Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Apeiron Streets, Part 1

A short story that's likely to become a novella. It's the first part of a story that I rediscovered and am currently editing. I'm likely to expand it, hence the novella statement. It takes place in a universe I've created called 'Void.' Likely to be other stories that take place in this universe, both in its dysfunctional cyberpunk future and its distant fantastic past. For now, enjoy a partial introduction to the world of Void!

Apeiron Streets
It’s almost go time…

Of the three glittering jewels of the Perseis Star System, Shin had never been anywhere but the advanced and intricate world of Kore. Even then, he had never set foot near the peaceful suburbs, nor the impressive high rises of the capital city. All his life had been spent in the industrial facilities and inner ghettoes of Apeiron’s outskirts. Abandoned as an infant, he should never have made it to adulthood.

But he had been born lucky, unlike so many other abandoned children. A scavenger from one of the largest street gangs had discovered him and taken him in. As a result, he’d spent his life, surrounded by violence, crime, and the absence of Mother, the sophisticated world-spanning AI that made civilization possible. Having known no other life, it was only natural that he entered the criminal trade of his rescuer.

Adjusting his grip on his stolen silent shot, he aimed it at the hover-truck driver. The driver was shortcutting through the alley to make time. He would pause for several seconds to make the turn into the more visible areas. Just gotta wait for the right…

The driver reached the perfect position. Shin did not hesitate. He fired the silent shot, watching as the hover truck’s window shattered right before the driver’s skull did. Scrambling down from the rooftop he had made the shot from, he drew his sonic gun, a cheap knock-off of the more reliable military models.

Carefully looking around, he approached the truck and yanked the dead driver out of his seat. Two of his thugs appeared and dragged the body away, presumably to be tossed into a dumpster. The rest carefully opened up the cargo area to make sure that they were indeed swiping hard merchandise, not Opees. Shin joined them and shared a grin with his enforcers. “Wha we got here, boys, is some hard merchandise,” he drawled in the sloppy dialect of the slums. “I’m sure KoreCorp gonna love gettin’ dis stuff back. An’ if they dun wanna pay up, sure to be somun who will.”

“Big Boss gonna reward us real nice for this haul, eh, Shin?”

“Yup. ‘Specially since no Opees be buggin’ us.”

‘Opees’ was street slang for the Office of Planetary Security and the corrupt police forces. They were one of the three arms of the Koren military, and inarguably the weakest part. Run by the Politicians, the police forces were more parasite than actual crime-stopping unit. Most of their efforts were highly publicized raids that were efficient in convincing the masses that the Police looked out for them. Shin chuckled cynically at the thought.

He stopped laughing when, out of the corner of his eye, he saw the characteristic white combat armor of a squad of patrolling Republican Guards. The formidable Republican Guard—Reps—quelled minor uprisings, policed high-danger zones, performed disaster relief and rescue missions, tasks for which the Police were poorly trained. They constituted a genuine army under the authority of Mother and the Director of Perseis. Hardened thugs shuddered at the mere thought of confronting a squad.

Quickly, he whistled the three high notes that would warn the others of danger. This succeeded in bringing the Guards attention on him and the idling truck.

“You! Stop right there!” their captain bellowed. He was cut short when Shin’s sonic bullet hit the vulnerable spot in his abdominal armor. The other Guards took cover as Shin’s enforcers opened fire.

He was grinning as he turned his back on the gunfight. Not hesitating in the slightest, Shin got into the driver’s seat, gunned the engine and left the Guards—and his enforcers—behind.


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This work by Ronald Mina is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.

Monday, July 26, 2010

Inner World, (?)End

Simple little writing prompt I put before myself. Short version? Manifest an inner world and override reality.

Inner World, (?)End
My eyes are closed. There is no need to look outward. Or should I say inward? This is not the world that people know. You could say that such a world cannot exist anywhere. The weather is not set. It can change in the blink of an eye. Sometimes, it is an arid desert where nothing can grow, a desiccating wind the sole accompaniment to the immolating sun. Others, it is a blizzard without let that covers everything within this land under the snow, allowing no one the possibility to advance or retreat. The snow will capture, freeze, and slowly...bury.

It is desert now. I sit... I rule alone in my inner world. I have imposed my will on reality, bending it to the shape of my true vision. True....? I'm not sure. It is true that I have reshaped everything that falls into my territory into my vision. My territory is endless; it lies beyond the horizon. Even if the true world seeks to reject my inner world, it must bow down so long as my will continues.

I open my eyes. This landscape is very familiar to me. Dotting the landscape like tombstones are familiar shapes. I don't know how many times I've drawn them. They're always there. There's more of them each time I bring forward my inner world. How many broken ideals have been forged into something new here? How many dead dreams have been painfully scrapped?

