Showing posts with label H.G. Wells. Show all posts
Showing posts with label H.G. Wells. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

War of the Worlds: Frontlines is Out Now!

Paperback: 266 pages
Publisher: Northern Frights Publishing (April 24, 2010)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0973483725
ISBN-13: 978-0973483727
Product Dimensions: 9 x 6 x 0.6 inches
Shipping Weight: 13.6 ounces
Price $15.95


War of the Worlds: Frontlines is an anthology inspired by the classic HG Wells novel The War of the Worlds. For this collection, we asked for stories that revolved around aliens and human beings in conflict. As we put it, "...we realize that wars between man and alien could be fought on many fronts, and in many ways. Feel free to send stories that span time, space, and genres." What we have put together is a collection of stories that are touching, amazing, and horrific (sometimes all at once!).

War of the Worlds: Frontlines contains 23 stories by some of the small press's more established authors, including Edward Morris, Anthony, Darrel, and Pushcart finalist James S. Dorr, and Writers of the Future winner Brent Knowles (3rd quarter, 2009). Additionally, prolific horror writer Eric S. Brown, the "King of the Zombies" was graceful enough to write a forward for the anthology, as his mash-up novel War of the Worlds plus Blood, Guts, and Zombies (Coscom Entertainment) was recently picked up for national distribution.

Here is the back cover text:

No one would have believed that in the last years of the nineteenth century that this world was being watched...

These words marked the beginning of H.G. Well's classic science fiction novel The War of the Worlds...and marked the end of man's child-like belief that we are alone in the universe. Published in 1898, The War of the Worlds is one of the greatest works of science fiction ever written, and it cemented H.G. Wells' legacy as a founding father of science fiction. A 1938 radio play by Orson Welles caused mass panic when it hit the airwaves, and frankly we haven't been able to trust aliens ever since.

Here now, are bold new visions of Alien and Human conflicts on many different fronts, including:
A man scours a distant world searching for something right under his nose...Two children terrorized by their own mother find an unlikely saviour...Giant war machines find love and more at the end of the world...A harmless looking birthday gift is really a portal to humanity's doom...

War of the Worlds: Frontlines contains stories by:

Michael Scott Bricker, Camilla Alexa, Vincent L. Scarsella, Sheila Crosby, Gerard Daniel Houarner, David Steffen, Mark Onspaugh, Bruce Golden, RJ Sevin, Kristen Lee Knapp, Harper hull, Auston Habershaw, Brent Knowles, Michele Garber, Gary Cuba, Michael Penkas, JW Schnarr & John Sunseri, Mike Baretta, Edward Morris, Jodi Lee, Victorya, James S. Dorr and Davin Ireland.


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War of the Worlds: Frontlines

A selection from "Usher" by Davin Ireland

Usher

by Davin Ireland


I.

M
oments before the pale white star was due to reach its midday zenith, a faint blemish appeared on the horizon. The blemish was tiny at first, and rippled with heat shimmer that blurred it back into the featureless plain of salt. But as time progressed, the shape coalesced, grew more definite.
An arch. A parabolic limestone arch some five-hundred feet across. Hewn from a single layer of sedimentary rock, it had stood to the sky for what might have been aeons. Cowper had examined it hundreds of times over recent months, and would probably do so again given the opportunity. But for now he was content to admire it from afar, pausing to wipe his face and neck with a filthy rag. The gesture offered little relief. The vast endorheic desert extended from skyline to skyline, the salt crust that covered it so uniformly flat that the planet’s natural curvature revealed itself at every turn. The sun beat relentlessly on the desiccated landscape, the whitened surface reflecting the heat back the way it had come.
Yet for all that, there was an austere beauty about the place that enchanted Cowper. A lack of ozone in the atmosphere meant the heavens sang in tones of indigo and ultra-violet for most of the day. When wet, the salt plains reflected those colours like a burnished mirror, creating an effect that was both pleasing to the eye and nominally disorientating. Right now the season was at its most arid, and the only water present was that which evaporated from Cowper’s own pores. He could live with that. The arch was less than an hour’s walk away, and the sloshing of the canteen at his hip formed a reassuring presence. Checking that no area of skin was exposed, he refastened his photochromatic goggles, took up the handles of the wooden barrow, and resumed his journey. 


II.

