The Dark Queen of Darkness

I thought I would regale everyone with a witty and on-point review of the new Scrivener iOS app that I would read and also probably my wife and maybe 3 or 4 other insomniacs. With that in mind, I downloaded the app to my iPad and immideatly started poking away. My thoughts? Not important. Frankly, nobody cares but me and the other Scrivener junkies who have been having fantasies of an app like this for years. 

In my haste to run it through it’s paces, I started another project. Yes, stupid, I know. But, this one is fun. It’s supposed to be light hearted and, contrary to what you might think or your wife tells you, is not a romance. In spite of the lead up you are about to get, there is no sex, milky-white skin, lush curving landscapes scented of lavender, or any other description that might be co-opted for use in a randy adult scene. Yet.

Cheers.

Her’s was the tallest, blackest, most evil looking, and most importantly, only tower in the land. At least in her land. She’d had it built special. After all, a dark queen couldn’t have a bland old castle of the usual design of a stinking moat round high walls with a few stubby towers. It really had to be something special, something that said dark queen and sorcerous on every stone. Indeed, she’d seen to that as well. Every stone laid had the words property of the dark queen, etched somewhere on its face.

As she did every morning, she stood at the largest window in the highest room atop her tower and surveyed the dark lands stretching off in all directions. It was easy to tell which bits belonged to her. Every corner could be described as foreboding orchards, brittle wheat fields, ancient twisted forests, and the occasional gloomy city. When the country wasn’t covered in heavy roiling clouds, it was being pummeled by any of a variety of different storms.

There was one bit of land visible from the tower that wasn’t hers. It was the bit that had for years resisted every attempt, both forceful and ingenious, to be subsumed into the dark lands. Out at the very of the edge of the horizon it glittered. A land of shining golden sun and rolling green hills, seemingly perfect in every way. It wasn’t a large country. Hers dwarfed and surrounded it, actually. But that country was held, and had been for ages, by Prince Charming.

Her eyes landed on the precious little sliver off in the distance and she gritted her teeth and pulled an ugly face. “Prince Charming,” she scoffed. “If people really knew Pete.”

The truth was, it wasn’t so much that she wanted that land as she wanted to live there. It was something she wanted so badly she was starting to feel desperate for it. That place was vibrant and positively glowed with life. After all, she wouldn’t be young for ever. Well, she could be, it was part of the evil sorcery of being a dark queen, wasn’t it? But all of that was just, well, tedious, and she’d rather like to get on with life. Maybe have a few chickens, learn how to bake, and pop out a few fat babies. Anything had to be more interesting than sulking at the top of a tower, telling off Demons and Gargoyles, intimidating subjects and keeping her lands just at the very edge of horrible without going over the cliff into unlivable. Being the dark queen was a lot of hard, thankless work and all she would ever have to show for it was a murky expanse of land and a lot of really unpleasant subjects.

She leaned against the open window frame and tapped her long fingernails on the stone sill. Between Pete, ye olde Prince Charming, and her own dedicated and very wrong-hearted minions, she couldn’t even escape. Everyone would either be trying to kill her or save her. Of course, there wouldn’t be any telling which was which and she’d end up dead in the process anyhow. 

Finally, Hexe pushed back from the window and spun around. Except for Melbourne, her ever-present Gargoyle, she was alone.

“My, dearest dark queen, ruler of darkness, most lovely of the land—” Melbourne said.

Hexe threw up a hand to silence him. She didn’t look at him. It was beneath a dark queen to look directly at her subjects when they spoke to her, it was only at her own discretion that she should deign to gaze upon anyone, especially when the subject was as hideous as Melbourne.

“Mirror?” Hexe asked.

“What?” A tall floor to ceiling mirror across the room barked in a rasping growl.

“Our dear friend Mr. Melbourne has attempted a compliment. Would you please set him in his place?”

The mirror didn’t hesitate, lighting into the queen’s appearance at once. “The dark queen’s hair is as limp and lifeless as a pot of cooked noodles, her makeup has been applied with far too heavy a hand, possibly with a mason’s trowl, and her clothing is as stiff as a school marm’s.”

