08/02/2024 Snippet, AUDITION.

Huh. I actually have a decent idea of how this is going to go.

That was a gamble, which paid off with a laugh. “Good! You’re one of the quick ones. And it’s ‘Agent Beltran,’ not ‘sir.’ I’m a cop, not a headknocker.”

He looked at his folder, which was made from actual paper. “And you are… Norman Baker. Born 2183, grew up in Lubbock, Johnson, was drafted for your one-year after high school. You voluntarily re-upped with the Peeps last year, though, took a five-year oath.” His eyes snapped on Norm. “Why?”

Norm exhaled — in relief. He’d guessed right about whether he’d been asked this question. He even decided that it was time for the truth. “The Peopl– the Peeps never had any trouble paying me, Agent Beltran. With the Old Man not doing so well–”

Dying, Baker,” Beltran corrected him. “President Lewis was dying. We can say things like that, now.”

“Right. Sorry. With the Old Man dying, it seemed smart to stay in service, right? No matter what happened, I’d get fed, and my family’d get my stipend. I wasn’t staying in to, you know, make a pile of cash or anything. I just wanted to keep my head down until the dust cleared.”

08/01/2024 Snippet, AUDITION.

New story! Set in the same world as GHOSTS ON AN ALIEN WIND. The title is a placeholder. You may also recognize the name.

People’s Defense Citadel #235
State of Riel
(Saskatchewan, Former Canada)
2103 AD

They decided to hang Danny the Deev in the morning.

Norm Baker (Corporal, People’s Liberty Corps) hoped that meant that the executions were over. They’d been pulling the PLC troops out of confinement three times a day for a week now to watch the hangings. At first, it was horrible, watching your own get treated like some kind of seccy rebel. After a while, you got numb. A while after that, you started counting how many of your buddies were still around and not kicking, and then it was horrible again.

But Danny was up there, all alone. And he was easily the worst bastard on base, except for the major who used to run this Citadel. Her, they had hanged right away. So maybe the worst was over? He figured they had to end sometime, unless the FSOBs were just gonna process the whole Citadel, right down to the foundations. And they could have done that any time they liked.

None of this showed on Norm’s face. He didn’t say a word about it, either. Not to any of the guys in his barracks, not to anybody in the chow line at breakfast afterward, and for damn sure not to anybody sitting at his table. He didn’t need the blinking collar around his neck to remind him to keep his damn fool mouth shut, except to shove food in. A lot of the guys who took a turn doing the gallows gavotte had talked themselves into the line. He wasn’t gonna do anything stupid, unless it wouldn’t matter anyway.

#commissionearned

Snippet the Last, THE REAL THING.

Thank God, it’s finished. Finally gelled at the last moments. Up on Patreon later.

On the other side, there was… well, it was once a man. There were still fragments of clothes on its long, splayed-forward arms and torso, and the withered wisps of what must have once been a full beard and head of hair. Its fingers were stretched forward, impossibly long, and I didn’t need magical senses to feel the closed circuit of sorcerous energy that flowed between it and the corruption, sustaining both, and neither.

I did need those magical senses to taste the flavor of the magic involved. I nodded, once. “Mage’s Alliance.”

The figure heard me. It couldn’t move its head, but its eyes swung towards us. It even managed to talk, after a fashion. “Another mage! Quick, help me destroy this filth–”

That’s when I interrupted it. “You’re on the wrong side of the river,” I told it calmly, and slammed the tip of my staff straight through its earhole, and out the other side. That probably would have done the job, but I let loose a little magic through the staff anyway. Better safe than sorry.

07/30/2024 Snippet, THE REAL THING.

Exasperation!

The road was called ‘78’ — the Old Americans had the most boring street names of any people, any place, any time — and it clearly wanted to be plowing straight through a heavily forested area. As we kept walking east, though, the forest grew sicklier and sicklier. Within a mile, the trees weren’t sick; they were dead. The grass had long since withered away, and even the lichen and fungi had vanished.

It was about then that I started feeling the pressure on my improvised (but well-improvised) charm. The sensation wasn’t unbearable. In fact, it was easy to get used to. It was still a reminder that we weren’t anywhere safe.Lost Atlanta was pretty flat, so it wasn’t until we had reached one of the old maglev lines — okay, quick digression. Those weren’t magical. Yes, I know they look magical. Yes, I know that ‘lev’ is short for ‘levitation.’ But ‘mag’ was short for ‘magnetic,’ not ‘magic.’ It was all done mundanely, which admittedly sounds insane. The Old Americans were just really good with mechanical things, and I don’t care what those Ancient Mystical Tradition writers from the Second Republic are telling you. Books like those will rot your mind — right, sorry, ranting.

07/29/2024 Snippet, THE REAL THING.

Lost Atlanta! …It’s horrible.

I’ve never seen a ruin as pitilessly bare as Lost Atlanta. Never. It had all the terrible purity and horror of a skull caught in its final death rictus. Even the air felt dead. Then again, it was.

It’s not that I haven’t seen ruins. The East Coast has a fraction of the population it once had, even in the Second Republic and the Kentucky Free State. My own Kingdom of Virginia is a land of empty towns and fallen ruins. But there’s still life in plenty to be found. Trees, grasses, bamboo, the animals that feed on those things, the animals that feed on those — there’s plenty of creatures that breathed a huge sigh of relief when their human neighbors went away, leaving behind all those lovely abandoned buildings to den in.

