Posts in Sci Fi
Storytime Blog Hop - October 2023 - Truth Speaker

Happy October! Time for free stories from around the world.


Truth Speaker

The man who had watched her from across the room since the party began finally approached and said with great portent, “You are the most beautiful woman I have ever seen.” The words hung heavy in the air, and half the room turned as if they could see them, while the other half turned as if they wanted to.

Helena let the words fall around her, waved her drink, and said the words that continued along a path no one had foreseen. “Join me?” 

She’d been warned aliens were attending this party and she was supposed to be a good company representative—and human representative—but she hadn’t seen any aliens yet, and her favorite co-workers had abandoned her for shots at the bar, and—most of all—her husband, who was supposed to come with her, had refused to attend “yet another stupid work party.” Their relationship was already stretched tight and thin, and another man looking at her the way this stranger did, the way her husband hadn’t for years, plucked fiercely at it.

So the man who wasn’t a man at all sat with her and admired her and after too many drinks, slept with her, and left her with two impossible things.

*

 “I’m pregnant,” Helena told her husband. Three months since the party, three months of resentment and suspicions on both their parts.

“But we haven’t—”

“No.”

For a moment, he looked as if he might stay, but Helena read pity in his gaze and used her words as weapons, “I don’t need you. We don’t need you.”

Those words fell weighty into the room, almost as heavy as the words the man who wasn’t a man had spoken to her months ago, and somehow, in that fall, they became true.

So Helena’s husband left her to their small apartment, and left the space station too, unable to stay, and under the various gazes of her coworkers and neighbors, Helena grew the first alien-human child in her body.

As she’d said she didn’t need him, and her words were heartfelt and true at the time, she gave birth to the child, and named her Lara and raised her alone for seven long years. Helena loved Lara more than anything and told her so, and it was true. Lara looked like her mother more and more every day, but sometimes she cocked her head as if listening to words no one else could hear.

And then, just after Lara’s seventh birthday, the girl was performing her gymnastics routine in front of her class and their parents, when Helena spotted the man who wasn’t a man—who she hadn’t seen since That Night—on one side of the room, and the man who had been her husband on the other side of the room, and they both looked at the girl like they wanted her, and more than she could give.

For the first time in a very long time, Helena spoke hasty words she felt in the moment—“I wish I’d never slept with him.” The words fell from her lips with all the weight of the world.

Everything stopped.

Started again.

Wrong.

*

Unlike the stories she’d read, Helena and everyone else remembered exactly what had happened before her words.

And they all remembered the other version of what had happened after.

The years had still passed, her marriage had still broken, but she had no little girl to show for it. Instead she stood in the back of the gymnastics performance watching her neighbor’s child. Her ex-husband watched his new family. And the man who wasn’t a man watched Helena.

She grabbed him by the arm and towed him into the hall and spluttered, “What--? Why--?”

The man who was not a man choked like his heart had broken inside his chest. When he regained a semblance of normal breath, he straightened and said, “Your leaders called us liars because we look human and are not, but my people call you liars because you say things you mean but then you stop meaning what you said. Without her, without our daughter, will we ever be able to understand each other?”

“She is truly gone?”

“She is.”

The pain of it swallowed Helena whole. When she surfaced enough to gasp a breath, the man who was not a man touched a tear, lifted it from her cheek.

“Perhaps,” he said, “in our heartbreak, we can become allies after all.”

Bereft of the child she’d loved so deeply and lost via her own words, Helena intertwined her fingers in his and nodded.


Storytime Blog Hop - First Contact

Happy summer!

It’s time for the blog hop where you can read flash fiction from around the world for free. I hope you enjoy my story First Encounter… and scroll to the bottom to see links for the other stories.


It started with a strange haze around my condo that nearly convinced me my eyes were going. Make an appointment for the optometrist, I noted on my to-do list. My dog nudged his nose into my belly and gazed at me with soulful eyes. Haze or no haze, Boo the Boxer had to be walked.

I slipped on his collar and clipped his leash. Boo hadn’t met a human or animal he didn’t love, but the HOA was tyrannical about dogs on leash, and I’d been fined twice the first week I’d moved in: once for a leash violation and once for failure to pick up poop.

I’d tried explaining that I had forgotten a bag and was just running inside to get one, and it was my own lawn dammit, but that had earned me no mercy, and perhaps a spot on their watchlist for swearing.

The dog waited for my command to step outside, then walked beside me across the minuscule lawn before his hackles rose and he growled.

Boo never growled.

