Author: sjan

Trunk Stories

One Small Change

prompt: Write about someone who’s traveling to a place they’ve never been to meet someone they’ve never met.

available at Reedsy

Dr. A was probably the most famous anonymous person in the world. There are plenty of published scientists who are little-known and content to be private, and then there’s Dr. A. The Nobel committee spent over a year before they found someone who was in contact with the brilliant polymath. All their searching was met with an immediate refusal. Dr. A was not going to be seen in public, nor did they want the committee’s attention.

Despite this, the anonymous doctor had authored and published no fewer than seventy-four peer-reviewed papers in twenty-two journals. Every publication came with the same stipulation: the publication must be made available to the public for free, and all of Dr. A’s work is released into the public domain. With new insights in Quantum Mechanics, Physics, Materials Science, Mathematics, Optics, Medicine, Artificial Intelligence, and Economics, Dr. A’s work had sent dozens of industries leapfrogging each other to ever greater heights.

It was the Ultra-resolution MRI analyzed by a medical AI in a quantum computer that found a clump of four cancer cells in my brain. Besides finding the cancer, the UMRI was capable of focusing its magnetic field to a single cell, destroying it and the chemical signal it would normally send on apoptosis.

 I discovered I had brain cancer, and it was eliminated in the same visit, all without any symptoms. Since then, I’ve had annual follow-up visits where the procedure has been repeated. The largest clump was the second year, with nine cells. This year was the second in a row that there were none.

That’s all a very roundabout way of saying that, thanks to Dr. A’s work, I’m alive. As such, I’ve made it my mission to meet the person behind the pseudonym and shake their hand.

I started my search with the former members of the Nobel Committee for Physics, trying to contact the person or people who had contact with Dr. A in the past. After getting the runaround with emails, letters, phone calls, and even the odd fax, I decided I’d have to talk to someone in person.

Where I’d gotten put off, shuffled or ignored over other communications media, in person I was simply stonewalled. The committee and its members, past and present, take the privacy of recipients and nominees very seriously.

I’d spent nearly a month in Stockholm and was preparing to admit defeat, when I was approached in a coffee shop. I’m not sure that “approached” is the right word. A small person in a rain slicker brushed past me, reached out with a delicate, russet hand, and left a calling card in my coat pocket.

There was nothing on the card aside from a phone number. I waited until I was in my hotel room to call.

“You are looking for Dr. A?” the distorted voice that answered the call asked.

“Yes, I am. I—”

“Why?” they cut me off.

“I just want to meet them and thank them. I’m alive because of—”

“UMRI, nascent glioma. Multiple diagnoses and treatments,” the voice said, “we know. Is that all?”

“Is that all?!” Try as I might, I couldn’t keep my frustration out of my voice. “I want to meet the person who gave me the last nine years of my life, and every year that’s still to come after. I don’t care if I never learn their name or anything else about them. I just want…” I tapered off as realization hit.

“What is it you want?”

Brutal honesty was the tactic I chose. Not so much for the voice on the phone, but for myself. “I want to sit in the presence of someone so far beyond my intellect and just soak it in. It would be like being in the presence of a god.”

“You consider Dr. A a god?”

“No, that’s hyperbole. But I really do idolize them as humanity’s greatest modern benefactor. Dr. A is my sole hero.”

“Never meet your heroes.” The voice on the other end was quiet for a moment, then said, “If you want to continue your quest, call this number after you clear customs at Bagdogra airport.” There was nothing further as they hung up.

I spent the last week I had booked in Stockholm applying for an e-visa from India, picking it up at the Indian embassy, booking my flight to India, and canceling my flight home. At the recommendation of the woman at the Indian embassy, I also applied for and received an e-visa for Bhutan, since I’d be right there. Contrary to what I’d heard, it wasn’t difficult or expensive in the least.

I spent every moment I was out and about looking for the small person that had slipped me the card, but never saw them again. For just a moment, I thought maybe it was the woman at the embassy, but her nails were long, and her hands stained with faded henna. The hand that slipped the card into my pocket had neither.

I don’t know what I expected, but Bagdogra airport could’ve been any modern airport anywhere in the world. Some part of my mind was expecting something more…exotic, I guess. Ny unconscious bias leaking through.

When I called the number, the distorted voice answered on the first ring. “Your car is waiting,”

Considering what the voice on the phone knew about me already, it was no surprise that they were waiting for me as I arrived. I made my way out of the terminal and found a chauffeur standing in front of an old Toyota off-road truck with no top. The dissonance of the bespoke suit and pristine driving gloves of the tall man holding a sign with my name in front of a rugged, dented, and decidedly dirty truck did my head in. It seemed that my trip kept getting stranger by the minute.

He held the door for me, placed my single suitcase in the back, and gave a slight bow. The driver I hadn’t noticed, on account of her small stature, fired up the truck and we pulled into traffic as though we were racing to a fire.

After fifteen minutes in traffic, she turned onto a dirt road and sped up. Where I’d felt she was a dangerous driver before, now I thought she might be suicidal. No matter what I said, she never responded. I took the time to look at her hands. This might be the person that slipped me the card.

As the road disappeared and she drove through woods heading north, I watched her. There was something about the way she moved that convinced me she was the one.

I waited for a moment where the ground was a little smoother and the truck wasn’t rattling so much to say, “Thank you. … For slipping me the card, I mean.”

I couldn’t see her face, as there was no rear-view mirror, but I thought I saw her nod, just a little. It wasn’t until we finally stopped in front of a small house in the middle of nowhere that I thought about where we might be. The script on the door of the house was not like those I’d seen in India.

“We could’ve crossed at the official border,” I said, “I have a Bhutanese visa.”

The driver said, “I don’t. Neither does the doctor.” She got out of the truck and waited. There was to be no white-glove treatment here. I got out of the truck and grabbed my suitcase from the back. The dust of our off-road trip coated her face, and — I suspected — mine.

I followed her to the house, where we washed our hands, arms, and face in the icy water from a well pump. Following her lead, I took my shoes off on the small porch and followed into the house, dimly lit with a kerosene lamp in the deepening evening.

There, in an unassuming house in Bhutan, I met Dr. A and promised to keep their identity secret. They called the driver “Deva” even though I was assured that was not her real name.

The three of us had spicy chicken stew and red rice lager and talked into the wee hours of the morning. Both Deva and the doctor had done even more traveling in the previous weeks than I, and we were both out of whack with the local time, which made for a long conversation that began pleasantly enough.

What came next, however, soured the mood. The doctor told me that they were not the author of all the papers that bore their pseudonym. They had come from a future where the wealthy had pillaged everything the world had to offer before they traveled to the stars. The poor were left stranded and starving on a dying rock.

All the science that was changing medicine and physics and industry had been secret in their future and had been used to further enrich the wealthy and take them to the stars. Buried in the combination of it, they had missed how it made time travel possible. The doctor said their world had been different in the 2020’s, though.

I offered the possibility that other travelers had gone further back and changed something, and the doctor responded with the possibility that they had traveled to an alternate universe instead. Either way, they didn’t want to see what had happened to their world happen here.

When I asked about keeping the time travel secret, they said they weren’t worried about it. No one will believe it until the group of post-docs working on it at Caltech built the first working prototype. They estimated it would be done within the year. Once it’s built and proven, it’s a moot point.

The science has already been peer reviewed, the results replicated, and what could have amounted to billions of dollars’ worth of patents have been put into the public domain.

As I was preparing to leave, Dr. A said, “My world is already dead, my future is sealed. Yours is at the turning point. It’s up to you to do something about it.”

“How much of a difference can I make?” I asked.

They smiled, and the last thing they said to me was, “Think of all the time travel stories you know, how changing one small thing can drastically alter the future. That’s how. One small, positive change at a time.”

Trunk Stories

Knowing You’re Safe

prompt: Start your story with people arriving at a special ceremony.

available at Reedsy

The Bihrelli sidled close to me. They were an average sort of Bihrelli; hermaphroditic, bipedal, two-armed creatures just under one and a half meters in height, with huge, black eyes that made them cute. This one’s skin was a pale blue, with uneven pale brown spots. Their tail twitched in the way that showed nerves or fear. There was nothing unusual about that, at least for this one.

“Hi, Jordi.” I’d long ago given up trying to pronounce their name and used a close equivalent. They’d done the same with me, even though they were always so tense when we met.

“Greetings, Tŷlŷ.” They said the vowels like some sort of mega-diphthong that mixed a, i, o, and u. “I am glad you are here for this.”

“Me, in particular, or the embassy guard?” I asked.

Their tail twitched even harder. “It is always a pleasantness to be in your presence, but I am relieved to see you — a…and the other guards — here in armed uniform to keep us safe.”

“Do you think there might be trouble?”

“There are many who do not want to see this treaty finalized,” they said. Their tail wrapped around my ankle as they moved closer. “The Drogne Empire has publicly threatened Bihrel and said that a treaty with Terra would be treated as an act of war.”

I could feel the trembling of their tail against my ankle. “You’re safe here, Jordi. I’ll make sure of that.” I put a hand on their shoulder. “Do you really think Drogne will try to attack if Bihrel has the backing of the Terran Union?”

“I think it would be foolish of them, but it would not surprise me.” They seemed to realize that they had hold of my ankle, unwrapped their tail and took half a step backward. “I am sorry for the inappropriate action of my tail.”

I looked into their big eyes. “It’s okay. Why are you always so nervous around me?”

They grabbed their tail and held it in front of them. “You are so big, and your weapons are frightening, and I — uh — think you are pleasing to look at and talk to and I just wish that I could find someone like you to…” their voice dropped to a faint whisper, “to parent with.”

I smiled. I’d suspected they might have a crush on me, but now I knew. “Well, adoption is always an option, but don’t you think you should take me for a date first, at least?”

I don’t know why I said that. Was I serious? The last thing I’d want to do would be to play with Jordi’s feelings and hurt them. The more I thought about it, the more I realized that maybe I was serious. At the very least, I knew there was more to Jordi than just the cute puppy vibe that Bihrelli had.

“Natalia, report.” The voice over the radio interrupted my thought.

“West entry, no traffic. Jordi’s keeping me company,” I radioed back.

“Eyes on. Presidential motorcade is arriving at the south entry in five minutes. Bihrelli delegation arriving in seven minutes at the west garden landing pad. Be ready to escort them to the event hall. Jordi can help out with that.”

