《The New Humans》Chapter Fifty-Nine: An American Warlock in Avon Valley
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Lieutenant Benjamin Veltro thought he’d gotten a plum job with his latest assignment: guarding a cleanup crew at some empty, podunk boarding school. The young soldier traded a narrow bunk in a crowded barrack for a queen sized bed with a view of pristine Wheatbelt countryside. Most of his days were spent reading dusty old children’s books, drinking forgotten bottles of red, and chatting with the cleaners on their lunch break.
It was only a week later that Lieutenant Veltro began to wonder why a school cleanup needed military protection. Why the grounds had such deep, strange scars; as if bombarded by meteors and slashed by dragons’ talons. Why he kept finding gold along the riverbank. Why the grass was littered with spent bullets and stained with blood.
“What happened here, Royce?” Benjamin asked the head of the cleanup crew one afternoon while they relaxed in front of a small, limestone castle. The lieutenant was sitting on an overturned gold gargoyle.
Pete Royce swallowed his mouthful of cornbeef sandwich. In his white hazard-suit, the balding, middle-aged man looked like a cut-rate astronaut. “Why you asking me, soldier-boy? They don’t tell us nothing.”
“I mean—” The lieutenant gestured back at the castle. “This isn’t normal, is it?”
Royce nodded. “Sure ain’t.” The cleaner’s eyes danced conspiratorially. “I hear this place was a school for demis.”
The lieutenant frowned. “You’re shitting me. That even allowed?”
Pete shrugged. “Dunno. Bloke who told me said they had some deal with the freak-finders. Then Canberra went all”—the cleaner mimed an explosion—“and I guess what was left of the government decided to crack down on the demis.” He smiled wryly. “I guess they ain’t all bulletproof.”
“Oh.”
Soon, the locals started turning up. Some of them brought food for children long gone. Some left guilty flowers to rot in the sun. Benjamin turned them all away, with only an “I’m not at liberty to discuss the matter” as an explanation
One dirty-blond young man left his spit at the lieutenant’s feet:
“Baby-killer!”
Lieutenant Veltro tried to muster some martial presence. Instead, he just stammered, “I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
The teenage hippie choked on his anger. “ ‘I don’t know’ my arse!” The boy strode towards the soldier, but his burly companion blocked him with his arm.
“He’s not worth it, Bazza,” he said slowly, eyeing the lieutenant's sidearm like a wasp.
Bazza took a deep breath. “You’re right, Ed.” He turned around and walked towards the gate. “Besides, these fuckers only go after little kids.”
“I didn’t—”
The lieutenant was alone again, his words drowned in the still summer air.
After that, a glass slide was pulled out from between the world and Lieutenant Veltro. The heat hit him harder. His spare time went from liberating to oppressive, seconds and hours stretching to breaking point. More and more, he kept spotting toys abandoned in the grass. His mind tried drawing lines between them and their absent, unknowable owners like terrible constellations. He spent a lot of time staring at the mural on the side of barn, wondering how much of someone’s life and time went into those mermaids. Benjamin felt like an intruder in an empty, lonely Heaven. Dante without a Virgil or Beatrice.
Then the lieutenant started going mad. He had to be. He kept hearing laughter. Light, young laughter…
Lieutenant Veltro swung around in the tall yellow grass, trying to find the voice. “Who’s there?”
No answer. Just more laughter.
Veltro reached for his gun, but went still. He remembered the look on that hippie’s face. The contempt.
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I’m better than that.
Instead, the lieutenant shouted, “Come out here, kid! This area is off-limits!” He only realized the contradiction once he said it out loud.
There was movement in the trees. A boy, with a face pale as a corpse. Or a ghost. He took off into the bush.
Lieutenant Veltro ran after the child. “Wait, come back!”
The boy leapt over roots and fallen branches without effort, swerving around gnarled, tightly packed trees with ease while the lieutenant struggled to keep up.
“I just want to ask—”
The boy disappeared behind a tree. Veltro managed to catch up before he emerged from the other side—
The boy was gone; like he’d never been there at all.
Lieutenant Veltro fell to his knees, rapping the side of his head with his knuckles and slamming his fist into the dirt. “Fuck! Fuck!”
