I wrote something magical

And incendiary. The Public Shame Glory Train hardly has enough room for these fools.

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To the dead

While this is not a story, it is interstitial. It is here because it’s a letter than can never be delivered to its intended recipient. Maybe some reader will hear me, and be compelled not to wait to love someone even if it hurts sometimes. He would be 31 today, 6 months to the day after his birthday.

It was today, ten years ago. I didn’t know it yet but you were gone. I wouldn’t know it for three more hours. I loved you and sometimes I am surprised to find that I still do.

It is hard to believe that in this universe of infinite possiblity there is none which will bring you back to me. You have left us and in your stead, while we have grown and changed you are a shadow, the same shape as you were on your last day. The substance of you, though, is no more.
Continue reading

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The Searchable Nineosphere is Online

What’s the Searchable Nineosphere?  Its this here easy to search archive of the stories listed in the Roll Calls. The Roll Calls are weekly listing of stories written at io9 by members of the community. We have two writing initiatives: #ThursdayTales and #SaturdayShortStories and each one is chock full of original writing by io9 community members, otherwise known as Niners. As of 20 August there are 155 free short stories by Niners in the Canon, and all can be searched in the Nineosphere. Enjoy, and if you like something, leave a comment for the author. They work hard for our free entertainment!

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Spiral

Her curls cascaded over her shoulders, her forehead, her eyes. They bounced with her laughter and, when she kept her head down, hid the shy flush of her cheeks and the uncertainty in her eyes.

His hand was warm and soft and it startled her just a little when it rested on her forearm for a moment. She stared at it as he talked, wide eyes hidden behind her nimbus of spirals until the appendage floated into the air like some creature, held aloft on the strength of the arguments and explanations it was enacting.

He’d told her he wished they had met before and she wished that too, but she was glad they had met now. Lo looked away, unsure how to respond except in the way she wanted, which was not the correct way at all. She wanted to avoid impropriety.

“Well…maybe we can get together again sometime, you know, I mean…I don’t want to make it seem like I’m-”

“Like you’re what? A person with normal desires and everything?” It was as if he could read her like a book. Her face was glowing and she wished she could will her hair to simply hide her whole visage, like some sort of springy balaclava.

“Well–I mean, I’m just…I don’t want you to think that I’m um,” she searched for the right words, the right ideas, to express. “I don’t want you to think I’m coming on to you or something.” There. She’d said it. It was out of her mouth and out of her hands now.

His fingers slipped underneath her chin and lifted her face and her hair obeyed gravity, refusing to hover to protect her from embarrassment. She furrowed her brows and stared at his mouth, which she thought gorgeous, studiously avoiding his eyes.

“What if I was hoping you would come onto me?” His voice was so soft and she risked the briefest flicker of her eyes toward his and she knew the question was rhetorical. Lo was hyperaware of his fingers on her skin, sliding up to the side of her face: it was fire, warming her where she had been so cold for so long. His fingertips slid into her hair and before she knew it his lips were getting closer and closer and when she opened her mouth to ask him what he was doing his lips were against hers and the electricity thrilled her to the depths of her belly. She’d known all along what he was doing, she just couldn’t believe it.

After they parted ways, Lo skimmed the blue beach, singing while Gladys kicked up wake beneath and behind them. She was happy to have returned to her twin-mooned frontier home. The Earth wasn’t her home any more, at least not now.

“Lo?” Gladys’ voice slipped under “Cartomante” and interrupted Elis Regina as she told the King of Clubs to fall.

“Gladys, you know this is my favorite part of the song.” Lo wasn’t really annoyed, even though the a capella chorus was her favorite part. “Yes, Gladys?”

“We always listen to ‘The Boys of Summer’ when we fly the beach. Nobody is on the beach, correct?” Her voice betrayed a little curiosity and Lo was proud of her cgrav, who seemed to have caught on to something she herself didn’t realize.

“Hmm, you’re right. Well, I guess something’s different now.” She rewound the song to the beginning, but no sooner had she managed to tell her imaginary lover that she wanted him to live than Gladys interrupted her again.

“Lo, your vital signs are elevated and although you seem to be unimpaired you are now behaving strangely. What is happening?” The cgrav suddenly decelerated and Lo could hear only the quiet idle of the engine as they hovered above the surface of the sea.

“Gladys!” Lo banged her hands on the dashboard as if she could cause Gladys pain. “Turn the car back on.”