“Affirm, chief.” I turned back to look at the little Bihrelli. “You stay with me while I escort the Bihrelli big-wigs, and I’ll take you out to dinner this weekend.”

“Is the Kŷmŷ coming here?” they asked.

“Yes, Jordi. The Koimoi of Bihrel is coming here to meet with the President of the Terran Union.” There was no way I could pronounce the weird vowels of the name of office of the leader of Bihrel, so I pronounced it as most humans did. Surprisingly, the President was known for speaking fluent Bihrellian, and her pronunciation was even better than that of the ambassador, who was at the moment waiting to meet her motorcade.

I felt the vibrations of the Bihrelli shuttle landing in the garden, and held the door open at attention. The Koimoi and their retinue walked from the shuttle, their tails held in an appropriate upward curve. Jordi followed their example and got their own tail under control.

I left translation to Jordi and spoke in Terran common. “Right this way, please.”

No sooner had the last of the Bihrelli walked in the door than another shuttle, a rental, zoomed in to hover above the shuttle on the pad. Three waves of half a dozen Drognen soldiers dropped out of the shuttle. Where the Bihrelli were cute, the Drognens were anything but. Looking like a nightmare cross of a toad and a praying mantis, they slowed their descent with wings that were useless for anything other than dropping to the ground with style.

The alarm klaxon sounded through the embassy. I pulled Jordi behind me and began firing at the intruders. “Get them to the hall!” I yelled.

The sound of gunfire was evident from all sides of the embassy. One of the Drognens set off an explosive on the Bihrelli shuttle. There was no way the pilot survived it.

I stepped back to try to get in the door before the embassy went into lockdown, and ran into Jordi, who was still behind me. “Why aren’t you inside?”

“I cannot. The door is locked.” 

“The Koimoi?” I asked.

“Safe inside.”

I pulled out my sidearm and handed it to Jordi. “Know how to—”

“I know how to work your weapon,” they said, ensuring there was a round in the chamber and the safety was off.

“You continue to amaze me.” I swapped out magazines on my assault rifle; thirty-two more rounds and then I was out. “Make every shot count,” I muttered to myself. 

The Drognens were using the fire and smoke from the shuttle to conceal their movements, but there was a clear area directly in front of the recessed doorway where we took cover. To my surprise, Jordi had climbed the vine trellis beside the door and was perched above me, their big eyes, set in such a way as to have a far wider field of view than us, scanning.

Their tail tapped my left shoulder, and I swung my rifle that way to take a shot at the shape moving through the smoke. I heard Jordi take a shot and curse.

With their eyes and my reflexes, we managed to take out seven of the Drognens before my radio crackled to life. “Friendlies coming over the wall into the west garden.”

“Hold!” I radioed back. “Drognen troops under concealment of smoke in the west garden.”

“Roger, Natalia. We won’t fire toward the door. Find cover, incoming.”

I pulled Jordi off the trellis, pushed them against the door, crouched, and shielded their body with mine. My ballistic vest was better than nothing and I expected all hell to break loose. It did.

Three explosions rocked the garden in quick succession, followed by the sound of Terran weapons firing from the wall. It ended as quickly as it began. I tried to stand, but a piercing pain in my leg dropped me to my knees.

Jordi held their tail up to me, the end covered in blood…my dark red blood, not their bright pink. “You are injured,” they said, “do not try to move.”

“Are you okay?” I asked.

“I am uninjured.”

I saw a trail of bright pink blood trickling down their face. “No, you’re not.” I reached for it, but Jordi shrugged.

“I just banged my head when the explosions scared me. It’s nothing.”

“Good, good.” My leg began to throb. I didn’t know if I’d taken a bullet or shrapnel, but either way it was serious. I began to get lightheaded.

“She needs a medic!” they called out.

I was too out of it to make out what was being said on the radio, but I heard the doors unlock and the alarm stopped. The lockdown was over. I crawled to the door and opened it for Jordi. “Get inside while you can.”

The assault team carried me in, and Jordi stayed by my side, their tail wrapped around my wrist. I was glad of it. A medic put an IV in my arm, injected me with something, and I awoke in a bed in the embassy clinic.

Jordi was sleeping in the chair beside the bed, their tail wrapped around my right wrist. A large bandage covered my left thigh. I lifted the edge to see what was under it and saw the remnants of what looked like an extensive surgery.

They woke up while I was examining myself and I felt their tail tighten around my wrist. “I am glad you are alive.”

“Me too. Did they say what it was?”

“A large piece of metal from the shuttle — from when the Drognens blew it up. I thought you knew.”

“I didn’t even notice until I tried to stand up after shielding you.”

“Thank you,” they said, “for saving my life.” They reached an idle hand up to a clear bandage over a couple of stitches above their right eye.

“Just doing my job.”

“Nonsense. Your job is to protect the embassy, the ambassador, and other officials, not a janitor.”

I grabbed their hand. “Well, I’m making it my job from now on. I’d hate to lose you.”

“As a coworker, or….” They trailed off.

“As a friend, at least. We’ll find out more as we go. Sound fair?” I asked.

“Very much so.”

“Where am I taking you to dinner?”

“You are not. I am taking you to my home to cook dinner for you,” they said. When I tried to interrupt they continued on. “I have been practicing cooking Terran food. I hope you like it.”

“Why can’t I take you out to dinner?”

“Because the doctor said you need to rest and stay off that leg for at least a week.” Jordi pulled out their comm pad and showed me a list of instructions and dates. “Until your first physical therapy appointment, which is already scheduled.”

“Wow, Jordi. Where is all this confidence coming from?”

“From you,” they said. “You did not laugh at me or turn me down right away, even though you are stronger, have a more prestigious employment, and are a much better fighter. That, and — I thought for a while I was going to lose you forever.”

“I thought the same,” I said. “So, first date at your place. You do move fast.”

“Second date,” they said. “The first was a little too exciting for me.”

It made me laugh, then I paused. “I wonder if we’re at war with the Drogne Empire now.”

“The Kŷmŷ and your President put out a joint statement about the terrorist attack here. The Emperor saw the wisdom of denouncing the attack by ‘unknown terrorists dressed as Drogne Palace Guards.’”

“You must have good connections around here, to know all that so fast,” I said.

They pointed with their tail at the screen on the wall. “Terran news.”

“Oh, yeah, they do seem to know everything that’s happening, whether they should or not.” I shifted slightly to one side in the bed. “Why don’t you use some of that newfound confidence to lay down here and snuggle with me? I don’t want to be alone right now.”

The little Bihrelli didn’t say anything, but crawled into bed next to me, their tail draped across my waist. I put an arm around them and snorted. “I don’t usually share my bed after the first date, but I’ll make an exception this time.”

“What about after the second?” they asked.

“You’re cheeky when you’re bold, aren’t you?” I patted their tail. “For you, sure. That doesn’t mean we’ll be doing anything right away, I just want to keep you close.”

“You are meant to be resting anyway,” they said.

“Yes, I am, and I feel so much more relaxed knowing you’re here and you’re safe.”

Trunk Stories

The Rise of the Specter

prompt: Write the origin story of a notorious villain.

available at Reedsy

From the outside, my childhood was normal. Of course, “normal” changes over time. The sounds of a paddle or belt coupled with the wails of a child was just “normal,” then. What should have garnered attention was the frequency and severity of my corporal punishment. The sense of the time was, though, that what happens in a neighbor’s house was not one’s business.

That is not to say I blame my parents for who I turned out to be. Just to say that I learned a lot about hiding in my early childhood. With a hot-heated father that looked for any reason to strike a child, I learned to be sneaky. I was almost never punished for my actions, just his flimsy excuses.

The day after graduation, while I was meant to be job hunting, I was hiding out getting high behind the weird government building that was out in the middle of nowhere. That was the day that everything changed.

The field in which the weird building sat had “No Trespassing” signs on twelve-foot chain-link fences with razor wire on top, but they didn’t take into account the largely unexplored lava tubes that ran under most of the area. I found one that led into a stand of juniper trees, away from the guards, on the opposite side of the property from the dirt road that led to the entrance.

Usually, I would just come out, sit under the junipers, and get high. That day, though, I wanted to get a closer look at the building. It looked like a concrete warehouse from the outside, until I got closer and saw the power connection. It wasn’t like the small line that dropped down from the pole to a house, it was the entire high-voltage line that fed right into the building.

Of course, I wanted to find a way in to see what was going on. Only problem was, I was high already, and not thinking too clearly. As I made my way around the building, an alarm sounded, one of those klaxon type alarms that made three loud blasts. I thought I’d been seen and was about to get arrested. Instead, a car shot out from the other side of the building, zooming away from it.

Everything fell to perfect silence. I wondered if I’d scared them off. Funny how my brain misfires when I’m high — which is why I don’t do that anymore. Anyway, that perfect silence was broken by an electrical hum from the power line. My hair stood on end, and I felt waves of energy wash over me. The walls went transparent, and I could see a huge machine pulsing in the center of the otherwise empty building. Then it blew up.

I remember thinking more than once as I watched chunks of concrete and steel pass through me that I was definitely dead this time. When it ended, I was standing knee-deep in the rubble — literally in the rubble. I began walking and my legs just passed through the rubble as if were water. I had gained the ability to phase through solid materials.

The logical choice for me would be to become a world-class thief, right? I mean, it makes sense when you think about it for even a moment. That also makes it the most idiotic thing I could do. The fact that I thought of it while I was stoned out my gourd and traumatized was enough to convince me that anyone who found out I had this power would put it together right away.

Remember, I had an entire childhood spent learning how to be sneaky. Something that could point back at me right away was off the table. Instead, I needed a way to put my new-found power to work without being obvious about it.

Does it mean I never used it to steal? No, of course not. I slipped my hand into the odd ATM here and there and pulled out a wad of bills. The trick is to block the cameras, like I don’t want anyone to see my PIN.

Still, it must seem like a leap from the ability to phase to leader of the largest criminal organization in the world. Not so much, though. One gets to the top of such enterprises by killing their way there. I thought maybe I could do that with practice, and I already had a target in mind, as if that was a surprise.

I had a job at an arcade, a small apartment, and I hadn’t seen the old man for nearly a year when I struck. I had some blood clotting powder in my first aid kit, and a pair of tweezers. That was all I needed, along with a night when he’d had too much to drink and was in a deep sleep in his armchair.

