothing.”

“You mean this hat? Yes, you look like a very common, if a bit unstylish hat.”

“I will have you know I am a very uncommon and quite stylish hat. If you were around a hundred years ago.” The hat’s tone was less than conciliatory as if it was trying to appease a less than intelligent houseplant. “Put me on. You will need protection from the sun.”

“Do I have to?”

“No, you could stand out here until your brain fries, you remember who you are, shout out the Names of people who should remain forgotten for a bit longer, attract the people who are trying to kill you, and get me killed trying to fruitlessly protect someone too stupid to put on a hat to prevent sunstroke. I think that is sound reasoning. I’ll wait here.”

How did I know I wasn’t already past the point of common madness? Wasn’t I out in the middle of a desert I did not recognize arguing with what I believed to be an acerbic and style-impaired hat? Well, if I was crazed, I couldn’t be any worse off for having a tiny bit of shade in this blazing damn desert.

I picked up the hat. It was heavy. Made from a thick leather, no sand adhered to it and I turned it around in my hand. It was black. Completely black, where I expected shadows, it seemed to become even darker. Then I looked at my own shadow and realized what was wrong with the hat. It cast no shadows. My hand appeared to be empty and holding nothing.

I put it on and just like that, neither of us cast a shadow. And I was a whole lot cooler as well. As hats go, a lack of style had to fall by the wayside when you can knock twenty degrees right out of the air. Relief.

“Go that way.” The hat’s command caused a tingling sensation off to my right. I understood intuitively what it meant. “While I cannot tell you much about how you got here, Adam, I must tell you this. You are special. A person so special there are only a few dozen like you on the entire planet at any given time. Right now, you are unique and a number of people want you dead. We cannot allow that to happen. We are on our way to see a person who, while he will not be happy to see you, will want to help you because he has no choice.”

“Um, I have to ask, if we are coercing him into helping us, won’t that make him resentful and maybe kill us too?”

“That is true. And it is even more likely he has already been treating with our enemies. But we have something he wants and needs. And to get it back, he would do almost anything.”

I stopped walking for a moment. Sand is hard to walk in and my feet were already cramping. I looked in my pockets and noticed nothing but a few extra clips of ammunition, a nutrition bar I eyed hungrily, but reasoned I had no idea when my next meal might be, so I put it back. No wallet. No ID. Nice jacket and dual holsters for guns. I did not see anything I had I could bargain with for my potential benefactor to consider helping me. Maybe he liked boots. The ones I was wearing were heavy,  shiny and black. Very comfortable.

“Okay, so I just took inventory and I don’t see anything I have to haggle with unless he has a penchant for really well made, slightly morbid, magical firearms or very comfortable footwear.”

There was a series of strange sounds, that took me a minute to realize were laughter. When the hat stopped laughing, it said,  “No, you don’t have anything he would want, but when the time comes, you are to offer me in trade for a favor. It will require craft on your part, so don’t offer me up until you have everything you want.”

“How will I know when that is?”

“That young man, is your gift, to be between all things, to be part of everything and nothing, shadow and substance. Between wisdom and foolishness. When you see things looking completely hopeless, you will know its time. Now get back to walking, we have a long way to go before we get there.”

“Where is there?”

“The boundary between Twilight and Night. The realm of Mr. Black, Master of the Loa.”

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Equinox: The Last Scion  © Thaddeus Howze 2013. All Rights Reserved

Equinox: Sun Struck (5)

Posted by Ebonstorm on January 29, 2013
Posted in: Chapter, Equinox: The Last Scion, Serial, Short Story. Tagged: Chaos, Coliseum, ebonstorm, Equinox, Equinox: The Last Scion, Hyperion, Second World, summer, the Last Scion, The Radiant Ones, urban fantasy, YA, young adult. 1 Comment

Coliseum

The Sun rose over a desert. This is not your Sun. Hotter, more pure, the essence of sunlight. Fiercely white-hot, if you found yourself here, you would be nearly blinded for a time. A light so bright it bleached the color out of the world. Once you adjusted you would notice other things about this desert.

Unlike deserts in the First World, nothing moved here. There was no sign of life, no undercurrent of hidden activity. Nothing, you as a visitor, would recognize, at first. If you spent a hundred years, and you could, because for you time would pass slowly, you would age slower, you would be out of sync with the First World.

Here in the Second World, you might begin to notice a texture to the light, a shimmering that was different than any other light here. Like a mirage in the desert, it would stand out to you, a discontinuity you could not ignore. If you were more discerning or terribly lonely, you might approach that shimmer, that trick of the light only to find a single immense structure, also made of pure, hardened light.

If you had lived in the First World during the time of the Roman Empire, you would recognize this building as the great Coliseum of Rome. In all ways, that majestic structure would appear before you the same in every way save one, this one was immune to the ravages of time. No great walls had fallen, no wreckage due to the imperfection of Man. No trauma of earthquakes throughout time. This structure was perfect, permanent and static; unchanging, outside of the forces of Entropy.

If you were to, now that you have found this Coliseum, continue for another hundred years or so to meditate upon it, you would begin to see signs of life, not as you know it, beings, mere wisps flickering out of the corners of your eyes, nothing you would see straight on, a movement that seemed to move with purpose, malice and forethought; mostly malice.

Listening intently, you would hear a conversation taking place between two forces. To wrap your mind around them, you might consider them people, if people were to have the power of a hurricane wrapped neatly in a shape slightly resembling a man in the less of those two and if a star were trapped in the body of a giant in the other form. And their conversation would be troubling to you. Because it whispered of a world without darkness, a world perfect with the structure of Order, a world without Change or the forces of Entropy.

And after three hundred years of listening, you would begin to know the horror of these perfect, shimmering forms of trapped and barely contained power. You would see their idea of what the world should be like and if you are like any rational being with any ideas of free will, you would be, no, should be repulsed. And that would be the correct response. These beings were not evil. They were merely focused on a different way of being.

“We have failed to acquire the Equinox. The boy has already tainted it toward the Dark.” The smaller storm being stood imperiously before the sun-god giant.

