Category: Fiction

  • I Fucking Love Astrology – The Horoscope for the Week of May 20th

    Well, well, well… what have we here?

    Pull out your star charts boy and girls, we’ve got something very interesting going on this week.

    Yes, yes, we’ve still got that Jupiter-retrograde-in-Scorpio, old news.  But see that Mercury-Sol-Venus alignment?  Change in relationships?  Well, this week, it’s moved in opposition to us.  And if that’s not enough we also have the moon in opposition to that opposition.  Double Opposition.  What does it mean?  This week, your relationships are going to be rock solid.  You can take advantage of this, as we can see from another alignment concurrent with the double opposition.  We have Venus (love) aligned with Mars (war) and Saturn (endings) retrograde (not).  So a fight this week will not end your relationship.  Having said that, while you can get away with having a spat this week, there’s no indications that you should.  There’s nothing here indicating that the makeup sex will be good, and with Venus having moved out of Gemini, there’s no indication to look up Heather and Holly on facebook to see if they are conveniently available this weekend.  Mars moving into Aquarius indicates “trouble with the provider,” so maybe it’s a good thing you’ve got a little stellar stability helping you out.

    One last alignment in this week’s very busy sky:  Sol – Jupiter retrograde – Luna.  Literally, good news for queens.  Elizabeth II is not going to die.  I don’t know if this also extends to drag queens, but it just might because:

    Both the Moon and Venus are in Cancer.  And of course, we’ve already mentioned how Luna has rulership of Cancer, but with Venus in the mix we literally have (almost) all the most feminine influences possible coming together and amplifying each other.  Indulge in your wildest stereotypes. Eat ice cream while watching rom-coms.  Cry every now and then for no reason whatsoever.

    People born under the sign of Taurus will receive good news this week.  Also, a new speed record for a racing cow will be set.

    If you are kidding this week, it will go successfully.  Both mother and child will be fine, but it won’t be twins.

    This week is also auspicious for naval forces.

     

     

     

  • I Fucking Love Astrology: The Horoscope for the week of May 13th

    This is going to be short, since for the next twelve weeks or so, I’ll be decontaminating, packing and moving a few megabucks worth of analytical equipment to a new cleanroom, while not reducing my fab support capability.  It’s demands like this that make me feel zero guilt about fucking around reading Glibertarians.com when I’m not required to be panicking over generating good data.

    Unambiguous good news:  For Taurus-folk (Taurans?  Tauroids?) this week is going to be awesome.  We have both geocentric and heliocentric indicators pointing to the same outcome.  With the change-driving effects of Mercury being made positive by the effects of the Sun, you have good luck.  By having a Four-light alignment also in your sign, you have better luck.  By having those four lights being the most important ones in the sky, you have even better luck.  By having one of those four lights being Jupiter (even retrograde), well, let’s just say you’re gonna have a good time.

    Relationships continue to be unstable (Mercury-Venus-Sol) but without last week’s good luck effects, this week’s might be a bit less pleasant.  You were using protection, right?

    In non-lovin’ news, there are indicators that martial belligerence will lead to good things.  Also, this is a good week to bet on buzkashi.

    If your local sports bookmaker doesn't have it, Swiss might be able to hook you up.
    This week’s money-maker

    In more astrology-vindicating news, world-renowned sciencey star-person Neil Degrasse Tyson is so made of science that he can be duplicated by a computer program!  Science!  Astrology is just as much Science as IFLS leader NdGT!

    Astrology music (not the right time of year, but oh well):

     

     

  • Ph34r mAh 1337 SkilLZ – The horoscope for the week of May 6th

    …and the confirmed predictions keep rolling in!  Between the Glibs engagement, hookups with hotties, and the fishing fotos we have further proof that the stars never lie.*

    What do we have for you this week?  Well, as always, some things stay the same.  The sun is still in Taurus, so that’s good for ranchers. We still have Mercury in Aries harshing everyone’s mellow and making my job harder.  And we still have a retrograde Jupiter in Scorpio.  But…

    I hate it when amateurs mix up celestial and Enochian scripts, but whatchagonnadoo?
    Celestial Ying-Yang

    This week we have an odd alignment of that retrograde Jupiter with Sol and our own Terra Firma.  That amplifies the Jovian effects out the celestial ying-yang.  So it becomes more important to get a handle what Jupiter is actually doing as it’s spinning the wrong way through Scorpio.  I think in this case, it’s crucial to get some context from the rest of the chart and how it relates to this.   So as above, we’ve got the Mercury in Aries thing.  This tension/ambivalence  simultaneously makes our interpretation both easier and harder.  It indicates that both of alternativeinterpretations will be true, but that we won’t be able to necessarily know how they are applying.  The conclusions are:

    • Your OCD is going to be worse than usual.
    • You should spend some time focusing on your genitals.
    • If you have the opportunity to cloister yourself with someone (actually two someones, see below) for said genital-focusing you should take it.
    • Said time should involve “unnatural acts.”

    Venus in Gemini indicates it’s a great time for three-way lovin’, twincest, and/or mirror use.  Related to that, there is also an alignment of Venus with Sol and Mercury, so if this is your first time with said twins, take it.  Actually, why would you need me to tell you to accept the offer of a threeway with a set of twins?  What is wrong with you?

    In non-hot-group-action signs,  we have an addition to the sports betting signals that have been hanging out for a few weeks:  the moon comes into conjunction with mars.  This is a change sign, so if you’ve been lucky betting on a particular team, this week they will let you down.

    Tarot update:  I suck at image editing, and I’ve been busier than something that is extremely busy in folksy analogies.  If there is anyone out there who is competent and enjoys this sort of thing, let me know.

    There is a reason the Rider-Waite deck is so popular: it’s got a ton of detail to fixate on and inspire drug-assisted mental connections.  So sometimes (barring the intervention of actual artists) I’ll be just adding things onto existing cards, like so:

    Awfully young for an empress, don't you think?

    So here, it’s a simple matter of replacing the scepter with a banhammer and adding Her initials to the shield.  We get to keep the reclining position, the crown of stars, etc. that are used for interpretation cues.

    While I do like R-W, it seems more appropriate for The Tower to use one from The Cthulu Mythos Tarot:

    Ia! Ia! ... you know the rest.

    Of course, this brings up a good question:  How do we communicate the glibness of the Arcana?  The SPempress is relatively easy, as is The Sun, Reversed:

    I really am supposed to be working right now.
    Hello, Rufus!

    But for SF, should we use the current hedobot avatar, or the earlier Snidely Whiplash?  Hedobot with a Snidely Whiplash mustache?

    If anyone has a preference how they are to be represented, please let me know, or better yet, send me the artwork.  Honestly, an actual photo of Yusef with a bindle walking along the edge of a wall at Slab City would be AWESOME.

     

     

  • Tricks of the Trade: The Horoscope for the Week of April 29th

    So you want to be a fortuneteller.  Congratulations!  You’re a moron!

    There are a very few limited instances when putting up a crystal ball shingle is a good less than catastrophically bad idea:

    1.  It’s a front for your illegal business
    2.  It’s a money-laundering operation
    3. You are otherwise unemployed, and/or bored AND you have no expenses involved with obtaining your venue.

    In the same vein as giving a junkie some chlorox with which to sterilize their shared needles, here’s a little advice about succeeding in the X-mancy business.