Hexe was still not looking at Melbourne, but she was also a sorceress and didn’t need to look. His ugly little flat face carried a slack look of horror which was more than adequately conveyed an unnatural bulge of his already very wide eyes. She let Melbourne stew for a moment.

“I suppose you were going to ask me if I’m ready to meet with my council?” She asked.

“Oh, yes, my most majestic and terrifying dark highness.”

“Tell them I’ll be along presently.”

The heavy footsteps and thudding of a heavy oak door made for a conspicuous auditory trail of his progress that continued on for some time.

“Mirror?” She asked.

“For the sake of all the gods above and below, I am not interested in hosting another pity-party,” the mirror snapped.

Hexe strode up to the mirror to look at herself. Straight Raven hair, pale skin, bright red lips, dark brown eyes, heavily adorned with all manner of makeup, and a very straight and stiff black dress. She looked grim, respectable, and, if she did say so, ever so slightly frightening. “It’s not a pity party, Luc. I just want you to make me look that way again.”

If the mirror had a face, Hexe would have seen it raise an eyebrow. “This is the definition of a pity party, queen. You need to be who you are and focus on your responsibilities. You’re not some foolish farm girl.”

“Just do it,” she said with a sigh of exasperation.

Luc, didn’t shake his non-existent head, though he certainly would have done, right before changing her reflection. Instead of the dark and beautiful queen, Hexe saw a pretty, but thoroughly ordinary farm girl. Her brown hair fell in loose curls to the shoulders of a plain and slightly stained-up dress. There wasn’t any makeup on her round round, happy face, and her body was rather more curvy.

“Did you add more weight this time?” Hexe asked. 

“Just a few pounds. I thought you might like a bit of extra curve just there around the hip.”

Hexe nodded, “I have heard this figure is all the rage.”

“This is an absurd dream,” Luc said. “You’d be bored as hell if you weren’t the dark queen, you know.”

“The heart wants what the heart wants,” she said vaguely.

“I can only make you look this way in the mirror,” Luc said. “You’re still going to look and sound and most probably act like the dark queen of darkness, no matter where you are or what you look like.”

“People change, Luc,” she said, still drawn in by the image and the shifting this way and that to admire her new curves. “I don’t suppose you might see about the bust a little?”

Her bust, as reflected in the mirror, slimmed.

“No, not that way. Bigger.”

Luc’s non-existent eyes rolled, but he obeyed and her chest grew to the size it had been a moment earlier and then grew just a bit larger. It wasn’t a significant change, but Hexe felt it made for an enormous improvement.

“Ah, much better,” she cooed, straightening up and admiring the new prow.

She wished she could keep this figure. It was lovely, and it seemed so unfair that she could only see it reflected back in the mirror. Then the thought crossed her mind, why did she have to? She was the dark queen, a sorcerous. She could do what she pleased. Sure, summoning that sort of magic would take quite a bit out of the land and make the people just a bit poorer and hungrier, but they’d live. They always did. 

Hexe raised her hand in front of her, fingers poised to snap. She didn’t strictly need to do this, but it made the magic feel punchier. One click of the fingers, and a considerable amount of magic, and she would be that image, through and through.

“Oh, no,” Luk said. “Don’t do that.”

Hexe could feel the power swirl with ever greater presence around her. The hair on her arms stood on end. All she had to do was unleash it and she’d take on the new form. Just the thought of it was intoxicating. Sense won out though, she let out a long sigh and lowered her arm. The sheer power filling the room ebbed away.

“I suppose you’re right. Hold that image though. I like it.”

“As you wish,” Luk grumbled.

Hexe sighed, “I suppose I’ve put off the council-thing long enough. Stodgy old bastards.”

“Didn’t you call the meeting?”

“Well, yes, but that doesn’t mean I have to enjoy it.”

“But you will, because that’s who you are.”

She walked over to the door and grabbed the handle. “Enjoying power doesn’t make me feel whole.”

“Yes it does,” Luc called after her.

Hexe slid out of the room, letting the door slam behind her. Much to her displeasure, Melbourne was standing outside.