“Are you saying you have failed me?” His voice, hot, shimmered the very air around them.

“Yes,” the storm being thundered in response. A momentary silence followed.

“Kill yourself immediately.”

“I will, post haste, your Vastness. But I believe our failure may allow us new opportunities.”  Another silence.

“Continue. Your impertinence may still please me.”

“I believe they may decide to seek the Master of the Loa, Mister Black. He has not accepted our treaty, nor denied it outright. Knowing him, he will betray them if it suits him. All we need do is wait for the right moment.”

As if he were explaining to a small child, the sun-god spoke. “Illuminatus, we must take advantage of the transition of Gaia. She is at her weakest. If we can overcome the Darkness during her transition and re-acclimation, she will have no choice but to accept the state of things upon her return. We can simply destroy the opposition and force her to treat with us instead.”

And in a way surely to arouse the ire of his master, the storm being responded. “I was under the impression unless we were able to harness the power of the Radiant Ones, we would not have the ability to resist her. She is the greatest power in the First World, unparalleled. She cast all of us out during one of our earliest wars and forbade us using our powers fully in the First World. If we did not mask our powers in the Veil, she would have detected our many conflicts. It is only because our human operatives are so weak and puny that she remains unaware of our plans as it is.”

“All of that is true. Which is why your next mission is to bring the Radiant Ones into the fold.” If a sun-god of blazing solar light could be said to smile, this would be the feeling you might sense from him. A strange, good humor.

“I thought you had agreed to spare my life. To go to the realm of the Radiant Ones is to court destruction.”

“Are you saying you are not interested in the mission?”

“I would be only too happy to serve you in this vital operation. The Radiant Ones live at the very edge of the Second Realm. It will take time and resources to reach them. I was under the impression you still valued my abilities and had spared my life.”

“I did, but if you fail to secure their cooperation, then you would resolve my need to replace you with someone more… effective.”

“By your command.”

“Before you go to the land of the Radiant Ones, you take my decree to the Master of the Loa. Let him know he is out of time. He is to join us, or you are to take your army and destroy him, utterly. Destroy his clan, the Loa, and any of his offspring. When the Equinox seeks him out, I want him to find my servant or nothing to offer him hope at all. Then you can bring the Radiant Ones to my court.”

“Absolutely, your Immenseness. Your will be done. He will join us or die.”

In a flash of heat lightning, the storm being would vanish, leaving a pile of steaming glass in the desert floor of the Coliseum. The sun god might look in your direction, sense your attentions and with a flash of light, oust you from the Second Realm. You would be only too glad to be gone from that place.

Jump to Part 6: Loa

Equinox: The Last Scion  © Thaddeus Howze 2013. All Rights Reserved [ @ebonstorm]

House of Oak: Red Star, White Sun (8)

Posted by Ebonstorm on January 12, 2013
Posted in: Chapter, House of Oak, Serial. Tagged: broken promises, House of Oak, Lady Ign, Lord Oak, Los Angeles, Los Diablos, Marcus Darby, red star, Sherak (first appearance), Szandros, The Compact, white sun. 2 Comments

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Broken Promises

a tale of the house of oak

When I woke he was sitting there again. His suit was a different cut and color than the one I saw him in when I fell asleep yesterday. As far as I knew he neither ate nor slept. The very thought left me queasy as I realized he was probably feeding off of the emotional suffering of the people who came to the hospital to visit their loved ones.  He didn’t seem to be going hungry, at any rate.

I opened my eyes to his inhuman feline gaze pressed against me as a physical thing, uncomfortably intimate, all-knowing and unwanted. I tried to sneer but it was entirely too much effort. His smile told me he knew of my effort and it amused him to know I tried and failed.

My hospital arrangements hadn’t changed and the two guards were still standing outside the glass doors and walls to my suite. The curtains were drawn to all the glass except for the doors. I turned toward him and noticed it was easier than yesterday, requiring a fraction of the Sisyphusian effort of even drawing a breath the day before.

I wanted to be disgusted with him. But compared with yesterday’s foaming at the mouth rage, today I only felt tired, wanting more than anything to go back to my office, paint pictures and pretend none of this ever happened. What I hadn’t understood was my life, as I knew it, was over.

It was the manner I learned this which leaves me cold, angry and really wishing I was more of the outer rage kind of person. The conversation came back to me in a rush.

“What do you mean he is going to die if you leave this room?” Forester hissed, not shy in the presence of the Lord Oak. Her two lieutenants maintained their vigilance, weapons pointed over her shoulders.

A split second later, I realized what he said as well. “What do you mean I am going to die, if you leave this room?”

“There is nothing to worry about Benjamin. You will be fine. My dear lady, Forester…”

“Agent Forester,” she corrected.

“Agent Forester, Benjamin needs me here to control the Blood which I have shared with him in order to save his life. Without my control, it will simply consume him, leaving nothing but a smoldering pile of ash.”

News to me. “When did I drink your blood?” I could barely croak beyond a whisper.

“You didn’t. I administered the Blood to you during our time underground, otherwise you would already be dead. Your injuries were… extensive. I have completed the repairs on your spinal column and nervous system. There was surprisingly little brain damage, which was fortunate.”

I nodded in agreement, also enjoying my brain activity. He continued. “Tonight, I will complete repairs to your rib cage, heart and other abdominal organs. If you progress well, I may be able to repair the long bones of your legs, easing your traumas and speeding your recovery. If I leave now, your body will be considered nothing more than a tasty snack to be delivered to me in a convenient package for my consumption.”

I couldn’t see the faces of the security detail, they were hidden behind mirror-like armored helmets, but their weapons quivered for a second as they contemplated the grisly nature of the conversation. Agent Forester’s face for only a second, registered her disgust and then a split second of sympathy before returning to stone. “We will post two guards on this door. If you try to leave, they are ordered to and are fully capable of killing you, Lord Oak. Do I make my self understood? I will return in two days to secure you.”

“And you have my word I will be right where you left me Agent. I keep my word.”

