Tag Archives: Cyberpunk

gHost Teaser

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Cyberpunk, BDSM

Date Published: September 27, 2024

 

 

In the 23rd century you can jack into the web, shop at a mall floating half
a mile above the street, kill yourself with the drug of the week, and wake
up in a new body.

The rich can have what they want — and they want immortality. What they
get is gHost, generic Host Somnambulant Transfer. The dead become
re-animated hosts for the living. The trade is controlled by megacorps and
is highly regulated. Getting on the list is the perk for any corporate
ladder-climber. But the price is steep.

Brady Woods is a smart-ass hacker fighting to survive in the dim streets at
the bottom of the canyons between two-hundred-story buildings, where smog
and anti-grav shopping malls block out the sun and predators prowl the
shadowed alleys.

Brady has talent. He can fix anything. And he can surf the web like no one
can. Code is his junk food; blind killers and security bots are his nemeses;
information is his currency and his rush.

Sleen’s girl Deel has eyes for Brady; a battered cat knows its own. Brady
knows what he wants, and he wants Deel. Problem. Sleen thinks he owns Deel,
and he’s not about to give her up. In a barter economy Deel’s up for grabs
— for the right price. But can she be trusted? And how far will Brady go to
make her his own?

 

gHost tablet

EXCERPT

Following Brady as they shouldered through the crowd in the free market at
Temple Square, Jongo asked, “That guy from gHost been around
again?”

“Yeah,” said Brady absently.

Free market hawkers shouted lies and the booths were generally full of
crap, but you could get warm beer and stale burgers for a decent price. If
you had a job. Large people with long arms and heavy truncheons roamed the
crowd. A few stood by jewelry booths and the like, vendors who could afford
the service and needed it.

They headed for the Sky Mall at Nineteenth and Ash. Gravs slid through the
canyons in a solid stream. The sun, where it could penetrate through the
maze of skybridges, the sludge of traffic, the vertical walls of the
superscrapers, and the thick drizzle-fog from the grav exhausts, fell
faintly on the Certified Organic PermGrass. You could roll a P-5 battle tank
over that stuff and every blade would spring right back.

At ground level, most of downtown was a meandering park, with low-light
trees and flower gardens and wandering paths to soften the atmosphere of
crumbling, graffiti covered tenements. Best thing about living here, if you
ignored the fact that it looked like nineteenth century London at midnight,
about which Brady was fairly certain Jongo didn’t have a clue.

“You jacked in again?” asked Jongo, looking askance. Like most
humans, Jongo practically lived to surf, but jacking scared him.
“You’re the only person I ever heard of can jack without an
implant.”

Brady thought Jongo sounded less envious than self pitying. Ordinary
mortals needed an implant and a steady supply of nauseating drugs to make
the necessary mental connection for real jacking.

The reward was the ability to be in the net, to swim with the sharks. The
sort of thing high level corporate IT commandos got paid to do. The downside
for plebes was two days retching your guts out when you checked back in from
the ride. The corporate guys got the good stuff, no withdrawal, but the
brain strain still sent three in ten to the psych ward.

Apparently I’m either immune or already insane.

Deep surfing demanded an out of body experience not compatible with
walking, but Brady could cruise a little.

Ignoring Jongo, Brady chatted with Beezo, who Brady actually knew
personally. Tall angular guy with shadowed eyes who spoke with deceptive
softness and had no known address, or, for that matter, any obvious means of
support. Beezo did mutter occasionally about overthrowing the establishment,
whatever that meant, and was known to drive his environmentally devastating
grav at speeds approaching escape velocity.

Beezo had planned one of his legendary, online/real-time parties, where
he’d take over an entire lower level floor somewhere, spend thousands
painting and decorating, invite three hundred total strangers, and provide
food, beverages and drugs. Entertainment developed through spontaneous
combustion.

Beezo mixed with a different crowd. Brady’d seen a society column online
that had a picture of a big deal party out in the Hamptons and fuck if Beezo
hadn’t been in it. No explanation for that one but Brady always figured
Beezo was some rich family’s black sheep. Black demon sounds closer to
it.

Brady had no idea where Beezo got the money, although the black demon
analogy looked better all the time. There was always serious female talent,
which appeared to be Beezo’s primary interest, but just as frequently the
parties attracted unwelcome legal attention, especially when someone
inevitably jacked in and tried to crack a corporate firewall.

“You in?” Beezo asked by non-video voice link, meaning he was
probably in a session with one or more girls. Brady could never tell
anything by voice alone. Beezo seemed to have Herculean self-control.

Brady had no interest in Beezo’s money or his drugs and he didn’t want to
take a chance on getting arrested, but before he could play the Elena card,
Beezo said, “I can have two good people over there to look after
Elena.”

Brady trusted Beezo that way. “You’re reading my mind. Thanks, but let
me think about it.”

“Way on.” Beezo blinked out.

Beezo had no issue with Brady’s noncommittal attitude, which Brady
understood put him fairly high up the ladder of people Beezo liked. He liked
Beezo in turn, but the party scene had soured for him before it started, in
view of his current situation.

Freddy Lake pinged him, wanting to know who could reverse engineer a
certain program that might perhaps be used to bypass the security system for
a minor third world bank. If one were so inclined.

