Showing posts with label Short Stories. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Short Stories. Show all posts

Thursday, 25 September 2025

Hunting Season - A Short Fable

It has been a while, but I promised you some new stories were coming with some amazing artwork from Anna Windlass to go with it and I am here to deliver.


Monster Hunter Titus has been summoned to the court of King Elmor with orders to investigate a mysterious cult that is riling up the peasantry and may have it's origins in the occult. Along the way Titus crosses paths with a mysterious vagabond known as Praxis, who claims to come from another world and knows more about the true origins of the cult and it's monstrous abilities.  Unbeknownst to each other, however, Titus and Praxis have their own secrets and agendas, and the real hunting season is about to begin.

Hunting Season is a story that blends elements from both Doctor Who and The Witcher in an attempt to deconstruct and subvert them. While it does not explicitly reference or feature characters from either franchise, you can treat it as a crossover if you squint, but is essentially written as a story "inspired by" these worlds rather than taking place within them. Think of it of a kind of mashup/remix.

Hunting Season is a story that blends elements from both Doctor Who and The Witcher in an attempt to deconstruct, subvert and experiment with elements of those stories and characters. Think of it of a kind of mashup/remix, but it is ultimately an original work in its own right.

You can read the whole thing here.

Thanks again to Windlass for an amazing job on the cover, and thanks to all of you who keep me interested in writing.


Monday, 11 December 2023

Sea of Spheres - Choose Your Weapons Wisely


 

All things come to an end, which is why it's bittersweet for me to bring you the final (for now) story in my Sea of Spheres series. So far we've seen stories from the point of view of those within the various factions and societies across the elevated sea, but in this final tale we get to witness it from the perspective of an outsider

With amazing art once again by Windlass, I bring you the conclusive Choose Your Weapons Wisely.

Grigda Longstride has been running and fighting for a long time, first from her home world of magic and myths, then from the gothic city of Haemoheim, besieged by war machines and fighter jets. As Grigda seeks to cut and run once more, a chance encounter leads her to travel to the mysterious and physics-defying Sea of Spheres, where everything she though she knew about survival would quickly be put to the test.

(more info below)

Sunday, 24 September 2023

Warhammer 40'000 - Who Killed Warboss Badgutz?


It gives me great pleasure to finally get the chance to introduce you all to Doctor Grotson, the intrepid Gretchin detective who as you can expect doesn't exactly fit in easily with the rampaging hoard of Orks he has found himself in the company of.

When Warboss Badgutz is found dead with no clear culprit, the Ork rules of succession are thrown into confusion. Desperate to stop the Ork forces from fracturing, Doctor Grotson takes it upon himself, with a little help from the Warbosses prospective replacements, to to find out who exactly had offed the vicious leader, and more crucially, find out why they haven't claimed his throne.

This was a real fun little story to write. Both comedy AND murder mysteries are difficult to balance, and that's before you throw in the Warhammer universe's most raucous inhabitants to the mix. It was a real experiment in seeing what I could get away with while holding the story together.

To top it all off, we have some amazing artwork by Ork artist extraordinaire Alex 'Crippled Giraffe.' He did an absolutely steller job of bringing the characters to life. If you're in the mood for more Orky antics I highly recommend you check out his work.

Who Killed Warboss Badgutz? can be read full over on AO3.

Thursday, 23 March 2023

Sea of Spheres - The Silent Approach

 


Welcome folks. We are once again taking a trip to the physics defying Sea of Spheres, where we finally delve into a sky-ship centric story following a motley crew of ambitious pirates as they sail through the skies in search of adventure and fortune.

I'm continued to be blown away by the fantastic artwork by Windlass, and can't wait for you to see more of the artwork created for this story.

Captain Brenda Loggins has lived a long and storied career as one of the pirates of New Wherewithal, and can count her continued survival on caution, nerve and pragmatism. Yet even she is not immune to the tantalising pull of fame and fortune. When she is told of plans to raid a Ratakaran skyberg, one of the titanic mobile vaults of the Sea of Spheres' largest banks, the temptation proves too much.

Propelled into a high steaks, low survival raid against almost impossible odds, Loggins must rely on her unlikely set of allies. Her faithful raid chief Maggie-Anne, her hated rival Captain Daxxon and Ratakaran turncoat Contrammiraglio Babette. The risk is high, but the reward even higher. Can Loggins pull off the raid while preventing her disparate accomplices from killing each other before the adventure is through?






Inspired by pirate epics both current and classic, The Silent Approach explores the idea of freedom and obligation and the tension that exists between these nebulous ideas. You can start reading it here, and it'll update over four parts every Thursday. 