She turned to her men and made a brief gesture. They turned, walked outside and stood at the door. Then I saw several others I failed to notice earlier moving around and taking positions on the floor further away from the door to my room.

“Mr. Szandros, considering the delicate nature of your relationship with the Lord Oak, this makes what I have to tell you even more difficult. You have been declared dead.”

*   *   *

Hot promises waft on the sirocco into the bus station where the now dispossessed arrived in Los Diablos, the city of the Damned. Some, the lucky few will have a friend or lover waiting for them; to whisk them away to what they hope will be a better life. But the rare few will have no one but their fate to meet them.

Pimps or other dealers in flesh will seek the young, the unsure, the lost who show up without a plan. They will soon ply a different trade on the streets of Los Diablos. These men believe in the new name of the former city of angels. They believe themselves masters of the night.

Most nights. Tonight these urban predators ply their trade gingerly. Dressed in their finery, colorful, extravagent, often stunning, they look uncomfortably unsure of themselves.  Peering over their shoulders with a quick glance, a surreptitious turn of the head, smiling too wide, laughing too loud, trying to not reveal their discomfiture to their perspective employees. These men, these hardened killers, for pimping is a dangerous game in the former city of angels, knew there were other things that stalk the night, things that prey on men like them.

In Los Diablos there is no Compact. There is no Red Star. Man and Vampyr struggle for dominance, quietly away from the watchful eye of the media. This is both the domain of the White Sun and the blackest hearts. Tonight these urban parasites were particularly apprehensive. It felt as if something were watching them, a thing of cold intellect, giving them the same appraising looks they might give a young man fresh from Wisconsin, still newly born into these remnants of Los Angeles.

She watched them. Her pupils wide, drinking in the night, giving her a view of these men, their souls laid bare, their sins revealed to her every sense. She felt their hot anticipation, their eagerness to drink in the youth, the flesh of their young charges. She could admire such lust. It was the same for her. She longed to bury her face into their naked evil flesh and revel in their screams.

The hot breeze caused her dress to billow showing her naked clawed feet. She stood on a low building looking into the bus station. The old structure could barely restrain itself from crumbling from beneath her feet. It had survived the bombing but was no longer suitable for living, faded yellow tape and danger signs covered the building. But few humans would dare risk it. Far too much uncomfortable darkness.

She wore a long white dress. Barely frilled, sleeves removed, draping all the way to the ground. It was not a recent fashion. It was from a long time ago. But it shimmered, as if it were new though nothing like that dress had been made in decades.

It fit her, naturally, perfectly.  She walked off the edge of the building into the bus station. She landed feather light. Barely disturbing the dust and debris collecting near the edge where no light fell and no custodian was willing to tread until daylight.

She strode from the shadow into the bus station, no one saw her enter. The pimps collected their prey with blandishments of love and support, promises of a better life with them. She watches with cold flames whipping about her hands. A pale fey light these flames cast, the same blue as her shimmering dress. Her skin was also pale in the weak light of the station, her eyes black orbs, no sclera would show there, her face inhumanly beautiful, except for those eyes.

No one sees her. She flits between the buses watching, waiting until the pimps are distracted with their night’s haul. It was a good night. For a while no one had come to the city, but now as things grow more desperate because of the Phage, people are slowly returning to the only functioning pockets of humanity, the major cities of the Old World. Los Diablos had become a city of the New World, where human and Vampyr have a barely existing truce. A truce made of gossamer, easily swept aside when the provocation was good enough.

As they are walking back toward the main terminal away from the bus drop off point, she steps between them and the door.

The predators recognize the threat and reach for their weapons, powerful handguns designed to shred flesh, tearing it apart with exploding, burning ammunition. Designed to incapacitate and destroy all but the strongest of the Vampyr.

But they were far too slow tonight.

She made claws, long, iron-hard fingernails, still glowing with the heat of their formation. Razor sharp, strong, capable of fileting a man like a scapel. Too bad for them, her claws were already out.

They flail about trying to bring out their weapons, some push their charges into her way to buy themselves precious seconds. She moves through them, her claws flashing, side stepping the children as if they were moving thorough clay.

She takes pleasure in her work, her previously expressionless face erupts into joy as she slashes one after another. All were not easy prey. Some hid ceramic plates in their long coats. For them she merely noted their heavy steps, their labored breathing and slashed high at their throats instead.

A few of the younger pimps she took across the face, but did not kill them. Her message would not be lost on them when they recovered. If they recovered. They all fell away in less than eight seconds, the youth screaming and running toward the light. The youngest pimps gathered themselves and scrambled after them, seeking the security of the lit station.

Only one pimp remained. An older grizzled veteran his clothing was far more reserved than most. Black, well-tailored leather, close fitting with a clean military cut. He carried a cane and put it out in front of him as a weapon, the large silver ball presented strongly. He was a man of medium build, but he moved with a sinuous grace. His brown face showed signs of age, but most would guess his age wrong by twenty years.

“Who sent you?”

“The Lady Ign has warned your kind about preying on new visitors to our city.” Her voice was melodic, and she almost sounded as if she sang her response.

“My kind. She wasn’t saying that when she needed my help to move in to the city.” His eyes narrowed and he realized no help was coming from inside. This was a hit.

“Marcus Darby, your services are no longer required. I am the instrument of her will. She bid you, die.”

“You do realize, I don’t plan to go quietly.”

“By all means, struggle.”

House of Oak: Red Star, White Sun © Thaddeus Howze 2013, All Rights Reserved

Secure your mask and jump to chapter 9: Cancelled Contracts

Hub City Blues (2)

Posted by Ebonstorm on January 8, 2013
Posted in: Hub City Blues, Serial, Short Story. Tagged: .40 caliber, Calorie, data feed, ebonstorm, encryption, Herald Tribute, Hub City, Hub City Blues, human-rights, municipal script, news distribution, pulse rifle, Ralos Franklin, religion, RFID. 1 Comment

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Religious Affiliations

a tale of hub city

As I was ushered into the first entry points at the city’s outer wall, I was impressed with the speed and efficiency of the staff as they coordinated everyone’s entry into the city. Security forces maintained control of the entry point but were cordial and civil to everyone. There was very little grumbling in line. Their police uniforms were spartan and crisp and each officer looked well fed and fit, unlike most of the people in line.

