Excerpt


“Has the jury reached a verdict?” asked Judge Participle–who was widely regarded as a “hanging” judge.

“We have, your honor,” said the jury foreman, one Mr. Rigg. “On the first charge of willfully and knowingly unleashing wretched prose upon the nations of the earth, and inspiring copycats to do likewise, we the jury find the defendant Stemp Heinemeyer guilty.”

Stemp, seated at the defendant’s table, let out a moan and hung his head in his hands.

“On the second charge,” continued Rigg, “that of willfully and knowingly disregarding the rules of grammar as we know them, and the specific counts of Oxford comma violations, run-on sentencery, purple-proseity, et al, we the jury find the defendant guilty.”

Stemp moaned softly.

“And finally, on the third charge of willfully and knowingly profiteering from these crimes, we the jury find the defendant especially guilty,” Rigg finished.

Judge Participle struck his gavel forcefully. “Stemp Heinemeyer,” he said, “having been found guilty by a jury of your peers, by the power vested in me by the State of Construct, I hereby sentence you to life imprisonment in a third-rate science fiction novel to be determined at a later date.”

“No!” cried Stemp wildly. “Anything but that!”

The judge banged on his gavel once again. “Clear the courtroom!”

  • Like what you see? Purchase a print or ebook version!

“Cincinnati Man! Cincinnati Man! Do you think I could get your autograph?”

“I’m not ‘Cincinnati Man,’ kid. That name was cooked up by the newspapers. Now get lost, I’m not signing anything.”

“But you’re the coolest! I still remember how you smashed Mechiguana and the Reploid army!”

“I didn’t smash them, kid. The Omni-Suit smashed them.”

“If you won’t sign an autograph, could you at least fly? Or smash something?”

“Kid, I gave the Omni-Suit back as soon as I didn’t need it anymore. I didn’t–and don’t–want to be a hero. I did what I had to do, and the only things I smash these days are the faces of people who won’t give me my space. So move.”

  • Like what you see? Purchase a print or ebook version!

Nerissa gently disassembled Steamy, as he had shown her to do many times for routine maintenance. The plumbing that kept his boiler supplied with water from the tank on his back was clogged with encrusted salt–as Steamy had always said, “Mistress, I must run on sweetwater only.”

The long days and nights on the outrigger, and Nerissa’s own all-consuming thirst had denied him anything but salt water, and she had seen the fruits of her selfishness in his erratic behavior and eventual shutting down. Had Steamy not also taught her to look for signs of a nearby island in the flights of gulls and the schooling of fish just below wavecrest, she never would have found the shoals.

Water roared and broke over the shallows behind Nerissa, which had nearly claimed the outrigger. It was now tied up on the calm end of a small island set amid the labyrinth of sandbars and coral. Someone had been there, long ago: they had dredged up coral and sand from the lagoon to build what must once have been an islet as small as the others into a large rectangle nearly a quarter of the size of the old atoll she and Steamy had once shared.

The buildings were crumbling and full of coconut crabs, but there was also a cistern filled with fresh water, protected from evaporation and designed to funnel rainwater.

Without the bucking and rolling of the Redflower as its outriggers cut into the waves, Nerissa could finally repair Steamy. She could finally rest easy, if only for a moment.

For there were still storm clouds on the horizon, and the island bore none of the red flowers that Steamy had once brought back.

  • Like what you see? Purchase a print or ebook version!

The issue of dates and times has long been one that concerned humans, first as we settled around our globe and later as we settled elsewhere.

Use of the Hijri calendar among observant Islamic colonists was particularly troublesome. As a lunisolar calendar, dependent on observations taken in Saudi Arabia, it had been difficult enough to communicate important dates like the Hajj when confined to a single world. Astronomical or algorithm-based methods of calculating dates had long been dismissed by leading theologians as illicit bid’ah.

But how to communicate this information across interstellar distances to the colony of New Mecca, 73 light-years from Earth? Divergent views have led to a wide variety of practices and even a few conflicts between groups of settlers whose imams issued differing jurisprudence on the matter. The issue of which direction to face during salat prayer is also thorny; whence lieth Mecca from New Mecca?

The issue of salat prayer was similar to that faced by Jewish colonists elsewhere in habitable space. When the Sabbath lasts from sundown on Friday until the appearance of three stars in the sky on Saturday night, what is one to do on a ribbon world like Epsilon Gestae IV where there is eternal twilight, or one like Omicron Theta II where a day is longer than the year?