I watched for several nights until the time was right. I pinched a small amount of the powder with the tweezers, phased into the house, and phased the tip of the tweezers into the big vein that stuck out on his neck whenever he yelled or snored. By letting the tweezers open a bit, some of the powder lost contact and was no longer in a phased state. That little bit of powder started a clot that worked its way down to his heart by the time I phased back out of the house.

Natural causes were the official findings of the autopsy. A heavy drinker with a short fuse and signs of high blood pressure threw a clot and had a heart attack? Yeah, no surprise there.

I spent the next three weeks working like normal, waiting for the feelings of guilt or remorse or something to show up. When they didn’t, I knew I’d found my calling.

I moved to the Big Apple to get myself involved in organized crime. I did that by starting a war between the street gangs and their supplier, one of the minor crime families. It wasn’t hard. I followed the street gang runner to where they did their drug pickup. After dark, I phased into the basement beneath the junk store where the mafia kept their stash. I replaced three-quarters of the bricks with bricks of baby powder.

The war started the next day when the gangs accused the mafia of delivering bunk, and the mafia accusing the gangs of ripping them off. While tensions were high, I stopped a lower-rung mafioso and told him that the gangs had their drugs hidden in their hang-out. When they showed up, of course, the drugs were there.

That was enough to get me a meeting with the local boss. He offered me a job as an informant, and I took it. I made sure that anyone who crossed me had a tragic “accident.” The last thing any of them saw was me, phasing through the floor of the car right before they lost control at highway speeds — or through the wall of the elevator right before it dropped all the way to the basement.

No one could pin it to me directly, but it was understood that if I was crossed, terrible things happened. It helped that a lot of the mafia was riddled with superstitions, and I just became another of those things about which to be superstitious.

It took twelve years of hard work to consolidate the Italian families, the Russian mob, and the New York City branches of the Tong, Yakuza, and the two outlaw motorcycle clubs active in the city. That’s not to say there weren’t still disagreements between the groups, but they all knew that the orders flowed from the top, and that was me — or rather, “The Specter” as I had become known.

Twelve years may sound like a long time, but it’s nothing in the grand scheme of things. In the twenty-nine years since, I’ve taken control of mobs, crime families, clubs, gangs, and groups of disaffected youths all over the globe. Once the ball was rolling, it was enough to say, “Join me or die.” The leaders of those organizations that thought they were better off without me disappeared completely.

Of the now seventy-thousand-plus members of the Global Initiative, perhaps a dozen still living have seen my face. That doesn’t mean I don’t still dole out the tragic accident or simple disappearance here and there when I’m crossed.

My instant, reflexive phasing when hit with anything that could injure me has resulted in over thirty instances of me being shot, stabbed, blown up, and other attempts on my life that always end in the same result; the death of the assailant after they’ve given up the names of everyone else involved. I save the slow, painful deaths for those others — often playing “how many sharp things can I phase into your body before you die” — and then phase their corpse deep underground, past the crust into the mantle where it is destroyed.

Of course, saying a thing doesn’t prove it, but the loyalty of my followers, whether they consider me a ghost, a phantom, a demon, or some undead entity, speaks volumes for how I get things done.

So, that’s me, “The Specter.” For my next adventure, I look forward to meeting the super-powered members of the League of Heroes or whatever you’re called these days. I have an offer for you. Join me for unimaginable wealth and luxury or die. Just remember, there’s nothing I can’t phase through. Once, just for curiosity’s sake, I phased through the Earth’s core.

Trust me, joining me is the safer bet. You might be bullet-proof, but that won’t stop me from phasing a softball into your brain. And if that doesn’t kill you outright, while you’re disoriented and trying to heal, we’ll take a trip to the core where I’ll deposit you. Even if you somehow survive the heat and pressure, it’ll be years before you make it to the surface, and I’ll be there to drag you right back down again into your own personal hell. Doesn’t your own private island sound a lot better?

Trunk Stories

XEF

prompt: Set your story during the hottest day of the year.

available at Reedsy

The scant wisps of high cloud offered no hope for relief from the rising sun. The dark red soil had barely finished radiating the heat it had collected the previous day when the first rays of the sun lit the sky.

“Listen up, the word of the day is hydrate.” Captain Inez Isobel filled her canteen from the creek, pushed the button on the side, and waited for the red light on the button to turn green. When it had, she took a swig of the tepid water. “Tastes like shit, but it’s better than dying out here. Speaking of dying out here, every hour we spend reduces the chances for rescue of the crew. Weather check, McCoy.”

“It’s going to be the hottest day yet. Yesterday was already 147 drin. Shit, I can’t do hotter.” Corporal Alex McCoy, barely 150 centimeters tall, turned grey eyes in a pale face rimmed with strawberry blond hair and beard to the tall, dun-skinned woman with dark brown eyes and matching hair buzzed to a few millimeters.

Corporal.” Isobel said the word in Dulxanit.

Aye, Captain. Apologies. I will endure, we will endure, the Xeno Expeditionary Forces will prevail,” he replied in the same language.

She shifted back to English. “McCoy, I know you like to show off your mastery of Dulxan weights and measures, but could you please use human equivalents when it’s just us humans.”

“Yes, ma’am. It was about 43 Celsius — that’s 110 Fahrenheit, Mary-Jane — yesterday, with humidity at 22 percent. It’ll be hotter today,” he said, “but it’s a dry heat?” he added with forced jocularity.

“I know Celsius, Private,” Recruit Mary-Jane Smith shot back.

“Why did you join the Dulxan XEF?” Isobel asked, pronouncing the acronym as “zef.”

McCoy sighed. “Same story as most of us, I guess. We’re not supposed to ask, so forgive me, Cap, if I don’t elaborate.”

Isobel crossed her arms. “I know you’re probably running from a jail sentence or something, what I meant is, why did you join XEF rather than, say, hiding away in any other system outside human space?”

“I—uh—didn’t have that option. It was either the Dulxan Xeno Expeditionary Force, or Dulxan prison, and I couldn’t do another stint.” He turned all his attention on his satellite relay that displayed the weather patterns in real time, along with an overlay of the search grids the team had already combed and those that were left.

Mouths began to open, only to be shut again, as the troops all had questions, but knew better than to ask them.

Sergeant Abel Mahmouddi unfolded his wiry, two-meter frame from where he’d sat. His ebon skin showed no sign of age, although his close-cropped, tightly curled black hair had spots of grey at the temples. “XEFs, fill your canteens and be ready to move out, three minutes. McCoy, keep your eyes on our satellite, Smith on point. Private Doe, what’s our comm situation?”

Private Jane Doe gave a thumbs-up. “We’re five-by-five with command, still no fix on the transponder.”

As they trekked kilometer after slow kilometer, the sun rose, a baleful orange that made their camouflage pattern look washed out and grey. McCoy stayed close to Isobel and Mahmouddi, marking each area they searched as they went.

“Hey, Sarge,” he said, “I saw how everyone looked when I said Dulxan prison.”

“No shit, Sherlock,” Mahmouddi said. “You’d have to fuck up pretty major to end up in Dulxan prison. And did you imply that you’d already done a stint?”

“Tell you what, Sarge. You or Cap tell me why you’re here, and I’ll tell you my story.”

Isobel spoke up. “That’s easy. You’ve already noticed I’m not using one of the ‘hundred names’, but my real name. That’s because I’m not running away from anything.”

“Not hard to believe, Cap,” he said. “I can’t imagine you being in trouble with the law anywhere.”

“I was in the Marines,” she said, “for the black sky Navy. I joined for adventure and travel. Instead, I spent my time on stations and guarding Ambassadors. I joined XEF for the adventure. I saw more action my first year in than I did in the six I spent as a Marine.”

Mahmouddi laughed. “I’m using my real name, too, but not because I’m not running away. I can never return to human space. First-degree murder doesn’t have a statute of limitations. I knew what I was getting into and so did my daughter. Those bastards won’t hurt her — or anybody — ever again, though.”

“Shit. Well, I guess it’s my turn. I, um, had a fling with Eviets, a Dulxan girl—”

“Wait,” Isobel said, “a hairy, snaggletoothed, stubby-legged, Dulxan? Like, with the extra bits down there and all?”

 “Yeah, Cap. Just like that. She was so sweet, though. I couldn’t help but see past all that.”

Mahmouddi’s eyes narrowed. “Was she underage? Is that why?”

“No, no, she…uh…used me…as a money mule. I didn’t know. She’d ask me to do her a favor and hand me a stack of credits with a filled-out deposit slip. Lots of different banks, but I figured it was normal for an interstellar business consultant. She travelled a lot for business, made lots of money, but still found time to keep me happy.”

McCoy marked their location on his display and continued. “It’s just that her ‘consulting’ business was money laundering for pirates and drug cartels. They arrested me while I was making one of the deposits and locked me up. I told them everything I knew, but they didn’t believe me. Eviets was in the wind. They said not even a human would get suckered in by someone as ugly as her, and I was in on it and in it for the money.

“That was the first term, for seven mita — about 2 years — and then they caught her, and she dumped it all on me. I knew I was fucked when I recognized the judge at the second trial as one of her regular customers. Now she’s free and I’m here.”

Mahmouddi chuckled. “You were with a Dulxan woman — an ugly one at that. Who was top?”

McCoy shook his head and sighed. “See, this is why I didn’t want to talk about it.”

“You’re saying she was,” Mahmouddi said. “I see.”

“Would it matter what I said?” he asked.

“Not particularly,” Isobel answered, “as I couldn’t care less. I’m more concerned with our mission. But your history with a snaggletoothed fur-dwarf is safe with me.”

“For future reference, you might just claim the money laundering and skip the rest of the story,” Mahmouddi said.

A sharp whistle from Doe caught their attention. “I’ve got a transponder signal, but it’s weak. North-by-Northeast, probably ten or so kilometers.”

“Round ’em up for a pause,” Isobel said to Mahmouddi.

Aye, Captain.” He raised his open hand over his head and circled it, giving the signal to assemble. Once the entire squadron was there, he said, “Drink up. We’ve got a signal and we’re diverting off the search grid. Ten minutes.”

“McCoy,” Isobel said, “weather report.”

“It’s currently 39 Celsius, and we’re expecting a high of 47,” he said. “For Mary-Jane that’s—”

“102 now, high of 117-sh” she said.

“Close enough. Humidity is dropping as the temperature rises, but we can expect 19 percent.”

