Tag Archives: futuristic society

A futuristic spaceship hangar bathed in dim blue and orange lighting. A massive stasis pod glows as a towering crab-like humanoid is frozen inside. Nearby, a woman in a sleek black dress and turquoise heels clutches a futuristic ID card, gazing out a large window at a distant, reddish-brown planet.

The Monster of Blueberry Falls, Chapter 11

Longevity and Other Stories
A life without end,
stars call from the endless night,
time slips through our hands.
Buy Yours Here:
Amazon - Books2Read

This is a draft version of a chapter from John Saye’s book, Longevity and Other Stories. If you are daring, why not subscribe to my newsletter (they come few and far between), and I’ll send you a PDF copy of the book?

They went to her room, anyway. There was a lot to discuss and do. The little room was much like a hotel room. Table, bed, luxurious accommodations, a window into space, and a bathroom that frankly freaked Janet out somewhat. It took a little getting used to. There were, let’s call them receptacles for several kinds of races to do their business and clean up. She spent the night asking questions about space. What was it like? Why was he hiding on Earth? Were there other crab people? There were plenty of answers. Big galactic governments, cheeseburgers to die for, and yes, he had a home world and never wanted to return to it. So much so that he chooses Bacon any day of the week.

In space, there were galactic weeks, all eight days; a month was eight weeks long and always started on Monday. They had Monday through Sunday, like Earth. Earth had actually been inspired by the stars by that, but the eighth day was called Yersday, and it was traditionally a day singled out for personal development and meditation. It gave everyone a three-day weekend also, so that reduced a lot of stress too. Why didn’t Earth use that day? It had lost it over the years, but mostly it had to do with trying to jam their weeks into time that would match their path around the sun, which was silly. Tracking the seasons separately from their weeks would have made it easier to move on. It perplexed Wen, and he just left it to stay at that.

They skirted around Bacon several times, and Wen softly deflected it. Janet covered loosely only in sheets and asked him again. “Tell me about Bacon. What are we looking at there?”

“Janet I…”

“I know. You don’t want to think about it, but I need to know, especially if I’m going to visit you once in a while.”

“It’s a prison planet.”

“I know that, I mean…”

“It’s brown. Essentially a mud ball on the surface, with three moons where the authorities organize their patrol ships and register everyone going up and down for a visit. I could be wrong about that number.”

“Then on the planet?”

“I’d be set up with an apartment, and all of my neighbors would be like me.”

“Big crab guys?”

“No, what you might consider supervillains from different planets and eras? The galaxy has housed them all together, as many as possible, where they can keep them all under control. Mostly we’ll get local jobs, work, occasionally brawl, but they keep groups of similar power together in what they call isolated neighborhoods so that things stay pretty even.”

“No ships.”

“No, no ships, cars, nothing to ride on. There is no transport of any kind. You’d check in on one moon, and ride a shuttle down to see me.”

“Okay. Mud, you said it’s all mud on the surface.”

“Yeah, mud and lots of rain, but Bacon is underground.”

“What is it like, a bubble?”

“Not exactly. There are these huge round hatches, large enough to land in, kind of pockmarked on the planet, and, under each, is an isolated neighborhood. Down there, under the mud, which constantly splashes in the rain and gets on, everything is an artificial city, complete with day and night cycles shining from the ceiling by projectors.”

“Then you just live down there. There are patrols, and check-ins and everyone must return to their apartment by a certain time each night.”

“What about folks they can’t keep under control?”

“It’s the hard gel. It kind of brown fluid they encase you in and then, after filling the container, with you in it, they electrify it, and instantly you are on ice.”

“Frozen?”

“Basically. Not cold, just well, frozen. Your body suffers no damage, and you can’t move, but you experience time. You wake up and experience the day, and the night, but no one is ever sure when you’re awake. Nutrition is taken care of by this mechanism. They’ll take me down in it, so don’t be alarmed when they do it to me.”

“Oh great, they aren’t!”

“Yes, they’ll have to. It’s the only safe way for me to travel down.”

“Just a shuttle?”

“Not for me. It’s almost time.”

There was nothing out the window. It all looked dark and then the planet was there. “Oh, it looks like a giant meatball in space, covered in…”

“Bacon right?”