Brady dropped that one like a dirty bomb, referring Freddy to a vague
acquaintance who had less regard for his own skin. Brady had helped Freddy
out a few years ago with a similar technical issue, before he understood
that Freddy’s profession involved personal intrusion into other people’s
private property.

Rumor had Freddy living in a penthouse in Paris half the year, and an
absolute zero mud hut on Frendel II out at the edge of the galaxy the other
half. No one had any idea what Freddy looked like or where he actually
lived. Brady figured he was a corporate AI construct, built to distract the
masses from their prosaic woes when they weren’t high on the drug of the
week.

Hive flitted by, waving. She used a porn star avatar, totally nude and
rendered in erotically charged detail. Hive liked bondage and D/s, which
request Brady had occasionally obliged, although digital orgasms didn’t do
much for him.

If she actually jacked in we could trade sensory overlays. The idea
appealed on a purely visceral level. But she wasn’t having any, hangover
aside. Sensory overlays were way too intimate for people who spent the
majority of their lives connected to the net.

A corporate cruiser swerved around a corner, riding low and slow, clearly
on the hunt. Amber beams cut through the mist. Jongo stiffened and Brady
knew he had Benedrene or Malzene on him again. The Legacy Corp decal shone
bright yellow on the door of the cruiser. They both breathed out as the long
blue shark glided off in search of other prey.

“Their CFO got iced a couple of days ago,” muttered Brady by way
of explanation, not that Jongo cared. “Probably Freeman Enterprises. I
heard they were making a move on the North Jupiter mines. The guy who got it
was jacked in at the time. Everybody’s saying it was an inside job. Someone
shorted his connection. Their whole online system collapsed, shut down the
entire Jupiter operation for six days. Cost them a bundle.”

Jongo screwed up his face. “Say what?”

“Nothing.” Brady scowled.

Jongo grimaced. “Unassisted Jacking kills more people than smoking,
Brady. Why the hell do you do it? And how do you do it without
drugs?”

“How do you know I don’t use?” muttered Brady,
concentrating.

Jongo waved his hand. “Shit, man, you won’t even blow a Wad. Besides,
I heard it from the dealers… I mean, you know, people talk. They say you
don’t use. Think you’re a loser.” Then, “So why do you do it all
the time, anyway? Jacking, I mean. You practically live there.”

They stopped at Louie’s Floating Food Kart. Jongo got a bowl of nut soup.
Brady bought a soy burger.

“Just curious,” Brady mumbled in reply as he wolfed down the
tasteless, dripping mess.

“You’re always curious,” Jongo muttered.

Brady knew Jongo really didn’t care.

“So what about the gHost guy?” Jongo asked between crunches.
“You think he’ll buy it?”

Brady shrugged as if he didn’t much care, either. “The holo’s pretty
good. I jigged the program from a server uptown, jumped six links to do
it.”

Jongo scowled again like he thought that was crap. Even though he didn’t
say anything, Brady knew he was secretly awestruck. It didn’t take much to
impress Jongo. “Yeah, I wondered what the three alarm was all about
last night.”

Brady snorted at Jongo’s attempt to sound like he understood one word of
what Brady had said. “That was the Legacy whorehouse. I mean Sexual
Therapy Clinic. Somebody torched the place. The Moral Mafia is taking
credit.” Brady shook his head in admiration. “Good old thermite.
Nobody’s used that since the War.”

He’d have done it himself, but he had a strong suspicion somebody like
Beezo had beat him to it. Or Freddy Lake, although Freddy was strongly
rumored to have no ideology that did not involve money.

Only five years late, he thought.

“Shit, that’s where your mom died, right? You glad it’s
gone?”

“It’s not gone, just well scorched. Pretty hard to burn honeycrete and
kelvic rebar. Somebody called in an alarm and they evacuated, ran the
sniffers and found nothing, then they’re walking back in and the place goes
up. Security got some singed eyebrows is all.” He smiled. Thanks,
whoever.

They walked on, heading for the mall. Jongo wanted to look at stuff he
couldn’t buy. Brady went along for no particular reason. To get out for a
while.

Brady saw Sleen and four of his ass lickers. Two were sizeable males of the
species, Nix and Jawbone. Brady suspected they shared a single digit IQ but
wasn’t prepared to bet it was that high. The other two were females, one
thin, the other not, neither of whom he knew.

Not-Thin-girl wasn’t actually fat, being built more along the lines of a
Roman Centurion, clad in retro-leather with fake metal patches that carried
the Roman analogy even further. Her dark hair stood out in horizontal spikes
and she had a razor chain wrapped around her left forearm. Brady thought she
could probably run the hundred meters in ten flat with one of him under each
arm. That and her possessive stance near the other girl tagged her as
mistress or owner.

Following his brief cataloguing of the Centurion, Brady shifted his gaze
and immediately forgot her.

Thin girl looked to be about a meter fifty if she stood straighter than she
now did, might weigh forty-five kilos if she ate something. But thin is
relative. Next to the Centurion she looked like a rod, but under her
gray-black second-skin, which looked like it had been sprayed on, because it
had, her ass looked firm and round and her tits stood out like melons, with
spectacular nipples.

Her white-blonde hair had been buzzed. She had light chocolate skin and
wore no makeup, which was clearly not an issue given her physical
attributes. If she had been healthier her sharp face would have been elfin
and intelligent instead of gaunt and flat-eyed.

