Deus Ex Machina

You can tell the difference between idle fantasy and reality. They taste different.

Taste is the wrong word; telepathy doesn't work like that. But it's a good shorthand. Reality — a memory of a event that has occurred, or an intent towards an event that is planned — has a different character than something that the mind knows will only ever exist in imagination. Even the most terrifying imaginary fears, the ones that quicken the heart and bring forth cold chills and flop-sweat, never feel anything but false, illusory. Unreal. At least, to Morris, from outside.

Walking behind a couple coming out of the theater: his hand his is tucked into the back pocket of her jeans; hers rests more demurely on his hip-bone. His mind is replaying their lovemaking this morning. It was real, it happened. The detail is honest, if already somewhat idealized. He wants to mention it, to put it in her head, to get her thinking about it; to start the ball rolling again. She is trying to decide where they should stop to eat.

It's always like that with couples. Almost always.

The middle-aged man sitting on the bench is looking out over the man-made paddle-boat lake, is looking at his watch, is waiting for his wife who stopped to go to the bathroom. He is distracted, feeling pangs of guilt because he has stolen from his work a sum that would send him to prison if it was revealed. They'll never find out, he is all but certain; but he still fears discovery.

In Morris's youth he would have passed close to the man and said, as if to himself, "They already know." Just for perversity's sake.

Morris has matured; he says nothing. He stops, lights a cigarette. The young couple moves out of range, on their way to find food or have sex or both. The middle-aged man rises, greets his wife weakly, and trundles off towards the parking lot. A woman with two young children passes, her head full of stress and disappointment; their heads full of wonder and magic. A man walks by...

Morris is frozen in place. Inside the passerby's mind is a litany of horrors planned, rehearsed, executed, remembered. There is a gallery of victim's faces, contorted in fear and then pain and then death. There is blood slick between fingertips and the smell of decay.

He turns and leans over the railing and wretches, barely able to keep from vomiting. He manages to turn back, get a good look at the man.

Jack is normal; he is nondescript. He is plainly dressed. He is trying not to be noticed. He walks a bit too fast. Jack is not his real name. His real name is buried, deep, hidden from even his own consciousness. Jack is the part of him that is in charge when he kills.

Jack has a fifteen-year-old girl drugged and gagged with duct tape and handcuffed to a metal bar sunk into recently-hardened concrete in his basement. Her name is Kaelyn. Jack is already hunting for her replacement.

Morris straightens up, wills his diaphragm under control. Jack is fading into the parking lot, disappeared between sport utility vehicles, glimpsed behind a minivan, ducked into a sedan. Morris does not hurry to follow, he already knows where to go: Jack's map has written itself onto Morris's mind.

Morris makes his way to his car, fumbles with his keys, sits trembling behind the wheel. He fears driving while this shaken, but he can't delay overlong. He scratches the car next to him pulling out. He doesn't stop to leave his information. Priorities.

Morris stops at the convenience store and gas station combo positioned just inside the theater complex parking lot. The manager is worried about being held up because the security camera inside has been broken for three weeks and the repairman has yet to come fix it. After saying a mantra to calm his nerves Morris makes his way inside and buys a prepaid cell phone.

Jack lives one town over. His neighborhood is cookie-cutter suburban. His house is utterly lacking in character. Jack has made a stop as well; Morris has beat him here.

Kaelyn is inside, but is barely conscious. The chemicals leeching from her bloodstream into her soft tissues is sparing her the terror she would otherwise be feeling now. She is only vaguely aware of the discomfort of the cold concrete floor against her naked skin.

Morris dials the police. He gives Jack's address, Kaelyn's full name. "She's handcuffed in the basement and he's going to kill her." He hangs up. The police will, with no prompting from him needed, eventually find the seven girls already encased in the concrete floor.

Morris continues down the street, crosses an intersection, turns around, parks. He sees Jack pull up, get out of his car. He has a plastic bag with the name of a hardware store emblazoned on it. He has purchased new killing and dismembering tools as part of his ritual: to re-use the last set would be to disrespect something vaguely but decidedly sacred. He wants to rape the girl before killing her and hates himself for the former impulse but not the latter. Morris wants out of his mind.

Jack stands at the basement door, reaches out for the knob, lets his hand drop to his side without grasping it and turning it. He rebukes himself, he shakes it off; he reaches for the knob again, opens it, steps through and down onto the first step.

