Hub City Blues

The Future is Unsustainable

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  • Hub City Blues

The Creator

Posted by Ebonstorm on June 13, 2013
Posted in: 5 Minute Fiction, Short Story. Tagged: cafe, cardigan, diorama, fiction, Hamburg, Italian, short story. 2 Comments

the_creator_by_nimbus2005-d5eqo0n

He’d been dead two years now.

I can still remember him from that Christmas two years ago, sitting in his checkered cardigan with his furrowed brow focused on a car from his underground diorama. He had hand painted every part of his tiny town; each part of it resembled our city of Hamburg, its mixture of buildings, trees, and rooftops.

I loved to go into the basement with him, down the rickety stairs, each creaking with a signature sound, his weight distributed carefully so each bore his weight gracefully. Even at his age, he had refused to use a cane and only lightly did he lean on the railing. Halfway down he had reached up and found the small beaded string and turned on the light over the stairs. Its wan light never lit more than the rest of the stairs into the basement and its hidden treasures.

He would move around in the near darkness and when he reached the far wall, he would turn on a dial and the lights in the city would come on, dimly at first and slowly each building would light up from within. Cunningly crafted the buildings would come alive as if you were seeing the city from above on a summer night. Terraces lit, streets glowing with familiar shadows, cars sitting, awaiting tiny drivers to enter them and drive to their tiny destinations and their tiny lives.

I loved that city. I would walk around it for hours noting every detail, taken from real life. I knew that he did because we would walk during the day together when I wasn’t translating a book for a client. His eye for detail caught everything and while we didn’t talk much, I noted his sharp eyes flickering around the town. He would then come home and paint the dings on cars, the dents on boats, the graffiti on buildings. He would rearrange cars, move his tiny people on the sidewalk cafes, and place gendarmes on different street corners directing traffic.

That last night he was painting a small Italian car, a rich royal blue, his brushes sitting on the table in the living room surrounded by family members who lovingly ignored his eccentricities. He didn’t talk much these days, not since Grandmother died. It was thought he was becoming a bit senile, but I knew better. I spent more time with him than anyone else in our family and though he didn’t need anyone to care for him, I had the time, so I did those little things he needed doing.

I replenished his supplies, kept his clothing up, did his laundry and talked to him even though he never answered. He painted a new car that appeared in the neighborhood and as he finished, he walked downstairs while the rest of the family finished dinner and was cleaning up. He walked by them and smiled, patriarch to an entirely too large and happy family. He took my hand and led me into the basement.

The lights in the city were already on. He walked into the room and gave me the blue car.

“Where was it?” His voice was soft and just a bit tired. He sat in his chair and pointed to the diorama.

I remembered. This was a car in front of the old church, the vehicle of the new bishop. Just a few days in town. He was still parking on the street until a space could be made for him in the back of the church.

“Here.” I reached out and grabbed a small stick and cable device he used to place and move vehicles and dropped it gently in front of the church.

He smiled at me and nodded off to sleep. He died a few days later.

He left me the house in his will to do with as I pleased. I had grown comfortable in the three years I had cared for him and hadn’t been in any hurry to leave. The family even continued to come around for the holidays as if he were still with us, so we continued to celebrate them as if he was.

I hadn’t been back into the basement since he passed away. I was unsure of what to do with his artwork. I resolved to address the work and considered talking to the local museum to see if they would be interested in such a detailed replica of the city.

I had fallen out of the habit of walking since he died and felt a bit guilty about losing touch with the city. After dinner and a couple of glasses of wine, I gathered myself and went into the basement. I expected to see two years of dust covering his miniature Hamburg forgetting to cover it after his death. As I started down the stairs, the door slammed shut behind me and the stairs failed to make their requisite groans as I entered into what was once my grandfather’s most treasured place.

Instead of the mustiness I expected, I found the air clean and cool, as if I had just stepped outside onto the terrace. Then I realized, the lights in the city were already on. I hadn’t even crossed the room yet. Instead of dust, I found the streets clean and in good repair. I saw people standing on their verandas, enjoying the night air.

And then, a blue car drove past me. A foreign roadster passed in the opposite direction. A woman turned and walked back into her house. The cafe owner, carried his chairs into his store and swept his walkway before closing his store.

Then I saw him. He was wearing that same checkered cardigan and white shoes with the dark laces. He was walking down the street with a woman who looked strangely familiar. They walked down the main street and into the doorway of the church. Then they turned and waved to me.

I numbly waved back. They turned slowly and entered the church. Then the nine-oclock bell rang and I could hear it here and outside in the city proper.

I sat and watched the city late into the evening until only the streetlights were left on.

I picked up a paintbrush and touched up a table at the cafe before I went to bed.

The Creator © Thaddeus Howze 2013, All Rights Reserved

Artwork: The Creator ©2012-2013 ~Nimbus2005

ScreenHunter_453 Jul. 01 18.14

Excerpt – Insurrection: Chapter 1

Posted by Ebonstorm on June 3, 2013
Posted in: Chapter, Excerpt, Insurrection. Tagged: Biyu, ebonstorm, Exo-Frame, Insurrection, Lorrissa, Thaddeus Howze, Thomas Wilks, Travelling Light. 1 Comment

vanquish_2_by_lonefirewarrior-d669lzd

Excerpt – Insurrection: Chapter 1

a tale of the Twilight Continuum

The air felt cool as it flew by my face; thick, steamy, sluggish, with just the touch of the hinterlands of Lorrisi, a nearby forest tainting the air with its pungent spores. This would not have been the first time I died, so I don’t want you to be upset if I should expire during the course of this story. It is simply an occupational hazard in my line of work, hence my familiarity with the strange things you notice, just before you kick off this mortal coil.

As I was falling I noticed blood was streaming into my nose and mouth as I was turning and tumbling, cloying, choking blood from an injury to my head. I tried to orient myself but could not seem to focus. I was simply unable to right myself. “Secondary neural complex activating. Activating nanostructure repair. Impact in 3 seconds, harden structure, activate impact aerojel.”

I heard the sound of a burst of compressed air from my belt buckle, and a tiny capsule hurtled toward the ground at the nearly the speed of sound.

“Three, two, one.”

Fortunately a parked gravcar, and a cushion of flash aerojel protected me from the forty story fall with nothing more than a two dozen serious lacerations, a dozen contusions, two minimal hairline fractures on my right forearm which broke my fall nicely. Then the shock overwhelmed me and I lost consciousness.

“Major,” said the quiet voice that I heard speaking to me on my way toward the ground.

“How long?”

“It has been 58 seconds since the first shot was fired, and you have been unconscious for 36 seconds.”

“Damage assessment.”

“You have suffered 10% loss of neural material due to the round you have taken to your skull. I have begun the nanotech repair of your neural network. Unfortunately, this will take some time. Your skull and facial reconstruction are already underway. The skull will be repaired in two hours. Facial reconstruction, will take another two hours. The rest of your body has suffered relatively minor damage and you have only lost nineteen percent of your physical capacity.”

“And the good news?”

“Your fractures are already under repair and will be completed within the hour. The lacerations and contusion damage have been sealed and your blood loss has been minimal. The damage to your skull and your memory center will likely take days to regenerate completely without the Frame’s support. Until we are able to get back to the Frame, your memory backups will be inaccessible.”

Okay, now to the important things. “Who is trying to kill us?” I get up from the remnants of the aerojel, which is designed to break after five seconds, but leaves a bit of residue on everything. This gravcar is never going anywhere again. A body weighing six hundred pounds from forty stories leaves a mess. Sitting in the seat of the car with the hood crumpled around me, I see people starting to mill around the car.

“Major, we have company. Across the plaza, two humanoids, armed with weapons matching the Ajax 320 Pulse Rifle with select fire options.”

“Do I want to know how you determined their weapons at this distance?” I was a bit incredulous that the AI could possibly know the weapons of our assailants so early in our conflict.

“We were bombarded by infra-sound ranging technology common to the Ajax 320 Pulse rifle. Considering our proximity to Ajax and the cost of shipping goods in this system, it is the most likely candidate for small and medium firearms in this sector. Since the Ajax is used in thicker than Earth-normal atmospheres and uses infra-sound for that reason, it was a logical conclusion, bolstered by the fact that I am now correct.”

I get up from the wreckage and pick up a small piece of the grav-car, likely part of a gull-wing door and use it as a shield. Yes, it would be easier for me to dodge their attacks and normally I would, but my image told me I had neural damage, so until I am able to assess that damage, I have to “creatively utilize my surroundings” as my Sensei was so fond of saying.

“You are no longer human,” said the tiny soldier dressed in a Mil-spec interface armor. The armor was black and grey, a close-fitting mesh, covered with tiny overlapping scales like that of a fish. His face was calm and serene and he was far different than my first drill instructors decades ago in my first basic training.

“You have had the final stage of your Mil-spec enhancements to your skeleton, neural net and musculature. As formidable as you were in your previous lives, and you were chosen for that skill, you are again as children in your understanding of your capability. For the next two years, you will live here on Soldanis Four and relearn your bodies. For now you have all been set to one sixth of your actual full strength. This approximates your normal human strength before your transformation. You have been dialed down in order to understand just how different you are now.

He turned and pointed downrange at an obstacle course and picked up an Ajax Pulse Rifle. There were several steel targets approximating the shape of human beings at a range of three hundred meters. Each target was holding a wooden prop of a weapon of one sort or another. I could barely see them. And then he moved. He went from a standing start to a run that literally kicked up dust behind him. He turned down range and fired his pulse rifle six times, one for each target. After he made his shot he covered the distance in thirteen seconds and proceeded using a Vibron Flex Sword to strike each of his targets and slicing them in half. He did not slow down for any strike, made three per target, covered the distance between them in thirteen seconds and returned to us in the last thirteen seconds.

We double-timed it downrange and when we got to each target, three things were apparent. No target had a head. It was nowhere to be found. It had been blasted off by his initially volley of six rounds of pulse fire. Each steel statue has been sliced in three completely separate pieces. And he had done all of this while moving at over eighty kilometers an hour. I had never seen anything like this. Even the smallest mecha suits which offered similar capabilities weighed over five tons and still could not work with the precision Sensei did.

“You are all now capable of performing similar feats with the proper training. You will learn this here. This is a pass or fail course. If you fail, you have died and will not reach the final stage of your development, access to a Resurrection Frame. Of the one hundred of you gathered today, fifty of you will fail to complete this course and will be horribly maimed. You will be repaired to the best of our technology, dialed down to normal strength and fitness and returned to your former duties if possible. Most of the damage will be neurological so you will be reduced to a vegetable and unable to participate in even feeding yourself. You will spend the rest of your life in a military hospital. Fifteen of you will die due to a failure to inculcate the nano-machines and bio-mechanical adaptations required to complete the transformation. I am obligated to offer you one final time to return to the life you know. You will be dialed back to a human-level performance and allowed finish your military career. You will remain in the military for the rest of your life, as you will need care to maintain your prosthetics. Only with your graduation to the Frame will such care, no longer be necessary. The Frame will repair you, and will ultimately become your life.”

No one refused. Having spent decades on the battlefield as an infantryman, a light armored trooper or heavy armored trooper, none of us had ever seen anything like Sensei. Armed with the proper technology, a single soldier like him was worth a regiment. We would die to possess such abilities. And many of us would.

Hefting the car door, I noted its solid construction and considered it to be more than adequate for my needs. I was wearing my combat mesh beneath my uniform but the fewer people remember seeing that, the better. Rounds pelted the car door and I ran toward the two shooters, careful to keep my speed down and maintain the appearance of humanity.

“Majoris, we need to hurry and resolve this. A call for Peacekeepers has gone out. This system has both Bal-ha and Mariovel Peacekeepers. I don’t need to remind you of their formidable abilities, do I?”

“Not good, pinpoint the others if you please, I will deal with these two.” The two soldiers who were approaching me were wearing light exoskeletons and carried heavy rifles. A tiny metallic bead shot away from my forehead and streaked toward the building we fell out of a few minutes ago. With my image gone, I could feel the difference in my physical condition, I was a bit slower and clumsier because it was compensating for my injuries. But these injuries were nothing I hadn’t dealt with before. With the image gone, I could also do things proscribed by its safety protocols. Once the exo-armors were within fifty yards, I increased my speed and closed the distance, in what would appear to them, instantly, using my inertia, I spun and hurled my car door at the leading armor, decapitating him before he realized I had moved. The second, surprised both by my speed and the violence of my action, hesitated, and in that two second window, I pulled my flex-sword, charged it, and sliced off his weapon arm before he could pull the trigger. I needed him alive, but a little shock wouldn’t stop me from getting what I wanted.