“My dearest, darkest queen, they are all gathered and waiting.”

“I know, you already said so. Why aren’t you down there keeping them occupied?”

“Because they sent me up to fetch you, your darkest, most fearsome, grace.”

“Let’s get this over with then.”

Hexe wound her way down a dozen flights of stairs followed by the thudding footsteps of Melbourne. When she reached the door to her council chambers, she stopped and waited for Melbourne to open it. He pushed it open and she entered the room, holding her chin up high and keeping her eyes trained forward. Taking no notice of her inferiors was usually not a problem. They were a motley assortment of stinking old men, demons, and mad wild-haired wizards. This time, however, she spotted someone new out of the corner of her eye. He was so out of place she almost turned her head to take a proper look, but she was the dark queen. Turning her head to look at anything in that room wouldn’t do.

When she reached her seat, Hexe had to force herself not to look in the direction of the unexpected attendee. Instead, she put on her best face of disdain, the one with the slight frown and raised eyebrow, that was her favorite. Then, starting at the farthest point from the one she really wanted to look at, she let her eyes slide to each person. The Demon lords were huddled together off to her left looking as polite and deferential as demons could. Then there were the barons and dukes. For the most part, round old men wearing a mix of haughty and cowed expressions. Then, he eyes lighted on the man she had wanted to take a better look at. He was much younger than most with broad shoulders, dark, intense eyes that reminded her of a hawk and a very strong and straight jaw. 

Since he hadn’t ever been there before, she felt she could get away with examining him at length without suspicion. Under her gaze, most men would cower or look away. This man did not. He looked back at her. If it had been any other man in that crowd, she’d have had him tossed into the the dungeon without having another word. That sort of uppity behavior couldn’t be tolerated. This man, though, had the part of her brain usually involved in scheming working overtime on strategies to get him to his feet and turn around, preferably without a shirt. 

“Who are you?” She asked.

“I’m Gregory the son of Duke Winthrop. My father —”

Hexe held up her hand. “You will address me as your grace, her royal highness, her most illustrious queen of darkness, or something equally flattering.”

Gregory nodded. “As I was saying,” he continued without the slightest hint of proper form. “I am the son of Duke Winthrope —”

“You will stand up and address your queen properly,” Hexe said.

Gregory stood up. Hexe felt a little thrill of pleasure run down her spine. Getting him to his feet had been a very good idea, indeed. Now, she needed him to turn around, and then there was the matter of that shirt, though that second bit would be tricky. 

“My father,” Gregory pressed. “Asked me to come in his place at this meeting.”

Hexe eyed him. If he kept on like this, he’d go from being interesting to a better looking version of the boring old farts she already had to deal with. This was not going to do.

“Melbourne,” she said. “This man has twice insulted me by not addressing me properly.”

“Shall I have him locked in the deepest, most horrible dungeon?” The gargoyle asked.

“No. Bring him to the top of the tower. I will deal with him when we are finished here.”

Gregory bowed and turned around to leave the council chambers. Melbourne stumped along behind him. Hexe’s eyes tailed him out, and it was a tail. When the doors shut, her mind went with him and became quite randy in very short order.

Several moments passed before she regrouped to address the remaining attendees. There was some business regarding prince of trolls, though she felt that topic really wasn’t worth the effort anymore.

Space Engineering Systems Help Desk

Based on my last few blog posts, it would be easy to imagine that the only thing I do all day is complain heartily about how bloody soul-crushing it is to research and then fail to connect with a literary agent. While it’s true I do enough of that, it not the only thing I’m up to – not by a long shot. I’ve got a handful of other projects in the works. None of them are moving particularly fast, but I am working on them. Here is a new first chapter excerpt of an Idea I’m working on – Enjoy in all of its very rough drafty glory:

Introduction

This is a story about Randall Christopher Martin Pierce. Randall was a short, slight man with brown hair and brilliant, almost glittering blue eyes. For those of a fantastical mind, he could be mistaken for a fairy or elf for the brightness of those eyes. Other than that, he started out as a wholly, completely, and exceptionally unremarkable fellow. To truly understand the events of Randall’s life, which have been so carefully collected and embellished between these pages, you first need some context.

