Stories

Stories

"#Lightspeed Magazine" #Free
A Good Home - Lightspeed Magazine
A Good Home - Lightspeed Magazine
I brought him home from the VA shelter and sat him in front of the window because the doctors said he liked that. The shelter had set him in safe mode for transport until I could voice activate him again, and recalibrate, but safe mode still allowed for base functions like walking, observation, and primary speech. He seemed to like the window because he blinked once. Their kind didn’t blink ordinarily, and they never wept, so I always wondered where the sadness went.
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A Good Home - Lightspeed Magazine
Sparks Fly - Lightspeed Magazine
Sparks Fly - Lightspeed Magazine
“There’s a dark side to sloths,” she said, using her straw to plumb the ice at the bottom of her glass, flicking red-blonde hair out of blue-blue eyes. “Sometimes they go to grab a branch, but accidentally grab their own arm, and then fall to their deaths.” “Because of the mossy fur?” I guessed, also guessing at the best way to put my hand onto hers on the bubbled-glass patio table. I could see her suntanned legs underneath and it put sparks under my skin.
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Sparks Fly - Lightspeed Magazine
The One Who Isn't - Lightspeed Magazine
The One Who Isn't - Lightspeed Magazine
It starts with light. Then heat. A slow bleed through of memory. Catchment, containment. A white-hot agony coursing through every nerve, building to a sizzling hum---and then it happens. Change of state. And what comes out the other side is something new. The woman held up the card. “What color do you see?”
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The One Who Isn't - Lightspeed Magazine
Welcome to the Medical Clinic at the Interplanetary Relay Station | Hours Since the Last Patient Death: 0 - Lightspeed Magazine
Welcome to the Medical Clinic at the Interplanetary Relay Station | Hours Since the Last Patient Death: 0 - Lightspeed Magazine
You take a shortcut through the hydroponics bay on your way to work, and notice that the tomato plants are covered in tiny crawling insects that look like miniature beetles. One of the insects skitters up your leg, so you reach down and brush it off. It bites your hand. The area around the bite turns purple and swollen. You run down a long metal hallway to the Medical Clinic, grateful for the artificially generated gravity that defies the laws of physics and yet is surprisingly common in fictional space stations.
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Welcome to the Medical Clinic at the Interplanetary Relay Station | Hours Since the Last Patient Death: 0 - Lightspeed Magazine
Salto Mortal - Lightspeed Magazine
Salto Mortal - Lightspeed Magazine
Three days ago, Paul had thrown Mary onto the kitchen floor and kicked her everywhere except her face. For the first two days, the only time she left her bed was to go to the bathroom, drops of clotted blood from her insides deposited like coins in the toilet bowl. On the third day, high on oxycodone, Mary dreamed about the lucha libre. She hadn’t thought about wrestling since she’d left Mexico, but the hallucination was as bright and sharp as grief.
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Salto Mortal - Lightspeed Magazine
The Stone Lover - Lightspeed Magazine
The Stone Lover - Lightspeed Magazine
When word came that the king had died, Kyros began packing his tools. Agathon had been a fine patron, commissioning statues and friezes for his capital’s many temples and his own palace, but his wife had no reputation for piety or art. He was surprised, then, when one of her pages delivered a scroll requesting his services.
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The Stone Lover - Lightspeed Magazine
The Debt of the Innocent - Lightspeed Magazine
The Debt of the Innocent - Lightspeed Magazine
On October 11, 2035, Jamie Wrede, R.N., was the sole employee staffing the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit at Temperance United in Martinsville’s Pine Ridge district. In the course of her career, she’d been asked to kill nine newborns. That morning, she planned to kill four more. Jamie woke at 6:45 and began preparing breakfast for her eighteen-month-old daughter, Claire. At 7:34, she picked up a “crank call” and listened for three minutes.
