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28/03/2016
20/03/2016
Excerpt from my short story "On the horn"
Dancer flipped the arm rests down and
eased back into the drivers seat. He stared out of the narrow viewfinder at the
sheer rock face on his left, then across the open bushland to the right,
randomly dotted with boulders of various sizes, probably dropped by some
ancient, retreating glacier. The blue-purple sky was getting darker with every
passing second; there was maybe thirty minutes of light left at most. Drawing
in a long, deep breath and exhaling slowly, Dancer grabbed his datapad. He
already knew his schedule, he’d checked it every day for the last week, but now
that the work cycle was coming to an end, he enjoyed looking at it all the
same. Eighty six days on world, four to go. He just had to deliver this last
consignment and get the roller back to the depot, then he was off on the next
shuttle to orbit, and from there, the next cruiser back to Earth for two months
rest. But right now, he had other things to think about. Setting down the
datapad, he looked out the viewport once again, trying to spot something,
anything, that was remotely familiar. Yeah, something wasn’t right. Better wake Steffens thought Dancer,
grabbing the internal comms mic and, as a mischievous smile crossed his lips,
cranked up the volume level in the bunk module to maximum.
“Hey Steffens, rise and shine! Better
get up here! we’ve got new orders from base. Come on Steffens, I need your eyes
up here on the double!”
“Jesus Dancer, you trying to give me a
heart attack back here?! I’m telling you, it wasn’t funny the last time and it
sure as hell isn’t funny now! Anyway, I’ve still got three hours of my rest
period left, what’s so important that…”
“Hey, like I said, orders from base.
They sent us a nav update a while back and…”
“Yeah yeah, spare me the details. I’ll
be right up.” Then, under his breath, “ Jackass.”
“Hey, I heard that!”
“Yeah yeah… turn the damn volume down
you jack… ah forget it.”
Dancer switched off the mic, chuckling
to himself. He knew he should probably stop messing with Steffens, he was bound
to get him back one day. On the other hand, he was senior driver and outranked
the new kid, so might as well have his fun while it lasted. Feeling satisfied
with himself, Dancer had just settled down into the drivers seat once again
when the roller hit something, probably one of the smaller boulders, and the
vehicle bounced up in the air, coming down with a thump and almost throwing
Dancer out of his seat. The auto-nav was programmed to avoid any objects large
enough to cause damage to the roller, but this one must have been just outside
of the parameters. Just about audible over the rumble of the engines and the
crunch and grind of the huge, two hundred inch wheels, Dancer heard a loud bang
and clatter from the bunk module, followed by a pained yelp from Steffens. He
chuckled to himself again, bursting into uproarious laughter as the door to the
bunk module opened to reveal a flustered looking Steffens, sweating and
dribbling blood from a superficial head wound.
“Thanks for the heads up, genius! You
knew I was up and about, least you could do is keep your eyes on the road! I mean…
oh, just fuck you. Fuck you Dancer! You like that? Fuck you man!”
This only encouraged Dancer more, and it
was several minutes before he managed to compose himself, by which time
Steffens had settled down into the co-drivers seat.
“Ok Steffens, I’m sorry, playtime is
over now, ok? Anyway, we got a problem up here I need you to take a look at. Can
you keep an eye on the auto-nav readout while I try and get my bearings with
the external cameras? I don’t really know how to explain it to you, but I just
get the feeling that we aren’t where the nav-com says we are.”
“Yeah, no problem Dancer, but I’m
telling you, I can’t deal with
any more of your crap today…”
18/03/2016
My short story "Fury World" has been published
My short story "Fury world" has been published in the new issue of Nebula Rift magazine, available here: http://www.fictionmagazines.com/shop/nebula-issues/nebula-rift-vol-04-no-02/
08/03/2016
Excerpt from my short story "On the horn"
“Dancer… Dancer I don’t like this. What
is going on, man? It’s like you said earlier, with the rock formations, and the
unbroken earth… we aren’t in the right place. Rodriguez must have overridden
the sat-com, rigged it to send out a false position… I dunno, I’m no radio
technician, but… ah, man, where the hell are we going?”
Dancer was silent, staring out the
viewfinder. Making every effort to remain as calm as possible, he lifted the
radio and, through gritted teeth, hissed “Yugo base. This is Dancer in Roller
Twelve. Do you receive me. Over. I say again, Yugo base, this is Dancer. Are
you receiving me? Hello? Is anybody receiving me at Yugo base? Rodriguez,
Jenkins, will someone respond?”
