Read The Love Machine & Other Contraptions Online
Authors: Nir Yaniv
The Love Machine
& other contraptions
short stories by
NIR YANIV
The Love Machine
& other contraptions
Nir Yaniv
What happens when every wish you make is immediately granted by God? If you could use the power of music to travel through time? If your body was the battleground for a strange, alien invasion?
In this, his debut collection in English, Israeli author Nir Yaniv shows his remarkable versatility, collecting stories from over a decade of writing and a wide range of the fantastic. In turns humorous, lyrical, profound - but always entertaining - these are the haunting tales of an author at the height of his power.
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© Nir Yaniv 2012
eISBN: 9781301416868
Electronic Version by Baen Books
Smashwords Edition, Licence Notes
This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to Smashwords.com and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.
No portion of this book may be reproduced by any means, mechanical, electronic, or otherwise, without first obtaining the permission of the copyright holder.
The moral right of Nir Yaniv to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the UK Copyright, Designs and Patents Act of 1988.
cover © Liron Ben Arzi (www.liron-n-art.com)
BY THE SAME AUTHOR
Ktov Ke'shed Mi'shachat
(
One Hell of a Writer
)
Retzach Bidyoni
(
Fictional Murder
) with Lavie Tidhar
The Tel Aviv Dossier
with Lavie Tidhar
INTRODUCTION
Lavie Tidhar
Nir Yaniv is that rare breed: an old-fashioned renaissance man. As a musician he released several albums, including Israel’s first styled “space rock album”,
The Universe in a Pita
. Indeed he has his own recording studio, built into his apartment in Tel Aviv. He composed the soundtrack for our mutual friend Guy Hasson’s indie feature-length movie,
Heart of Stone
(2008). He played a monster in Elar Rath’s 2006 short horror film
Eaten
and wrote, produced and directed his own short film,
Conspiracy
, in 2011, which showed in several festivals around the world, including Sci Fi London.
Then there’s Nir Yaniv, the editor. He created and edited Israel’s first online genre magazine,
sf-f.org
, then went on to edit several issues of the groundbreaking print magazine
Chalomot Be’aspamia
. As an editor in the field of short science fiction and fantasy in Hebrew his influence can scarcely be measured.
And then, of course, there is Nir Yaniv, the writer.
I wrote two novels with Nir, the supernatural apocalypse novel
The Tel Aviv Dossier
and the humorous murder mystery
Retzach Bidyoni
(A Fictional Murder), both published in 2009 (one in English, the other in Hebrew). We might one day complete a third. Yet Nir is first and foremost, it seems to me, a writer of short stories: stories that are in turn playful, ironic, self-aware, funny – and occasionally devastating.
Nir’s first short story collection was published in Israel in 2006.
Ktov Ke’shed Mi’shachat
(
One Hell of a Writer
) collects many of his early stories, only some of which are collected in this new volume, Nir’s first English-language collection. Almost inadvertently, it seems to me, I’ve translated – and in several cases first published – many of Nir’s short stories, six or seven of which are included in this present volume.
“Cinderers”, a story I had the chance to publish in my 2009 anthology
The Apex Book of World SF
, is a pop-art nightmarish vision, a commentary on art as much as on – just possibly – contemporary Israeli life. “The Word of God” is satire, while “Undercity” – a recent story – is lyrical and thoughtful, a love song to Nir’s city of Tel Aviv.
Indeed, Tel Aviv recurs again and again in Nir’s fiction. We (mostly) destroyed it in
The Tel Aviv Dossier
, and it reappears in “The Dream of the Blue Man” (first published in English in
Weird Tales
, making Nir the first Israeli writer ever published in that venerable magazine), in which dreams underwrite the city’s reality. Yet “Vegescan”, in contrast, is straight comedy, a homage to both Jerome K. Jerome’s novel
Three Men in a Boat
and a parody of classic hard SF. “My Uncle Gave Me A Time Machine” is a more serious form of parody – a commentary on Israeli political and historical narratives, a time travel story, a comedy hiding a complex, serious undertone. The short-short “A Painter, A Sheep, And A Boa Constrictor”, seamlessly meshing hard SF and
The Little Prince
, punches above its weight – it was included in Rich Horton’s
The Year's Best Science Fiction & Fantasy
in 2010.