Though Randall was born on January 21st, 2278 his story actually begins on August 23rd, 2045. On that date, high in the Canadian Arctic, a city appeared. It wasn’t the sort of small mining city that usually pops up overnight in those sorts of places, it was a booming mega-metropolis of roughly 22 million inhabitants. On the 22nd of August the same patch of ground had been nothing more than a rolling plane of arctic tundra. Dwarf birch and shrubby willows punctuated with the odd lake or pond as far as the eye could see. At first, nobody knew what to make of it. All of the various mystics, psychics, LARPers and other weirder people around the world rejoiced at the appearance of a magical city. American protestants declared it a sure sign of the end of times, the British regarded it as something new upon the world that they had yet to invade though they hardly needed to, the Chinese were certain whomever these people were, they were inferior, and the Germans and Americans started plotting ways in which they could sell them cars.

It transpired that these new comers were not magical, but they were most definitely not human. They were short with a fur-like feathery covering and stubby snouts. Their hands each had one too many fingers. And most importantly they came from a small, perpetually frozen, planet near Bellatrix in the left shoulder of Orion.

The initial response from the governments of the world was notable only because of its truly underwhelming scope. After decades of alien invasion books, games, and movies one might expect waves of aircraft and tactical nukes. Nothing remotely like that happened. Instead, the Canadian government sent in a single helicopter with the only two diplomats in the country who hadn’t quit at the mere mention of the new city to ask them why they’d come and if they would, please, leave.

When the diplomats arrived, they found a thoroughly hospitable and excessively casual culture more thoroughly knowledgeable about humans and human cultures than most humans were. As a result, the diplomat’s visit was a tremendous success. The aliens explained they were in a bad spot, and just really needed a place to crash for a couple hundred years. They had set down in Canada, because they aliens knew Canada would understand. Not only did the aliens readily agree to to abide by Canadian provincial laws, but that they would, indeed, clear off as soon as terraforming efforts were complete on Mars. This last piece made every other government on the planet nearly uncomfortable enough to get together and do something about it. As such things go with governments, committees were formed, councils held and finally the people of earth wrote-off mars as a lost cause. After all, having aliens on Mars was rather a lot better than having them on Earth.

Upon returning to Ottawa, the diplomats were asked to describe the aliens, and the very first thing heard by the general public of Earth was, “well, they’re all Anglophiles, even speak English in a British accent, call themselves Dentrassi after something in a book by a British author I’ve never heard of, which they berated me for not having read. It’s the most bizarre thing I’ve ever encountered. Other than that, I’d say they were pretty chill.”

And while this is the story of how Canada became the seat of interstellar travel and trade for Earth, it is only just the beginning of Randall’s story.

***

Chapter 1

Randall stared at his array of screens. Over the past few days, he’d grown accustomed to staring at the exceptionally boring tritanopic blue-hued lines, lettering and diagrams sitting on a black background. His ability to speak and read Dentrassi was so rusty as to be practically non-existent so the text was near to meaningless, except for one word on his central screen, which he recognized to be something like heat or hot. However, he thought he could do the job well enough without being able to read all of the words. Provided all of his status screens remained blue, everything was fine and there was no need to worry. Really, Randall hadn’t wanted to go to Mars at all, but there had been a job opening on a small freighter that paid the equivalent of five years solid salary for a little more than three months of work. His friends had tallied up the amount of beer they could buy if one of them got the job. Being that he’d taken a few semesters of Dentrassi engineering in college, his friends immediately concluded he’d be perfect. It didn’t help that Randall was the least assertive of the group, and was easily badgered into it. Not to mention he was quite drunk when he signed up.

While he was as eager as any of them to earn the equivalent of 5 years worth of beer in 3 months, this was precisely the sort of thing that he would do almost anything to avoid, at least while sober. It was well outside his comfort zone and he couldn’t imagine being more out of place anywhere in the galaxy, even on the homeworld of the Dentrassi themselves. To that end though, it had thus-far been an easy job and was shaping up to be well worth the money.