When his commanding officer rolled up in his khaki jeep, Benjamin was relieved. Maybe he was getting a transfer. Anywhere or anything would be better than this bloody haunted school. Even Vietnam would’ve been an improvement in Veltro’s book. Not like you could get up to much with the Flying Man swooping in whenever things got interesting.
Instead, the captain handed the lieutenant a funny smelling stick of chalk and a sealed envelope.
“The Americans are sending someone to give the place a look over. He’ll be here tomorrow night. You’ll be getting things set up for him, your instructions are in the envelope.” The captain looked like he was about to say something else, but instead simply sighed. “Just do what it says, and do what he says, got it?”
Lieutenant Veltro saluted and shouted, “Yes, sir!” What else was he going to do?
He opened the envelope in bed that night. All that was in it was a sheet of A4 paper with an astrological symbol scrawled on it:
☿
Next to it were written the words, “Draw this on a flat surface, sunset tomorrow. No earlier, no later. Use the chalk.”
Benjamin didn’t know what to think. It was yet more easy work but… Americans were a strange, strange people.
So, the next day, when the evening shadows were eating the farmhouse walls, the lieutenant found one of its abundant blackboards, and got his art on.
When he was done, Veltro stuck his chalk in his ear and lit a cigarette, admiring his efforts. He’d forgotten how bloody hard drawing a halfway decent circle freehand could be, but he thought he’d done alright. Satisfied, he turned to leave, ready to greet the yank whenever he deigned to show up.
The lieutenant still wondered why the bloke wanted him to draw some New Age symbol. Why not a flag? Or an eagle? Something Americans liked.
Outside, the roof of the sun finally dipped below the horizon. The thin, bright fuse that separates land and sky burned out. Behind the lieutenant, all its light flowed through the window into the Mercury symbol.
A warm breeze broke through into the empty classroom, carrying with it the scent of rain soaked pollen. Strange birds called to each other from some vast, near distance. Veltro could feel the sun on his back.
Someone cleared his throat.
Lieutenant Benjamin Veltro turned to find a man standing in front of the chalkboard. He was tall, with brown skin and serious, beetle black eyes. Dressed in the olive green of the US Army, tight curls peeked out from under his dark green beret. In his left hand was a dark wood staff.
“Lieutenant Veltro?”
Shakily, the lieutenant saluted. “A—awaiting your orders, Colonel Penderghast.”
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Lieutenant Veltro had been hearing lurid tales of Howard Penderghast for years, ever since he walked into a New England recruitment office and conjured forth the spirit of Charles Young. People said he could make dead soldiers get up and fight, pull Viet-Cong up from Hell into an interrogation room, and then make them wish they had been left to the flames. He was like the US military’s own personal Flying Man.
So naturally, the first thing the warlock did after teleporting halfway across the world via chalk drawing was find the kitchen and make a pot of tea.
At least—Lieutenant Veltro considered—he didn’t make him do it.
Penderghast poured out three cups. Two were delicate bone china, the third a thick, cheap enamel mug.
“Permission to speak sir?”
“Granted,” the wizard replied absently.
“Who’s the third cup for?”
“In case we have guests.”
With no particular flare or ceremony, Penderghast waved his staff over the tea. The cups took to the air, bobbing in the air behind him. “Take us to the library, lieutenant.”
Benjamin tried to keep his jaw from dropping. He’d never seen any kind of magic or powers or whatever that trick was in person. He felt like a complete rube. “Yes sir.”
The school’s library wasn’t big, exactly, but it was densely packed, with floor to ceiling bookshelves lining every wall. Just glancing at the spines revealed an admirable diversity. Thin hardcover children’s books and rough, wild pulp magazines were sandwiched between fine, leatherbound volumes that were probably older than any library on the continent—with only the very beginnings of dust, as the poor lieutenant couldn’t help but notice.
The principal piece of furniture was a honey-oak table that seemed more suited to a kitchen or dining room than a library. The colonel pulled a too-long candle out from a pouch on his belt and set it on the middle of the tabletop. He laced his fingers together and performed some painful looking contortions:
“Ignis.”
Veltro felt the air in the room shift, like he was caught in a whale’s slipstream. The candle lit of its own accord.
“Licet has exaudiat herbas, ad manes ventura semel.”
The flame burned black. The air whispered.
“Neat—” The lieutenant shook himself, readopting the standard, almost sing-song army man cadence. “I mean, that’s very impressive, sir!”