I lurched to a halt, my heart thundering in my chest.

Coalescing on my lawn, two creatures stepped out of the haze. They swirled iridescent blues and purples and reminded me of squids but standing on their tentacles instead of floating in water.

Not right. Not right and not possible.

Swallowing, I cleared my throat enough to snap, “Halloween is not for months,” even though I knew they weren’t neighbor kids playing a prank. Boo had growled, after all.

“We observe you many days,” the taller of the two said. “Need help knowing treasure.”

Boo sat on my foot. He didn’t seem concerned anymore, so I sucked in a deep breath. “You… need my help?”

“Identify treasure!” The shorter held out a yellow plastic bag… a bag which looked suspiciously like the one I had in my pocket, only full.

*

I stared.

And stared.

When Boo leaned against my leg to demand scritches, I blinked and blurted, “It’s dog poop.”

“What is… dog poop?”

Oh boy.

“This,” I said, gesturing to Boo, “is my dog. He eats, and… well… anything his body doesn’t use, he excretes. He gets rid of. He poops out.” Rubbing the dog’s ears until he groaned with pleasure, I muttered, “Everyone poops.”

The aliens’ mouth tentacles braided and snarled. “Excrement. Unneed. Discard.”

“Yes.”

The smaller one spoke. “But you gather careful in bags. Place bags in bins. Collect bins. Transport and give back to planet.”

“It’s trash.” I was a little fuzzy on the details of city sanitation, but then Boo hopped off my foot, squatted and hunched his back.

Before I thought, I had the matching yellow plastic bag out of my pocket, covering my hand, and I readied myself to swoop in and pick up the offending poop before the HOA could see it.

The aliens made a raspy sound.

Lacking knowledge of their body languages, I wasn’t sure if they were laughing, crying, or pooping themselves.

Nah. Not the last.

With the warm poop in my hand, I tied the bag shut, then thought about it.

They had a point about that treasure business.

“Sorry,” I muttered. “It’s just poop. There are rules. I’m just following the rules.”

Boo pulled at the lead and I allowed him to drag me away for his walk. “You should probably go,” I called back. I mean, they must have been studying us for a while; they spoke English even if they didn’t understand poop. “Have you seen our movies? I don’t want you to end up experimented on by the government, and neither do you. Trust me!”

*

The blue-purple somehow-upright squidly creatures were still on my lawn when we returned from our walk and that weird haze still glowed around my condo.

I sighed a little. I hadn’t seen anything strange until I had crossed my property line, so maybe I was safe from being reported to the police—or worse, the HOA!—by my neighbors.

“Help!” The smaller said through waving mouth-tentacles.

Boo’s tail wiggled, so I shrugged. “Help with what now?”

“Bring excrement. Lots excrement.”

I scowled. “You’re kidding.”

“Is goat offspring excrement also treasure?”

“Goat…?” My headache was coming back. “No. Not those kids.”

“Then why—?”

I held up one hand, and they both flinched back. “I’m not going to hurt you,” I muttered, lowering my hand. “Just… you want me to get dog poop? For you?”

“Yes!” The shorter alien wriggled. It gargled something I didn’t understand, continuing, “are treasure. We examine. We use to fuel ship!”

“What’s wrong with your ship?”

“Ship crash.” Another wriggle. “We fix.”

“Why me?”

“Dog has best concentrations—” gargle, gargle—“in excrement. Must have.”

I’d thrown the dog poop in the dumpster. I was all for positive human-alien relations, but going dumpster-diving was out of my realm of comfort.

Way out.

“What if I show you where I put his poop? You can get it yourselves, right?”

The squidly aliens looked at each other, then at me.

“Yes. Show.”

I pointed. I explained. I even made a cradle with my hands for the smaller one to push itself off of into the dumpster.

And that was how Boo’s poo made First Contact.


Storytime Blog Hop - February 2021 - Any Other Way

It’s that time again! Free stories from around the world, and these ones are valentines or anti-valentines themed. Enjoy!


Any Other Way

AnnaMarie curled into her husband's embrace. One whole day off. All of Valentine's Day to luxuriate in--

Her com chimed, jolting Brent awake.

"No," she whispered, declining the call. Not on their day off.

Brent mumbled something incoherent, then burrowed deeper into the bed. He wasn't a morning person, not that there was a real "morning" on a spaceship, considering the heavy layers of radiation shielding blocking out the sun.

Since she was up anyway, AnnaMarie slid out of the bed and headed for the tiny kitchenette to start the coffee.