She stood behind the others. Probably the group whore, but Brady didn’t
judge her. Neither, apparently, did Jongo, whose eyes clearly wished they
were hands.

Sleen wore a jacket that appeared to be made from multi-hued feathers. A
holographic tattoo on his bald head changed color and shape constantly,
depending on his mood. Just now it was a snake swallowing a mouse. Brady
watched the shimmering coils slither around the side of Sleen’s head.

Sleen saw Jongo’s look. He casually backhanded the girl, who turned her
face away with practiced quickness and took the blow on her temple as she
crumpled to the ground.

No one moved, including Brady. Sleen clamped one huge hand on Jongo’s neck,
squeezing lightly and making Jongo’s eyes bulge.

“Forget about her, shitbird. She ain’t for sale or rent and you got
other business right now.”

 

About the Author

By day, Jonathan Wright disguises himself as a retired insurance
underwriter. His family believe him to be supremely cool, though slightly
deranged. In pursuit of his career as a horror/romance/comedy writer, Jon
strives to expand his experiences, in order to relate them to his readers
with authenticity. Skulking through everyday life is not enough for Jon, no,
he pushes the envelope (and everyone’s buttons). He calls this
“research.”

The cats, who have unique and appropriate names, but do not answer to them,
and are therefore both known simply as “Cat,” could care less. His
daughter generally forgives him, as long as he remembers to take out the
trash and put the toilet seat down.

 

Publisher on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and TikTok:
@changelingpress

 

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Reality Testing Virtual Book Tour

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Cyberpunk

Date Published: 01-27-2022

Publisher: Black Rose

 

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Welcome to Berlin. Population: desperate. In the throes of the climate
crisis the green tech pioneers are king, and if you aren’t willing to be
their serf then you’re surplus to requirements.

Carbon credit for sleeping on the job. That’s the offer a dreamtech puts to
Mara Kinzig, and she jumps on it. After all, the city ain’t getting any
cheaper.

Then somebody changes the deal while she’s dreaming in the tank.

Now Mara has a body on her hands, an extra voice in her head, and the law
on her tail. Only the Vanguard, a Foreign Legion of outcasts seeking an
alternative path in the dust between the city states, might be able to help
her figure out what went wrong. First, though, she’ll have to escape the
seething streets of Berlin alive.

Reality Testing tablet

 

EXCERPT

A CITY TO LIVE IN
G R A N T P R I C E
1
The man’s blood was on her skin and now she would have to
run.
Grid lines on powder-blue walls. Metallic warmth from
inefficient tech. Light too soft for the horror of the room. She staggered
back, away from the man. Limbs clumsy, adrenaline spiking, breath
loud. A shake of the head. No trails, no blurred vision, nothing to
suggest she’d been pumped with cybins and this was only grim
illusion. It was too sharp, too immediate, for her to still be dreaming
in the tank. There was a wetness on her hands, and when she brought
them to her eyes she saw fingers dipped in red.
One word struggled to the surface: Where.
She turned away from the body, saw a cylindrical rig hanging from
the ceiling. MR chamber. That explained the grid lines; they aided the
neocortex as it painted pictures. A stack of moulded objects in the
corner, their purpose unknown. Educational, sexual, leisure. Too
much to process. She probed her eye with the hand that wasn’t bloody.
A thin membrane sitting atop her iris. Glass. So she’d been sharing his
mix. She removed one from each eye, dropped them on the ground.
More questions. How long. What district. What city. What day.
One step at a time. She wore a jumpsuit, expensive, the kind a
bleeding-edge NK advertorial would flash. Pockets all over. Only one
turned up anything useful: an old denbar stick, not hers. She unrolled
the razor-thin film, pressed her finger to the screen. It displayed a
balance at the top. In the minus on carbon. How was it keyed to her
touch? She couldn’t have been conscious when they did it. Who was
‘they’? All so unclear.
R E A L I T Y T E S T I N G
2
Nausea took her in the legs, made her shake. The man on the floor.
She didn’t want to check him; touching the body would make it real.
But without carbon she was going nowhere. With a dry throat she
crouched beside him. She didn’t recognise the face. He was white,
thickset, senior, no features to help him stand out in a crowd. He’d
crisped his skin more than once, which meant he had money, but the
lines of age still showed through like cracks in concrete.
No pulse. Head resting in a pool.
She turned her head away as she rifled through his suit. A newermodel denbar was tucked into an inside jacket pocket. Expecting
nothing, she lifted his hand, pressed a finger to the end node. The
screen fired up. In a second she’d swiped his carbon—barely a stack—
and snapped the denbar in half.
Leave. She stumbled to the exit, her body still refusing her, and pressed
her hand to the panel. Two squares of a Torggler rotated out and she
left the chamber and the dead man behind.