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The Debt of the Innocent - Lightspeed Magazine
Phantom Pain - Lightspeed Magazine
Phantom Pain - Lightspeed Magazine
He was in the library. It was quiet. No guns. No mud. He could crawl in peace, as long as he didn’t make any noise. Mrs. Dientz, the librarian, wouldn’t allow noise. Ed was worried that he would get dirt in his wound, and it would get infected. The library is full of fungus, like a locker room: You can get athlete’s foot in places you would never put your feet.
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Phantom Pain - Lightspeed Magazine
The Worldless - Lightspeed Magazine
The Worldless - Lightspeed Magazine
Every day NuTay watched the starship from their shack, selling satshine and sweet chai to wayfarers on their way to the stars. NuTay and their kin Satlyt baked an endless supply of clay cups using dirt from the vast plain of the port. NuTay and Satlyt, like all the hawkers in the shanties that surrounded the dirt road, were dunyshar, worldless—cursed to a single brown horizon.
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The Worldless - Lightspeed Magazine
How to Become a Mars Overlord - Lightspeed Magazine
How to Become a Mars Overlord - Lightspeed Magazine
Welcome, Aspiring Potentates! We are tremendously gratified at your interest in our little red project, and pleased that you recognize the potential growth opportunities inherent in whole-planet domination. Of course we remain humble in the face of such august and powerful interests, and seek only to showcase the unique and challenging career paths currently available on the highly desirable, iconic, and oxygen-rich landscape of Mars.
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How to Become a Mars Overlord - Lightspeed Magazine
The Perfect Match - Lightspeed Magazine
The Perfect Match - Lightspeed Magazine
Sai woke to the rousing first movement of Vivaldi’s violin concerto in C minor, “Il Sospetto.” He lay still for a minute, letting the music wash over him like a gentle Pacific breeze. The room brightened as the blinds gradually opened to the sunlight. Tilly had woken him right at the end of a light sleep cycle, the optimal time. He felt great: refreshed, optimistic, ready to jump out of bed.
·lightspeedmagazine.com·
The Perfect Match - Lightspeed Magazine
Amaryllis - Lightspeed Magazine
Amaryllis - Lightspeed Magazine
I never knew my mother, and I never understood why she did what she did. I ought to be grateful that she was crazy enough to cut out her implant so she could get pregnant. But it also meant she was crazy enough to hide the pregnancy until termination wasn't an option, knowing the whole time that she'd never get to keep the baby. That she'd lose everything. That her household would lose everything because of her.
·lightspeedmagazine.com·
Amaryllis - Lightspeed Magazine
Things You Can Buy for a Penny - Lightspeed Magazine
Things You Can Buy for a Penny - Lightspeed Magazine
“Don’t go down to the well,” said Theo to his son. So, of course, Tim went to the well. He was thirteen, and his father told him not to. There was no magic to it. To get to the well — and not the well in the center of the village, because everyone knows where that well is, and no one has any stories about it except for whose grandfather dug it and how soon it’s going to go dry.
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Things You Can Buy for a Penny - Lightspeed Magazine
Tea Time - Lightspeed Magazine
Tea Time - Lightspeed Magazine
Begin at the beginning: His many hats. Felt derbies in charcoal and camel and black. Sporting caps and straw boaters. Gibuses covered in corded silk for nights at the theatre. Domed bowlers with dashingly narrow brims. The ratty purple silk top hat, banded with russet brocade, that he keeps by his bedside.
·lightspeedmagazine.com·
Tea Time - Lightspeed Magazine
Nomad - Lightspeed Magazine
Nomad - Lightspeed Magazine
People in modern times don’t like to acknowledge that some of us Radicals are nomad. They interpret that as rogue and dangerous. If you think it’s hard for us now, it was much worse during the turf wars—especially if you weren’t integrated. When Tommy died I became uni—unintegrated—and that usually means nomad. I belonged to no Streak, had no chief and no Fuses to protect me. It wasn’t overnight.
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Nomad - Lightspeed Magazine
The Elixir of Youth - Lightspeed Magazine
The Elixir of Youth - Lightspeed Magazine
Frederic Paschel, a wine merchant who lived in the town of Sylah in the valley of the river Dordogne, was left a widower when his two sons, Gilbert and Benedict, were in their infancy. The younger son, Benedict, was as dutiful as any father could ever have desired; he was amiable and pliable, ready and willing to be molded in the image of his sire as a respectable tradesman. Gilbert, on the other hand, was surly and rebellious.