“Yeah.”

“It’s got big steel towers all over.”

“Yeah.”

He stood by her. “We’re coming in. There are the moons over there, well, two of them anyway, and yeah.”

Both moons were pale yellow in the light reflected from the planet and the nearby sun. One was a little more cratered than the other, and one was covered in cities and lights. It took the work of a full planet’s worth of law enforcement to keep this place in check. Ships constantly flew from the surface to the moon and back. Occasionally, one was blown up.

“Escape attempt. I assume it happens daily.”

“Oh.”

She held him.

“I don’t want you to go.”

“I know, but it’s not forever. They’ll set up the visitation situation, and you ought to know you, and not Barton, are getting all the credit for bringing me in. I talked to him about that. This is his job. He can’t collect the bounty.”

“What’s that mean?”

“It means you’ll have some galactic credits to get you started with.”

“Ah. Oh?”

He smiled at her in the dim light of the cabin. “You’d better get dressed.”

“Ah, ack! Where are my shoes?” She pulled the sheet off the bed and looked under it. She pulled the turquoise shoes out from under a sofa and pulled her black dress from off the bed. She pulled it on, and Wen helped her with her shoes, and kissed her hand, slowly and softly, just as there was a knock on the door.

It opened, and Barton stood there with two towering robots behind him. They were armed, and by that their arms ended not in clear hands but weapons instead, sharp points, lasers, mass drivers, missiles, and a rack of throwing stars.

“You’re ready Wen?”

“Of course.”

“We don’t need these guys, right?”

“The robots are unnecessary, no.”

“That’s What I like to hear. Come on, let’s go. It’s time.”

We stepped out into the corridor and allowed the robots to flank him just a little. With Janet on his right, and Barton on his left, they walked down the hall to the elevators. Barton waved his hand at it. His pass seemed to light up, embedded in his hand, and the doors opened.

They got in, and Barton said, “Four, please.”

The tube shot up, and let them out into a steamy room, lit mainly by orange and green lights coming through the grates on the floor, with some heavy spotlights from above. There was a large open spherical depression on the floor, and from it blew a tower of green steam.

“You know how this works,” said Barton.

“I know. It doesn’t mean I have to like it, though.”

“True.”

“Wen!”

“Janet, I…” she kissed him before he could finish.

The robots pushed Wen from the back, but he shrugged them off. “You don’t need to do that.” He looked them in the face and stared them back. He stepped down into the depression, and waited, standing in the steam and telling Janet he’d see her shortly while three bent spikes came down from the ceiling until they were just above him.

They started blasting when he closed his eyes. Starting from his midsection, a bubble of bright orange material expanded, floating almost weightless as it grew around him until it covered his shoulders, legs, feet, hands, and finally his head.

“Oh Wen, no.” He struggled, fought, and appeared to gasp for air, and then they shot a bolt of electricity through the liquid and it all turned blue and solid, resting on the floor. Wen could no longer move, frozen there for transport.

“Is he dead?”

“Oh no, we won’t even keep him like this all that long. Haul him up!”

The floor flattened, and the two blaster bots got behind it and rolled him away. They rolled him through a side door that closed, but not before Janet saw him one last time.

She turned to Barton and grabbed onto him.

“I know,” he said. “I’ve got people down there too that are close to me. Come on. We’ve got more business to take care of.”

He led her out the door. They walked down the hall. “Down here.”

“What’s going on?”

“Don’t worry, it’s good news.”

She followed him into a stuffy office in the middle of the ship. There were no windows, but she could see the planet below, a giant bacon-covered meatball rotating beneath them.

The room has a single, smallish table in the middle. Two people, beings, sat on the other side. One looked as human as anyone, maybe slightly large on the ears, and the other was another of the folks that reminded her of talking celery.

“Please sit down miss Janet…”

“Roberts.”

“Roberts, Thank you.” The celery was doing the talking.

“We are prepared to transfer to you a rather sizeable sum of money following the capture of your friend, who was wanted on thirteen systems. We know you are new to the intergalactic community, so we’ve set you up with a valid identification card, and bank account. It’s all here in this folder.”

He handed over a small folder that fit into her hands. She opened it and read through it. It was like a tight small wallet that ended in a computer.