“I have them. In addition to the two that were in the office we jumped out of, there are four others who are meeting with the others in the parking facility. They are carrying much heavier weaponry. I think a strategic retreat is in order.”

“These two are down, one incapacitated, the other in shock. What can you do for a vehicle? Using the one we came in is likely not the smartest idea.”

“There are several non-sentient AI’s I can coerce into allowing you to ride and not broadcasting their location to the grid,” the Image sounded as if it might enjoy that process.

“I am going to head toward our car and see if I can detonate their charges as a cover. Get a damn car and meet me there.”

I turned back toward the two soldiers who were down and that’s when I became aware of the Bel-ha descending from the sky.

“Desist activities and resist not. Comply, please,” it’s mechanical voice was created by a vox-coder but it was clearly commanding even while it was polite. The Bel-ha prize politeness above all else.

And I intended to comply, because it had asked me so nicely and because its psionic powers were reputed to be so formidable it could stop my heart with a casual thought. I really did plan to stop but as it descended, slowly and majestically right over the bodies of the mercenaries, of which I really needed to take one of, I heard the sound of a detonator switch on and decided to dive for cover instead. This was the right choice, as the explosion dug a twelve-foot hole in the ferrocrete beneath the bodies and sent shrapnel over my head, which I had conveniently located on the ground. I did not expect to see much of the Bel-ha cephalopod, except maybe some sushi clinging to the local plaza art. Imagine my surprise when I saw the Peacekeeper lying about 12 meters away in relatively good shape, a bit crisp, alive but quite still. Remind me never to get on the bad side of one of these aliens.

“I’ve damaged the local constabulary and lost my leads. Tell me you have better news on the transport front.” I was being snarky but was really pissed because this would put me on the top of the local Peacekeeper hit list.

“The vehicle selection was wide and excellent, all with low grade intelligence engines, easily swayed by my magnetic charms. I am on my way, keep your pants on. ETA, forty-five seconds if you are standing near our car. As a minor aside, there has been a secondary call to the Peacekeepers and it has been acknowledged as an escalation and possible terrorist attack. Did I mention, I was being chased by heavy armored assault suits in hover mode? My recommendation is to jump in as I pass, as slowing down would be bad. I’ll remember to roll the window down, this time, I promise.”

“Now you realize, I should stop to render assistance…”

“Majoris, this is Biyu, the base is under attack, requesting orders.” Biyu Chenggang never panicked, but the stress in her voice was evident.

“Talk to me.”

“Light and Heavy Infantry suits, likely Denar-surplus, armed with bunker-busters and anti-personnel weaponry. Base personnel are providing resistance but are equipped with light infantry only. They were not expecting a heavy assault. I estimate they will last approximately two minutes. I am also detecting the approach of six to eight fast aircraft converging on the base, below the lidar systems. The planetary defense systems have come online and aircraft are scrambling toward this position and a position in the city. I would guess that is your position. The ship is cloaked above the airfield and targeting the facility where the Frame is housed.”

“You make sure they do not get the Frame. You do whatever is necessary. Authorization A-6, full release.”

“Understood, full release is authorized. How did they know we were here, Thomas?”

I had no idea, only the military could know since they directed me to this secret research facility with the understanding, no one would see us enter or leave. “I don’t know, Biyu. We are on our way but have run into some heavy opposition as well. Hold the ground, till we get there. Our ETA is…”

“Eight minutes, if the Major can get the lead out. Coming alongside. Is eighty kilometers an hour the best you can do? Fall a few dozen floors and the next thing you know, you’re wanting to take retirement pay.”

A modern grav-car, with an exotic grill and lighting system, roared around the corner, nearly hitting everything in its way, but touching nothing as it came full tilt up the street. I spared exactly one second to assess it before moving up the street into oncoming traffic at my top speed. I could also hear the air fans of the heavy assault armors as they followed behind my Image’s getaway vehicle. I activated my flex armor field, and blasted away my civvies. All bets were off now, no sense in dying to maintain my disguise. I felt just the tiniest bit safer, but knew if they were armed with the right equipment, I was only a tiny bit safer than wearing nothing at all. As the gravcar came up behind me, oncoming traffic peeled away, due to the infrastructure’s safety features. I counted on this, and my Image’s pathological need to create as much mayhem as possible to work to my advantage as it pulled alongside.

“Windows?” I waved my arms frantically trying to get my Image’s attention. That exactly when the mercs decided to open fire, and the first three rounds whizzed uncomfortably close, and the forth hit my flex field right below my ribcage, directly into the housing of my biomechanical augmentation systems. Heavily armored and shielded by my flex field meant, no penetration, even of a highly sophisticated round. What it also meant was it hurt like hell and I decided to just jump through the window again, using my flex field to disrupt the window integrity. Glass shattered and flew through the vehicle but my Image was the size of a raisin nestled comfortably in an ashtray and was uninjured. What luck.

“Oops. Sorry about that, it’s so hard to figure out where they hide the window controls in these modern vehicles.” The engine roared as the vehicle picked up speed and continued to disrupt oncoming traffic. With a bounce, the gravcar returned to the proper traffic lanes with the exoskeletons in hot pursuit. We were able to maintain our lead and distance, and keeping a clear lane of fire for less than a second or two for about three minutes.

I flipped down my HUD visor and saw a satellite view of the city with a military and police overlay. The base was less than four minutes away, but the two assault helicopters would be intercepting us all in about thirty seconds.

“Major, the base has been breached. The Frame’s containment area has been broken. I am going to begin my attack. The incoming spacecraft will arrive in three minutes. This will be my only chance to intercept. Biyu, out.”

There was no point being angry or anxious, we would get there or we wouldn’t. The one thing I can say about working with professionals, is everyone is so good at their job, there is no need to backseat drive. I was carrying nothing but light weaponry, nothing strong enough to penetrate those suits back there, but the two assault helicopters were going to take care of that problem unless they decided to make a break for it. They had to know they would not make it to the base. Suddenly the mecha blew off most of their armor and heavy weapons. This technology explodes as four smaller contrails streak away from the ground. On lidar, two of the eight approaching spacecraft turn away on an intercept course to the four contrails. The remaining six continue their approach, but two hang back approaching slower. The four contrails disappear in a flash of tractor activity and the two ships turn back toward the sky. The two slower ships stop their approach and the first releases a small star-like missile, the second activates a super-heavy tractor beam. The remaining space-craft peel away releasing another swarm of missiles toward the city’s incoming attack aircraft.

“I’m stupid, thick, thick, thick. Biyu, come in, it’s a trap!”

Biyu turned Travelling Light’s four cannons toward the wreckage of the armored warehouse building where four heavy suits had entered and disappeared from sight. Four light mecha waited outside with their weapons primed. Each mecha suit was targeted.

“Torpedo bays activated and primed for launch. Two incoming targets quiet-locked,” Travelling Light’s soothing female voice indicated. Biyu silently acknowledged the telemetry and as the four exoskeleton’s were visible moving the storage container of the Frame into view, she dropped the ship’s cloak and fired upon the four mecha with tachyon pulse weaponry. The exotic weaponry released a tachyon beam of faster than light particles. These particles were entangled with an antimatter magnetic resonance which would only be affected by super-dense matter. The type of super-dense matter found in armor or other barrier-resonating fields. When the two collided, the antimatter was fully returned to our space-time and detonates, violently. The four mecha were instantly obliterated, and the resultant explosion knocked the remaining exoskeletons off their feet. The remaining building was destroyed in the explosion. The container storing the Frame was undamaged.

Immediately after firing the tachyon beams, Travelling Light swivels smoothly skyward and launches two torpedoes as eight incoming craft lock on with their lidar-targeting systems. Their returning volley of micro-missiles darken the sky. At the last second, two ships streak away from their dive and turn toward the city center. The remaining six continue their approach as their targeting systems lock onto Travelling Light. Two of the six ships take the torpedoes on their shields, dropping them immediately and damaging a variety of systems onboard those ships. Small explosions flash across their hulls and a few seconds later both explode from internal power-plant containment failures. The fifty micro-missiles striking the shields of Travelling Light and the remaining missiles batter the ground, causing explosions that obscured the ship from view.

“Shield power at 80%, reactivating cloak, moving to intercept Frame.” The cloaked ship moved through the debris toward the containment unit. Biyu climbed out of the pilot’s chair and grabbed her personal heavy pulse pistols. She was confident she would be able to handle the four light exo-skeletons in the time it would take the last ships to reach the ground. She would use the cloaking field and shield from the ship to protect her from incoming fire. After the initial volley of missiles, the ships had switched to beam lasers and heavy blaster fire, both would be insufficient to penetrate the military-grade shielding of the Travelling Light.

As she dropped to the ground and started running toward the four exoskeletons, her heavy pulse pistols, fired at full auto, tearing into the armors of the mercenaries, who were attaching something to the containment unit. They were gravity compensators. She stopped in her tracks as she heard the part of the scrambled message from the Majoris “–it’s a trap!”

Then the sky lit up like the sun come to earth.

Insurrection © Thaddeus Howze 2011-2013, All Rights Reserved

Artwork: Vanquish 2 © lonefirewarrior

Suicide Seed

Posted by Ebonstorm on May 25, 2013
Posted in: Hayward's Reach, Short Story. Tagged: ebonstorm, Hayward's Reach, Mehta, mercenary, Monsanto, mushrooms, population decline, Russia, seeds, South America, Thaddeus Howze. 2 Comments

ScreenHunter_404 May. 24 17.29

a tale of Hayward’s Reach

Stephanie Mehta woke Thursday morning to her clock radio in her tiny apartment in the Russian city of Moscow. It was little more than a room with a kitchen and bathroom.   She shuffled around slowly until she got her bearings. She was a diminutive Indian woman in her early thirties, with clear skin, long hair, and full lips. Her mother always wondered what was holding up her grandchildren when she had a daughter as beautiful as she was. Just another thing they had to fight about.

Her Russian Blue, Fedya, hopped up onto the counter and nuzzled her, releasing a tiny squeak, indicating his hope for breakfast, sooner rather than later. She nuzzled him back, and stroked him absently while she tried to remember what there was to eat in her apartment. She knew not to look in the half-height refrigerator, because she had not had anything fresh enough to require refrigeration in quite some time.

The tiny markets on the outskirts of Moscow had been bringing in less food in the last few years. Farmers were complaining about reduced harvests, and no one seemed to have any idea why the crops were getting smaller and smaller. Stephanie had taken to growing potatoes in the corner of her apartment from the eyes of earlier generations she had scavenged, and had been successful in managing their growth. Her apartment did not have much, but sunlight was in abundance.

“Sorry, little one, it looks like potatoes again.” His tiny reply seemed resigned to potatoes, and he ate them with vigor. “I promise to bring you something that looks like meat from the hospital tonight.”

Stephanie washed up quickly, trying not to use up her allotment of water for the day. Water shortages had become all too frequent since she came here eight years ago to start her residency. She opted to come to Russia because so many of her people started moving north as the rising sea levels drove many Indians into Rangapur. Her mother suggested she move to Russia because of the growing economic prosperity there.

She had since informed her mother that economic prosperity was relative. Yes, Russia was doing better in some ways, and worse in others. For example, India had more doctors, but Russia had more hospitals. If she didn’t hurry she would be late for her shift. Fortunately she lived in a barracks arrangement right next to the Municipal Hospital No. 15, and it only took her fifteen minutes to walk across the overpass into the main hospital courtyard.

The hospital was busy, people everywhere, babies crying, staff bustling about trying their best to tend to patients. As she danced through the crowds, patients touched her white coat and asked her questions. She tried not to stand still lest she be overrun. They needed to go through the brief paperwork at the desk before they could be seen. She would see as many today as her supervisor would let her.

She was technically a full doctor, but her supervisor had been reluctant to sign off on her paperwork because it kept her with him here at Fifteen. She would have been upset if she hadn’t loved her job so much, even with the lack of resources, the constant rush of patients, the government interference, or any of a number of other issues. She wasn’t just a doctor, she was a healer; she wanted to find out how to help as many people as possible.

Ekantika Das was her last patient of the day, and she agreed to take her from her supervisor, Helmut Baum, who had been on for three days straight. Mrs. Das looked tired, strained. She was probably borderline malnourished and dehydrated, like most people were these days. The rains had been less frequent, and the summer was one of the hottest on record.

“What brings you in, Mrs. Das?”

She began tentatively. “Doctor Baum scheduled me to come and see him a few weeks after my miscarriage.” Stephanie had looked briefly at the record and saw that she had three miscarriages in less than two years. Each happened earlier and earlier during her term.