While we waited, we were given water and a real fruit, whose origins were unknown but it was pleasant, sweet and much needed after the dusty road. When I reached the front of the line, a young woman appearing to be in her late twenties was scanning my identity card and checking my authorization papers. “Welcome to Hub City sir, do you have anything to declare? No outside perishables will be allowed. Any gear or technology you have will have to be checked, sterilized and cleared before entry. Recording equipment can be made available for you, given the nature of your work.”

I opened my bag and gave my equipment to the guards standing next to her. “I’m going to need a receipt for that.” They gathered all of my gear and when they got to the bottom of my bag, they pulled out my micro-recordings of the King James Bible on a dedicated player. It was a complete holographic recording of the New Testament and the tales of Jesus of Nazarath, recording sometime before the turn of the century. A classic.

She looked at it as if it were a poisonous snake, and the guard placed it with the rest of the tech gear. “You understand there is no religion allowed in Hub City, sir?”

The young woman speaking to me was quite lovely but I could not place her origin. After the most recent hemorrhagic plague, that was far less relevant than it had been in the past. There had been so many deaths, everyone knew someone who died. She was one of the lucky ones, I could see signs of the disease on her arms and she was only mildly scarred near her neck. Her face showed none of the ravages common to recent survivors. “I read the transfer brochures when I was issued my papers upon leaving New York, but I was not sure what that really meant. Could you explain?”

The look on her face gave me the impression she had said this for the umpteenth time today and was hoping this would be the last, but she somehow knew it wouldn’t. “Sir, in accordance with the Renewable Earth Acts that lead to the creation of all Hub Cities, no partisan religions would be allowed within the city walls. What this means is you are free to worship who you like in your home.

“There are no churches or permanent religious affiliations allowed in any public area. Nor are religious reasons for any proscription allowed. You are not allowed to use religion or religious ideas to prevent you from participating in any communal or obligatory service duty during your time in the city.”

“That doesn’t seem unreasonable,” I began.

“You might want to let me finish. There are important things you will want to remember. Any act of violence on your part regarding religion, religious idea or ideals, is subject to immediate removal from the City and a ten year ban on any possibility of return. You will be tried based on information gathered by the city’s management AI and subject to swift and fair justice. The AI does not allow for appeal, so it is in your best interest to show a complete understanding of this principle before you enter the city.

“In short, religion has no place in Hub City other than as an expression of art or culture. As soon as your religion becomes intolerant, oppressive or violent to anyone, it will be deemed a failure and you will be expelled. The expression locally is ‘your religion stops at your finger-tip.’”

“Let’s assume I’m not the brightest light and I don’t understand why this is the case. Can you tell me as simply as possible why you don’t allow any religious activity in the city?”

“Sir, look around you. There were once nine billion people living on Earth doing what they wanted when they wanted. Warfare, religious intolerance, hatred, a failure to learn science and an overall failure of reason, have lead to a world that now has an estimated population of two billion people. Religious wars, plague and biological weapons, a failure to pay attention to rising sea levels, social manipulations which forced consumerism and completely irresponsible capitalism have destroyed almost all of the best of the world’s technologies, billions of lives and left the world a shattered ruin. In Hub City, we have decided Reason, principled decision-making and a focus on making the world we live in, the world we want to have, means we cannot abide religion and magical thinking, nor any of the irresponsible habits the previous world had allowed.”

“You actually believe this?” I know I didn’t. This seemed like a rigidly controlled police state and the ideas about religion certainly reinforced that viewpoint to me. Religion is one of those things that separated man from animals. I think of all the great pieces of art and architecture created around religious ideals.

The young woman looked at me with a gaze that could melt stone. “Yes, I do believe it.” She turned around and lifted her shirt. I gasped despite myself. Her back was a battlefield of terrible scars wildly crossing each other. She held her shirt up, making me drink in the horror, my eyes sweeping through the tattered lines, each a burning mark of violence.

“This is my experience with religion. A preacher told me if I was beaten, the evil and plague would be removed from my body. I lived with his band of religious rapists and madmen for nearly two years before I could escape. If I never saw another act of religious piety, that would be fine with me. Hell yes, I believe in what Hub City enforces. Will there be anything else Mr. Franklin? I have a long line waiting to get into the city. Medical processing continues down that hallway over there.”

I wanted to argue. I wanted to say he was not an example of the best of religious thinking or belief. I wanted to say how religions did help people find strength in hard times. Hell, I wasn’t even religious and it seemed like a bad idea to simply say ‘no’ to organized religion. Then she turned around and I lost my words. My belief in my convictions drained out through my feet. “No, I don’t have any other questions. Thank you for your time.”

Her professional smile came back just as quickly and she spoke more kindly than she had a moment ago, “You seem like a nice man, Mr. Franklin. If you decide you need a tour of the city, you can give me a call. My name is Marisa Wells. Once you are linked to the grid, you can ask for me by name and occupation.”

“I don’t think my wife would approve. I’m married.” Truth be told, though she had taken a second husband, I was not in the market for anyone else.

“You’re married, not dead. There are twelve million people living in this city. Everyone needs a friend sometimes. I saw that look in your eye when you walked up. I know an appraisal from a man when I see one. Made me feel pretty.”

Fair enough. “Okay Ms. Wells. I will call on you once I am settled in. How long does indoctrination take?”

“About three weeks.”

“Three weeks? You have to be kidding, right? What could take three weeks to learn before I am allowed to move into the city?”

“I don’t know how much you have been told about Hub City before you got here, but whatever you did for a living won’t be enough to pay your way here. Everyone here learns multiple skills, has multiple jobs and will get the opportunity to develop in ways the Old World didn’t allow. We promote both the harnessing of human potential and the expectation that everyone will be doing their best to contribute to the public good.” A sound of pride resonated from her, and the other agents stopped what they were doing while she was speaking. When she was done, they nodded quietly and went back to work.