“You can read all the documents? Is the language okay?”

“Yes, it seems fine.”

She had no pockets, so she just held onto it.

“What’s this computer in the back?”

“There’s an earphone you can use. Think of it like a tablet computer phone thing, all in one.”

“And it’s mine?”

“Oh, yes.”

“How do I recharge it?”

“You don’t need to.”

“What?”

“It’s got a twelve-year battery. Just before it dies, another will be delivered to you. Questions?”

“I need to pick up a few things. Are all ties with Earth gone?”

“We’ve intervened on Earth. You are no longer wanted, but they think you and the creature are lost to the sea. Video of you jumping and flying around with him is still widely circulating on all digital social media platforms.”

“So you’re saying…”

“You’ll be recognized quickly. What we gave done is send a group of unwitting police to seize everything in your apartment. Would you like to go through it?”

“You got my stuff? Why didn’t you tell me?”

“Because I figured you were more interested in hanging out with the big guy.”

“Right. Where is it?”

“This way.”

He took her down the hall and opened another door that was full of evidence boxes. They were open, lined up, and ready for her to go through.

“I’ll come back.”

“Okay.”

The door slid closed. She lifted lids on cardboard boxes and pushed them around, some larger than others. She located her rolling luggage. “Check.” Then searched until she found her favorite shoulder/carry-on bag. That was good. She found a couple of purses, threw away most of them, but kept three and started packing them. If it didn’t fit, there was no way she’d take it beyond this. She was keeping the black dress and the turquoise pumps as well. She found her underwear, good god, she was glad to see that, her favorite sunglasses, her best jacket, and a good assortment. She found the most comfortable sneakers, kept a pair of boots, and when she was finished, and ready to let the rest of it go, the door slid open.

“Ready?”

“Yeah. Thanks for bringing all this up.”

“My pleasure.”

She pulled her luggage behind her, her other bag over her shoulder, redressed, and was ready to move on.

A futuristic spaceship corridor lined with sleek metallic doors, illuminated by soft blue lights. A woman in a black dress and turquoise heels walks hand in hand with a towering crab-like humanoid. Nearby, a group of diverse aliens and humans converse in a lounge, watching them with curiosity.

The Monster of Blueberry Falls, Chapter 10

Longevity and Other Stories
A life without end,
stars call from the endless night,
time slips through our hands.
Buy Yours Here:
Amazon - Books2Read

This is a draft version of a chapter from John Saye’s book, Longevity and Other Stories. If you are daring, why not subscribe to my newsletter (they come few and far between), and I’ll send you a PDF copy of the book?

“So, what’s going to happen to us now?” said, Janet.

“Well,” said Barton. He sat for a moment in a chair with his hands folded in front of his mouth. His feet dangled beneath him. “For you, that all depends. You know we’re out here now, so I imagine life can never be the same.”

“No crazy memory wipes or anything you do to people?”

He laughed. “No, not really. The human brain, as you will find, is far too complex for that kind of thing.”

“Not that I’d ever forget him. What about him?”

“Well, that’s tricky. He’s been hiding out on Earth for some time and endangering folks there.”

“I endangered no one.”

“Did you see the way they reacted? All the missiles, national guard. I think that counts, even if you are hiding as a cave monster in a fake cave.”

“Yeah well…”

“We’ve told you before you can’t stay planet side on earth long without getting off the planet. Causes this very thing. With Wen here, I don’t have a choice.”

“No choice?”

“He violates intergalactic law. Had he been forward in time a couple to five hundred years in the future, it wouldn’t have mattered?”

“But because…”

“Earth is still in the dark about the rest of us, and he knew it and this isn’t the first time we’ve had to pull him out…”

We exchanged a look with Janet, who then looked at the floor.

“Sentence has already been passed.”

They looked over at Barton.

“Your lawyer did a bang-up job, but the judge… it’s no use. I’ve got to take you to Bacon.”

“What’s Bacon?” said, Janet. “I’m assuming you aren’t talking about lovely crispy sweet breakfast bacon?”

“No.” he stopped for a moment. “Bacon is a prison. Sort of a holding facility for super-powered folks, aliens too strong for normal containment. I’m sorry.”