Were I asked what my favourite story in this collection is, I might opt for “Benjamin Schneider’s Little Greys”, which I was lucky enough to publish when guest-editing
Apex Magazine
’s 2008 World SF issue. I plain adore this story, and hope you would too.
The following stories represent some of Nir Yaniv’s best work over the last decade or so. Never a prolific writer, he is nevertheless, at his best, a challenging, funny, deeply
committed
writer, always experimenting, always reinventing, always exploring. I hope you enjoy this collection as much as I did.
Lavie Tidhar, 2012
The Dream of the Blue Man
Those were days both terrible and awesome, days wonderful and cursed, days of creation and blossom. Those were days of great heroes and of deeds deserving of songs: those were days when right could no longer be told from wrong.
The people of previous generations, now no more than dim memories of creation, could never have imagined those days: not in dreams, not in pain, not in the wildest flights of fancy.
If only because the people of the present generation had done so—in dreams, and in nightmares and woe.
~
When the blue man raised his gaze he saw, in the light of a sun that was yet to rise, three giant apes on top of the Empire State Building. Two of them were the hazy sons of King Kong. The third, a chimpanzee with a sailor’s hat, chewed loudly on bananas and hit his two accomplices with the giant skins. The bananas passed through them without causing any harm. The building itself, gigantic and grey, was located unflatteringly on Tel Aviv’s beachfront skyline. It was already leaning dangerously to one side.
That was where he had to go.
He held tightly to the bulldozer’s wheel and pressed on the gas. The engine roared and a plume of smoke rose from the chimney behind him. No one had manufactured bulldozers for more than ten years, and this one, too, was only a piece of fluff one of his neighbors had agreed to dream for him in exchange for a nine-course gourmet meal.
He was an expert in meal-dreaming, but there were many like him. Far too many. On the other hand, people like his neighbor, who dreamed heavy engineering equipment, hadn’t interested anyone in years. There were better ways now, and dreamers with far more finesse.
And much stronger. Horrifyingly strong, sometimes—but not strong enough. Not for his purpose.
One of those dreamers had provided the blue man with the contents of his backpack, in exchange for a special flavor, one for which he had searched many years: the taste of a delicacy the dreamer’s grandmother had used to prepare for him before she died, years before the dreaming had started. Not many were capable of retro-dreaming anymore, not since the fad had passed a year or two before. But the blue man was one of its rare remaining practitioners.
The bulldozer proceeded up what had once been the Yarkon Street. The surface was broken in many places—the ground’s elevation had changed too often in too short a time. A light rain of frogs fell on the bulldozer’s roof, stopped almost at once, then leaped back into the skies. Nameless night-crawlers thumped against the tracks and were crushed underneath, leaving no mark. From time to time the tracks passed, with a disgusting sucking sound, through pools of human sperm. Flickering lights could be seen occasionally in buildings’ windows. Once, a long time ago, they would have meant a television set, switched on. He had not watched television in... years. He had not even seen a set. Who needs a television when all your dreams can come true?
A naked woman stood in his way, singing horribly. He ran her over without batting an eyelid. She continued singing for a while, but he did not stop and the sound grew distant. The building grew ahead of him, and the concrete under the tracks became increasingly shattered. Now he could see the base of the building, erupting out of a huge mound of earth and beams, the remains of buildings that had stood there before. He pressed down on the accelerator again, and suddenly heard a hiss, a kind of sizzling sound. The bulldozer’s larger arm lost its yellow color and turned grey. He stood up, checked that the backpack’s straps were tight, opened the driver’s door and jumped out. The bulldozer continued moving forward, melted and then disappeared.
A good sign. Another sign that whoever had dreamed the building was strong enough. Not enough to do the impossible for himself, of course, but more than enough to do it for the blue man. Very good.
He began to climb the mound of earth. Remnants of fog rose between the ruins, and from time to time a complaining sound came from the belly of the mound, and the creaking of beams, and a slight tremor. Apart from that, there was no sign of a watch, and that too was a good sign—this person needed no guards, no protection. His very power was protection enough.