“Nobody likes a brown noser, lieutenant.” The cups of tea settled on the table, only for Penderghast to grab the odd mug out and throw it hard at one of the few exposed stretches of wallpaper. It shattered with a clatter, faint brown liquid dripping and steaming down the worn green and red damask and soaking into the carpet.
Veltro jerked back. “Permission to speak, colonel.”
Penderghast sighed, “I think we can take that permission as being granted until I say otherwise, lieutenant.”
“...Why did you do that?”
“Again, in case we have guests. I might have to make more tea…” Penderghast climbed on top of the table and raised his staff. “Codices, proferte vestra arcana.”
The library shook. Books shoved and jostled each other like they were fighting in a queue. They burst free, flying through the air on wings of paper, lining up in front of the colonel like soldiers for inspection. “Until those guests choose to show themselves, we will be sorting sorting through Herbert Lawrence’s collection of esoteric literature.”
“Yes sir. Could I just ask, who was Herbert Lawrence? I’ve heard the name, but everyone acts like I should already know his bloody birthday.”
Penderghast looked at the solder with some concern. “You weren’t told?”
“Ah. Need to know, I got it.”
Penderghast seemed to consider something. Finally, he spoke. “Herbert Lawrence was a psychiatrist who ran this place as a care home for superhumans. Wrote a book on it.” He pointed to a maroon book floating at the end of the line. “There it is, actually. Your DDHA let the school stay open as a test-case.” He paused, as though deciding whether he ought to continue. “Then it turned out he was trying to breed the students. Make a better class of superhuman. There’s evidence that suggests he may have been involved in the parliamentary bombings.”
“Christ,” muttered Veltro. “I just thought he got it for having a bunch of demis around.”
“I don’t think they like that word, lieutenant.”
“Sorry, sir.”
“Don’t apologize to me, I’m neither blessed nor psychic,” said the man making books dance. “There was a raid. It... didn’t go as planned. That’s why I’m here. Clear up some details.”
“And the books…”
“Are my payment. Try and find me anything that seems ‘mystic’ will you?”
For the next couple of hours, Lieutenant Veltro sat on the library’s couch, a stack of books resting beside him, calling out titles to his acting CO while tomes filed past the warlock’s cool, appraising gaze.
“Omskirk's Revelations of Thirty-Six Other Worlds.”
“How did the old fool get his hands on that? Keep.”
“The Lives of Trees.”
“I have a friend who’d appreciate that.”
The lieutenant picked up a heavyset book bound in porous peach leather. “This one doesn’t have a title.”
“Check the front-piece.”
Veltro obeyed, sounding out the book’s title. “The Necro-nomi-con.”
“Who did the translation?”
The lieutenant squinted. “Some guy called John Dee.”
A grunt. “Might as well trash it then.”
“Right.”
Lieutenant Benjamin had a sneaking suspicion that Penderghast had only put him on book sorting duty to give him something to do. Which he might’ve appreciated, if he had forgotten the concept of “smoko breaks.” He wasn’t entirely sure why he was taking orders from a demi, whatever else he claimed to be. It didn’t help that the colonel was coloured, either.
Still, had to make the best of it.
“If you don’t mind me asking, sir,” Veltro said, “are you really a wizard?”
Without looking away from his books, Penderghast answered, “I prefer to go by ‘warlock’. The etymology is a bit unfortunate, but I think it projects the right… connotations. ‘Witch’ is fine, too, but some people today have… opinions on the idea of a gentleman witch. I’m sure you understand.”
Veltro nodded. “I think I get the picture. Never heard a bloke call themselves a witch. Thinkin’ about it, I’ve only ever heard blokes call women that.”
“Indeed.”
“So, how did you get to be a warlock?”
The colonel raised his chin slightly. “The Penderghasts have been practising magic for over three hundred years, since before our ancestors came on the Mayflower and the slave ships.”
“So it’s something you’re born to.”
“Not entirely.”
“...Could I learn to do magic?”
Penderghast looked at the soldier, his finger on his chin. “How old are you, lieutenant?”
Fair question. “Twenty-seven, sir.”
Penderghast nodded slowly. “And how long do you expect to live?”
Veltro wasn’t sure what to make of that one. “Um… supposing I don’t get shot or catch something nasty? Seventy I guess? Eighty if I’m lucky. My granddad got to be ninety-one.”
