Read Racers of the Night: Science Fiction Stories by Brad R. Torgersen Online
Authors: Brad R. Torgersen
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In other words, “Blood and Mirrors” is something of a variation on Pinocchio’s tale. Which is one of those timeless tropes I think can be endlessly fascinating for both writers and readers alike.
As for the technical aspects of the story, this kind of stuff may not be as futuristic as it sounds. There are already companies which make significant money building “almost as good as human” life-size sex dolls. Since people are as imaginative as they are perverse, it’s probably only a matter of time before—in the event that artificial intelligence programming becomes cost-effective—someone attempts to build a robot like Jaguar, or Camarro, or Lotus, and so forth.
Think not? Too weird? Okay. Imagine if you will, a lover who comes from the factory built to satisfy your every taste and whim, and who is capable of mimicking all the standard human emotions and behaviors, including lust, desire, physical joy, et cetera. This lover feels human, smells human, acts human, and (s)he never complains, never gets tired, never has erectile dysfunction, never has PMS, never prematurely ejaculates, says everything you want him/her to say, and will do whatever it takes (all night long) to ensure that you are absolutely as sexually satisfied as you want to be. Period.
Such a creation would command top dollar, from those men and women willing to pay.
Of course, what happens if such a creation becomes self-aware? Able to recognize what it is? Who it is? Make choices, other than what it’s been programmed for? What happens when the law of the land—concerning property rights—collides with the law of the land concerning individual freedom?
I have sometimes heard critics of Star Trek: The Next Generation complain that there is no reason why an artificial intelligence designer should bother putting an artificial mind into a human replica body, such as that of Commander Data. Much easier to just leave the brain in a box. Talk
to it like
HAL from
2001: A Space Odyssey.
My thought is: the exclusive market for robotic lovers probably could (and will?) create exactly the need for an AI in simulated human form; as unwholesome as that application might seem.
ESBT is, of course, based on my familiarity with the Puget Sound, from having lived there over many years. It’s a great place to stage a noir detective story, with all the rain between October and June. It’s also got a strong technological base, and a strong “counterculture” underground that might manifest something akin to the Scene. With all the many urban and suburban areas growing together over future decades, what are presently separate metropolitan districts might just gel to form a giant super-city. Which also lends itself well to noir detective stories: the lawlessness, the cultural underworld, the rich who believe themselves above the rules as they apply to little people, and the poor cops tasked with plugging their fingers into the dike against the potential flood of crime and vice.
It’s probable I will return to this world in the future. Camarro Jones will have more cases to solve.
***
Mentors: Kevin J. Anderson & Rebecca Moesta
I first met Kevin and Rebecca when I was a brand new winner attending the Writers of the Future gala and workshop in Los Angeles, in 2010. I knew them both by reputation—Kevin obviously needs no introduction, his name is practically stamped in stone on the bestseller list—but L.A. was my first chance to see them up close and in person.
I thought them electric: the kind of couple who are synergistic and dynamic in their enthusiasm for their mutual love, which is writing stories. I didn’t set out to become one of their students, but by the time the workshop week had ended—and Kevin and I had had a chance to stay up late and talk about the future, over drinks at the Roosevelt Hotel’s outdoor lounge—I felt that perhaps a connection had been established. Kevin is practically hyperactive about helping new authors. The man eats and breaths writing (and the business of same) all day every day. I decided that I not only liked the guy, but that he was somebody who (along with Mike Resnick, who I’d also met for the first time) could probably help me as I worked to grow my career; beyond the initial hoopla of winning the Contest in its 26
th
year.
I was right. A few months later I was able to attend Kevin’s wonderful Superstars Writing Seminar: a three-day event that recaptured not only the talks Kevin and Rebecca had given at Writers of the Future, but a whole raft of experienced advice from the likes of Dave Wolverton, Eric Flint, Brandon Sanderson, and also some guest lecturers like bestselling Dragonlance author Tracy Hickman. My fellow Writers of the Future winner Laurie Tom and I were there at the Salt Lake City Red Lion (in January 2011, with the inversion in full force) to soak up as much career-altering information as we could get. To include more after-hour chatter with Kevin, Rebecca, and the other lecturers.
I’ve noticed something about the Writers of the Future judges (most of the Superstars lecturers have been Contest judges for years) and it’s that they love seeing new authors put their (the judges’) advice into practice; and succeed. By the time 2012 rolled around, Kevin had me back to Superstars as a helper and alumnus of the seminar; me being the 2012 triple nominee for the Hugo, Nebula, and Campbell awards. I was selling a lot of short fiction by then, and doing well with several editors and markets. I was also poised to put my foot in with a first novel, and when—in 2013—I sent that first novel off to Toni Weisskopf at Baen Books, Kevin was there to be my counselor on the affair.