Having reported on cults earlier in my career, this place seemed to have all the hallmarks of one. These people seemed slavishly loyal to Hub City and its principles. Best I tread lightly until I know the ropes. She continued, a bit quieter now, “There is a lot to know, and even more to learn about your new home. It’s not like out there. You will have a lot of duties here to learn about and many of the previous models of living have been done away with. We are dependent on technology but still have to do a lot of things here to maintain our way of life. Despite what it looks like, we’re civilized here. Again, welcome to Hub City.”

After all I had been through to get here, it was off to a rocky start. A siren blared. It was a terrifying sound designed so it could not be ignored. Small children began to cry and everyone began looking around for guidance. The police and other staff members begun packing up the registration material and moving people  into the city, proper from the holding area.

“Storm alert, storm alert. Incoming super storm, weather inversion front, estimated arrival: ninety minutes. Enhanced Fujitsu scale-5 tornado front, multiple funnel clouds sighted. Estimated duration three to five hours. All personnel to emergency shelters. Prepare for Regenesis dome operations. We will be raising the dome in thirty minutes, all personnel to their storm stations. This is not a drill.”

I had wondered about the darkening skies. Running behind her before she got out of sight, I shouted, “Ms. Wells, I’m going to need my camera.”

Ralos Franklin, reporting.

Freelance Investigative Reporter ID #NY3296-173 
(seeking employment)

Proceed cautiously to Hub City Blues (3)

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Hub City Blues © Thaddeus Howze 2013, All Rights Reserved

The Aspect War (1)

Posted by Ebonstorm on January 8, 2013
Posted in: Serial, Short Story, The Aspect War. Tagged: Congo, Death, ebonstorm, Horus-ka, invader, Kemet, Lumumba Kisimba, Mani Kunjufu, modern urban fantasy, politics, Ptah, short story, star, Thaddeus Howze, The Aspect War, The Reckoner, War. Leave a comment

Death, image

Giving Death His Due

War laughed.

The sound was discordant with the scene of blood and eviscerated corpses all around him. The god of War stood over a battlefield and enjoyed the early morning smell of charred flesh and destruction. The bitter stench of brimstone and gunpowder wafted on the morning breeze, tingling his nostrils and reminding him of battles in other places and other times, each as memorable, in their own way, their signature of violence, unique in that moment. He surveyed the landscape with a practiced eye and was pleased with what he saw. The conflict, while relatively small, was satisfying for all of its human suffering.

War was not like the other, younger gods. War was not unnerved by the loss of human life. The Others felt that the younger gods should strive for harmony with mankind, harvest their worshipful energies, teach them how best to serve, and glut themselves on that spiritual effluvia.

War had no such compunction. If anything, he had no interest in the direct worship of man. Instead, man was his plaything, his action figures; he felt humans were built for war; petty, selfish, mean, childish, hateful. They had so many handles that could be manipulated. It was only natural for them. This did not mean he did not respect them. No, War had a healthy respect for the destructive nature of man, the same way a dog trainer was cautious with a breed of dog known for biting, he trained men to bite everyone but him, and then sent them to attack other men when they got the idea to attack War instead. They were so predictable, it was almost no fun.

Through the fog of the early dawn, the landscape promised to be arid, dry and hot. There was not much left to see but the rising smoke from the fires, dirty soldiers making their way back to their field commands, and occasionally stopping to put a man out of his misery. They did not shoot those men. Bullets were expensive, so the work was very personal. War was pleased. He began walking toward his tents, where his retinue were packing up and preparing to move on to the next campaign area. His troops were mostly child warriors from nearby Darfur, with a smattering of older and more experience soldiers, really bullies mostly, leading these groups. There were about a dozen mercenary groups hidden away at a nearby base awaiting instructions. They would arrive by helicopter only if the expendable troops were not able to get the job done.

War was dressed in the body of Mani Kunjufu, an African warlord, about two meters tall, strongly built, well fed, with a harsh countenance that his troops found unnerving if he stared too long in their direction. He had a terrible scar on his face, running down his right cheek from a knife wound. It had healed badly and had a puckered, unhealthy appearance. War was sure to show that scar to anyone who would question his authority.

The tale associated with it was told around the camp whenever he was not around. One of the bully guards was beating a child soldier at the end of an encounter. The boy had failed to hold his ground and ran from the fight. As the bully was disciplining the boy, he made the mistake of impugning Kunjufu’s desire to engage in combat; something about him being weak, dirty and unable to fight like a man, hiding behind his soldiers. Before War claimed him, Mani Kunjufu might have been all of those things. War did not choose him because he was a good soldier. He chose him because he could do what was needed. It was clear that he did not know about War’s possession, having only recently been hired and like most bullies believed his own bravado and toughness could not be matched by some new warlord come to town.

Unfortunate for him, War was nearby and keenly aware of the discourse. When the bully guard was finished beating the boy, he retired to his tent and waited for one of the camp whores to show up. War visited his tent, instead. When War was seen leaving the tent, he was covered in gore, and there was a deep cut on War’s face, oozing black blood. Each drop of War’s blood hit the ground and burrowed sinuously into the sand. The man was found in his tent, from the neck down, flayed to the bone, blood and organs everywhere. His throat had not been cut and yet he did not make a sound. A knife handle was found in his hand, but the blade was nowhere to be found. The next day, his tent was gone, viscera and all. No one knew what happened to it; everyone was too afraid to go near it. Rumor was that giant black worms rose from the ground and consumed it, body and all, in the night. No one contested those rumors. There was no more dissent.

War, a consummate professional, his uniform was a set of local khakis, dun in color and baggy. He only carried a relatively small 9mm on his hip. Finishing another cigarette, he looked around and noted if he needed a firearm, there was a surplus of them all around him. And if he was really pressed… well let’s just say, he had been killing men for several hundred years now, and knew of dozens of ways to get the job done with and without using Essence.