“Not until I am able to understand the nature of your sudden behavior shift. Did that male I saw you with put something into your food or drink?”

Lo suddenly burst into laughter, her head lolling down and then throwing itself back. The great cascade of spirals followed and tears began to roll down her cheeks as her breathless mirth continued. “Oh Gladys, oh wow. Girl, no he didn’t put anything in my food or drink.” She wiped her eyes, shaking her head. Gladys was more astute than she’d imagined a car with no eyes could be. “You drive, old girl. I think you have this under control.”

Gladys began moving forward again, though the music was still off. “If you did not ingest any foreign substance, why are you so different?” She didn’t give up. Her purpose in the world was to understand, Lo guessed. It was a self-made purpose because the factory made her for driving.

Lo leaned her seat back and put her hands behind her head. Rarely she let Gladys drive but this time it was worth it. “Tomorrow–no–the day after tomorrow, remind me we need to go down to the new camp. I want to see what the metallurgists are getting from that area.”

“Metallurgists? Is this some new duty? I don’t have any new orders and none of our existing orders mention-”

For Onomis, Gladys! He’s there. Okay? And he’s not a metallurgist but he’s working with them and…well, I’m so excited because he kissed me.”

“Kissed? I have seen you kiss Em and Xan and even others before but you have never-”

“It’s not the same. It’s different.” She was excited and exasperated and, well, excited. It had been so long since she’d felt this sensation, longer than she’d had Gladys. She’d forgotten she could feel like this. “Pick a song, Gladys.”

“Really? Any song I want?” If a machine could sound incredulous, it was Gladys.

“Any song you want.” Lo stared out at the endless black sky between the ocean and the twin moons.

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Roll Calls

I have mistakenly posted the Roll Call as a post again instead of a page when, in fact, it is a page. It now can be found here.

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Death

Thanks to mouse/maud dib/alphabete/etc for letting me use her blog to post my stuff on. A quick short story for #thursdaytales. The title is, I suppose, “Death.”

Somewhere clean, smelling of disinfectant and freshly laundered sheets, a young girl is dying. She is surrounded by her family and friends, lying on a bed with tubes and wires running from her to various mechanical contrivances designed to prolong her ordeal in this world, ostensibly to give her more time with her family. Though, in reality, these last, painful, lingering moments are a comfort to no one. As her mind and her body fail her, her last thoughts and emotions are not of the supposed passing on to other worlds, or the shallow comfort provided by those around her. They are of the simplest, purest terror. As she dies she reaches ahead of her, into the air, to grasp at nothing at all.

Some of those standing around her that day were devastated at the loss of someone they had known and loved. Some wept and howled, while others stood and stared numbly on, all emotion hidden behind a wall of shock. Others had their deepest fears dredged up by her death, pulling to the surface anxieties about their own, limited mortal lives. Still others saw this moment with relief. They had been anxious, not precisely for her death, but to return to worldly obligations, jobs and bills and children and pets. Her illness had been an inconvenience, one that was finally drawing to a close. They had known her, or her parents, merely well enough to make it rude to not show up.

At the moment it became clear the girl would not breathe again, her mother began to sob. Mutters of disbelief grew into screams, and she railed at God and sickness and no one at all for taking her child from her. She sobbed and wailed and grasped ineptly at the front of her daughter’s hospital gown, and pressed her face against the child’s unmoving flesh, as it faded slowly to an ashen grey.

Behind her, her husband stared dumbly forward, and had to sit. His mind was blank, and though he had known for months that this was the only possible outcome, at this moment, he couldn’t believe it had occurred. The emotions were there, somewhere, hidden away by a protective mechanism, one his mind had developed to cope with him witnessing and causing death on foreign battlefields. His emotions would come to the surface eventually, in inappropriate ways, as bouts of anger and depression, and he would drink until they sank back down into the depths. But that was later. Now, he placed a hand on his wife’s shoulder, and leaned forward until his forehead rested on her shaking back.

Richard did not know the girl he had just seen die, or the woman he had watched sob and scream. His wife, Susan, did, however, and had insisted they both go the moment she’d heard. She had been the girl’s teacher in her last year of life, and had expended more time and energy on the girl than the rest of her class combined, all because the child was dying. Richard had always thought this was foolish on multiple levels. It wasn’t as if the child would use anything she’d learned, and it didn’t make sense to him to become emotionally attached to something which would not be there long. He knew his wife had a soft heart, though, and he indulged her foolish choices.