I wonder how many words I can use to describe the raw materials? Dreams, fancies, fantasies, ideals, hallucinations, delusions, illusions, wraiths. Specters. Fake. All of it is nothing but a dream. False dreams, broken ideals, crushed fancies, murdered fantasies. You can't escape my territory. No matter how you far you run, you'll see nothing but the end result of the raw material.

I slowly stand. To your left is steel with an undulating style. To your right, the simple elegance of a curve belies deadliness. Beyond that, steel of every type imagined and seen exist. My right hand reaches out and draws from the ground my favorite type of sword, the schiavona. If you're here in the desert, I'm sure you understand. The blizzard would have given you a peaceful demise, but here in the desert of my inner world...

You have entered the Field of Blades. Forged from false dreams, broken ideals, crushed fancies, murdered fantasies, each one of these swords is stronger than any mere mortal or his insignificant hope. Few can survive the despair embodied here. Even fewer can continue on with these manifestations of wounds and still feel the pain inside each sword.

That doesn't matter any longer. Here, I am King. The desert is unkind. My swords are forged from that harshness. It is irrelevant if you fight. Come, I will show you kindness.

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This work by Ronald Mina is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.

Friday, July 9, 2010

87

Someone misses you
Their pain is more than soul deep
They mourn lost futures

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Saturday, July 3, 2010

86

Haiku structured stanzas strung together. I think I managed to keep the spirit of the haiku even as I told a longer story. For things I can't name, I'm just numbering. As the previous one was 85, this one is 86.

Precisely a year
I am like the Fisher King
The pain is still here

My dear assailant
Liar, traitor, beloved
Justice, please strike soon

What a bitter day
For I still bleed everywhere
Today it hurts more

Perhaps a good knight
Will be merciful today
And end this by force

No such mercy comes
I exist in sheer agony
Suffering alone

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Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Alone Against the Mob

Short historical fiction piece. This incident is attested to in Appian, where it's confirmed that Octavian strode into a mob of people who wanted to rip him into tiny pieces and stood his ground. The crowd took out its fury on Octavian by trying to stone him to death. It's quite possible that Octavian would have died here had Mark Antony not heard about what was going on and dispersed the crowd with the army. Now that the history street cred has been presented, on with the story.

Alone Against the Mob
Any curious sightseer who wished for a majestic view of the city of Rome had one destination: the Palatine Hill. The richest and most exclusive of all the city’s addresses, the Palatine was home to senators and knights, the elite of the First Class. The draftiest house on the Palatine was worth more than hundreds of acres of prime real estate anywhere else.

The Palatine loomed over the Forum, the center of Rome. In the same way, the First Class towered over the other social classes and dominated the governance of Rome. But Rome was not just a city; it was an empire that ruled the Known World. The world turned on the fulcrum of Rome, Forum, and Palatine. Decisions made here by the Senate and People of Rome reverberated everywhere from the Pillars of Hercules to the Euphrates, from the swampland of Belgica to the First Cataract of the Nile. It was unfortunate that the Senate and People of Rome failed to grasp that decisions taken outside of Rome could also have a great impact on the Eternal City.

Gaius Julius Caesar Octavian maintained no such illusions. He stood on the northwestern slope of the Palatine so he could survey the scene below. His slight form leaned against a plinth that supported a statue of his divine father. Both he and father's effigy stared down at a Forum obscured by a smoky haze.

He was not the great Julius Caesar’s biological son. Octavian had been adopted by his Uncle Caesar to carry on the family name, to ensure that the great patrician family Julius would live on, that the honor earned over seven hundred years would not be lost. It was a great privilege and a great burden that he had shouldered for six years. By the calendar, he was twenty-four years old; by experience, he reckoned he was at least a hundred.

Octavian looked away from the Forum, and looked up at his Uncle Caesar’s statue. They shared similar traits, fair-haired and light-eyed men, but Octavian was slight where his uncle had been muscular, of middling height when his uncle had been tall, sickly when Caesar had been vigorous. Even so, he had been close to his uncle, the son of Caesar's soul, the inheritor of his spirit. The adoption had been a surprise, one amongst many concealed in Caesar’s will.

Caesar’s will. Octavian closed his eyes, remembering his great uncle’s smile. The petty men of the Senate, led by that drunkard Cato, had attempted to strip Caesar of the honors and glory he had reaped subduing the barbarians of Gaul. Caesar had refused to allow it and had crossed the Rubicon, precipitating civil war. Octavian’s cousin, Mark Antony, had been there, and had told him Caesar’s words at that famous crossing: Aneristho kubos: Let the dice fly high!

The civil war had ended with Caesar’s victory. How could it not have? Julius Caesar had been the greatest general in all the history of Rome. And how it hurt to say “had been”!

Uncle Caesar had been assassinated by the heirs of Cato, Brutus and Cassius. Twenty-three men had ambushed Julius Caesar in the Senate House and stabbed him to death. These had been men who had received Caesar’s mercy during the civil war and men who had been trusted friends, yet both had joined hands to murder Uncle Caesar. With Caesar’s death, Rome had been plunged into civil war once again, Assassin against Caesarean.