So I think it’s safe to say that Kevin’s got his fingerprints all over my career to date. And I am quite proud of that. The man is a testament to the power of creative work ethic. I am not sure I know anyone who works harder than Kevin, to do what he does. And given the fact I know men like Mike, and also Larry Correia, that’s
really
saying something. Because in a pool of working professionals of that caliber, Kevin is the working professional’s working professional.
Moreover, Rebecca is Kevin’s other half. They are a true team. Practically finishing each others’ thoughts and sentences sometimes. In many respects, they remind me of my wife Annie and I. And while Annie is not a writer, she is absolutely my business partner and we have always worked very closely with each other at every step, in our marriage. The way Kevin and Rebecca mesh is therefore similar to the way Annie and I mesh, and it was like peas and carrots—putting Annie into the mix in 2013, when she went with me to Superstars, where I was again helping out as an alumnus.
That’s when Kevin and Rebecca invited me to get in on the ground floor of their growing WordFire Press enterprise—which I did, with my first short fiction collection,
Lights in the Deep
. I took it as a sign that they considered me (and Annie by extension) to be one of the “good ones” who was doing what it took to make a long-lived career for himself. They didn’t have to bring me aboard. They had (at that time) and continue to have many top-drawer authors approaching them. A relatively new guy like me? I think it showed faith on their part—that Brad R. Torgersen was going to be a name that would stick in this field.
When somebody puts his or her faith in me, I want very much for that faith to be (in the final analysis) well-placed. Rebecca and Kevin both have put me forward as someone they are proud to be associated with; as a junior author rapidly coming up in the business. That means a great deal to me, and I am both proud and thankful to have been able to work with them these past five years. There are a lot of new faces passing through Writers of the Future every year, and the odds are long that any of us will go on to bigger and better things.
I was determined (in 2010) to be one of the exceptions. And once it became apparent that I was not only working to make it happen, but able to digest and apply advice from my seniors, Kevin and Rebecca decided that I was worth investing more time and attention in. To the point that (now, in 2014) both Kevin and Rebecca have become, not just two of my most important instructors, but also two of my most important friends in the biz.
Lovely people. And a lovely couple.
I raise a glass to their eternal energy.
***
The Shadows of Titan
(with Carter Reid)
The sky was dim. Dimmer even than the Puget Sound’s on a rainy winter day. And there were no clouds. Just a persistent, dirty-yellow haze. As if the smog over Mexico City had thickened and dropped to ground level—only I was reasonably certain it had never drizzled liquid methane in Mexico’s Federal District.
The Celsius reading in my helmet’s field-of-view display said it was a crisp 179 degrees below zero. I could faintly hear the susurrations of my coldsuit’s circulation system as it piped reheated antifreeze throughout. The battery had been rated at twelve hours during coldsuit testing in Antarctica, where things only got to about 80 below. Judging by how rapidly the charge bar in my FOV was presently dropping, I guessed we each had about four hours before we had to get back to the
Gossamer’s
descent module; for a battery swap, and a break.
Which was fine by me. Titan kind of gave me the creeps.
“What do you make of it?” asked a voice in my ears.
Captain Bednar, playing it cool.
“No idea, ma’am,” I said honestly.
Clad in a coldsuit built for a woman’s physique, Bednar’s arm was pointing at the four-story-tall pyramid that thrust out of the heaped ice of Titan’s surface. We’d seen the artifact—on accident—as we’d come in to land. It didn’t show up on Doppler, nor infrared. And it had been too small to be seen from orbit. Only a chance look out a porthole had done the trick. We’d have missed it otherwise.
It had taken us ten minutes in a rover to get here from the designated landing coordinates. That the pyramid was not a natural landform had long since become obvious. Its sides were smooth and black like obsidian, and the drops of methane that precipitated out of the nitrogen atmosphere immediately ran down the pyramid’s sides—like it was coated in non-stick Teflon.
But who had put the pyramid here, and why, and for what purpose, were a complete mystery.
Captain Bednar’s arm slowly dropped to her side. I looked at her as she continued looking at the artifact. The expression on her face, as seen through her helmet’s clear face shield, was almost greedy with anticipation.
I felt a twinge.
Technically, she was a mutineer. According to the mission plan established years before leaving Earth, Bednar was supposed to have remained in Titan orbit with our two crew who were manning the
Gossamer’s
nuclear-rocket-powered return module. Instead she’d handily ripped that page out of the plan—upon our having entered Saturn space—and there’d been precious little any of us could say otherwise.
After all, what was Mission Control going to do? Fire her?
She was the captain. And this far from Earth, the captain’s word was law. Once her intentions had been declared we were more or less helpless to prevent her from going down. So we’d bundled into a craft originally built for three people—some of us gritting our teeth—and made our way down via parachute and, then, hot air balloon.
“Is somebody getting pictures?” asked another voice.