“I would like to run a series of tests to see how you are doing, and when I am done, we will see what we can do. Do you still want to have children?” Many women, if they find they cannot carry to term, these days opt just to give up.

“Yes, desperately. My husband and I work as part of a collective on the outskirts of town, trying to turn older buildings into hydroponic structures to supplement food output for the greater Moscow area. We are recently wed, and would like to have children since neither of us is getting any younger.”

“I understand. These tests will take less than a week, so I will send you an email to schedule your visit.”

“Namaste, Doctor.”

The rest of the week was uneventful, and there was even a slowdown at the hospital. Patients were always reluctant to come to hospitals these days since the number of cases of MRSA had risen in the last twenty years. Over-use of antibiotics had caused the rise in the resistant disease strains. People needed hospitals more than ever, but were reluctant to come there with the risk of catching a nearly incurable disease while being served.

Later that week, when she got the test results, they were unusual, but she could not put her finger on why. She went back and checked Dr. Baum’s records. He had made some notes about fertility issues in several of his patients, so she kept working. Something about it seemed strange to Stephanie. In a momentary lull, she went down to the primitive records databases and made some soft queries using the records of the female population of child bearing ages at the hospital. After a few dozen questions, she made a startling discovery. The number of births at the hospital and in the area in general had dramatically dropped, far below the statistical average. She thought she had done something wrong and double-checked her queries.

These numbers could not be right. This would be a thirty percent reduction in live births in less than a ten year period. Stephanie was tired. She assumed she had made a mistake and planned to run the check from home once she was settled.

* * *

Fedya was enjoying his purloined sirloin and wrestled mightily with it. It was mostly scrap from the senior doctor’s kitchen, but that mattered little to him. His gusto gave Stephanie a warm glow while she studied the data now from the fourteen nearby hospitals.

She couldn’t understand why no one had noticed it before now, but the more she looked at it, the more she could see the scale of this issue. But she would need more information and likely some corroboration with some colleagues, possibly in London. With the new civil war in the U.S., she wasn’t likely to get much data except from the neutral states like California or Oregon. So she prepared a data package for a variety of hospitals and sent it off.  Immediately, she received an instant message.

–IM–

GreenMachine: You are in danger.

Dr. Mehta: Excuse me?

GreenMachine: There is not much time. Can you meet me in an hour at this net address?

Dr. Mehta: Who are you?

Greenmachine: This address is secure, but you cannot be at your apartment. I have slowed the trace, but they will find you in twenty-four hours. Pack a bag. Now hurry.

Dr. Mehta: I can’t leave my cat.

Greenmachine: Then take him with you, but for God’s sake, hurry. Now get to the coffee shop, and we will give you further instructions.

Dr. Mehta: I have no intention of leaving home on the say-so of some unknown IM.

Greenmachine: You have discovered a reduction in birthrates in the area hospitals where you work. You have checked this against local hospitals in the Russian datasphere. You find the information able to be confirmed with an 87% accuracy. Tomorrow you will receive data clusters from your points in London, New Delhi, Mexico, Canada, Brazil. You will see that this trend or worse had happened across the globe. How am I doing?

Dr. Mehta: How do you know I did all this?

Greenmachine: GO TO THE COFFEE SHOP. NOW.

The IM client connection vanished, and she sat up in disbelief. Putting her data key into her pocket, she grabbed her night bag and packed two changes of clothing, her level 1 Medical ID, and all the money she kept in the house. She barely spent any, so she should have plenty available.

She dropped Fedya off at a friendly neighbor’s with a generous bribe of her latest potato crop and some cash in the event she was gone longer than a few days. Fedya complained the entire time until she gave him his favorite squeaky toy. Dame Romanov agreed to take care of him. She had always liked him and said he would have plenty of mice to keep his belly full.

When she got to the coffee shop, the terminals were empty because it was near midnight. When the late shift came on, the place would fill up, but that would not be for another hour or so. She sat down and put on the wireless ear buds sitting in the sonic cleanser.

As soon as she plugged in her data-key, a video image appeared. The man sitting in the video was in a laboratory with a single tech working in the background. He was wearing a full bio-suit, so his face was obscured, but she could see this was a real lab with real equipment, not a stage. “Doctor, you have discovered something Consanko does not want known. Birthrates all over the world are declining due to the interactions of a genetic manipulation called ‘suicide seeds.’

“This technology was designed thirty years ago as a means of controlling food production on Earth. Seeds were being designed to fail to produce a new generation of seeds so Consanko would become the sole provider of seeds as it cornered the market on genetic seed materials all over the planet.

“Once they had patented nearly all of the food crops on the planet, they gathered the genetic materials, mapped the genomes, and proceeded to alter the seed products to ensure no seed would be produced by the resultant plants. People would have to pay every season. Needless to say, Consanko grew fabulously rich.

“As scientists had predicted, monocultures would be a problem when blight, insects or disease struck, but Consanko had variants it saved for that occasion, and their wealth continued to grow until this very day. But I noticed there was a corresponding effect in animal populations that ate seeds created from these plants. They became increasingly sterile. You have now learned the other secret: that it is affecting us as well. More slowly, but just as effectively.”

The lab tech in the background seemed to be working hurriedly. The man in the front of the display held up a picture. “See this face? Memorize it. He is the person you are trying to find. When you look through our upload, you will find he knew about everything. Maybe he can help you find the answers you are looking for.”

An explosion rocked the room. Smoke started coming from the ventilation shafts. “We don’t have much time. That explosion was a trap set up in the ventilation. They won’t try that route again. Our suits will protect us from the gas, but in a few minutes, they will up the ante and we won’t survive. Our upload is on its way to you via our intelligent agent. We are destroying any trace of our information to give you as much lead time as possible. Doctor, we are sorry to involve you in this fashion, but we had lost hope that anyone would notice. We were going to leave our data to an intelligent agent and hope the first person who found it was as good as you are.”

“What do you want me to do?” The sight of an arc cutter coming through the armored door showed their attacker’s progress in the attempt to gain access.

“We want you to stop this. There must be a way to reverse it, some way to introduce our reproductive viability back into the species before it’s lost completely. Our predictions say in thirty years, humanity and most animals will have lost any possibility of reproduction.”

“I am not a geneticist. I wouldn’t even know where to begin!” Mehta was feeling frantic as she watched the smoke grow thicker.

“We know you are not a geneticist, but you have other friends. It will take a team to solve this problem, the same way it took a corporation to cause it. We are out of time, Doctor. Godspeed.”

End of transmission. End of recording. Agent instructed to your key codes. All resources are at your discretion.

This was a recording? “Agent, accept vocal input.”

 “Accepting.”

“How long ago did this recording take place?”

“Two standard days ago.”

“Then how were they answering my questions?”

“They weren’t; they anticipated a variety of responses; I provided the interface adaptations. Doctors Lawrence and Cloverfield have been dead for forty-eight hours.”

“How much time do I have before they come looking for me?”

“All temporal estimates are still accurate, as your information requests have been slowed but not stopped. In 24 hours, you will be apprehended, likely by Interpol or the Soviet police as an enemy terrorist. Recommendation: leave the country.”

“And go where, pray tell?”

“To the coordinates left by the doctors.”

“And where is that?”

“The coordinates on the map indicate a location inside the remaining Amazon jungle. It will require one, possibly two major airline flights, one charter flight, and likely six to ten hours of ground travel. You should begin now.”

“I need to go back to my apartment. I am not ready for this.”

“That path is not recommended.”

“Let’s see you stop me. Agent offline.”

Stephanie did not know what she was seeing, but she was certain this was some elaborate practical joke. The shaky camera, the explosion, the shutoff of the camera seemed just too dramatic. When she got back to her building, several emergency vehicles were sitting outside. The lights were off, so whatever it was, it was already over. They were taking several bodies out on stretchers, and one of them had a grey cat lying on top of it. It looked like…

“Fedya!” The grey cat jumped down and ran through the street to Stephanie, and she suddenly realized who one of those bodies was. Showing her badge to the paramedic, she asked, “Show me the bodies.”

When they pulled the covers back, the first was the delicate body of Dame Romanov. The second was Helmut Baum, her boss, her sometime lover, her friend. He had been shot in the head. Seeing him that way was like a physical blow to her system. She grew lightheaded and fell back into the arms of a strange man who had come up behind her.

“Do you know this man, Doctor?”  The man’s Russian was impeccable, and he looked like he could be a policeman or an inspector. His hands were strong, like a vise, and he literally held her up from falling. He was a giant wearing an ill fitting suit, as if they could barely find anything to cover him properly. He had a strong face, young looking, but his eyes were hard, sharp; they glittered like flint in the streetlights, the eyes of a man who had seen too much.

“His name is Doctor Helmut Baum.” He was in apartment 17. Her apartment. Waiting for her. She said none of these things.

“I am Inspector Piotr Nikolayevich Rasputin, and I have a few questions for you. The first is where have you been for the last few hours?”

“I was at the coffee shop for the last two hours. Helmut was at the apartment waiting for me to get in. He had just come in from his shift. Can I sit down, Inspector?”

“Yes, of course.”

“Do you know what happened?”

“They appear to have been assassinated. Do you know of any reason they might have been targeted?” Piotr had his own reasons, but he wanted hear hers first.

“No, I don’t know why anyone would want to hurt him. He was a good doctor. He did not have any enemies.” But Stephanie knew it wasn’t true. She had logged in with his address a few days ago, because he was logged in and had a superior clearance. The first traces would have been on his account.

“I’m going to have to take you into the field office for questioning, Dr. Mehta. It shouldn’t take too long.”

“Can I go to my apartment and put my cat there? Will the police allow him to stay at the scene? If not, can I put him with another neighbor?” These questions came boiling out all once.

“Yes, of course, you can leave him with another neighbor. I’ll wait right here until you get back.” Piotr shook out a cigarette and lit up as she moved toward the apartment building. The police had already canvassed the property; whoever they were, they were very good. They left no clues, no casings, no signs of forced entry. An inside job, perhaps.

The emergency vehicles pulled off after twenty minutes, and she had not returned. He put out his third cigarette and went into the building. She was not at her apartment, but one neighbor did have Fedya. But he said she had left nearly twenty minutes ago. So she knew where to drop the cat, and used the remaining time to get a head start.

Touching his datapad earpiece, he spoke into his mastoid comm, “Agent, put a trace on her medical ID at all the local airports and any recent taxi pickups. Do not alert her to the flags. Just follow and report.”

“Request activated, flags sent out. Will notify.”

Piotr got into his car and headed to the Moscow airport. Sometimes technology is no match for a good hunch. When he got to the airport, his agent had already found her booking a flight to South America, quite a distance for a woman with nothing to hide and very little luggage to pack. He decided he needed to see what was really going on.

“Agent, book corresponding flights, inform Command of itinerary. Log it as active investigation. Inform pilot of intent to carry firearm onboard. Clear security checks.”

“Acknowledged. Activity in progress.”

 

This was just to ensure her safety and his curiosity. He had not been out of the country for a while; he was sure South America would be lovely this time of year.  She sat in coach the whole time reading. He was not sure what it was, and did not want to risk having his agent read over her shoulder, so he took this time to catch up on his rest. The only thing he could think of was smoking a cigarette the whole flight until he fell asleep. Where could she go?

* * *

“Or what will happen? You will make me eat some bland chips and tasteless fish from your country? Perhaps some of your beer that tastes like piss? My cat makes a stronger brand of beer in his litter box.”

When the plane landed, he knew he would have to confront her. The next leg of the journey was on a small private plane with only twelve seats. It would be hard to remain inconspicuous. The heat was terrible, and the humidity worse. He took off his jacket and remembered he did not bring a change of clothing, so he was going to have to get something local first chance he got.

His training as a KGB agent instantly came online once he landed. There were four hours between the landing and the smaller flight. He took that time to hunt around in the airport for vendors of more local attire. It did not take long for him to find some more comfortable shirts, slacks, and a bag to carry his gear. A pair of sunglasses and a white hat completed the ensemble.

Now, a bit more comfortable and armed with a selection of local toiletries, he cleaned up, changed, and was able to get to the airport runway with plenty of time. The doctor had managed to clean herself up, but it was obvious she had not slept on the flight over and was in need of rest.

A man from Russia got off the plane. Piotr noticed him at first and thought he was just a tourist. But the coincidence of his waiting for the same plane made him more suspicious. The man had the movement of a trained fighter; he walked on the balls of his feet. He kept his hands clear of his pockets. He sat with his back to the wall and faced the entire area.