Monday, 17 October 2022

Sea of Spheres - The Right to Know

 


Welcome, once again, dear readers, to the next instalment of the Sea of Spheres series. This story, The Right to Know, is a bit of a departure from the previous stories in the sense that it leans into a more science-fiction influenced part of the setting. I've tried to balance the writing in such a way as to make it believable that this takes place in the same, more fantasy influenced world of the previous stories.

Of course, as ever the artwork is by the fantastic Windlass, who has if anything absolutely nailed the balance and really stuck the right aesthetic of 'fantasy world with modern technology' that I'm trying to go for.


In the aftermath of a catastrophe that left an advanced dimension jumping ship crashing into the savage sphere of Gemini, the Horns that reside there soon found themselves with technology far in advance of their rivals, but with little practical knowledge of how it all worked. A half-century later, detectives Garrick Ceraface and Cardina Mordang, while on the trail of a missing scientist, soon find themselves on the wrong side of the law, and learn that the cost of keeping their civilisation afloat might be far greater than they could ever conceive.

Link under the cut:

Monday, 2 May 2022

Sea of Spheres - Matters of State


We're back at it again folks. While it's been a long time coming for a lot of reasons, I'm finally ready to start releasing the next Sea of Spheres story, Matters of State. As always, artwork is by the fantastic Windlass.

Sophia Sloan left the Empire of Arcadia in the wake of her father's disappearance, leaving behind a prestigious naval career and many societal obligations. Having worked as an independent bootlegger, sailing the Sea of Spheres for years, Sophia is pulled back into Acadian society through a proposal of marriage. Initially suspicious, Sophia soon discovers that in the intervening years Arcadia may have changed more than she expected.








Matters of State has a little bit of action, a little bit of romance and, of course, a whole heaping of political subtext. You can read the whole thing here.

Part one is now up, with parts two to four dropping every Monday. Hope you all enjoy reading it.

Sunday, 27 February 2022

Warhammer 40'000 - A Beautiful Dream

 


Hey folks. I recently entered a short story into Cold Open Stories fast fiction contest for January and came in as a runner up. If you're not familiar with Cold Open Stories, they're a collective of Warhammer fan authors who get together to assemble monthly releases of top quality fiction.

If you want to check out a story of resistance against an oppressive galactic empire you can read the story here. Of course, you can also check out all the other fantastic stories by other writers too.

Thanks for reading.

Friday, 13 August 2021

Hidden Depths - A Necromunda Story

 I've said in the past that I was planning on revisiting the world of Warhammer 40'000 for more stories and comics, but in this instance I wanted to drill down more into the murky world of Necromunda specifically. 

However, this is not a story of one of the notorious house gangs, but instead of the enigmatic Water Guild and their heavily armoured Subnauticans. 


For Subnautican 117-R, working within the bowels of Hive Primus' deep reservoirs makes it easy to forget about the chaotic, ruthless world around her. However, when an anomalous life-form finds its way into the sector's pipe system, her search for aid clashes with ambitious Escher gangers, fanatical Redemptionists, and even the cut-throat politics of her own guild. However, none of this can contend with the threat that the mysterious creature itself heralds, hidden away within the dark depths below.  

You can read the whole thing here.

Cover art is by the outstanding Mustafa Bekir. A big thanks for this wonderful piece, and if you want to check out more of his work you can find more information here.


Since It's so good, I'm also going to post the unedited version below.



Sunday, 23 May 2021

Sea of Spheres: A Question of Conscience - Part One

 


Today sees the release of Part One of my second Sea of Spheres story, A Question of Conscience. This story takes us far from the bustling metropolis of Icon and instead takes place on the dusty wasteland of The Basin, a massive concave, bowl-like landmass.

Once again a big thanks to Windlass, for not only the accompanying artwork but also giving me feedback on forming the direction of the story.

As with No Route to Guide You, this story takes inspiration from all fields and genres, but is heavily influenced by works like Dune, The Witcher and, as ever Planescape: Torment.

The details follow:

Oleanna Pathox once served in the Special Intelligence Corps, the secret police of the ancient kingdom of Arcadia. After a lifetime of watching, and having to administer, violence committed in the name of a kingdom that claimed it had a divine right to rule, it didn't take much for Oleanna to defect. With no real rebellions to throw her weight behind, the Anarchists became her choice almost by default.

However, when a contingent of Arcadians set down on the Basin for unknown reasons, Oleanna is forced to take a journey and ask herself what she really stands for, and where she really belongs.

You can read part one here. Part two will be coming, next Sunday.

Saturday, 12 December 2020

Sea of Spheres: No Route To Guide You Complete



No Route To Guide You, my Sea of Spheres short story, with illustrations by Windlass, is now fully up and available to read in it's entirety, you can find the links to each individual part below.

Part One: On her first case, what appears to be a simple break-in reveals a scheme that stretches far beyond the city's borders, and Eva discovers that the civilisation she was born into is far more corrupt and unjust than even she had ever suspected.