How the weathered android had managed to survive this long on its own, Cowper reasoned, was a miracle of both science and spirituality. A diminutive 130 centimetres in height, it patrolled the base of the arch ceaselessly, aging servo motors whirring, graphic-fibre bundles bunching and extending in time to its movements.
Still shrouded in his rags, Cowper rolled the giant barrow to a standstill, the salt crust cracking beneath its great wheel like an ice floe fracturing before the prow of an invading ship. He always stopped to observe the solar-powered droid as it strutted east to west, never ceasing to feel a kind of pity for its meaningless existence and the duties that defined it.
“Usher,” he croaked, cupping his swollen fingers about his mouth. He cleared his parched airways and tried again: “Usher!”
The android continued in sentry mode for a few seconds more, then turned to face the visitor.
“Cowper,” it said, and raised a hand in greeting. “How goes the salvage business?”
“So-so.” He indicated the barrow piled with junk, most of it the wreckage of off-world racing vehicles previously scattered across the plains. “Anybody drop by?”
The android greeted the old joke by miming gently sarcastic applause. “Ever the optimist,” it said. “By the way, I read the instruction manual you left the last time. Not quite as challenging as the railway timetable but interesting in its own right.”
Cowper grunted. “Try living my life for a day and tell me about interesting.”
Usher tipped his head quizzically to the side. “Would the conversation improve?”
This time it was Cowper’s turn to applaud. Unfortunately, he forgot to mime, and the collision of roasted palms sent shockwaves of pain lancing up his wrists. “Dammit,” he whispered, “that’s what you get when you let your guard down.”
“Are you damaged?”
“Damaged?” Cowper shook his head, an act which caused precious droplets of sweat to spatter the inside of his cowl. “I guess I’ll survive,” he said. The statement belied a deeper anxiety. Already a mixture of blood and pus seeped between the wrappings covering his palms. If he didn’t get them seen to soon, infection would result. In bygone times, a sturdy pair of gloves had provided ample protection against heat blisters, ultra-violet radiation, even burning hot metal — of which there was much on this otherwise barren hunk of salt-encrusted stone. But with manufacturing in terminal decline, the only substitutes were filthy strips of canvas torn from sacks stolen off the New Deptford wharves.
Cowper lifted the cowl from his face and squinted at the titanic arch, which loomed above them, midday shadow a narrow stripe on the well-trodden salt.
“Is it ready?”
Usher took a moment to calculate the time differential. “I believe so,” he said. He sounded disappointed. He always sounded that way when Cowper returned to his own world. “Will you bring me something else to read next time?” He handed back the instruction manual, which had once served a mechanism described as an automated dish-washer.
“I only just gave you this one,” Cowper protested, and regretted it immediately. It wasn’t the droid’s fault it was all alone. “Look,” he sighed, “I’ll see what I can do, okay?” As he said this, he tried to forget how he had also promised Usher a thesaurus to go with the dictionary the inquisitive droid had already consumed and stored on his hard drive. The acquisition of that one volume — even on a temporary basis — had saddled him with a debt he was still struggling to pay off, but it had been worth it to establish communication with the portal’s faithful guardian. “Just try not to be too disappointed if it’s another manual,” he added, “deal?”
Usher nodded as a pinprick of darkness opened up at the centre of the arch. The pinprick swelled first to fist-size, then plate-size, then all the way up to man-size. It would continue to expand until it reached the solid rind of calcium carbonate that encapsulated it.
“Time to go.” Cowper gingerly grasped the handles of the barrow and winced. Even this much pressure caused his aching palms to scream.
“Do you hurt?” Usher’s head was tilted to the side again.
Cowper intended his chuckle to be both dry and cynical, but all he could manage was an exasperated wheeze. “There’s an old expression about rubbing salt into wounds,” he said. “I doubt its author ever visited this place.”
The droid was silent for a moment. “I wasn’t talking about your injuries.”
And just like that, they were on the subject of Joshua again. Usher had grasped the principle of physical pain with ease. Damage occurs, a signal travels to the appropriate receptor, action is taken. But emotional pain — grief, bitterness, despair — was a mystery to him, and therefore a source of endless fascination. That was hard to take. Like so many families, the Cowpers had lost their only child at the end of the period known simply as More. They had struggled to survive on their own since, yet Marit still harboured the dream of bringing another child into the world. Usher’s preoccupation with the subject verged on obsessive — and the fact he was not much bigger than Josh when the boy had been taken from them only added to the sorrow.
“Have your fertility levels risen?” the droid asked. “I could perform a scan.”
Cowper stared morosely at the far vista of the horizon. “I’m not sure I’m the one with the problem,” he said, “and I think I’d prefer it if you didn’t ask me that question again.”


III.