Would Caesar have approved of all the things Octavian had done? He had marched on Rome, seized the consulship, formed the Triumvirate with Mark Antony and Lepidus, proscribed his enemies, and participated in the Battle of Philippi. A lifetime’s worth of achievements packed into half of one. And despite it all, it was on the verge of being undone.

Octavian finally returned his gaze to the Forum, looked down upon the rioting rabble. Things had not been going well for him. Philippi had been a mess. His health had always been poor, a side-effect of his asthma. The battle had produced so much dust that he had suffered a brutal asthma attack that forced him to seek the marshes just to breathe.

Unfortunately, Mark Antony's rude health precluded anything resembling understanding for the weaker constitutions of others. The moment they had returned to Rome, Antony had condemned him for a coward and had disseminated the distorted tale far and wide. And then he had had the gall to drop on his shoulders the miserable task of regulating Italy and the grain supply, with the added trouble of finding land for the veteran soldiers to settle on and money for their bonuses when Rome was bankrupt.

His fists clenched, the only sign his togate form revealed of his rage. Antony tormented him in the East, withholding money, fleets, and support. The grain supply was in the hands of his nemesis, Sextus Pompey, son of the legendary Pompey the Great. That piratical heir to a great man controlled the stomachs of Rome and Italy, long unable to feed themselves.

Every year the price for grain grew ever dearer. Every year, Octavian had to raise taxes from highest to lowest to pay for the grain. Every year, Octavian would try to come to a deal with Sextus, to get the pirate off his back so he could deal with Antony. Every year, Sextus would break their agreements and make Octavian's burden greater. Every year, Octavian was more reviled and loathed.

This year had been the last straw. With grain ever more expensive, he had expected the People to support him in refusing to once again come to an agreement with that pirate. Instead, they had been demanding that he reach an understanding with Sextus, that he bring about peace at long last. He had very publicly refused even as he grimly raised taxes to continue to pay his legions.

For many, that had been the last straw. Ever since his decision had been announced, all of Rome from the Quirinal to the Aventine had been rioting. Shops and temples had been set ablaze, mansions and banks had been looted. Graffiti scrawled on every wall slandered his name and threatened him with death. That reprobate Antony had been no help at all, too busy wallowing in his recent marriage to Octavian's sister. Just as well he had sent the Seventh, Eighth, and Eleventh Legions to defend the granaries, else they'd all be in the sty.

“Caesar?”

Octavian looked up from the urban battlefield that had been the Forum, then looked further up as his tall German bodyguard frowned down. He was the captain of his bodyguard of Ubii tribesmen, fierce cavalry troopers he had inherited from his Uncle Caesar. They had fought for Caesar from Alesia to Zela, and had a well-deserved reputation for ferocity that made even Roman legionaries tremble in their boots. Tall, blonde and blue-eyed, they did not wear armor, trusting to their spears, long swords, and shields for defense.

“Yes, Herman?” Octavian replied in German.

Herman looked pleased; it had flattered his bodyguard when Octavian had begun to learn their language. These men, far from their misty forests, were absolutely loyal to him, just as they had been absolutely loyal to Caesar. They would die for him if he asked.

“Caesar, are you really going to walk in there?”

Octavian, aware that his dozen Germans were listening, smiled Caesar’s devil-may-care smile. “Of course. Are you saying you have something more pressing to do?”

Herman snorted, hefted his shield and spear. Even though he was a foot taller than Octavian, there was no doubt who commanded. “You lead us, Caesar, and we shall follow you to Tartarus.”

Still smiling, Octavian turned on his heel, and began to walk down the Palatine Hill. His trusty Germans surrounded him as they marched into the rioting thousands. Gaius Julius Caesar Octavian was no coward, and it was time Antony, and all of Rome, knew it.

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Monday, May 24, 2010

Safe Journey

A safe trip to you
Though you go across the world
My heart is with you

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Monday, May 17, 2010

A Familiar Silence

Today I saw you from afar
It was a first in much time
Or perhaps it was a last?

Even then, my mind was mute
Muzzled by a certain thing
I do not know what to think

A familiar silence
My mind did not heed my call
Twas another who acted

Treacherous eyes bore witness
Heart of glass that did whimper
Lungs that did not do their work

Unholy strain my chest did feel
My hand reached across that space
Untold agony of loss

Is the first last or last first?
Heart no longer speaks to heart
What could I say to reach you?

Could emotions bridge that gap?
Can you hear my heart screaming?
Or is your heart deaf to it?

I don't know what else to do
Now I pray for miracles
Will some kind god grant me one?

A familiar silence
An unbearable silence
In that place in me that's yours

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This work by Ronald Mina is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.