    "Cleo" was already taken, obviously
    This is the look you’re going for

    First off, be a woman.  You might get away with being an astrologer with a Y chromosome, but for palmisty, cartomancy, scrying or psychic reading ain’t nobody gonna pay you for your opinion.  Once you are a woman, invest in chunky jewelry and scarves.  Consider dying your hair, but for the love of Gaia, do not have it professionally done.  You need to do it yourself.  The look you are cultivating is “sketchy.”  Respectable people make crappy fortunetellers.  There needs to be something… off about your appearance — the difference between “underbridge dweller” and “reclusive gypsy” is in the attitude and how you set up your surroundings.

    Good luck with that
    Nice try

    Do you think you’re psychic?  Great!  This is going to help lot.  It’s like they say, “sincerity is important, once you can fake that, you’ve got it made.”  The most successful psychic I know acts exactly as if they believe their own bullshit completely.  She has never dropped the facade in front of me.  Remember, you’re mostly a salesperson at this point, so have confidence in your product!  What if you can’t actually believe that you have the power to foretell the future?  Well, there is a solution to that.

    Drugs.

    Remember the oracle at Delphi?  Paint huffer.  Not from a spray can, but all natural organic hydrocarbons straight from Mother Earth’s crack.   If you want to go with the classics, you can choose ether, but what with the usual accouterments of candles and incense, I wouldn’t recommend it if you don’t want to go all Richard Prior.  But be careful that you don’t overdo it.  “Not entirely safe, not entirely sane” will draw the attention of the mark; “Crackhead” will have them scurrying for the door without paying.  The point of the drugs is to take the edge off your internal censor and *ahem* “open your mind to” the possible connections between the real world and your divinatory tools.  The only difference between “psychic” and “psychotic” is “cot,” which is what you’re probably going to be sleeping on if you choose to ply this trade.

    There is one skill that is pretty much mandatory if you’re going to make this business a sole/unaugmented source of income:  cold reading. This is a skill that can be learned, so do it.  Prestidigitation is also extremely useful, both for forcing cards and well… we’ll get to that

    Ideally, they should be less physically imposing, as well
    Notice that the mark must ALWAYS be wealthier than you

    Last thing:  if you want to make real money, you’re going to need a permanent premises so that you can build a clientele of suckers.  And if you want to really take them for what you can get, you’re going to need to commit some felony-level fraud.  This is going to end badly, if for no other reason that former marks, even ones that you that you didn’t even rip off will eventually be upset with your advice and having a fixed place of business means they know where to find you to make their displeasure known, or to send the local constabulary.  If you are satisfied by the rewards of one-off clients and the occasional petty larceny (this is where prestidigitation comes in:  if you keep your workspace cluttered, claustophobic, and filled with garish colors and patterns, this can make the mark more distracted and less likely to remember that he set down something small and salable, particularly if he didn’t notice you palming it.) then it’s safer to adopt the M.O. of grifters everywhere and keep mobile.  Carney life here we come!  Actually, renaissance fairs are a pretty good deal for an aspiring fortuneteller: the one-person tent is the cheapest premises you can have and is perfect for the kind of work you need to do, you have a constant flow of new clients pushed right in front of your flap, and those clients are in a pretty good mood and won’t actually take your advice too seriously.  Plus lots of them are drunk.  Blessings to Eris and Dionysus for drunken marks!

    I should probably also mention that dial-a-psychic is a thing that exists and my closest fortuneteller friend makes her living doing this, but I’ve never seen it in operation first-hand.  so not only do I not know anything about it, I don’t even know enough to be entertainingly ignorant about it.

    Also the marijuana is usually ass.
    Renfair. Pros: lots of one-off clients, steady income. Cons: herpes.

     

    Now, on to this week’s chart!

    This week has a couple of strong markers, and an oddly large number of tension/uncertainty indicators.  The more definite signs are for good fishing, and an extraordinary alignment (Sol-Mercury-Venus-Saturn retrograde) for relationships.  This is an excellent week to meet new partners, but a terrible week for breakups.  If the squeeze hasn’t gotten his crap out of the house KK, maybe it would be better to put it off until next week.  On the tension front, we have TWO different cross-alignments of opposition influencts;  we have change and stability signs on top of each other (Mercury in Capricorn) as well as balance/flux juxtaposition (Luna in Libra). If you are having difficulty figuring out WTF is going on in your life, this probably is why.*  The positioning last week that encourages sports betting  (Mars-Saturn retrograde in Capricorn) and masturbation  (Jupiter retrograde in Scorpio) remain this week, so have fun with that .

    *no, this is not why at all.

  • What Are We Reading – April 2018

    SP

    Reading two very different books at the moment, but that’s really not unusual for me as I generally read constantly.

    First, I’m dipping into Waking Up by Sam Harris. I’ve practiced meditation on and off for most of my adult life; currently in “off” mode. However, I’ve long acknowledged that during “on” periods, I seem to be much more resilient regarding the regular buffeting that life hands me. I simply lack the discipline necessary to always maintain a practice. Various things crop up that derail the habit, and it takes me a while to get back to it. I’m hoping that this book gives me a nudge to begin again. One day will simply lead to the next, and so on, and I’ll be back to a better practice and, perhaps, sort out some things that have been on my mind lately.

    I’ve also begun Data and Goliath: The Hidden Battles to Collect Your Data and Control Your World by Bruce Schneier. If you weren’t already paranoid – and you’re here at Glibertarians.com so I’m betting you are to some extent – this book will push you over the edge. I’m also looking forward to Bruce’s new book Click Here to Kill Everybody: Security and Survival in a Hyper-connected World due out in September.

    Web Dominatrix

    I’m currently reading two books as well, also very different from each other.

    The first is When: The Science of Perfect Timing by Daniel Pink. This is very much as is described in the title: all about why the timing of something matters as much — and sometimes more — than the thing itself. Pink discusses how people’s biorhythms make them more prone to mistakes at different parts of the day, and how it’s important to align the task you’re doing with your own natural rhythm. The book starts off with the suggestion that maybe the Lusitania sunk because it was early afternoon — typically a time when most people make mistakes — and the Captain made a series of bad judgement calls. I find this book very interesting.

    I’ve also just tucked into We The Corporations by Adam Winkler. It’s too soon to form an opinion.

    SugarFree

    I had been meaning to read The Three-Body Problem by Liu Cixin for a while now, intrigued by the idea of the most popular Chinese-language science fiction novel of all time and when it won the 2015 Hugo Award (in translation by Ken Liu.) But with the announcement that Amazon was prepared to commit a billion dollars to adapt the trilogy for Prime TV, I decided to move it up in my long reading backlog.

    The first book in the trilogy isn’t perfect, seemingly to only half-heartedly commit to its attempt to blend the history of Red China’s SETI program, the Cultural Revolution and a modern-day mystery of wide-spread suicides among physicists which are somehow connected to an underground VR game called The Three-Body Problem. The early parts of the book, set around the Cultural Revolution and the SETI program are very engaging, but the long sequences of the main character playing the VR game–with its grounding in higher mathematics and Chinese historio-mythologue–is less so. And when the reveal comes to tie it all together, it creates severe fictional whiplash.

    I was left with a real sense of “Where the hell does he go after this?” And after Liu showed me in the sequel, The Dark Forest, I was left asking “Where the hell does he go after this?” And after Liu showed me in the final book, Death’s End, all I could think was “How in the hell are they going to make this in a TV show?”

    There are few science fiction books that surprise me, and even fewer that don’t turn that surprise into disappointment. Liu Cixin didn’t disappoint me but these books are not an easy read.