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The Elixir of Youth - Lightspeed Magazine
Lady Antheia’s Guide to Horticultural Warfare - Lightspeed Magazine
Lady Antheia’s Guide to Horticultural Warfare - Lightspeed Magazine
It is customary to begin one’s memoirs at birth. As I was not “born” in the gross mammalian sense, I shall begin instead at a more logical point in time. To wit: I was borne to Earth on cosmic winds, falling through chance and the grace of the heavens to root in the soil of Notting Hill. There I grew rapidly to adult stature, devoured a lady’s maid who had the misfortune to come too close to my tendrils, and assumed her form.
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Lady Antheia’s Guide to Horticultural Warfare - Lightspeed Magazine
Six-Gun Vixen and the Dead Coon Trashgang - Lightspeed Magazine
Six-Gun Vixen and the Dead Coon Trashgang - Lightspeed Magazine
Dead Gulch lived up to its name. A two-bit hick town that was little more than a dirt track flanked by a couple dozen wood shacks. My beast growled low and mean as I started through and then reared up in yet another fool attempt to unseat me. I had to dig those rusty spurs in long and hard, twisting the boot heel like I was squishing a scorpion. My Halfie let out that familiar nerve-gnashing howl and settled down real quick.
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Six-Gun Vixen and the Dead Coon Trashgang - Lightspeed Magazine
The Last Garden - Lightspeed Magazine
The Last Garden - Lightspeed Magazine
The Surrogate walked past Casey’s window. She watched its shadow slip across the shade, then she stood and zipped up her flight suit. This was the day. No matter what. The doorbell rang. It was polite, the Surrogate. It had manners. It rang the doorbell. It said please and thank you. It had saved Casey’s life, twice, and the first time she had been grateful.
·lightspeedmagazine.com·
The Last Garden - Lightspeed Magazine
The Elixir of Youth - Lightspeed Magazine
The Elixir of Youth - Lightspeed Magazine
Frederic Paschel, a wine merchant who lived in the town of Sylah in the valley of the river Dordogne, was left a widower when his two sons, Gilbert and Benedict, were in their infancy. The younger son, Benedict, was as dutiful as any father could ever have desired; he was amiable and pliable, ready and willing to be molded in the image of his sire as a respectable tradesman. Gilbert, on the other hand, was surly and rebellious.
·lightspeedmagazine.com·
The Elixir of Youth - Lightspeed Magazine
The Last Garden - Lightspeed Magazine
The Last Garden - Lightspeed Magazine
The Surrogate walked past Casey’s window. She watched its shadow slip across the shade, then she stood and zipped up her flight suit. This was the day. No matter what. The doorbell rang. It was polite, the Surrogate. It had manners. It rang the doorbell. It said please and thank you. It had saved Casey’s life, twice, and the first time she had been grateful.
·lightspeedmagazine.com·
The Last Garden - Lightspeed Magazine
Starship Day - Lightspeed Magazine
Starship Day - Lightspeed Magazine
The news was everywhere. It was in our dreams, it was on TV. Tonight, the travelers on the first starship from Earth would awaken. That morning, Danous yawned with the expectant creak of shutters, the first stretch of shadow across narrow streets. The air shimmered with the scent of warming pine, it brushed through the shutters and touched our thoughts even as our dreams had faded. For this was Starship Day, and, from tonight, nothing would ever be the same.
·lightspeedmagazine.com·
Starship Day - Lightspeed Magazine
Later, Let’s Tear Up The Inner Sanctum - Lightspeed Magazine
Later, Let’s Tear Up The Inner Sanctum - Lightspeed Magazine
Still in the hospital. Radiation burns suck. Mom came to see me, though, which was nice. She probably had to argue with that dick of a boss she works for to let her off early. You’d think since I nearly died because superheroes were fighting above my school that I’d get some sort of benefits or medical insurance, but noooo, it’s all on me and Mom to foot the hospital bills because fights are not a novelty anymore.