That wasn’t true here. The former lawns and planter pots now only grew hard, rocky clay, with a brown crust that must have once been grass or trees. There were a few surviving shrubs, mostly under some of the covered walkways. But even then they didn’t really survive. They were just… shriveled and shrunken, so dry that leaves and even branches puffed into nothingness if you breathed on them. Nothing was alive, except us. Even the cracks in the ground revealed no crabgrass or moss.

But there were bones, though. Bones I recognized, from the riverbank and the earlier fight. And far too many of them.

07/28/2024 Snippet, THE REAL THING.

Fights!

“Grab those ropes tight!” ‘Bob’ shouted. “I need them taut!” 

For a second, it didn’t register — but then my eyes snapped in his direction. I could feel my face congeal with horror as I realized that he really was swinging the Old American fire ax at the ancient, writhing cables. The live cables, the ones full of electricity

I couldn’t intervene. My own hands were filled with spells to push back the other eruptions of plastic, wiry death. It was also too late to scream “STOP!” but I tried anyway, if only to let myself feel better later. ‘Bob’ heard me, but he didn’t even try to hesitate as he buried the ax into the tangle of wires trying to drag Nellas away by the throat. Its metal edge dug deep into the mass, cleaving cables in two…

…and nothing else happened. Well, obviously the cables were cut off from the central mass. But there were no sparks, no St. Elmo’s Fire, no grotesque last Galvanic Gavotte from the legends. Just a spray of cables, and fragments of decaying plastic through the air. Nellas even looked like he was getting more air.

“NEVER MIND!” I screamed again, and immediately changed tactics.

07/27/2024 Snippet, THE REAL THING.

I finally blocked out the rest of the damned story. It’s like pulling teeth, this summer.

Finglas, Elanor, and I all hissed, “Hold!” at the same time. Perforce, the entire group stopped. Any one of us would have been enough to get them to stop, but all three? I’m surprised they didn’t take a few steps back. I’m surprised I didn’t.

“Lifebane,” I asked/commented to the other two. “Vitalism drain. I have a spell watching for it.”

Elanor nodded, and showed a blackened vial of goo. “Special fungus. Does the same thing as your spell. Doesn’t say what kind, though.”

Finglas grunted. “Air just smells bad here. Dead, but the wrong kind of dead. Dry-dead, not new-dead.”

“That’d be all the invisible demons in the air being killed,” I observed, then grimaced. “Sorry: all the bacteria. Good news if any of us get a cut, bad news if we go too much farther without protection. Elanor, you’ve got stuff for lifebane, right?”

07/25/2024 Snippet, THE REAL THING.

Logic!

Best of all, I had managed to get an insight. “Where did the naked lizards come from?” I asked our impromptu grand council.

“You’re the mage,” Finglas pointed out. One of his ears looked pretty ragged, but he had gotten through the fight all right. “I’m sure you can tell us.” 

“Yes, I can.” I pulled out one of the scribbled-on maps we had brought with us. They were our best guesses of the roads around and through Lost Atlanta, and were just accurate enough that we kept using them. “Those things came at us from the north, which is where we think the Chattahoochee River is. They couldn’t have been far from their home hunting grounds, either.”

“Because they’re so thin?” Elanor asked. “Wouldn’t the river have fish in it, though?”

“Maybe,” said Nellas. He had gotten a nasty slash across his arm, but it was healing up well. “Some of these places got cursed or lifebaned pretty hard, back during the Discovery. But even if it does have fish, these creatures aren’t going to be great in the water.” He poked at one of the naked lizards we had cooked up for dinner. “See how these feet and claws move?”

I studied the half-eaten corpse. “Yes,” I finally intoned. “I have no idea what it means, though. You’re the scout, though. I’m sure you can tell us.”

07/24/2024 Snippet, THE REAL THING.

More fights!

And the naked lizards had been whittled down to something almost manageable. Most of them were worrying at the meager flesh of their fallen packmates; the rest had learned wariness, at least. “How smart are these heconnar?” ‘Bob’ snarled as we scrambled past the half-cleared hedge that was our major defense. “Because they don’t act too stupid!”

“How would I know?” I snapped back. Then I paused. “Dammit. They’re not sapient. Their heads are too small and they don’t have hands. These things are here to eat, not think.”

“That sounds like good news!” Either Elanor was mad, or just wanted to get in the spirit of things, because she was being loud, too. “Why is that a problem?”

“It’s not!” I grimaced, and lowered my voice. “It’s not. I just hate it when I have to correct myself. I did know, after all.”

07/23/2024 Snippet, THE REAL THING.

Magic!

I don’t like casting spells outside of the Kingdom. The magic is so slow out here, like I’m running through syrup, and it smells/tastes weak, too. More than one Virginian mage has gotten into a lot of trouble by trying to pull in magic that just wasn’t there, or tough enough to be pulled, so I had to be quick and gentle in absorbing the local the energy… I’m sorry. This makes more sense to mages. Try to imagine that I was pulling a tablecloth off of a table without disturbing the dishes and glasses, only the tablecloth was really tissue paper. You can still do it without everything ripping, but you need to do it right.

I got it right. Mostly. Well enough that the difference didn’t matter. It’s actually no big deal when your nose bleeds. Anything can cause a nosebleed, right? You only really have to worry when it’s your ears or eyes. The important thing was, I had the power I needed by the time I jumped through the ring of fire. So obviously it was time to start using it.

I started out by taking over the flames, fueling them from some of my own gathered power, and the magic still remaining in the area. That wouldn’t last forever, either, but I didn’t need forever. I steadied that spell in one hand while pulling together a cloud spell with the other. It sounds harder than it is; most simple magics can be done one-handed, and we train ourselves to use both, from an early age.