Specialist Majack—our other female on the descent team. She’d lingered back at the rover while the rest of us approached the pyramid in slow steps. I got the sense Majack found Titan as unsettling as I did. Visibility was only about a hundred meters or so, before things just kind of … faded out. The horizon was a murky blur in the distance, and the sun was a small, semi-bright disc that seemed too far away to give any comfort.
Specialist Kendelsen cursed, and remembered his media recorder dangling from a cord attached to his torso. All of the coldsuits had digital cameras integrated into their helmets, recording every second of our time on the surface. But Kendelsen had the high-res device that would get the good stuff our bosses back on Earth would want to see. No flash bulb necessary. The device had been designed to compensate for Titan’s perpetual low-light conditions.
Kendelsen held it at waist level and began a slow, steady reconnaissance around the pyramid proper.
Excited jabbering—from Pilot Jibbley and Engineer Gaines, above—told me that they were getting the recorder feed being beamed to the rover, then back to the descent module, then up to the return module.
“Historic,” Bednar said to no one in particular.
“That’s what you wanted, right?” I said.
Captain Bednar glared at me for a moment, then she went back to staring at the artifact.
“They’ll be talking about this discovery for decades,” she said. “Maybe even centuries. Nothing else like it in over one hundred years of probes and landings. And it was just … dumb luck that we happened to pass over it as we floated down. What are the odds, Chief?”
“Million to one,” I said. And meant it. I too was feeling more than a little impressed by the fact that if our landing zone had been even a few kilometers further in any direction, we’d have missed the pyramid completely.
“There’s something on the south side,” Kendelsen said with obvious excitement.
“What is it?” Bednar demanded.
“I might be wrong, but it looks like … a door.”
Majack, Bednar, and me all hop-trotted in the relatively weak gravity, our path taking us around the way Kendelsen had gone until we too could see what he was talking about.
And sure enough, it had the looks of a door, albeit buried halfway beneath the icy surface. I walked up to it and ran my suited hand along the door’s edges. I couldn’t tell if the material of the pyramid was hot or cold. My coldsuit’s fingertip sensors didn’t seem to register a temperature at all.
When I spotted the small circle in the door’s middle, and tapped it reflexively with a fist, I didn’t actually expect anything to happen. I fell back into the crumbled slush at Captain Bednar’s feet as the door rapidly slid up and out of the way: a ramp lowering into the black bowels of the pyramid proper.
All four of us were dead silent.
Then Captain Bednar sprinted past me and down the ramp, disappearing almost immediately into the darkness within.
“Chief . . ?” Specialist Majack said, half-questioning, as she and Kendelsen stared down at me.
I spat a couple of choice curses, stood up, and tapped the small control panel on the forearm of my coldsuit. My helmet lamps came on, throwing thick shafts of yellow-tinged white light into the air in front of me. The lamps would drain battery power even faster than the reheaters, but I reasoned there was no choice now.
“Kendelsen stays,” I said. “Majack, get back to the descent module. Grab as many spare coldsuit batteries as you can, along with the augers and surface sample lockers containing our smaller tools. I’m going in to see what our beloved commanding officer is up to.”
“You don’t want me to come with?” Kendelsen said, disappointed.
“No,” I said. “If neither myself nor Captain Bednar return, somebody’s gotta stay outside to help Majack. I’ll keep sending audio and telemetry as long as I can.”
Which didn’t seem like it would be too long. Already we’d lost Bednar’s feed. Whatever was blocking exterior electromagnetic examination was cutting off our suit-to-suit communications too.
“Understood?” I asked, looking from face to anxious face.
They said
yessir
in unison, and then I was off.
• • •
I couldn’t be sure, but the pyramid seemed far larger on the inside than it had on the outside.
Of course, with how the ramp spiraled rapidly down into the interior, the pyramid’s total cubic volume was increasing enormously with every story I descended. Just how big
was
the damned thing? A hundred meters tall? Two hundred? How far into Titan’s crust had it sunk? Or had it been deliberately buried? Or had unknown eons simply allowed ice to accumulate
over
the artifact, sliding down the sides and piling up at the base, one layer at a time?
I found myself huffing and sweating as I jogged along the ramp. There’d been no junctions nor forks, so I had to assume that as long as I kept moving, I’d find Captain Bednar eventually.
I practically ran into her when I hit the bottom of the ramp. She grunted as our suits
thunked
together, then I noticed what had made her stop short.
We were in a rectangular room perhaps fifty meters long by thirty meters wide by ten meters tall. Everything—the ramp, the walls, the ceiling—was made of the same seemingly impervious black material as the outside of the pyramid. But from a circular depression in the exact center of the floor of the room, came an unnervingly eerie, green light.
The captain began walking slowly towards the depression.
I followed five steps behind.
“Hell of a way to lead from the front,” I said, annoyed. “You’re proving to be very good at doing whatever the hell you want, whenever the hell you feel like it.”