“I said, drink up!” Mahmouddi yelled. “We’re going to push on through the heat before it cooks our Dulxan friends. Let’s remind ’em why they have an all-human unit in the XEF!” He switched to Dulxanit and called, “I will endure.”

The squadron answered back in Dulxanit with, “We will endure, the Xeno Expeditionary Forces will prevail.”

The squadron covered the distance in just under two hours. The Dulxan light freighter was wedged against the side of a cliff, the landing gear sheared off in the dense soil, the emergency ablative heat shield all but gone from the high-speed entry to the thick atmosphere.

There were no tree-like plants here to hide the ship. Isobel looked at the open plain and the clear sky above. “McCoy, why didn’t the satellite pick this up?”

McCoy showed her the view from the satellite. “Something in the rocks here is messing with the imaging. It’s all just a blur.”

“Doe, call command with our location. Tell them to send extraction and a medical team at once,” she yelled.

“Trying, Cap, but I can’t reach command. Something’s messing with the signal.”

Mahmouddi and the others were looking for a way into the ship, but the main door was wedged against the mountainside. Smith clambered up the rock face to get on top of the ship. “There’s an access here on top!” she called out.

Isobel looked at the Mahmouddi. “Sergeant, take two more and get into that ship. Be ready with medical requirements. And get me some comms.”

Aye, Captain.” He turned to Doe. “Do you think you could get through from up there?” he asked, pointing at the top of the cliff.

“Maybe, probably. We didn’t bring any climbing gear, though.”

Smith had already clambered down. “I’ve done years of free climbing,” she said. “Give me the radio, and I’ll try to call from up top.”

Mahmouddi nodded. “Make it happen, Recruit. Doe, hand over the comms to Smith and come with me. Corporal Jones, you’re with me, too.”

Two of the squadron ran up to him.

“Shit, sorry, I forgot you got promoted last week. Corporal John Jones, you’re with me and Doe, Corporal Sally Jones, stay with the rest of the squadron and set up a protective perimeter. Corporal McCoy, keep an eye on the display for anything that might be coming our way.”

Aye, Sergeant,” they responded in Dulxanit.

While Mahmouddi led his team into the ship, and Smith climbed the cliff face, McCoy kept watch on the satellite display. “Ma’am,” he asked, “what do you think a Dulxan freighter is doing all the way out here in Thaazi space?”

“I’m sure it’s above my paygrade,” she said, “not to mention yours.”

“Is this planet even inhabited?” he asked.

“Don’t know. It’s not on the public charts, but obviously the Dulxan know it’s here, and I would guess the Thaazi do too.”

Smith waved from the top of the cliff and gave a thumbs-up. Doe popped her head up from the ship and made the hand signal for medevac, followed by a raised hand with four fingers. Smith copied the movements and held a fist in front of her face to say she was relaying the info on comms.

“Here comes the parade,” McCoy said, pointing at his display. Two ships were marked in green on the satellite image, heading toward them.

“Give them a landing marker,” Isobel said. She whistled loud enough for Smith to hear from the top of the cliff and gave the signal to assemble.

When the ships landed, Dulxans in bulky environmental suits to keep them cool rushed out to the freighter. They cut through the side and carried the four injured and overheated crew out of the ship. The XEF squadron loaded onto the second ship as the last of the suited-up Dulxans left the freighter. The air in the extraction ship was a pleasant 19 degrees Celsius.

No sooner had they closed up the ship than the freighter exploded. McCoy showed Isobel and Mahmouddi his display. Where the image had been blurred and glitched, it was now clear.

She nodded. “It wasn’t the rocks.”

“And that was no freighter,” Mahmouddi said.

“Who cares?” McCoy asked. “I’m just going to enjoy this cool air for a while.”

He wasn’t alone. The XEF squadron fell silent as fatigue and the relief from the heat overtook them.

Trunk Stories

Nondescript

prompt: Write a story about an unsung hero.

available at Reedsy

Elijah was the sort of person that could disappear in a “crowd” of three. There was nothing about his looks that stood out. Medium height, build, hair color, skin tone, and immediate impression. He was both an “everyman” and no-one in particular. That suited him just fine, though.

He checked the balance of his savings account, what was left over from his mother’s life insurance after paying her debts. He stepped out of the shotgun shack he’d inherited from his grandparents by way of his mother. A quick scan of the small, gravel plot showed him no weeds on his tiny property.

A trip to town, he thought, was the plan for the day. There was something that drove him, compelled him, to help others. Elijah didn’t feel like himself without it. The fact that those he helped couldn’t recognize him after was fine. He didn’t do it for praise, just to feel — if only for a moment — normal.

He parked his second-hand, beige Toyota in the middle of the grocery store lot. A woman with a full cart, including a toddler and an infant in a convertible car seat, walked out of the store to her SUV parked close to the doors. She wrangled the children into the car, then unloaded the groceries.

Elijah got out of his car, noting the distance to the doors, the cart corral, and the woman’s children in her car. He waved a hand over his head, “You can just leave that there and I’ll take it,” he called out.

The look of relief on her face was all he needed to see. She gave a harried smile and got into her SUV and pulled away. Elijah retrieved the cart and returned it to the stack inside the door. He hadn’t planned on shopping — or anything else for that matter — but a cold drink sounded good.

A bottle of decaffeinated iced tea in hand, he stood in line at the cash register. The man in front of him was growing agitated with the cashier and began to berate her. As his tirade increased, Elijah saw him reach behind his back to pull a pistol.

Time slowed for Elijah, allowing him to toss his drink on the shelf and grab the man’s wrist before he could draw. With the man surprised by the unexpected grab, he froze.

Elijah leaned forward, his arm around the man’s waist, and whispered in his ear, “I know you’re having a bad day, but it doesn’t have to end like this. Please, for the sake of everyone who loves you, don’t do it. The young lady checking your groceries isn’t who you’re really mad at. Look at her, she’s frightened and crying, and why? No reason.”

He stepped back and picked up his drink from the shelf. The man in front of him stood for a moment, then his shoulders dropped. His hand, still empty, fell to his side and he stared down at nothing. Tears pooled in his eyes and began to fall down his cheeks.

His voice barely above a whisper, he said, “I’m sorry, it’s not you, you don’t deserve this. I don’t know what to do, I don’t know….”

Elijah handed the man a calling card for a crisis phone line. “It’ll work out. These people can help.”

As he walked back to his car, he saw the man sitting on the sidewalk near the store, talking on his phone, tears streaming down his face. The people on the phone were good, Elijah knew that. They had helped him when his mother passed.

He got into his car and pulled the pistol he’d lifted from the man’s holster. He ejected the magazine, pulled the slide back to eject the round in the chamber and let it stay locked open. He put the round into the magazine and set the pistol on the passenger seat. His next stop was obvious; the police station to turn in a found weapon.

Part of him felt bad for taking the man’s pistol, but the other part was concerned that he might carry through with the next encounter. Of course, the possibility that he might harm himself was there, too, and Elijah wasn’t going to let that happen.

He’d been honest with the officer about how he ended up in possession of the pistol and the officer led him to an interrogation room and told him to wait, as they might be charging him with felony theft. After he’d waited for an hour, he stepped out of the room and asked the officer watching the rooms if he was still needed. She seemed to be surprised to see anyone there, looked at her clipboard, and told him that he was free to go.

Next to the police station was a used bookstore, and he went in to browse. While he looked over the shelves of used paperbacks, the officer that had taken his statement and told him to wait in interrogation walked in. He browsed the shelves next to Elijah with a slight nod and no hint of recognition.

Elijah found a series of paperback fantasy novels by a dead author he’d never heard of and picked them up. The entire series was there, so no danger of getting invested and having to wait for the next. He loaded the books into his trunk and was about to get in when he saw a runaway stroller.

Time slowed down as he dodged through the crossing traffic. He reached a point past the intersection, in front of the oncoming stroller and braced himself. Straddled wide so the wheels wouldn’t hit his legs, he grabbed the sides of the stroller and shifted his weight to his right foot, bringing it to a stop in a large arc.

He pushed the stroller out of the street to the sidewalk and looked inside. Expecting a baby, he was surprised to see a small dog with a pink bow on its head. The dog seemed happy to see him, licking his hand and wiggling under his pets.

A few others gathered around to see what was going on. The elderly woman toddling down the hill was beside herself. “My baby! My baby!”

Elijah handed control of the stroller to her. “Safe and sound.”

“Thank you so much!” She knelt in front of the stroller and began baby-talking the dog. The crowd, seeing it was a dog, began to clear. “Was my baby scared? Was that a scary, scary ride? I know, right? My poor baby Posie. Mama’s here, and you’re okay now. We’ll get you some num-nums from the doggie bakery. What a big day.”

Elijah had stepped back and turned to go when the woman stopped him. “Yes?” he asked.

“Did you see the young man that saved my baby? I wanted to thank him.”

Elijah smiled and shrugged. “Sorry,” he said, as he walked back to his car. It was better that he didn’t have to deal with her — or anyone at all, really. He was truly unremarkable, instantly forgettable, and that suited him just fine.

Trunk Stories

Campaign

prompt: Write a story with a big twist.

available at Reedsy

“That smug bastard’s done it again.” Penelope made a fist and the small gem in the wall went dark, taking the wall-sized image of the dwarf’s press conference coverage with it. She banged her warm brown fist on the table, her blonde-tipped, brown hair falling in waves around her face as she dropped her forehead to fist, hiding her hazel eyes. “He just laid out the entire transportation plan we just finalized last night.”

“We can fix this.” The elf with charcoal-grey skin, bright violet eyes, and long, straight, snow-white hair pulled into a severe braid took a step toward the desk. “We should go to the press, back door, ‘unnamed inside source’, let them know our campaign has a leak, and Ironstrike is taking our policies public before we can.”

“Really, Agatha? You’re my campaign manager, and I thought you were my friend. That will make me look weak and incompetent, and whiny to boot. I may not have your experience, but I know that’s not how the game is played. It’s a dirty game, I get that — but you — find the leak!”

“Yes, Ms. Gonzales,” Agatha said with a slight bow.

“I’m sorry I snapped. Please, let’s just continue to be Aggie and Pen. I don’t know what I’d do in this town without you.” Penelope raised her head to give Agatha an apologetic smile.

Agatha stepped around the desk and put an arm around Penelope’s shoulders.“You’ll always be little Pen.”

Penelope leaned her head against Agatha’s shoulder. It brought back memories of childhood, when Agatha was her teacher, substitute parent, and frequent partner in crime, sneaking in forbidden sweets for her. “Why does everything have to change?”