A corridor, the same powder blue as the room, deserted for the
moment. At its far end a camera blinked a single red eye at her.
Security could already be on its way up. She needed a way out.
Vertoo.
The command echoed around her head, unanswered. She tried
again. Nothing. They’d nixed her chips before she went into the dream
tank, but they’d said it would take only a thought to get them back
online. Then again, they’d also said she would wake up in a clinic bed,
and that hadn’t happened.
She dragged herself to the end of the corridor and stumbled down
a set of stairs into a lobby, also empty, with a ceiling-to-floor lightwall.
As she threw out a hand to steady herself, she saw how the skin there
had become thicker, more wrinkled. No longer the hands of a
mechanic. More like a fixer.
The lightwall flickered on when it clocked her and an impression
materialised on the screen. Glossy bodysuit, large, glistening eyes,
G R A N T P R I C E
3
peroxide stubble cut, erotic pout. It gave her a good idea of what kind
of place she was in.
‘Welcome to the Mardi Marquis.’ The impression bowed. ‘How
may I assist the master of the house?’
High-end system. She didn’t recognise the name of the place.
‘Show me the way out.’
Her voice was husky. Maybe a side effect of breathing
perfluorocarbon for so long.
The impression blinked and a map of the building appeared below
it. A red pulse pinpointed her location. The exit was close.
‘Follow the arrows, please.’
Pale yellow darts in the floor, barely there so as not to disturb the
ambience. She lurched after them, out of the lobby and through more
corridors in the same infantile blue. Still no other customers or
employees. Could be the place was closed. Could be the man in the
room had been the owner. She drew up the hood on the jumpsuit to
hide her face as best she could.
The arrows ended at another Torggler door, the two squares
already rotated out. She peered around the frame. Compact foyer,
muted floating screens with MR ads playing on a loop. Standing at a
welcome station was a man in a bronze dashiki, his mouth and nose
obscured by an air purifier, who was using a set of tongs to tease out
the leaves of a small biotope. Micro-greening. Cheap propagation tech
to rapidgrow miniature forests that—when cared for right—were
supposed to suck ten times more carbon out of the atmosphere than a
normal tree. His looked like it was fresh out the jar.
She ducked back behind the Torggler. No way to bypass the guy
without being seen. She could handle herself well enough, but he
would be carrying and he’d fry her before she got within ten paces.
She needed another way out. The longer she stuck around, the more
likely he’d pull up his room links and find the body.
Then a voice. Automatic, flat, broadcast from a wall screen: ‘Check
refrigeration unit one-nine-alpha. Possible malfunction of diaphragm
valve.’
She pressed her face to the doorway, saw how the welcome station
glowed a soft red. The man frowned at his biotope, then muttered a
R E A L I T Y T E S T I N G
4
confirmation. The station returned to its soft white. He dropped the
tongs, ran a hand through heavy dreadlocks, and left through a service
door under the floating screens.
Go now. As she entered the foyer, the screens flipped to graphic ads for
near-death experiences and her adrenaline spiked again. The welcome
station greeted her in Chinese. Ahead, the exit rolled open. No security
loitering outside. She slipped through the door.
The bullet between her shoulder blades never came.