While Randall still hadn’t quite worked out the full scope of his job, he had at least determined it mostly consisted of making sure the lines and diagrams on his set of screens didn’t turn white, and if he did say so himself, he’d been good at that. They hadn’t. At least not in the three days since he’d first sat down in the chair. The other thing that seemed to be his job was to help his partner William, which so far exclusively involved grabbing him another bag of chips from his dorm. William was a Dentrassi, just like 95% of everyone aboard. He looked, in form, just like every other Dentrassi, but just like humans and other domesticated animals, Dentrassi were as distinct from one another as anything, and this Dentrassi had large watery eyes, streaks of red in his dark brown feathery coat, and always wore Hawaiian shirts. Dentrassi weren’t particular about dress-code.

So, on that third day, three hours and twenty-two minutes into his shift, when the lines on one section of his central screen, the largest, did turn white, Randall didn’t react right away. As a knot of stress started rapidly forming in his gut, he hoped it was a glitch, but the white grew to encompass every line, diagram and bit of spindly Dentrassi lettering on the screen and especially the word that he was pretty sure had something to do with heat. He tapped on the console and looked up at William. William, who had his feet propped on his side of the console, was leaning back in his chair, fast asleep, and drooling all over himself. Randal opened his mouth to say something that might get his attention and the door to the engineering systems room swung open.

Standing in the small ovaline doorway was Bert, the operations officer. In Randall’s opinion the operations officer was the most intense Dentrassi he’d ever met, which was still a great deal calmer than most humans. “We seem to have a slight engineering-related problem.” he said in a perfectly crisp British accent.

Randall had always thought it the oddest thing in the universe that Dentrassi, covered in the furry feathers and having a dog-like snout should speak as if they belonged in an English period mystery.

William opened his eyes and straightened up, slow as you please, keeping his feet propped on the console. “You know the rule Bert. If you’ve a problem, you need to log a ticket.”

Bert blinked. “Put in a ticket? I’m not at all sure we’ve got the time for that. The reactor is overheating.”

William nodded slowly, narrowing his eyes in an almost comically human expression. “Sounds serious, you should log a ticket.”

Finally, Bert started becoming what Randall interpreted as impatient, even by human standards. “We’re all going to die and you’re worried about a ticket?”

“How else will we know what to do, and how will the captain know we’ve done it?”

“The captain will absolutely go into fits if this isn’t sorted,” Bert said.

“Will she?” William asked with interest. “Do you think she’ll get upset? Oh, she is gorgeous when she’s upset.”

Feeling more than slightly alarmed at the sound of overheating reactor and even less reassured by the thorough lack of speed on the part of the Dentrassi, Randall decided to pipe in. “Does this have anything to do with it?” He, pointing at his white screen.

Bert stepped up. “I’d say it does, this is the reactor display. Can’t you read man?”

Randall looked at his screen again and to the word he was pretty sure meant hot – which was now flashing aggressively. Suddenly, something from his university classes slipped into place. What he had been staring at was a warp drive reactor display. Randall shot to his feet. Two things crossed his mind at once. The first was that he was going to die, the second had something to do with the fact that they shouldn’t be using the warp drive on a trip from Earth to Mars.

“Bang on the display a few times. That usually clears it up,” William said unhelpfully and with entirely too much ease for Randall’s tastes.

Randall beat on the thing mercilessly. Though, he knew that wasn’t going to do a damn bit of good. He tried to remember how these things worked and started searching for the kill switch.

Bert joined him in pounding on the screen. Still nothing happened.

William swung his feet down and leaned forward to pull a bag of potato chips off of his console. As he did, the display in front of Randall started turning blue. Slowly at first, and in segments, until finally the entire thing was blue on black, as it had been just a while before. Bert’s eyes slid up Randall’s display to William. Randall slumped back in his sear, trying to catch his breath and not throw-up over the near miss.

“You know what I love about Earth?” William asked, as if nothing whatever had gone wrong. “Crisps. They’ve got to be the best snack in the universe.”

Bert straightened up and stroked the hair on his chin. “That did seem to fix it. What did you do over there William?”

“Just eating my crisps. I feel they always make everything better, don’t you?”

