TABLE OF CONTENTS
THE SUCCUBUS
AND OTHER STORIES
Page 19
Story One
THE SUCCUBUSStory of sexual politics. Contains necrophilia. Saw an editor write, somewhere, "If you're going to write a scene in which someone has sex with a corpse, you'd better have a very good reason." I feel I have reason sufficient, and make no apologies for the story. That said, this is probably going to be yet another story which my mother is not going to like. But that is just too bad. TALEBONES liked it: thanks, guys. First published in TALEBONES in 1999 ed. Patrick and Honna Swenson. Note: Startel is a proprietary name and is used descriptively. A big slab of a story, about 8,250 words.
Page 48
Story Two
HOWIE GLENST
AND THE WOMAN MADE FROM GLASSA story about sexual desire, cyberprostitution and the sexual delusions to which men are prone. First published in ALBEDO ONE in 1999, editorial responsibility attributed to a collective. A shorter story this time, about 2,580 words.
Page 58
Story Three
CONSENTING ADULTSSex story of about 900 words. Very brief. If theft is the sincerest form of imitation, I should feel flattered that this story has been plagiarized online, word for word, at least twice that I know of, my work passed off as someone else's. In case you didn't know, that's one of the sins for which you burn in Hell. First published in KIMOTA back in 1988, ed. Graeme Hurry.
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Story Four
IF YOUR BABY WILL NOT SLEEPEveryone writes sex stories but baby stories are fewer on the ground. A micro fiction of 217 words written during the intensely stressful first few months of parenting. First appeared when published online in 2006. (Any story said to have been first published online first appeared when posted on the zenvirus.com site, which can also be accessed via hughcook.com.)
Page 62
Story Five
DADDY'S LITTLE GIRLA longer story, about 3.000 words, which first appeared online in 2004. This story has a science fiction idea at the core, something human which is genetically new, which changes social reality. The story flows, emotionally, from the rage and frustration which I experienced during the first months of fatherhood. A child is one thing, but a baby, this red-faced thing which screams mercilessly, with no stopping it, that is another thing altogether. To the parents of young babies everywhere, my sympathies. (And you, if you don't like my attitude, you can go write your own happy story starting "The baby cried endlessly, and the more it cried the happier the perfect mother got.")
Page 72
Story Six
POGY BOBS AND THE HYENA OF DEATHFrom sex the natural segue is to violence, or, better still, sex and violence. Unfortunately we took a double deviation into procreation, touching first on motherhood then on fatherhood. But now we're back on track again with a serial killer sex slaughter story complete with the hyena of death. Put that "horror" label on the cover, got to have at least one serial killer story in the collection. It's a rule. First published in HARPUR PALATE in 2001 ed. Toiya Kristen Finley, and made BEST OF THE REST 3 in 2002, ed. Brian Youmans. A reasonably substantial story at about 6,300 words.
Page 93
Story Seven
HONEYMOONAnd, having started down the horror road, let's go further. Much further. This is as about as dark as dark gets. A short 778 words, first published online 2004. Republished in THIRTEEN in 2004, ed. Andrew Hannon.
Page 97
Story Eight
SUICIDE HOTELI spent seven years living in the Tokyo-Yokohama area, where, every year, hundreds of people inconvenience fellow citizens by jumping in front of trains. What every society needs is specialized hotel facilities where people can take care of that kind of self-destruction without inconveniencing their fellow citizens. 931 words, first published online in 2004.
Page 109
Story Nine
THE SUICIDE BOMBERA story about the motiveless malignancy of the suicide bomber, the malignant death freak we do not, cannot, will never understand. 1,697 words, first published online 2003.
Page 115
Story Ten
THE RATFrom suicide to murder. The rat, which is not trying to commit suicide, dies. 524 words, first published online 2003.
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Story Eleven
THE KIDNEY BEAN DIETFrom one extremely unpleasant murder to another. A story of 1,850 words first published in ALBEDO ONE in 1998.
Page 124
Story Twelve
GOLF COURSEAnd once you're dead, what then? One option is given here. 2,739 words. First published in 1999 in SACKCLOTH AND ASHES, ed. Andrew Busby.
Page 134
Story Thirteen
OTHER LIVESMeanwhile, back on planet Earth, murder yet again, this time with demonic complications. First published in the winter 2000/2001 issue of BLACK PETALS, edited by Kenneth James Crist and John Gollihar.
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Story Fourteen
HER MINT-GREEN BREATHMoving on from murder to murder, here is a science fiction tale about murder in a mode of corporate wetwork. First published in TALEBONES in 1999, ed. Patrick and Honna Swenson.