Marit was waiting for him — face drawn with concern — when he dragged the giant barrow back into the cellar, salt whispering beneath his soles. It was so full its contents nearly brushed the low ceiling. 
“Clear,” he gasped, and allowed his hands to drop.
Marit threw the switch on the aging junction box and the portal collapsed as quickly and neatly as a deckchair clapping together after a day at the beach. Only there were precious few deckchairs left any more, and most of Earth’s beaches had long been subsumed by desert.
“How long?” He threw off the cowl, ditched the goggles, tore at his finger-wrappings with giddy impatience. It was always the way. Returning from the other side, where there was ostensibly nothing, the darkness and the cramped conditions of home sent him into fits of claustrophobia.
Marit grimaced, her face teetering on collapse as she drew water from an aging rain barrel. “Thirty-six hours,” she said, voice rising with indignation.
Thirty-six?” He took the proffered bowl, searched her eyes for confirmation. “So long?” He stopped short of asking Marit outright if she was completely certain. He knew how agonising she found his absences, but also how crucial they were for the both of them. Without the salvage income, the Cowpers were destitute. But two nights and a day? After the bowl was empty, she helped him into a sackcloth robe, led the way to a chair by the fire. The stack of firewood — slats and fractured skirting boards mostly — was almost gone.
“The time,” she said, “it’s getting longer, isn’t it?”
“Not necessarily.” Cowper leaned forward as she stirred the embers, but stopped short of raising his palms to the feeble flames. In the space of minutes he had gone from the baking furnace of an alien desert to a dank basement in the slums of New Deptford. The contrast could hardly be greater, as was the opportunity for chilblains. But what could he do? His flesh was practically cooked as it was.
“No, not necessarily longer at all,” he repeated, thinking the thing through. “Oscillation is common in older model portals. We’ll just have to hope it regains a shorter frequency sooner rather than later.”
“And if it doesn’t?” She clutched sackcloth to her throat with a white-knuckled fist. “Next time you could be gone for months. Years, even.”
“Not years, my darling, please. Days at best.” He frowned, a mixture of guilt and dread momentarily undermining his confidence. What if Marit was right? What if he returned next time to an armed reception, waiting militia men, an empty shell? Marit wouldn’t be able to survive on her own for more than a week. If he was reported missing, the authorities were bound to come calling. 
“I was so frightened, Joseph,” she was saying, thin form shivering beneath the robe, “so horribly frightened.”
“Well, it’s over now.” There was little else he could say. Both of them knew the reality of the situation. God alone knows, he thought, neither of us is immune to fear. But as the modest fire burned lower, with the satisfying tick of salvage metal cooling in the background, he realised that words were not enough, would never be enough. Not until ...
She was waiting for him to ask, just as they both knew he would. They also both knew the answer to the question. It was merely another of the ways Marit had of beating herself up.
Reluctantly, he draped an arm around her shoulders. This was one chore he could do without. “So how are you feeling, my love?” He did not wish to put it to her any more directly than that.
“I’ve been better,” she said, and instinctively rested a hand on her shrivelled belly.
“That’s thirty-eight months in a row,” he told her. “If I auction the salvaged technology on the black market instead of selling it for scrap, the fertility treatment you so long for could be ours —”
“No.” Voice firm, tone uncompromising, she waved the offer away. “It’s too risky, Joseph. I could never ask you to —”
“You’re not asking me anything,” he interrupted, “I’m offering of my own free will. There’s a difference. Besides, the underground is far more organised now than it was before. There are middle men, financers, networks of reliable informants. The authorities will be none the wiser.”
But she was steadfastly shaking her head.
“I won’t countenance it. What’s the point of another child if it enters the world fatherless? I’ll end up as nothing more than a surrogate for a wealthy couple.”
She was right, of course. Theirs was the last working portal in the city, perhaps the country. If the secret ever got out, public execution would be the best they could hope for. In the background, the cooling heap of metal ticked progressively slower, like a clock running down the days ...