    Riven

    The bad news is: I did not pass the exam on April 3rd. The good news is: I get to take it again on May 7th. … Yay. So, I’ve still been reading this lovely book, taking practice exams, etc. It’s been a very exciting few months. I’m looking forward to reading literally anything else after this is all over. … But mostly I’m looking forward to quality time with Persona 5, which Mr. Riven purchased for me for my birthday based on how much I loved Catherine. Since I can’t recommend you pick up the book I’m buried in, I will recommend you purchase either of these fine video games, instead.

    jesse.in.mb

    Al Qaeda’s Super Secret Weapon – a VERY tongue in cheek take on the end of DADT in short graphic novel form. I laughed until my sides ached. There’s an almost poignent discussion of the IDF and why threesomes seem like a good idea but aren’t somewhere in the middle, and a pointed criticism of the Dallas airport. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

    An Irish Country Cookbook, Patrick Taylor – I didn’t realize when I picked it up that it was a tie-in to a book series. I’ve queued up a few of the recipes and the short stories interwoven into the book almost make me want to start reading Taylor’s Irish Country Doctor series.

    I’ve completely failed to put down Jia Pingwa’s Happy Dreams, which is both fascinating and infuriating, which is why I’m light on the reading this month.

    Old Man With Candy

    Two fun books, with a couple from SugarFree queued up for next month. First a reread of something I picked up a couple years ago and loved the hell out of, Bad Science: The Short Life and Weird Times of Cold Fusion, detailing what (to me) was the most interesting scientific fiasco of my lifetime. I may be somewhat biased because I know (or knew) about three quarters of the people talked about in the book, but it really is a delightful look at the use and abuse of science, the wonderful self-correcting nature of the process, the socio-religious tensions in the Salt Lake City-Provo axis, and the carnivorous world of academia. It does make me grateful that I’ve made a science career in industry instead…

    The polar opposite is an intimidatingly thick romance novel, The Proviso: Director’s Cut, by the Glibertarians’ own Moriah Jovan (mojeaux). I’m not much on the romance novel genre, but couldn’t resist this one. It’s set in a corporate cut-throat environment, and brings together fatal attraction, ultra-violence, Mormonism (I’m sensing a theme in my books this month), sex, and libertarian sensibilities. The personalities of the characters are very three dimensional and the storyline is compelling. I’m halfway through and greatly enjoying this exploration outside of my reading comfort zone. The scene in the prosecutor’s office will sound disturbingly familiar:

    “We don’t help people here. We find excuses to put them in jail and take their stuff… That means we’re the bad guys. Power hungry, abusive of the office, contemptuous of the law, in bed with all the wrong people, completely uninterested in justice,and to top it off, we’re a bunch of thieving bastards… And if you think any other prosecutor’s office is any different, think again.”

    JW

    I haven’t been eating at home much recently, so I’ve run out of cereal boxes to read. But the really cool thing is that at my favorite restaurant, they have special placemats! So instead of me telling you about what I’ve been reading, I’ll show you!

    It’s cool because it’s interactive.

    SP’s Dog

    Swiss came to visit me. Swiss brought me a whole pizza. Just for me. I didn’t share. I love Swiss. Swiss is my favorite forever. Bacon Magic didn’t bring me pizza. I bark and growl at Bacon Magic.

    Swiss inspired my reading. My Pizza. American Pie. The Pizza Bible.

    I love Swiss. Forever. Woof!

    Brett L

    I am reading the latest Mark Lawrence book, Grey Sister, second installment in his newest series. Honestly, I’ll probably take a break and re-read the first one as I can’t track the characters.

    I also read The Great Passage, a surprisingly entertaining book (set in Japan and translated from the original Japanese) about a young, uh, “focused” man who becomes the center of a fifteen year effort to create a new dictionary. I really don’t know how to describe it beyond that. But a really good novel about a couple of awkward people who fall in love with dictionaries and lexicography from a passionate desire to communicate better.

    I also read the Riyria Revelations trilogy since last I made a WAWR post. A fun “let’s go overthrow the empire” adventure by two thieves who turn out to be principled killers instead of just thugs. Fast-paced, entertaining, good plot twists. A little too reliant on deus ex machina but a good sword-and-sorcery yarn that doesn’t take itself too seriously.

  • What Are We Reading? – March 2018

    Hello fellow Glibertarians! We’ve been reading, or in jesse’s case listening…or in JW’s case looking vacantly at pictures on the back of a Lucky Charm’s box and wanted to share our experiences with you! Gather round and share your latest reads in the comments (like we could stop you).

    SugarFree

    Nothing but British Apocalypse this month, starting with a tenth or twelfth re-read of John Wyndham‘s The Day of the Triffids (1952), easily the best killer-plants-eat-middle-class-England novel. Despite my commitment to cut down on re-reading to focus on material I always wanted to read but never have managed to get around to, Triffids was an overlap of my book-to-film read/watch project. After reading it again, I watched the 1962 film adaptation, as well as the 1981 and 2009 BBC TV miniseries.

    Triffids is an oddly refreshing apocalypse to read in retrospect, relying on neither the dreary analogue politics of nuclear annihilation or the current vogue of climate change. Wyndham makes two changes to a familiar post-WWII England and lets the plot unwind: There are the huge plants called Triffids–poisonous, mobile and fecund–that everyone tolerates because they produce a valuable oil and manageable because in non-industrial settings their stinger can be docked and a comet that produces a cosmic light-show that blinds anyone who watches it. The protagonist, a worker on a triffid farm, wakes up in a hospital, eyes bandaged from an attack by the vicious vegetables that almost blinded him. (If all this sounds familiar, it is because the premise was taken in bits in pieces for the set-up for The Night of the Comet (1984), and the intros for both 28 Days Later (2002) and The Walking Dead (comic and TV show.) The protagonist stumbles around in London, avoiding packs of blind people who grow more violent in their desperation, finds himself a beautiful sighted girlfriend (who missed being blinded because she was sleeping off a massive hangover) and the struggle to survive begins. Slavers, plague, clueless goody-two-shoes and separation all afflict our lovers long before the killer plants become too much of a problem. A foster daughter and a couple of the friendly sort of blind folks later, they build themselves a comfortable if hardscrabble life on a lovely country estate, flamethrowers ever at the ready. (The last part led Brian Aldiss to dismiss this entire genre as “cozy catastrophes.”)

    The 1962 movie is pretty garbage, discarding most of the plot for rubber Triffid suits and wooden acting. The 1981 miniseries the most accurate to the spirit and letter of the book, lifting dialogue straight from certain sections. The Triffids are fairly well done; modeled on pitcher plants and oddly pretty (you understand why people would have a deadly walking plant in their gardens.) The 2009 miniseries is pretty crap, using only the broadest outlines of the book (and stealing a plot point from 28 Days Later in a sly twist.)

    Old Man With Candy and I both read The Death of Grass (US title: No Blade of Grass), 1956, a savage little exercise in doing what it takes to survive from John Christopher, best known as an author of children’s fantasy and science fiction novels. A virus attacks all the grasses of the world, wiping out more of the ready carbs and leading to worldwide famine. However, OMWC smartly declined to put himself through the terrible 1970 film adaptation, which changes the virus-famine to a namby-pamby environment horror story (think horrible folk guitar over stock footage of industrial waste and oil spill birds) that misses the point of the book.