Morris dials another number.

Jack's cell phone, bought for emergencies, rings in his pocket. He has memorized this number but has never given it to anyone. He is startled, frightened. He calms himself, assumes it to be a wrong number, continues down the stairs.

Morris lets it ring. When it goes to voicemail he hangs up and dials again.

Jack fishes the phone out of his pocket, flips it open, stares at the number without realizing that by opening the phone he has answered the call.

"Jack? Jack, answer me one question."

Jack closes the phone, cutting off the call. When it rings again, Jack answers. "Who is this?"

"Jack. You're wrong about her. She's not a whore. She's a good girl." Morris knows Jack well now: it will slow the killer down just enough.

Morris hangs up, turns off the cell phone, wipes his fingerprints from its smooth plastic surfaces and tosses it out his window into the grass between curb and sidewalk. He can hear sirens approaching. He pulls away from the curb and makes a left at the intersection, headed back towards the interstate. Three police cruisers pass him moving fast. He pushes a button, and all his car windows slide down with a hum and a whirr. The sirens sound from every direction: more are coming.

He gets on the highway, he drives away. He leaves Jack and Kaelyn and the cell phone and the police behind. He cleanses them from his brain. They will sneak back in, tomorrow, in the newspaper and on the radio and on television, but only at one remove and a little bit at a time, as a story told from a distance.

That he can handle.

Dalanzadgad

They sat without talking in the café on the concourse by the gate; she distracted herself by people-watching while he studied — for the hundredth time, it seemed to her — the extensive 'Employee Guidelines (Human)' on his Pad.

"Everybody's human," she observed. The café staff, the security guards, even the ticket agents at the Polixaci Trade Authority counter had been human. "Where are all the aliens?"

"What do you mean?"

"It's a spaceport."

"Sure, but they employ locals to run it."

"If they're locals, shouldn't they be Chinese? Or Mongolian, or whatever?" Outside the plate-glass concourse window, the Gobi desert stretched away like the Martian plain. If only there was a window on the other side, looking towards the immense silver lander: that was another thing she wanted to see in person, at least once.

He chuckled; "Everything's relative."

"You can still back out, you know." She said it conversationally, trying not to betray the emotions churning her stomach.

He looked up from his Pad, he turned it off. "I really can't."

"They said. You won't have committed to anything until you actually get on the lander. Right? They said."

"Eight months isn't so long."

"Eight months is forever. Eight months with no face, no mail, nothing."

"In an emergency, I could—"

"So I get to hear from you when you're dead, great. Meanwhile, you'll miss everything." Her hand was on her stomach, just below her stomach, where there was as yet no appreciable bulge.

"Come on. You're exaggerating."

"Oh, okay, I'm exaggerating."

"Your father did, what, three tours in the middle east back when he was our age? Weren't you born while he was deployed?"

"That's different. He could call. He could write. He was still on Earth."

"I'll make enough money working this one circuit to start a real business, Jan; with enough left over for a nice house where we can raise our kids. It's just eight months."

She was silent a long time. She knew he was right. She didn't have to like it.

"Look, there's one." He gestured with his head.

"What?"

"Look."

It wasn't a Polixaci; something else. She'd seen one of these on the news, once. Lignol? They were rare, even near the embassy in New York. It plodded down the concourse, carrying a small silver case. "It's going home?"

"Probably. Change liners at Friktik. He'll have to wait there for the connection, though, maybe six months? They don't always line up the way you want." He'd done his research. He said, pointedly, "Eleven stops, each with a layover. I'll be back here before he's home."

"You don't have to go"

He switched his Pad back on. "I want to go."

Fantasy Drabble #302 "Ready To Wear"

The wizard, Yolgothorung, sent against me a golem: unkillable, made of metal known only to his arcane science.

I fought the golem for hours until I was bruised and nearly dead from exhaustion. Had I not been able to push it from atop the cliffs at Mandorum it would have taken my spine. I fled without shame; I knew it would follow. Inside the mountain, it blundered into a hastily-prepared dwarven trap. Held in the grip of their clamps, it was rendered helpless.

Even now they hammer it, white-hot and still living, into the shape of a suit of armor.