·lightspeedmagazine.com·
Later, Let’s Tear Up The Inner Sanctum - Lightspeed Magazine
Probably Still the Chosen One - Lightspeed Magazine
Probably Still the Chosen One - Lightspeed Magazine
“You must wait here,” the Highest of the High Priests told her. “We will return and bring you back to the Land of Nibiru once we have found the circlet to place upon your head.” The very mention of the circlet made the High Priest tremble with joy. Though the journey through the portal had been brief, the Land of Nibiru was many universes away from where Corrina now stood—in her own small kitchen, in her own small house.
·lightspeedmagazine.com·
Probably Still the Chosen One - Lightspeed Magazine
The Memorial Page - Lightspeed Magazine
The Memorial Page - Lightspeed Magazine
It’s my habit, of an evening, to walk along the canal, a grey and sleepy little waterway that runs through our village in the low-lying Eastmarch. I follow the canal into the countryside for two miles, to the door of the Fighting Temeraire. This old stone inn by the water is a place where one can drink an excellent rum punch, and share the evening with country people.
·lightspeedmagazine.com·
The Memorial Page - Lightspeed Magazine
Sooner or Later Everything Falls Into the Sea - Lightspeed Magazine
Sooner or Later Everything Falls Into the Sea - Lightspeed Magazine
The rock star washed ashore at high tide. Earlier in the day, Bay had seen something bobbing far out in the water. Remnant of a rowboat, perhaps, or something better. She waited until the tide ebbed, checked her traps and tidal pools among the rocks before walking toward the inlet where debris usually beached. All kinds of things washed up if Bay waited long enough.
·lightspeedmagazine.com·
Sooner or Later Everything Falls Into the Sea - Lightspeed Magazine
Natural Skin - Lightspeed Magazine
Natural Skin - Lightspeed Magazine
As I shrug on my jacket, moving across the carpet as quietly as I can, my sister Xuemei pushes her blankets aside and rolls over onto her belly with a soft murmur. “Liin jie. Where are you going?” Fuck. I glance at her across our shared bedroom, her pale skin glimmering in the near darkness. My shoes are already on; no use lying about it now. “Go back to sleep, kiddo.”
·lightspeedmagazine.com·
Natural Skin - Lightspeed Magazine
A Dirge for Prester John - Lightspeed Magazine
A Dirge for Prester John - Lightspeed Magazine
We carried him down to the river. It churned: basalt, granite, marble, quartz---sandstone, limestone, soapstone. Alabaster against obsidian, flint against agate. Eddies of jasper slipped by, swirls of schist, carbuncle and chrysolite, slate, beryl, and a sound like shoulders breaking. Fortunatus the Gryphon carried the body on his broad and fur-fringed back.
·lightspeedmagazine.com·
A Dirge for Prester John - Lightspeed Magazine
For Solo Cello, op. 12 - Lightspeed Magazine
For Solo Cello, op. 12 - Lightspeed Magazine
His keys dropped, rattling on the parquet floor. Julius stared at them, unwilling to look at the bandaged stump where his left hand had been two weeks ago. He should be used to it by now. He should not still be trying to pass things from his right hand to his left. But it still felt like his hand was there. The shaking began again, a tremelo building in his hand and knees.
·lightspeedmagazine.com·
For Solo Cello, op. 12 - Lightspeed Magazine
I've Come to Marry the Princess - Lightspeed Magazine
I've Come to Marry the Princess - Lightspeed Magazine
Before Jack can apologize to Nancy, she has to believe that dragons exist. Nancy’s mad at him because they were supposed to perform a skit at the talent show and he stood her up. They’ve been practicing it for two summers. It’s called “I’ve Come to Marry the Princess.” When Jack didn’t show, Nancy had to go on stage all by herself. He didn’t ditch her on purpose; his dragon egg was hatching and he needed to be there.
·lightspeedmagazine.com·
I've Come to Marry the Princess - Lightspeed Magazine