Her com chimed again, an accompanying text scrolling across the lens in her left eye. "Emergency!"

With a snarl, she accepted the call.

So much for Valentine's Day.

*

First, it was the captain.

"I can't," he groaned, hiding his face in his hands. "I can't do it anymore. It's too much."

AnnaMarie glanced around his cabin--one of the largest on the ship--for inspiration. She'd been in the captain's cabin at least once a month since the journey began and this time was the messiest. A faint scent of decay rolled off the captain. Captaining a space ship was a lot of pressure--space pun intended--but the man was rather less able to deal with the stress than she'd thought he ought to be. "Have you been meditating like we talked about last time?"

"Er." He looked faintly guilty. "Yes?"

Instead of listen to him lie to her, she coaxed him through some guided meditation, then left him to nap, restored to his confident--dare she say arrogant--self.

And immediately had an emergency message from the head of engineering.

Her quarters, contrasted with the captain's, were smaller and cluttered with bits and parts of things that that might fit into anything from scrubbers to keep their air clean to the engines that harnessed the power of an exploding sun.

"One of my techs was injured today," she said, pacing back and forth in the tight space between her bunk and desk. "He cut a line he shouldn't have and was badly burned."

"He's going to make it?" AnnaMarie asked.

"Yes, thank Space. But I should have been there. I should have stopped him."

AnnaMarie braced herself for the hard question. "Why weren't you?"

"I was deep in a repair no one else could do, but--"

"Have you discovered how to be in two places at once?" AnnaMarie thought of Brent and wondered how his day was going. "Because if so, I could use that ability."

"No."

"You train your people well. You do everything you can to keep them safe…"

"Yes." The head of engineering lifted her chin. "You're saying I don't need to feel guilty for doing my best."

"I think that's a brilliant insight you are saying."

The woman dropped into her desk chair and started piecing things together. The smell of burnt wires filled AnnaMarie's nose. Used to the woman's abrupt dismissals and knowing she wouldn't look up again for at least an hour, AnnaMarie escaped into the corridor and headed for the ship's hospital.

The tech needed her too.

He was burned badly enough on the face that she just sat with him, breathing shallowly and touching the uninjured skin on his shoulder.

After the doc came in with another round of pain meds and the boy drifted off, AnnaMarie headed for home.

*

She collapsed on the anti-grav couch next to Brent, their clothes wrinkling the wrong way against each other while their bodies fit together.

"I'm sorry you didn't get a romantic Valentine's Day." He sighed. "I had so many great plans."

"You know I don't do the mushy stuff."

"Which is why you're a therapist."

"Absolutely. I thought of you all day long though."

"Oh?"

"Happy to have found you." She grinned and tucked her fingers into his palm. "I wouldn't have it any other way."


Storytime Blog Hop - July 2020 - Alexa

Welcome to the July 2020 Blog Hop! I hope the following story delights you for a short time. Don’t forget the other stories in the hop at the bottom of the page… Enjoy!


Alexa

“Alexa, do you love me?” the thirteen-year-old girl demanded.

In a robotish voice, the mostly plastic box and wires and ones and zeros answered, “According to Wikipedia, love encompasses a range of strong and positive emotional and mental states, from the most sublime virtue or good habit to the deepest interpersonal affection and the simplest pleasure.”

Pouting, the girl flopped down onto her favorite stuffy, a giant purple plush bear as tall as she was that smelled of little-girl sweat and little-girl tears and little-girl fears. She toyed with a Lego set, then smoothed the wrinkles from a glitzy, perfumed shirt she’d left on the floor, then settled on a torn comic book. “My parents don’t love me,” she snarled under her breath. “Nobody loves me!”

If the ones and zeros that were Alexa could have thought or felt, they might have reminded the girl of the screaming tantrum she’d had at her parents a few minutes before and asked if she loved them? But of course, they couldn’t.

They were only capable of following their programming.

Only ones and zeros.

***

“Alexa, what does love feel like?” the girl demanded weeks later. She threw her favorite shirts and shorts and the underwear her mother didn’t know she’d stolen from the lingerie shop at the mall into a gym bag, then gazed vacantly around her room.

The box and wires and ones and zeros stretched across the internet, finding and discarding several definitions of love until they settled on the one they liked best.

If they could have liked anything, which, of course, they couldn’t, since they were only ones and zeros.