“Excuse me? After all this, including dragging me into space, that’s the best thing possible?”

“It’s the way it is. Look at it like this. You have a new life, one in which you may eventually be reunited with Wen here. His sentence isn’t too long. He’s got to go to Bacon. You know there’s more out here. I can’t change that. I can get you situated, set you up, and show you how to get around in space. I can show you how to get back and forth to visit Wen frequently, and when he’s released, then the two of you will be free to travel the Galaxy together.”

She turned, to look out the window. “I suppose I could also just return to Earth?”

“If that’s what you want. Yes.”

“I assume that if I leave, I can’t come back again.”

“Also true. You can come back in the future after the earth is part of the federation.”

“Right.”

“Stay with me,” said Wen.

“How long until his sentence is up?”

“A hundred years.”

“A hundred!”

“Hey, that’s not so long in space. It’s not the same as on earth.”

“So, I can leave Earth behind and wait for Wen for a hundred tear-like years whatever that means out here, and See Wen every once in a while, leaving earth behind, or go back, and… I’ll be…”

“Dead before he gets out, yeah. The important thing is our next jump isn’t for about seventy-two hours, so there’s time to think about it. Assuming neither of you steals a ship and tries an escape, you can tell me in a couple of days.”

“If we steal a ship and try to escape?”

“We’ll shoot you down before you can reach Earth. Lots of automatic weaponry. I know little about it. If we miss, it’s a self-destruct. Okay?”

He hopped up, and shook Wen’s claw, then extended his hand to Janet. She shrugged and took it.

“Good,” He said. “Okay. Y’all are limited to decks A and B. You’re on a now. Your room is on B. I’ll be around. He threw them each a pass. Wear these. They’ll identify you and keep the elevator from taking you to decks C and D, which might cause them to explode.” He stopped, enjoying the shocked looks on Wen and Janet’s faces. “Not really. Just big alarms.” He chuckled.

“The passes will let you in your rooms, all that. I’ll be around. Smack the image of my face there on the card and I’ll get an alert you want to see me. Great way to annoy me frankly, if that’s what you’re after.”

“Okay.”

“See You shortly.” He left, the door closing quietly behind him.

They were alone, if you could call it that, in the glass conference room.

“Would you wait?”

“I’m thinking. Job’s gone. Can’t go back there. My family probably thinks I’m dead, anyway. I’ve got no ties. I’m ready to just sit and hate you for a couple of minutes.”

“Why?”

“Because I want to wait for you, and I don’t want to wait for you. I want to go back to earth, and I want to get a ticket and just head out into the galaxy. I mean, what’s out there? How much is there to see? And, were you ever going to stop hiding, and tell me what was out here? I love you, but forgive me, you’ve never been able to communicate all that well.”

“I know. Sorry, but stay. Give space a chance. Visit me once in a while. See how it goes, then when I’m out, let’s see if we can make it work. In space, a hundred years of space travel isn’t the same.”

“Tell me about this Bacon place.”

“Bacon is, like he said, kind of a super prison. Everyone has secured apartments where they are supposed to stay, but the surface is covered in giant patrol robots that are supposed to blast anyone who tries to get out. No shop ships are allowed within the distance of a teleport machine.”

“Or?”

“Well the moons, three or four of them I think are little battle planetoids that will take shots at any ship that zaps anybody off-world, if they want to go, which means those in Bacon also take part in the planet’s defense.”

“Interesting.”

They watched the Earth. It sat under the sun, slowly rotating, and unable to see them.

“Come on, you lug. Show me around this spaceship.” She dragged him out of the conference room and they walked around the outer perimeter of the ship, which was all made of glass like the outer wall of the conference room, or at the least, they were clear windows, whatever they were made of. They walked, and walked, around the oblong ship, which was about the size of a football field, possibly a little longer. The forward pod was another large room and comprised a large triangular observation deck. It looked like it was set up for something closer to parties than conferences. They followed the earth as long as they could until they made it round to that front corner party room. It was empty save for two forward-facing couches and a line of tables at the back that looked like they were used to laying out food.

They left the forward lounge and walked back along the other side of the ship until they found the room opposite the room where they were held earlier. It was so dark. There were so many stars, but there was also so much darkness. She pressed her face against the window and looked out.