Wendell Millbern Has Two Secrets

Wendell Millbern was parked outside the Principal's office again today — head down, sniffling, looking simultaneously tough and ragdoll-broken — while I was replacing light bulbs in 'A' hall.

He isn't a bad kid. He's just acting out. I decided the bulbs in his general vicinity needed special attention.

"Wendell; how are things?"

Wendell talks to me. Wendell knows me. Wendell isn't one of these kids who thinks of the janitor as less-than-human. "Sucks."

"What are you in for?"

Wendell shrugged as if to say it was nothing, it was beyond his control, it was a bum rap. But he answered because he knows I'll keep asking. "I talked back to Ms. Gomez in music class."

Surprising. "You like Ms. Gomez."

Wendell shrugged again as if to say that Ms. Gomez was all right, for a teacher; as if to deflect the possibility that he might have a bit of a crush.

"Come hold the new bulbs for me."

"I'm not supposed to get up."

"It's fine, I'll explain it all if Principal Ngai comes out."

I handed him the box of bulbs, which he took carefully, held delicately.

"How's your dad? Still mad all the time?" Wendell's father was a habitual drinker of overlarge quantities of beer.

"Yeah." Wendell watched me unscrew the bulb. "Hey, that one was still good."

"I have a feeling it was going to burn out soon. Call it a preemptive replacement. Watch out, it's still hot." I handed down the old bulb and he handed up a new one. I didn't feel bad about the waste: the replacements were all the more efficient compact fluorescent types. Still frustratingly primitive technology, to be sure, but better than the incandescent bulbs the school had been using. "Ever hit you?"

Wendell's a bright kid. "Where you're from, what do they do to people who beat up on kids and their moms?"

"Well, Wendell, where I come from hardly anybody does anything like that. It's not perfect. We've got our problems," haphazard quality control in navigational sensors and far-from-prompt rescue services being two that spring immediately to mind, "but drinking, that's just not one of them."

"What would they do?"

I re-affixed the cover to the lighting fixture and climbed down the ladder. "Well, Wendell, when someone is hurting someone else, we change them. We make them different."

"How?"

Changing brain chemistry; changing brain structure; rewriting memory… "It's complicated."

"Would it work on my dad?"

I put my hand on his shoulder. "If it was something that would work on your dad, Wendell, I would have done it already."

Wendell deflated. "Too bad."

"Mister Millbern, I'm getting tired of seeing you outside my office." Principal Ngai's voice is deep and impressive and somehow reassuring. He's a good man. "Come on."

Wendell shrugged at me and went in. He knows I will keep his secret because he keeps mine.

Ngai will ferret it out. He'll pick up on the patterns. I did, after all, and I'm not even human.

Remote Control

"I don't like it. I don't like bringing in these outside—"

Morris wasn't a board member, but he was the point man on this project, and knew he had the Chairman's support, so he was comfortable shutting the man down. "It's the only way to know what's going on, Mister Lawrence."

"How would we know? Until we get a recovery team out there, we're just going on his word. And by then your telepath's cashed his check and gone."

"Actually we'll be able to see if his reports are accurate as the board catches up to him." Morris shrugged. "He comes highly recommended. His accuracy track record's impeccable. Tiān Shàng Mining used him last year on that Belt thing."

There were nods and murmurs in the room. Campbell, from public relations, said, "That turned out well for them."

Lawrence objected, "Eight dead? That's turning out well?"

Campbell scoffed, "Well, in P.R. terms, anyway. The casualties would have happened either way. Our situation is unique: we have safeguards. This guy lets us actually use them effectively. I say—"

"The decision's made."

Chairman Rockman's voice, coming from the head of the table, ended the discussion as it always did; until then he had been staring at the situation display on the wall as if willing it to update again. There were nods from those in agreement and sighs from those opposed, and no one bothered to call the vote. Rockman continued, "Is your guy here?"

Morris answered, "Waiting outside, sir."

"Well, let's not waste any more goddamn time." The Chairman reached for a small remote control, switched the display off

Morris beckoned to the assistant at the door, who quietly opened it and stepped out. There was a short, hushed discussion in the hall, and after a moment, the specialist appeared.