A selection from "The Candle Room" by James S. Dorr

The Candle Room

by James S. Dorr



I
 had come to love Niki deeply. I didn’t know why. She was slender, hollow-eyed—really, most people would call her skinny—believing in so many things so easily whereas I’d describe myself more as a skeptic. But still, I did love her, and so, when I passed the shop again, that I’d passed I don’t know how many times before, and glanced in the window and saw it sold candles, I stopped and wondered.
Niki liked candles.
I felt for my wallet. I didn’t have very much money to spend, but. . . .
Hell, Niki loved candles. She collected them. And, as I’ve already said, I loved Niki.
And so I went inside. There were shelves of candles lining the walls. Tallow candles. Beeswax candles. Paraffin candles — petroleum candles that stayed lit even when soaked with water. And books on candles.
I glanced at the books. There were books on candle making, histories of candles, uses of candles at social events like funerals and weddings, and candle magic — that was Niki’s thing. One book was titled Birthdays and Candles.
Niki’s birthday was on this weekend. She didn’t expect me to get her anything, though I had plans. I’d picked up tickets for the theatre and put aside something for supper afterward. That kind of thing.
But now, surrounded by candles, I thought — why not a present too?  She’d invited me up that evening so, taking a quick look inside my wallet, I let my eyes travel over the shelves, taking in prices, colors, and materials. There were molded candles, finely carved candles, and one odd gray candle, maybe about eighteen inches tall, shaped to look like a gnarled little man in a monk’s robe of some sort. Niki would love it.
I picked it up from its shelf to take a closer look. Its features were wizened, a little distorted, almost cartoonish, and its long beard was thick and rope-like. The whole image was a little — almost a little frightening. 
“You like our troll?”
“I—I’ll admit I jumped, for I hadn’t heard the clerk come up behind me. “I—uh—I’m Roger Wenham.”  I held up the candle. “You mean it’s supposed to be a troll?  Like one of those creatures who live under bridges?”
“Well, that’s what I call it,” the sales clerk said. “It’s one of a kind. Part of a lot we got at an estate auction.”  She paused as if she were thinking, then suddenly grinned. “Well, this is sort of silly, really, but there was a lot of weird stuff that came with it. Mirrors and figurines, although most of these were sold to other buyers. But there were other things too, like catalogs, one of which said this was a troll, a sort of an ice troll, except not the Earth kind like in The Three Billy Goats Gruff and all that. This kind lives in frozen caves on Neptune. Except it’s—it’s like in a different dimension.”
“You mean sort of a ‘New Age’ Neptune?”  Niki would like this.
The sales clerk laughed. “Well, that’s what I tell people. You saw our shelf of books on magic?  Some of them came from the same auction. But this candle is just a kind of novelty item, really. So it’s not too expensive.”  She paused and smiled again.
I looked at the price tag. It was inexpensive. “My girlfriend would like it, though,” I said. “And maybe a book on magic as well, if it doesn’t cost much. She likes to use candles to tell people’s fortunes.”
The sales clerk nodded and found me a book on telling fortunes, one of the ones that had come with the odd, gray candle. I looked at its cover, old and faded. I thought, what the heck, maybe I’d have her wrap the candle up to give to Niki tonight, then maybe read the book myself — sometimes, like with this woman, I didn’t always quite know what Niki was talking about so, maybe, this book would help. Then I could give it to her as well on Saturday night, for her birthday proper.
“You know,” the clerk said when she’d rung up my purchases, “there’s a legend about these ice trolls.”  She winked as she handed me my receipt. “In the collection catalog, anyhow. When you looked at it, did you notice its mouth?  Like it was singing. Like it and its fellows who’ve gotten to Earth here — you know, the ones that do live under bridges — miss the others who stayed on Neptune. Whatever their planet is. And so they sing — except this one, somehow, was turned into a candle.” 
I laughed with her this time, though somewhat uncertainly. As with a lot of Niki’s teasing, I never knew quite what I was supposed to take seriously and what was just joking. But this I did know, as I put the candle under my arm and took it with me to her apartment.
Niki would love it.