Piotr tipped his hat forward and slumped his shoulders. The man’s gaze passed over him, stopped momentarily, and then moved on. He was looking for something, but Piotr did not know what that might be. Thirty minutes before the flight was due to leave, the small plane landed and taxied into the runway. A crew came out to refuel and inspect the plane. The pilot chatted with his relief, and then the preflight was underway.

The suspicious man began to move closer to the doctor, and she did not seem aware of his approach. Piotr also moved closer, sitting behind the two of them, hiding behind a magazine. He put his gun under his bag in the chair next to him.

“Dr. Mehta. I am going to have to ask you to come with me. British intelligence.” The man’s accent was certainly British, but there was something strange about it.

“Don’t you have to show me some ID or something?” Stephanie asked. She had a look of intense skepticism mixed with real fear. Something was definitely wrong, and she was completely out of her depth.

“Just come with me, miss, and we will sort this out in the customs office.” The “agent” reached out to grab her arm and move close to her. He whispered something, and Piotr knew what it was. He had a handgun pressed against her back.

“Excuse me,” Piotr stood up and in his thickest Russian accent asked, “Do you know what time our flight will be leaving?” He was certain they would have almost no chance of understand what he was saying.

“Sod off. I am busy with the lady.”

Piotr took off his hat and held his hand out to Stephanie. “My name is Piotr. And you are?” He could see the recognition and relief in her eyes. But he tried to transmit the idea that they were not out of the woods yet.

“Stephanie. Stephanie Mehta.”

“And your friend?”

“Her friend is telling you to mind your bloody business, Russian.”

“Or what will happen? You will make me eat some bland chips and tasteless fish from your country? Perhaps some of your beer that tastes like piss? My cat makes a stronger brand of beer in his litter box.”

Whoever this fellow was, he was not a member of British Intelligence. He lost his temper far too easily. Likely a mercenary. He brought his gun out from under his coat and redirected it at Piotr. Exactly as planned. Piotr stepped to the right of the gunman’s hand and with a single maneuver, relieved the man of his gun, breaking two of his fingers. His aggressive wristlock held the man and brought his arm behind his back in a breaking position. It happened so quickly, no one saw anything at all. Piotr handed the gun to Stephanie and used his other hand to pat the man down.

He wasn’t carrying anything else. His ID said his name was Howard Mason, but Piotr doubted the ID was real. Using his real Russian police ID, Mason was taken into custody, and Stephanie and Piotr were questioned by the local authorities. Many hours later, it was called an act of random violence, nothing more. But Piotr knew better. It was time to get some answers from the beautiful doctor.

When they were walking back to the smaller plane runway, Stephanie started talking. Piotr decided to keep his request simple and see what she had to say. “It started with the bees. Dr. Sheppard said he noticed first when colony collapse began to show up in the newspapers.”

“Who is Dr. Sheppard?” Piotr interrupted.

“He was the leader of the genetic engineering teams who pioneered the last great plant genome modifications. His work created the super-yield wheat, the rust resistant potatoes, the suicide seeds, and the natural insecticides common to almost all plants today. He worked for Consanko for nearly thirty years.”

“So your trip here has something to do with him?”

“I was reading the information on the flight here. It had been gathered and collated by two later scientists, peers who reviewed his papers and were not satisfied by his safety information. They spent the last fifteen years refuting his notes about the “restrictive coding” built into the gene maps of his genetic constructs. Their contention was that the genetic transform viruses and bacteria used to modify the plants was completely unable to be contained to that environment.”

“So this brings us back to the bees, yes?” She looked at him incredulously. “Yes, I went to school once upon a time.”

She continued. “Yes, this brings us back to the bees. They moved pollen from the genetically engineered plants, first to their hives, then to other plants. Which ultimately moved them to us. The first signs of the suicide genes were the failure of some bee colonies, as their queens became less able to reproduce stable colonies.”

“So now you think it has moved into the human population?”

“Correct. If what I have discovered is true, the human race will likely be extinct in less than one hundred years, and unable to reproduce in less than sixty. Consanko has put poison into the environment on every major land mass on Earth.”

“Then this explains why people are trying to kill you, Doctor. You know too much. So I assume this means we are going to talk to Doctor Sheppard?”

“If anyone knows what can be done to reverse this, he would be the one.”

The small plane captain started ushering people onboard, and the two of them sat in the back of the craft away from everyone else. Piotr put his gun in his lap under his hat. Stephanie curled up next to him and leaned onto his shoulder and fell into a dreamless sleep.

Piotr, already rested, considered what he knew about corporate politics and industrial espionage and hoped this would end better than this sort of thing usually did. On a good day, only bad people died. On a bad day, everyone did. He checked his backup piece, and stashed a huge knife under his shirt.

The flight, leaving late in the day, arrived eight hours later in the early morning in the small town of Quito, Ecuador. Stephanie woke, still looking tired and out of place. She is just a doctor who has been told the world is coming to an end, Piotr; how do you expect her to look? The only reason you don’t look like her is that your world came to an end a dozen years ago. She reminds you of Natalie. Enough of that; keep your mind in the game.

Two men met them at the runway. Piotr knew them well. It had been nearly eight years since he had been there, but these two were still working the rainforest, gathering intelligence on the two dozen corporations currently fighting over what was left of it. Javier and Hector Morales, two brothers who worked with the KGB and whose loyalties were relatively unquestioned, reported regularly, their intel was good, and they were able to keep their noses clean. This made them decent agents, and Piotr did not tell them anything more than that he needed a car and a decent local map. They didn’t know what he needed one for, and they didn’t care.

“Rasputin, you look terrible,” Javier began.

“How is that any different than normal?” Hector finished.

“It is good to see you two, as well. Did you get my request?”

“Yes, your dull agent made the request and was very clear about what he wanted. Do you really still use the Kinataci 4000 model? It’s nearly eight years old.” Javier smiled while he teased Piotr. “My wristwatch has more power than your agent.”

“Seriously, Piotr, we have children here in Ecuador who have better agents than that. Are you going to upgrade any time soon?” Hector handed Piotr the map pack and the car keys.

“And who is this lovely creature?” Hector muscled Javier out of the way as Stephanie approached the car after getting her bag.

“My name is Stephanie.” She shook hands and took in the quaint little airstrip on the edge of Quito. The car was something from earlier in the century; she did not recognize it, and thought it might actually still use some sort of petrochemical to power it.

“Rasputin, you did not tell us you would be bringing company. Keeping the good things to yourself, as usual.” Hector smiled, something honest and real, and Piotr realized they misinterpreted the relationship. Let it go.

“We have to get moving. When we get back, we will share a beer or something before we take off. Thanks for the save.”

“No problem. We are always here for you, Rasputin. You saved our lives, once. We owe you.”

The car was old and serviceable and started up immediately. Neither of them had much to say on the trip; it was hot and miserable and both had grown used to the dry heat of the Moscow summer. Here at the equator, the weather was always hot and wet, with seasonal showers every day at around eleven o’clock and again at three as the winds shifted.

The GPS on the map said they were nearing their destination. Stephanie realized this was likely the place because they started seeing a variety of hydroponic domes erected for what looked like miles in every direction. These domes were scattered within the forest canopy and seemed to be strangely porous, allowing trees to grow through them even as they defined an area, each with a sixty foot diameter at the bottom. The dome appeared to be grown and continued to grow with the plants around them. Most were opaque, but a few showed levels of transparency, and people were servicing the plants within.

The domes gave way to a series of smaller prefab buildings.  No security was visible, and a driveway with a number of other vehicles parked outside seemed a good place to start. They sat for a while, getting the rhythm of the place. Piotr made sure his guns were ready and scanned the grounds for anything out of place. Workers moving canisters on small flatbed trucks seemed to be the only road traffic. Occasionally, a larger twelve-wheeler would roll out or come back into the property.

A bearded man with graying hair got out of a vehicle near one of the campers, and Stephanie noticed him. He looked very similar to the photo she was shown on the video clip. She tapped Rasputin on the arm, and the two of them walked from the car to the prefab. When they got to the top of the stairs, Piotr entered first, and the small man was sitting behind the desk with his gun drawn and pointing at him.

“Please come in; your young friend, as well. I have been expecting you. Have a seat.”

Once they were inside away from the blistering sun, Stephanie welcomed the opportunity to take a seat. The sun seemed to drain the strength from her body. She did not even have the ability to maintain any concern about the firearm pointed in her direction. “Dr. Sheppard, I presume.”

Sheppard put the gun back into his desk and pointed to a small table in the back of his very organized office. “Please, have some water; you will find you sweat quite a bit more than you think here.”

After they had a glass of water, and then a second, Doctor Sheppard got down to business. “Did the company send you? I am surprised it took them this long to find me.”

“No, sir, we have come here at the request of Doctors Lawrence and Cloverfield. They said you would know why we were here.”

“Did they? Did they tell you what I am doing here?”

“No, they said you were no longer working for Consanko, and you expressed some level of regret for what happened.”

“Regret? No, my dear. Regret does not even begin to describe what I feel. I thought my work here might be enough. Would you like to see it? What about you, young man? You do not look like a scientist. If I were to try and read you, I would say a corporate hit man, government agent, possibly KGB, or if they are still in existence, a CIA agent.”

“Very good guess, Doctor. So why are you here? If you have regrets for your work, why retire to this place? You were a very rich man; you could be living anywhere.”

“The answer to your question lies out there. Are you rested enough for the tour? It’s the least you can do before you kill me.”

The three of them stepped out into the terrible heat of the day and strode toward one of the domes. “I made these domes myself. I designed them to absorb and convert the solar energy into a cooling chamber. I have patented the technology and am making a tidy fortune in the equatorial regions all over the globe.”

As they stepped through a simple series of flaps, Stephanie noted the vast difference in the internal temperature of the tent, and by the time they were inside the dome proper, the temperature was less than fifty degrees, nearly an eighty degree drop. The air was cool, even a bit damp, and over eighty percent of the sunlight had been dimmed, making the area just a bit brighter than sunset. Dr. Sheppard touched a small remote on his wrist and the dome became a bit brighter as the spines of the hexagonal shapes began to glow with a blue light.

“I could make the dome more transparent, but that would bring in more heat; I want to wait until this dome has been harvested. But the polymorphic materials used in the construction of this dome are grown into this location. See?” He pointed to the edge of the dome, and Stephanie could see the dome seemed to move into the ground. There were none of the seams she would have associated with a constructed work.

The material covering the hexagons was thick and a bit rough, and had a scaled appearance. “The scales are a polychromatic material capable of converting sunlight into electrical energy. That electricity is used to cool the tent as the fabric absorbs the energy of the air using superconductivity. The energy absorbed is redirected by an underground organic network to a power storage facility used to maintain all of the vehicles and other power needs here.”

“Why the strange design, growing them below the forest canopy?” Stephanie asked.

“Because they are not visible from space,” Piotr answered before the doctor could respond. “You said harvest, Doctor. What are you growing?” Piotr walked over to one of the trees and touched the strange formations growing on the trees and in the underbrush. “They look like mushrooms.”

“Very astute. Indeed they are mushrooms, mushrooms of my own design. What do you know about mushrooms?”

Piotr looked at Sheppard and answered. “I like them in my soups and on my steaks. Do I need to know more than that?”

Sheppard laughed and said, “No, I guess not. I hope you really like mushrooms, young man.”

“What are you talking about, Dr. Sheppard? I came here to discuss a means of reversing the birth reductions in the human and animal populations.”

“Young lady, when we first began our studies and first genetic experimentations, we were young and thought we were going to feed the world. We thought we would work with companies like Cansanko who would ensure that our patents would be protected, and we would be able to work with corporate backing. With their money and our skills, no problem of food production could confound us. But they had their own agenda. They rounded up seeds from all over the world and began to patent the seeds. The seeds! Can you imagine? We were outraged. Seeds belong to everyone, we said. They laughed and called us idealistic and told us to get back to work. We would have fewer complaints when we were rich.”

Dr. Sheppard found a chair near the monitoring station and raised the lighting a bit. The two of them saw dozens of varieties of mushrooms, all over the room. They had been walking inside a very limited area. Once there was more light, they saw a rainbow of mushrooms, some close to the ground, others towering at three and four feet, shelves of mushrooms growing on the sides of trees. Some of them appeared to be the classic shapes, but others looked like ocean waves, some like bushes, but they were all growing harmoniously, beautifully, together.  She had never seen anything like it.

“We went back to work, to increase the yield of our newly patented seeds. And with the revolutionary work of Dr. David Lawrence, we succeeded beyond our wildest imagination. Every time we worked on a new patent, we felt like explorers, crossing boundaries we had never conceived of. We became gods, Promethean in our endeavors, with no thought to the consequences.”

Piotr heard the helicopter blades first. His training in war zones made him more alert. The others heard them soon enough.