“Well, that’s sorted. I’m off to update the captain,” Burt turned and made to leave.

“Do put in a ticket so we can log this,” William called after him before door thumped closed.

For a long minute, Randall drew in deep breaths in a failing attempt to stop his shaking hands. He watched William carefully extract potato chips from the bag one at a time, until he finally had enough control of himself to ask, “what would happen if the reactor shut down at full warp?”

William shrugged. “We’d fall out of the warp field. It would either tear us apart, or we’d get stuck in a decompressing warp bubble for a few thousand years. Then, there’s a chance we might be rescued. Really, you don’t want to try it.”

“Warp?” Randall felt his chest tighten, that was the other question he had to ask. “I didn’t think warp was used for Earth to Mars travel?”

“It’s not, but you’re not on your way to Mars are you?”

Randall’s mouth dropped open and it took him several tries to get it back into service. “Wait, we’re not going to Mars?

“Clearly not.”

“How could I possibly tell? I’m locked in a giant metal box without any windows.”

“Didn’t you hear the captain’s message after launch?”

“Well, yes, but I couldn’t understand it, it wasn’t in English.”

“And you didn’t think to ask anyone?”

Randall could feel the heat rising from his collar into his neck. He should, of course, have asked someone. “Okay, fine, we’re not going to Mars. I need to know where we’re going.”

“Humans are far too serious. Everything according to plan and so on. Life is so much more fluid than that,” William leaned back, as if nothing more need be said on the matter.

“Can’t you just tell me where we’re going?”

William scratched his snout. “I think you call the star Sirius.”

Randall thought about this for a minute and started to feel slightly less concerned, but only slightly. Sirius wasn’t far as interstellar travel went and he could be back to Earth in six months. Warp was, after all a prodigiously efficient way to travel. It was considerably longer than expected, but he could manage that. “Then we’re headed back to Earth after?”

“Do you mean immediately after, or after in the sense that this ship and some of it’s crew will return to Earth at some point?”

Randall had to rest his hand on the console to steady himself. “I don’t like the sound of that.”

“It’s fascinating how often humans say that sort of thing. Does your lot like anything?”

“Yes, but if this is how things go aboard a Dentrassi ship, I can see why you rarely find a happy human.”

“Eventually, this ship will make it back to Earth. We’ll probably pop into a few other systems, maybe double back a couple of times, take a good long holiday on Belatrix – oh you’ll love it there, best beer in the galaxy, then maybe we’ll head back to Sol. Tough to tell though. You never really know where you’re going until you’re on your way do you?”

Of course, Randall felt as though one should know precisely where he was going before he left and he was certain most humans felt this way. Instead of the angry rant he felt aching to burst out, he just asked the simple question, “how long do you think that’ll take?”

“Not long, maybe ten years.” William said casually.

“Ten years!” Randal shot out of his chair, now feeling thoroughly ill. “I can’t stay out here for ten years.”

“You humans are such a jumpy lot. Is there nothing that doesn’t excite you?”

“Ten years is a long time for humans. My girlfriend will have certainly have moved on by then, I won’t have any friends, they’ll all think I’ve abandoned them or I’m dead.”

“Your friends can’t be very good if they’ve send you out on a Dentrassi ship, and I know full well you haven’t got a girlfriend.”

Randall could actually feel his eye beginning to twitch. “Okay, maybe I don’t have a girlfriend, but there was a girl I was sweet on and I certainly do want a girlfriend. There’s no way that’s going to happen if I’m meandering around the galaxy for a decade. There are five humans aboard. One is me, the other four are men.”

“But think about how much more sexy you’ll be if you’ve been to a dozen star-systems. Not many blokes going to have that on you are there?”

“No. Just no. I can’t be cooped up on this ship for that long.”

“See – too serious. What other things have you got to do, except try land a girlfriend? Why not hang along for the ride?”

“Because, I just can’t,” Randall sputtered. “I don’t belong here in the first place.”

William gave a little shudder that Randall had learned was the equivalent of a human shrug. “You did sign up.”

“I signed up for three months, not ten years.”

