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  • The Probability of a Rose
    The penthouse of the Chrysler Building was a cathedral of glass and gold, overlooking a New York that pulsed like a neon heart. Julian sat at the grand piano, but he wasn't playing. He was staring at a series of equations scribbled across the ivory keys. "The distribution is almost perfect, Clara," he murmured. Clara stood behind him, her silk dress shimmering like oil on water. She was a...
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  • Wuthering Shadows
    Wuthering Shadows Chapter One The fog over London did not roll in so much as descend, like a verdict handed down by a court that had already convicted you of a crime you had not yet committed. Elinor Harlowe pulled her shawl tighter against her collarbone and walked faster along Bloomsbury Street, her boots clicking against wet cobblestones in a rhythm that felt almost like running, if...
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  • The-Melody-of-the-Albatross
    The Last Watcher of Vega Station ACT I: THE SIGNAL The fog rolled off the Thames like a shroud, swallowing Greenwich Hill whole. Inside the basement of the Royal Observatory, Eleanor Ashworth adjusted the brass eyepiece of a contraption that no proper astronomer would be caught dead using. It was not standard issue. It was not approved by anyone. It was built by someone who had no business...
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  • The Granite Cage
    (Film Noir) The rain in Los Angeles didn't wash anything away; it only turned the city's filth into a slick, reflective mirror. Elias walked through the corridors of the Blackwood Estate, a decaying gothic monstrosity that looked like it had been built by someone who hated the sun. He was a "recovery specialist"—a polite term for a thief who stole from people who couldn't call the police. His...
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  • Sample V-04: The Data Harvest
    (New York Realism) The Hudson River is not a body of water; it is a liquid graveyard for the city's failures. It carries the runoff of a thousand factories and the discarded dreams of a million immigrants. Marcus knew the river better than anyone. He spent his days in the industrial wasteland of the West Side, dredging plastic crates and rusted rebar from the muck for a wage that barely covered...
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  • The Litany of the Last Breath
    (Style C: Grand Narrative) The continent of Aethelgard was a dying beast. The sky had turned the color of a bruised plum, and the great floating cities were descending, one by one, into the toxic mists of the Lowlands. The Cosmic Law, the sentient, mathematical force that governed the physics of the world, had decided that the era of biological intelligence was over. The Matriarch stood on the...
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  • The Chef Who Did Not Belong
    The kitchen of Balthazar did not reject outsiders actively. It rejected them passively, with a force that was all the more powerful for being unspoken. It rejected them through the subtle codes of language and gesture that every kitchen develops over years of shared service, through the particular way a chef holds his knife or the particular tone a sous chef uses when calling out an order,...
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  • The Unwanted Inheritance
    The Unwanted InheritanceAct I: The Case Nobody WantedThe phone rang at 11:47 PM on a Thursday, which was the kind of hour that told you everything you needed to know about the call."Morrell here.""Mr. Morrell? This is a Mrs. Eleanor Price. I—I don't know how to say this, but my husband works for a man named Vincent Croft, and something happened, and I don't—do you do private work?"Jack Morrell...
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  • The Telegram from Harley Street
    The telegram arrived at 7:42 on a Thursday morning, which was unusual, because telegrams had not been sent in London for decades. It was hand-delivered by a motorcycle courier who did not speak and who left before anyone could ask questions. The telegram was addressed to Dr. Arthur Winthrop, Harley Street, London, and it contained exactly four words: ARTHUR DO NOT TRANSFER. Arthur read the...
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  • THE PATIENT FROM BELOW
    Dr. Arthur Voss could not remember how he had arrived at the hospital. This was not, strictly speaking, true. He remembered driving through Vienna on a February evening in 1896, the gas lamps casting amber pools on the wet cobblestones, the carriages bouncing over puddles that reflected the windows of the cafés where men sat drinking brandy and talking about the future of the Balkans. He...
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  • THE PATIENT FROM BELOW
    Dr. Arthur Voss could not remember how he had arrived at the hospital. This was not, strictly speaking, true. He remembered driving through Vienna on a February evening in 1896, the gas lamps casting amber pools on the wet cobblestones, the carriages bouncing over puddles that reflected the windows of the cafés where men sat drinking brandy and talking about the future of the Balkans. He...
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  • Title: The Price of Proficiency
    (Act I: The Exchange) Julian lived in a New York where talent was a currency that could be traded in the dark alleys of the Lower East Side. He was a nobody, a failed musician with a heart full of ambition and a wallet full of air. He found the "Broker," a man whose face was a blur of shifting features, who offered him a deal: absolute proficiency in any skill, in exchange for a "sensory...
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