The GenuSstadt couldn’t have been mistaken for anything else.
Poolers, parlours, head shops and 24/7 clubs, all part of a labyrinthine
kiez frequented by suits, futurists and fringe elements. It made her
uneasy to find herself so far away from the Lichterfelde dream tank
she’d dropped into before lights out, but at least she was still in Berlin.
The air was hot and dry despite low-hanging clouds. She joined
the manic press of people moving as one over rubberised paving strips
that turned kinetic feet into hot current. The walls of every building
spoke, sang, became amorphous strands of colour. GLISTEN: aural
hydration . . . . . Grafts, Plants & Augs, 500 M . . . . . Linghai Algae
Industries is Hiring in Nanhui – your chance at a sustainable future . . . . . CasiNine Flavour DJ Tour – SOLD OUT! . . . . . Next Left: Thebes House
of Ruin. The fervid odour of fried insect mash drifted out from the
doorway of a restaurant and made her stomach flip.
A few people eyed her, making her either for a junkie who’d do
anything for carbon or one of the women who’d been kicked to the
curb after Klaus Koje and Athos had changed the world with their
announcement. Some, the suited ones, pushed past her like she didn’t
exist. Despite how cheapjack the GenuSstadt was, most of the citizens
on the streets were growthers who took the maglev from Potsdamer
Platz to the kiez for a little entertainment in between work, sleep and
more work. Growthers had no respect for anyone who wasn’t on their
level; it came with the territory.
G R A N T P R I C E
5
Then she was out of pedestrianised zone and into a street packed
with bikes, boards and shuttles. Motors whining, lightwalls glowing.
‘Gravemaker,’ said a hypnotic voice. ‘Unwind the mortal coil and drift
into the Eternal. Apply today, expire tomorrow.’ A woman sitting in
her own filth raised a cracked tablet and begged for neweuro. A man,
naked from the waist up to show off a designer body, called out to her.
‘How much for an hour, obsol?’
She continued on, crossing a bridge that had once carried trains
across the city but now heaved with bordellos, hookup banks and
implant resellers. At the next corner was a bullwagon, dark blue with
a wide white stripe down its centre. Three bulls flanked it. Their
features, approximately human, were blank, their augmented eyes
forever scanning. The inhabitants of the GenuSstadt gave the spot a
wide berth and she did, too, slipping back into the warren where no
transports were allowed. Not that she could lose herself in here;
cameras were everywhere, recording everything. Still men kept
looking her over, leering, approaching. ‘Come with me, lost one,’ said
a religious head who walked beside her for a few paces. ‘Tenfive
minutes get you threeten,’ said another. A rail-thin kid wearing a
cracked technicolour jacket brushed past, his message delivered in a
whisper. ‘Cybins, blitz, krokodil, salts.’
She ducked into an unlit alley clogged with refuse, kicking aside
paper, plastic, rags, things that had once had a purpose, until darkness
shrouded her. She stopped. No mutters of human beings living in the
waste. No sounds of pursuit. If anyone had seen her enter the alley,
they hadn’t trusted themselves to follow. Dizziness hit and she fell
against a wall splashed with anti-gov graffiti. She sucked in dirty air,
overcame her desire to empty her stomach. Far above, an air
conditioning unit spat condensation.
They must have found the body by now, and the bull unit
responsible for the Mardi Marquis would be running the vidlink. They
would identify her and if it turned out she hadn’t killed him in selfdefence then she’d be scooped, wiped and pressed into HPU servitude
alongside the other perps underneath Potsdamer Platz before
morning. She thought back, but her first memory was of her standing
over the man. No way to know without seeing the footage for herself.
R E A L I T Y T E S T I N G
6
In a panic, she rubbed at her hand where the blood had dried. She’d
have to go underground. And then? Find a surgeon willing to work
for the scant neweuro she could scrounge, have them put her under
the scalpel and cut her until she couldn’t be recognised by sight. What
about prints? Eye veins? Hand geometry? She couldn’t afford work
like that. Few could.
She tried to get online again, but the response was the same as
before. She balled her wrinkled hands, pressed them against her
stomach to stop the nausea. Then she rested against the cool brick,
concentrated on the dripping of the air con unit. Get a grip or you’ve
already lost. Remember who you are.
Your name is Mara Kinzig. You’ve been dreaming in a tank.
Now you’re awake.
And you’re a killer.
G R A N T P R I C E
7
The carbon Mara had taken from the dead man’s denbar was
enough to get her back to her neighbourhood. She hopped a
grimy S-Bahn train heading out of the GenuSstadt and hunkered
down for the hour-long ride to Zossen district. End of the line. Refuge
of nongrowthers, neutrals, the downwardly mobile. People not
vicious enough to carve out their corner in the city nucleus, but lacking
the grit to try the survivor’s life in the dust.
On a screen in the roof of the carriage, protected by a thick layer of
plastic, a newsgram flashed images of a factory in flames on the
outskirts of Dortmund. The city cabal was placing the blame on the
Vanguard, a group on the Steppe that’d been making a name for itself
in recent months. Mara kept the hood drawn tight around her in case
she appeared next on the screen. What she didn’t need right now was
some penner trying to sell her anything. The denbar was as good as
depleted, and she didn’t have enough carbon even for a cup of matcha.
At least the ancient carriage’s security camera had been smashed.
Small comfort.
The S-Bahn screamed as it took the curves and the wheels scraping
along the tracks sent vibrations down Mara’s spine. Through a
window that had been tagged in the black and red of the Doomsday
Troop, she could see the scrapers of Potsdamer Platz with their
rotating stack plates. Tower-to-tower gliders took off from pads close
to the top, while further down Maglev lines spat bullet trains in all
directions: to the Brandenburg Celestial Link, to the cleantech
incubators in Frankfurt, to Munich, crypto city, way down in the
south, to the crescent-shaped Conurbation that encompassed the
2
R E A L I T Y T E S T I N G
8
hyper-districts of Düsseldorf, Cologne, Essen, Bonn and Dortmund.
Mara had never been on a bullet train. Off-limits to no-hopers like her.
After the scrapers came the tiered blocks carpeted in plants and solar
film, populated by workers who did jobs Mara didn’t understand.
Then the S-Bahn passed over Auto 1, the artery that pumped the road
trains with their mutant crops from the superfields to the Marzahn
Drive Yards.
As the train shook, Mara took stock of her situation. Her last
memory before waking up to find the guy’s body was the door of the
dream tank coming down and the gas being pumped in. The question
was why she was no longer on Ahe+d’s premises. Why had they
chosen a sleazy MR chamber to put her back in the world? Nothing
about it added up. She saw a whole lot of mafan on the horizon.
Jema would know what to do. But there was no guarantee Jema
had waited for her.
She’d warned Mara not to do it. No, not warned; begged. LINK
programmes couldn’t be trusted, she’d said. Too many stories of
citizens signing up, climbing into the tank and disappearing. Yeah,
some did their time in the programme and made it out, and those were
the ones Jema had tried to interview as part of her stringer gig, but no
dice. Their wrists were bound with red tape, their mouths stuffed with
NDAs. The dreamtech companies weren’t baichi. They covered their
bases. Plus they had the support of the city cabals and the national
government. LINK programmes were big business, with tons of
carbon riding on their outcomes.
Competitive, too. Candidates needed an IQ of onedredthree-O just
to get an interview. Mara still remembered being approached as she’d
drifted through a pooler, searching for a cheap game that would settle
her after a long shift. The advertorial had been a tractable kid with
kinky blue-pink hair that stood out for miles. Sidled up to her, gave
her a spiel about how LINK helped society and paid more carbon than
she could burn through for a year, then spun away, eyes glazing red,
her face already forgotten to him. On the way out a lightwall had
tuned in to her frequency and played an ad for Ahe+d. Because four-O
minds are better than one. The message did its job, following her out the
door and all the way back to pod she shared with her lover. When
G R A N T P R I C E
9
she’d brought it up, Jema had gone feng feng. Why set a match to the
wood when it’s at its driest? Mara had had no answer except that she
was slipping down the ladder and didn’t want to see what that bottom
rung looked like.
Now she wasn’t on the ladder at all. Someone had pushed her off.