Part Two: Eva and Leo's investigation into greater Waykeeper corruption continues, but they soon discover there is more to the Map Emporium's break in than meets the eye. Meanwhile, Eva struggles to find stability in a city constantly determined to grind her down, but hope for a found family might be just around the corner.

Part Three: With their leads drying up, Leo and Eva seek help in Icon's high society, where the truth of the city's wealth inequality is laid bare. Eva comes face to face with old heartbreak and new temptations, while Leo's crusade to bring light to Waykeeper corruption begins to reach it's full momentum.

Part Four: Eva and Leo close in on their suspect, yet as they face the worst corruption and evil their city inflicts upon the helpless, they are forced to ask themselves if a simple arrest can truly resolve the crime. Ideologies clash and hard decisions must be made as this tale comes to it's uncomfortable conclusion.

I've really enjoyed working on this story and collaborating on the art, so it certainly seems like a world we'll be revisiting very soon. As always this blog will keep developments fully up to date. 2020 has been an awful year for near everyone, so here's hoping we can get back on track in 2021. An update for the coming year will be posted in January.

Friday, 20 November 2020

Sea of Spheres: No Route To Guide You - Part One

 


Today's the day for the start of a brand new story. I'd talked a while ago about working on a webcomic called Sea of Spheres, and while that's still on the backburner, this new short story, No Route to Guide You, should give you a window into this world of floating landmasses and flying ships, and most importantly, man's inhumanity to man.

A big thank you to Windlass, who not only did the artwork but was also instrumental in forming the direction of the story and the themes I wanted to explore. They really helped me bring this world to life.

The story takes inspiration from all fields and genres, but you'll notice in particular elements drawn from Planescape, Warhammer Fantasy, Judge Dredd and The Wire. If that sounds like your jam then read on.

The details follow:

In the city of Icon, centre of the skybound Sea of Spheres, Eva Reinheart is struggling to get by. As a Horn she has lived a life being dismissed by the city's administration and brutalised by the Waykeepers, Icon's ruthless law enforcers. Seeking a better life working for the Justices, Icon's detectives and investigators, she falls under the tutelage of the unpopular Justice Leo Gunter.

On her first case, what appears to be a simple break-in reveals a scheme that stretches far beyond the city's borders, and Eva discovers that the civilisation she was born into is far more corrupt and unjust than even she had ever suspected.

You can read part one Here. Part two will be uploaded next Friday.

Saturday, 6 June 2020

Hook a Sister Up

Since lockdown has left me with free time I wouldn't otherwise have, I decided to revisit the Warhammer 40'000 universe I'd last wrote about with The Trials of Sister Roslyn.

This time following one of the secondary characters, Sister Touro, it's a story of smuggling contraband into a Sisters of Battle order and making the best of an awful universe during awful times.



Life as a Battle Sister in the Order of the Weeping Martyr isn't easy, but Sister Touro can provide life's little luxuries to take the edge off, for a price. However, when Touro's contraband line is cut off, all the favours she had accumulated evaporate into the aether. Can Touro navigate the factions and rivalries within the order to wrangle a new hook up? Or will Security and High Command decide the Battle Sister is more trouble than she is worth?


And finally a big thank you to Kristina Amuanm for the cover art, you can find more of her work here and follow her on twitter here.

Sunday, 20 October 2019

Jack's October Update




Things have been moving gently along over the last few months so I just thought I'd give you a bit of a round up to let you know where things are and what's to come.

- As mentioned in a previous update, the print edition of Foul Cheeses and Space Diseases, my collection of illustrated short stories, is out now. More details here.
- My comic about local history, The Whitehaven Siege, has secured another outlet. So if you happen to like consuming libations while reading comics (or just coffee, tea, whatever, you do you) then you can now purchase copies at The Harbormaster in Whitehaven.
- I'll be dipping my feet into the waters of fan-fiction very shortly. The Trials of Sister Rosyln is a Warhammer 40'000 Sisters of Battle fic, and I'm hoping to get the prologue and chapter one up in November. I commissioned artwork by the wonderful Windlass to accompany it, and you can see that artwork below.
- I said previously I had hoped I'd make one more convention this year, but unfortunately that hasn't panned out. Here's hoping I can secure more appearances for 2020.
- I'm still mulling over what to do with Memoirs of the Fated since Less Than Three shut up shop. I'm going to see if there are similar small publishers interested in carrying it first but self publishing the series is always an option if things don't pan out. We'll see.



Well, that's about it for now. Once again, thank you all for stopping by and reading.

Wednesday, 25 September 2019

Announcing Foul Cheeses and Space Diseases


Hey folks, it's time for me to announce that I have a new self-published book in print. Foul Cheeses and Space Diseases collects five years worth of short stories that I've written for a variety of projects, from competitions to zines, all in one handy volume, and I'm excited to get it out into the world.

