The Best Science Fiction and Fantasy of the Year: Volume Nine

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The Best Science Fiction and Fantasy of the Year: Volume Nine Page 57

by Jonathan Strahan


  “ANISA – ANISA!” IZZY has taken her hands, is holding them, and when Anisa focuses again she feels as if they’re submerged in water, and she wants to snatch them away because what if she hurts Izzy but she is disoriented and before she knows what she is doing she is crying while Izzy holds her hands and sinks down to the rain-wet floor with her. She feels gravel beneath her knees and grinds them further into it, to punish herself for this, this thing, the power, and she is trying to make Izzy understand and she is trying to say she is sorry but all that comes out is this violent, wrecking weeping.

  “It’s me,” she manages, “I made her sick, it’s my fault, I don’t mean to do it but I make bad things happen just by wanting them even a little, wanting them the wrong way, and I don’t want it anymore, I never wanted this but it keeps happening and now she’ll die –”

  Izzy looks at her, squeezes her hands, and says, calm and even, “Bullshit.” “It’s true –”

  “Anisa – if it’s true it should work both ways. Can you make good things happen by wanting them?”

  She looks into Izzy’s warm dark eyes, at a loss, and can’t frame a reply to such a ridiculous question.

  “Think, pet – what good things do you want to happen?”

  “I want...” She closes her eyes, and bites her lip, looking for pain to quash the power but feels it differently – feels, with Izzy holding her hands, Izzy facing her, grounded, as if draining something out into the gravel and the earth beneath it and leaving something else in its wake, something shining and slick as sunlight on wet streets. “I want Blodeuwedd to get better. I want her to have a good life, to … be whatever she wants to be and do whatever she wants to do. I want to learn Welsh. I want to –” Izzy’s face shimmers through her tears. “I want to be friends with you. I want –”

  She swallows them down, all of her good wants, how much she misses her father and how much she misses just talking, in any language, with her mother, and how she misses the light in Riyaq and the dry dusty air, the sheep and the goats and the warmth, always, of her grandmother and uncles and aunts and cousins all around, and she makes an anthology of them. She gathers the flowers of her wants all together in her throat, her heart, her belly, and trusts that they are good.

  THE TRUTH ABOUT owls -

  ANISA AND HER mother stand at the owl centre’s entrance, both casually studying a nearby freezer full of ice lollies while waiting for their tickets. Their eyes meet, and they grin at each other. Her mother is rummaging about for caramel cornettos when the sales attendant, Rachel, waves Anisa over.

  “Is that your mother, Anisa?” whispers Rachel. Anisa goes very still for a moment as she nods, and Rachel beams. “I thought so. You have precisely the same smile.”

  Anisa blushes, and looks down, suddenly shy. Her mother pays for their tickets and ice cream, and together they move towards the gift-shop and the aviaries beyond.

  Anisa pauses on her way through the gift-shop; she waves her mother on, says she’ll catch her up. Alone, she buys a twee notebook covered in shiny metallic owls and starts writing in it with an owl-topped pen.

  She writes “The truth about owls –” but pauses. She looks at the words, their shape, the taken-for-granted ease of their spilling from her. She frowns, bites her lip, and after a moment’s careful thought writes “Y gwir am tylluanod –”

  But she has run out of vocabulary, and this is not something she wants to look up. There is a warmth blossoming in her, a rightness, pushing up out of her chest where the power used to crouch, where something lives now that is different, better, and she wants to pour that out on the page. She rolls the pen between her thumb and forefinger, then shifts the journal’s weight against her palm.

  She writes “ان الحقيقة عن البوم معقّدة”, and smiles.

  FOUR DAYS OF CHRISTMAS

  Tim Maughan

  Tim Maughan (timmaughanbooks.com) is a British writer currently based in Brooklyn, using both fiction and non-fiction to explore issues around cities, art, class, and technology. His debut short story collection Paintwork received critical acclaim when released in 2011, and his story “Limited Edition” was shortlisted for the British Science Fiction Award. His nonfiction work regularly appears in a number of places, including the BBC, New Scientist, Arc, and Icon, and he has recently given talks at Princeton School of Architecture, HASTAC 2014 in Lima, Lambeth Council in London, and Sonic Acts in Amsterdam. He sometimes makes films, too.