    I finished off the spree with J. G. Ballard‘s apocalypse tetralogy: The Wind From Nowhere (1961), The Drowned World (1962), The Burning World 1964; variant title: The Drought), and The Crystal World (1966). Ballard takes the four medieval elements (air, water, fire, and earth) and sets about gleefully destroying the world. They were a bit much to read back-to-back. Wind and Burning are fairly skippable, and Drowned tries to work in far too much Heart of Darkness. Drowned and Crystal incorporates the sort of nightmare logic that informs his later and more accomplished work and the writing is superb, full of lush prose about awful things–but all of them are flawed in their own way, and you would be better off reading Crash or High-Rise to experience Ballard.

    jesse.in.mb

    Oliver Pötzsch – The Hangman’s Daughter. Pötzsch digs into his own family history to write a detective novel set in an inter-war period (1660, so not *that* inter-war) Bavaria. The story focuses on Jakob Kuisl the town hangman, and the town physician. The title is a bit misleading because even though she’s in the story and has all of the hallmarks of a strong heroine (clever, headstrong, agile), she’s a relatively minor character. The setting and the story are fun and the presentation (Kindle In Motion) was something I hadn’t experienced before. It made me feel a bit like I was reading a children’s book, but the art was solid.

    Randall Munroe – What If?: Serious Scientific Answers to Absurd Hypothetical Questions. As a fan of XKCD for about as long as XKCD has been a thing, I was excited to finally take a crack at What If?, and it was breezy and delightful. The audio edition was narrated by Wil Wheaton, which probably should’ve annoyed me but his tone augmented the nerdy whimsy of it quite nicely.

    John Scalzi – The Dispatcher. I have limited exposure to Scalzi’s early works (Old Man’s War has been near the top of my to-read list for a solid five years, but never quite gets there), and have heard his later stuff isn’t that great, but I enjoyed The Dispatcher as a thought experiment of a violent place (Chicago, natch) where violence has changed: when you’re murdered you feel it, but you return home unscathed after death. Much of the novella is presented as a conversation between a dispatcher (a licensed killer) and a CPD detective who are trying to find another dispatcher who has been violently abducted. Zachary Quinto brings a warm affability to the dispatcher which gives the moral discussions an interesting dimension.

    Heroic Mulatto

    Timothy Zhan – Thrawn. Because Thrawn.

    Riven

    Well… I’m testing on the material presented in this book on April 3rd, then I can start reading other books again. (Y’know, provided I pass…) I’m looking forward to finishing up the copy of the Kama Sutra that Swiss got me for Christmas. What, your friends wouldn’t get you a book like that? Get better friends. Mr. Riven and I also recently visited his parents and listened to about half of Jordan Peterson’s 12 Rules for Life on the drive there and back again over ~8 hours.  We still have the last half to listen to, but what we did hear was some pretty solid advice with a good bit of dry humor. Much to my delight, Peterson is the narrator of his own audiobook, and I’m looking forward to the next road trip across the state so we can finish it.

    SP

    My extended road trip to visit OMWC’s Mom resulted in varied reading. I read a couple issues of The Jewish Journal (Palm Beach), which is really pretty informative, but not as informative as my MIL’s canasta ladies. I read many of those inserts that pharmacists include with medications. I read through and sorted out all my MIL’s tax documents. And, as indicated previously on this website, I read many, many, MANY wine bottle labels.

    I downloaded The Complete Father Brown Mysteries for my Kindle app. Although there is some controversy of the “completeness” or lack thereof among the reviewers of this edition, for what I needed… mindless relaxation I could fit into small blocks of free time… this filled the bill nicely. Especially for $.99. In the 40 years since I last read them, I’d forgotten how gentle and charmingly written these short stories are. Perfect.

     

    Swiss Servator

    Beer labels, and lots and lots of contracts.

  • A Path to Wellness, Part Three

    A Path to Wellness, Part Three

    PART ONE

    PART TWO

    Chapter IX

    INT—PANEL VAN—NIGHT

    The picture FADES IN AND OUT as TED groggily regains consciousness. His beard and hair are noticeably longer, he reaches to touch his face and scratches himself with abnormally long fingernails. As he tries to gain his bearings the van abruptly moves side to side, bouncing him around.

    TED
    What the hell is going on?!

    HARVEY turns to look back from the driver’s seat.

    HARVEY
    Holy shit! You’re awake!

    TED notices an odd sensation in his groin, he reaches down and pulls up a catheter line and bag filled with urine.

    TED
    What the fuck!

    There is a crashing sound and the van suddenly jumps, causing Ted to pull out the catheter. Blood and urine spray around the van’s interior.

    HARVEY
    Long story, short; you’ve been in a coma for a few months. We were being kept in a Soros dungeon in Chicago. I broke us out. It was quite brilliant actually…

    INT—DUNGEON—DAY

    STYLISH FLASH-BACK
    Ted is comatose, Harvey is masturbating in the corner. A knock at the door. The door opens, a guard enters.

    HARVEY(VO)
    The guard came into the room, and I flung my seed in his face…

    This happens on screen.

    HARVEY(VO)
    I had meticulously timed out the rotation of…

    INT—Panel VAN—NIGHT

    Ted interrupts the flash-back sequence.

    TED
    I don’t give a shit! I’m pissing blood back here!

    The van is rocked once again by a collision.

    TED(CONT’D)
    And what the fuck is going on out there?

    HARVEY
    We’re being chased by Hillary’s goons. Kind of a fun action car chase thing.

    TED
    Fun!? And what do you mean Hillary’s goons?

    EXT—HIGHWAY—NIGHT

    The panel van is being chased by three black SUVs with big bold lettering in yellow on the side ‘FBI’. They ram the van again. The chase passes by a billboard that reads ‘BUY YOUR SWEETIE SOME SWEETS THIS VALENTINES DAY. WITHOUT THE GUILT. VISIT SUGARFREECANDIES.COM’

    INT—PANEL VAN—NIGHT

    Ted is rocked again by the impact. He hears a cough and leans over to get a better view of the passenger seat, where he sees TIM, a light-skinned black guy who looks sickly as if he has a bad case of the flu.

    TED
    Who the fuck is that!?

    HARVEY
    Ted, this is Tim, Tim, this is Ted.

    They halfheartedly wave at each other.

    HARVEY(CONT’D)
    Tim works at the CDC. It’s all connected!

    EXT—HIGHWAY—NIGHT

    The van makes a pit maneuver and breaks free of its pursuers.

     

    Chapter X

    EXT—LITTLE CEASARS—DAY

    Ted is sitting out the back doors of the panel van. Tim is leaning against the exterior, draped in a blanket, looking pale and sick. Harvey emerges from the store with a pizza in hand.

    HARVEY
    The only hot and ready they had was deep dish ham and pineapple.

    Tim vomits.

    TED
    Fuck, I don’t even know the last time I ate solid food, give me a slice.

    Harvey opens the box and Ted grabs a slice and begins to devour it. He begins speaking with his mouth full, spitting chunks everywhere.

    TED (CONT’D)
    So what the fuck is up with this Tim guy?

    Harvey scuttles to the other side of Ted so Tim can’t hear him and whispers.

    HARVEY
    George and Hillary, after the Vegas debacle, they decided to weaponize the flu vaccine. You see the flu vaccine carries a dead version of whatever virus the CDC suspects will be most prevalent in a given year. But that’s not what they did this year. This year all the vaccines were for the Russian Flu. Well, all the real vaccines the politicians got anyway, the rest were just sugar water.

    TED
    What?

    HARVEY
    You see, Tim here is a diabetic, and after he took the shot he knew his reaction was a diabetic one. So he decided to look into it.

    Tim starts shaking uncontrollably.

    Harvey
    Turns out all the shots designated for civilians were a sugar placebo. Only a chosen few were given access to the real vaccine against the Russian Flu.

    TED
    What the hell are you talking about you depraved piece of shit?

    Tim collapses into a diabetic coma.

    HARVEY
    Don’t you get it? The Russians are behind all of it?!

    Ted
    Electing Trump?