The stories range from Murder Mysteries to Supernatural Horror to Science Fiction and Comedy, all with accompanying illustrations. Most of the stories are ones I have released for free on my blog over the years, but they are the remastered and definitive editions of these stories. The collection also includes some previously unreleased short stories and behind the scenes notes on where many of the ideas came from.

The link to get them through amazon is listed below. On top of that I'll also make sure to have copies at future conventions along with Tales of the Modern Realms and Memoirs of the Fated.

That's all for now, hope you check out the links if you're interested and thanks for reading!



Monday, 19 August 2019

Compulsory Redundancy


Compulsory Redundancy
By Jack Harvey



Niall Robinson tapped his fingers impatiently on his knee as he watched Vincent Chambers chat jovially through his ostentatious looking chrome headset. He was a man that looked the very image of a company CEO. Square jawed, arrogant, finely coiffed hair and an affectation that was whiter than white. He radiated undeserved confidence.

Chambers was also one of those people who didn't give a damn if you could overhear his conversation or not. In fact, Robinson judged that he revelled in it. Nothing pleased Chambers more than letting people know exactly what was going on in his life.

"Yeah," Chambers said, with a smile on his face as he straightened his blue silk tie. "Yeah. Yeah, Tuesday at six. Yeah.... yeah... gotcha'."

Chambers gave a hand gesture to end the call before punching the air with a look of glee on his face. Then he turned to Robinson.

"Aunt Sally's," he said without context.

Robinson looked at him, confused. Even though he had known the man for years, Chambers' boundless self absorption never ceased to disturb him.

"What?" Robinson sighed, rubbing his head slightly.

"Aunt Sally's," Chambers repeated, smacking his hand on the fine oak of his desk. "The new place! Near the wharf. You know? Six month waiting list? Gold leaf pizzas to die for?"

Robinson shook his head. Chamber's lunch plans were as ostentatious as his damn headset. Indeed, looking round the office Robinson found little that suggested subtlety. His desk was adorned with gold and marble pen holders. The office itself was filled with cabinets displaying glittering awards and trophies, most of which were from Chambers' son, from one school event or another.

Chambers excitedly walked around his desk before sitting down on it's corner, towering over Robinson. He slapped the man's shoulder. "So, what it it you wanted to see me about sport?"
Robinson almost spluttered. He couldn't believe that Chambers didn't know what he had come all the way across town for.

"You know what I'm here for," Robinson said, trying to keep his cool.

Chambers just stuck out his bottom lip and shook his head.

Incensed, Robinson shot to his feet, and pulled a letter from his inside pocket. He threw it onto the desk.

"I'm here because of this god-damn thing," he shouted.

Calmly Chambers picked up the letter and read it. "Ah," he said, the situation currently dawning on him. "Compulsory redundancy."

"Exactly," Robinson said. "Vince we've known each other for decades."

"Niall," Chambers said, choosing his words carefully, his face a half smile. "I didn't know anything about this."

"What do you mean you didn't know?" Robinson asked, before smashing his hand on to the desk. "You're the god-damned company CEO!"

Chambers held up his hands, half smile still on his face. "Niall, you know as well as I do that you designed the algorithm that makes the company decisions now. I'm just a figurehead."

"You didn't even think to check?" Robinson said, exasperated.

Chambers shrugged. "That's the great thing about computers Niall. You can just leave things to them and enjoy yourself," He got back off the desk and walked over to the window. "Did you know that even the government is considering a hands-off approach? Apparently most councils are planning on letting the algorithms do the work these days."

"Never mind the algorithms!" Robinson said. "It's my work that got you here. I'm entitled to a fucking gold leaf pizza just as much as you are!" He then breathed out, and tried to calm himself. He approached Chambers. "I just came here so you could make this right."

Chambers leaned back and sucked his teeth. "No can do I'm afraid old chap. If the algorithm has decided you're surplus to requirements, then I'm afraid the company has no more need of you. It's already decided that letting you go is what's best for the consumers."

"I'm surplus to requirements?" Robinson said in shock. "Then what does that make you Vince?"

Suddenly a device on Chambers' desk began to ring. "Hold that thought Niall," he said, only half listening. Then he picked up his headset and put it in his ear. "Vincent Chambers speaking."

Robinson was fuming. He'd put years into the company. Gave up time he could have been spending with friends and family and instead spent it coding the algorithm. He had seared parts of his soul getting it tailored just right for Chambers' company. It was his life's work, and now it was replacing him.

It took Robinson a few moments to realise Chambers had gone silent. The CEO's arms were slumped, and his face looked enraged.

"What do you mean I've been fired?" he screamed.








Nobody really expected the end to happen the way it did. The world was built on a perfect system after all. Why have bosses, directors, councils, landlords, when a simple algorithm could crunch the numbers and tell you exactly what needed to be done next?