  29 June 2024 Yiwu, China

  MING-HUA TAKES a Santa Claus from the conveyor belt, holds its feet between thumb and forefinger, and blushes its cheeks red with two delicate taps from a paintbrush. As always, she tries to avoid its dead-eyed gaze, but before the second dab of paint it’s laughing at her, hidden servos shaking its head from side to side in simulated cheer.

  Ho ho ho! Merry Christmas Ming-hua!

  She drops the Santa on the pile next to her table and they celebrate the arrival of yet another of their kind, 300 Santas ho ho ho ho-ing and vibrating as one.

  Two tables up the line Yanyu, who paints the pupils onto their dead eyes, is wearing a plastic mask while she works. This week it’s Kermit the Frog; last week it was Pikachu. Before that, a Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle. It stops the Santas from scanning her face and searching the social networks for her name. It means they keep fucking quiet. The masks have to be animals or cartoon characters – no real people or celebrities.

  Ming-hua tried it, for a while. She hid behind Spider-Man’s face. But it got too hot, the sweat from her brow stinging her eyes, the smell of the plastic as suffocating as the fumes from the injection-moulding machines clanking and pounding in the corner. She decided she was better off putting up with the ho ho ho-ing.

  The camera above her twitches as she moves, the counters on the screen tracking her progress as the Santa hits the pile, updating her daily stats like video game scores: units per minute, units per hour, units per day, Yuan earned. Time per unit, both for her and across the whole production line. They’ve all been keeping an eye on that one – Mr. Han threatening them every morning that if they don’t keep on target he’ll replace them all with 3D printers and auto-painters. At break Yanya always tells her it’s bullshit, that there’s no way he can find printers or bots faster than them, plus he’s too tight to pay for upgrades. All Ming-hua knows is that she needs this job, so she doesn’t let herself stop and think about it for too long.

  13 October 2024, Ningbo, China

  WEIYUAN STARES DOWN, past his feet and through the glass floor of the cab, fighting vertigo. He drops the container down on steel cables. Even though he can’t see it happening, he knows it’s made contact with the stack on the ship. Somehow he feels the hard clang of contact through joysticks and pedals.

  He knows well enough to thumb the button on the joystick that releases the spreader, makes it disconnect from the container, and leaves it sitting there. Hit that too soon and boxes fall, product is ruined, lives are lost. Hit it too late and you slow everything down, or you find yourself hauling the spreader back up before the release is done, and you’re back to falling boxes, ruined product, lost lives. Either way you’re fucked, the network knowing it’s you holding up the entire supply chain, your incompetence sending planet-wide ripples of schedule panic through infrastructure space. Timing is everything. Feeling is everything.

  Weiyuan glances at the screen above him, at the ever-shifting Tetris puzzle, unthinkingly decoding the squares and numbers, knowing instantly where on the ship he needs to drop the next box. He doesn’t know what’s in the boxes, doesn’t care, he leaves that to the network, to some algorithm in Copenhagen to worry about. He just worries about being fast.

  And he is fast. One of the fastest. The frame of his super-post-Panamax class crane is studded with medals, gold and white against Maersk corporate blue. 300, 400 – even 500 boxes moved in a single 12 hour shift. And he’s got to stay fast. He rarely looks up, but he knows that across the port, under the halogen-orange clouds, the
rival Evergreen terminal is running without people at all. If they don’t keep up the pace it’ll be Maersk next; they’ll plug the cranes directly into the network so Copenhagen can run them. They’re fast, he hears, but not 500-a-shift fast, limited by safety regulations and insurance policies. He wonders if those Danish algorithms can feel.

  Not that Weiyuan is perfect. Next to his screen, gaffer-taped to the ceiling, is a crane-jockey’s tradition: items taken from every box he’s dropped and split open, a bouquet of multicolored plastic. Day-Glo toys. USB charging cables. Cigarette lighters. Socks. A Che Guevara action figure. Phone covers. Toy cars. And right in the middle of them all, a red and white plastic Santa Claus, its head shaking as its eyes meet his, its tinny digital voice singing out:

  Ho ho ho! Merry Christmas Weiyuan!