The channel cracked and hissed, but no
response came. Dancer switched to the general emergency channel, just in case
there was another Roller nearby – he knew there wasn’t, but anything was worth
a try now. Again, there was no response.
“Steffens, we have no choice, we are
going to have to ride it out until dawn and see for ourselves where in the hell
we are when the sun comes up. We’ve been off course for more than four hours,
and we could easily be in unmapped territory by now. God damned company! You
know buddy, the first couple of years out here were great, really great. We got
all the training, all the support, all the spare parts you needed and then
some. If anything went wrong, even the slightest niggle with the Roller,
there’d be support vehicles despatched from multiple locations to guide you
home. There weren’t any decommissioned relief bases, or comm stations with only
one technician on duty. There were three men to each Roller, and they even made
some of the more important runs by dropship. Now though, it’s like this whole
place is falling apart. I can’t believe they actually gave me a co-driver for
this run now that I think about it; I’ve been running solo out here for, oh,
the last two or three work cycles. Some of the guys I joined up with back at
the beginning, lifers like me, just stopped coming back after their off time
back on Earth. When I tracked a couple down back home, they told me they got
laid off! You’ve seen all the raw materials we’re carrying around out here,
right Steffens? No way anybody should be getting laid off, this planet is an
embarrassment of riches. Then they replace them with… no offence kid, but,
well, you new guys just don’t get the training we got. When they first planned
this expedition, we were signed up to three years training – yeah, that’s
right, three years! Toughest part was the acclimatisation simulators. You see
that rebreather you carry around there? Well us old timers don’t need them
because we spent months cooped up in pressurized chambers, to teach our bodies
to breathe the atmosphere here on 296e. But you new guys, you get six weeks
training, and then get sent out here with no clue what you’re doing, unable to
breathe the atmosphere, and barely getting paid enough to make coming all the
way out here worthwhile! I mean, Steffens, you’re alright buddy, don’t take it
personally, but I really miss some of those guys, you know? Ah hell, forget
about it. Sorry to go on about it, it just gets to me. But hey, it passes the
time, eh?”
“Erm, yeah, sure thing Dancer. Thanks
for the history lesson. I’ve, er, got some news feeds I’d like to take a look
at if you don’t mind…”
“yeah, whatever, I’ll shut up for a
while. Have at it, kid.”
04/03/2016
My short story "The bad, bad luck of Judson Worley" has been published
My short story "The bad, bad luck of Judson Worley" has been published in efiction magazine, available here: http://www.fictionmagazines.com/shop/efiction-issues/efiction-vol-06-no-12/
01/03/2016
Excerpt from my short story "Fury World"
As
the planet shook, the creature stirred. It’s massive body, wrapped around the
planet’s core like a dog warming it’s belly by the fire, began to expand and
contract as it flexed long dormant muscles and tendons. It took stock of it’s
extremities; countless tendrils, each many miles long, spread far and wide
throughout the planets mantle. Their tips rested amongst underground caverns
and fissures, drawing in moisture and minerals that were, for the most part,
impossible for any drill to exploit, although a small percentage of the
creatures appendages did come within reach of the surface. Still, it had no
desire to go up there. It was cold, and barren on the surface. No, it would not
travel to the edges of its world. Not unless it had no other choice.
Many
years ago, they had come. They had dared to come to it’s world, to change it
for their own needs, and to walk upon it as if it was their own. The first
time, it had not been ready for them, and once the terra-ships had left, it
seemed that their activity had become minimal. The creature, though angered,
allowed them to remain. For now. If they respected it’s world, it would respect
them.
Years
later, the ships returned, and the creature remained idle no longer. It extended
a tendril and plucked the Tau Ceti out of the sky as though it were a child’s
toy, but it allowed the other ships to flee, returning to it’s eternal slumber.
A warning, then.
But
now, they returned a third time. Had they no value for their own lives? Was
it’s world so important to them? There were other worlds, uninhabited worlds,
ripe for the taking. But they chose to return here once more. It had lain here
for millennia, waiting for another of it’s kind to make contact. Perhaps it was
the last, it did not know. But there was one thing that it did know - It would
no longer tolerate these pathetic mortals to walk upon it’s home, to change it,
to pile their waste upon it, to build their structures and land their vessels.
They would pay the ultimate price for their transgressions. The creature,
enraged, began to dig.
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