Captain Bednar spun and looked at me, our face shields almost touching. Her eyes were hot with anger.
“I don’t particularly care if you’re still pissed at me for pulling rank. You’re not the one who got passed over for the Europa flight because you wouldn’t polish the Assistant Mission Director’s knob. I had to bust my ass to find a way to work around that lovely little problem, and once I got posted to the Titan flight I knew in my bones there was no way
anybody
was keeping me from coming down to the surface.”
“You broke the rules,” I said matter-of-fact.
“Chief, don’t be dense. Who cares about the rules now? Look at what we’ve found. This is
it.
This is the proof we’ve been searching for, ever since the dawn of the Space Age. No humans built this place. No humans even knew this place existed until now. Whatever it is—whatever it’s meant to
tell
us—is going to be of enormous impact back home. This changes everything. We aren’t alone. In fact, we were
never
alone. Ever. How long has this pyramid been here? How long has it been waiting for us to find it?”
“You make it sound like the thing’s a message in a bottle,” I said.
“Isn’t it, Chief? Why build a thing with a doorway sized more or less accurately for humans? Why create a passageway sized more or less accurately for humans? Why construct something that’s deliberately stealth-guarded against sensors, and cloaked from above by the atmosphere? Unless the point was to wait until we were here—in the flesh.”
“Sounds like you’ve got it all figured out,” I said. “So how about we retrace our steps to the surface and put together an actual
plan
before we do anything more rash than we’ve already done? Maybe
you’re
prepared to break rules, but I’m still the goddamned second-in-command on this flight, and I say we be methodical in our investigation of this—”
But I could already tell my words were useless. The light from the depression had entranced Bednar. She turned away from me and walked slowly towards the depression. I heard her quietly gasp when she got to the edge.
I took a few quick steps to catch up with her, then I froze as I saw what was in the concave bowl in the floor.
Was it alive? Had it been alive once upon a time?
I honestly couldn’t tell.
It was big. Bigger by far than a horse.
Elephant
big. A sinewy body with armored sections along its spine, lay curled numerous times; like a millipede. Only, each of the legs was tipped with what appeared to be three digits, and the head … the head was an unspeakable cranial collection of grotesque, melon-like lobes interspersed with darker-colored fontanels and punctuated with six oversized, albino-pink eyes—each wide open and seemingly staring at nothing. A mouth-like orifice was in the center of the head, studded with viciously sharp teeth, and disgorging three snake-like tongues that hung lifelessly to the floor of the depression.
The bowl glowed, if ever so softly. Like a weak chem light.
“Christ, what a horror,” I said, resisting the urge to put my hand up to my face. Getting sick in my coldsuit helmet at this particular juncture wasn’t a good idea.
“Horror?” Bednar said. “I think it’s breathtaking.”
“A
breathtaking
horror,” I said.
Captain Bednar turned to look at me, her expression most disapproving, then she turned back to the creature.
“A pet?” I guessed.
“Or the architect herself,” Bednar corrected.
“How do we know it’s a she?”
“We don’t. But I think we can be reasonably certain this place is
not
a galactic kennel.”
“The creature can’t be alive.”
“I believe you’re right, Chief. It is dead. Or at least in a state approximating what humans call death. Stasis maybe?”
Captain Bednar got down on her knees and reached a hand into the bowl to touch the thing.
She suddenly yanked her arm away.
“What happened?” I said.
“My arm went numb. Instantly.”
I got down on my hands and knees and reached hesitantly towards the creature. As soon as my fingers were over the precipice of the bowl, they went numb in a heartbeat. I left them there for a brief instant, a tingling sensation at my knuckles, then I drew my hand back. Quickly, feeling flowed back into my fingers as I flexed and moved them.
“
Whatever’s
kept the corpse from decaying, I wouldn’t try climbing down in there to find out. Your whole body might get short-circuited. If we’re going to examine the creature more closely, we’ll have to have equipment to pull it out.”
“What then?” She asked.
“I won’t be surprised if it blinks and jumps up after us, roaring for blood.”
“Silly,” she said.
“Yah, maybe. But tell me honestly that thing doesn’t make your skin crawl? I certainly wouldn’t want to see it revived. Though I wager you can add a Nobel to your name once the biologists back on Earth carve this thing up. The first extraterrestrial life form ever discovered, and it looks practically as brand new as the day it croaked. I wonder if it laid any nasty eggs in here for us to find? You know, like they always show in the movies?”
“I hardly think this race would have gone to all the trouble of constructing this place if their only goal was to entice us here for the purpose of impregnating or eating us. An alien civilization capable of traveling the stars is doubtless well advanced beyond our own. Their purposes are probably well advanced beyond ours as well. Imagine cave-dwellers encountering the mummy of an astronaut in his capsule. They’d be baffled too.”