Niki’s apartment was really a loft—a drafty walk-up that took up most of its ageing building’s entire fourth level. It had been partitioned into irregular rooms, who knows how long back, with walls that as often as not still showed bare lath. But Niki had made it her home, with some walls covered by tapestries, others with posters, and still more with bookcases forming dividers within the divisions. It was into one of these rooms that she led me after she’d unwrapped her present.
This was her Candle Room. That’s what she called it. The only furnishings it contained consisted of the cushions we sat on, and her candles.
Rows and rows of colored candles, in various stands, some in high candelabra against the walls, others in old-fashioned mirrored sconces, others in low bases more toward the center. Some were lighted, but most were kept out, keeping the room very dim.
In the center of the Candle Room she placed her new candle, facing it toward us. Around it she placed three colored candles in a triangular configuration.
She struck a long wooden match on the floor and lit the three candles, first the gold one, then the white one, finally the red. “The red one’s our love,” she said.
She placed the burnt match into a shallow bowl next to where we sat. “I’ll tell you our fortune.”
“Okay,” I said as I tried to look serious.
“Really,” she said. She handed me a brass candle snuffer. “I want you to help me. First use this to put out the candles on the walls, so only the ones I just lit are burning, then come back beside me. I know you’re sensitive — I can read people. You’re much more sensitive than most men.”
I did as she asked, then leaned over to kiss her, but she gently pushed me back. “Later,” she said. “This is important. Try to be serious. You and I form a sort of nexus that magic can flow through. That’s how I’ll be able to find what the future holds for us, but only if you concentrate with me.”
I nodded. “Okay.”  I tried to concentrate on the candles, the three flames dancing. The larger candle in the middle, dark, almost looking like some sort of wizard overseeing a ceremony that went on around him.
“Good,” Niki said. “Now look at the flames. The gold candle first — that represents money. Worldly possessions.”
I watched as she chanted under her breath, concentrating on the flame. Slowly it seemed to waver a little, then, picking up speed, the flame seemed to move in a sort of spiral before settling into a
side-to-side motion.
“Where you work,” she said. “You have a rival?  Someone you think is trying to get a promotion you’re after?”
I looked away from the candle to her face. “Yes,” I said. I’d never told her about Joe Bradcliff, one of the guys in my division, who had been sucking up to the boss a bit more than usual lately.
“He may well get it,” she said. “But don’t worry. That spiral the flame made — that indicates that something’s happening behind your back, but the left to right pattern it went into afterward suggests some kind of change of surroundings. My guess is that he’ll get the promotion but, unknown to either of you just now, it involves a transfer to a different city.”
I laughed a little, in spite of myself. “You mean, if I got it, I’d be the one who’d have to go away?”
“Exactly,” she said. “Now should we go on to the red candle?  The one that’s our love?  Or would you rather concentrate on the white one first?  That’s the one that represents life.”
I looked back to the triangle of candles and now all the flames were moving from side to side. Then, suddenly, the flame of the white one threw out a spark.
I felt Niki’s hand squeeze mine. I looked up again and saw she looked worried.
“The life-candle,” she said. “First, all three candle flames are wavering, indicating that we might both take a trip as well. But that spark — it means some kind of reversal. Perhaps even danger. We have to be cautious.”
“Will we be together?” I whispered. “I mean, if we go away, will it be on a trip together?”
“Shhhh. I can’t tell yet. But now I want you to concentrate hard on the flame of the red one. That’s the one that’s important.” 
She gently squeezed my hand, while I stared as hard as I could
at the red candle’s flame. I watched as its wavering seemed to slow. As a point of bright, white light seemed to form at the tip of its wick, growing hotter and hotter. Hanging motionless, I don’t know how long.
Then I heard Niki sigh. A sigh of happiness.
“Here,” she whispered. “Snuff out the candles. The gold one first, then the white, and the red one last. Carefully, though, so you don’t splash any wax.”  When I had done that, she kissed me and dragged me onto the floor, her arms around me.
“The bright light,” she whispered, “—it showed that our love is growing. Whatever happens, we will be together. In spirit, perhaps, at first—I can’t be sure of that. Whether we’ll go away together. But, later on, if we remain faithful, together in body.”
Together in body.
For now we made love, lit only by the electric light from the apartment’s hallway, shining through the room’s open lathwork. Later Niki relit the wall sconces, then went to the kitchen and brought us back coffee.
“I love you, Niki,” I said. “I really do.”
“Yes,” she answered. She kissed me softly. “You did well tonight — I mean concentrating. Even the little troll-candle agrees. See how his mouth seems to form the word ‘yes’?  And I love you for that, too, even more than I loved you before.”