“And are you particularly good at anything?”
“I guess I’m a decent enough soldier. I know my way around a radio.”
“Then I don’t think sorcery would be worth pursuing.”
“Oh.” Well, no reason to let the conversation die. “Are there schools for this sort of thing?”
Penderghast waved his hand. “A few, here and there. I’d avoid Scholomance, but there’s also Esquith and Saint Cyprian.”
“Which one did you go to?”
The warlock sniffed. “None of them. The schools are fine if you don’t have anyone better to teach you, but I was tutored at home.”
“Must’ve been lonely.”
For the first time that night, Penderghast smiled. “I have four sisters and six brothers. All older. I wished I was lonely.”
Benjamin laughed. “I hear ya, mate.”
Next to the table, the candle-flame fluttered. The air turned wintery.
The lieutenant threw his arms around himself, shivering. “This you—”
“I don’t look like this.”
There was a young woman standing at the table. She looked like a black and white photograph of a teacher—attired in a monochrome pintuck blouse and skirt that went all the way down to her nurse’s shoes. Her face was built for cheer, but now set in a grim, colourless mask. Her hair was strange to behold, as though someone had managed to produce the colour red from only grey pigments. She was studying her smooth, pale hands like they belonged to a stranger. “I mean, I haven’t for years. I’m sixty-five.” She looked up at the warlock, still sitting cross legged by the candle. “Is this the way of ghosts, Mr. Penderghast? Do our souls not age with us?”
“It varies from spirit to spirit, ma’am,” the colonel replied. “Some shades appear exactly as they died, down to the scars of their death. I think it’s rooted in a person’s self-image.”
The ghost laughed. It was the saddest sound in the world. “You know, I never put much stock in conscious survival after death. Whenever someone asked I told them I was a Jeffersonian Christian. So not only was I wrong on that, I get to find out I’m vain, too.”
“I don’t know about that.” Penderghast swirled his index finger in the air like a mixing spoon. A vaporous replica of the smashed mug of tea coalesced from nothing. “Would you like a drink, ma’am?”
The spirit took the cup and drank like a woman who only knew thirst. “Thank you.”
“No problem.” Penderghast looked past the ghost. “Put that away, Veltro.”
The lieutenant lowered his gun sheepishly. “Sorry, miss.”
“Don’t be, young man. Guns have done all they’re ever going to do to me.”
“You’re Mary Gillespie, aren’t you,” Penderghast said. “You helped run the New Human Institute.”
Mary sighed. “You’ve got me there.” She shook her head. “It wasn’t supposed to be that way. Or maybe it was and I was too foolish to see it.” The spirit wafted towards the library doorway, her form rippling like smoke in the wind. “There’s something you boys need to see.”
The shade of Mary Gillespie led Penderghast and the lieutenant to the house’s front door, passing through the wood and glass soundlessly.
The warlock turned to Benjamin and removed a small jar of ointment from his belt. “You right-handed, lieutenant?” he asked as he unscrewed the lid.
“Yes sir.”
Penderghast held the open jar out Veltro. “Rub this in your left eye and keep your right one covered. That’s your lying eye.”
“...Yes sir.”
With some trepidation, Veltro dug out some of the yellow, foul-smelling stuff and started applying it to his eye, while Penderghast did the same with his left. When he was done, the colonel pulled out an eyepatch and placed it over his right-eye. He looked like where soldier met pirate.
“Why don’t I get an eye-patch?” Veltro asked with his hand over his right-eye.
“Because you didn’t come prepared. Come on, lieutenant. You don’t keep a lady waiting.”
The men stepped outside. Night had arrived in full over the Institute, and with it, phantasms. Dozens of human afterimages were burned into the grass by the Institute’s gate. Soldiers wandered aimlessly, aiming the faint memory of their rifles at nothing and everything, yelling out silent orders and screaming mutely.
“Can—can those guns hurt anyone?” Veltro asked Penderghast.
“No. I just find it amazing a weapon can become so rooted in a person’s sense of self.”
They ventured into the long-gone crowd. Veltro made great pains to step around the ghosts, but Penderghast barged through them as carelessly as fog.
“They can’t feel it,” he reassured the other soldier.