When thousands began losing their jobs, nobody batted an eyelid. That was just the way of things. It wasn't until the distinction between employee and customer started to blur, however, that people started to take notice. By then, though, it was far too late.

Humanity was getting in the way of company efficiency. The algorithm had decided to make the entire human race redundant. It was, after all, only working as designed.

Humanity didn't last long after that, with all the food being consumed by more efficient customers. Robots and drones to fill the stores and concert halls, designed to the specifications of the algorithm. They were the consumers now.

Most starved to death. Automated supermarkets would refuse to serve food. Automated garages would refuse to sell fuel. Humanity was wiped out merely through attrition, as farms and forests where whipped up to serve a new world of consumers.

Robinson only survived because he knew what was coming. He had designed the algorithm. He knew exactly what kind of efficiency it strove for. It didn't take him long to realise that he could masquerade as one of the 'consumers' as long as he had a barcode to scan in each store.

That, however, was only step one. The algorithm had designed it so that every consumer had a place. Every market had a demographic. Each robot or drone was designed for a specific purpose. It had to be up at the same time each morning, and stay in lockstep with it's cohorts, ready to consume the same goods, purchase the same products.

So it was that Robinson nearly drove himself half crazy through concentration. Every morning he would don his salvaged chest plate and walk in sequence to the train station where he would stand, crushed in like a can of sardines, side by side with the other robotic consumers as soulless adverts that were wasted on them barked commands to consume.

Robinson would walk in line all day, every day. Not too quick, not too slow, lest he be deemed defective and taken away for repairs that surely would do his flesh and blood no good. This was the only reliable way for him to get his hands on food, which he would devour voraciously as he watched the other consumers simply deposit burgers and roast dinners into a slot in their chests, before disposing of it at the end of each day and retiring to uniformly white painted houses.

This day was to be no different. Robinson rubbed his eyes, and steeled himself to repeat the day's task, having long lost track of how many days he had been doing it. As he made his way across the room to retrieve his stolen chest plate, his toe stabbed into a screwdriver on the floor.
For a moment, he looked down at it.

"No," he said to himself. "It's just a crazy dream."

Yet as he prepared for the day's grind, Robinson couldn't get the dream out of his head. He had designed the algorithm. He knew, to a degree anyway, how this system worked. As long as he was wearing the right barcode then he would continue to be mistaken for a consumer. The barcode he already had was allocated to nothing other than burgers and roast dinners. If he could somehow switch barcodes with another consumer, however...

He looked back down at the screwdriver.

What did he have to lose?








It took Robinson several days of planning. His prescribed route would pass by the hardware store on their way to the burger place. He often saw another line of consumers leaving with power tools. He knew not what they were used for, or if the consumers even did anything with them at all. As long as the algorithm was producing goods that were getting purchased it saw no discernible difference.

Robinson knew if he could just switch lines with his own then he could get his hands on one of those power tools, and with a power tool it would make things much easier to switch places with other consumers.

"One thing at a time," he told himself. Carefully, he stepped out of the train station, screwdriver gripped in hand. The consumers were expected to wait in a specific order at the burger place, and it would often take fifteen minutes to walk across the centre, but if the weather was wet it messed with the grip on their feet. That gave Robinson a very small window.

Once off the train he sprinted ahead, feet splashing in puddles below. As water leaked through the rubber of his soles he made a mental note to infiltrate a line to the shoe shop if he managed to pull this off.

There, just a few stores away from the burger place, was the hardware store.

Approaching the line was another faceless, identical consumer. However, Robinson had been studying the line, watching the numbers and timing their entry and exit. If he was correct, the one in front of him was the one that always 'purchased' power tools.

He looked around. Living amongst this soulless world was eerie. Nobody was watching. The consumers cared little for Robinson's appearance, but he knew if his barcode didn't get scanned at the right time they would turn on him.

Even so, Robinson couldn't shake the habit of acting stealthily, and instinctively held up his jacket to conceal what he was up to. As fast as he could manage he began unscrewing the back of the robot's chest plate, trying his best to not shake the consumer, or trigger anything that would effect it's mechanics.

He had managed to loosen six of the eight screws when he felt a twitch at the back of his head. Turning, he saw the group of consumers he was supposed to be a a part of approaching the burger place quickly. His time was almost up.

Robinson had to decide whether to drop the plan and leave, or keep going. If his barcode wasn't scanned for burgers when it was expected then the GPS device weaved into it's foil would signal the other consumers to remove him as defective.

Robinson then looked at the burger place. He was done eating burgers.

With all the speed he could muster Robinson began working on the rest of the screws. The seventh was out as the line outside the burger place began to form. The eighth was out as they began to scan their way in.