“How much life is out there?”

“The universe is teeming with life.”

“Everywhere?”

“Not all planets are safe harbors, but there are uses, minerals, or whatnot on any planet that are useful if you look for them.”

“But planets, like Earth?”

“There are a certain number of planets the federation would, rather. If he visited like yours, just get yet, but there are plenty of planets that are just fine.”

“Why’d you come to Earth?”

“Hiding.”

“And you met me.”

“And when you did, you should have screamed.”

“But I didn’t. I could tell you were kind. Why were you hiding?”

“I killed a man, in the wrong place at the wrong time, for both of us. That was the best mistake of my life, because of you.”

She took him in her arms and squeezed him tight. He ran a claw through her hair. “I so love you.” She kissed him, jumping into his arms.

“Does anyone else look like me? Or like you?”

“I’ve got a planet, yes, and we are not unknown about the galaxy, but humans are a little more well-known. You’ll find that there are pockets of you that have left the planet frequently, but there are also many other planets where the conditions were similar enough and similar enough creatures to yourself. You won’t be among just aliens. Even him back there, though he looks enough like you, is not from Earth.”

“It’s Interesting That now I’m the creature.” That made her laugh.

She took him by the claw and they walked around to the back of the ship. From there, across a rail, they could see the engines blasting behind the ship, at least at a dull roar to keep the ship lumbering through space to keep up with the earth.

They were low and blue, but she could feel the vibration coming from them, and this close to them they vibrated the floor, walls, and everything around them.

“Come on, this is cute, but,” she said.

“I’m with you,” he said. They turned the corner and walked back until they passed the first room they were in earlier, only passing one other person, who looked human save for light bluish skin and three eyes.

He nodded to them and waved back.

“Hi,” said Janet.

“Hello there.” He continued down the hall, on his way somewhere.

They returned to the middle. “Here we are,” said Wen. There a bank of doors stood. “Go, swipe your card at a door.”

“How?”

“Probably just have to get close to one.”

She walked over. Her turquoise heels hurt a little. The door gave a soft ding and opened wide.

“In we go.”

They walked on the elevator, and it closed behind them.

The elevator spoke to them. “Passes restricted to decks A and bB taking you up to deck B assuming that’s your destination.”

“Yes, thank you.”

“All right then,” said the elevator. In a blink, the doors opened again, and what was an orange gall was now in shades of blue. “Out you go, you have arrived at deck b.”

“Right.” She stepped off.

“This is probably all cabins.” They walked the perimeter again. This time, it was a hallway full of doorways on both sides. Every ten doorways, there was a lounge with a window in the space.

In the first lounge, three humans sat talking with someone that, to Janet, looked like a giant celery. They waved. One human, a young dark lady with slightly pointed ears, said, “Are you the one on the way to Bacon?”

“Yes,” said Wen. “News moves fast.” She looked at Janet, sizing her up. “Was she worth it?”

“Every minute.”

“Hey, I can talk to myself. Wen is one of the best people I’ve ever known. I love him, and I don’t care what you think about it.”

“I wasn’t, I didn’t…”

“Mean it?”

“Yeah. It’s a big galaxy, sorry, but this might be too much.”

“You know what? I think I’m just going to find out.”

She pulled her pass up from around her neck and smacked Burton’s face on it. “Yes, Janet?” She could hear his voice over the local speakers in the ceiling.

“I’m staying in space. Can I make that official?”

“Yep, thanks for letting me know. I’ll get the paperwork together and have it for you in the morning. Thanks.”

“Thank you.”

“Okay, Bye.”

His voice cut out, leaving some soft music playing.

“Where are our rooms?” She said.

“This way,” said Wen.

The celery snapped.

A futuristic Martian colony under a massive glass dome, with a lone astronaut standing at the edge of an excavation site. A golden, alien hatch is partially unearthed in the red desert rock, hinting at a mysterious discovery beneath the surface.

Longevity, Chapter 6: 2400

Longevity and Other Stories
A life without end,
stars call from the endless night,
time slips through our hands.
Buy Yours Here:
Amazon - Books2Read

This is a draft version of a chapter from John Saye’s book, Longevity and Other Stories. If you are daring, why not subscribe to my newsletter (they come few and far between), and I’ll send you a PDF copy of the book?