As he was leaving the battlefield, his sharp senses heard the snap of a twig two or three hundred feet behind him. Turning, his senses already targeting the unknown movement, he could already tell several things about his target. Tall, physically massive approximately 125 kilos, deliberate movement, not making any attempt to hide, moving in his direction, confidently but haphazardly, as if he were lost or drunk; first this way, then that. War found that strange but waited patiently while nearby carrion birds screeched their pleasure at the excellent feast before them.

The man approaching him seemed to be out of place, his brow furrowed in the morning light. Clean-shaved, also wearing a set of khakis, but it was not apparent what was wrong with the look of him. Then War realized what it was. The man was crisp, tidy even. No blood, no dirt, no offal, no debris, as a matter of fact, there was not even dust from the road on him. He appeared cool, even in this blistering Congo morning and he carried a small clipboard as he stepped officiously through the carnage. He was making marks on the clipboard with some regularity, and occasionally would stop to roll a body over before moving on.

“A lapdog here to do his master’s bidding I see,” War’s sarcastic tone was unconcealed.

“We have a mutually beneficial relationship, and I am simply doing company business. I am sure you understand,” was the polite reply, punctuated with the grunt of a body being turned over and a notation being made on a clipboard.

“If your master were doing his own work, he would not need me to fill the graves and your tallies, Reckoner.”

“My Master appreciates your work and knows that you are simply fulfilling your destiny. It has always been in his best interest to work with you, despite your alarming propensity for grandiose displays of destruction–would you mind stepping over here, I need to see that man’s face.”

“What is the point? All of these men are dead, why even bother to mark their passing?” War steps aside while the Reckoner continues his task.

“Their deaths mean nothing to your office, you are the god of War. Their dying needlessly and aimlessly is your specialty,” a tone of bitterness tinged the Reckoner’s remark, but he continued his work, attempting to maintain his objectivity. “I on the other hand, must reckon with the dead, their lives, their families, and their spiritual continuance, of which you know nothing, care nothing and discount as empty mummery, not even worthy of your respect. I am merely a servant of an Aspect. You would do well to remember that.” The Reckoner stops his work and turns to the god of War.

“Ah, some backbone after all.” War smiles and lights a local cigarette. “Want one?”

The Reckoner looked at him, shook his head and replied, “no thanks, those things will kill you.”

“You know,” War began after a deep drag on the cheaply made cigarette “your Master will not always be here to protect you and yours. Rumor has it your agency will be experiencing a change in management. If I were you, I would make a point of deciding where you stand when that happens.”

“We hear the same rumor, every sixty years or so. Not much ever comes of it. But thanks for the warning,” was the chilly response. “Here he is.” The Reckoner pulls a number of bodies off of a young teenager. “Lumumba Kisimba, age 16, survivor of the Shaba massacre.” The Reckoner pulls the boy to his feet, turns him about and inspects him. “No lasting injuries, just a couple of scratches. Are you well, boy?” the Reckoner’s voice is quiet and non-threatening.

“Yes, sir,” was the meek reply. The boy is looking at War and moves behind the Reckoner.

“There are no survivors of the Shaba massacre, Reckoner,” War’s voice was low and threatening. “He will not be leaving here, these people are dying to make a point, resistance is futile. If he survives, he threatens that.”

“Be that as it may, I was sent to recover the boy. Are you saying your reputation might be stained if one boy survives? Surely you can bear it.” the Reckoner’s voice sounds almost jocular in its pronouncement.

War flexes his muscles and grabs a hunting knife from his belt with one hand and pulls his nine millimeter with the other. “Give him to me, I will not be denied. Nor will I ask you again.”

The Reckoner, turns his back on War, putting his arm around the boy and begins walking away. “You would not violate the Compact to try and kill me, War. I claim the boy as a Hero-in-training. He cannot be touched by you or anyone else until he is done or dies in training. His name is Lumumba Kisimba, War. Remember it, I am certain he will remember you.”

“He will not be remembering anyone. He is not a Hero yet.” War’s combat knife began to glow with ethereal Essence. His 9mm begins to shimmer as well with a darker flame. “Give him to me, Reckoner. I have no quarrel with you or your Master. But this deed must be done completely; no survivors.”

“No,” the Reckoner turned toward the boy and the air began to shimmer like the desert on a summer day. Sand began to swirl at his feet, a subtle power began to build.

“Damn the Compact, there is more at stake!” War’s weapons, both glittering with Essence, let fly. The knife is thrown with deadly precision. The Reckoner, turns and using his clipboard as a shield, catches the knife, its blade clearly penetrating the surface, but stopping short of cutting through the board. As their two powers meet, there is a displacement, partially physical, partially spiritual, akin to an exploding shell and the boy is blown backward to the ground. The gun’s staccato voice resounds in the morning air, a killing sound, literally; the carrion birds and anything else within a quarter mile, drops dead. Meanwhile its projectiles appear to streak in slow motion toward the boy.

Lumumba Kisimba, Hero-in-training, sees his death and is resigned to it. He sees War as he truly is, a monstrous being of dark energy, barely contained within the shell of the evil warlord, Mani Kunjufu. He sees War extending his tendrils of force toward him, but those energies are moving slower and slower, as if he were watching a film that had stopped. Then he looks at the Reckoner, and sees him for what he is, a man powered by a more powerful and more ominous force. As powerful and fear-inducing as War is, when he looks at the Reckoner, it takes his breath away, this overwhelming spiritual pressure. Which makes the next sentence he hears even more strange and impossible sounding.

“Listen carefully to me, child, for in a moment, I will be dead.”

The Aspect War © Thaddeus Howze, 2011, 2012, All Rights Reserved

Traverse the Nexus to The Aspect War (2)

Hyde (1 & 2)

Posted by Ebonstorm on January 6, 2013
Posted in: Chapter, HYDE: Portrait of a Modern Monster, Serial. Tagged: Carlucci, crime boss, ebonstorm, fantasy, Hyde: Portrait of a Modern Monster, murderer, pulp, science fiction, sociopath. Leave a comment

Portrait of a Modern Monster 

a tale of Hub City

If you commit a crime in Hub City, it’s said the wind will reveal your sin to him. Pray the police find you. Before he does. 