“We don’t have much time. I have been expecting them. I thought you were going to kill me. But now I realize they have been reading my notes. You see, when we first started noticing the problem, they started burying my ideas. And when Laurence and Cloverfield’s work began to show we were wrong and there was the possibility of genetic pollution, they were killed.”

“I thought they were killed two days ago.” The look on Stephanie’s face was undecipherable.

“They were. Two days and five years ago. I left the company in disgust and refused to do any more work once I had seen the error of my ways. The company refused to acknowledge my work until recently. Now I suspect they want my help. The work we did was revolutionary, and they killed the only two other people who really understood it.”

“Then who sent me this message?”

“I did.” Dr. Sheppard stared hard at Stephanie. “I need you to finish my work here. I need someone young and idealistic, someone who believes in a future worth fighting for. I need you here to fight for the present while I try and redeem myself and the future of humanity. I wish I had some words that would ease the years ahead. But I don’t. Our pride has led to the fall of our species. I hope I live long enough to make it right. I am an old man, a stupid old man.”

“What about Helmut? What happened to him?”

“He had begun his own investigation. I did not find his data flags because he was pursuing a different angle. By the time I realized what he was doing, they were already on to him. I am sorry for your loss.” Stephanie realized that she did not kill Helmut with her research. This only increased her grief.

The helicopters were close enough to begin landing, and the dome began to vibrate with their approach.

Sheppard stood up and walked over to the two of them. “The pollution has spread to all crops everywhere. What Consanko did not release and does not want people to know is that all of their original source seed has been corrupted, as well. So they have been selling seed for the last decades, but the seeds they are selling are the last of their kind from the last stockpiles of any seed on Earth. None of it has the ability to create new seeds. What you and your team don’t find on your own, won’t be found. Mushrooms will feed some of humanity, but our conservative estimates are that more than two thirds of the human race will die of starvation.”

Sheppard looked up and tears flowed from his eyes. “I need you to finish what I have started here. Everything you need is here; all the command codes have already been transferred to you. I have done all of the heavy lifting. All you need to do is teach humanity what we have done here.”

Walking toward the door, Sheppard stopped and looked back, wiping his face. “You were worried about humanity not having a future in a hundred years. I am going to leave here and go with those men landing outside, because if I don’t, humanity won’t have a future in less than ten years. Good luck.”

mushroomdiversity

Suicide Seed, Hayward’s Reach © Thaddeus Howze 2011, All Rights Reserved

One Pilot, Six Panels, One TARDIS

Posted by Ebonstorm on May 9, 2013
Posted in: Science fiction TV. Tagged: Dr. Who, Melody Pond, River Song, Rory, TARDIS, The Doctor. 2 Comments

doctorwho50

Name that Panel

This is my first and only Doctor Who post on my site currently. Thanks for dropping by. In time for the 50th anniversary, we have been given the rare distinction of having photographs of the six control panels of the TARDIS, thanks to IO9.com.

As an exercise, both because IO9.com is doing it and because I considered the challenge and choose to accept it, I am planning to see if I could define what each panel does and why, based solely on its appearance the immense lore of Doctor Who. The exercise is all in fun but if I had a time machine as amazing as the TARDIS, I would like to think I took the time to know what can be done to control my ship and why.

The Doctor’s TARDIS is a “TT Type 40, Mark 3” and normally requires six pilots for smooth operation. The Doctor is considered a less than stellar pilot running about the control panels of the TARDIS flinging everyone around as it moved through the Time Vortex. Dr. River Song seemed a more capable pilot even when she was piloting singularly.

My approach will be to ask what have we seen the TARDIS do and where would I put that level of functionality on a control panel.

  1. The TARDIS is a spaceship capable of moving at superluminary speeds over vast distances. We have watched the TARDIS chase down other vessels in space.
  2. The TARDIS is a timeship capable of entering the Time Vortex to travel in time both forward and backward with equal facility.
  3. The TARDIS is Dimensionally transcendental, meaning she is capable of supporting a number of permanent internal spaces which are much larger on the inside than what appears in normal space time. She can also alter the aperture at the front of the TARDIS to appear anywhere inside her she wants. We have seen River falling from a building still manage to land in the swimming pool. This means the portal aperture can be relocated.
  4. The TARDIS is capable of replicating any kind of matter or energy needed to repair or replace components. This probably means she is capable of creating food as well.
  5. She is capable of seeing into the Time Vortex and knowing in relationship to herself, where she is at any moment in space and time; we can call this temporal awareness.
  6. She must have technology which allows her to see and be aware of things in normal space like any good spacecraft would. Such sensors would require a means of calibrating and analyzing feedback. We know she can do this both internally and externally.

Previously established lore for the Eleventh Doctor’s control panels included:

  • The mechanical panel contained the engine release lever, door release lever, gyroscopic stabiliser, locking down mechanism (described as a physical handbrake) and the TARDIS display dials.
  • The helm panel contained the eyepiece (an alternative to visual scanners), the time rotor handbrake and the space/time throttle.
  • The navigation panel contained a time and space forward/back control, directional pointer, atom accelerator (the spinning, spiky ball) and the spatial location input (a computer keyboard).
  • The diagnostic panel contained the inertial dampers, the cooling systems (gauges), a bunsen burner and a microphone/water dispenser.
  • The communications panel contained an analogue telephone, digital com, voice recorder, analogue radio waves detector/monitor/changer and a scanner/typewriter.
  • The fabrication panel contained the materialise/dematerialise function, harmonic generator, time altimeter, a fabrication dispenser (which was described as being able to produce sonic screwdrivers and other technology – which eventually housed the laser screwdriver) and a Heisenberg focusing device which was used to break Heisenberg’s Uncertainty Principle. This device was called a zigzag plotter.

So, if we take the lore of the previous panels and my requirements for a TARDIS to operate, we should be able to map these to the new panels below. Unfortunately, the mapping, one to one didn’t happen.

Panel 1

Panel 1: This panel has no feedback mechanisms, no screens or dials. This strikes me as a service panel which controls inner functions of the TARDIS. Doors, defense systems, specific defenses, operational controls, turning main systems on and off. Note it has six primary switches, which could relate to the six panels of the control interface. Note the single red button on the left. Since the two monitors swivel over all the panels, it is assumed if there is feedback, it is sent to the screens, as needed.

Panel 2

Panel 2: This looks like a space monitoring and information system similar to a terrestrial radar station used onboard Earth naval vessels. This would be where scanning either the interior or the exterior of the TARDIS would be done. Distance/range from the scanner could be controlled with the two main knobs with the smaller ones allowing for macro creation and target switching. They might also allow for a variety of scanning types, EM, temporal energy signatures, technology or radiation detectors. This screen could also function as a display screen, providing information on the central display or on the two overhead screens.

Panel 3

Panel 3: Again, no particular feedback screens but a joystick on the left and a throttle on the right indicates a flight control system, possibly for spaceship mode. A simple variety of buttons and controls for easy access, each must manage or toggle very specific flight-based controls. Since the Type 40 isn’t supposed to have weapons, we have to assume the red buttons on the left are some sort of defensive mechanisms.

Panel 4

Panel 4: The only former panel I could think this might be related to would be the diagnostic panel. These windows might show energy flows and relationships between the Heart of the TARDIS and the Time Vortex. Since neither of those things require actual interaction, it may simply be a monitoring station since there are no visible controls. Since the Doctor is shown to be a less than stellar pilot, it may come from his not having a perfect understanding of the relationship between the Heart of the TARDIS and the Time Vortex. Since a monitor sits over this panel, it is possible these are some sort of touch or mental interface with feedback going to the screen.

Panel 5

Panel 5: This panel looks like it should be the communications panel. I can see the analogue telephone, digital com, voice recorder, analogue radio waves detector/monitor/changer and a scanner/typewriter. The profusion of knobs, keypads and connectors gives me the impression, this is capable of connecting to a variety of electromagnetic spectrum-based technologies.

Panel 6

Panel 6: This makes me think of the Timelord calendars I have seen on the Internet so I am going to assume these are the temporal controls where the management of Time and to some degree space placement is done. I think it is silly to have all of these old school switches with hand-cranking calibration. Perhaps the TARDIS helps calibrate placement and precision or the controls are capable of being precise despite their primitive appearance.

Some of the features of the other TARDIS control panels appear to be missing. I don’t see a fabrication station though it could be the station with nothing on it. The device could be teleported there after being created in the fabrication center. Now a hard core fan would go back and watch the most recent episodes and see how well what has been theorized has been displayed on the show so far. So I will be setting my DVR to see if I can compare scenes in the TARDIS with what I have mapped so far. I’ll keep you posted.

Anger without Enthusiasm (5)

Posted by Ebonstorm on April 27, 2013
Posted in: 30 Characters in 30 Days 2013, 30 Stories in 30 Days 2013, 30 x 30 x 30, Clifford Engram, Serial, Short Story. Tagged: barghest, Clifford Engram, creatures, demiurge, Fisher, Francine Kane, hybrid, Paper, Rock, Scissors, shoggoth, Thaddeus Howze. Leave a comment

Shoggoth

Dramatis Persona:
Clifford Engram: Paranormal Investigator, Accursed
Zebediah Kane (Phoenix) : Senior Investigator, Accursed
Jan Havel (Rock): Sanction Operative, Accursed
Acedia Bela (Paper): Sanction Operative, Accursed
Sean Harper (Scissors): Sanction Operative, Accursed
Ben Fisher (Barghest): Deputized for Duration, Accursed
Lt. Phil Franklin: Military Escort

Part 5: Accursed

For the better part of an hour, no one died.

The creatures had thinned. They appeared, sometimes they saw us and attacked, other times they ran the other way as if they already had a different purpose than our obliteration. We were grateful, three of the marines had already perished when we were overcome by waves of the entities and they were swept away. Each activated the flame rune they were given by Paper and exploded, breaking the wave and each bought time for us with their lives.

We considered ourselves lucky. Then the tunnel darkened ahead and split. We knew which way we were headed. The direction in which the darkness breathed evil, in and out, a respiration of desperation, a necrotic fear which crept into our bones and gnawed its way through to our souls.

The canvas was laid before us with this final stroke.  “Hello Zebediah.” The low contralto resonated through the tunnel. All around us, but without an echo as if it were right next to each of us, whispering in our ears. It was a voice I knew but I also knew it was impossible to be hearing that voice.

Zebediah Kane walked out in front of us, his ice-blades lit the way into the inky blackness. When he heard the voice he stopped. His voice was hoarse from shouting and he croaked in response, “Francine.”

“Zeb, you know you shouldn’t have come.” The voice came from in front of us now, it was leading us. We followed, nerves frayed, weapons held tight. I pushed Fisher, his motions had become sluggish as he recovered from his use of the Barghest. The manifestation had disappeared after rescuing Kane and driven the creatures back from him. Each exploded into a pile of quivering flesh as the howl of the Barghest consumed them.

Only Fisher’s acknowledgement of our friendship prevented us from being liquidated along with our enemies. Even so, my cursed marks shook as the howl tore into the boundaries which compressed and bound my curse within me. I saw similar distress in the rest of our party as their own curses momentarily became too much to bear. Only our truly human members experience anything like the ordinary horror associated with a hound from hell.

Fisher, upon seeing the work of his spiritual partner, wailed and passed out. Rock carried him over her shoulder, her preternatural strength took his bulk in stride until he woke some time later. Now on his feet again, I shoved him along with the sound of a voice I hadn’t heard in forty years; Francine Kane, a woman I suspected of being my mother…

“You are not Francine.”

“Yes, I am. You know I am. All that was Francine Kane is now here.”

Kane ran off into the darkness. We all sprinted after him to keep him in sight. “Francine is dead. Stop using her voice. Just stop it!”

Everyone looked at me, my face conflicted with the scene as it unfolded. Kane had slowed his pace, paused for a second and then continued to run. He stopped suddenly and appeared to have to regain his balance. Then we saw the light as he dimmed his ice-swords. The area had sunken into a pit fifty or sixty feet down. After the initial lip and a ten foot drop, there was a shallow grade, dug into the gravel, and eventually rock below.

It was a treacherous and sliding surface, not an ideal one for a fight. A cool chemical glow, greenish blue, lit the pit that was easily a kilometer wide. The thing at the bottom was… indescribable. It was surrounded by hundreds of the creatures, who stood up near it, and waved as a single organism might, like the frills on a coral swayed back and forth, their tentacles raised up, their tips toward us.

The creatures slowly parted and two humanoid forms began to walk forward. At this distance they were unrecognizable. Kane jumped to the gravel below and began to walk toward them. The rest of us followed. We readied our weapons. Fisher seemed barely aware of what was happening and Rock jumped with him in her arms like a child. Scissors and Paper supported each other in the jump.