“That’s just the way the universe works,” the elf said, petting Penelope’s hair. “Besides, if nothing changed, you wouldn’t be the first human to get this close to nomination for Premier, would you?”

“We have good ideas, at least. If not, Ironstrike wouldn’t be rolling them out as his own.” Penelope chuckled. “He’s been in the game for what, five, six decades? He certainly knows how to work the media.”

“But,” Agatha said, “he wouldn’t know a good policy or decision if it bit him on the ass. Deva Singh, his manager, has to be involved. Still, if he does win the nomination, he would be a fool not to choose you for VP.”

Penelope sat up and straightened her back. “Find out who’s been talking to the Ironstrike campaign and uncover all their communications. I don’t care if it’s a speech writer winking at one of his interns, anything that ties any member of my campaign to his, dig up everything.”

“We won’t have any legal standing to—”

“Doesn’t matter. Get it done. I know you have technical and magical contacts that skirt the edges of legality. Use them if you have to. We have to find the mole.”

“I’ll hire a PI. That way, any possibly less-than-legal actions they take won’t blow back on you. I’ll make sure whoever I hire has complete access to all my communications for the last year and inform them they are to report directly to you.”

“Agatha, come on. I know it isn’t you.”

“But I have more communication with the Ironstrike campaign than anyone else around here.” She crossed her arms. “It’s only fair.”

Penelope nodded. “Fine. What’s on the agenda?”

“Final hearing with the Parliamentary vetting board at eleven, then you’re free until the fundraiser at the Met Gallery, eighteen-hundred.” Agatha pursed her lips. “I can’t join you for the hearing, I think I’ll reach out to Deva, take her to lunch, see if I can get some information from her about who’s been talking. I’ll record our conversation for the PI, too.”

“Thanks.” Penelope stood, moved her hand in a small gesture that made the gem in the wall pulse once before a section of the wall became a mirror. “I should get myself squared away before the hearing.”

Penelope’s phone rang and she answered as Agatha left her office. “Good morning, Ms. Underhill. … Sure, Janey. … Uh-huh … right … thank you. That seriously calms my nerves. See you at eleven.”


Deva Singh’s phone rang. The number was unlisted, but she answered with, “What do you have for me?”

The deep voice on the other end, warped with some sort of magitech said, “Word is that the Gonzales hearing is a formality, the vetting committee has already decided she’s cleared. Her campaign manager floated the possibility of Vice Premier under Ironstrike, and she didn’t turn it down.”

Before Deva could respond the other party disconnected the call. Her tail twitched, and her horns itched. She looked in the mirror at her deep red skin, jet-black hair, and red eyes in black sclera. She wondered how she ended up working in politics. It was far outside what she thought she’d be doing when she got her PhD in Social Work.

Her office door opened, and a red-headed dwarf wearing a bespoke suit stepped in. “What is it, lass? Wondering again how you ended up in Capitol City?” He had lines around his brown eyes, and shots of grey at his temples. His beard was in a four-plait braid with a green ribbon run through it.

“Morning, Hank. Something like that.” She sighed. “Our secret benefactor called again.”

“What’s the word?”

“Vetting is a done deal, and Agatha Blackstone floated the idea of the VP to Gonzales. She didn’t turn it down.”

“She has great ideas, but not the political capital to get it done.” He smoothed his beard. “As soon as she drops her candidacy, I’m offering her the position.”

Deva’s phone rang again, and she answered on speaker. “This is Singh, you’re on speaker.”

“Hey, Deva, Agatha. Are you free for lunch? I want to pick your brain on something.”

“Sure. Orcish at Mama Magthurg’s at twelve?”

“Spicy noodles sounds good. See you there. My treat.”

Deva disconnected. “She wants to know who the mole is.”

“Any luck on that front?” the dwarf asked.

“Nothing yet.” She turned off the mirror and turned to look down at the dwarf from her two meter-vantage. “Does using her plans to flesh out your own not feel dirty to you?”

“No … yeah … a little. But that’s how the game is played.” He straightened his suit that didn’t need it, and said, “Keep looking. If we find the mole before they do, we’ll tell her. She doesn’t need that sort of disloyalty in her camp.”

“And you acting on that disloyalty? What’s that?”

“Politics, lass. Pure politics.” He checked the time. “I’m sitting in on Ms. Gonzales’ vetting hearing, so I better go.”

Deva nodded. “Later, Hank.”


Agatha and Deva sat in the back of Mama Magthurg’s, enjoying their spicy noodles. Agatha looked across the booth at the demon across from her. “You know what I’m going to ask.”

“I know,” Deva said. “We hired a PI, but she’s run into a dead-end. None of the calls are long enough to trace with tech or magic.”

“But they’re coming straight to you?” Agatha asked.

“Yeah. And my phone is tapped in  order to trap him or her.”

“Him or her?”

“The voice is distorted.”

“I just got off the phone with a PI myself. We’re probably going to tap everyone’s communications.” Agatha frowned. “I doubt it’ll help, though. They’re probably using a burner phone.”

“Do you think Ms. Gonzales has a chance at the nomination?” the demon asked.

“Not really. I’m just involved in her campaign because I’ve watched her grow up, and I know the kind of person she is.” Agatha’s smile was sad. “She wants to help people, really help them, and that doesn’t translate well to political clout.”

Deva cleared her throat. “This isn’t a promise or anything of the sort, but Hank is making noises about offering her the Vice Premier role. She’d be able to do a lot of good there and gain the political clout to carry her further.”

“As if she’d be young enough to run as Premier after Ironstrike serves three full terms.” Agatha shook her head. “She’s already fifty, and in twenty-one years she won’t be taken seriously as a candidate.”

Deva shrugged. “Anyway, I thought I’d put it out there, so you aren’t blindsided when Hank calls.”

Agatha chuckled. “I told her this morning that he’d do well to have her as his VP choice.”

“Wait, this morning?” Deva leaned forward. “Who else was there?”

“Just Pen and myself.”

Deva looked at Agatha in shock. “Her office must be bugged. The mystery caller told me about it just before you called.”

“Shit. I’ll send the PI over to scour her office now. Maybe the bug will tell us who the mole is.” Agatha dropped a couple large bills on the table and left in a hurry, making a call on her phone as she went.

No sooner had Agatha disappeared around the corner than Deva’s phone rang. The mystery caller again. “Make your move tomorrow morning. The human’s going to highlight wand control at her fundraiser tonight, which will push her right out of the running.” The caller hung up before Deva could say anything.


The fundraiser was a bust. Penelope laid out the only policy that Ironstrike hadn’t stolen from her, wand control. She explained in detail how wands beyond cantrip power would be regulated in the same way guns were, in order to keep them out of the same hands that they wanted to keep guns from.

It was hot-button topic, and not something any politician hoping for election should broach. She knew it could backfire, and it did. Still, she played the role well until the event ended. She sat on a table and sighed. “That could’ve gone better.”

Agatha didn’t have an answer for her. She’d advised against bringing it up until after election. “I don’t know what to tell you, Pen.”

“I do. Throw in the towel, Aggie. We’re done. I don’t have the backing to stay in the race.” Penelope lay back on the table and laughed. “Now, I can relax. I might even sleep in until six or seven tomorrow.”

“Deva said that your office might be bugged, not that it matters much now.” Agatha sat on the table next to Penelope and stroked her hair. “I sent the PI to your office to find the bug. Maybe that’ll tell us who the mole is … was.”

“You don’t have to,” Penelope said. “I already know.”

Agatha stiffened beside her. “What?”

“I’m not stupid, Aggie.”

“What do you mean?”

Penelope sat up. “It was stupid idea, anyway. A human mayor of a predominantly human, orc, and halfling middle-sized city running for Premier? Never happen in a million years.”

“But—,” Agatha sputtered, “I’m not—”

“Shh, I’m the one telling the story now. It doesn’t help if that human has some more liberal views on social matters than the centerline of the party. I’m just happy our policies have gained the kind of traction they have with Ironstrike’s campaign, however ill-gotten they may be.”

When Penelope was silent for nearly a minute, Agatha asked, “But … who’s the mole?”

“Hmm?”

Agatha stared at Penelope, who raised an eyebrow. “You?”

Penelope nodded.

“You were so convincing that you were angry Ironstrike was stealing your plans.”

“I was angry,” she said, “but not because of that. I was angry that he could spin those as his plans and everyone gobbled it up, but nothing I ever said in twenty years in office, or testifying in front of Parliament, ever got anyone’s attention.”

“They don’t know how smart you are, Pen. That’s on them.” Agatha patted her on the shoulder.

Penelope stood and stretched. “My work here is done.”

“Not so fast,” Agatha said. The look on her face reminded Penelope of her childhood when Agatha was her tutor.

“What, ma’am?”

“You’ll no doubt be hearing from Ironstrike. Deva told me that it wasn’t a promise, but Hank was ‘making noises’ about you as VP pick. He doesn’t make those decisions on his own. It was Deva’s way of letting me know you were about to be tapped.”

“I guess I could do that,” Penelope said, “after I sleep in for one day at least.”

“But what about Premier? If he does three terms, you’ll be—”

“I know how old I’ll be. Aggie, let me tell you a little secret. My only goal in running in the primaries was to get the party to focus on what matters to the constituents and get out of the political navel gazing they’ve fallen into in the past three decades.

“I don’t have the political weight to get the party talking about things like improving transportation infrastructure or expanding healthcare access. Hank does. I knew those issues would strike a chord in the party and beyond, and get voters fired up. I was right. And Hank has the media skills to make it count.”

Trunk Stories

One Way

prompt: Write a story that includes the line, “Is nobody going to say it?”.

available at Reedsy

The mood in the room had been smothered to the point that if were to drop any lower, it would wrap around into manic chaos. Thirty-one red markers on the holographic display blinked and drew attention to themselves as they orbited the gas giant in the system.

“If they complete the gate, the frontier worlds are lost. They have to be stopped, now but … the nearest carrier strike group is the twelfth, and they won’t get here in time.” He looked at his reflection in the darkened screen of his terminal. Where he’d been a young captain only a few months earlier, he was now a commodore, and had aged at least ten years. Lines formed at the corners of his deep brown eyes, a few grey hairs showed at his temples, obvious in the otherwise jet-black hair. Dark circles gathered under his eyes, adding unwanted shadow to his warm brown skin.