    HARVEY
    Fuck no! Causing chaos in American politics. When Trump said the election might be rigged, he was called crazy and paranoid. But what happened after Trump won? Hillary said the election was rigged. Now we’ve got Robert Mueller chasing us all the way from Chicago to Florida to shut us up!

    TED (holds his hand up)
    Give me sec, I need to vomit.

    HARVEY
    Yeah, you probably shouldn’t be eating solid foods yet.

    The camera pulls up in a crane shot as Ted is vomiting and Tim is having a diabetic seizure.

     

    Chapter XI

    EXT—HIGHSCHOOL—DAY

    The panel van crashes into the side of high school after suddenly bursting into frame with a passenger side view of the van. It stops with a violent crash. The sliding door on the van opens, Ted and Tim exit through passenger side sliding door, supporting each other. Harvey rushes around, temporarily stopped when his tattered robe is caught on the bumper but fights his way free to help Ted and Tim.

    TED
    They’re going to be here any second!

    Tim coughs up blood.

    HARVEY
    Wait, this is a high school. I spend a lotta time round these…for business reasons.

    They continue to drag each other forward.

    TED
    Yeah, so?

    HARVEY
    If we go in there yelling about guns, they’re gonna lock the place down!

    TED
    But we ain’t got no guns!

    HARVEY
    That don’t matter, they hear the word, the place is locked like a nun’s asshole!

    Tim coughs up some blood.

    TIM
    It’s worth a try.

    Tim, Ted, and Harvey look at each other for a moment.

    TED
    Fuckit, we ain’t got nothin’ better.

    INT—HIGHSCHOOL—DAY

    Tim and Harvey drag Ted through the front doors.

    HARVEY
    I’ve got a gun.

    The staff in the hallway continue about their business.

    TED
    It’s a semiautomatic gun!

    The staff screams in terror and scrambles.

    CU A BUTTON IS PUSHED.

    CU EMERGENCY DOORS SHUT. The school is on LOCKDOWN.

    EXT—SCHOOL—DAY

    A black van marked FBI in yellow letters screeches to a halt. A hit squad exits the van followed by ROBERT, who exits the van in slow motion, adjusting his impeccable suit, a long-faced man with gray hair and a darkly shadowed face. Still in slow motion Robert and his goon squad pass several Dade County Sheriffs frozen in fear.

    INT—SCHOOL—DAY

    Tim and Harvey are dragging Ted down the hall when the door at the far end of the hall is breached with explosives. FBI goons come pouring in followed by Robert.

    ROBERT
    We can end this peacefully. Just tell everyone you work for the Russians. You helped steal the election.

    Harvey stops and turns.

    HARVEY
    You’re the piece of shit working for the Russians!

    ROBERT
    That’s not the story the people will hear. And that’s all that matters.

    HARVEY
    You want to talk about public opinion! I built public opinion for 20 years for you assclowns! And this is the thanks I get!?

    ROBERT
    Kill them.

    The clacking of stupid Hollywood guns being loaded when they already should have, then just before the FBI raid team opens fire, a group of high-school kids walks into the hail of gunfire. Killing the teenagers, but allowing Ted, Tim and Harvey to escape out the other exit.

    EXT—HIGHSCHOOL—DAY

    Harvey and Tim load Ted into an unlocked car in the parking lot.

    HARVEY
    Tim, do know how to hotwire this?

    TIM
    Why, cuz I’m black?

    HARVEY
    Well, yeah, and you’re like fucking smart.

    TED moans in agony. Tim coughs up some blood.

    TIM
    Yeah, I can do it.

    TIM rips apart the steering column and touches two wires together, like in the movies, and the car starts, he gets in the driver’s seat.

    TIM
    Get in bitch! If I’m gonna stereotype I be goin’ all out!

    Harvey gets in and the car screams away.

     

  • What Are We Reading – February 2018

    jesse.in.mb

    Don Winslow – The Force. Is the story of a cop who thought himself good and spent his entire career methodically crossing line after line until he was really a villain. Maybe. Winslow seems unsure if this is going to be elegy or indictment and I found the damn thing an infuriating listen. There’s some unironic patter about his first duty is to get home to his family. Seriously.

    James S. A. Corey – Leviathan Wakes (The Expanse Book 1). It was fun dipping my toe back in hard sci-fi. I wish I’d read this before watching the first season of the show as the show was a fairly faithful retelling of the book with some alterations so that you saw more of Earth’s politics from the beginning, primarily from the view point of Chrisjen Avasarala (Shoreh Aghdashloo), who does not appear in the first book. It cannot be stated enough that I would listen to Shohreh Aghdashloo read an intro to chemistry text book for all eternity and be content.

    Richard Phillips – Mark of Fire (The Endarian Prophecy Book 1). Fantasy, a little on the generic side, but well paced. The magical system was a fun departure from most of what I’ve read, and while not exactly unique, it was well fleshed out. The second book just came out in January and the third on 02/20, so I may just continue on with the series.

    SP

    I’ve been driving around the country helping elderly relatives with various health stuff this month. (Pro tip: Don’t be the oldest-female-child-and-only-child-with-medical-training in a huge family.)

    Not one of SP's elderly relatives, or OMWC would have married SP for her money But, hey, I don’t mind driving. And I love my elderly relatives. Interstates, however, get on my nerves. Yes, I’d prefer to take the “blue highways” but time hasn’t allowed.

    What to do? Listen to an audiobook, of course!

    On this last drive, I started listening to the somewhat lengthy Shooting Victoria. The length – 19 hrs and 54 mins – would normally be off-putting for me, but when one has endless, mind-numbingly-boring hours to fill…feature, not bug.

    Shooting Victoria tells the stories of the eight(!) failed attempts to assasinate Great Britain’s Queen Victoria over the course of the 19th century. Although perhaps a bit dry for some, it’s quite interesting to me from a social history standpoint. I’m only 8 hours in or so and we’ve already had much discussion of Bedlam, Chartism, the state of the judiciary, the plight of the Spitalfields silk weavers, and the Irish Potato Famine. Also fascinating-yet-not-surprising are the machinations of the political figures and those within the Queen’s household.

    I am enjoying the book and will likely finish it on my next driving trip. Webdominatrix and I are headed to Florida soon to check in on OMWC’s elderly relative, with stops to visit Brett & his family and SugarFree & his bourbon (not a euphemism) along the way. Nothing good can come from this. No, there will not be pics.

    Old Man With Candy

    For sheer thrills and excitement, there’s nothing to match C.D. Motchenbacher, and I managed to score a copy of an older edition of Low Noise Electronic Design, sent to me as a gift from one of my favorite technical authors. It may be old, but so am I, and the basic physics that are discussed are still valid. It’s comprehensive and readable, everything a technical book should be.

    For fun, I realized that it had been years since I picked up my copy of The Annotated Alice, the Lewis Carroll classics thoroughly annotated in a witty and scholarly style by the late polymath Martin Gardner. The fact that the author may well have been a closeted pedophile wasn’t the main attraction, I swear. I’m not a poetry kinda guy, but The Walrus and the Carpenter and Jabberwocky still speak to me in a way nothing else has, other than the works of Don Marquis. As someone whose professional career has been tied to molecular physics, I am particularly delighted by the insights of Through the Looking Glass and Gardner’s commentary. Everyone should own this.

    Riven

    All of my reading time since last month has still been dedicated to this sole book. The good news is that I should be testing on it in a few weeks. The bad news is that, until then, it’s going to be the only book I’m reading and I will continue to be scarce.