As he tried his best to ignore the gaping space in the line where he was supposed to be, Robinson yanked off the consumer's chest plate and then followed that with his own. Frantically, he swapped them round, forcing as many of the screws back into their holes and twisting them in with the screwdriver.

He only managed to get four in when he heard an uncomfortable bleep from across the way. His absence at the burger place had been noticed.

Robinson looked back at the line of consumers, waiting for them to act. Instead, they carried on into the burger place, taking no notice or action.

Then Robinson heard an almighty crunch from behind him, and he turned. It was the consumers from the hardware store line that had come to 'correct' the defective.

Robinson had never seen a consumer look surprised before, it's blank plastic head made expression all but impossible, but he had to admit, the one he had just swapped barcodes with looked mighty surprised.

The alerted consumers removed their cohort's arms and legs, and then swiftly made to carry it away. With nothing standing in the way, Robinson took his place in line. The hardware store was now only meters away.











Robinson had helped himself to a plethora of power tools. After some jury-rigging, he was now much better prepared for switching chest plates with the consumers. Making a swap would take him seconds rather than minutes.

Over the next few months Robinson capitalised upon his advantage, and concluded that if he kept switching line to line, barcode to barcode, he could move himself up in the world. He had gone from burgers and casual roasts to gourmet salads and fine steaks. He furnished his house with fine sofas and curtains. He began to piece together a more comfortable life, perfectly camouflaged from within the algorithm's perfect system.

Even so, this only pleased Robinson for so long. He knew if he really wanted to achieve his dream he would have to climb even further up the ladder of this strange society. He would have to leave the suburbs and shopping centres.

He had to get back to the city.

So it was that over another series of months and careful plans Robinson continued to switch places with consumers. Chest-plate to chest-place. Barcode to barcode. He switched into a line that purchased cars from a car showroom, and before his absence was noted, drove to the city and switched places again, taking careful observations of these new lines and schedules he was no longer familiar with.

He set up in an abandoned apartment that looked down over the lower east side. It had the perfect view of the cities commercial centre. The city almost looked exactly like it used to, and Robinson had a pang of nostalgia thinking about where he used to work, long before the extinction of the human race.

The nostalgia was soon gone, however, as he began to put the final phase of his plan in motion. Robinson used every waking hour to observe the lines of consumers below him, and take note of when they started and when they stopped. It took him several months to even get into a line close to the commercial centre, and even then the wide roads of the city made it more difficult to exploit the few windows of opportunity he got safely.

It was hard going. As ever, jumping from line to line, a small window here and there.













When his opportunity finally came, Robinson could barely remember a life before the consumers. His every waking minute was filled with thoughts of lines, queues and the seconds that counted down between them. He knew faces no longer, just blank plastic visors.

After months of work Robinson had eventually managed to get close to one of the consumer's most exclusive locations. Though he wasn't sure if they could even be said to be aware of such a concept.
It was a rainy day, which meant Robinson had once again a little more time to slip away and swap places than he would normally be graced. Even so, all other lines were kept at arms length, so Robinson knew he would barely have seconds to make the switch if he wanted to reach his goal.

He had been out of his designated line ten seconds. His absence had already been noticed, and as he ran down the block he could hear a group of consumers tracking his barcode. His feet splashed in the water, and he was glad for his new pair of boots. This switch would be life or death. If he hesitated, or even mistimed his switch, then it would be him being taken away for 'maintenance' and not his target.
Sweat was running from his brow, as he saw a remotely driven limousine slow up in front of the building. Out of it stepped a consumer, as identical and indistinguishable as the rest of them.

"Here we go," he said to himself.

Robinson lunged for the consumer, pulling out his power drill and stabbing for the screws. One, two, three! The consumer flailed, confused as to what was unfolding. Five, six, seven! The pursuing consumers were almost upon him.

Eight! With one fluid movement, practised over years now, Robinson whipped off the consumer's chest plate and his own at the same time. Smoothly, like a ballet dancer, he secured the one around his chest, and used the power tool to fasten his old discarded one in place.

He stepped back, and his pursuers lunged at the consumer, methodically tearing off it's arms before dragging it away.

A smug smile on his face, Robinson took his place in line and made his way into the building.
The interior was finely decorated. Chandeliers hung from the ceiling and renaissance-esque paintings, but with consumers in place of humans, adorned the walls. Consumers sat at tables, mindlessly scooping fine food, like caviar and oysters, into openings in their chest cavities.

The absurdity did not bother Robinson. He was just glad to have gotten there. After all the hardship, and all the years of fighting and planning, he laughed at the irony that he had gotten to dine at Aunt Sally's before Vincent Chambers ever did.

Light headed, as though he had just entered the gates of heaven, Robinson sat down at his allotted table.

He closed his eyes and breathed in. The smell of cheese and garlic was unmistakable. When he opened them he was greeted with the object of his desires. The one thing he had not been able to forget after all these years.