  And Weiyuan swears, that for a second, he can feel the container hanging below him shaking, as if its entire contents are ho-ho-ho-ing along.

  22 December 2024, Queens, New York City

  SHONDA SCANS THE shelves of Target, desperately looking for something she can afford.

  It’s not that she’s totally broke, but she just spent too much of her last paycheck getting back from Detroit. 11 hours stuck in the back of a Bolt Bus, not sleeping, her limbs aching. She should be excited to be back – first time she’s seeing her kids in four months – but she’s scared. Scared they won’t even recognize her. Scared they won’t care.

  Four months in Detroit, away from her family, sleeping in a workers’ dormitory that was once a public housing project. Four months spraying plastic tribal masks with varnish so they look more like real wood. Varnish that hangs like a cloud of glue around her, sticking to her overalls and splattering her goggles, impossible to shake in a small room in a building where Americans used to make cars for the whole world. And now the Chinese make fake masks to sell to tourists in Kenya. A small room where it’s always too hot, even when it’s minus twenty outside.

  She thought she’d have more to show for it, after four months of 16 hour shifts in the varnish room. Even after PayPaling most the money to her mom so she can feed the kids, she expected to have some left for Christmas. But money acts weird in Detroit. You get paid and it seems like a lot, seems to go a long way, plus when you live in the dorms you don’t really need to pay for food or heating or shit anyway.

  But come back to NYC and damn, like as soon as you step outside of Detroit all the prices are doubled, like it’s a different country or something. Mom says it’s because they made Detroit a Special Economic Zone, with its own laws about taxes and labor conditions, just so the Chinese could come in and help out the city when it was so broke. And that’s why Shonda headed up there, ’cause there were jobs. Seemed like a good idea, four months in Detroit.

  On the shelf, in amongst the mess of red and green and white and glitter, something catches Shonda’s eye. A little fat Santa Claus, his cheeks cherry red, his head starting to shake from side to side as it calls out to her.

  Ho ho ho! Merry Christmas Shonda!

  And then around it dozens more, identical little Santas, springing to life, ho ho ho-ing and vibrating as one.

  She shakes her head. What the fuck is it with things all knowing your damn name these days? But it is kinda cute. The kids will probably like it. It’ll make them smile. And it’s only a couple of bucks. She grabs one, drops it in her shopping basket. Looks back at the shelf. Doesn’t seem much point in only getting one. She grabs another three. Now she’s just got to find something for mom.

  25 December 2107, Land Fill District 14 South-B, New Jersey

  MARY SCANS THE landscape, trying to blank out the stench.

  Some of the other kids joke that they can’t smell it anymore. They say it’s burnt out the parts of their noses that respond to that particular frequency, or the parts of their brains that identify it. Mary’s not so sure. She can smell it. Always. It’s always on her body. She can smell it when she wakes in the morning. She can smell it when she eats. She can smell it every fourth day when she’s allowed to shower, and she can smell it while she sleeps. She can smell it in her dreams.

  Walking is hard. The oversized boiler suit flaps about her like a useless flag, stained with filth like the emblem of the world’s shittiest nation. It catches the breeze like a sail as she walks. She keeps her head down; the floor of the landfill crater is hazardous terrain, an undulating battlefield of microhills carved from plastic and pools of toxic runoff. Tendrils of compacted ethylene monomers graze her ankles. She’s good at this, she’s been doing it most of her life. Keep your head down. It was the best piece of advice she was ever given – keep your head down. Pay attention to your feet. Pay attention to the ground.

  Before they let her out of the camp to work here she had to memorize diagrams, catalogues of shapes and lines drawn precisely by hand on decaying paper sheets. The things she spends all day looking for. Syringes. Glass bottles. Ceramic plates and cups. Cutlery. Scalpels. Clothes. Anything valuable. Anything they can’t make anymore.

  And then the pictures of things to ignore, the useless things best left and forgotten – she had to memorize them too. Cell phones. Batteries. Toys. Laptops. Anything made of plastic. Anything with a screen.

  She was good at memorizing; when they give her and the other kids tests, she always scores high. Which is why she pauses when, from out of the corner of her eye, she spots something she doesn’t recognize, red and white extruding from the shredded, mulched plastic.