“Commodore Singh, all due respect, sir, everything after ‘but’ is horseshit.” The woman who spoke looked out of place, wearing a track suit and trainers among a room full of dress uniforms and suits. Dull blonde hair was pulled back into a ponytail, showing a sun-darkened, beige face with dark freckles, and grey eyes. “The twelfth isn’t the closest or fastest resource.”

“Who are you?” he asked.

She stood and snapped to attention. “Major Brennan, sir, 48th SBS, Marines. Apologies for the state of my dress, but I was shuttled here directly from the gym on the Dublin.”

He nodded and she sat back down. “Major,” he said, “we may need to utilize the Dublin and Donegal to evacuate civilians. I’d lay good money on an Eire-class fast attack hunter against any two alien ships from anywhere. Still, there’s no way two fast-attack ships can take on a squid battle group.”

“We don’t have to take out the whole group, sir, just the flagship. Our intelligence says that without communication with their higher-ups, the squids are unable to organize and take coordinated action.”

“That’s all fine and well, I’m sure.” Governor Haight wore a rumpled, blue suit that set off her deep brown skin, her Afro uncharacteristically askew. Her pale brown eyes showed the weight of expectation. “How do we do that?”

Singh sighed. He gave the major a knowing look and set his jaw.

Brennan took control of the holograph. “Madame Governor, there’s no way for a fast-attack ship to fight through the battle group to the flagship, which is why we have to use stealth.” She entered a command that showed the class of each enemy ship, the flagship marked in purple. It was well within the sphere of other ships.

“Looking at it like this is misleading,” Brennan said, “as the space between each of those ships is a little over a kilometer. I’m suggesting we launch five, two-person BBs — that’s breaching and boarding torpedoes — with the goal of inserting a four-person and six-person team. It’s an hour and forty minutes from launch to attachment if we launch under cover of a patrol maneuver by the Dublin, staying just outside of the squid’s weapons range.” The display showed the Dublin in green moving toward the alien battle group, then turning a slow arc to return to their colony world. Behind the Dublin, five small, green lights continued on toward the alien ships.

She changed the display to show the layout of the alien flagship. “We attach two here,” she made a highlight on the display, “at the comms, and the other three here,” she made another highlight, “between engines and weapons, right near the escape pods.”

As she explained, the green markers representing the SBS squad members moved through the ship. “The first team cuts all communication. This cripples the rest of the battle group. Then they join forces with the second team here, at the main engine room, after the second team has disabled the escape pods. Once the engines are disabled, the full squad will go deck by deck, blowing or disabling every airlock, after which we detonate the BBs, exposing the entire ship to vacuum.”

The governor cleared her throat. “Don’t they breathe methane? Won’t the whole thing blow up, and you with it?”

“Their ship-board atmosphere is pure methane, no oxygen, so fire’s not a concern, unless we pump the ship full of an oxidizer, like the fluorine missiles. We don’t want to destroy it, though, we want to capture it.”

“We just pulled you here from the gym. How did you come up with this plan?” the governor asked.

Brennan smiled. “We gamed this out ages ago. We’ve just been waiting for an opportunity to capture a squid flagship.”

“How much oxygen do the BBs hold?” Singh asked. “Is it still just one hour, or have there been improvements?”

The major smirked. “One hour, sir. The upgraded versions aren’t due to be deployed to the fast attack ships for at least another two years.”

“With two hours of oxygen in your armor, that doesn’t leave a lot of time,” he said.

“Aye, sir. But we’ll get it done.”

“Madame Governor,” he asked, “what’s your decision?”

“What will you do once you detonate the boarding torpedoes?” the governor asked.

“If some of the other ships will move in closer to assist, we’ll expose the reactor to make it too radioactive for them to approach. If they don’t, we’ll sit tight until the twelfth gets here and they can capture the ship for intel.”

Haight looked between the major and the commodore. “The fleet won’t be here for a day and a half. Is nobody going to say it? It’s — you can’t — you’ll—”

Brennan looked the governor in the eye. “It doesn’t need to be said, Madame Governor.”

“Volunteers?” the commodore asked.

“I have too many. The entire squadron volunteered. We’ll draw names out of a hat, except for Lacey and Birkram. Lacey’s got a kid on the way, and Birkram has a two-year-old.” Brennan looked at the governor. “Madame Governor, do we have the green light?”

“What are the chances of success?”

“We’ll get it done, Madame Governor. Like our motto says, ‘By strength and guile.’”

“It feels wrong to throw away the lives of ten marines,” Haight said. “Is there no other way? Commodore?”

“Intel says they’ll finish the gate in the next ten to sixteen hours. After that, we have to admit defeat. They can bring thirty battle groups through in as many minutes.”

“If I may, Madame Governor,” Brennan said, “you aren’t throwing away ten marines. Ten marines are willing to pay the price to protect our borders from the squids, and considering the alternative, it’s a bargain.”

Haight took a deep breath. “Major,” she said, her voice cracking, “you have the green light.” Tears fell from her eyes, and she slumped in her chair.

The major stood and saluted. The commodore and governor both rose and returned her salute.

“God speed,” Singh said.

Haight looked like she was searching for words but not finding any. Brennan nodded at her. “Don’t worry, Madame Governor, we’ll make you proud. We knew when we gamed it out it might be a one-way trip.”

Trunk Stories

Spritely

prompt: A photographer captures an image of something unexplainable. What happens next?

available at Reedsy

When she saw the glow of fire, Scarlett stopped, called 9-1-1, and pulled out her camera. The corner of the warehouse was wrapped in flames, not yet huge, perhaps caught early enough to save most of it. Given the rash of arson in the industrial district, Scarlett set about capturing as much of the fire as she could.

The news vans would be trailing the fire trucks. If there was a chance for an exclusive, now was it. She put on her telephoto lens and began scanning the edges of the flames, snapping as she went. Something caught her attention. It was as though bits of flame were breaking off from the base of the fire and skipping across the ground until they found something flammable to land on and ignite.

She pulled her self-locking monopod out of her pocket and extended it with a practiced flick of the wrist. Continuing to snap pictures of the bits of flame that seemed intent on spreading the fire, she screwed the monopod in with her left hand, letting the weight of the camera and lens rest on it.

Scarlett followed the skittering bits of flame, certain that some strange material from the warehouse was causing their action. There was a part of her mind, however, that was just as certain that they were bits of flame moving under their own volition, skipping gleefully from one piece of flammable material to the next. She could’ve sworn that some of them had little legs made of flame.

The increasing sound of sirens announced the arrival of the fire trucks. She moved farther away from the warehouse to stay out of the way of the firefighters. She kept snapping as hoses were extended and connected, and the firefighters began pouring water on the growing fire.

The news vans rolled in, including one that made a point of stopping between Scarlett and the fire. She had plenty of photos, and none of the news cameras would capture the skipping flames like she had. She was about to call the local paper to see if they wanted any of the photos for their breaking news webpage, when her phone rang.

“Scarlett Muñoz.”

“Are you the person that reported the warehouse fire on East Cleven?” the voice on the other end asked.

“That’s me.”

“This is Fire Marshal Alice Dewitt. Are you still at the warehouse?”

“Yeah, I was just about to pack it in and get these photos to Tribune.”

“Don’t leave just yet, and don’t send any photos without my okay. Until I make further determination, they’re evidence. I’m pulling up now.” The Marshal’s siren drowned out the words as she pulled in.

Alice stepped out of her SUV and stood looking at the fire and the news crews. “Where are you?” she asked, still on the phone.

“I’m behind the News 9 van. Next to the grey Camry.”

Alice turned around, nodded, and walked to Scarlett, cutting the call as she did. “Miss Muñoz,” she extended a hand, “Alice Dewitt, Fire Marshal.”

Scarlett shook her hand. “Just call me Scarlett, Marshal, unless you think I did this.”

“Nothing like that, Scarlett. Could you just tell me what you saw when you first got here?”

“When I first got here, the fire was small, just at the corner of the building.” She turned the camera around and began showing the photos. “I switched to the telephoto to get some detail shots and saw these little embers or flames or something skipping across the gravel to set little bits of weeds or wood scraps on fire.”

“Mm-hmm.” Alice seemed to be trying not to react, but Scarlett had seen the momentary flicker of recognition.

She stopped on one of the close-up photos of the dancing flames and zoomed in as much as possible on the camera’s screen to show what looked like legs. “It’s like these little flames or whatever had legs.”

Alice’s expression turned dark. “I need to confiscate your SD card, and I need you to come with me to the police station.”

“What? Why?”

“Those photos can’t go public, and I don’t have a large screen or anywhere private to talk at my office.” Alice’s expression softened. “I would like to get more information from you about how the fire was — behaving. You’re not detained. If you want to just hand over the card, you can go.”

“And if I don’t give it to you?”

“Then I arrest you and turn you over to the police for obstructing a fire investigation.” Alice held out a hand. “I really don’t want to do that.”

“I’ll go with you,” Scarlett said. “If nothing else, I want to see these things on a large enough screen to figure out what I’m looking at.”

The police station gave them the use of a conference room with a big screen, and they were joined by a Lieutenant Detective from the Major Crimes Unit. Alice welcomed him far too warmly for the occasion. “Mark, it’s good to see you back at work!”

“Thanks, Alice.” He looked at Scarlett. “Has she been read in?”

“No, but I think we might need to.” Alice held up the SD card and the detective took it from her. He looked at Scarlett. “Any sort of virus or malware on here that you’re aware of?”

“No. Just a bunch of images in raw format.”

He stepped to the podium, inserted the card and tapped on the keyboard. The screen faded to life. Her images were laid out in a grid, and the point where she changed lenses was obvious. The images taken with the telephoto needed some serious level adjustment.

Scarlett cleared her throat. “You might want to apply—” she began, ending in an annoyed groan as he clicked on the “Auto-Adjust” button. It made the images better, but not as good as she could in thirty seconds of manual adjustment.

Mark clicked on the first of the images of the “dancing” flames. As he clicked, from frame to frame, Scarlett was more certain that there were no embers, just flame, and it seemed to move like it had a purpose.

Alice put a hand on Scarlett’s arm. “I’m sure you understand, you can’t speak about this with anyone.”

“About what?”

Mark sighed. “What do you know about the fey?”

“Like fairytales? That’s it.”

“Fairytales, yes, but also no.” He pointed at one of the little flames. She swore she could make out a face. “Fire sprites.”