He was a tall man in a rumpled suit, with angular, almost severe features. He was bald, with a wispy salt-and-pepper chin beard. He looked like the sort of man mothers watch like a hawk when they happen to pass near their children. Morris, in spite of an instinctive dislike for the man, walked over and offered his hand. "Mister Strang, I'm Morris, we spoke on the phone. Thank you for coming on such short notice. We have—"

Rockman interrupted, "Strang, I have a time problem: my board," he pointed to the now-blank situation display, "is an half an hour behind. The installation is on Ganymede, and there's the light-speed delay. And other than these internal sensor readings, communication is down, possibly sabotaged. Morris says you can help me?"

Strang looked at the blank display with his head cocked to one side. "You have something that belongs to the man?"

Rockman gestured. "Morris?"

"Right over here, Mister Strang." Morris pointed to the end of the conference table where a carefully folded shirt, a baseball, and a book lay in oversized ziplock bags. Strang stepped close to the table, but didn't reach for the items, didn't take them out of the bags, didn't even look at them with any particular intensity. Instead he sat in an empty chair and closed his eyes.

"I assume you want me to describe the surroundings, give you some detail that isn't publicly known? To establish my bona fides?"

"I'm glad we understand each other, Mister Strang."

Strang sat silently for a long moment, a look of concentration on his face, and then began, "The station has four lobes, connected by underground pressure-tunnels. Only two lobes are occupied: the fourth is unfinished, and the third was damaged. By shifting ice? Yes." Strang didn't open his eyes to gauge the reaction of those assembled. "Some repairs have been done but it's still leaking. They're frustrated; they didn't have the materials to repair it correctly, and they should have."

Lawrence began to object, "That's not—"

Rockman held up a hand to quiet the interruption. To Strang, he said, "Go on. Is that what precipitated the incident?"

"No." Strang's hand reached out as if on its own, and came to rest on the bag containing the folded shirt. "Colson; he's unhappy. He's been unhappy for some time."

Morris saw Rockman's face relax. The Chairman was sold: the odd-looking man had gotten the name right. He asked, "Unhappy about what?"

Strang said nothing for a long moment. His head lolled forward, as if he were nodding off to sleep. "The way he's been treated by the others: excluded, mocked. Especially by one of the women, but by all of them to one extent or the other."

Morris asked, "Do you have the others as well?"

"Yes." Strang took his hand from atop the bag, folded his arms across his chest, and sat back in his chair. "They're angry. They're afraid. They're waiting for something. I can't tell exactly what. Something bad."

"Can you sense all eight?"

"There are only six men," Strang pointed at the shirt, "including Colson."

"Then two are already dead." Lawrence said coldly.

Someone from human resources piped up, "He said 'men'. Six men. It's the women, Bentsen and Afardi."

"The women are both dead? Did Colson kill them?"

Strang slowly nodded. "Yes. One... one was an accident. There was a scuffle, over nothing, and it got out of hand. He keeps replaying it in his mind. The other killing was self-defense; at any rate, he thinks so. The others assume both were premeditated murder."

Rockman pressed a button on his remote, and the display came to life: it displayed a layout of the four-lobed station, with each area and system labeled. There were red dots indicating people, several in each of the two lobes and several in the connecting passageway between them. "Can you tell us where everyone is right now?"

"Everyone but Colson is in the habitation lobe: one is in medical, the rest in the common area or near the pressure door. They can't get through the door. I think they're running out of breathable air; that's what they're afraid of." He pointed at the personal effects on the table. "Colson is in the control lobe. He's armed."

Rockman nodded to Morris, who went to the terminal beside the display and began typing on the keyboard. They had the information they needed to intervene, and Morris knew exactly what to do.

Strang opened his eyes. "The one in medical is dying. I can't tell who it is." Strang looked over at Morris, and asked conversationally, "What's he doing?"

Lawrence explained, "We have remote access. We can override anything Colson has done on the control computer. Anything that's not actual physical sabotage, that is. Communications isn't coming back up, for example. He blew out the power relays as the others were reporting on the situation. You say he's armed? With what?"

Strang shook his head. "I don't know. I only know he thinks it's very clever. The others didn't realize he had a weapon like that until they came for him, and they didn't get a good look at it."

The woman from human resources interjected again, "He probably modified something, a tool. He's got a high engineering rating."

"Those laser drills are small enough to be man-portable, if you figured out a way to rig up some sort of single-shot batteries. It could be done." Morris read the time-stamp on the display. "We'll see the remote orders go into effect in twenty-eight minutes, thirty seconds."