  She pulls it away from the ground, holds it in her hand. It’s dented and scuffed, but made from that ancient plastic that’s near indestructible. She turns it in her hands, a tiny ornate figure, red cheeks and sculpted white beard. As the gaze of its dead eyes meets hers, its head starts to shake, and it calls out to her.

  Ho ho ho! Merry Christmas [ERROR: NETWORK CONNECTION UNAVAILABLE]

  She drops it, lets it just slip from her fingers, and as it falls the ground beneath her begins to shake, the small hill she’s standing on vibrating, a tiny earthquake of indestructible, compressed, forgotten trash ho ho ho-ing as one.

  Note: Over the summer of 2014, writer Tim Maughan accompanied the Unknown Fields Division, ‘a nomadic design studio’ lead by speculative architects Liam Young and Kate Davies, on an expedition to follow the supply chain back to the source of our consumer goods. This story was inspired by that trip, and in particular a visit to the markets and factories of Yiwu, the Chinese city where over 60% of the world’s Christmas decorations are made.

  COVENANT

  Elizabeth Bear

  Elizabeth Bear was born on the same day as Frodo and Bilbo Baggins, but in a different year. When coupled with a childhood tendency to read the dictionary for fun, this led her inevitably to penury, intransigence, and the writing of speculative fiction. She is the Hugo, Sturgeon, Locus, and Campbell Award winning author of twenty-six novels and over a hundred short stories. Her dog lives in Massachusetts; her partner, writer Scott Lynch, lives in Wisconsin. She spends a lot of time on planes. Her most recent book is science fiction novel Karen Memory.

  THIS COLD COULD kill me, but it’s no worse than the memories. Endurable as long as I keep moving.

  My feet drum the snow-scraped roadbed as I swing past the police station at the top of the hill. Each exhale plumes through my mask, but insulating synthetics warm my inhalations enough so they do not sting and seize my lungs. I’m running too hard to breathe through my nose – running as hard and fast as I can, sprinting for the next hydrant-marking reflector protruding above a dirty bank of ice. The wind pushes into my back, cutting through the wet merino of my base layer and the wet MaxReg over it, but even with its icy assistance I can’t come close to running the way I used to run. Once I turn the corner into the graveyard, I’ll be taking that wind in the face.

  I miss my old body’s speed. I ran faster before. My muscles were stronger then. Memories weigh something. They drag you down. Every step I take, I’m carrying 13 dead. My other self runs a step or two behind me. I
feel the drag of his invisible, immaterial presence.

  As long as you keep moving, it’s not so bad. But sometimes everything in the world conspires to keep you from moving fast enough.

  I thump through the old stone arch into the graveyard, under the trees glittering with ice, past the iron gate pinned open by drifts. The wind’s as sharp as I expected – sharper – and I kick my jacket over to warming mode. That’ll run the battery down, but I’ve only got another 5 kilometers to go and I need heat. It’s getting colder as the sun rises, and clouds slide up the western horizon: cold front moving in. I flip the sleeve light off with my next gesture, though that won’t make much difference. The sky’s given light enough to run by for a good half-hour, and the sleeve light is on its own battery. A single LED doesn’t use much.

  I imagine the flexible circuits embedded inside my brain falling into quiescence at the same time. Even smaller LEDs with even more advanced power cells go dark. The optogenetic adds shut themselves off when my brain is functioning healthily. Normally, microprocessors keep me sane and safe, monitor my brain activity, stimulate portions of the neocortex devoted to ethics, empathy, compassion. When I run, though, my brain – my dysfunctional, murderous, cured brain – does it for itself as neural pathways are stimulated by my own native neurochemicals.

  Only my upper body gets cold: Though that wind chills the skin of my thighs and calves like an ice bath, the muscles beneath keep hot with exertion. And the jacket takes the edge off the wind that strikes my chest.

  My shoes blur pink and yellow along the narrow path up the hill. Gravestones like smoker’s teeth protrude through swept drifts. They’re moldy black all over as if spray-painted, and glittering powdery whiteness heaps against their backs. Some of the stones date to the 18th century, but I run there only in the summertime or when it hasn’t snowed.

 

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