    Brett L

    I read The Shadow of What was Lost by James Islington, which Amazon’s AI has been pushing on me for a long time and reviewers compare to Robert Jordan. I like Mr.Islington’s writing, but the plot is very reminiscent of Jordan, which is to say that there probably is one but I can’t discern it. The plot of the book — two young men who are destined to be magic users are set on a quest. Along the way they meet a 3rd young man who may be a mass murder as well as a wizard who is probably a mass murderer, but the men he killed were probably going to kill one of the original two young men. These 4 men meet a princess who turns out to be the 2nd young man’s cousin. Eventually an army is defeated, much wrong is righted, the young mass murderer turns out to be The Highlander — an immortal with a super-sword who has killed more people than dysentery.

    Oh, and a shit-ton of Microsoft Azure and DevOps training. DevOps sounds cool if I ever work on a team of more than 1 or have clients who actually can be arsed to test what I write.

    SugarFree

    I have read so much. So bigly of the reading. Yuge reading.

    Read The Iron Druid series. I liked it quite a bit, unlike some [cough]Brett L[cough]jesse[cough]. Basically Dresden Files Lite crossed with American Gods. Druids and shit. A talking dog. Hot redhead bartenders. The ultimate in “don’t stick it in crazy Death Goddess” sex. Will say… I thought the series was finished or I would have avoided it until it was. Between Planetary and GRRM, I have literary battered wife syndrome: I never want to get into that sort of abusive situation again. The final book of the series is supposed to be out in April. I’ll believe when I see it and not before, mofo.

    I have this urge to read the book before I see the movie, and over the years I have built up a large backlog of movies I’ve been waiting to see. My project for the next few months is to finally do something about it. So far I’ve read/watched The Other by Tom Tryon, The Fury by John Farris, The Stepford Wives by Ira Levin and I’m working on reading The Devil Rides Out by Dennis Wheatley.

    The Other was a bit of a bust since the movie hews so closely to the novel. Kind of pointless if you’ve read the novel. But the novel was very good. The whole thing goes down like a fever dream.

    De Palma’s film of The Fury is better than the book, honestly. The novel introduces better characterization and motives but is so disjointed it feels like maybe the copy you are reading had some chapters torn out at random. Time shifts back and forth, plot threads weave and unweave at random, and whole character arcs will have the important middle bit excited. Also, filming the novel as written would have had De Palma up on child porn charges.

    I had already seen The Stepford Wives a couple of times, so it was a bit of cheat. In this case, both the novel and the film are worth it. The plot doesn’t make much sense–if you can make realistic sexbots, just sell the sexbots, make a ton of cash and buy young hot wives; lather, rinse and repeat every ten years or so President Donald style. But the feminist paranoia of the piece is so palpable and so–for the lack of a better term–hysterical, it creates excellent tension. And I’m pretty sure there’s not a single scene of Katherine Ross or Paula Prentiss wearing a bra for the first 3/5ths of the movie. It was the 70s, man. Can you dig it?

    And that font. I’m not a font nerd or anything, but could that font be more 70s?

    JW

    So I was reading the milk carton at breakfast, and discovered something interesting. Besides it providing me with the minimum daily adult requirement of Vitamin D, it turns out that Mary Margaret Cameron, age 9, is missing. She was last seen on October 13, 2007 in the company of her noncustodial father, and they had a cool picture of what she looked like with age progression. She’s developed well, and I’m sure he’s a proud daddy.

    Sloopy

    The only thing anyone here needs to be reading is the TUNNELL ESTATE AUCTION SALE DAY CATALOG.

    Disclaimer: Contributions not necessarily actually by the author whose name appears above them.

    Web Dominatrix

    I have had a slow reading month. I too have been enjoying Shooting Victoria at SP’s recommendation. I am currently reading Salt: A World History and I find this far more fascinating than I expected. It is, as you might have guessed, the tale of how salt has shaped civilisation.

    I am also reading/listening to (Thanks, Amazon, for allowing me to switch between Kindle and Audible!) Uncertainty about Heisenberg’s principle.

  • Florida Man Episodes — Anniversary

    The ceremony to placate the Skunk Ape and keep the rapey cousin of STEVE SMITH raping anyone besides Florida Man was off to a rocky start. One of his minions had decided it was a good idea to give blood and go drinking before capturing the three key deer (one buck and two does) that every in-the-know Florida Man knows will keep the lesser rape-ape away. FM had planned to take a sail around the Caribbean and take his chances with SEA SMITH, even going so far as to bring in help from outside of the great state of Florida. But that didn’t work out, either.  Now, there was only one way to be safe. It was obvious to Florida Man that he would have to fall back and petition ZARDOZ, who he knew to have some substance abuse problems, to  go to STEVE SMITH directly. Florida Man decidedly did not want to gain the attention of a giant flying head that thought FM’s favorite organ was evil, but… hey. Guns were fun to shoot, and FM knew plenty of brutals.

    FM started out his petition in a way crafted to get ZARDOZ’s attention:

    Dear Prudence,

    I am afraid that the Skunk Ape will come and rape me. I tried to give the traditional offering, but was unable to do so. Can you please tell me how to keep my rectum in some sort of shape other than “gang raped to death”. I have plenty of brutals and plenty of guns.

    Sincerely,

    Florida Man

    Florida Man may have left out some details. An angry voodoo priest with a discriminatory attitude towards Puerto Ricans. Some previous predation by Skunk Ape. It also appeared that maybe some of FM’s minions might have had, er, less than completely voluntary intercourse with some monkeys who worshiped Skunk Ape in their own fashion. Although, to FM’s way of thinking, the aggressive herpes simplex that resulted from those couplings should be its own punishment. Those were not important. What was really important was not having to have his rectum reconstructed by some guy who did two years of veterinary training at Southeast Hispaniola Junior College. Which, not to insult residents of the island of Hispaniola, is not exactly like getting it redone by the guy who does the asshole tightening on wealthy South Beach clients who are into that stuff. Florida Man might once have insulted that man’s work and been overheard.

  • Glibs of Future Past – Chapter 1: The Undiscovered Country

    Undisclosed Location

    The Future

    The sounds of shells landing abated, the dust settled in the tunnel. New Guy looked around and saw that the others were recovering from the shelter stance, returning to business as usual. It had been a fiercer bombardment than usual. He checked his watch, gifted to him by an old timer just before the Battle of Chicago; it had been passed from soldier to soldier, a token of good luck. Swiss motion, 24 hour dial, even after the hardscrabble life of campaigning, it still worked beautifully.

    1357, he had his meeting with the Boss, Saint Petawatt, in three minutes.

    The shelling would resume in 13 minutes, the pajama boys operating the heavy pieces demanded a 15 minute break every hour and Herself was a generous God-Empress to the contrite and faithful. They had kept up the bombardment for months now, blasting the earth away, hitting bedrock, slowly mining it out one shell at a time. It’d takes a year to breach the honeycomb of deep bunkers at that rate. Maybe longer if they slouch on their breaks, he thought to himself.

    The tunnel he was in was one of dozens, maybe hundreds that had been carved out by ‘Steel Balls’ Sloop when the war started going south. At first it had been almost like a party, a festive atmosphere, a group of people united in just cause. Stone heads had been carved into the rock around the arsenal doorways. Sasquatch sketches appeared above the bunkhouse entrances. By christmas everyone knew that the war would turn around.

    That’d been two years ago.

    Now?

    The lights flickered weakly, the halls echoed with calls to help move ruble.  

    “Hey, you the new guy?”, a woman poked her head out from the sliding steel door next to where he was standing

    He nodded, “Yeah, is it time?”

    “Saint Petawatt will see you know.” The young blonde motioned for him to follow.

    New Guy walked through the door and down a small flight of rusting metal stairs that groaned under his average weight.

