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  • THE GOLDEN EPIPHANY
    Act I — The Gift of Double Vision The moor wind came down from the Yorkshire heights like a judgment, carrying with it the taste of distant storms and older sorrows. Arthur Pendelton stood at the edge of the cliff, his thin frame swaying slightly in the gale, and watched the meteor shower tear itself across the sky. He was nineteen years old, with eyes that made people uncomfortable—not because...
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  • The Ghost in the Machine of Memory 8
    The rain in Los Angeles was a relentless judgment. The rain in Los Angeles was a relentless judgment. The rain in Los Angeles was a relentless judgment. The rain in Los Angeles was a relentless judgment. The rain in Los Angeles was a relentless judgment. The rain in Los Angeles was a relentless judgment. The rain in Los Angeles was a relentless judgment. The rain in Los Angeles was a relentless...
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  • The Bus Stop
    The television in the convenience store showed a man in a suit talking about the future. The future, according to the man in the suit, would be here sooner than you think. On the screen, a robotic arm picked up a small metal part and placed it in another robotic arm and the second robotic arm placed it in a box and the box was sealed and shipped and the cycle repeated, faster and faster, until...
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  • THE ETHER SEEKERS
    London, 1896 The telegraph company occupied a three-storey building on Foster Lane, not far from St. Paul's, and in the basement, behind a door that no one opened, was a room that contained decades of discarded signal records: handwritten logs from 1874, printed strips from 1880, and, most recently, the magnetic tape records from the wireless receivers that had been installed in 1895 as part of...
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  • Paper Rings
    Paper Rings The vending machine at the Winnebago convenience store on East 14th Street had a habit of taking quarters and giving nothing back. Rachel Cooper had been trying to get a coffee out of it for twenty minutes when a man in a pickup truck jacket leaned against the machine, punched it on the side, and the coffee fell out. "Thanks," she said. "No problem." He took the coffee, handed it to...
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  • The Coroner's Burden
    I The first time Dr. Edward Ashworth heard a dead man's last words, it was through his knees. He was at St. Bart's Hospital in London, preparing to examine the body of a dockworker named Thomas Riley, who had been found floating in the Thames with his pockets full of stones and his face frozen in an expression that the attending physician described as "singularly contorted." Edward was...
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  • The Great Projection
    The champagne in Julian's glass was flat, much like the conversation surrounding him. He sat in the center of a gilded ballroom in Manhattan, 1924, where the air was thick with the scent of expensive tobacco and the desperate noise of a thousand people trying to convince themselves they were happy. The jazz band played a frantic rhythm, a heartbeat for a city that had forgotten how to sleep....
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  • The Void Laughter
    Sarah didn't believe in God, but she believed in the Math. As a professor of quantum psychology in New York, she had spent her career mapping the architecture of human despair. She believed that grief, anxiety, and terror were not just emotions, but quantum states—energy signatures that could be measured and manipulated. Then she found the Leak. It started as a series of anomalies in her data....
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  • The Cypress Window
    Edith Merriweather did not cry when she learned of Thomas Ashworth's death. She simply stood at the window of the east wing and looked toward the moor, and she did not look away for a long time, and the woman who was folding her laundry noticed this and said nothing, because in a house like Ashworth Hall, silence was the only language that everyone understood. It was October, 1888, and the fog...
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  • The Increments of Staying
    Tom O'Brien did not decide to stay. He decided not to decide, and the not-deciding accumulated, increment by increment, until it became indistinguishable from a decision. The increments were small. A deadline he could not miss. A source who was about to talk and who would stop talking if Tom left town. A rent payment that would be due before the Starward launched and that he could not afford if...
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  • The Hourglass Mind
    I.The coffee was bitter and the room was warm and Alistair Blackwood was not sure which version of himself had sat down at the desk this morning. The one who remembered dying at twenty-eight in a Vienna clinic, or the one who had woken up at twenty-four in the spring of 1899 with a headache and a conviction that time was not what it seemed.He looked at his hands. They were steady. They had...
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  • The Transparent Girl
    (V-12: Southern Gothic) The Blackwood Manor was a place where the air felt like wet velvet and the shadows had a habit of lingering long after the lights were turned on. In the deepest room of the east wing, behind curtains of heavy lace, lived Clara. Clara suffered from a condition that the doctors in New Orleans called "The Glass Fade." It was a slow, cruel erosion of the body. Her skin was...
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