They waited. They all watched the board update. Someone brought in water pitchers and glasses. Campbell and Lawrence discussed sports until they realized they were annoying the Chairman. Every five minutes, the red dots would become active, moving through the station, eventually coming to a halt again in different locations. Morris mentally interpreted the motions as they occurred: a search, then a chase, then a confrontation and a retreat. Nearly a half hour later, they had all reached the positions Strang had described.

The room quieted in anticipation. Eventually, Strang's eyes closed again. "Something's changed."

"Describe it as it happens." Rockman said.

"Colson is panicking. Now he can't breathe well. His air isn't just shut off, it's being pumped out. He's terrified. He's moving." Strang's head lolled forward again, his body swayed side to side. "He's moving fast."

Lawrence guessed, "Headed for the suits?"

Morris nodded. "As expected. He can't get to them, though."

"The others can breathe better now, fresh air is being pumped in. They don't know why it's being pumped in, but they're happy about it. They're still trapped. Colson is in one of the pressure tunnels. Headed towards the damaged section."

Rockman looked pointedly at Morris, who said, "He won't be able to get through the pressure door at the far end." Unless the man was an even better engineer than Morris thought, that is.

Strang had reached out, picked up the bag with the shirt. "He's trying to override the door. It's not cooperating. The codes have been changed. He's angry. He's heading back the way he came."

"This is the best part." Morris grinned. The Chairman shot him a look, and he hurriedly wiped the smile from his face. It's not that he was enjoying all of this, he was just proud of his solution.

"He can't get back through the other door either. Those codes have changed too. Automatically, once he was inside? He's panicking now. And he's..." Strang clutched at his own throat.

"If you have to let go, do it. Don't put yourself at risk." Morris said.

"I can stay with him almost until the end." Strang's voice was strained. "He's collapsed. The floor is cold. He's strangling."

"Jesus, this is awful." The woman from human resources had her head in her hands.

Strang said nothing for a long moment — looking increasingly distressed — before pushing himself away from the table. "He's lost consciousness. That's it."

Rockman nodded to Morris, who once again went to the terminal, saying, "Sending default code resets for all the pressure doors, and default condition reset for the life support system. In twenty-eight minutes, the survivors will be able to retake the station. I'll send new orders as well; once they get comms repaired the orders will download to their server."

Rockman stood up, and so everyone stood up. "Mister Strang, thank you for your help." He walked around the table and offered his hand, which Strang took and gave a perfunctory shake. "Jenny will take you down to H.R. and have them cut you a check."

"Turns out it's direct deposit, actually: even better," the woman from human resources offered. "Right this way, Mister Strang." The telepath followed without looking at the board, without acknowledging anyone else in the room. Morris was happy to see the man go. Rockman made his exit immediately thereafter, with the rest of the board members following, congratulating each other as they went.

Morris waited and watched the display. It kept updating, the red dot representing Colson eventually fleeing from the control lobe and into the pressure tunnel, stopping at the end, turning back, stopping, fading and disappearing. All just as Strang had described. Somehow, watching it happen on the board made it real to Morris. Ten minutes later the red dot in Medical faded and disappeared as well. Twenty minutes after that, the remaining four dots left the habitation lobe and made their way through to the rest of the station. Morris stared at the display blankly, coldly; he felt an uneasy feeling in the pit of his stomach, almost as if he were crashing from a high.

Rockman was at the door; he'd been watching as well, for how long Morris didn't know. "Well done."

"Thank you, sir." He shook his head. "But without Strang it would have been impossible."

"Without your remote system it would have been impossible."

"...Yes, sir."

"Fifty percent losses instead of a hundred percent isn't terrible in cases like this. It's an accomplishment. Or is it killing Colson that's bothering you? It had to be done, of course."

"Of course."

"Anyhow, take your time with the report. Lots of detail. Get as much information from the survivors as you can. We'll have to pay out indemnities to everyone, of course. Damn expensive. Anyway," He clapped Morris on the back, "Nice work. The company will remember how well you managed this mess."

"Thank you again, sir."

When Rockman was gone, Morris went over to the table, picked up the remote, and shut the display off. He had a feeling the whole thing would replay in his head, though; frozen red dots coming to life and scurrying around the surface of Ganymede before dying by his distant hand.