    The blonde lead him down a narrowing corridor, until they reached an office door. The pressed teakwood contrasted starkly against the dark granite. On the door a simple brass plaque: BOSS

    “Alright New Guy, Saint Petawatt doesn’t fuck around. Especially since they got the Old Man. Answer her questions, be direct, don’t be afraid.”

    The young lady knocked three times on the door and a powerful voice called from within:

    “Enter!”

    She opened the door and New Guy walked through.

    The office was small, spartanly arranged: a few shelves of combat manuals, a map of the US on the wall, marked with flags, a small blue cluster surrounded by red stood out.  On the desk, a laptop and a picture of an old man, who looked like every inch a mad scientist. Between the picture frame and laptop a Taurus Judge sat, well maintained but clearly used.

    The Boss stood, she was short with silvering hair and a hard gaze, softened behind yellow lenses. She motioned for him to sit.

    “Welcome, please take a seat. I wish we were meeting under happier circumstances, but…”, she gestured around, “There’s not many of those left these days.”

    He sat in a hardback dining room chair, the only one available.

    The Hacker pulled out a manilla folder from a file drawer and laid it on the desk. She began flipping through, and after a moment looked up.

    “Why did you join us?”

    “I’m sorry?”

    “Why are you here, in this bunker, fighting for us? It says here you were in Chicago, Herself released a general amnesty after that. You could have tossed that pin on the ground and never had to worry again.” She pointed at the pin in his collar, a face, moustached, wearing a tophat and monocle. “You didn’t, though. You stuck it out and now you’re stuck here.”

    As she spoke the ceiling began to tremble, dust falling in small streams. The barrage had begun again.

    “I’m fighting for freedom.”

    “Hmm.”

    She flipped the folder closed, “We’re losing this war, newbie, every day those shells dig another few inches out of the granite. They’ll breach our defenses eventually. There’s no way out,” she sighed and took off her yellow shaded glasses, pressing the arch of her nose with her fingertips. “We just got word, the last transmission from our bureaucratic sympathizer came through. They poisoned his breakfast, replaced his unsalted butter with salted, his tap water with mineral water. The sensation of taste caused a brainstorm. We just lost our last connection to the outside. The news he sent wasn’t great, either. The Southwest has been cleared. Vhyrus and his harem along with Sharpshooter were holding down half the pajama boys in the country. They were crushed by a landslide of brass. Now every Pajama Corps is on the way here. They were the last of us holding out, outside this bunker.

    Hell, they’re sending everything. Every Pajama Corps’, the commie mechs, they resurrected the Moment. Even Herself may be arriving soon, in all her tentacled glory.

    So, why did you join us?”

    “I want to make the world a freer place. If I die here, then I know I’ll have left a legacy, real resistance to evil power that want to conquer everything.”

    The Hacker put her glasses back on, “Well, you won’t be dying here. Hate to break it to you. But you might just get your chance to be a martyr, in another time, a different place. Come on,” she stood up, holstered her gun and gestured for New Guy to follow her. They walked over to a bookcase, she pulled a volume out and the bookcase swung away. She went down the tunnel, lit by a string of hanging lights. New Guy looked around then followed her.  

    The tunnel opened to a small room, a glass cube looking down into a large chamber with a dais in the center. Directly in front of them was a bank of screens; external camera feeds, graphs and scrolling walls of code.

    Sitting and staring at the screens in a swivel chair was a grotesque thing. A neckbeard, arms from knuckles to elbows covered with a layer of cheeto dust, a crust of unidentifiable dried, well, something, formed a sort of sheath that held the dust tight. He turned to face them, a nervous tick pulling at his cheek.

    “Petawatt! Good to see you! <Snort> It’s been some time since you graced us with you superior presence <snort>,” he collapsed into a chortingly mess at his seemingly hilarious pun.

    Petawatt shook her head, “Right. I’m here to check on the status of the Chamber.”

    “Oh, right. Yeah, I took the code Titor sent us before that whole incident at the CERN black hole. I mixed in some of my own prose. I think we’ll have enough to rip open a portal.”

    New Guy looked around, “What is this place? Nobody ever mentioned this.”

    “This is what all of Q’s bequeathment went to,” she spread her arms showing off the room. “He left a substantial amount of (((gold))) to use in the event of his death, and after those perfect holographic tits lured him over a cliff, we used his (((gold)) along with the Old Man’s to finance and build a time machine. Titor was helping before Herself’s forces trapped him in the event horizon of a singularity. The formula was incomplete, but fortunately Neckbeard over there has figured out that mixing his prose with the partial formula will activate the machine.”

    “Is that what my mission is?”

    Petawatt was about to speak when the base was shook with a massive blast. An alarm cut the air in perfect 4/4 time. Two men rushed into the room from her office tunnel.

    A large man in fatigues with a SIG SG 550 slung over his shoulder was first. Shortly behind him was another man, almost as tall, wearing a pickelhaube and sporting a perfect handlebar moustache.

    “Commander, Sloop,” she greeted them in turn. “Sitrep?”

    The commander went first, “Serious breach, looks like a shaped explosive, blew a hole through the security door at one of maintenance tunnels.”

    Sloop followed up, “We’ve got units responding, but I think this is the big one.”

    The Intercom suddenly buzzed, Imperial Troops have entered the base! I repeat. Imperial troops have entered…, the voice was just as suddenly cut off.  

    “Scheisse!”, the commander cursed.

    “GUYS!”

    They all turned to face the neckbeard, who was pointing at the screens from the exterior CCTV. The images showed thousands of pajama boys rushing the freshly blown breach. On another screen more pajama boys ran from another tunnel, just as an explosion consumed it. Once again the base shook. Several wire bundles fell from the ceiling and the lights dimmed. After the second they came back up. A third explosion tore the air. This time the lights stayed dim.

    “Damn,” the hacker exclaimed, “Damn! We need to buy more time.” She looked at Sloop, then the Commander. She gave them a slow nod and off they rushed. She slapped the neckbeard on the back. “Altright pudyanker, let’s see if we can make this work.”

    He began furiously typing. The alarms cut off, came back on, and then with a whine stopped.

    The hacker snatched a radio off the desk, “Commander, you copy?”

    “I’m here, en route to the first breech with a battalion of Swiss Guards. We’ll hold for as long as we can.”

    “Good Hunting, Commander. Rufst du, mein Vaterland! Over and Out”

    She switched through channels before getting on again, “Sloop, you copy?”

    “I’m here, got the killdozer rolling, got my amazons with me, isn’t that right, darling?” There was a loud war whoop,  “Ready to lay those commie mechs out. We’re heading for the second breach now.”

    “Good Hunting, Sloop. It’s been an honor. Over and out.”

    She turned the frequencies again, this time a general broadcast, “Attention Everyone! This is Saint Petawatt. The Boss. The Imperial forces of Herself have breached our base at multiple points. Report to your squad commanders for orders. I know that each of you will do the cause proud. Stay strong, make them pay for every inch. Do it for the Old Man, do it for the orphans, kick ass and take no prisoners!”

    “Uh, Boss,” the neckbeard pointed at the external screens again. A slithering shape cut across them. One by one the cameras cut off; a slimy, scaly tentacle the last image before static. “She’s here.”

    “Alright. Seal the room.”

    The neckbeard hit a large red button on the desk, a blast door dropped from a hidden compartment above the entrance tunnel, closing off the room.

    “Get him down there, start the process. I’ll direct it from up here,” she ordered the neckbeard, who gestured for New Guy to follow him. They went out a door on the side of the glass cube, down some stairs, out to the floor. On the dais a large glass cylinder was lowering from recessed storage.