It was chilly when I finally left Niki’s apartment. The weather was turning well into autumn, but inside I was warm, scarcely feeling the wind of October, scarcely minding that since the buses had stopped running by now, I’d have to walk home.
I thought of Niki and her Candle Room. Of flames and fortunes—I felt the book in my coat pocket and thought of the troll-candle. Bearded, gray men that lived on Neptune in its ice caves.
Then I saw him.
Not the candle, but a real gray man, hunched and bent and wearing a billowing, hooded cloak, scurry into the alley a half block ahead.
I ran to the dead-end alley and looked down its length at garbage cans and trash, shrouded in shadow. No men of any sort, hunched or standing straight, gray or in color.
I listened. I heard nothing. No sounds of scurrying. No sounds even of breathing except my own, until, far away, I heard a car horn honk.
I shrugged. I was dreaming. Awake, on my feet, but still dreaming after a wonderful evening. And if I was going to do that, I thought, as I scurried to my own apartment, I might as well do my dreaming in bed, and do it of Niki.

A selection from "To Love a Monster" by Victorya

To Love a Monster

by Victorya



T
he Great Slaughter happened when I was a baby.  There’s no better name for it I guess; that’s what it was.  That’s what my father called it.  He was always appalled at what we’d done, we being humanity. 
“Bleeding heart liberal!” my mother would scream when he got into the sadness of it all. “Remind me again why the hell I married you.” And then she’d throw something and it would shatter and we’d all scurry, we being my brother, father, and me.  My father would try to calm her down sometimes.  I like to remember him as trying, before he walked out the door to go watch a movie or something, leaving Johnny and me to bear our mother’s wrath.
The gist of the Great Slaughter, as I learned later in school, was that all of a sudden cephalopods fell like rain.  We’d heard of it raining cats and dogs, but never some squid-like things.  They weren’t really squid, weren’t octopi— didn’t really even need to live in water.  They landed on cars and slammed through roofs and broke branches off of trees as they barreled from the sky and everyone, well, they pretty much freaked.  And it happened in the span of an hour.
Then it happened again a week later.
People went out with shovels to bash in the brains of those things.  They got into their cars and ran the cephalopods over, smooshing them into the asphalt and pavement.  Everything was covered with cephalopod guts.
Scientists urged people to stop, to capture them as ‘specimens’ and the like.  The cephalopods were studied and believed to be of alien origin.  They had no biological similarities to our cephalopods save for the outward appearance.  They had beaks on the underside, which was a soft peach or white, three big round eyes with pupils that responded to light, and from five to nine tentacle-like appendages that were used for movement and to feed themselves.  The scientists found out they really liked marshmallows.
I have no idea how they found that out, but that’s what I learned in my fifth grade science class.  Cephies (as they are now commonly called) have an omnivorous diet consisting mainly of small rodents, insects, and vegetables and are known to have a fondness for marshmallows.”  That’s what the Science of Life book said.
Cephies.  I’ve known of them since forever.  After the initial fear and slaughter ended people found out they were useful.  They didn’t grow big, like large cats is all.  They became a staple in any country household, even better than cats at keeping the rats away.  Cephies were intelligent too, not enough to threaten humans (so says the Science of Life) but enough that they could be easily trained.
Shelters overflow with them.
But my mother didn’t believe in Cephies.  “They ain’t right,” she said.  “We should be killing them all.  They’re some beacon or other such shit.  Just lulling us in, then the mother ship will come and we’ll be the pets, you see.” If she caught my dad rolling his eyes when she said that, it would be another rough night.
Of course, our mom, she just wasn’t much for loving anything, be it alien or her own family.  I just don’t think she knew how.  She couldn’t hug without pinching, demanded kisses and our devotion in return for the basic necessities of life.  My father took it in stride until his strides took him away.  I like to think he wanted to take my brother and I with him.  Wasn’t I daddy’s little girl?  He never said I was, not really.  He said my hair was too long once.  “Eugenia,” he said, drawing me close to him.  I stared up at his red stubble of a beard.  “Eugenia, we really have to do something about that rat’s nest of a do you’ve got going.  You really need a haircut, don’t you?”  And I hugged him and he acted surprised.  My dad also told me to respect life.  He said I needed to find meaning in things.  He said I needed to believe that there was good in the world, and that in the end everything always turned out for the best. 
My brother was older than me.  He was twelve to my ten.  He knew more than I did.  “Dad never loved us,” he told me one night as we sat under blankets eating bagels we had secreted away from the kitchen.  Once again we had been denied dinner for not showing our mother how much we loved her.  “We probably aren’t even his.”
That night I woke up to a towering figure roaring into my room.  It grabbed me by my hair that was too long and pulled me out of bed.  As I bounced across the floor I hit something soft, something warm – my brother.  He was screaming and crying and fighting to get out of what turned out to be my mother’s other hand.  She dragged us through the house and threw us in the shower.  The more we tried to get out the more she hit us to get us back in there as she doused us with Clorox and turned on the cold water.  We couldn’t cry out because the bleach would get in our mouths.  It burned through our eyelids.  I couldn’t see, but could feel the warmth of blood dripping.  I wasn’t sure if it was mine or my brother’s as we lay there huddled against each other for warmth.
She had found out about the bagels.
The next morning our mother came into the bathroom where Johnny and I sat still huddled, shivering, almost blue with cold.  “You Silly Billy’s,” she said, tousling our hair.  Strands of my brown locks mixed with the water and snaked down my limbs.  “Why are you still here?  Come on, get dressed.  I made pancakes.  Peanut butter, your favorite.
We didn’t go to school that day.  She took us to the movies instead.  Then we went to McDonald’s and she got us each a Happy Meal even though we were too old.
The next day we went back to school. When my teacher asked me where I was I said like Johnny told me, that I was sick and my mother forgot to write a note.  My teacher eyed me suspiciously, like she likes to do, and during recess she took me aside to talk to me.
“Eugenia,” she said, “you know sometimes when kids are in trouble they can talk to their teachers.  We realize why kids do stuff, like wear long sleeve shirts even on hot days, that they do it to hide stuff.”  I did have bruises and cuts on my arms, not that I’d tell her.  I told her that I was fine and could I go play now and when she said yes I ran all the way to the back fence of the playground to count the links in the chain like I liked and I found a Cephie.
It was small, maybe the size of a tiny mouse.  The sun glinted off its big purple eyes, its pink skin was all dry and dull.  At first I thought it was dead but when I crept closer I heard a noise like a purr.  I didn’t know Cephies purred.  I touched it, and it wasn’t slimy or anything.  Then I wondered if it was sickly out there all alone and then I wondered if I could help and then I picked it up and it kind of snuggled against my hand, trying to wrap tiny tentacles around my fingers and I slipped it into my pocket.