The building had no real entrance. A transparent staircase, its edges lit by white neon, began at some point in the middle of the mound and reached up to the second floor’s wall. The blue man hesitated for a moment, then stepped onto the staircase and began climbing. As he did so he tried to decide if the wall was real or not. One moment it appeared solid, and in the next seemed to be made of smoke. Strange arabesques appeared on its face, eddied, grayed, melted away and were replaced by others. In the background, weak and hazy, there was the sound of a distant orchestra, playing Gershwin tunes. The wall came closer and closer, and with it the music, and the two coiled, and grew, and wove, and intertwined. The blue man’s eyes opened wider and wider, and he felt his ears prick up, heard heartbeats, felt as though his entire body wanted to see, to hear, to contain more and more. The wall had become his whole world, and nothing but.
He suddenly coughed, and so survived.
The sharp, cutting sound had frayed the magic cords. He tottered for a moment, full of horror as the memories returned to his overwhelmed mind and then, again, his ears pricked up and his eyes opened, and he had the power, if only for one moment, to close his eyes and jump forward, straight into the wall.
~
No one knows when the dreams of horror began: there are those who say it is a punishment for sin, and there are those who say that humanity is always changing within. But in the heart of those terrible days there rose a man and he said, it is all because of the one, the first dreamer – he who made.
And you shall be as dreamers, so he said.
~
The only source of light in the grey darkness was a simple metal plate with two buttons: up, down. He thought about it. On the one hand, you don’t dream of the Empire State Building in order to sit in the basement. On the other, it stands to reason that a dreamer, as strong as he no doubt was, would not want to risk his real body with the dissolution of the building. His counterpart in the dream can spend all the time he wants upstairs, while the sleeping body would lie somewhere safe. Down, then.
The elevator sighed and began to move. In the almost-complete darkness it was hard for him to tell which way it was going, and suddenly he was no longer sure if he was standing or lying down. For a moment he felt a little sick, as the elevator descended into the earth. Then walls appeared and became transparent and dissipated and he could see all the way out, and for one moment it seemed to him he was hanging from the ceiling, coming down from the stars to the earth, but no: he was still on his feet and around him the dreaming city’s lights stood in all their awful, if not colorful, glory, and retreated from him, and the ground grew distant, and the elevator climbed and rose, climbed and groaned, towards the roof of the building and its residents, both seen and unseen.
And as it climbed so did his doubt. To achieve his goal he must confront the dreamer himself, face to face, but also reach his sleeping body. Body and mind—either one worthless without the other.
A sudden fear grasped him, and he held tightly on to the backpack’s straps, to make sure it was still there. To draw courage from it. Well, he was as ready as he could be, and would face whatever he met. At this point there was no choice, and no turning back.
The elevator slowed, then stopped with a groan. Doors appeared in it, their frames lit by neon, and opened. He passed through them. The lighting changed a little, and he turned and looked back. The elevator was no longer there. In its place stood a man.
“You’ve arrived.”
An elderly man, tall, grey hair, grey suit. A hat. Above, through the transparent roof, the three apes could be seen. The dreamer smiled when he saw the blue man’s gaze climb up to them, for a moment. “You wanted to meet me.”
“Not only you.”
“What you want is not possible.”
The dreamer didn’t ask. He looked as if he received visits like this every night.
“Of course it’s possible,” the blue man said with a confidence he didn’t feel. “In fact, you’re curious about it. You want to know why I came.”
“Let me guess,” the dreamer said. “You want me to dream your dead lover back for you. Or your living lover the way she was when you truly loved her.”
The blue man was silent.
“Your children. You want them to be this way, that way, or maybe you don’t have any and you want there to be, or you do have them and you don’t want them to be.”
Silence.
“Money? Power? Command? You do understand that I’ve already been asked for everything possible—and impossible.”
“No.”
“So, perhaps—”
“No—you didn’t understand me.”
“What?”
“I mean to say—you haven’t been asked for
every
possible or impossible thing. Not yet.”