Not all the dead soldiers were completely intact. One walked around with only a mangled jaw left of his head. Another was riddled with bullet holes, still bleeding even now his blood was gone.
There were children among the spectres, too. Veltro startled when a boy walked through and around him, clutching at a head wound that would never heal.
Benjamin staggered forward, almost trampling a little girl rocking in the grass. He could tell she’d been blonde, even through her grey pallor. The front of her overalls were soaked black with blood.
“Why’s the wind not listening?”
Veltro wished he could answer the girl.
Penderghast meanwhile was keeping careful count of the ghosts, lest the casualty list for Operation Prometheus need revising. So far, he had spotted none of the unaccounted students. Not that he had expected to.
There were more soldiers than he expected clinging to the Earth. Surely they of all people should be prepared for death.
He shook his head regretfully. Conscripts.
They found Mary Gillespie mournfully watching the shade of a teenage girl. She seemed to be ranting and raving at the schoolteacher, angry, long-shed tears retracting their paths down her face:
“You bastards! You murdering fucking bastard—”
Her sentence was cut short. In a blink, she was shaking her head in disbelief, trembling with uncontainable rage.
“You bastards! You murdering fucking bastard—”
Again and again, like footage on loop.
“Christ,” said Veltro as he drew close. “You’d think you were the one who killed her.” He squinted at Mary. “...You didn’t, did you?”
“She’s not talking to me.” Mary tore her eyes away from her student. “It’s not fair. Death gives her a voice, but it took everything else away from her.”
“Death is very fair,” Penderghast said. “Limbo isn’t.”
“You’re that yank wizard, aren’t ya?”
Penderghast and Veltro turned to find a shade standing apart from the others. It was a teenage boy, with hair as yellow as the sun. Not the pale, half-remembered impression of the colour, but real, honest yellow. His skin looked like it still had blood flowing under it.
The boy almost looked alive.
Penderghast’s eyes widened. “Blood of Olympus…”
Lucius Owens half-smiled. “Kinda nice to have some outside confirmation on that. You know, Laurie always said you were just a barmy psychic.”
Penderghast folded his arms. “I think we can agree Dr. Lawrence was wrong about a lot of matters.”
“I hear ya.” Linus looked around at the addled spirits of his classmates and killers. “My uncle—Hermes, you know—came for me and Mary here, and that bloke that was bossing all the soldiers. He said he couldn’t take everyone down below.”
“You didn’t go with them?” asked the lieutenant.
Linus shrugged. “We weren’t going to leave them behind, we we?” The vivid spirit asked Penderghast, “Why couldn’t Hermes take them? Why are they all so… out of it?”
“Violent death can do that. Suffering and fear have their own awful gravity. It might be what gravity’s made of.”
“Thought it would be something like that,” muttered Mary. “It’s always like that in the stories.” She looked the warlock straight in the eye. “Can you help them?”
“Yes.”
“...Will you help them?”
“Mrs Gillespie, what else is a warlock for?”
The ghost frowned. “I hope you know what that word means, young man.”
Penderghast allowed himself a smile. “It’s my word and I can do what I want with it.” His face became grave again as he shot Veltro a glance. “Stand back lieutenant.”
The lieutenant obeyed with gusto, almost stepping out of the crowd of spirits altogether.
Penderghast closed his eyes, and raised his staff.
When a magician speaks spells, they almost never use their mother-tongue. The European magi who gave Howard Penderghast his name used Latin, the language of priests and scholars long-dead. The Romans before them used Greek and Estruscan. To use another’s speech keeps the magic ready at your fingertips, safely away from your heart.
When a sorcerer really means business, though, they use their own words, plain and simple.
“Rock and moss and trees and stars, loosen your grip…”
Penderghast’s voice was loud. Veltro thought it could echo forever and never dim. It was as if the warlock spoke not with his tongue and throat, but with every atom of the land itself.
“The dust has tasted blood, but it craves souls too. The void of Erebus opens for these spirits, and not urns nor tombs nor sepulchres shall hold them back!”
Delicate silver strings spun between the lost ghosts and Penderghast’s staff. The ground and sky groaned in protest. Lighting flashed in a cloudless sky, heralding thunder like the earth splitting open.
“By the gods who authored light from entropy, and by the cosmic ruins that mothered them, by the fire that burns in my bones, and the thread that measures my life, I break their fetters!”
