Frequency-Theta-9
The Silence Beyond
The void outside the observation port had no stars. This was not unusual at the galactic rim, but it was always unnerving. Captain Silas Thorne had been staring into it for seventeen years, and he still found himself expecting the darkness to resolve into something familiar—a constellation, a nebula, the distant glow of a star cluster. The darkness never resolved. It simply was.
"Aegis," Silas said, "bring up the perimeter scan."
The AI's voice filled the bridge with a...
The Perfect Resonance
The world ended not with a bang, but with a spreadsheet.
Art Black knew this because his therapist — a woman named Dr. Mitchell who had uploaded her consciousness three years ago and came back different — had told him exactly that. She described the spreadsheet in precise, clinical terms: the exact percentage of the global population that had chosen to upload, the cost savings to the global economy, the projected increase in happiness metrics. It was a beautiful spreadsheet. Beautiful in the...
The Last Echo of Blackwood
The dome was dying. Arth knew this the way he knew the weather — not through measurement or data, but through feeling. The walls vibrated at a frequency that sat in his chest like a bad tooth. The air tasted different than it had when he was a boy: thinner, metallic, with a faint sweetness that reminded him of old blood.
He was seventeen years old and he had never seen Earth. Everyone on Blackwood-9 had died here or been born here or arrived as a child. The planet was a rust-colored...
The-Last-Watcher-of-Vega-Station
The Ashworth Vow
The key was heavy when Lord Edmund Ashworth took it from the sideboard. Not heavy with iron, but with something older and heavier still—the weight of four hundred years of stone and memory. The key was tarnished, its bow carved with a design that looked at first glance like ivy but upon closer inspection resembled hands clasped in an oath.
He stood in the vaulted entrance hall of Ashworth Hall, and the house exhaled around him. The air was thick with the smell of damp wool...
The Inheritance of Hollow Bones
The screaming began at three in the morning, but it was not Evelyn's voice.
She sat up in her narrow bed, the wool blanket pulled to her chin, and listened to the sound pouring through the floorboards of Hollow House. It was her mother who was screaming — she knew this because the sound came from the wing below — but the words being screamed were not in English. They were not in any language Evelyn knew, or perhaps any language that existed in the world she understood.
She had heard this...
The-Caretakers-Signal
The Null Protocol
The neon was the first thing Rex Mercer noticed when he woke up. It was always the first thing. Red, blue, amber—colors bled through the cracked polycarbonate window of the data center bunker and painted the walls in a slow, hypnotic pulse. Outside, Neo Pacifica never slept. It couldn't. The city was powered by the Megacorp servers in the upper tiers, and those servers never stopped humming.
Rex sat up and pressed his left hand to his eye. The cybernetic implant—a...
The-Classified-Frequency
The Seventh Legion
The command deck of the UNS Indomitable was the size of a football field and smelled of ozone and cold coffee. Commander Marcus Hale stood at the center of the tactical table, his mechanical right leg making a faint metallic click with every shift of weight. He had lost the flesh leg at the Battle of Cygnus, three years into the war. The military prosthetic was the latest model—responsive, durable, nearly indistinguishable from a biological limb except when he stood...
The Frame Job
The Frame Job
My father didn't die in an accident. I knew that the way I know my own name — not from evidence, not from proof, but from the small, constant pressure of a thing sitting inside you like a stone in a shoe. You don't notice it until you stop walking. Then you notice everything.
His name was Marcus Moss. He was forty-two when he died. He was an engineer on the Stellar Anchor Program, a gravitational tether system designed to stabilize Earth's orbit around a Sun that had been...
THE ARCHIVIST'S WAR
Act I: The Filing
Sublevel Seven of the Central Archives Tower smelled of dust and slow decay. Julian Moran knew this because he had spent six years on that sublevel, and his sense of smell had adapted to the particular chemistry of aged paper, oxidizing adhesive, and the faint metallic tang of the tower's climate control system, which had not been properly maintained since the Tower was built.
His job was filing. Not the dramatic kind -- not searching for hidden truths or uncovering...
THE BEACON BEYOND
Act I: The Pulse
Station Twelve existed in the space between Kepler-442b and nothing. Thomas Grierson knew this because he had been given the station's orientation coordinates on his first day and had memorized them the way monks memorize scripture: not because they meant anything, but because repetition was a form of discipline, and discipline was what kept you from thinking about the void outside the observation windows.
His job was simple: listen to the signal, log its patterns, transmit...
THE PALE WITNESS
Act I: The Seeing
The fog came in thick on Tuesday, the kind of fog that turns Blackpool's lighthouse beam into a pale thumbprint against a sky the colour of wet slate. Edmund Harthwaite stood at the lantern room's window and watched the working quarter below wake through the mist.
He knew three of those workers would be dead by Friday. He did not know which three. He only knew, with the certainty that was his particular curse, that three of them would not survive to see Saturday's tide....
THE MIRROR OF BLOOD
Act I: The Pattern
The rain in New Shanghai did not fall so much as it accumulated, layering itself in thin sheets across every surface like a slow, persistent erasure. Mor watched it from the doorway of his hab-unit in the lower district, watching the acid droplets eat into the metal plating of the street below with the same indifferent consumption that characterized everything in this city.
He was a Moran-class synthetic detective unit, seventh generation. His designation was Moran-7,...
Blogs
Διαβάζω περισσότερα
The Silent Inquisition
The fog of 1884 London did not merely cling to the cobblestones; it felt like a living shroud,...
The Keeper's Oath
The first seal was placed in 3000 BCE, beneath the ziggurat of Ur, by a Sumerian priest named...
The Rot of Blackwood Manor
The Spanish moss hung from the ancient oaks of the Lowcountry like the tattered lace of a dead...
The Weaver of Sands
(An Arabian Nights Modern Variation of 'Old Man Crank')
In the shimmering heat of modern Dubai,...
The Last Root
The soot fell like snow in Manchester, 1851. Thomas Webb was nine years old and already knew the...