The S-Bahn dribbled through the nu-crete belt that drew itself tight
around Berlin’s midriff, flitting in and out of the shadows of huge
structures that looked like bulbs of garlic. Built during the green boom
and left to rot after nobody wanted to live in them. Nongrowthers and
neutrals couldn’t afford the rent; growthers wanted to be closer to the
centre. The antiballistic glass fronts were cracked and sprayed, and
ugly wounds showed from multiple forced entries. They were
guarded by drones that put holes in anyone baichi enough to be found
squatting there. When the train pulled into the station closest, nobody
stepped off.
Mara’s eyes burned. Drugged, not drugged. She couldn’t tell.
Head heavy against the plastic seat, every tremor going through her
as the train dragged itself along the tracks. She eyed passengers with
ashen skin. Low-level startup gophers whose faces still bore the faint
mark of hope that they, too, would make the jump one day. Exhausted
workers spattered with dirt and grease and dust. Tractable kids with
eyes clouded red as they sucked down content from all over Vertoo.
Two real freaks wearing lip plugs that interpreted the wearer’s
subliminal thoughts as colours. No danger from any of them.
The S-Bahn howled in a language from a different century. More
stations, more high-rises, more lights burning in the semi-gloom. Mara
allowed her eyes to rest. She wanted to be home.


Wake up. Mara stirred. A voice had been talking to her in her sleep. Giving
her instructions, reassuring her. Memories from her time in LINK.
R E A L I T Y T E S T I N G
10
Unsure. The contract had said there might be side effects. Nothing
about coming back online to find a dead body in front of her.
The view from the window told her she was close. Surroundings
as green as they got in the city. Most engineered in a lab. The idea of
trees rolling off a conveyor belt had unsettled her once upon a time,
but no longer. The insects had come up from the south, waged their
war and won, and so now the city had to create trees with bark tough
like an Oranienburger skinwalker if they were to survive. Between the
patches of green were towers, each one bearing pods that hung from
sturdy plastographene branches. Zero-carbon living over a few
miserable square metres. Airtight, insulated, all-over solar film, oval
design allowing rainwater to cascade down and collect in troughs that
funnelled into a chamber for recycling. An external biotope for
offsetting, built-in waste processing, a simple node to connect to
district heating.
The biotecture design for the pods had come out of a LINK
programme.
The train pulled into Prierow station, named after a lake that had
dried up long ago, and Mara jumped out. Head down, eyes keen,
stalking past street hustlers looking to roll a mark, hawkers selling
gristle on sticks, HPU fodder that had so far managed to evade the
utility men and made their home where the shadows were loudest.
Fifteen minutes later she was standing at the entrance to her tower,
and the relief was strong enough to make her skin itch. Part of the first
wave of nu-crete biotecture that had washed through Berlin after the
Preservation Act, the outer surface of the tower was coated in quickgrowing moss that kept the air around it cooler. The tinted hexagonal
glass panels that leapfrogged their way to the top were layered in
scum. No way inside other than a security door in the base. Not the
kind of place that could afford a sentry drone for overwatch.
Mara went to the vein reader next to the door, opened her eye
wide. The screen blinked red. She tried again with the other eye. More
red. Junk tech, only ever worked half the time. Shuffling closer, she
touched the scanner with the tip of her index finger. NO ACC flashed
on the screen. She couldn’t have been out of the loop long enough for
her prints to be erased from the tower’s system, not unless Jema had
G R A N T P R I C E
11
moved in the meantime and scratched her from the records before she
left. She swallowed her nerves. Keep cool, Mara. Maybe this is what
happens when there’s a warrant out on you.
She stabbed the button for her pod. The screen crackled into life,
but remained grey.
The voice that answered was soft, but alert. ‘Who are you?’
Mara could have rested her head against the door in relief. ‘Jema,
it’s me.’
‘Identify yourself.’
She threw back the hood. ‘It’s Mara, Jem. I’m back. The scanner
won’t open the door for me.’
The response was quieter. ‘Mara.’
‘I’m in trouble. Real mafan situation. I have to get off the street.’
‘Mara.’
‘I know you’re sore about how I left, but I need your help. Right
now.’
The com broadcast dead air.
‘Jema?’
‘How did you get this address?’
Cold pins pricked at Mara’s chest. It was like she was in a dream.
But that couldn’t be, because she was tired and hurting and scared.
Three of reality’s favourite calling cards.
‘I live here. With you.’
The response was fast this time. ‘How do you know me?’
Humour her. If it gets you inside, do it. ‘We met when you were
investigating the disappearance of a group of mechanics and
technicians from the hire pool at the Marzahn Drive Yards. We’ve
lived together for three years, and we’ve shared a bed for two. Want
to scotch me some more?’ She paused, sighed. When she spoke again
her voice had no edge to it. ‘I want to see you.’
Again the silence. Now she did press her head to the door. If Jema
didn’t let her in she would be lost. She’d turn herself in to the nearest
bull unit, throw herself on the scant mercy of the law. Nothing else for
it.
The com crackled. ‘What were Soléne’s last words?’
Mara shivered, moved away from the com. ‘Why bring that up?’
R E A L I T Y T E S T I N G
12
‘Answer the question or the screen goes dead.’
She breathed through gritted teeth. It hurt, even now. ‘She told us
our bones are already dust and this existence is a shadow burned into
the path of time. Then she threw herself off a walkway because she
was whacked on cybins. There wasn’t even enough left of her to scrape
into a box. Satisfied?’
More silence. Then a mechanism clicked and the security door
rumbled open. Mara slipped inside before Jema could change her
mind. The air tasted metallic, but cool.
When the elevator deposited her on branch two-O-five, Jema was
waiting in the pod doorway, her crisped skin pale and clean, and Mara
was already prepared to forgive her for Soléne and take her in her
arms. But as she moved underneath the branch’s spotlight, Jema’s eyes
became wide, her body rigid. A ceramic knife appeared in a porcelain
hand.
‘Christ, mausy,’ said Jema. ‘What have they done to you?’