Penderghast slammed the butt of his staff into the grass. The threads snapped like a dozen cracking whips. Penderghast collapsed to his knees, breathing heavily.
“Colonel!”
As Lieutenant Veltro ran to Penderghast’s side, something broke over the gathered spirits. Lights lit in their eyes. Spectrals wounds and missing body-parts filled back in.
The boy who had been Gwydion rubbed at his head, until he spotted a soldier who’d just been reunited with most of their torso.
“You bloody killed me!”
The soldier looked at his victim, stuttering, “Oh, shit, I did, didn’t I?”
The two stared at each other for a while.
“...Sorry.”
“...Fair enough.”
For the first time in over a week, Mavis Nowak looked at Linus and actually saw him. She ran and embraced her old friend, the smoke of their ghostly bodies as firm as anything living in each other’s arms.
“Oh, God, Linus…” The girl’s hand went to her mouth. “I can talk!”
Linus laughed. “You never had trouble making yourself heard before!”
Mavis slapped the boy. Somehow, miraculously, it stung.
That out of the way, Mavis asked, “So, are we… alive again?”
“I don’t think so,” said Mrs Gillespie, hugging the shade that had been Windshear. “I think you’re finally dead.”
Despite that news, Mavis grinned at her teacher. “You’re looking good, Mrs G.”
Mary adjusted her bun primly. “Thank you, dear.”
Linus looked at Penderghast, back on his feet but leaning on Lieutenant Veltro and his staff for support. “Thank, Mr. Wizard.”
Penderghast raised his hand. “It was no big deal, son.”
It probably cost the warlock a few years off the end of his life, but he had plenty to spare.
“So,” said Linus, “what do we do now?”
“Do we find somewhere better to haunt?” asked Mavis. “Could always start following the Beatles around.”
“No,” replied Penderghast. “Someone will be coming now.” He laughed hoarsely. “Can’t unring a bell.”
“That you can’t,” said a velvety Louisiana drawl.
A handsome black man was standing behind the gate, watching the ghosts with a small, bemused smile . He was dressed in a silver-buttoned tailcoat and a top hat that could’ve poked God’s eye. His own eyes were hidden by thick sunglasses, and the left half of his face was painted white with ash. In one hand he held a cigarette between two fingers, in the other, he grasped an ivory cane topped with a carved ebony skull. The bottom of his dress shoes were stained saffron with pollen, like he’d been walking through
“Hello, Lucius. You ready to come on down now?”
“You’re not my uncle,” said Linus.
“I’m afraid Mr. Penderghast here is on closer terms with me than your Hermes, son. I’ll be your guide below for the evening.”
Linus tilted his head. “There’s more than one of you guys?”
“Oh, as many as there are deaths. Maybe more.”
“Let me guess,” Mary said, waving a finger ponderously at the spirit. “Baron Samedi.”
A frown tightened his lips. “Baron La Croix, actually. There’s rather more than one of us Loa than that one showboater.”
“Sorry. Us Englishwomen tend to be more up on our Greek than our Voodoo.”
“Fair enough.”
Penderghast cut in, “Great spirit, I apologize for delaying your duties, but I have a question, if it pleases you to answer.”
The psychopomp looked at the colonel consideringly. “You can ask. Can’t promise any answers, but you can ask.”
Penderghast straightened. “Alberto Moretti of Bovegno, son of Luca and Giuseppina Morretti. Do you know how he died? What has become of his body?”
Well, that was an easy one. “Howard Penderghast, your question has no answer, for Alberto Morretti’s heart still beats. He still walks among the living, somewhere.”
“At least there’s that,” Mary said.
“Indeed,” Pendergast said through gritted teeth.
Valour’s going to love this.
Baron La Croix clapped. “Everyone line up, you’re not the only people who need ferrying tonight.”
Student and soldier alike came together before the Guédé. Things like grudges and anger lived mostly in the blood. At the front of the crowd was Mary Gillespie:
“We’re ready… your highness?”
The Baron chucked, taking the woman by the hand. “Just Hermes will do, Mary. I’ve been waiting for this date for a long time.”
Mary laughed. “Flatterer.”
And so, the dead of the New Human Institute went down past where the day sleeps, over the wall of silence, beyond the darkest rivers, and after that there is no language.