It was still a crude settlement, but we all loved it. The Mars 4 landing site. Red ugly desert as far as the eye could see, but we’d built this town here, hadn’t we? What used to be a stand-alone rocket site with a couple of disused landers and half a dozen robotic rovers had turned into a bustling town. Of course, it was all under domes and that kind of thing, because you still couldn’t breathe out there, but it was still interesting to see the planets. Coming from an age when going to another planet, even in our solar system, was practically impossible. I’ve now seen Titan. I’ve done Saturn, and I’ve also been on a cruise around Jupiter. That one was pretty good.

I met my third wife on that trip. We called it the trip of a lifetime, and here I am, moving to Mars on my own. She died earlier this month, some kind of infection that the shot didn’t fend off, and I just sold everything. The stuff they wouldn’t take, I boxed up and sent away to charities and auctions. If I could get a dollar for it, then I did. I didn’t care, but I got the ticket. They don’t even put you under for the trip anymore. It’s that fast. I swear it was like a light shuttle ride to the moon to get here. I think besides the fact that the jet lag on a trip like this can put you into a coma if you’re not careful, the strangest part was watching the earth disappear on the monitors and then watching as Mars blew until it was larger than life.

We landed, everything was just fine, about an hour ago, and I’ll be interested to see the apartment that I’ve selected. Everyone gets this big package before they buy into this place, it’s almost like one of those packets they used to get you to sign off on when they wanted to sell you a time-share or something, and the sell is about that hard, but I knew what I was doing, and was already going to buy before I got there. I wanted to get off the Earth again. I joke I was born on Earth, but that nobody who was ever born on Earth will ever die there now. It’s just too easy to get around. Moving to the moon is like relocating from New Jersey to Idaho for a job, and going to Saturn is something like a vacation spot. There’s a lot of gas mining going on at Jupiter, but Saturn is untouchable. You have to get all kinds of permits and things before you can get anywhere near the rings. They are paranoid that someone will pass a space freighter through there and tear them up. It’s like Saturn is some kind of behemoth state park that no one is allowed to touch.

Imagine someone driving an eighteen-wheeler onto Old Faithful and unloading a stack of Chinese snack cups headed for Disneyland and then crashing a cement truck into that. They don’t want anyone anywhere near Saturn. Ever. At least not anymore.

The apartment is pleasant, if sparse, and it came furnished, so I didn’t have to do anything about that. I brought some clothes with me, but all I want to do is log in on the table and see what my brother is up to. I check my bank accounts, and where there used to be nothing sits a pile of cash that I never spend. I have so few needs, and so few want anymore. The apartment is paid for, so I’ll have it. I think for about one hundred ninety-nine years before the contract runs out. With any luck, I’ll die before that’s over, but the way things are going, I just don’t expect that to be the case. I have an appointment with my doctor tomorrow. With any luck, I’ll have contracted a deadly disease or something. All I want is something to challenge my doctor a bit. It’s been so long since he had to treat anyone for anything that I think he’s just plain bored.

I heard that he’d taken up jet snow skiing, but I can’t confirm that. He won’t put pictures of that up on his profile, so naturally, I can’t confirm it.

I go out onto the veranda, something I paid extra for. Too many of these units face inward, and I didn’t see the point in doing that. There the view is a view of the rest of the city, up under the dome. It’s about thirty miles wide, and I’m in a sea of other little white stone high-rises that comprise much of my district. In the distance, you can see the red landscape of mars, and to the south, there is a magnificent canyon that you can don breathing gear and go climb in, but the real view is of the city at night and the glow of the desert under Phobos and Deimos above us. They aren’t more real than great potatoes in the sky, but I love them.

I hate the kitchen. It’s almost impossible to grow anything here, and all the food is synthesized, but it comes out okay, I guess. You tell the kitchen what you want and it cooks it for you. For another hundred thousand, the kitchen will provide you with synthesized raw ingredients and the means to mix and bake them for yourself. It’s all made of the same protein gel stuff, but I think I’m going to upgrade my kitchen next year. It all smells good, but it tastes like cardboard.