Then I went to the water faucet and splashed water on my hand and slipped my hand in my pocket and felt for the little Cephie and hoped water was enough to save it.
All the rest of the school day I couldn’t think about the way the Europeans sailed around the world or how the multiplication tables worked or even which colors you need to make orange, and art was my favorite class.  All I could think about was the little Cephie in my pocket and slipping out to splash water on it as much as teacher would allow.
I named it Charles.
When I got home I was scared my mother would find Charles and squish him.  But, she wasn’t home yet and Johnny wasn’t home yet either so I let myself in with the butter knife Johnny hid in the backyard for the times our mother forgot to be home before us.  It slid easily down the window in the back so we could open it and crawl in.  I was careful not to hurt Charles as I climbed through the window.
Charles was my secretest of secrets.  I’d bring him down to the creek behind the house whenever I could get away and talk to him about everything.  I told him of Sally at school, the girl my brother liked who told me that I was a little ragamuffin and who was my brother to think she could ever like someone like him.  I told Charles how mad I got when I saw the look on my brother’s face when she told him the same thing.  I told Charles of my dad and how I like to think he tried and was still trying.  That he was going to help Johnny and me.  And sometimes I’d start to cry and tell him through sobs how my dad had to be right, that there had to be something better, there had to be a reason I had a father who ran away and a mother who couldn’t love me no matter how hard I tried.  That’s when Charles would hum the loudest and look at me with those big purple eyes of his and wrap himself around my fingers and, as he grew, around my wrist.
Once, he reached a tentacle out to my face as I cried and I wasn’t the least bit scared.  He was my Charles. He just wanted to catch a tear.  He was humming a pretty song but when he caught my tear he skipped a note.  That’s the first time that happened.
Charles grew bigger fast and it got harder to sneak him out.  But we still went down to the creek or I’d take him to the big field near my house where dad used to take Johnny and me to play Frisbee and eat ice cream while it melted down our cones and stickied our fingers.  Charles liked the field; he’d run around and catch stuff.  Bugs mostly.  I liked watching his tentacles move as he grabbed at the crickets and flies.  When he was done running he’d come over to me and nibble on the grass, taking it up in his tentacles and putting it in his beak like I’d seen the elephants do on the filmstrip at school.
My Charles was smart too.  Sometimes I’d do my homework out there, lying in the grass as the sun heated my neck and my back.  Charles would play with my hair, gentle like, taking a lock in his tentacles and throwing it up for the breeze to catch.  I’d read my books out loud and taught him all about what the Science of Life said about Cephies, and I know he understood me.  I taught him my math tables, and he taught me how to sing and we’d both be out there in the sun singing.
My teacher took me aside one recess and asked how things were at home because she saw me smile more and I said no better no worse can I go play now?
Around four in the morning, I think it was four, my eyes were gummed and screaming woke me up.  I was dragged out of bed by my arm and into the car before I knew what happened.  I fell asleep in the back seat, not even wondering what was wrong I was so tired.  The screams and bumps were just natural to me.  The ride ended at the hospital.
We were there well into the day as my mother explained again and again about my brother’s fall down the stairs and that’s how he broke his arm and the bruises had to be from that too.
We were there when her story changed into him falling off his bike because some bullies dared him to jump at night and he shouldn’t have done it now, should he?
We were there well into the afternoon as my mother explained to the social worker just how hard it is to control such willful children being a single parent and all thanks to a no-good husband who walked out.  A nurse took me aside.  She was nice and clean and smelled like hospital.  She took me to the cafeteria and bought me a grilled cheese sandwich and asked me questions.  I already knew the answers to these questions.  “I love my mom, she does her best, we just get into a lot of accidents because we’re active,” I said between bites.  The cheese was still gooey; I liked it that way.  I dipped the chips in the side of the sandwich to scoop out the cheese, its vibrant orange enticing me.  The nurse smiled and asked if I had a pet.  I wanted to talk about Charles, about how we sing together, about how when I try to do my homework and he wants to play he takes my pencil away, about how he can hide right on the ceiling in my closet.  Instead I said no, can I go be with my brother now please?  And she bought me two cookies – one for me and one for Johnny and gave me a card to call if I ever wanted to talk more.
Johnny, he started acting different after that night.  I guess he learned something I didn’t.  He started rocking our mom in the rocking chair when she was tired.  He started singing to her, “Someone’s rocking my dreamboat,” in his crackling tired voice and she’d laugh and smile and reach up a hand to grab his.  He started telling her that she was the bestest mommy in the world.  He actually said it, bestest.
“Just do it too,” he told me only once.  “Please.  Please Eugenia, it’s the only way.”
But I couldn’t love a monster, even if in pretend.  Now when I cried to Charles, I had more to talk about.  About how my brother wouldn’t help me sneak bagels anymore and told on me when I did, even if it was to give him one and crawl under the blankets like we used to.  And Charles, he’d look up at me with those big purple eyes and he’d sing.  He took to snuggling closer to me, not just on my finger or wrist. He was as big as a cat and he’d crawl on my chest and I’d hug him and cry and he’d reach up a tentacle and his song would miss notes with each tear that fell.  He didn’t hide in his box anymore, mainly under the bed or the roof of the closet and he’d sneak out at night and sleep with me, humming his Cephie lullabies in my ear as his tentacles played with my hair.  I think he spoke to me at night too, in his language of comfort.
When Johnny called me into his room I felt that maybe he’d relearned what I knew, that pretending a monster’s your mom doesn’t mean it is, that moms know how to hug their kids in such a way that the child believes the world is good. That moms love their kids even if they leave spots on the dishes and moms don’t break all the dishes instead.  I hoped I had my Johnny back.
“Do you love mom?”  he asked me.  I didn’t answer.  “Do you love her?” he pressed.
I eyed my brother very carefully.
“Listen,” he sighed, coming closer.  “Just tell me if you love her.  I need to know.  You love me, right?”
I was silent.
“You don’t love me?”
Tears began to fill my eyes.  I didn’t know what to do or say.  I wanted him back, but had no idea why he was asking me these questions.
“You don’t love me?” he asked again, his face pleading. 
“Of course I love you, you’re my brother!” I blurted out.
My brother smiled, a real smile, one I hadn’t seen in a while.  “So, do you love mom?” he asked again.

