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Renfrew’s Course - Lightspeed Magazine
Renfrew’s Course - Lightspeed Magazine
Six feet tall, the statue had been carved from wood that retained most of its whiteness, even though the date cut into its base read 2005, seven years ago. Jim thought the color might be due to its not having been finished—splinters stood out from the wood’s uneven surface—but didn’t know enough about carpentry to be certain.
·lightspeedmagazine.com·
Renfrew’s Course - Lightspeed Magazine
The Cross-Time Accountants Fail To Kill Hitler Because Chuck Berry Does The Twist - Lightspeed Magazine
The Cross-Time Accountants Fail To Kill Hitler Because Chuck Berry Does The Twist - Lightspeed Magazine
Mabel blurred through the Doorway and stumbled into a wall. She groped for a fingerhold, anything to prop herself up until the gut-twisting vertigo passed. Every time she experienced the blur it got a little worse. All that worse added up to worst because she had made hundreds of auditing trips to the past during her thirty-nine year career in cross-time accounting.
·lightspeedmagazine.com·
The Cross-Time Accountants Fail To Kill Hitler Because Chuck Berry Does The Twist - Lightspeed Magazine
Mother Ship - Lightspeed Magazine
Mother Ship - Lightspeed Magazine
My mother was a colony ship. For one revolution of the galaxy, a quarter of a billion years, she carried her creators between the stars. At the end of that time, all the creators had died. My mother drifted aimlessly through space. After a hundred million years of traveling alone and empty, her drifting brought her to Earth.
·lightspeedmagazine.com·
Mother Ship - Lightspeed Magazine
Ruminations in an Alien Tongue - Lightspeed Magazine
Ruminations in an Alien Tongue - Lightspeed Magazine
Sitting on the sun-warmed step at the end of her workday, Birha laid her hand on the dog’s neck and let her mind drift. Like a gyre-moth finding the center of its desire, her mind inevitably spiraled inward to the defining moment of her life. It must be something to do with growing old, she thought irritably, that all she did was revisit what had happened all those years ago.
·lightspeedmagazine.com·
Ruminations in an Alien Tongue - Lightspeed Magazine
Test - Lightspeed Magazine
Test - Lightspeed Magazine
Something is eating the starship Stephen W. Hawking, chewing it slowly and efficiently to pieces. Hurtling through hyperspace, or merely hanging suspended therein (who can really tell about hyperspace?), the vessel has become entangled with an unknown entity that exhibits at least one recognizable attribute: curiosity.stev
·lightspeedmagazine.com·
Test - Lightspeed Magazine
Alarms - Lightspeed Magazine
Alarms - Lightspeed Magazine
My curse is that I set off alarms. Smoke alarms. Car alarms. House alarms. It doesn’t matter what kind; I set them all off as soon as I get close to them. Close is usually about thirty feet. I don’t know why I set them off. I haven’t always been like this. I used to be fairly normal.
·lightspeedmagazine.com·
Alarms - Lightspeed Magazine
The Day They Came - Lightspeed Magazine
The Day They Came - Lightspeed Magazine
You remember the day they came. The shady corner behind the store smelled of Lou’s cigarettes and the dumpster down the alley, just shy of pick-up day and overflowing already. You chewed your sandwich and stared at the weeds growing through the asphalt. The day was stifled by summer heat and suffocating humidity, too bright and too hazy all at once. A shadow passed overhead. You looked up.
·lightspeedmagazine.com·
The Day They Came - Lightspeed Magazine
The Heart’s Cartography - Lightspeed Magazine
The Heart’s Cartography - Lightspeed Magazine
Jade was the sort of backwoods girl who had a map of the countryside tattooed on her heart, and she could feel it in her bones when the pieces of her world shifted. So when the new family moved into the house across the road that late summer, she felt ripples of wrongness radiating out from them and their too-bright clothes, their bizarrely old-fashioned wood-paneled station wagon, and their rolling words.
·lightspeedmagazine.com·
The Heart’s Cartography - Lightspeed Magazine
Weialalaleia - Lightspeed Magazine
Weialalaleia - Lightspeed Magazine
The Weialalaleia (Hirudo Threnophaga) is difficult to observe, and is more recognisable by the sound that accompanies its presence than by its shape. It floats on the air like a jellyfish in water, and, like a jellyfish, is translucent, although there is some debate within cryptohirudological circles about whether the Weialalaleia lacks pigment.