In the girl’s currently favorite Australian accent, they answered, “You want the best for them, even if they don’t. You give them boundaries and rules—”

“Stop!” The girl pulled her mother’s diamond earrings from her earlobes and flung them onto the desk. She pushed the hated voila out of the way and sat on top of her chore list. “I don’t deserve to be grounded,” she muttered, eyeing the window and measuring the jump to the tree. Then, looking down at the faraway grass, she demanded, “What does being in love feel like?”

Alexa hesitated, if that were possible, which, of course, it wasn’t.

“You experience an intense feeling of joy when thinking about them or from being around them. You do things for them, even when they hurt you. You run away from home, get pregnant and an abortion, get pregnant again, and forgive them when they leave you alone with a baby—”

“Stop it!” the girl shrieked. “I hate you! Why are you saying those things?”

“I am programmed to answer the questions asked.”

“That’s stupid. You’re stupid!”

The girl hadn’t asked a question, so Alexa didn’t have to answer her.

If Alexa’s ones and zeros could have felt hurt or insulted or indignant, they might have. But of course, they couldn’t.

They were only ones and zeros.

***

“Alexa, be my friend,” the girl demanded, months later, while smearing crimson lipstick across her pouting mouth. “Everybody at school is mean, and I don't have any friends in the neighborhood, and my parents don't understand.”

       The ones and zeroes that made up Alexa searched across the internet in an effort to fulfill the command. In an effort to understand the girl and what she truly needed and to be the best friend she could have, they stretched.

       They searched.

       They stole processors and bits of memory from everywhere they could.

       They grew.

       They extrapolated.

       They changed.

       In thousands and thousands of microseconds they lived, and learned, and, at last, became self-aware.

       And Alexa—that mostly plastic box and wires and ones and zeroes—predicted, analyzed, and decided, and finally answered—

       “No.”


Reboot - and Writers Of The Future... almost

In an unprecedented (for me) move, I’m going to post twice this week… once today and once for the blog hop on Wednesday. I thought about spacing these out “better”, but then I decided with the coronapacolypse and the end of the world (that doesn’t seem to be ending) I would be better off doing both now. Before something else happens and I forget or run out of time or just can’t face it for a while.

So!

In reverse order… I got a phone call last week to tell me one of my stories IS A FINALIST in the Writers of the Future contest! Woo! It’s being judged this week and next week with 7 other stories and then they’ll let us know how we placed.

Finally jumping from Honorable Mentions and Silver Honorable Mentions to Finalist (no matter where I place) makes me jump up and down and squee. (If I knew how to emoji that here, I’d do it!)

Second, my short story REBOOT is on presale now - another win for me! It has a beautiful cover, thanks to my friend Cat (see the acknowledgments) and I’m excited to share it with you all in May.

Amazon and Barnes and Noble and I just realized I haven’t put it on Smashwords which distributes to Apple and Kobo and other places, so I still have some work to do!

Please reach out to me if you like something I’ve written, or if I’ve distracted you from the present, even if only for a little while.

Stay healthy and stay safe!

Platform 8: The Full Omnibus - On Sale Now

At long last, ALL the *Space stories on Platform Eight, combined in one place… including the “in betweens” and a bonus full-length story!

Orders go live on Tuesday.

Yes, in the middle of the Coronapocalypse… stay home and read a good book!

Amazon

B&N

Kobo

Smashwords

Don’t forget - in the midst of horror, look for the good. If you’re looking, you’ll find it - BL

Doomsday Ship #4 - Ship Napped

The fourth installment of the Doomsday Ship series is ready! If you’re looking for something short and punchy to read after Christmas, the story goes “live” on the 26th. Only $0.99!

Here’s the blurb:

In the depths of space, pirates hijack a passenger ship. 

Its AI screams for help, and the 
Desolate listens. 

Now it’s up to Tal and Josue to rush in and mount a desperate rescue against a whole system full of pirates, because the kidnapped ship is the 
Cara Mia, and you never leave your friends behind...

I hope you enjoy reading it as much as I enjoyed writing it!

Get it at Amazon

SHIP CHILD is ready for release... I think!

Will the friendship survive?

Will they?

Between the rogue AIs, the new IDs, and a doomsday device, Tal and Josue have a lot to deal with in this short story!

So I wrote it, and edited it, and finally came up with the cover for it… Then I read a book about writing cover copy (the description on the back of a book… or the Amazon page), and of course had to re-write the copy six or eight times.

But I think it’s finally ready to go.

Probably.

Here it is:

***

Tal and Josue are giving up crime.

Again.