Difficulties such as those have seen a variety of creative solutions. The Helium-3 mining kibbutzes of NGC-3110, for instance, calculate their observances using a 24-hour cycle overlaid on the planet’s 97-hour night-day cycle with the colony ship’s landfall as their epoch. The Sunni solar harvesters of Feynman’s Star use a complicated algorithm to determine their calendar which is readjusted periodically after the arrival of more precise information from Earth.

But the Eastern Orthodox pilgrims who colonized Tsarzvezdan? The Traditionalist Catholics on Quartum Romae? The Baptist colonists, the Colonbaptists, who run the Christ the Redeemer Medical Center lightspeed emergency medical frigate?

They merely look to the stars for the one which shines brightest.

  • Like what you see? Purchase a print or ebook version!

No reckoning of famous predicting mistakes would be complete without mentioning the Great Strike of 2287. On the planet Albion Prime, the government-owned Albion Broadcasting Corporation’s Astro Office issued a public warning through popular astronomer Marcus Delfino about the planet’s passage through the debris trail caused by the collision of two asteroids.

The Albion system was notorious for that sort of activity, and issued regular hypernet bulletins warning shipping and people on the ground of possible asteroid strikes on the off chance that any fragments made their way past the planetary defense plasma cannons. Delfino was the public face of the ABC Astro Office, appearing on weekly and emergency broadcasts.

Famously, in 2287, Delfino was on the hypernet for his usual programme when he made the following remarks: “Earlier on today, apparently, a woman rang the ABC and said she heard there was an asteroid on the way…well, if you’re watching, don’t worry, there isn’t!”

Less than 12 hours later, a barrage of material from the collided asteroids overwhelmed Albion’s planetary defenses, destroying one of the key cannons and shorting out power to several others that had been daisy-chained together. The resulting meteors struck densely populated areas, causing widespread damage and killing over a dozen. May people blamed Marcus Delfino’s statement on their failure to properly deploy meteor screens and deflector shields.

In later years, Delfino would insist that he had been technically correct and that there was no asteroid–after all, once the objects entered Albion’s atmosphere, they became meteors and meteorites. He would also claim, at various times, that he had been referring to the planet of DeSoto II, another notoriously strike-prone world that had indeed not been struck that day. Either way, the resulting furore cost Delfino his job and led to what wags have called the “Delfino syndrome:” future ABC Astro Office asteroid predictions tended to always err on the side of caution by predicting massive strikes even when the odds were small.

No one wanted their face slapped all over the hypernet with an incorrect prediction.

  • Like what you see? Purchase a print or ebook version!

“Uh, ma’am?”

“Not now.” Prentiss Construction Corporation LLC chairman Holly Scruthers massaged her temples, yawning to pop her ears as her corporate jet took flight. The inspection tour of the new PCC development had been very tiresome, not least of which was dealing with the lecherous and frankly insane architect and planner Nikolai Dyavolov. The board had insisted on hiring him, and his constant revisions to the plans of both buildings and streets had been a source of constant irritation.

“Ma’am?” the pilot said again.

“What part of ‘not now’ don’t you understand?” Holly snapped. Usually she tried to be understanding or at least pleasant to her employees, but two weeks of Dyavolov ranting in Russian while trying to peer down her dress had soured her mood like overripe milk. But everything would get better now that the first houses were being occupied and electrified, even if Dyavolov had insisted on irrationally picking them rather than deferring to tenants.

“It can wait.” The pilot closed the cabin door and banked the plane to the left.

“How long before they notice?” said the co-pilot.

Looking out his window, the pilot shrugged. “Guess we’ll find out.”

Below, the lit portions of the PCC housing development formed a giant pentagram with the message AVE SATANI surrounding it.

  • Like what you see? Purchase a print or ebook version!

“Captain” Fitz McHugh strode through the wreckage of the Union column, surrounded by burning wagons, dead men, and panicked horses. His “command” of raiders had already fallen out to plunder food and arms from the well-supplied Yankees, but McHugh had other notions.

He approached the standard-bearer, the last invader still alive. The man wore an officer’s uniform; he may even have been the commander, shot in the gut while trying to save the colors.

“What…how…?” the man mumbled.

“There’s something you Yankees didn’t reckon on,” said McHugh cocking his big, brass-framed Griswold & Gunnison 1860 Revolver. “This ain’t your Kansas. It’s Arkansas.”

  • Like what you see? Purchase a print or ebook version!