A selection from "My Beautiful Boy" by Jodi Lee

My Beautiful Boy

by Jodi Lee



H
is views on logic did not interest me. My lack of desire to listen to his ramblings had allowed my brain to wander, and I kept myself amused by mentally ripping the skin from his jowly face.
In fact I didn’t hear more than five words during his whole twenty-eight minute monologue. When he asked my thoughts, I’d coo about how wonderful it was, how everyone at the conference tomorrow would find him the most interesting and knowledgeable speaker there.
I glared at the back of his head as he faced the window and gazed out on the rotund piece of rock floating beneath us; my mind saw him floating out there beyond the glass, blood pulling away from his body in little drops to freeze in the lack of atmosphere.
If thumbprint ID wasn’t required to open doors in this section of the station, I’d have been gone long since. As it was, he and his cronies watched my every move.
I could not stand his continual droning on and on in that snotty monotone. Fantasies of debris from the launch pad smashing through the window and slicing through his pencil-thin neck, severing that constantly babbling mouth from the body that fed it energized me. I closed my eyes and savored the details.


The boy wearing a torn shirt and jeans pulled the cart across the deck in front of the small office building. As he trudged it through the door he thought about the rewards he would receive after the hard labor today. Never in his life had he seen so much treasure in one spot; the Outsider would be ecstatic on his return to the compound. No one had found this before, even though it should have been one of the first places they’d searched.
The old floorboards squeaked. He knew they were barely holding his weight combined with that of the cart, let alone the return trip being double that. This would be the final time he crossed the floor in this building, the final time he would have to be frightened for his very life.
Echoes of the past rebounded in the old mine. He had ventured several miles below the surface, seeking the treasure. Whispers of the long-forgotten ocean roared and swirled in the tunnels and caves; a Goddess’ cries dying in the dark. The Outsider had once told him that his whole compound was once beach-front property, and that all the sand for miles outside the walls was actually the sea-bed.
The young man couldn’t even imagine that much water everywhere. Water was a treasure to be hunted for, just like the precious metals and stones that the Outsider hoarded within the stronghold of the compound.
And he had found a rich supply, the Goddess had blessed him with so much treasure!
Perhaps he could get permission to leave and visit his sisters where they lived on the Station. To leave the dusty rock of existence and visit the sparkling object that hovered just outside of the atmosphere tickled his mind and fired him on. To leave and do anything, anywhere he chose, even if it was just for a few days. With all of his hard work, the Outsider was sure to be pleased, and pleasing his Outsider was one of the great joys in his life.
He grimaced slightly as he hefted the giant container onto the cart. Another one, and still another; added to the others he’d removed earlier, that made nine all together. Enough to last the Outsider and the household at least a half-year.
The boy wasn’t really a boy after all, as could be seen once he was out of the shadows, under the spotlights. Although small in stature, he was indeed a young man. At least two decades in age, when he stood tall he was only just barely over five and a half feet in height; his build lent to the illusion of youth. Slender but well-muscled, tanned a deep bronze from being out in the sun most of the day, his eyes were a washed out shade of blue as were most of the men.
Too much genetic preferencing in the old days had resulted in men that looked alike - dirty blond, pale blue eyes, short. It had become quite rare to see a man with dark features. The Raiders, though, they were dark.
He often wondered what it would be like, to be like the Raiders. All well over six feet, dark and muscled like oxen, the Raiders went from station to station, compound to compound, planet to planet - trading, selling and thieving whenever they had a chance. Raiders didn’t believe in a Goddess, any Goddess. They didn’t even believe in a God. Just themselves.
He thought of the fickle way in which they used the women of the stations and outposts. Often, the women were left with child. On their next trip through the area, if the men remembered which woman he’d been with, he’d visit again. If the child was dark and heavily built, the Raider would take it when he left again. If the child was pale and small, it was left behind. As he himself had been, only to live with the shame his mother reminded him of every day while she was around. She’d even named him Raize, a common slang term for Raider. Since the women were not allowed to abandon, sell or give away boy-children, his mother had sold herself into service to an Outsider in order to support her little family and avoid prison.
The next time the Raiders visited, she managed to escape with one, leaving her children behind. The girls had long-since left the Rock, seeking their own way in the ‘verse.
Leaving Raize behind.


Oh, blessed silence – finally! How I have longed for your touch.
I couldn’t stop staring at my hands. The blood that had covered them, though having been washed away long since, still seemed to stain the skin. I was sure there were rings of dried gore under the edges of my nails - I was constantly picking at them as though to remove it.
Perhaps no one else would see it. Could see it. My bent head only lent validation to my ruse; I was a grieving half-wife, the remaining concubine after the death of my Outsider master. I was finally free at least. Nobody seemed to suspect that I had done him in, I played my part well.
I believed I had everyone convinced that I did in fact love the droning lump of narcissistic flesh that had bought and paid for my services.
There I sat, picking at my nails while the station accountant crunched his numbers. My portion of the assets remaining after the station had taken its chunk could not be reckoned in dollar amounts. Rather, the accountant was telling me I’d be given a set amount to live on, each month, via tix at the station warehouse. The room we’d lived in for two years had been paid for in full, all amenities included.
But, should I show any resistance to staying on the station and continuing my life as his ‘widow,’ everything would be forfeit.
“Madeline, you can have as many lovers or as few, as you choose. You can never marry, and you can never bear a child. Should you wish to leave the station for any length of time beyond that of a months’ visit to the City, you forfeit your claim. It will then become station property to do with as the Leaders see fit.”
I had a week to make up my mind. I didn’t need a week.
I knew what would happen if I returned to the City without a means to support myself. They’d put me back up on the block to be sold as concubine to yet another Outsider. I didn’t want that
I wanted to be able to pick and choose my lovers from the wandering, random flocks of human men that I’d seen on the station.
Yes, the chances of my conceiving would be higher with a human, but I’d never had the pleasures of intimacy with one of my own kind. I’d always been for sale to the highest bidder, and those bidders were always Outsiders. Besides, there were ways around conception.
Below, on the human home planet - once lush and green, now an overheated sand dune – there were men who could use that very heat to keep me from conception. There were no codicils stating I could not use sterility as a form of contraception.
I continued to stare at my hands while I considered my position. I was heartily sick of Outsiders, the main tenants of the station. Rarely did humans come and when they did, they didn’t stay long. They traded, they drank in the bar, and they left - in a trail of dust and disaster that some Outsider low-rank would then clean up. Even the Raiders didn’t stay long here.
If I stayed here, in these rooms where I had finally rid myself of he that owned me, I would be treated as Outsider upper-rank. I could freely walk the station at any time, visiting the bar or docks without reprimand.
I could troll for a human man.
I glanced up at the accountant. For an Outsider, he was actually rather handsome. “Are there any stipulations in regards to birth control?” I smiled as I’d been trained; doe-eyed and innocent, yet the knowledge of the worlds apparent in the slow grin.
“None. He was advised to put one in, but he ignored it, knowing you wouldn’t leave the station as long as there were funds at your disposal here.”
I nodded. Glancing out the window to my left, I observed the planet of my birth. I could not remember anything other than constant, unforgiving heat searing through the atmosphere and literally baking the surface. The Station was cool, maintained at a constant temperature just below comfortable for humans.
Down there, a hack could burn the lining from my uterus. Anesthesia was no longer an option down there, not for humans. I could live with the pain, so long as I remembered the freedom. It was the smell of my own burning flesh that would get to me.
Not to mention the smell on the planet itself. Earth One in the old dog days of summer was not a healthy place. Outsider refuse and bio-waste was barely contained all over the planet. Thus, when it really began to heat up – it really began to smell.
I sighed. Freedom and money outweighed the cons.
“I’ll stay, but first I must visit Earth One.”