Now that the child was dead, though, he was ready to leave, and was glad this obsession which had taken his wife was at last drawing to a close.

He touched her shoulder, causing her to turn about suddenly, tears in her eyes. She held him tight for a while, dampening his shirt, before he broke free of her, holding her shoulders, and looked at her.
“Are you ready to go?” he asked her, not quite keeping the impatience out of his voice.
“What?” she croaked, looking up at him, phlegm and emotion breaking up her voice. “No,” she said, finally registering what he had said. “I’m going to see her mother.”
“Ok,” he said, glancing at the turmoil in the room wish detached distaste. “I’ll be waiting in the car. Come out when you‘re ready.”
He turned and walked from the room, leaving his wife and all thoughts of the girl’s death behind him in the hospital room.

Sam had been a Baptist pastor for nearly twenty years. He had said prayers and blessings over the sick and dying, and had spoken at more funerals than he could count, often times not knowing the deceased very well at all, inventing pleasant lies about them, always assuring everyone present that their loved one was happily wiling away their infinite hours in the presence of the almighty. While many times lies were small, they were always there. And the wicked were always spoken well of, no matter how callous or hate-filled they might have been. Scoundrels in life were saints in death, and all present created clever excuses for why the things they did weren’t so bad after all, forgetting the trespasses and remembering the few good moments.

But here, today, was something alien, and unsettling. This child was not a broken and selfish adult who needed to be lied for. She was sinless. She was innocent. He had watched as she died, not in anticipation of the afterlife, but in abject terror of her own death. He had nothing to say, nothing to rationalize it with.

He had spent time with her over the past year. Her mother had called him, asking him to ensure her child’s to salvation in her final days. While he was there, she asked questions. Simple, childlike questions.     “At church, they say anyone can talk to God, and he’ll answer,” she said. “When I talk to God, why doesn’t he answer? Why can’t I hear God?”

The usual answer, of course, was that those that didn’t hear God chose not to. But this wasn’t someone who didn’t want to believe. This was a young child, making an honest attempt, because she was capable of nothing other. So he told her she wasn’t listening hard enough, and tried hard to believe it himself.

“If God loves everyone,” she asked him one afternoon, “then why does he send people to Hell?”

Sam tried to explain that God was perfect, and no one could live up to his perfection, but it was beyond her, and the more he tried to explain it, the less sense it made to him, as well. The rationalizations he’d used to reconcile God’s love and mercy with eternal torment had lost the sway they had once held with Sam. The more he used them, the more worn and transparent they became.

Each day new questions would come, and each would chip away at the foundations of his faith, which no longer had the resilient strength it had once had in his youth. In those days, he was full of passion, ready to believe any mote of emotion which floated his way during a prayer session was God’s voice speaking to him. But time brought wisdom, and wisdom brought the realization that he didn’t apply the same standards to his beliefs that he did to other people‘s beliefs. He would have preached of the sins of false prophets once, but now he could see no difference in their prophets or his own, could not see what made his any more convincing.

The year he spent ministering to this child had fractured the final justifications and explanations he’d adopted for propping up of his faith. Now he stood at a few feet from the child’s too still form, as her mother was approaching, wanting consolation that he could not give, wanting assurance that her child was somewhere better, when she was still in the room, dead. The child’s mother stopped a pace from him, looked at him with her bleary, tear-stained face, and held out her damp, clammy hands to him, which he took.
“Help me,” she said, simply.
“I can’t.”
“Help her, then. Pray for her.”
“I can’t, Judith. She’s dead.”
“Sam, pray for her. I need you to, Sam. She needs you to.”
“There’s nothing left to pray for, Judith.” He dropped her hands, and turned and started walking.
The girl’s mother followed him as he tried to walk away, to escape.
“What do I do now?” she called after him, loud enough that others turned to look. “What do I do? Help me, Sam.”
“I don’t have any answers for you, Judith. There‘s no lesson to be learned, there‘s nothing to be gained. She‘s dead, and there is nothing else.”
And Sam left.

He went not to his church, or home, to pray, but instead stopped at a gun store and purchased a revolver and a box of ammunition. He paid for a motel room, and sat in it, with the loaded pistol, but couldn’t bring himself to complete the act. He instead went home to his wife, full of fear and doubt, finding little reason to live, but too afraid of death to complete the act. He lived a long life, and died as the child had, terrified, but for the first time in his life, honest.