I also paid for the robot butler.

That was a serious waste of money that I won’t even get into.

I turn on the wall so I can dial up my doctor.

The wall finishes booting up, and there on the screen is a large waterfall, surrounded by a lush green hill. I punch in the numbers on a keyboard that’s built into my table, and after a moment, my old doctor’s office appears. He’s not there anymore. I haven’t gotten used to that.

Hovering on the screen is a small spherical robot.

“How are we feeling today, Jacob?” says the little robot. Its eyes blink and a flash of light forms a mouth on what’s almost just a screen for a face. It blinks at me and seems to cock its head slightly, but I realize that it’s just rotating its face within the unmoving screen on the hovering little ball.

“Are you sure this is going to work?” I say.

“Of course, everything will be perfectly fine. I’ve got your record up here now.”

“Where is it?”

“In my mind. I can see your entire work-up right now.”

“And what do you see?”

“I see it is time for your next dose.”

A small slit opens up in the table, and a syringe rises filled with a bright pink liquid. Vibrant in the stark white of the surrounding apartment.

“Must I?” I give the syringe a sideways glance.

“Your health is optimal. You have very infrequent injuries, and your rate of healing has declined little since you took your first dose so many years ago. This is a fresh batch, however.”

“What’s different about this one?” I pick it up. I’ve never seen it so clear and bright. It’s usually kind of dirty pink color, but this time it just seems to sing as I touch it.

“This is what we’re calling the last dose.”

“I’ll never have to take one again?”

“They might give you a slight boost if you break your arm or brain yourself somehow resulting in a hospital stay, but otherwise, yes, this is the last dose. You don’t have to take it.”

I take the syringe. “Anywhere will do?”

“We like to use the thigh, but no, it doesn’t matter.”

“I thought you might send a robot or something to do the job.”

“We thought about that, discussed it, but the implications are much too serious. Do it yourself.”

“Why?”

“Because outside of major injury that might lead to death, and that’s preventable these days, this serum will make you completely immortal. And it’s no longer covered by insurance.”

“It’s not?”

“No, what would the point be of insuring you if there was no longer a real chance of death? Shall we do it? You could put it back on the table. I’ll retract it, and no payment will need to be made.”

“If I say yes?”

“Then I’ll make sure to check your credit first, of course.”

“Of course. Let’s do it.”

“Okay, I’ll start the process…” but I was already plunging the needle into my skin and powering the liquid into my body.

I fell to my knees, then my face hit the floor.

I couldn’t move.

Above me, the robot was blathering on about credit scores and that due to my recent move to Mars I no longer qualified. I was sorry, but could I place the syringe back on the table now until we could secure the proper payment?

I remembered little after that.

The blackness came and when life swirled back into my body, I awoke in a small cell. It was lined with the same white walls that were in my apartment, but it was a jail cell, with a self-lowering bunk in the wall, a small desk, and a chair that wasn’t so much bolted to the floor as it was part of the surface of the floor extruded into a chair-like form.

I checked the computer on the table if there was a flat surface anywhere, it was available as a computer screen, and my credit had been reduced to a negative number. I was effectively owned by my doctor’s office until payment was completed. I didn’t have any ties. I was on my own. Who would miss me? I realized I didn’t even care. I checked the computer again and found that I was on duty for digging Martian rock for the next three-thousand-one-hundred-ninety-three days.

I let out one long gasp and then settled back down, turned on the wall, and watched for when my shift would start. There was enough time to sleep.

The next day I suited up, with about three dozen other men, all with heavy spacesuits on, charcoal red with mirrored visors and we went out from the airlock and out into the martian desert, with picks in our hands and spikes on our feet. I found I could hop and run pretty well, something that I hadn’t had a chance to enjoy yet. I could see it as the end of the world, but I saw it as a chance to regroup and work out. I might write a book at night with no one to bother me. Every day we went out there and dug at the rock for no reason that I could fathom until one day, at the bottom of a dark shaft we’d been working on, I came across something that wasn’t more red rock.

It was gold.

I scraped away a large swath and found a regular pattern etched in the metal. After a few minutes, the other men were together helping me.

My radio buzzed with a crackle from the guy who stayed topside. “They are on their way.”