The gold leaf pizza. It glistened in the light of the chandeliers.

"Fuck you Chambers!" Robinson said with a laugh, gingerly pulling himself a slice. The cheese stretched, and the gold leaf cracked open like little nuggets being panned out of a river.
Robinson took a bite, and savoured the taste.

And then, horror, despair. Robinson winced. He scrunched his face up and shook his head. Tears began to stream from his eyes.

The pizza was fucking disgusting.
---------------------------------------------
Jack Harvey 2019

Saturday, 22 June 2019

Announcing In Service to the New Regime


Carnack Coudland is back. As I'd hinted at previously, a fourth story in my Memoirs of the Fated series is just around the corner. As ever, though, it's written to be completely self contained and accessible to new readers.



In Service to the New Regime is a bit of a departure for the series, which was pretty heavily in the Fantasy genre. This time around Carnack returns as the protagonist, but in a Sci-fi Fantasy setting that includes elements of Noir and Cyberpunk.

Cover art is once again by the wonderful V. Rios, whose work never fails to surprise me.

As King of Andavia, Carnack Cousland has become a responsible leader in a wider universe, but once he was a wild card, a killer for hire in the employ of President Hartley's New Regime. When an ancient oath threatens the delicate peace between the worlds of magic and technology, Carnack must join forces with a hustler, a cat-girl and two cyberpunks in order to end a universe spanning feud caused...

In Service to the New Regime is set to be released as an Ebook on July 16, with (I hope) a print version as part of the Volume 2 anthology some time next year. You can pre-order it now, over at Less Than Three's website or grab it on Amazon. Once release day comes around I'll update the liks accordingly. 


Amazon UK

Amazon

Wednesday, 8 August 2018

The Darkness Inside - Part Three

The Darkness Inside is a three part horror mystery. This is the final part. You can read Part One here, and Part Two here.
                                                                    

The Darkness Inside
By Jack Harvey



“I mean, It could have just been a nightmare,” said Dennehy, his feet up on the table.

“No,” Barb said. “There was something more to this. Whatever is out there is trying to communicate. Trying to send me a message.”

“What do you think 'it' is?” asked John, who was standing in the corner, arms crossed.

“I don't know,” she said. “Something old. Something unbelievably ancient. It felt like it was at home there, and I was the intruder.”

“And what kind of message you think it was trying to send?” asked Dennehy.

Barb rubbed her eyes and looked at her fingers. There was still sleep in them. “I'm not sure,” she said. “A warning I think. It was telling me to get out. Go away. Leave things well alone.”

“Well,” Dennehy sighed. “I guess it was too much to hope that we could negotiate.”

“Maybe, but I've got a good feeling about this,” Barb said.

“A good feeling?” Dennehy said, shocked.

“Well don't you see?” Barb said, looking at both Dennehy and John. “If it's trying to scare me away, then it's threatened. I think it knows we're on the right track.”

“The soil?” asked John.

Barb nodded. “Any word on the results?” she asked Dennehy.

“Doctor Castillo is on her way over from the hospital now,” he said. “She shouldn't be long, but I'm not expecting a miracle.”

“Well it's the only lead we've got for now,” Barb said. “I've still had no word back from the FBI, and can't get a call through. We're going to have to make do with what we've got.”

Suddenly Dennehy picked his feet from the desk and strengthened up. Barb turned to see that a young blonde haired woman in a lab coat had entered with the deputy.

“Doctor Castillo,” Dennehy said. “Thanks for joining us.”

The deputy handed John back his shotgun and he gripped hold of it protectively.

“I'm sorry about making you wait,” Castillo said softly. “I was trying to collate as much data as possible for you.”

“That's okay Doctor,” Dennehy said. “We're just happy to see you here.”

Castillo nodded nervously and began handing them sheets of data. Barb scanned the sheet, though most of it didn't mean anything to her.



“We've only been able to do some rudimentary studies,” she said, almost apologetically. “Our lab isn't exactly kitted out for extensive work, but from what we found, it looks like your suspicions are correct. There's something unusual about our soil, as well as the metal of that gun.”

John began to look nervous.

“Let's start with the soil,” Barb said. “What have you found?”

“It's odd,” Castillo said. “But it looks as though there's a mineral element to it that we don't recognise. It's almost on a microscopic level but whatever it is it's extremely dense. Heavy. We tried to break it down with a bunch of chemical experiments but whatever it is it appears to have a single elemental structure, but it's no element we recognise.”

“Interesting,” Barb said.

“I don't really know how to explain it,” said Castillo. “Not least because there's been soil studies in the past, over Eleney's obsession with the stuff, and this is the first time anyone found anything like this.”

“Maybe they were just looking at the wrong time,” Barb replied. “What about the metal?”