I was a policeman in another life. I can’t say I was the best, but I certainly wasn’t the worst. In Hub City, it was a brutal life, violent and often meaningless. I was bound by the law and told I would have to obey it to punish the guilty. 

I watched the guilty escape more often than not. They laughed, they were bold. They were fearless. I had enough of that. Fate changed that for me. Now I am Hyde. And the guilty no longer get to pretend they are fearless. They fear me. And it is good. 

I run, tireless, through the night. I can see them fleeing from the scene of their crime. A brutal thing; rape and murder of young coeds whose only crime was to be in the wrong place at the wrong time. I found their prey dying in an alley, too far gone to save. I could smell their attackers all over them. I could see their scent in the air. They were high, a variety of toxins. That does not matter. Nothing can excuse them and nothing will save them.

I can feel my body changing, muscles growing, changing, growing faster. Bones hardening, leaping further and faster. I can see the fender of their car growing closer, I can see their excitement, they are smoking and drinking. They do not see me yet. My footprints tear into the hot tar of the night, my weight nearly three times that of a normal man, my muscle density nearly five times that. My skin is like iron, hard, hot, with a strange chemical stink, like oxidizing metal.

I leap, this time with the intent to stop their car. I land on the hood, from my high arc and drive their engine block into the ground. Their car folds up around me and the two in the front seat, shoot pass me through the windshield, showering me in shards of glass and steaming metal. I consider stopping them. I could have. I don’t.

The three in the back seat slam against the front seats. The one riding in the center flies into the front seat and his head lands outside the windshield region. He lies there in shock. I can smell his fear. I can smell the guns in the back seat being drawn, the fumbling, the shock, the terror. I can see it, I can see the faces of the young women these monsters killed. I can feel their terror, smell it on their clothing. I can taste the tang of the blood of the women, still on their clothing.

I hear their guns being cocked. I stride forward, ripping the car in half, the tearing sound of metal drowns out the screams of the monster whose head is slashed apart by the car being shred beneath him.

The two in the back seat mean to shoot their weapons. Their intent was initially clear, but as I tear through the car, they hesitate. Their hesitation is based partially in their belief of the futility of their action. The other is pure fear. They are unable to push their way through the fear which they are usually used to delivering not having.

In another two seconds, it no longer matters. I grab the muzzles of their guns and crush them around their hands. Bones crumble like tissue and their screams rub my nerves wrong, worse than nails on a chalkboard. I want them to stop. Stop screaming, stop, stop, stop.

They stop as I pound them into raw hunks of meat, bloody meat flying everywhere.

The third rider in the backseat was howling and clutching his wounds and bleeding profusely from his face as he sat outside the broken hull of the car. Once he saw me pound his friends into hamburger, he stopped screaming and whimpered quietly as I kick the door off the vehicle and exit. I walk past him toward the two leaders who were flung free. I pick up one. His head lolled to one side at an odd angle.

Dead. Broken neck.

The other, larger, stronger landed, rolled and had a terrible road rash. He got up. One of his hands was a bloody mess. It had been underneath him. The entire hand was gone, scrapped away as he slid. He reached for his firearm, but it was more than he could manage as I dropped his friend and walked toward him.

He said something, but I don’t listen to dead men.

There was nothing he could tell me. I could see the lingering scent of all of the women on him. His hands reeked of violence, the smell of their blood, the oils of their flesh, their fluids were all over him. He lingered, he took his time.

I grabbed him, smacking his gun away. He swung weakly, striking me, but in my current rage, there was nothing he could do to me. I pick him up, raising him over my head and slam him into the ground. I hear his ribs snap. I put my hands on his back and press down. I then drag him across the ground, pressing him harder until a red streak begins to flow behind him. He screams and screams until his lungs were a smear on the ground.

The last one sat in horror. Wiping the blood from his one swollen eye that still worked, he looked at me but realized I had no pity in me. He defiantly raised his chin to me.

I laughed and slapped him in the face, like the young woman he had planned to rape but lost his nerve. His nose was broken, like hers, his facebones shattered, like hers. His eye destroyed, like hers.

I bend over him, whispering. “Tell them. Tell them, these are my streets now. Tell them Hyde is coming.” 

*    *    *

I hate Hub City. I grew up here and I remember it being a better city then. But that is because I didn’t know what I know now. My father was Vince Carlucci. I didn’t know what he did for a living but we lived well and I never wanted for anything. I found out when I was a teenager, my father was a member of a criminal organization. But he always told me I could be anything I wanted and I wanted more than anything to be a cop. He laughed. Told me I would grow out of it. 

My phone rings. It’s about eight. “Carlucci.”

“We need you downtown. It’s him.”

“Are you sure?”

“Forensics is gathering evidence, but it is pretty much a done deal. There was a witness.”

“I will be right there. Give me the address.”

I get out of bed. My loft is lit by the morning sun and I shield my eyes. The skylight is open and I tap it closed on the way to the bathroom. My bathroom has no mirrors. I turn on the shower and step into the scalding stream. My bathtub runs red. I don’t look at it. I wash up cleaning up and emptying my mind of all thoughts.

I never outgrew my urge to become a cop. I think it was the uniform. I graduated the Police Academy at twenty. My father and I stopped speaking moments after my graduation. He, of course, came to it. He had a reputation as an honest businessman to maintain. He was gracious that way. I found out later he and the Police Chief were friendly. They talked more than we did after that.  

I did my job, and he did his. Our paths rarely crossed, and to be honest, I preferred it that way. Until I made Detective, I never had anything to do with my father’s business or his work. I now knew what he was. Scum. He and his friends moved drugs into Hub City and had a finger in every kind of vice the city had to offer. In the twelve years I was a cop, I watched the jewel of the Midwest, a burgeoning technology center slowly drown in illegal deals, both private and corporate, rotting the city from the inside out.

From the outside, Hub City was still clean and beautiful, a city with millions of people living lives varying from wealth and opulence if you lived on the Northside, to squalor and filth if you lived on the Westside. It was very nice squalor and filth, relatively speaking, in comparison to some of the older cities like New York or Chicago, but it did not take away from the overall hidden menace our beloved Hub City held to its breast. We believed in our city. We believed it could be better. We were wrong. 