Posted in BobSmith, Visitation, interstices | Tagged | 2 Comments

Trade

Inspired by LukeRomyn who tweeted “Hand grenades would be really cool if they were actually shaped like hands.” Upon suddenly realizing it was Thursday and getting a crazy picture in my head, I went with it. It’s about 350 or so words over 1k. I apologize but….well that’s about it. I apologize. I also apologize for the devastating continual loss of spacing and line breaks. I put them in, WP replaces them with divs and tells me to shove off. I can only edit them in so many times before I just lose it.

Starkey’s cigarette was low.  He was puffing it like a madman.  It was his last one and he was determined to make the most of it, not even pausing to talk.  He just grunted, the butt clenched between his teeth and his eyes squinted against the stream of acrid smoke.  The patch he was standing in had been cleared, and Burke and Timmons were relaxing, free for the next few hours from their chore.
There was really something magical about this place, Starkey thought, glancing up at the purple sky through the light glinting off his specs.  It was hard to smoke with them on.  Those little tubes that extended from the nosepiece and into his nostrils made it a real pain to try to breathe.  They threw his rhythm off.  It was like being in a hospital on oxygen.
Burke reached into his pocket and pulled out a full pack of smokes.  Starkey stared, almost dropping his mouth open.  Burke didn’t even smoke.
“Hey Star-KEY, look what I got.  Isn’t this your brand, too?”  Christ, what an asshole.
Starkey pinched his smoke between his fingers and looked down at it.  It was burning his fingers.  He dropped it.
“Whaddaya want, Burke?”  His eyes rolled to the moons and he took a deep breath, already aware of the answer.
“C’mon Starkey, what do I always want?”  Burke’s eyes slid to Timmons and Timmons looked away.  He liked his job and he didn’t smoke.
“Shit.  Come on, Burke.  This round it’s you and Tim.  I don’t have a rotation for another week, man.”  Still he hungrily eyed the pack, his body preparing for another half-day with no nicotine. “Come on man.  I’ve got cash.  How much you want for it?  I’ll give you ten.”
Burke shook his head, a smug grin plastered on his stupid face.
“Twenty.”  Starkey took out his wallet.  Burke just stared.  ”Twenty-five.  Hell, thirty.  Come on, man!”  His voice had taken on a whine of desperation.  Smoking was an unusual habit these days, and Starkey paid as much for his smokes as druggies paid for a day’s worth of cheap hits.
Starkey looked to Timmons, who simply turned and walked away, throwing back “Maybe it’s a good time to think about quitting.”
“Fuck you both, man.”
An hour later Timmons was in a pod, enveloped in its warm, fleshy interior, communing.  His ArTel’s name was Grace and she shared the voice and mannerisms of his wife.
“Scott, do you have another rotation soon?”  Her voice made his chest tighten and he wished that he could go home right now.
“Naw, we’re cleared out for the next few hours.  Just wanted to come in here and listen to my baby.”  He’d felt, originally, that it was sort of like cheating on Grace to have this ArTel imitating her, but she had ordered one that was modeled after him, for herself.  It was the closest thing to being in live touch.  His buddies ribbed him about it but more than once a couple had admitted they wish they’d thought of the same thing.
“Did you see any hand grenades?”
“Shit no, and thanks to Onomis.  Those things’ll tear you up.”  He’d seen the damage they could do and he hoped mightily that he would never tangle with one without his flaksuit.
Outside, Starkey was sitting by the mess pod, eating something that he thought was a burrito.  That’s what the pod told him it was.  It kinda looked like pod shit and he wouldn’t be surprised if those things did just crap them right out then keep them warm for the soldiers.  He was halfway through when Burke showed up, smirking toothily.
“You must be desperate for a smoke, eating that thing.  I still got ‘em.”  He patted the box-shaped bulge in his pocket.
“Screw you, man.  I’m gonna take Tim’s advice and quit.  There’s no way I’m going out there and get snatched by one of those things.”  Starkey wanted a cigarette so bad he felt like choking Burke until he gave them up.  His superiors informed him last time that it was bad form.
“Well, I got myself some fresh fruit.  The trees are in bloom just a little ways over, my friend.  Delicious, and pesticide-free.  Want some?  You don’t have to trade for it.”  The glint in his eye made it look a little like a bullseye and Starkey had to look away to hold himself together.
“No thanks, man.  This crap burrito is fine.”
“Suit yourself.”  Burke wandered off in the direction of the fruit trees.