“I’m sure you’ve heard about the recent arson fires,” Alice said. “Fast spreading, jumping from one structure to the next, even with no wind, incredibly difficult to put out. What hasn’t been in the news, though, is that no trace of accelerant has been found at any one of them,”

“These pictures,” Mark said, “prove our theory. Our arsonist is calling the fire sprites to a location and letting them go.”

“You’re not making any sense,” Scarlett said. “It’s fire, not magic.”

Alice walked over to the screen and pointed. “What’s that? A face. And those? Feet.”

“Pareidolia,” Scarlett countered. “We see patterns where there are none.”

Alice sighed and gave Mark a questioning look. When he nodded, she held out her hand and chanted for a few seconds.

The air around her hand began to swirl, turning first into a small cloud, and finally into a golf-ball-sized sphere of water, as one would expect in zero gravity. The sphere then dropped into her hand and formed into a sort of water column. It moved up Alice’s arm in the same way the flames had moved, and Scarlett was certain it had a face when it stopped to stare at her. She felt compelled to it, as if she had to see it. She reached for her camera, except it wasn’t there.

“This is a water sprite. I can summon it to me. Once it’s here, though, it has a mind of its own. If I summoned it near a pool or a lake or a river, it would spawn thousands. Generally harmless, though.

“Fire sprites need fuel to burn, and spawn that way. Our arsonist is doing what I just did, only with a much more dangerous creature.” She uttered a single syllable and the sprite turned into plain water that dripped off her arm.

Scarlett stood slack-jawed for a moment. “Uh, couldn’t you just, make that sound and make the fire sprites go away, too?”

“Doesn’t work that way,” Mark said. “Summoned fey can only be released by the summoner, killed or, rarely, decide to leave on its own when it feels it has exacted payment for its summons.”

“But how does a Fire Marshal—”

“We’re both members of the National Paranormal Protection Agency.” Mark produced a business card that had nothing to do with his position as a police lieutenant. “We think you’d be a good fit.”

“Why?”

“I saw how you reacted to the water sprite,” Alice said. “What took you to the warehouse tonight?”

Scarlett thought for a moment. “I was on my way to the docks to take some pictures of the Navy ship that’s about to be decommissioned, but for some reason, I felt like I had to take a left onto Clevin. That feeling has gotten me some good photos in the past.”

“And when Alice summoned the water sprite? What did you feel then?” Mark asked. “I saw you leaning in and reaching for a camera.”

“I just felt, drawn to it, as if I had to see it,” she answered.

Alice looked at Mark. “Finder?”

He nodded. “You’re a finder, Scarlett. The paranormal pulls you to it. We could use someone like you to keep us informed of what’s happening and where.”

“Would I have to stop selling my photos?”

“No. In fact, it’s better that you keep working your regular job. It helps that it’s one that gets you into places the average random schmuck can’t go,” Alice said. “You do have a state press pass, right?”

“I do.”

“The other reason to keep your job,” Mark added, “is that the NPPA is a government position. Good healthcare and other benefits, but terrible pay.”

Scarlett thought about it. She knew that if she declined, she wouldn’t say anything about it to anyone anyway. Who would believe her? But a steady paycheck…she nodded. “I’m in.”

Mark patted her on the shoulder. “Call the number on that card tomorrow morning, and we’ll get you sworn in and get your employment packet set up.”

Alice shook her hand. “It’ll be nice to have you on board. You’re free to go, but remember—”

“Not a word to anyone,” Scarlett said. “Like they would believe me.”

“Mark, who should we bring in on the fire sprite summoner?”

He looked at Scarlett and made a “shoo” motion. She closed the door behind her, and their conversation continued on muffled as she walked out of the station.

She got into her car, loaded a new SD card into her camera and pulled out to the street. Something made her turn away from home, though.

Trunk Stories

Accidental General

prompt: Write a story in which a case of mistaken identity plays a pivotal role.

available at Reedsy

Desperate people do desperate things. Jen convinced herself that what she was doing was desperate rather than insane. If anyone had the cure for her mother, it would have to be the aliens.

They’d arrived on Earth a few years ago, spending an inordinate amount of time dealing with human governments, greed, and tribalism. In the end, they were given places where their trade vessels could land, sell goods, and buy from the local populace in dozens of countries. One of those alien port markets happened to be just a hundred kilometers or so from her home.

Humans weren’t allowed near their ships, and they were very careful to not let anything they called “forbidden for primitive trade” out of their sight. They had no use for precious metals, human currency, or gemstones. They traded what they brought for other goods.

Jen had been lucky, in that a large part of the recent trades at her “local” port market had been live chicks, ducklings, goslings, and rabbits. She’d bluffed her way to the back streets of the market, nearer to where their ship lay hidden, by explaining to the aliens in detail how to care for the baby birds and rabbits.

When she’d finally been shooed away, she managed to hide in the back streets, creeping ever closer to the ship. Which is how she made her way to the cargo hold with the animals, where she found herself wondering what her next step would be.

She hadn’t felt anything other than a slight reduction in her weight when they left. She knew from the spate of news stories and documentaries that the aliens came from a system nearly eight-hundred light-years away. That they could cross those distances meant they had to have the technology to cure her mother’s cancer.

How long it would take, though, she wasn’t sure. Water was taken care of, as the tank carrying it for the animals was easy to get to. For food, she carried a case of two dozen meal bars, and a couple kilos of mixed nuts. It wasn’t ideal, but it was what she could find spur-of-the-moment when her desperation turned to action.

Jen guessed they’d taken off about two hours earlier, but she hadn’t eaten at all that day. She unwrapped a meal bar and took her time with a bite of it. When she was about to take the second bite, she heard movement, and large cargo door began to open.

She ducked behind the water tank. One of the aliens was probably coming in to check on the animals. A peek around the side of the tank, though, showed that the outer doors were open as well. A dim, red sun illuminated a world no other human had ever seen.

Panic began to set in. She hadn’t planned for what came next, beyond begging for help. She ducked back behind the water tank and calmed herself. Deep, slow breaths brought her heart rate down, and helped her settle her mind.

One of the aliens ducked behind the water tank with her, holding a bundle in their arms. “You’re finally here. Put these on and I’ll get you out of the port,” the alien said in perfect English.

The bundle contained clothes like those the aliens wore, with a head covering that was somewhere between beekeeper and hazmat. The gloves only had three fingers and a thumb that sat too low and was far too long. Still, she did her best to cover herself.

She followed the alien out of the ship, through the port, and into what must be a city, though there were no cars or analogues. The roads themselves, if they could be called that, moved. Everywhere she followed the alien, the other aliens gave them space, many bowing or holding up a single, long, middle finger. For a brief moment, she thought they were flipping her the bird, until she reminded herself that these grey-skinned, black-eyed, three-fingered aliens were not human and not given to human gestures.

They finally stopped in front of a low building with a yellow glass roof. The alien led her inside, then straight through the open main hallway beneath the skylight to a back room. There, the alien unlocked a panel on the wall and led her down a winding staircase to a dim basement.

More aliens waited for them in the basement. A map on the wall showed symbols she didn’t understand.

“Is that the human?” some of them asked.

Jen stripped off the gloves and lifted the headpiece off to the astonished gasps of the other aliens. “It’s true! You’re here!” they called out.

“I am Renthion,” the alien that had led her said.

“Hi. I’m Jen. What’s going on, and how do you speak English?”

“We do not speak English, Jen, but the devices we wear around our waist translate for us.” The alien that spoke raised a middle finger. “I am Abalorth, and I am honored to be in your presence, great general.”

“Um, wait, great what?” Jen asked.

“We understand you will want to secure payment,” Renthion said. “What is your desire?”

“Oh, I, uh, I just came here to find a cure for my mother’s cancer.”

They turned off their translators and spoke among themselves. Their speech sounded more like the murmur of water in a stony brook than anything else.

Finally, they turned back on their devices and Abalorth said, “We accept the price.”

Renthion pointed at the map and began explaining what all the symbols meant. It was a war map, with different troop types and sizes and terrain on display. It reminded her of the strategy games she regularly played, right down to “this unit type is weak to that one and stronger than that type.”

“We are badly scattered, as you can see. But we have it on good authority that the human great general that will stow away on a government ship will know how to turn things around for us.”

“But I’m not a great general, I’m just—”

“Your modesty is appreciated, but unnecessary. We will leave you alone with the map for a while to make your plans. Writing materials are just there, by the map.” They filed out of the dim room and Jen sighed.

She didn’t know who they were fighting, or what was their cause, or whether it was even just. No matter what she did, though, someone was going to pay the price for what she decided. Either this group meeting in secret, or the others that had them outnumbered.

She paced the small room, stopping in front of a mirror. “What are you doing, Jen?” she asked her reflection. “Are they trying to overthrow their government? Probably, judging by the huge amount of armored type units on the other side. Does their government need to be overthrown, or are these guys religious fanatics?”

She groaned and paced some more. Every time she closed her eyes, she saw the look on her mother’s face when the doctor told her they’d have to stop the chemo because it wasn’t working and there were no more options.

“Screw it,” she said to herself, “mom’s worth whatever price I put on my soul.”

Jen studied the map as if it were one of her strategy games and began scribbling out early plans and options for each unit. Then she addressed any actions the enemies might take with counteractions by the troops.

If it was her favorite strategy game, she’d have the seemingly overwhelming army defeated within twenty turns and lose at most a tenth of her own armies. She was still looking for any stupid moves the enemy might make — she’d addressed every smart, logical move — when the door opened ant the aliens came back in.

Abalorth looked over the pages of notes she’d scribbled on the smooth paper. “Can you explain your plans?”

“Sure.” Jen picked up her notes, in order, and stepped in front of the map. As she pointed to units on the map and explained their best course of action, those unit markers would move on the map. As she talked through the action-reaction portion of the combat, the enemy markers would move, and the friendly markers would follow her recommendations. She detailed everything, including the possible need to sacrifice two units in order to bring down four to six enemy units.

After an hour of explaining what took her twenty minutes to figure out, she looked at the aliens. They all sat in silence for a long minute before Renthion raised a hand, his middle finger up. “It is as our spy said, the general is a genius.”

“I’m not really—”

Abalorth and another alien cut her off with a bow, holding out a large case. “This contains an automated healing machine. It is not allowed for trade with your people, but since you held up your end of the deal, we will uphold ours.”