Kane picked up the pace and I ran to close the distance between him and I. I knew the next few minutes would be the final tableau one way or the other. We had only fifteen minutes until they began firebombing this pit. We were right under the central target proposed by the military, hurrah for science.

The Lieutenant’s flashlight lit the woman and her single human companion as well as her escort who towered over her as we approached. She appeared in every way to be the spitting image of the long dead, Francine Kane, down to the nineteen fifties style outfit she wore.

As the light played across her, everything she was wore and even her skin itself was varying shades of vermillion, from a coral skin tone to a brilliant red handbag and a burgundy dress suit and hat. Her human companion wore clothing from this period but he too had been done over in shades resembling dark and clotting blood.

She walked toward him, her arms out and she spoke. The eerie everywhere voice continued as she hugged Kane like a long lost friend. “Welcome Zebadiah. Welcome to the end of your world and the beginning of a new age.”

Kane hugged her back, hard, like a man holding onto a life-ring in a storm.

“Thank you for getting him to me. My children are unruly and hard to control at great distances.” She locked eyes with me as she spoke over Kane’s shoulder, her voice heard by everyone, but the message was for me.

Her entourage, however did not stop moving, and soon he was on the far side of two dozen of the largest creatures we had seen, ever.

She and Kane began walking back toward the glowing mass in the distance.

“Kill them,” the omnipresence whispered.

Anger Without Enthusiasm © Thaddeus Howze 2013, All Rights Reserved

Written For 30

Moral Ground

Posted by Ebonstorm on April 26, 2013
Posted in: 30 Characters in 30 Days 2013, 30 Stories in 30 Days 2013, 30 x 30 x 30, Short Story. Tagged: alien, ebonstorm, guided evolution, nuclear war, nuclear weapons, philosophy, politics, questionable morality, science fiction, Thaddeus Howze, War. 3 Comments

pyramid_spaceships_w1

Because a thing seems difficult for you, do not think it impossible for anyone to accomplish. –Marcus Aurelius 

Three hours into my new job, my eyes began to operate independently from my brain. I reached a state of self-transcendent zombieness and learned to see human anatomy as a collection of wet, pliant machine parts and so grade their interactions according to an official scale.

Humanity was weak. Physically. Mentally. Socially. Culturally. But we had been weak, so we knew what weakness could drive one to do.

We had been as weak as humans hiding on this backwater planet. Mingling with the natives, looking like them, eating their wretched food, chasing animals with their oh-so-weak legs and puny arms. Our internal facilities hidden, shut down, vestiges of themselves so we were never discovered. We allowed ourselves to die in accidents, by disease, impaled on bars of shaped metal, by smoky weapons in primitive wars fought over land, food, women, slaves, and for the sake of power itself.

When the enemy came to this world, they flew over humanity’s primitive hovels in their horrid little ships and they did not see us. Humans called them UFOs but we knew what they were. They were looking for us. They thought we would conquer humanity and build our cities, our technologies and transform their world into ours. And then they would destroy us for the last time; chased to the edge of the galaxy and hounded to a final and futile extinction. Instead, they found a primitive and warlike creature barely able to reach their own moon.

In their mechanized arrogance they flew away after probing a few humans and ignored Earth for another generation. And so we waited.

I gland zenotonin and dilated my pupils, increasing my visual acuity a thousand fold. My diagnostic organs fully expanded, fully realized, my physical prowess, the equal of any MRI machine on Earth. Cilia, a millionth of the width of a human hair, I binded genes structures in new and illegal ways. The human under my care writhed until I limited its neural signalling putting it into a coma until I completed my work. I recombined physical attributes long separated by religious doctrine.

Our religion forbade us to dominate these feeble creatures through force. They had to embrace the Way of their own free will. We were forbidden to use our physical abilities which clearly separated us from them. For us to make them ready, we had to be them, to understand them. Some didn’t listen. Some even rebelled. But even in rebellion, they served our purpose.

One of our kind shared with starving Cro-Magnon, our secret of fire and set them on a course of violence. A course we initiated. A course we promoted so we could show them our superiority. They looked at it as a boon, but we knew better. Oh, how many wars did we pursue or even initiate so we could engage the warlike nature coursing through our genes. We infected them with our love of battle and war. They were once so gentle, so different from what we made.

If it were in me to regret, and it is not, I would regret what we made. What would they have been like without us?

Our religion, our code of battle forced us to train them to fight, to win, to die, to raise themselves on ideas of honor, of bloodshed, on death and dismemberment. How many of them did we wade through in Troy, Sparta, Rome, the Crusades, the magnificent World Wars where they took their world to the brink of final destruction. We caused these wars so we could remember why we were here, how we came here and what we would do to leave here. These were our toys until we could return to the True War fought so far away.

Though our bodies were limited and we were without our glandular enhancements, our minds were unchanged. Our innate intelligence was constantly at war with our present weakness. Though our brains appeared the same, we had an advantage unable to be seen with human technology and which hid itself upon our death. Our brains possessed one thousand times the number of connections between each cell. Our brains absorbed data like a sponge took on water. Effortlessly. We learned languages, we learned mathematics, taught philosophy, both light and dark.

We polarized Humanity. We gave it the illusion of polarity, the idea of Dark and Light, Good and Evil. We would make them the most warlike species in the galaxy. And we would never tell them they were weapons.

I modified the cellular cocktail, ensuring the cleansing of human genetic diseases from their feeble frames. This would clear away their cancers, prevent their cells from such sloppy evolution-guided cellular replication, hardened their bones, replacing calcium with hardened carbon, sharpened their vision, replaced their feeble muscles with highly active white muscle tissue instead of their puny red muscle tissue. I smoothed their joints, toughened their cartilage, streamlined their circulatory system and hardened their immune system.

I stripped away much of their internal cellular flora, they would have no need for it. I replaced it with ours, a rich biome capable of rebuilding them in a matter of hours from any injury short of death. They could eat a raisin and live on it a week, they could live without water for a month, recycling everything with their new skin, black as night, smooth as glass. They would not recognize themselves. Nor should they. They were no longer just human. They were now ours. Though we had given them much, we would take much more from them on the field of battle. They were our shocktroops as we return to the Galaxy at large.

I returned my vision to normal and stabilized the serum. I looked at my handiwork, glistening in the flesh-chamber, floating in a protein-fluid which promoted the transformation into an organic weapon of war. I was pleased with this final work. I killed it and distilled its genetic essence. The cells in my body memorized the genetic mapping and created a transfer virus for the final airborne version of this improvement. The remaining mush was absorbed by my ship as food. We wasted nothing in these final days.

My brothers looked at me, their bodies restored to their true greatness, I saw nictitating membranes flickering in eyes capable of seeing in any environment short of true lightlessness, I saw iron-clawed hands and flexible cup-like ears. I saw mobile hair, waving about on heads, I saw prehensile tails, stretching out in idle luxuriousness. I saw each of us bringing out the nature we had hidden in fear of being ourselves for millennia. But no more. I retracted my cilia into my six fingered hand, and straightened my uniform. It was time. Each touched me and took away a sample of the transformed virus. Each would be able to apply it in whatever fashion they saw fit.

Our secret warehouses was filled with the technology we had waited to use. We shared it, a piece at a time until Humanity could understand more. Now, with the right motivation, they could build everything we needed to return to the stars. And they did. Now we had taken what they had learned and made it our own. Their mighty factories would churn out our weapons of war. Each hidden and prepared for the final step in the Plan. Our other agents had hidden on a thousand other worlds, among their people, shaping them, raising them for a war against an impossible enemy.

Our combined nervous systems resonated with the entangled signal of our distant brethren. They were almost ready. Twenty years at the most.

Our mechanized foe, unable to find us had begun exterminating all life in the galaxy. They knew we would not sit for this. We were the last threat to their supremacy.

We watched Humanity as they launched their thermonuclear missiles into the air. In thirty minutes those missiles would land and plunge them into their final war on Earth. From those who survived, we would cull them and make them our army, they shall be fierce, made tough and ruthless by the years of deprivation, living without the essentials, these would be the most creative, most adaptable, most ready to burn their way across the stars.

Our slumbering warships stood ready, hidden in pyramids all over the planet. Waiting for the day we took the best away from their world for the last time.

We had hidden for eleven thousand years until humanity had the tools to fight to reclaim their galaxy. Now armed with a violence which had destroyed billions of their own, we shall stride forth, no longer hidden, no longer pretending, no longer waiting, now ready to wage war with a creature bred for it. A creature unreasoning in its hatred, willing to kill its own members for any reason or no reason at all. We have harvested that capacity for violence and would use it to win back the Galaxy for species more deserving to rule.

If humanity didn’t survive, their sacrifice would be worth it. For us.

battlesong_by_tavenerscholar-d2zqcmp

Moral Ground © Thaddeus Howze 2013, All Rights Reserved

Artwork: Battlesong © 2010-2013 *TavenerScholar

Written For 30

The Second Law

Posted by Ebonstorm on April 25, 2013
Posted in: 30 Characters in 30 Days 2013, 30 Stories in 30 Days 2013, 30 x 30 x 30, Short Story. Tagged: Between, Creator, ebonstorm, Entropy, fantasy, Flame, Mist, Thaddeus Howze, Trickster. 3 Comments

Image

We chased him for forty days and forty nights.

He eluded us, he deceived us, he made us fight against each other, he tormented us and mislead us. And yet he could not escape us. For all of our infighting, we were committed to one thing above all other petty jealousies, beyond our rivalries for power and glory, beyond our need for His Attention, we were committed to our brother’s capture.

Our works he perverted. Our plans he thwarted. Our dreams he frustrated. We did not blame him. He was as he was made. But even our immortal patience was worn thin by his pranks, his trickery, his complete disregard for any propriety at all. We made the world as we were commanded and he just as promptly broke it, sundering the land, raising up the seas, creating storms from wind, snow from rain.

It was easier to tolerate in the beginning. He was the youngest. He was His Favorite. He was tolerated and even indulged. And secretly he hoarded his powers. He made nothing. He created nothing. He only disrupted the work of others, saving his Prime for his machinations whilst we spent ours crafting the world of our mutual Creator.

On the forty-first day we cornered him in an iterative and recursive corner of Reality, a sidereal realm, a place neither Here nor There, and once he realized we had tricked him, his rage was something to behold.

“Ho, Trickster. No place to run.” Our eldest brother wore a body of Flame, the essence of creation. He was the bringer of life to worlds and realms. This place was his creation.

Our eldest sister, wore a body of Mist, soothing, cooling, bringing the rain, the rivers, and lakes of a thousands worlds. “There is no need for cruelty, flaming one, he has led us on a merry chase and knows he cannot escape. Gloating is beneath such as we.”

“And yet he must, for if he did not remind himself he is my master and my better, he might not actually know it to be true.” The Trickster wore a body of twisting cubes, each sliding against each other in an orgy of geometric wonder; cubes which were consuming each other, writhing in an orgy of shades and hues.

Silently as was her want, our sister composed of the blackness between the stars, spoke. Her voice was the wind of winter, cold and terrible, inescapable, “We have you, Trickster, and if it were left to me, and it is not, I would feed you to our most nameless of brethren, the monsters of our earliest creation, the shame of our birth and let them tear you to atoms as is their wont. But our Creator has forbidden such. So our punishment for you must be as cruel as he would allow but no meaner than that.”

“Dark sister of mine, oh why am I being set upon in this way? What is my crime? A bit of harmless mischief here or there? Surely one cannot begrudge one such as myself the tiniest bit of entertainment? Our work seems so endless and without meaning. What does our Creator tell us of our work? What is His plan? We create Great Works and he decides if they are worthy? When they are not, what happens to them? He tells us not. Does that not chaff, even you, my coldest of siblings?”

“Silence!” our brother of Flame roared. “Your honeyed words have no place here. You have been found wanting, the destruction of our Works is your crime. You claim to be a part of the effort of Creation. If so, if you are a part of our Great Work, name your piece, lay claim to your effort and if it be worthy we will leave you in peace. If not, know you will face our wrath.

Our other siblings soon arrived. Beings composed of the stuff of Reality itself. And as they surrounded the Trickster, he grew fearful sensing our resolve.

“I am as our Creator made me? Would you challenge his thought of a need for the likes of one such as me? Which of you would tell our Creator he has done wrong? Is the Creator capable of making mistakes? I have no remorse for the things you claim I perverted. I made each of them better, more beautiful, easier on the eye, or more challenging for the tiny creatures you all show such great affinity for. You made reality, I fractured it giving it dimension. You created matter, I gave it phases, so that it knew variation and color. Some of you are born from those very transformations.  Would you judge me when I have made it possible for you all to exist? What hypocrisy is this? I deny your charges. I say to you, this is folly and I would leave here. Now.”