Page 169
Story Fifteen
HARRIET'S ARMPITHarriet gets started with one murder, that of her husband, but it most certainly does not stop there. 1,704 words. First published online 2003.
Page 175
Story Sixteen
HOT CARDBOARDHard-boiled story of city life complete with a drive-by shooting, a box cutter rape and a male heartlessly abandoning a female on the grounds that she has been despoiled. (No fault of hers. She's the innocent virgin who got slashed up big time by the box cutter.) The big hard city does not come any harder than this. 1,609 words, first published online 2004.
Page 181
Story Seventeen
SANTA CLAUS, SEX CRIMINALYour friendly local pedophile endures the damnation of his afterlife, forced to commit a series of acts of giving, a series of selfless acts of light. You with your left leg blown off, got a box of chocolates here for you, too! A story of redemption and of spiritual hope. 919 words. First published online 2004.
Page 184
Story Eighteen
SWEETNESS AND LIGHTFrom one form of purity to another. Literature gets cleaned up. All that nasty stuff? It goes. (Not a new idea. Historically, Thomas Bowdler, a "let's clean up Shakespeare for the family" editor, was hard at work on this some time during his own lifetime, 1754-1825.) 3,462 words. First published in PSYCHOTROPE in 2000, ed. Mark Beech.
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Story Nineteen
JORGELVACE
A science fiction story about reality mutating around you. The game has changed, obviously, but how, exactly? And how are you going to handle it? 3,555 words, first published as part of an e-mail newsletter in 2004.
Page 209
Story Twenty
THAT NIGHTMARE KNOWN AS LIFESo your eyes open and you are awake, but who are you and where are you? In which nation is this mountain? And what are you doing on the mountain? And how are you ever going to get home again? 9,250 words. First published in CHALLENGING DESTINY in 2001, ed. David M. Switzer.
Page 243
Story Twenty-One
THE TRIAL OF EDGAR ALLAN POEThis underage sex stuff, can't let the guy get away with that. Would set a truly terrible precedent. SF story of 7,393 words first published in CHALLENGING DESTINY in 2002, ed. David M. Switzer.
Page 269
Story Twenty-Two
SHOTGUN AL'S LAST PICNICA classic science fiction scenario: the multi-generational spaceship heading out into the hard vacuum, away from the sun. Sounded like a good idea to the scientists who got on board it. But Al, he wasn't consulted about this. So there are consequences. 6,559 words. First published PREMONITIONS in 2004, ed. Tony Lee.
Page 290
Story Twenty-Three
HEROES OF THE THIRD MILLENNIUMAnd from one classic science fiction scenario to another: the time machine. Have time travel machine, can travel. Where? To New York. A story which, having visited New York, I wrote and sold to a New York editor, Gorden val Gelder of FANTASY AND SCIENCE FICTION, in the pages of which this story first appeared back in 1998. A reasonably substantial story at 5,017 words.
Page 307
Story Twenty-Four
BAD SEXContinuing with classic science fiction themes, a clone story. 5,285 words, first published online 20003.
Page 326
Story Twenty-Five
NIGHT ON BEAR MOUNTAINA virtual reality story of 7,903 words first published in CHALLENGING DESTINY in 1999, ed David M. Switzer.
Page 351
Story Twenty-Six
HUNTING ANDREWAn SF story of 3,705 words first published in ALBEDO ONE in 2001, editorial responsibility attributed to a collective. Published again in BLACK PETALS in 2002, ed. Kenneth James Crist and John Gollihar.
Page 364
Story Twenty-Seven
HOUSE HUNTINGThis story of 3,479 words also came out in BLACK PETALS, thanks to the same editors, appearing in 2003, in the Halloween issue. Reality starts to get a little alternative. A story about the nightmarish process of looking for a house to buy.
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Story Twenty-Eight
HIS NAME WAS MACReality continues to get alternative as we take a fresh look at the homeless person problem. A story of 1,889 words was first published online in 2003.
Page 386
Story Twenty-Nine
BOXESOne editor rejected this saying it was too obvious right from the start exactly what was happening. Another rejected it because he read it through three times and quite simply could not understand what was going on. Can't please everyone. The editor who accepted it was Graeme Hurry who published it in KIMOTA in 2000. A story of 1,314 words about a man in an extremely alienated situation.
Page 391
Story Thirty
LIFE ON PLANET EARTHReality gets totally alternative. An SF story about the consequences of an alien invasion of our planet. A story of 3,386 words first published online in 2003. In 2004 this story was published for a second time in THIRTEEN, ed. Andrew Hannon.