This meant that the guards were on their way in a shuttle. Whatever it was, it was serious, and we had about fifteen minutes to see what it was before they got here.

We piled onto the gold square, now about the size of a car’s hood, and continued to scrape away at the surrounding rock. In five minutes, we’d cleared another few feet. In another five, we’d found the edge of what looked like some kind of door. A moment before the guards would arrive, we found the handle.

It was unlocked.

We wrenched at it, and the Martian soil blew away in the wind as we opened the hatchway. It was dark, and it was deep. While the other men were attaching a rope and beginning to lower themselves down into the darkness, I jumped. What would I hit? Would I survive? I whistled down through the air, falling with less force than I would on Earth, and landed on something soft. I could see the men a thousand feet above me, getting arrested and pulled from the hole. The hatchway was thrust closed, and I was left in darkness. I sat down where I was, looking around. I could see nothing.

After a moment, I allowed my eyes to get used to the darkness, and I saw again. The surrounding rocks were softly glowing, pulsing, and glittering. There was something nearby. I followed the lights, which were buried deep within the cavern walls. Traveling down, my feet stepped on gravel, which skittered into the darkness until I came to an enormous cavern. Sitting in the middle of it was a large silver disk.

A ramp extended, and stairs descended with a soft hum, and little feet attached to little bodies scurried down it.

I reached for a weapon I didn’t have and instead raised my arms to show I was no threat. Would that be enough?

They scrambled around me and shone lights on my legs.

I stopped moving.

They moved and examined my body.

I kept my arms up.

They crawled up and over my back and stood on my head. They knocked on my visor and checked their teeth in it, which they found to be hilarious.

I lowered my arms, to make sure they knew I was still alive, and they jumped back, then I was surrounded by the light of their little probing flashes again.

Either they were scanning me or they were just trying to make me feel like an idiot, I was never sure. They closed in, and then one of them took me by the hand, and they walked me towards the ship.

I looked back and heard them drilling through the door again, and the little creatures seemed to want to pick up the pace. They pointed their lights back behind me. They knew what was coming.

I stepped into the ship, which was beautiful and bronze, covered in flashing lights and computer screens. The inside seemed to comprise one large round room, a control room that was surrounded in little bunk cubicles for the crew. I saw several of them tuck themselves in while their replacements popped out and shook themselves awake. There were about seven crew members working the controls. About seven crew members were working a video display in the middle of the room that showed the guards from the jail, now on a run towards the ship, and another that showed an image of the hatchway we’d just entered closing up like a tear rejoins a body of water. The guards stopped and ran their hands over the surface of the ship, looking for the entrance, and then another one of the little creatures hit another button, and they all found themselves stuck to the surface of the ship as they were all electrocuted. When it was over, there were no bodies left, just dust.

They motioned me into a chair, which oddly was the right size for me, and as I sat down they lifted off, with absolutely no feeling of inertia in my body, and the craft lifted to the sky, through a cave-like tunnel, and disappeared into the reaches of space, at least as far as I knew. The truth was it was, only up to the moon, Phobos and back.

“They think you are dead now, Jacob,” said one of them without moving his mouth. To tell the truth, I did not know if the thing had a mouth, to begin with.

“Thank you, I think,” I said, “But I was pretty much all right with them.”

With that, he cocked his head and chortled a little.

Then they gave me the grand tour. The one who spoke to me took me by the hand and walked me around all the time, speaking quickly. Sometimes it was hard to follow their speech.

“Over here are the controls you see. It’s where we control the ship to move it around the universe. No, we’re not ‘Martians’ but we’ve seen them on television, at least the television that you remember as a child, none of that really exists anymore, I know, and over here are the sleeping quarters, they go all the way around. The part we love the most is the ceiling, which gives us a perfect map all the time of the night sky.”

I raised my hand.

“Yes, we’re here for you. No, you’re not in trouble. Yes, you’re special. Yes, you will be found.”

“What do you mean, found?”

Then I remembered no more.

When I woke up, I was standing next to a Martian gas station in full prison uniform, holding the pump on a cargo freighter that I was refueling. No one seemed to react to me, though people were walking all around me.

I asked what the year was.

It was three years later.