I strode forward through the diverse elements of my brethren and stood before him and he quaked in fear. I am the Void, the place between all places, the boundary between all things. None have power over me, and none can resist me. He was right to quake in fear. In power, I have no equal save the Creator of All Things. “You have done all that our Creator asked. He asked you to make difference, polarity, divergence, but your work now is done. If allowed to continue you would break the underpinnings of the Universe.” Having knowledge of the future and the past, I know ultimately this Trickster would eventually have his way with all things. But not today.

“All that you have done, will remain. All of the transformations of our universe you have altered, we will not change and in our way, we will be grateful to you. The beauty you have brought to our work is greater than we would have done without you. Now I bind you. The only trace of you will be as an echo in the background of all there is. I name thee, Entropy and everyone will know your name, though they will only infer your existence. We deny you. Your doom has been spoken.”

My siblings turned away, my doom pronounced, they knew our work was done. Each turned away and visualized their contribution to the Universe aborning.

Our Creator Spoke, his voice booming “Let there be Light.” And there was light. It spread from a single point that was not a point into an explosion moving faster than any of our Works had ever done before. The Trickster turned and looked into the Work and wept.

Then he laughed and pointed. As the universe formed he faded from view.

He knew what I knew when I spoke of it. He would be the birth and the death of all there was and would underlay the most important aspects of our Work. And he would never be welcome anywhere.

He was both wonderfully and terribly made.

Image

The Second Law © Thaddeus Howze 2013, All Rights Reserved

Written For 30

Anger Without Enthusiasm (4)

Posted by Ebonstorm on April 24, 2013
Posted in: 30 Characters in 30 Days 2013, 30 Stories in 30 Days 2013, 30 x 30 x 30, Clifford Engram. Tagged: Clifford Engram, Complex, Daughters of the Dust, heart of darkness, London, Paper, pulp, Rock, science fiction, Scissors, small arms fire, Underground, urban fantasy, Zebediah Kane. 3 Comments

london-underground-tunnel-finished-2

“They’re all around us.” Rock, Jan “Red” Havel, whispered while wiping the remains of what was once a human being from her hand. We had stopped thinking about what these things used to be. We had to. Otherwise we’d lose our minds. The alien stink mixed with the scent of human offal caused even professional soldiers used to the horror of war to take pause.

Blade-shaped shards of ice forming in his hands, Kane used them as swords cleaving through the former humans with a manic abandon. His dispassionate face of stone was gone, this was the face of man driven mad by the horror of his work. He pulled out in front of us, pushing the enemy back with the sheer ferocity of his sword work.

His body glowed blue with the frozen energy of his transformed state. Creatures touching him recoiled as their limbs froze and broke away from their bodies. He was the icebreaker making a trough through the horrific waves of the enemy. We followed as best we could.

Spinning, her machetes whirling, Scissors, Sean Harper, made short work of the hybrid beasts trying to grab her with their partially transformed hands-cum-tentacles. Four dropped and she watched their bodies hit the ground while she prepared for the next wave.

We continued our plunge into this heart of darkness. Scissors stayed close to Fisher whose eyes were open wide, seeing the horror now with his waking eyes. His whimpers were the only sound we heard whenever we weren’t wading through what used to be people.

Another incursion of the creatures, part human, part alien detected our movement and ran toward our position from a tunnel we passed behind us. The five soldiers we found were doing their part to keep the enemy at a distance, aiming for their heads, the only part of them vulnerable to small arms fire. Seeing the number of enemy, each conserved ammunition dreading the moment when their clips ran dry.

Paper, Acedia Bela, readied another of her magical paper-bombs and whirled the glowing shapes toward the approaching enemy. Everyone took cover, having learned how powerful Paper’s alchemical magic could be. Paper continued to draw new shapes in the air and placed them, glowing, on each of us. We had no idea what they would do but were forced to depend on each without question.

Rock stood protectively in front of Fisher and I, as the explosion shook the tunnel. Before the smoke could clear, new beasts were swarming through the smoke and we were once again fighting to gain ground toward our enemy from the stars.

The tunnel seemed to tighten around us. Kane was pressed by a new crush of the creatures and his blue glow was swallowed up replaced by an oppressive darkness. Then the howls began as Fisher’s terror reached its crescendo and the Barghest sprang from his chest, a liquid shadow in the shape of a great wolf, and into battle.

The power of its howl drove us all to our knees, a soul-crushing force and our enemy, all around us, for the first time, stopped advancing.

For a second…

* * *

Dawn came, a riot of early morning color, belying the unfortunate circumstances we headed toward. We arrived by seven thirty and our police scanner reported the activity we knew would be going on when we arrived. The local military was already assisting in the evacuation of the area. It would take twelve hours to clear this area. We had six.

For some, it would already be too late. They were taken in the early morning on their way to work. When four trains failed to arrive in station, our suspicions were confirmed. We had roiled the nest and it had reacted. Five thousand people or more may had already been converted. The Dust would be ramping up its production of servants for a last gasp growth spurt. Paper turned toward the metro station set up as the command post.

“Is anyone going to tell me what the hell is going on?” Fisher looked at our faces and even in his state knew there were things we weren’t telling him.

I looked at the others and they shook their heads. I had the dirty task. “The Agency and the Dust were bitter enemies, who had been fighting for nearly one hundred years. They were one of the first and most dangerous threats we had ever faced, bar none.”

The Daughters of the Dust, which was what they called themselves, was an interstellar threat and fell under our jurisdiction because of their unpredictable nature. A communal intelligence with the ability to inherit memory of previous generations, they were an enemy who grew more dangerous with each confrontation. No two incursions were the same, each learning, sharing and knowing what they all have experienced.

“They are from deep interstellar space, arriving as spores during meteor showers. We monitor such showers because they can appear and take root if the conditions are right. The Daughters of the Dust need to feed on protein molecules, the fresher the better. Their diet on their homeworld would have been the equivalent of dinosaurs here, one creature feeding a cluster and keeping them slumbering. On Earth, we’re more mobile, they had to adapt, grow smarter to catch us. We helped them evolve.”

“So they’re some kind of plant?” He was a quick study. If we live, he might make a decent agent.

“Something like that. They always take root near underground water, electrical power and ample supplies of food when they land in cities. Electricity metabolizes their growth allowing them to reach incredible sizes.”

The_Green_Meteors_by_AreYoU

Rock turned and picked up before I could continue. “However, landing in the country can be just as advantageous because they get to grow slowly and co-opt all of the plants and animals in a region. They can spread over a wide population, destroying every plant and animal until the region has been reduced to an energy-free, organic dust. When they land in the country they have time to develop their mental abilities and can even learn from their host creatures.”

“City dwellers don’t tend to get as intelligent, but spread faster by using its spores in the open air gathering thousands of new minds all at once. This collective intelligence may not be as smart as its country cousin, it will add minds to itself claiming an entire city in a few months. But because it is less intelligent, it acts on instinct, keeping a low profile until it reaches critical mass.” Scissors was honing one of her many knives while she shared with the group.

Paper drove us into the command area and we were recognized and directed through the ersatz base.  The Agency first became aware of this complex when we noticed a series of missing person reports, fast growing, very close together, no apparent connection except for a geographic similarity.

The number grew faster than any other kind of normal human crime and thus the Agency was alerted. We placed the area under psychic watch. After predictions led to confirmations, ground agents were sent in. Three groups never returned. That’s how I ended up here. Senior agents investigated when regular agents didn’t report back.

When no one volunteered to continue, I took the cue, “What we didn’t know then was the Dust was a learning creature, as well. Our every encounter taught us something about them. But they were able to share each encounter with their descendants growing more formidable each time. This information transfer happened in real time, so if there were two of them, they shared data and tactics. In the late fifties we were in a pitched battle against multiple outbreaks. The Agency lost two thirds of its best agents at the time.”

The battle went poorly until we realized they were intelligent. Our attempts to destroy them continued to fail until we captured one. The loss of life was catastrophic but the information gathered was worth every life lost in 1960. The threat of the Daughters of the Dust had been resolved after that conflict when we captured one of the Daughters and it told us how they came to be here. They were travelers who moved from world to world via spores. They claimed they didn’t want to kill us, it was just their nature. They claimed they were a reflection of us. We were violent and they took their genetic cues from us after absorbing us.

“The last major outbreak in the United States occurred in a small city in Kansas in 1967. The outbreak was stopped. Fuel-air weapons combined with alchemical Greek Fire, leveled the entire area, destroyed all the spores and all of the remaining townspeople.  There were no survivors. Over two hundred thousand people perished. Similar weapons were used in Korea to destroy an infestation there hidden under the conflict of the Korean War.” Red spit out the window after her mention of the Korean War. She and her sisters were much older than they appeared and probably had friends and loved ones who died there.

Neighboring towns were told of a contagious infection which swept through the town and a brave sheriff sacrificed himself to destroy the fuel facility there in order to stop the infection. Most of that fabrication was actually true. A sheriff did try to bring the creatures to the center of the refinery there and destroy them. The military destroyed the town even though the threat had been ended. The sheriff was the legendary and retired agent, Zebidiah Kane.

Though he had been successful, the Agency burned the town to the ground, as a part of standard procedure. Kane had lived in that town, as a retired Agency operative for five years working local cases until the threat of the Dust appeared there. He never forgave the Agency even as he went back to work in a senior leadership position.

And as I expected, he would be here.

Kane stood in the midst of this crazed nest of activity as calm as a mountain. People moved around him, he spoke, they left often running with renewed urgency. When he turned toward our vehicle, Paper, gasped looking into his icy eyes. His eyes spoke of the depth of his rage against this particular threat.

He was a man who had been fighting it for over a hundred years losing more often than winning. It was only his now inhuman nature which allowed him to continue his struggle into another century. So many of the operatives of the Agency were conscripted, forced to work with them or be destroyed by them. This made for tense relationships.

I concluded with the most important information Fisher would need to understand this threat. “The last Dust complex we captured said we were stronger than their Sisters understood. They had underestimated humanity all those centuries ago when they first saw our planet. With their first attempt at conquest defeated, they would just go to sleep and wait until a time came when no one alive would remember them. She entered a cocoon-like state and we were unable to penetrate its natural armor. So we locked it up in a vault under surveillance for thirty years. She was counting on humans to have short memories being made of meat.

The Agency wouldn’t forget. Kane wouldn’t let them.

We got out of our vehicle and technicians drove it away like a well oiled machine. Kane was a giant, easily six feet five and his tailored suit did nothing to hid his incredible physique. Even Rock, who was used to being the tallest person in the room, felt cowed by his physical presence. He seemed to cause the very air to tingle with electricity. Not the good kind either. The feeling you get when you are standing outside in a thunderstorm with a long metal pole pointing into the sky, waiting to be struck dead.

In the days before the Agency in the 1930s, incursions of the Dust were devastating. Swallowing up whole towns, the development of the pretense of the American Dustbowl became necessary to explain the catastrophic losses of life and the destruction of the ecosystems of the America West. By the 1950s, the Agency had established a protocol and reduced casualties to twenty percent of a local population. He wrote those protocols.

“You look like hell, Engram. Are you sure you’re up for this?” This was as close as Zebadiah Kane, scary immortal, with elemental ice powers ever came to a hello.  He nodded to the ladies and I had the impression he knew them better than I did. He dismissed Fisher with less than a glance.

I looked behind him and saw the police and Agency personnel moving people away, some being scanned before put on double-deckers conscripted for the purpose of moving as many people as possible. Attack helicopters hovered in the sky already in an attack posture to begin firing their specialized munitions on this site at a moment’s notice. Soldiers stood nearby, armed with flamethrowers and other less savory incendiary weapons at every potential exit from the underground including manholes and sewer exits.

The police seemed casual as if they thought this was just another emergency drill. It was only the faces of the older Agency agents which revealed the true nature of the danger. Beyond the perimeter of Agency personnel, military staff with more conventional weapons stood as a third line of defense. Professional. Faces grim and tight. These were men who were truly willing to die in battle. There was no point in telling them, if the first two lines of defense failed, the third would only serve as an aperitif for a monster set on and completely capable of consuming the world.

“Are we the first team?” The cup of coffee handed to me by a faceless technician went a long way to soothing my nerves. Rock stood behind me with her hand on my shoulder. Our previous dalliances, while considered unprofessional, were overlooked due to our collective win-lose ratio.