    “They ever tell you what happened to the Old Man?”, the neckbeard asked, scratching at the orange perma-glaze on his right arm.

    “No.”

    “It was the second strike they made against us. The first was when the got HM with a supersonic shockwave from a THICC killbots’ twerking. About twenty minutes after that, us founders, we called an emergency meeting, cause we knew it was happening. Only without the Ron Paul laserlight gif. They slung 20 pounds of semtex under the Old Man’s panel van, had a chemical trigger, set to blow at the presence of underage pheromone. We were scraping him off buildings halfway across town. Couldn’t take the chance that he’d get away.” He sighed. “They’ll be scraping us off the walls of this room by tonight.” He idly scratched at his other arm, sitting in contemplation. “Well, better make sure they need a mighty big power washer.” He belched with finality.

    “So, here’s the mission you’ve already accepted: we’re using a machine to send you back in time, we need you to do two things. One, make sure that the Glibs assemble and impress upon them the warning of doom from the future. If we are united and given a forewarning we stand a better chance. Two, once we’re assembled you need to use your future knowledge to help us find a counter-candidate to leverage against Herself. Someone so different that Herself won’t be able to beat them, like Rand Paul, but with charisma.”

    “But why me? I’m just, well, I’m nothing special.”

    “Yeah but you’re an unknown normie. They nailed Titor, Guy. You don’t just ice a time traveller without knowledge of how they operate. That means the forces of Herself might just have access to time travel. They know our faces. If one of us went back, well they’d try and stop it. But you? Eh, they’ll not see it coming. Why would we choose some rando from the ranks, right? Uh no offense,” he finished with a nervous chuckle.

    ‘Alright, come on,” he extended a hand. New Guy demurred, stepping up on the dias himself.

    “Well, while Saint Petawatt is revving the system, let’s see how it’s going, shall we?”, Neckbeard flipped in the walkie clipped to his belt.

    The radio was set to cycle, the white noise was intercut with horror.

    “This is tunnel three, flamethrowers ineffective against tentacles.”

    “Has anyone seen the killdozer? Red Mechs are in bay 12, we’re getting slaughtered.”

    “If anyone can hear me, tell my wife I-”

    “…стрелять в них всех…”

    The last transmission he got before he flipped it off was simply the slurping sound of tentacles knotting and pulsating with excitement.

    Turning, the Neckbeard waved at the Hacker, the intercom clicked on, “Yeah?”

    “You listening to the radio, boss?”

    “No. I’m revving up the machine. Why?”

    “It’s bad. I’d say from the chatter you got five min-”

    The blast door sounded, a deep CLANG-

    Then another -CLANG- and another.

    A buckle appeared, a dent, from their low vantage point they couldn’t see the door properly but they could see Saint Petawatt snatch up a shotgun from its boot under the table, sling it over her shoulder.

    Neckbeard looked at New Guy, in rushed and aspie tones, “If you would kindly step onto the circle, please, now please.”

    New Guy stepped in the circle on the dais, the cylinder above him began to lower.

    ~

    There was another loud -CLANG-, the blast door fell inwards. Saint Petawatt spun around, hurriedly typing, smashing a key before a figure emerged from the dust cloud.

    ~

    From the dais, they could only see the top of its head. A glorious shock of blonde hair.

    ~

    The figure was across the glass room in a second, with a single blow it swiped at the Saint Petawatt, throwing her through the glass wall and onto the floor below. She rolled as she landed, coming up to a kneeling position, slinging her shotgun around and leveling her aim. The figure hopped down the the cube.

    ~

    The cylinder had lowered completely around New Guy. Neckbeard stood close. Working feverishly on a dropdown laptop. Laser focused, seemingly unaware of the action to his back.

    ~

    “Libertarian Moment!” The man proclaimed, running a hand through the hair and pulling the leather jacket straight. His face was shocking jigsaw of sewn together flesh, oozing pus from the rough stitching. “Join us <Facial Software Scan>, Saint Petawatt, <Scan> Supra Prime,<Scan> Surprise Pe-”, Saint Petawatt blasted the man in the face, the shot sluiced away the sewn skin, bits of green pus and blood painted the wall behind him.

    The voice raised an octave, “To be sure, your act of aggressive self defense is justified but it won’t stop the,” octave drop, “Libertarian Moment!”

    A metal skull with yellow glowing eyes fixed on the Boss. The machine advanced, one step at a time, with each step another burst of buckshot tore away skin, revealing the machine beneath. The Jacket and Hair remained pristine.

    Neckbeard finally finished on the laptop, spun around, pulling a large revolver from his threadbare sweatpants.

    Saint Petawatt fired the last shell, but the Moment kept advancing, now stripped save for the Jacket and Hair from the waist up, the pants and leg flesh sheared off, like a snake molting. It reached her, grasping her throat with metal fingers.

    Neckbeard fired. The first round took out an eye, the next round the other. The Moment dropped the Hacker and clutched at its blown out sockets. He walked quickly across the room, emptying the wheel gun into the chest of the bot, with each round another burst of sparks shot out.

    Getting to Saint Petawatt he gave her a hand up, “The honor is yours, milady,” he bowed and extended his arm towards the twitching machine.

    She stepped forward and fished out her pistol. The blind and dying robot groped out, looking for flesh to rend, but she sidestepped the arms and pressed the barrel against the machine’s head.

    “My website was better.”

    She pulled the trigger, the metal skull exploded into bits of hot steel and silicon.

    With a deep sigh she holstered the gun, turned towards New Guy, gave a thumbs up, then patted neckbeard on the arm, “Good shooting, pudyanker. We’ll get you that creepy cartoon pillow, yet.”

    There was a squealing noise as the Hat and Hair tried to slither away, find another bot to assimilate.

    “Oh no you don’t!”, she fished into her pocket and pulled out two neon red shells. Quickly, she grabbed up the shotgun, racked the rounds and fired. A burst of flame shot from the barrel, then another, incinerating the crawling things.

    “Are we ready?”, she turned to Neckbeard

    He nodded eagerly, “Yeah, we’re ready, just got to hit the ignition.”

    At that moment there was a terrible noise. A sopping roar, that chilled all living things to the bones. New Guy felt it in the cylinder, he doubled over, doing his best not shit himself in fear.

    A tendril crawled through the broken glass of the now ruined control room above them. Then a larger tentacle followed. Soon a great whirling mass appeared, it’s trembling tip turning about, searching for something. The mass shivered with anticipation when it honed in on the Petawatt and the Neckbeard.

    “Get to the keyboard,” she whispered from the side of her mouth.

    Neckbeard turned and scrambled up the dais. His movement triggered the wet, green mass, which shot out, knocking the Hacker over, then subsuming her in a mess of slimy appendages. Several thin tentacles wrapped around Neckbeard, even as he reached out to hit the final key. They swarmed over his body, seeking purchase and perhaps more.

    “Tentacle rape? Really? I’ve had wet dreams worse than this,” Neckbeard snarked, in a single clenching movement of his laborious cheeks he sheared off some tentacle ends, this shocked them enough to slack just enough. He hit the Enter key.

    The great roar was renewed. A helmet dropped down from the ceiling, blocking out New Guy’s vision. There was a bright flash and suddenly his mind was filled with dates, names, addresses. The helmet retracted, the cylinder was surrounded.

    With Octopus-like tenacity the tentacles were seeking out a single crevice. The chamber began filling with gas. Blue, smelling of marijuana and petrichor. New Guy suddenly felt a falling sensation, his vision dilated. The cylinder cracked open, a thousand tentacles burst in. A single one wrapped itself around him before darkness fell.