“I’m sure the captain will let you off at Sirius. You don’t have to stay longer than you want to. You do get the odd human ship through there. Otherwise, the Woka’ni sometimes take on passengers. They’ll probably get you as far as Proxima Centauri, there’s an Earth embassy there.”

“Is it an American embassy?”

William leaned forward and started poking at a screen on his console. “Ah, no. That one is Chinese. I must say, you humans with your complicated politics is absolutely confounding,” he poked at the screen a few more times, “no, Canadian. Most of these are. I don’t suppose you can catch a ride home from the Canadian embassy?”

“No, the Americans and Canadians aren’t exactly on the best of terms at the moment. I’d be as likely to be arrested as sent home and at that rate I may as well just stay where I am.”

For a few more moments William poked at his screen. “This seems promising.”

“What?” Randall asked.

William cleared his throat to read, in that melodic way Dentrassi do. “The lost and misplaced Earth travelers society, specializing in the return of humans to Earth. For a modest fee, we furnish transport back to Earth for the unlucky human who as happened upon the wrong ship or has unexpectedly found themselves light-years off course.”

Randall took a deep breath and sat down. That was it. That was his ticket home. No problem. All he had to do with hang out for a few months while they were in transit.

“See,” William continued. “Nothing to worry about.”

A moment later, Bert re-entered the engineering room. He was holding a small stack of books, the top had title that read, A Human’s guide to Dentrassi. With the sub-title, a traveler’s guide to not getting lost in space.

Bert handed over the books, “The captain and I would take it as a kindness if you wouldn’t mind freshening up on your Dentrassi and also your engineering. I’ve put a few manuals in the stack. We would prefer not to die from a reactor malfunction.”

Randall blinked, and eyed the books.Once again, Bert left the room. A solid minute passed before Randall asked the question he should have asked on the first day. Perhaps even before then.“What exactly is my job?”

“You’re the chief warp-drive engineer and reactor technician. If it goes wrong, you get to fix it.”

Randall fell out of his chair.

The Goblin King

I’m a procrastinator and find that whenever I’m having a bit of a rough time with my main project I start daydreaming about another. That’s what happened this week and I lost at least two writing days to it. It’s just the start of a concept really and it might not go anywhere, but here’s the first bit of intro.


 

Jareth was a weird kid, poofy hair, outlandish clothes, and ugly friends, but what would you expect from the prince of goblins?

That’s the first line from my unauthorized biography. He called me weird kid in the first breath, can you believe that? The worst part is that it’s the nicest thing the book has to say. I mean, look at this line,

Even from a young age Jareth spent most of his free time playing with glass balls and daydreaming.

Tell me who doesn’t daydream at that age, and those balls? First off, they’re crystal, and secondly, that’s some seriously powerful magic. I was putting my daydreams into those things. You could literally go into one and be there. I’d love to see anyone else try that. Every detail of my life is wrong, pretty much fabricated, which is bad enough, but he even recounted the whole Sarah affair from her twisted version of events. He obviously didn’t do a single minute of research.

I have to admit, I was pretty excited about the prospects of having an unofficial biography released. Perhaps it could have been a return to Jareth the powerful, Jareth the feared, and so on. Nope, as if my fortunes haven’t fallen far enough, no thanks to Sarah, it makes me look like a vindictive jerk. It’s left me no choice but to write my own biography, not that I have time. As you can imagine, being the Goblin King is a lot of work. Constant squabbling, the highest murder rate in the middle kingdoms, and don’t even get me started on the trash problem. Perhaps it would be a little more tolerable if I still had the old palace. Lost that in the divorce too.

Before I say anything else on the topic on my life, I want to get one thing straight. I don’t go after kids. In Sarah’s current version of events, she made it sound as if I took advantage of some sixteen year old girl. That’s absolutely untrue. Doing any research at all would clearly show that she was twenty when we met, and sure were were a little on the outside of the dating formula range, but not illegally so. Now that’s off my chest, I want to start at the beginning, the real beginning of my story.


There it is. The start of the story of the Goblin King told from the perspective of Jareth. May never see the light of day, but it’s a fun distraction.