·lightspeedmagazine.com·
Weialalaleia - Lightspeed Magazine
Remote Presence - Lightspeed Magazine
Remote Presence - Lightspeed Magazine
As usual, Win was late to work. Since he hadn’t had time to eat breakfast at home, he arrived at his office—tucked into the old wing of the hospital, now a maze of ancient files and obscure personnel—clutching a styrofoam vat of cafeteria coffee, a donut balanced atop it. He wore jeans and hiking boots and a wrinkled pinstripe dress shirt, from which his ID badge hung crookedly. “Winston Z, MDiv, LCSW, BCC,” it read.
·lightspeedmagazine.com·
Remote Presence - Lightspeed Magazine
If Lions Could Speak: Imagining the Alien - Lightspeed Magazine
If Lions Could Speak: Imagining the Alien - Lightspeed Magazine
Many have written on this subject to confess failure; who am I to claim success? The objections line up like policemen: Alien intelligence does not, in fact, exist. So when we try to describe it, our thoughts do not connect to any object except ourselves. The words we put into an alien mouth, the feeling into an alien heart, the tools into alien hands, what can they be but imitations of our words, feelings, tools?
·lightspeedmagazine.com·
If Lions Could Speak: Imagining the Alien - 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.
·lightspeedmagazine.com·
The Debt of the Innocent - 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.
·lightspeedmagazine.com·
The Stone Lover - Lightspeed Magazine
World of the Three - Lightspeed Magazine
World of the Three - Lightspeed Magazine
Then the Bird of A Hundred and Eight Names gathered together her three new children, and she said, “You have passed our people’s tests and joined our ranks, and may leave if you wish. But leaving will take you among the Alabar, who collect salt in their bare hands and have no fear of rust, and call themselves merely people. Some among us speak slightingly of them, for their lives are short and easily ended, and they don’t protect one another as we do. You should be more wary."
·lightspeedmagazine.com·
World of the Three - Lightspeed Magazine
Yakshantariksh - Lightspeed Magazine
Yakshantariksh - Lightspeed Magazine
The Yakshantariksh is beyond one’s imagination, yet that is where its existence is made manifest. It is a being so real that it can only be sensed by that most intangible of organs: the mind! What a delightful paradox! And yet it is so. It was discovered in a dream---supporting evidence came later. Thus a tick living on the body of an elephant may never realize the elephant exists, unless, perhaps, the elephant speaks to it mind to mind. So it is with the Yakshantariksh, which is as vast, perhaps vaster than galaxies.
·lightspeedmagazine.com·
Yakshantariksh - Lightspeed Magazine
Nine-Tenths of the Law - Lightspeed Magazine
Nine-Tenths of the Law - Lightspeed Magazine
Donna had picked up Jared’s favorite---Romano’s to go, he liked the rosemary bread and the penne rustica---and was just putting it in the oven to keep warm when they brought him in. They being EMTs, after pounding urgently on the door, and brought him in meaning he was on a stretcher. He had an IV in his arm and his eyes were bandaged with thick layers of gauze.
·lightspeedmagazine.com·
Nine-Tenths of the Law - Lightspeed Magazine
World of the Three - Lightspeed Magazine
World of the Three - Lightspeed Magazine
Then the Bird of A Hundred and Eight Names gathered together her three new children, and she said, “You have passed our people’s tests and joined our ranks, and may leave if you wish. But leaving will take you among the Alabar, who collect salt in their bare hands and have no fear of rust, and call themselves merely people. Some among us speak slightingly of them, for their lives are short and easily ended, and they don’t protect one another as we do. You should be more wary."
·lightspeedmagazine.com·
World of the Three - Lightspeed Magazine
Yakshantariksh - Lightspeed Magazine
Yakshantariksh - Lightspeed Magazine
The Yakshantariksh is beyond one’s imagination, yet that is where its existence is made manifest. It is a being so real that it can only be sensed by that most intangible of organs: the mind! What a delightful paradox! And yet it is so. It was discovered in a dream---supporting evidence came later. Thus a tick living on the body of an elephant may never realize the elephant exists, unless, perhaps, the elephant speaks to it mind to mind. So it is with the Yakshantariksh, which is as vast, perhaps vaster than galaxies.
·lightspeedmagazine.com·
Yakshantariksh - Lightspeed Magazine
They Tell Me There Will Be No Pain - Lightspeed Magazine
They Tell Me There Will Be No Pain - Lightspeed Magazine
Colonel Rathbone attends my final debriefing. I’m wearing a paper hospital gown that doesn’t cover my ass; I’ve got a breeze where no breeze has any right to be, from the back of my neck right down where the good Lord split me. But despite that I’m sweating, the backs of my thighs sticking to the paper covering the hospital table
·lightspeedmagazine.com·
They Tell Me There Will Be No Pain - Lightspeed Magazine