“Then tell me,” the dreamer said, “You might succeed in arousing my curiosity.”
“I’m sure.”
“So tell me.”
“Not before I’ve met your body.”
“You do know,” the dreamer said, “that I could destroy you on the spot.”
“Yes.”
“And still you won’t tell me?”
“Only in the presence of your body.”
“I have an idea,” the dreamer said. “Give me a clue that will make me curious enough, then we’ll see.”
The blue man thought about it. “Fine,” he said at last.
“And the clue?”
“I want to be God.”
~
And the first dreamer, so it is said, had dreamed in his mind all the horror and the beauty, the fear and the dread. Seven days of creation, seven nights of invention—so some say—yet others argue that it happened in a single day, in a fit of almost inhuman concentration. And he who dreamed had disappeared, so it seemed, from the world he esteemed, from the humans he dreamed – in his image he had made them, redeemed.
~
“It’s a nice legend,” the dreamer said. “You don’t really believe it, I hope.” Beside him, on a white bed covered in a white sheet, lay his body, and it was quite similar to him. A little greyer at the temples and maybe not as tall, though it is hard to judge the height of a man when he is lying down, and the gray murky light of pre-dawn did not help.
“It probably is a legend,” the blue man said, “but that doesn’t mean that it couldn’t have happened.”
“Really?”
“To be exact—it doesn’t mean that it
can’t
happen.”
“Ah,” the dreamer said. “You want dream enhancing. There are doctors, you know.”
“No.”
“No?”
“No, I don’t want enhancing.”
“Then what do you want?”
“I want you to turn me into the first dreamer who could dream himself.”
Silence.
“You know that’s impossible. A dreamer can’t change his own dreams. Even if he is as strong as I am.”
“And doesn’t that frustrate you?” the blue man asked. His hand reached casually for his backpack.
“I make do with what I have,” the dreamer said, but the expression on his face suggested that this was not the case. The light grew a little, and the shadows of the apes above became sharper, more bothersome. It was not long until sunrise.
“You can’t change your own dreams, but you can certainly change mine.”
“Say I could do it—why
should
I?”
“Because then I’d do the same thing for you.”
The dreamer thought about it.
“Why should I believe you?”
“Because,” the blue man said. What else could he say? He felt a slight tremor from inside the backpack. The machine inside came alive.
“What do you have in there?” the dreamer asked.
The blue man fell silent. The dreamer took the backpack from his unresisting hands and looked inside it.
“Interesting,” he said. “Is that why you wanted my body to be present? To use a brain-scanner on it?”
“It’s not a scanner,” the blue man said. “It’s an alpha wave generator. I hoped it would help me convince you.”
“I see,” the dreamer said. “It didn’t.”
“My offer still makes sense,” the blue man said.
“True,” the dreamer said.
“What?”
“True, it makes sense. I accept.”
“But...”
It didn’t make sense. It really didn’t. It was too easy. Decisions on this scale weren’t really...
“Stand here and don’t move,” the dreamer said. “There isn’t much time until the night ends.”
“But...”
“Quiet. Don’t delay me. Don’t move! Already it took you too long to get here, and I always wake up with the sunrise.”
“I know,” the blue man said.
Something was not right. Something didn’t fit. How did he know? Where did the knowledge of the dreamer’s sleep pattern come from? How did he know, with such confidence, to come here and not somewhere else? And the only decision he had reached on his own, now that he thought about it, throughout this entire journey—was the decision to go down instead of up. Why?
“Don’t bother,” he said.
“Don’t move,” the dreamer said.
The once-blue man closed his eyes and stepped and walked and ran through the wall and beyond it and fell, down toward the lights, toward the city he had never really grown up in, toward the street where he had appeared out of nothing only a short time before, he and his backpack and his bulldozer, toward the nothing from whence he came and to which, now, even before he hit the ground, he returned.
And the dreamer in his high castle upon the Tel Aviv beachfront sighed in his sleep and turned, disappointed.
And when the sun rose over the city of nightmares and lights and fruitless escapes, there were gone from the skyline one building, and one street, and three apes.