 

Grant PriceAbout the Author

 

 Grant Price is the author of three novels: Static Age (2016), By the Feet
of Men (2019) and Reality Testing (2022).

He has lived in Berlin, Germany, for too long.

 

Contact Links

Website

Goodreads

Instagram: @mekong_lights

 

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Amazon

Barnes and Noble

 

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Neon Lieben Blitz

 

Neon Lieben cover

 

Lieben Cycle, Book 1

 

Science Fiction, Cyberpunk, LGBTQ

 

Release Date: August 22, 2021

Publisher:Vræyda Literary

2085 The world recovers from War. A squeal of tires chases Dr. Dieter Karnak, as he creates artificial life under his corporate partner’s begrudging nose. Dr. Robert Dunlevy doesn’t buy into such spiritual nonsense. He builds god damned machines, the way their Conglom overlords want. Karnak’s beloved intern Baiko hatches a plan to steal Lieben, before she becomes a corporate ploy.

2155 AD-001 swims to the shore of Vancouver Island. Lieutenant Max Allard is tasked to drag AD-001 back, before the Mater Machine claims ‘it’ for her own.

AI meets genetic engineering, when the Idless, a collective of anti-label anarchists, attempt to free Dr. Karnak’s android Lieben from the Conglomerate. 70 years later, gene-spliced super soldier AD-001 sees humans for the first time. A spiral of origins chase Lieben’s ghost in this sci-fi cyberpunk adventure…

Come at your leisure. My love is free. My abundance is yours.’

Neon Lieben phone


About the Author

Sapha Burnell

Sapha is like a young Wolfgang Pauli, in every laboratory he went, there was a little explosion” – David Roomy, Author of Inner Work in the Wounded and Creative: The Dream in the Body

Cyberpunk & mythology aficionado Sapha Burnell teethed on images of the Berlin Wall falling down. Steeped in divergent cultures, religion & gender roles, the Wild One dedicates her work to the dichotomy between science and spirit.

Author of The Judge of Mystics Series: Son of Abel (2017) & Usurper Kings (2014), Sapha speaks on martial arts in pop culture, comparative mythology, the craft of writing, using film director techniques as an editor, and being LGBTQ in a religious setting. The first in the Lieben Cycle, NEON Lieben inspects artificial intelligence, the rise of quantum computing & genetic engineering in a novel spanning two timelines.

Visit Sapha at www.saphaburnell.com on her Discord Server, or on Twitter, Twitch & Instagram @UsurperKings.

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A Holo World Tour

A Holo World banner

A Holo World cover

Book 2, Hiding Can’t Save You Series

Science Fiction, Dystopian, Cyberpunk, Robotics, Genetic Engineering,
YA

Date Published: A Holo World: 10/13/20

 

Invisible illusions are John’s first inclination that things are not
quite as they seem in Amber City.

Following the aftermath of the destruction to the city caused by the
criminal mastermind named Crofar, John’s world flips upside down. Not
only does John have to hunt down Crofar, but he also has to figure out his
own problems. Everything around John glitches out of existence and reappears
as if it never left. Simultaneously, John’s visions of the future
start fading away which may signify his death.

A team of soldiers called the Renegades, John’s best friend Chase,
and a feisty girl named Hazel are not experiencing what John is going
through. In a sudden change of events, John’s surroundings vaporize
and all that is left is darkness and the voices of his dead parents.

A small glimpse allows John to see the hand of his mother, injecting his
neck with a serum that allows her to control him like a robot. The rest of
John’s future is now out of his control and there is nothing he can do
to change that. It’s time for fate to take the wheel, or maybe this
was all part of a plan.

 

 

The Uncontrolled cover

The Uncontrolled: 9/18/20

 

Tracking Devices, Mind Control, and Visions of the Future

 

An action-packed adventure set against the loss of free will that comes
from a mind-control serum.

The robotic way people smile is John’s first inclination that things
are not quite as they seem in Amber City.

At the age of fourteen, everyone is “vaccinated” with a
biological implant that makes people controllable. John is supposed to get
his shot the very next day, until he and his parents find out about the
mind-controlling chip requiring his family to devise a plan to put a stop to
this once and for all, but things don’t go exactly as planned.

Along with his friend Chase, and an irrepressible girl named Hazel, the
three of them find themselves in the world of the controlled, where they
must try to escape the notice of this powerful society and its leader,
Crofar. As the trio of teenagers attempt to defeat Crofar on their own, they
stumble upon the Renegades, a formidable group of “the
uncontrolled,” led by Maximus.