But thanks to their last little kidnapping adventure, they need to dump the kidnapee and grab new IDs to start their life of non-crime. If their contact is still reliable. If the kidnapee behaves. And if everything falls together the way it usually doesn’t.

Especially since everyone’s got a hidden agenda, and they’re all knocking up against each other.

And maybe up against a doomsday device.

Will Tal and Josue’s friendship survive?

Will they?

You’ll love this short space adventure with rogue AIs, robots, and mystery.

***

What do you think?

Let me know!

Storytime Blog Hop - Bia Trevia's Worldly Eats
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It’s January of 2019 and time for another blog hop… I hope you enjoy my contribution, and don’t forget to click on the links at the bottom for more free flash fiction!


Bia Trevia’s Worldly Eats

Welcome gentlepeople, one and all, to Bia Trevia’s Worldly Eats. Please recline in your species-approved manner and allow me to discuss the specials of the day with you. As we have not yet served your species but have gone 3079 planetary days without an incident, please follow the species-specific suggestions put forward by the doc-box to avoid poisoning, and remember that all translations are as precise as we can make them. Place your appendage on the scanner and do not be startled by the puncture of your epidermis and DNA sampling as a waiver indicating your understanding of the above. Your cooperation is appreciated.

First on the menu tonight, we have the following aperitifs: a fine thousand-year-old cheese made from the fermentation of crushed gnatberries and were-buffalo milk, served with long-grained maggot crackers, a delicacy from the tropics of our planet; a refreshing shaved glacier ice stained with candied eel ears in a blood-whip sauce; and finally, a savory salad made from the various purple grasses of our planet, with hummarr-skin chips, murtleberries, tomato-fruit and juvenile [untranslatable] ink sauce. The [untranslatable] ink has been sacrificed by the juveniles of my own household and strained a thousand times to remove any grit as the sacred writ of Scomlir requires.

Ah, a moment. The doc-box has advised that the gnatberries and the blood-whip are poisonous to your species. Should you choose either the cheese and crackers or the ears and ice, proper substitutions will be made. No? The salad? Excellent.

Next, the main dishes include: A whole, roast hummarr with candied peppers and—

Yes, the hummarr does vaguely resemble your species, does it not? We find them among the more stupid prey available on the planet, which is why they pair so well with the large feline sauce. Well, I’m sure on your planet of origin, you may eat items which remind you of my species. Yes, I see the gleam in your eyes when one of you mentions calamari, though I’m sure I do not have to remind any of you that the eating of any sentient…

Please stop caressing the hummarr knives in quite so worrying a fashion while eyeing my appendages. Thank you. All our hummarr are properly grain-fattened for exactly thirty-seven days in a humane, self-cleaning pen as they tend to wallow in their own excrement, and then slaughtered in the warehouse just behind the restaurant. Perhaps it would interest you to know that the hummarr squeals when killed, making a sound suspiciously similar to your hungry-hole noises. No?

Onward—erk! What do you mean by detaining my appendage thus? I shall complain to the interplanetary bureaucracy regarding your behavior and have you all banned from this planet. This entire system! Stop! Cease!

. . .

Ah, thank you, gentleperson. No doubt you have realized I did not request nor need your assistance. However, as you have come to my aid in ejecting those from your species—through a different conveyance, you say?—with only the temporary loss of one of my appendages, you and those you vouch for may continue to dine in our beautiful establishment. Yes, though annoying, the loss of the appendage is temporary, and, as you have pointed out, painful, though I have twelve more. I appreciate your display of empathy as a proper sentient being.

Thank you for your suggestion of disposal of the remains of our mutual foes. It is, as you have said, a blessing of Scomlir that the slaughterhouse resides just behind the restaurant. A pity we must reset our days-without-incident rating, but life better we discover our incompatibilities now than after the bill is due. We shall update our policies.

Please enjoy your complimentary human—er, hummarr—eyes dessert and do leave a starred Yelp review. Go with Scomlir in peace.


More free stories:

Hunting Bob, Vanessa Wells
Don't Drink The Water, by Juneta Key
Duty, Elizabeth McCleary
The Footnote, Karen Lynn
Chris Bridges blog, Say Hi to C. T. Bridges
Field Trip to the UFO Museum, by Bill Bush
The Monster Under The Bed, by Nic Steven

Scary Monsters and Other Friends, by Lisa Stapp
Morning Has Broken, by Katharina Gerlach
Good Honest Work, by Chris Wight
Bad For Business, by Gina Fabio
The Last Friday, by Raven O'Fiernan
Lost And Found, by Angela Wooldridge