Paper and Scissors flanked Ben Fisher who looked completely out of place among soldiers. Two other technicians were measuring him on the spot and fitting him with our standard armor. Once a new uniform was ready, Scissors raked her hands across his clothes and they fell away like leaves in the wind.

Fisher’s face flushed and the technicians proceeded with their work. Within six minutes he was ready to go. One tried to hand him a pistol, but he waved it away like it was a venomous snake. Since he had no weapons training, he would be depending on us to keep him alive long enough to bring the Barghest into play.

“No, we sent reconnaissance teams in, sixteen teams of six men apiece. None reported back after an hour. We don’t suspect they will. We went to condition one and are standing by with Greekfire missiles and a fuel air strike on this site. Her majesty and the British Parliament would like this to not happen. Tell me you are up for this?”

“Yes. We won’t let you down.” The others stood and looked at him, their faces as intent as my own. They were not much for talk. They believed in letting their actions speak for them. It was their most endearing feature.

“Listen to me Engram, you do whatever it takes. If you have to burn this section of London to the ground, you do it. There are two other outbreaks happening right now. One in the Midwestern US, and one in Central Africa. This one is in the most densely populated area, so all eyes are on you.” He reached toward my neck and pulled out my necklace. His hands were fully gloved and they still froze the flesh he touched just for a second. He leaned in and whispered to me. No one could have heard what he said and just stood there. Even I didn’t believe it.

Then he looked at all of us and said plainly. ” I have seen what the Dust can do when it breaks free. Don’t let that happen. You have six hours. The people who were on the trains who have not come back numbered about ten thousand, we estimate it may have another five thousand people who were snatched between when we became aware of it and now. In six hours, their metamorphosis will be complete. And then they will come boiling out of this place like army ants. Bulletproof, superhuman, army ants, each with the strength of ten men. I have been authorized to nuke this site. And I will.”

Then he dropped the necklace and put his hand over it causing a layer of frost to freeze it to my armor. We went into the underground and the thought crossed my mind this might be the last sunrise I might ever see.

As we went into the underground, explosions were heard all over the city, closing the entrances into the underground with rubble. This would force the creatures into chokepoints giving the defenders a chance.  Machine gun pickets were setup around all of those exits. As we turned to walk into the darkness, we heard a crunching sound behind us coming from the entrance that was just closed. We prepared ourselves to meet the enemy.

It was Kane. He was without his hat or gloves. “I have a personal stake in this. Everything I said still stands. They will nuke this site if we don’t call back in six hours. Now keep up.”

He strode off into the darkness, his naked hands and face glowing a silver blue and an icy breath rose up into the tunnel.

Now it was just the six of us against a creature that had killed entire worlds.

Anger Without Enthusiasm © Thaddeus Howze 2013, All Rights Reserved

Written For 30

Within Arms Reach (1)

Posted by Ebonstorm on April 23, 2013
Posted in: 30 Characters in 30 Days 2013, 30 Stories in 30 Days 2013, 30 x 30 x 30, Short Story. Tagged: candy bar, Claude Marks, fantasy, SafeCo, shopping, television, twilight zone, work. 1 Comment

Special TV

Claude Marks was a man down on his luck.

He lost his job as a gas station attendant a year ago and paradoxically seemed unqualified for any work which could support even his meager lifestyle, such as it was. Claude was a man of simple tastes and ambitions. Not a terrible looking fellow, Claude had a strong back and mostly unremarkable features, a mop of dirty blond hair which defied a style which would give his round face any gravity. He bore his dullness with poor grace and was often thought to be an angry man by most people who knew him.

Eventually his fall would cost him his apartment at the edge of his city’s poorest suburb. With nowhere to go but down, he would take up residence in a daily hotel because he had already exhausted the kindness of the few friends he possessed. Having the wit to hock his possessions, he was able to keep himself out of the drain while his quest for work continued. His persistence paid off. A job as a stock boy in a local market gave him the ability to avoid the indigence he was headed toward and for a moment, Claude breathed a sigh of relief.

But the daily hotel he lived in was still a far cry from comfortable. He found himself bone tired after work but his hotel room had all the comfort of a prison cell. A dark and dingy hole, barely lit by the forty watt light bulb in the center of the room, the pseudo-kitchen with a gas stove and half refrigerator was where he might store a few perishables. The half bathroom without a respectable shower, aging toilet and a mysterious smell which rose from the commode when the wind blew in just the right direction over the century old structure.

The worst part of his room was the bed. A mattress which rivaled the hardest bedrock, sheet covers as thin as a butterfly’s wings, and a nasty collection of vermin which plagued Claude ceaselessly. Nothing he did ever seemed to alleviate the horrors waiting in his bed. The hotel had already given up their struggle against the bedbug and considered their failed efforts due diligence. Nothing further was or could be done, so it wasn’t. Claude was left to his own devices to find a way to endure.

A few weeks into his new job, Claude noticed the back of the store where they dumped the wasted food from the kitchen, broken cans, and other products past date. Ever so quietly he would take the edible resources from the large trash cans. Those things only mildly past their date, or cans which had lost their labels were subject to his predation. No one noticed or seemed to care and Claude considered this a changing of his luck, with a meal thrown in for good measure.

Unfortunately, the neighborhood being what it was, had others who might leave things in the store’s dumpsters since it was one of the places which got regular service, rain or shine. On a dark Wednesday, Claude found a television with a broken antenna whose case while a bit dinged and nicked from the vicissitudes of life. Finding an antenna attachment in the hardware section, he carried his ill gotten gains home and plugged it in hoping for a distraction from his life.

The image required some work, but after an hour of tweaking the antenna and moving it around, Claude was satisfied with the quality and began cooking his dinner. This was a good day, food, a bit of television, a shower and sleep. Settling in for the night, the television rested on a dilapidated chair in front of his bed just within arm’s reach so he could change the channel. What else could he ask for besides a remote?

And just as quickly he thought, a candy bar would be nice. Claude hardly had a sweet tooth, but remembered eating the occasion chocolate bar at the gas station in his previous life. And of course, a candy bar ad flashed on the screen to make his longing complete. As he faded off to sleep he reached out to the screen and touched the bar and promised himself one tomorrow. He could afford it, it was payday.

When he woke in the morning, he felt refreshed for the first time in months. He jumped up noticing he was just a little later than usual. If he rushed he would be able to be almost on time. Scrambling around and getting dressed he was almost out of the door, before he saw it under the bed next to his shoes.

It was an unopened candy bar.

The same candy bar he had not been to the store to get. Yet.

He could hear the bus coming down the street and if he missed it he was going to be late. The last thing he wanted to hear was Mahoney’s mouth.

He grabbed the candy bar and ate it on the run toward the bus stop. Best thing he ever ate.

“You’re late.” Mahoney’s vodka laced breakfast wafted across the doorway as Claude rushed in from the winter cold.

“So dock me. I’ll be in the loading bay.”

“Unload those three beds and all is forgiven.”

“Screw you, Mahoney. It’ll be done by noon.” Mahoney’s face tightened and if one looked close enough, you might imagine steam rose at his collar. Mahoney hated Claude. He was always late, very aggressive and insubordinate on a regular basis. After writing him up two times, the senior store manager suggested Mahoney try to look at Claude’s hard work ethic first and his attitude last. Mahoney still hated him but work was done first and Mahoney took the credit. Win-Win-Lose for Claude.

Mahoney was going to be breaking in a new girl today and he fancied this one. A pretty youngster, barely twenty with this being her first work experience, made her prime pickings for an experienced Lothario like Mahoney.

The choice of young and nubile staff members was a perk of the job as far as he was concerned. He looked around expecting her to be coming from the changing area. Where was she?

She watched Claude as he unloaded the truck, his arms flexing with just a light coating of sweat.  He wore a short sleeved shirt and his hands were covered with rough workgloves. She stood in the doorway watching him work for a few minutes before deciding to introduce herself.  Her co-worker had mused on the way out, she could do worse. He was the hardest working man at SafeCo. She had a weakness for a hard working man. “My name is Camille. Call me Cam.”

Momentarily startled, he pulled his headset down to his neck.”I’m Claude. I’d shake your hand but I’ve got stuff all over ’em. You’re new here?”

“Yes, I was supposed to start this morning. Couldn’t get into the changing room until another lady let me in.” Cam wore her hair in braids pulled back and the work apron of a SafeCo cashier. She was shapely and wore no makeup. Claude found himself mesmerized by her simple good looks. Her smile was glorious. He could look at it for hours. Only the nasal bellow of Mahoney could ruin it.

“Camille!” Mahoney’s Brooklyn accent played havoc with her name.

Claude whispered as she turned and walked back into the store. “Watch his hands. He is a very handy fellow.”

“I’m sure. He’s wearing Old Spice. He wasn’t wearing it yesterday. I’ll keep an eye out. See ya, big boy.” She smiled and intercepted Mahoney before he could mangle her name again.

End of Part 1.

Within Arms Reach © Thaddeus Howze 2013, All Rights Reserved

Written For 30

Psychopomp

Posted by Ebonstorm on April 22, 2013
Posted in: 30 Characters in 30 Days 2013, 30 Stories in 30 Days 2013, 30 x 30 x 30, Short Story. Tagged: ebonstorm, future, intelligence, psychological, psychopathic, science fiction, sociopathic, Thaddeus Howze. 2 Comments

unemotional_by_miliaris-d33kt93

I failed the first tests when I was just a little kid. You know the ones. The preliminary PSE’s.

Psychopathy, Sociopathy, and Empathy psychology exams administered to everyone in elementary school. They showed me the pictures of people I was supposed to feel sympathy for and I felt nothing. Even back then, I knew there was something wrong with that. No tender feelings for animals, either.

A puppy had the same emotional content as a cockroach. None at all.

I didn’t understand at first but when my parents started whispering about our missing dog, I quickly put two and two together. I didn’t even tell them about it. They just knew. I didn’t understand why it was so important that I feel something about some dumb old dog. He was sick and dying anyway. I didn’t even enjoy it.

My parents were afraid of me. I knew that. I didn’t feel it. I knew it. Something about the way they looked at me. Something about how my mother would hug me, hold me close, whisper to me how I would be okay. My father didn’t even disguise his feelings. His disgust was clearly evident. I memorized his face, his emotional depth. I could replicate the behavior perfectly after seeing it one time.

Compassion took longer.

It was more…rich, more complex. At the time I simply didn’t understand the depth of compassion. Later I found out, compassion and empathy were simply beyond the range of things I would ever feel.

At the age of five, I began to replicate the emotional appearances of everyone around me. I couldn’t tell you what I was feeling but I knew I was in danger if I could not learn this. Until I took the official tests, I was allowed to attend school. My classmates were a wealth of information.

Each charming, childlike face smiled at the most vacuous of things. Making shapes, coloring on paper, writing their names, things I mastered in hours, they took weeks to learn. I read War and Peace by the time I was six, but I didn’t tell anyone. I pretended to struggle just like my classmates and made the right noises, laughing and such.

The pretense sickened me.

Once I was out of school, I could disappear onto the bus and go home. My sitter, a forgettable local teenager, Megan, spent the bulk of her time on the phone with her friends, or on the computer looking at mostly naked men. I went into my room and read books I smuggled from the library. I could read a thousand pages a day.

I would be ten when they tested again. Their trepidation as my second test date drew near increased but they seemed hopeful announcing to the mysterious person on the phone about my progress, my displays of emotion and how perhaps the Childhood Psychological Survey group need not make a visit to our home. She was always crestfallen at the end of the call. I watched her conversation with the agent and found it curious.

The woman, Ms. Fischer, seemed to exhibit the very same nature she accused me of; she was cold and aloof. Her eyeglasses held eyes as distant as my own.

I saw the Psychopomp on the table and knew its history. The Psychopath Purges of 2050 from humanity world-wide promised to fix the urge for dominance that had all but destroyed the Earth as we knew it.

The evening before the test, a neighbor came over to report a missing cat. I told them I had never seen it. I was believable.

The day of the test, the Psychopomp determined I was incurable and would be destroyed. My parents wailed and gnashed their teeth. The agency police escorted me out of the house.

I felt no fear of death.

Ms. Fischer walked me to her car, her eyeglasses in her hand. She didn’t look at me.

“I lied to your parents. Do you want us to fix you? We can now. You can be as ordinary as anyone else. All of your cognitive gifts would be gone as well.”

“No.” I replied.

“Good. We don’t want to either. You’ll work for us. Controlling the world is tireless work. We need someone like you who is willing to do anything…”

Psychopomp © Thaddeus Howze 2013, All Rights Reserved

Photography: Unemotional ©2010-2013 ~miliaris

Written For 30

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