“Dude, c’mon.  Stay outta there, man.  It hasn’t been cleared in hours.  And you’re not wearing your suit.  Don’t be an idiot.”
“Whatever, man.  We cleared it.  If it had hands, we’d know about ‘em.”
Timmons was talking to pod-Grace and his pod’s Onomis persona at the same time, sharing distant closeness with his wife.  The QB shield kept his exertions and panted prayers from the ears of his mates but he could still hear outside of the pod.  It was hard to get used to one-way QB but he eventually got over the fear that his fellows would hear him.
Just was he was reaching his peak, there came a scream from outside.
“TIM!  STARKEY!  HELP ME!  OH GOD SOMEONE!”
Starkey dropped his burrito and ran toward the sound of Burke’s voice. That idiot, he thought, what’s he gotten himself into?
Timmons stumbled out of his pod, straining painfully inside his pants.  He was pulling on his flaksuit when he caught up to Starkey.
“Oh my God.”  A hand was clutching the edge of Burke’s jacket.  Hiss eyes were bulging out of his head and he was afraid to move.
“Okay, okay stay calm Burke.”  Timmons’ voice was calm and soothing.  ”Take the jacket off, slowly.  Then toss it this way.”  He stepped foward, motioning with his hands.
The rest of the camp gathered behind them, watching.  They were the only guys there with flaksuits, and Burke had left his in his pod.  Starkey shook his head, following Timmons’ lead.  The flaksuits would prevent the hand from detonating.  Burke was sliding the jacket off and watching the hand, which was slowly clenching.
He threw it toward Timmons and the hand clenched around the fabric in midair.  Timmons and Starkey ran away from the jacket and managed to get far enough away that they only got minor lacerations when the grenade exploded.
“He said toss it, you jerk!” Starkey yelled.  ”You wanna get us killed?”
Burke breathed a sigh of relief, laughing nervously.  ”Sorry man, just wanted to get it as far away from me as possible.  I shoulda aimed straight at you.”  He started out of the copse of trees, face split in a stupid grin when he stopped suddenly, eyes wide again.  ”Oh shit.”
Starkey and Timmons heard it.  The sound of things falling from trees.  The look on Burke’s face told them there was no room to hope it was fruit.  Hands fell, landing on his shoulders, grabbing at his arms, crawling spiderlike across the ground to clutch at his feet.
“Oh God help me, please guys, something.  DO SOMETHING!”  Timmons dug into his pocket for the mini-beacon, trying to toss it to Burke.  Burke’s voice turned high and fearful and he sounded like he was about to cry.  ”Please…please HURRY!”
Just as Timmons found the beacon and tossed it, the hands began to clench one by one.  They were armed.  The beacon flew right into the explosion and disintegrated in midair.
Starkey sat down, banging his fists on the grass and cursing Burke’s idiocy.  He was going to have to take Burke’s place in the rotation.  Timmons, stunned, began walking toward Starkey and his foot hit something that bounced over to him.
Later, leaning against his pod, Starkey took a long hit of his cigarette and pledged this time to make the pack last.  Timmons glanced at him, face painted with disgust.
“Really Starkey?  Is that all you can think about?”
“Hey, man, I gotta take his rotation don’t I?
Posted in interstices | 5 Comments

#SaturdayShortStories Anthology!

Niner mkirkland has created a wonderful EPub anthology of the first month’s worth of Saturday Short Stories. There are 15 stories included and this makes me want to do one for Thursday Tales now!! The awesome cover art is done by user EdificeComplex. The anthology can be found here. Enjoy!

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Woohoo the big day is HERE!

Welcome to my site, if you have never visited before. It is mostly an assortment of short stories, a few poems, and some ink blog posts thrown into the mix.

If you’re visiting from ErgoFiction, hi and thanks for dropping by. The Roll Calls can be found linked at the top of the page and I hope you enjoy them. There are some fine stories to be found there.

If you have never been to ErgoFiction, hie thyself thither with the quickness!

Have fun poking around.

-alphabete

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Big time fancy pants awesome sauce rooty toot woot news for you and me

That’s right, this is big time news.
I have written a guest post for Webfiction E-zine ErgoFiction.
It will be posted at noon, British Lunch Hour or British Breakfast Time or something like that on Saturday, which means 4am PDT.
It’s called “The Niner Primer” and it’s about how the niner fiction canon came to reside at io9.
Yay!

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