“But I haven’t really—”

“The troops began moving quite a while ago. It was as you said.” Renthion pointed at the map. The units reset themselves to a position in what Jen considered the “late early game.” The enemy troops were responding in some cases in the most obvious way, in a few cases the second or third most likely she’d expected.

She heard explosions outside as one of the enemy armored units barreled past their location, getting themselves trapped in a kill funnel at the edge of the city. Explosions could be heard further afield as well. Units began disappearing from the map.

Four armored units and two light mounted met up at the edge of a clearing. Jen felt sick. This was the point where the purpose of two entire light mounted units was to draw them out and get obliterated while infantry closed in from behind to mine their escape from the heavy artillery that would begin to pound them from the far tree line.

The alien numbers depicting the size of the sacrificial units began to fall until they pulled further out into the clearing. Jen found herself sweating, silently urging the enemy units to take the bait. They did. She watched them advance in formation, while infantry units moved behind them to mine their escape.

The bait units continued to maneuver and dwindle until one blinked out existence on the board. The other made a beeline for far trees when artillery began raining down on the pursuing forces. They pulled back in a hurry, almost running into the infantry units that were scattering in the woods behind them.

As the enemy retraced their steps, their unit numbers began falling, until three had blinked out of existence, and the remaining three were trapped by the damaged vehicles. The infantry reformed around them, and those three enemy unit markers also soon disappeared.

There were battles happening in other locations on the map but watching that one closely left Jen feeling sick. She’d just sent a bunch of people to their death, and she didn’t even know what for. She clutched the case with the healing machine. Was her mother really worth that many lives? What gave Jen the right to decide?

She stared at the map in stunned silence over the next hours, watching more and more of the previously outmanned units coalesce and claim more of the map. The final push was for the center of the city, where the halls of government lay.

Jen said a silent prayer to any god or gods that might be somewhere out there, to forgive her weakness. Tears ran down her face unbidden for the unknown lives that were lost. The room grew silent around her, and then exploded in sounds of joy and celebration. “What have I done?” she muttered under her breath.

The map changed to show video from the government building. Grey aliens like the ones around her celebrated as massive, reptilian aliens were led out of the building in chains. With the devices on the aliens around her, she could understand what the alien shouting into what must have been a microphone was saying to the crowd.

“We have thrown off the shackles of the bordlenorb and now are masters of our own destiny. Freedom for the people, freedom for Rorbenthor” The translators didn’t translate their word for the reptilian aliens or the planet’s name, but it was enough that Jen understood what was going on.

She didn’t feel quite so bad about the dead enemies any longer, but it didn’t assuage the guilt she felt for trading so many lives for her mother’s. She dropped the case and fell to her knees, sobbing.

Renthion sat on the floor near her. “Are you injured?”

“No. Yes. I mean, not physically, but I just caused so much death, and for what?” She forced herself to look Renthion in the eye. “I am selfish, and thought only of my mother, not what my actions would cost.”

Renthion put a hand on her arm. “Do you know why we were not allowed to trade that device?”

“No.”

“It would mean that humans would live far longer, healthier lives, and likely reach the stars sooner. The bordlenorb, our previous lords, forbade us to help any ‘primitive’ world advance.”

Abalorth helped her to her feet. “You may have only been thinking of your mother, but what will others do with this?”

“Is this something we have the technology to recreate?” she asked.

“Maybe not today, but very soon.” Renthion stood, picked up the case and handed it back to her. “Your scientists and materials experts have the know-how, it will just take some time.”

Jen sighed. “Only governments and big corporations have the resources for that, and it’ll be limited to the ultra-wealthy in the end.”

Abalorth bowed slightly. “Scarcity economy, of course. Perhaps if you had the resources, it could be shared in a fair manner?”

“Yeah, but that’s not happening any time soon.”

They turned off their devices and burbled among themselves again, checking the alien script on the map screen while they directed it to do something. After they reached a consensus, Abalorth turned back to her and asked, “Would thirty-two-thousand kilograms of gold be enough resources?”

Jen stared. “Would what? That’s — a lot of gold. Like a billion dollars’ worth? Two billion?”

“Would that be enough?”

Jen nodded. “Yeah, yeah it would.”

“Well then, general, we have an agreement, and we expect to see great things from humans in the near future,” Renthion said.

“Like I said, I’m not—”

“Nonsense. You figured out how to best use our remaining troops in almost no time at all. All of our field commanders are taking your lessons as they move forward to clearing out the last of the bordlenorb.” Renthion motioned for her to follow but didn’t make her put on the clothing again.

As they passed through the streets on their way back to the port, the passersby cheered and held up a middle finger. Renthion’s translator caught their cheers for the human great general that had freed them all.

She rode back to Earth in a comfortable seat, then was taken in a smaller craft to her home along with a vault that opened only to her touch, crammed with gold. She bid the aliens goodbye and brought the healing machine to her mother.

While the machine did its work, she began researching how to set up a non-profit research organization and how to hire top talent scientists. She would not feel at ease with her actions until she had saved at least a hundred times as many people as she had condemned to death on Rorbenthor.

Something Renthion had said on the return trip echoed through her mind. “Only a great general  weeps for the cruelty of war, even after winning it.”

Trunk Stories

A Private Meeting

prompt: Set your story in the stands at a major sporting event.

available at Reedsy

“Really? Of all places, this is where you choose to meet?”

“Damn! Can you believe these seats? I can’t see what’s happening,” the small woman complained. She leaned left and right in an attempt to see around the crowd of large men in the next row. Her pink-tipped blonde hair fell across her pale beige face and green eyes as she did, and she ignored it.

“It’s a game of sportsball or something. Some kind of sports are happening. That’s not why we’re here.” The woman next to her wore large sunglasses that hid her eyes, a wide-brimmed hat with her nondescript brown hair tucked into it, and a look of annoyance on her gold-tinged, light brown face.

“I don’t care what we’re here for, we’re at a baseball game, we should at least be able to see it.”

The stands erupted, the men in front of them jumping to their feet, yelling and spilling beer.

“Someone made a touchdown or whatever. Now get serious. It’s bad enough you didn’t even try to disguise your appearance.”

“Maisy, come on—”

“No names!”

“I’ll use names if I want to. Nobody is paying any attention to us at all.” She stuck out a hand. “Nice to meet you, Maisy, I’m Allison.”

Maisy grabbed the offered hand hard. “Knock it off. Are you trying to get caught?”

Allison tapped on the shoulder of the man directly in front of her. When he turned, she said, “Hey, I’m Allison and I’m going to murder my husband tonight. My friend Maisy here is going to help me.”

He looked at her through a haze of drunkenness. “Does that mean you’re available?”

“Not until tomorrow, honey.”

“Woo!” He raised his sloshing cup of beer in salute before draining it and turning back to his friends and shouting, “She’s dumping her old man tonight!” The entire row gave her smiles and raised cups before turning back to the game.

“See?”

“Fine. Do you have it?”

Allison reached into her pocket and pulled out a thumb drive. “Everything you need is right here.”

Maisy took the drive and put it in her bra. “And where—”

“Plug that into any of the computers except the ones at reception. Those are on a different network.”

Maisy pursed her lips. “That may be difficult.”

“What about the printers? You have access to those?”

“Yeah. But—”

“But nothing. All this needs is something connected to the network, and printers are notorious for their weak security.”

“How long do I wait?”

“Ideally, until you get a text on your phone that says, ‘I’m here, where are you?’ Could be ten minutes, might be as long as an hour. If you can’t wait around for it, try to stick it somewhere it won’t be seen right away.”

“What’s your endgame here?” Maisy asked. “What are you getting out of this?”

Allison held out her hand. “Paid. That’s what I’m getting. Nothing more, nothing less.”

Maisy pulled a pre-paid credit card out of her purse and handed it to her. “But you’ll have access to their entire network. What are you going to do with it?”

“Get paid some more.” Allison scanned the chip in the card with her phone and verified the amount on the card, then stuffed it in her pocket. “They stole my patent; they owe me.”

“I still don’t see how, though. Not how they owe you, but how you expect to make money off this.”

“Is it considered insider trading if I short their stock and then tank their company from the inside?” She winked. “Of course, if I find what I think I will, just turning that over to the Trade Commission will be enough to tank them.”

“You think Berlitz will see jail?”

“Nah. He’s richer than God. Guys like him don’t go to jail, unfortunately.” Allison turned in the set to face Maisy. “Now it’s my turn to ask. What are you getting out of this?”

“That smug bastard got a judge to force me to sell the condo I grew up in, then bulldozed the entire complex and the park next to it to build high-rise condos no one in this city can afford.”

“So it’s personal for you, too, huh?”

“Yeah.”

“But you still took a job there.”

Maisy sighed. “I know. I guess I thought that if I was inside the company I might find a way to take him down.”

“Well, you did.”

“I wasn’t expecting to break the law to do it, though.”

Allison put a hand on her shoulder. “You don’t have to, you know. You could throw that drive away and walk away.”

“Maybe,” she said, “but I don’t think I actually can.”

“We always have…,” Allison stopped herself. “I was going to say we always have a choice, but Berlitz’s lawyers didn’t give you a choice about whether to sell, so that statement is demonstrably false.”

There was a commotion in the row in front of them as the beer vendor came by and sold a new cup to everyone in the group. Given how drunk they already were, Maisy thought it was a bad idea.

When the vendor stepped up to their row, Allison called out to him, “Two here!” She handed the vendor a twenty and waved off the change. She handed one of the cups to Maisy and said, “Drink up!”

Maisy held the cold beer in the flimsy, plastic cup, and took a tentative sip. It was watery and tasted like someone had scared carbonated water with a beer at some point, but the cold felt good. “I don’t normally drink beer. Especially not this kind.”

“It’s six-dollar piss-water, but at least it’s cold.” Allison tapped her cup against Maisy’s and took a deep swig.

Maisy took a few more sips, until the beer began leaving a bitter after-taste. “When should I do it?”

“Next time you’re on shift.” Allison looked into Maisy’s eyes. “I don’t think I need to tell you this, but don’t quit right after. In fact, it’s better if you wait for them to lay you off.”

“Right, so they don’t connect me with the hack.”

Allison raised her cup. “Here’s to your fortune.”

The man in front of her turned around, saw her raised cup and asked, “We toasting you being a free woman? Cheers!”

Allison smiled, tapped the man’s cup with her own, and watched his friends pull his attention back to game just in time for all of them to groan. “See? Best place for a private meeting.”