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- In Serial8 Chapters
Entangled Fates Book 1 - Quantum Beginnings
“By far, the greatest danger of Artificial Intelligence is that people conclude too early that they understand it.” —Eliezer Yudkowsky Hey all, we're moving over to book 2. This content is in a state of transition. The book is now availble on Amazon (includes extra chapters): https://www.royalroad.com/amazon/B07W1534R8 Artificial intelligence was nearly mankind’s last invention. AI took off like a rocket, then when it racked up an impressive death toll, it crashed before it could blossom and took most high-tech industries with it. Resistance and fears became deep-set. Two decades after the infamous Rev. 4.6 incidents, humanity hasn’t quit dreaming of the wealth and power that could be at their fingertips. A new generation of mega-corporations rose from the ashes. When one melds a quantum computer to a barely functional mental patient as a PR move, there are those who seek to profit, those who want to destroy it, and Alex. Alex Sage is a typical college student trying to keep up his grades and maybe find a meaningful connection with the fairer sex. Then, an automated semi crashes into his home, killing his family and turning his head into a pin cushion in the process. Alex awakens to find most of his memories gone and an illegal AI hidden in his brain implant. Now the pet project of a tech billionaire and heavily in debt, Alex struggles to stay valuable enough to be kept online. Still grappling with the repercussions of his injuries, and threats from a dangerous anti-augmentation political movement, there are no easy answers and threats loom around every corner. Alex must use whatever resources he can to escape from under the thumb of a ruthless corporation, while keeping those he comes to love safe. Chapters will stay up on RRL until Aug 10. It'll go up on Kindle Unlimited after that. How do you get those extra chapters I didn't have planned for RR? If you want them, they'll be in the published book. Book 2 will still make sense without them - I made sure of that. But... isn't $3 a lot for extra chapters? Think of it as tipping me for a good job and you'd also be getting my eternal thanks. If you enjoyed it so much that the idea of missing out a few chapters haunts you, I did my job as an author and made an engaging story. What's in those extra chapters? Resolving a few issues, set up for the cybernetic revolution, a rather intense sex scene with a new partner, revelations of who's really pulling strings, and a bit of set up for book 2. Complaints that people missed out on it when it was published here won't help (sorry!). I posted this for the folks who helped me shape the book, which is you all! (Again, yay!) But... Why! Why not keep it all on RR forever? My editor likes being paid for one. For two, I'd like the ability to get broader readership. If I break even on editor costs, I'll be incredibly happy. What about book 2? Drafts for Book 2 will go up around Sept 10. My draft of Book 2 is done, and it will be handed to the editor once Book 1 is published. Feedback has been even more positive. Beta readers devoured it and wanted more. I'll add a link to Book 2 once it's up on RR. I'm more or less, using you all for Beta Readers, so you get it before it's "canon" and edited. I invite active and meaningful feedback during this process. In return, you get early access to chapters. That does mean that the book content or plot might be adjusted before it gets published as I refine it. Sex Y/N? Yes. I heard the feedback, 90% wanted it explicit. You all will get the "full" experience. Will I dump all of book 2 here? Honestly, I'm not sure yet. At a minimum, it'll be up to the 75% mark as we collect feedback, much like what I did with book 1. It really depends on how good the feedback is and how nice people are. Lots of support + meaningful feedback to make it better = higher likelihood you get all the book. Will be it up here indefinitely? No, it'll probably go up on KU at some point, but I'll make sure there's enough time for a large readership to grab it here. Then we move to book 3 which already is around 60K words already. What about other adventures in the same universe/characters? Yep. Absolutely. Nothing ready to share yet though. I plan to keep those side chapters and more slice of life stories as RR exclusive. Since I'm carving this off in book-sized segments, I'll have to figure out where those disconnected story arcs belong. I'm open to suggestions.
8 144 - In Serial86 Chapters
Dynasty's Ghost
A sheltered princess and an arrogant swordsman must escape the unraveling of an empire. This story is complete. *** If you enjoy this book, consider reviewing or reading my Twitter microfiction @ThisStoryNow.