Warily forming an alliance with the teenagers, the numbers are not in their
favor, and the uncontrolled are barely holding their own. Until that is,
they realize they have a secret weapon. John starts to have regular visions
of the future, which can change in interesting ways when certain variables
are adjusted.

While John has visions they can use to win the war against Crofar, things
become complicated because Crofar has visions too. With two adversaries who
can see the future, only one can outsmart the other.

The Uncontrolled is an adventurous, sci-fi book written by award-winning
teen author Zachary Astrowsky.

Available from Amazon HERE

A Holo World phone

EXCERPT

C HAPTER 1

“Everyone get up and search for Crofar now!” I watched as the veins nearly popped out of the neck of a soldier barking orders to all of the Renegades surrounding me. I had seen this man before during the battle against Crofar. His intimidating appearance made it apparent why he was selected to join the Renegades and made saving the world possible. After his voice filled the room with words dominant enough to persuade all of the soldiers around me to holster their weapons and put on their bulky and torn vests, people started to file out of the data room in order to explore deeper into the remains of the emptied base. Everyone besides Chase, Hazel, and me rummaged through gear and prepared to search for the criminal mastermind who had somehow slid through our fingers like beef juice on Taco Tuesday. Some soldiers nervously fumbled with their equipment while the rest casually geared-up. The frantic bustle reminded me of the most hectic day of my entire life, the last day of school. Like me, most students apathetically walked to the buses while others screamed as they sprinted across the entire school yard just so that they could get home faster. Although I tried fighting my controversial opinion, I was excited to see what school would be like now that the world was uncontrolled. However, that regular lifestyle would have to wait until we either found Crofar or confirmed his death.

About the Author

 Zachary is a 16-year-old high school student. His debut novel, The
Uncontrolled, was originally published in March of 2018. The book was
re-launched in September of 2020 with a new sci-fi cover. The sequel, A Holo
World, is expected to be released October 13, 2020.

Aside from writing, Zachary loved science and playing lacrosse for his
school’s varsity team and a club team.

 

Contact Links

Website

Facebook: Zachary.Astrowsky

Twitter: @ZachAstrowsky

Goodreads

Instagram: @Zachary.astrowsky

Purchase Link

Amazon

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A Holo World Blitz

A Holo World banner

 

A Holo World cover

Book 2, Hiding Can’t Save You Series

Science Fiction, Dystopian, Cyberpunk, Robotics, Genetic Engineering,
YA

Date Published: A Holo World: 10/13/20

 

Invisible illusions are John’s first inclination that things are not
quite as they seem in Amber City.

Following the aftermath of the destruction to the city caused by the
criminal mastermind named Crofar, John’s world flips upside down. Not
only does John have to hunt down Crofar, but he also has to figure out his
own problems. Everything around John glitches out of existence and reappears
as if it never left. Simultaneously, John’s visions of the future
start fading away which may signify his death.

A team of soldiers called the Renegades, John’s best friend Chase,
and a feisty girl named Hazel are not experiencing what John is going
through. In a sudden change of events, John’s surroundings vaporize
and all that is left is darkness and the voices of his dead parents.

A small glimpse allows John to see the hand of his mother, injecting his
neck with a serum that allows her to control him like a robot. The rest of
John’s future is now out of his control and there is nothing he can do
to change that. It’s time for fate to take the wheel, or maybe this
was all part of a plan.


 

The Uncontrolled cover

The Uncontrolled: 9/18/20

 

Tracking Devices, Mind Control, and Visions of the Future

 

An action-packed adventure set against the loss of free will that comes
from a mind-control serum.

The robotic way people smile is John’s first inclination that things
are not quite as they seem in Amber City.

At the age of fourteen, everyone is “vaccinated” with a
biological implant that makes people controllable. John is supposed to get
his shot the very next day, until he and his parents find out about the
mind-controlling chip requiring his family to devise a plan to put a stop to
this once and for all, but things don’t go exactly as planned.

Along with his friend Chase, and an irrepressible girl named Hazel, the
three of them find themselves in the world of the controlled, where they
must try to escape the notice of this powerful society and its leader,
Crofar. As the trio of teenagers attempt to defeat Crofar on their own, they
stumble upon the Renegades, a formidable group of “the
uncontrolled,” led by Maximus.

Warily forming an alliance with the teenagers, the numbers are not in their
favor, and the uncontrolled are barely holding their own. Until that is,
they realize they have a secret weapon. John starts to have regular visions
of the future, which can change in interesting ways when certain variables
are adjusted.

While John has visions they can use to win the war against Crofar, things
become complicated because Crofar has visions too. With two adversaries who
can see the future, only one can outsmart the other.

The Uncontrolled is an adventurous, sci-fi book written by award-winning
teen author Zachary Astrowsky.

Available from Amazon HERE

About the Author

 Zachary is a 16-year-old high school student. His debut novel, The
Uncontrolled, was originally published in March of 2018. The book was
re-launched in September of 2020 with a new sci-fi cover. The sequel, A Holo
World, is expected to be released October 13, 2020.

Aside from writing, Zachary loved science and playing lacrosse for his
school’s varsity team and a club team.

 

Contact Links

Website

Facebook: Zachary.Astrowsky

Twitter: @ZachAstrowsky

Goodreads

Instagram: @Zachary.astrowsky

Purchase Link

Amazon

 

 

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