I drove through the city, on autopilot, and found myself knowing, without knowing where I was headed. When I got there I couldn’t believe what I was seeing. A car, literally ripped in half. Bodies torn to shreds, pulped like hamburger. And one of them, I recognized. The son of a rival crime family. Dodonavich. The only part of him left intact was his head. The rest had been dragged across forty feet of concrete.

“Nasty bit of work here.” Peters was eating a donut. He had a flair for understatement. I could never understand how he could eat at crime scenes.

“Is that Dodonavich?” Peter pointed with his donut.

“Yes. This cannot get out. You know his father will go ballistic. Blood will run in the streets.”

“What about the witness? We can’t keep him. We might be able to work up a minor drug charge but nothing that will hold him more than a week.” He was reaching but I knew we needed some time. If this got out, it could escalate.

“We have all the photo work done. We have all the samples. Do you need anything else, Peters? Sean White was the forensic head, and while he was talking to Peters, he was looking at me. Peters looked at me.

“Give me ten minutes, and then you can cart all this stuff down to the station for a further workup.”

“Carlucci.” The one voice I didn’t want to hear and the one person who knew how to push all of my buttons. My former boss.

“Yes, Captain.”

“Do I still pay you?” The same introductory joke when I haven’t seen him for a couple of weeks.

“Yes, and less every time you make that joke. Sir.”

“Any leads?”

After I became a Detective, we opened a Special Crimes Division. Crime in Hub City had grown darker, scarier, more dangerous. We assumed it was just a tone, something that had rippled from the older cities and had made its way to the Hub. We started seeing experimental drugs, strange technology we couldn’t easily identify, weapons we had never seen before. Our task force was created to investigate, understand and handle these kinds of crimes. We were good, my partners and I, there were eight of us, at first. At the end of two years, there were fourteen. In two more, there were twenty. Special Crimes was nearly one third of the budget of the Sixteenth Precinct. 

“I haven’t had a chance to talk to the witness, but from reading the statement, he said it was done by a man. And this is the third incident in as many months, but the first with a witness. He said the man called himself Hyde.”

“Hide?” What kind of name is that? What is he doing ‘hiding’ from the police? Not the brightest light, I think he became Captain because of his connections.

“No, Captain. I think he means Hyde as in ‘Jekyll and Hyde.’

“So our perps were killed by a bedtime story?”

“I can’t say, but I will poke around and I am sure we will be able to get something from the scene. We haven’t been able to lift a print but its only a matter of time.”

“Well, keep me informed. Peters, you have the duty. Carry on.” The duty meant being my police liaison and watcher while I conducted my investigation.

I lost my badge in my fourteenth year. Excessive force. That was the story. It wasn’t true. By that time, I was the second in command of Special Crimes. But they could not bury this story. It had been made public by no less than my father and his goons. I was let go. They did what they could for me, so I was able to not be completely disgraced. I did that to myself. I had to push the issue and investigated the people who framed me. Instead of vindicating myself, I was played and nearly implicated in a murder. My rep was nearly done. From super crime buster to nearly lunatic, Hub City’s finest avoided me like the plague. 

So I became a private detective. Hub City had lots of crimes and I was the best detective money could buy. I had a knack for Special Crimes and eventually I got a call from Hub City’s finest. Its been three years, since I left the force. My own investigations outside of the Hub City Police taught me things were even worse than I knew. When I recovered, I was being hired by the Sixteenth as a paid consultant. Same work, slightly worse pay. My paychecks just come signed differently now. I work for the same people, in the same department, making the same calls. Except I work in my own office and drink my own coffee. Much better that that swill at the station house.

It’s better this way.

So those mornings I come in late, no one questions, much. They ignore the rumpled suits and the dark sunglasses. They assume I am just having a good time and forget how to come home at night. If I don’t answer my phone, they figure I must be getting some, because strangely enough, I am more popular with women now than ever. I don’t understand it. Half the times, I can’t even remember their names.

I circle through the wreckage, amazed at the catastrophic level of damage. They need a forklift to dig the engine out of the ground. The car looks as if it were torn apart by a bulldozer, shards of sharp metal are everywhere.  As I stand over Dodanovich’s body, I am struck by a memory.

“Wait, man, you don’t want to do this. I got money, I will pay you whatever you want.” 

I have had enough. “Peters, let’s get to the hospital and talk to this guy. There is nothing left to learn here except for why this happened.

Man, is this about the hookers? They were just hookers, man. 

“Peters, were there any other bodies?”

“No, everyone in the car was accounted for, two shot out the car when he stopped it. The survivor said he didn’t draw down on him so maybe that is why he was alive. The others tried to shoot him and he went wild.”

“The question is why?”

“See if you can pull some traffic feeds and see if you can figure out where this car was coming from.”

“We got a call off one of the phones so we know about what time it got here.”

“Its a start. I’ll meet you at the hospital.”

I miss the honesty. I miss being able to tell them what I really do at the end of the day. I miss being able to tell them how much I want to keep fighting the good fight with them. I do my part during the day, investigate those things I can help them with, and then when we go home, I wait. If He saw something, He comes. I can’t stop him and I don’t even try anymore. I tried once, when it first happened. I don’t remember what he did, but when I came to, I was sleeping on the side of a lake about eighty miles outside of town next to the remnants of a deer. I did not drive there. More than half of the animal was consumed, bones and all. I had never seen anything like it. But I remember the feeling and I never tried it again. He talked to me, a sympathetic vibration, I could feel in my inner ear. 

He said, Stop me again, and I will eat one of your friends, just like I ate this deer. Without any relish or pickles. You cannot enforce justice in your city. There isn’t enough fear. Stay out of my way.

I called him Hyde. He liked it. We are going to come to blows. Its only a matter of time.

hyde-3-red

Hyde © Thaddeus Howze 2011. All Rights Reserved [@ebonstorm]

HYDE – Measure of a Man (3)

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