8 208 - In Serial6 Chapters
A Light Not Extinguished [40K Dark Age What-if]
We all know the story. The Men of Iron rebel, humanity degrades into barbarism during the Age of Strife, Slaanesh is born through the depravity of the Aeldari Empire, the Imperium rises and falls and the galaxy burns in strife and bloodshed.But what if that which was ordained never came to pass? What if the Cybernetic Rebellion never happened? Can humanity defy the dark fate written in the stars with blood and sin? I DO NOT OWN WARHAMMER 40K, THIS IS AN UNOFFICIAL 40K FANWORK
8 149 - In Serial167 Chapters
The 13th Loop [A Progression, GameLit, Sci-Fi Adventure]
Kyle Goldman is having a bad century, multiple of them. Kyle is immortal, destined to live the same mediocre life over and over again. Worse, he remembers each time through life. Every betrayal, every life lesson, every combat spell, he is destined to learn them all again and again. Every life he re-awakens during the Awakening Trials. Trials designed to pull out the full magical and spiritual potential of a Space Force Candidate. Depending on how well he does in these trials can change his entire career. Since this is his thirteenth time through the trials he is well aware of their importance. Even better, he knows how to cheat. Having prior knowledge of the trials and their ever increasing difficulties is the ultimate form of cheating. Especially when the rewards for completing each stage of the trial is an increased Attribute point. He's lived each life to its fullest, some dying as a famous ace pilot. Others dying as an expeditionary Marine on long range space recon. Each life ultimately leads to the same inevitable end, he makes friends, tastes happiness for a brief moment, and then is betrayed. The betrayal always changes, but always hurts the same. From there a deep spiral occurs, leading to his inevitable, but often glorious demise. This time he vows to take things differently. He still plans to ace the exams, but then he will do the unthinkable, he will resign his commission as an officer. To live as an overqualified regular citizen of the free worlds. With the knowledge of spell craft deeply ingrained in his mind from his previous lives, he is set to make try number thirteen his lucky number after all. There is only one problem. The Government saw his test scores and now they won't stop to have him in their ranks. It looks like the betrayal will come earlier than expected in this, his thirteenth try at living the same stale existence. Themes Include: GameLit Elements, Progression Fantasy, with Space Tech and interstellar battles. Schedule: Monday through Friday Cover Art: Thanks to Asviloka
8 223 - In Serial11 Chapters
Of Sheep & Sisters (Tales of the Axe Book 2)
The indominatable Fraker the Axe returns! This time in the company of his older sister, this collection of short stories set in the fantasy Six Worlds of Shtar is a tongue in cheek look at what a great hero gets up to in between the times of legends and when prophecy isn't really telling him what to do. From a kitten and a rosebush, to a civil war, Fraker stumbles from one "adventure" to the next, never quite comfortable with the world outside the battlefield he was bred for. (This work is currently unfinished and will updated infrequently)
8 90 - In Serial75 Chapters
Devil in My Heart
'You're my endless love, from one life to next life. When he has decided to love someone, it's not easy to move to another heart. That's why love is precious.'The tale is under the blue sky where the human world relates to other creatures among god, asura, and demon.Ryan is the reincarnation of a goddess Lyra, but in this life, Ryan is an ordinary person and a commoner. Ryan meets Lucien who is a fallen god. We can say Lucien as asura or demigod. They had met in the heaven realm, but they didn't know each other when they met again in a terrible incident in the human world. In the past, Lucien who was named Aquila in heaven was fell in love with Lyra. When Aquila fell from heaven, he was saved by Tyrone, a powerful demon, who gave him the name Lucien. Tyrone fell in love with him. Meanwhile, there is a god named Cygnus who is reincarnated into the human world to protect humans from demons. The three of them are finally reunited. So, who will you choose? God or demigod (asura)?The adventure begins when Ryan was taken by the asura. How is destiny going to be?He lifted me with both hands. Walk in the fog and then fly. I saw his face more clearly because of the moonlight. My fear was replaced with a sense of my charm towards him. His long black hair was flowing beautifully in the moonlight. His sharp eyes looked ahead. Sometimes he looks at me, but I quickly avert my eyes. This mixed feeling is like a wave. Then he took me to the mansion. Arrived at the mansion, he lowered me from his arms...*****A fresh story about reincarnation is different than usual. With a fantasy setting, readers are invited to imagine different places, such as the heavenly realm, fairy forest, crystal cave, under the lake and sea with any creature that you can find in this story."Use your power only to protect."*****If you like this story, please give it a vote. Thank you so much 🙏😊Since 03 April 2022
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