One of the enduring mysteries surrounding Quantum Coffee LLC GmbH of Dimension X has been its lack of an alkaline beverage counterpart to its famous low-pH molecular acid CaustiCoffee™. Its use by the Hegemony to degrime hyperspace engines of dark matter residue aside, CaustiCoffee™ has been elevated to the status of a cultural touchstone by the Rypl and the 4Ploq. Sales have been strong despite the fact that it eats through most life forms like a starving man through a buffet.

But the multiverse is just as full of creatures with a strongly alkaline or basic biochemistry. The $%^& of $%^&lith, for example, require an environment with a 14 pH to survive; they slip into a coma and die at 13.999. The hyperspace-native merchant race known as the Squibbians require strongly alkaline food, and their 17-foot-tall lopsided and betentacled forms are a common sight on hyperspace-aware worlds and trading stations. One might also single out the Northuos, a race unfairly maligned as interdimensional crime lords when only 87% of them practice that vocation, who find a high-pH soak-and-rub to be invigorating.

And yet Quantum Coffee LLC GmbH only produced BaseBrew™ Coffee for a few years, from Multiversal Standard Interval 1337 to MSI 1340. Their marketing efforts, including free magnetic containment cups to keep the alkaline beverage from corroding away ordinary mugs, slick TV commercials featuring L47-P the WisecrackBot, and sponsorship of the HyperBowl, all came to naught. Sales remained in the septic tank, so much so that some Quantum affiliates had dropped it within two weeks of “B-Day,” its much-heralded rollout.

  • Like what you see? Purchase a print or ebook version!

“Well, doc, I keep having these strange symptoms.”

“Strange in what way?”

“Well, I keep slaying the living and draining their still warm bodies of blood and other fluids with hypodermic fangs. I have developed a severe aversion to sunlight, running water, strongly-presented holy symbols, and slivers of wood.”

“When did these symptoms begin?”

“Not long after Dr. Hardtmann prescribed me Wampiria™, the Once-Daily Pill for Mild to Severe Rheumatoid Porphyric Hemophilia.”

“Did you have Mild to Severe Rheumatoid Porphyric Hemophilia?”

“No, but he prescribed it just in case, as a placebo.”

“That, in a nutshell, is why we can’t have good antibiotics anymore, my friend.”

  • Like what you see? Purchase a print or ebook version!

Kiro gingerly approached the smouldering wreck, his Type 193 assault rifle held ready. The crash appeared to have been relatively low speed and controlled until the final flip which tore the vehicle apart; the volatile fuel had been jettisoned and there was no fire to warm the frigid air, only thin plumes of smoke from tiny electrical fires.

“Received and confirmed, Patrol-27,” came the voice in his ear. “Support group is inbound.”

“How long before support arrival?” Kiro said.

“ETA is twenty sidereal minutes plus or minus ten, Patrol-27,” said Dispatch. “Orders are as follows: secure site if practical, eliminate any hostiles if practical, claim any valuables if practicable. Keep channel open and relay any observations.”

“Received and confirmed, Dispatch,” said Kiro. He began moving gingerly into the wreckage–he knew as well as anybody that when Dispatch relayed orders from Command ‘if practical,’ it was one’s duty to attempt them or die an honorable death in trying to do so. Promotion or death–those were the twin horns of Kiro’s dilemma, and beneath his practiced military exterior his heart glowed like a firelit jade at the prospect.

“Craft appears to be a Matsuhita Type 201,” he said, moving toward it. The Type 201 transport ship was long out of service with the Imperial Armed Forces in favor of the Type 210, but it was still used by the seperatists and their disloyal allies.

The hull was fractured in several places, allowing easy ingress, and Kiro soon saw that the craft had split in two, spilling much of its cargo onto the tundra. “Craft has catastrophic hull breach, no immediate danger. Cargo appears to be chiefly foodstuffs and non-reactive supplies.” That part was surprising, considering how starved the insurgents were for weapons. Almost every other Mastuhita Type 201 knocked out by Imperial batteries exploded violently as its munitions detonated.

“Hang, on, Dispatch. Have observed unusual item in intact section of cargo bay.” Kiro was drawn to an eerie light of uncertain and varicolor hue; approaching, he saw that a heavy-duty transport container had been smashed open by the crash, but that it had been padded by surrounding crates which had clearly been meant to conceal it. Bodies of a small but well-armed guards contingent surrounded it, in poses that suggested they had given their lives to protect the cargo.

The item itself defied desciption.

  • Like what you see? Purchase a print or ebook version!

« Previous PageNext Page »