Castillo sighed, it looked like whatever she found odd about the soil, the gun was even more bizarre. “The metal of the gun,” she said. “Well that also has an unknown element, but it's the opposite.”

“The opposite?” said Dennehy.

She nodded. “Unbelievably fine. Unbelievably light,” she said. “Almost undetectable. We actually missed it the first couple of runs. An intern just managed to catch a glimpse when they were testing microscope lenses. Whatever it is it's so fine it almost blinks in and out of vision.”

Barb nodded, but she was really starting to lose what Castillo was trying to explain.

“And whatever it is,” she continued. “It has the strange property to reduce the weight of the metal's compound. It's actually making the shotgun lighter, which probably explains why a man of John's... frame, could handle it so effectively.”

John looked down at his thin arms, wondering if he was supposed to be insulted.

“Is there anything else you can tell us?” Barb asked. “Where this stuff came from?”

Castillo shook her head, blonde hair bobbing as it did. “Like I said, we're only able to perform rudimentary tests here. Believe me I wish we could do more. See how the elements react to each other and other similar compounds, but we're not really equipped for that and I don't want to blow up the lab or... create a black hole. I mean we're really in an unknown area here. You should be speaking to the Hadron Collider folks.”

“Thanks Doctor,” Dennehy said, dismissively. “If we need anything else we'll be in touch.”

The deputy led Doctor Castillo out of the office and shut the door behind them.

“So now what?” Dennehy asked. “We know something's up with the soil, but what does that have to do with anything?”

“Do you believe in God Mr Hartley?” Barb asked.

John looked around the room nervously. “Well I was raised Catholic. I go to church every Sunday but I won't lie that I have my doubts.”

“What are you trying to suggest Agent Brown?” Dennehy asked her sternly.

“All natural forces in the universe have their equals and opposites,” she said. “Up and down, north and south, darkness and light. What if the rising of this darkness is the reason John's been put here with the shotgun.”

“What?” Dennehy said. “You think he's God's chosen one?”

“Right now I'm not willing to discount any theory,” she said.

John looked at her nervously. “Now hang on a minute...” he protested.

“Don't worry Mr Hartley we're not going to ask you to die on a cross or anything,” she said, with humour in her voice. “I do have a plan.”

“Well,” said Dennehy, leaning back in his chair. “Let's hear it.”

Barb nodded, then her mouth tightened. “I'm not going to be able to go into detail,” she said. “Whatever this thing we're dealing with is it could be anywhere. It could be watching us right now. Hell, it got into my dreams, so it could be reading my thoughts.”

Dennehy and John both shuddered.

“So I'm going to have to do some compartmentalisation, and you're going to have to trust me,” she turned to Dennehy. “Captain, I take it this station has some kind of workshop for maintaining your guns?”

Dennehy nodded.

“Good, I want you take Mr Hartley's shotgun and saw off a length of the barrel and sharpen it to a point. About enough to make a decent shiv.”



John gripped the gun tightly.

“Don't worry John,” she said to him softly, holding out her hand. “It'll only be sawn off. If anything it'll make carrying it about a lot easier.”

Nervously, he handed her the shotgun.

“Once we're done with that John, you're going to head back out to the oak tree you arrived at.”

He looked at her, confused. “Why? You think I can get home?”

“No,” she said, casually. “I need you to act as a distraction. I want the darkness to think you're at the crux of the plan, so it's not paying too much attention to me.”

“W...what?” he mumbled. “No, I can't do that. I'm not trained to deal with something like this.”

“I'm sorry John, but the tests are pretty conclusive,” she said, lifting up one of Castillo's studies. “You and the gun have been put here for a reason. Whatever is about to unfold you're about to play an integral part in it.”

John shook his head. “Look, I'm... I'm just a tourist. I shouldn't even be here. This isn't my responsibility.”

“I'm sorry son,” Dennehy said, legs still casually up on the table. “The lady is right.”

“Dennehy, shut the fuck up,” Barb said, slamming the butt of the shotgun into his feet. Slowly, she wheeled herself over to a cowering John, and took his hand. “Look John, responsibility doesn't even come into it. We're all stuck here now, and if we want to get home, it's up to us to figure it out. If there was anyone else, trust me, I'd send Dennehy, or a deputy, but you're a part of this puzzle. We need you to get us out.”

John nodded, and swallowed.

“All you need to do is go out there and last an hour, tops. Your gun works against those creatures. Load up with as many shells as you can carry and blast them to pieces. Once an hour has passed, if you don't here from me then just head on back to the station.”

“Alright,” said Dennehy, a little more soberly. “What about me?”

“We need you holding down the fort Captain. If we're both not back within the hour then send your men out to look for us, but don't dally long. If you can't find any trace of us then don't put any other men needlessly at risk.”

Dennehy nodded, seemingly glad that it was John that was going out and not him. John, for his part, was shivering, even under the heavy leather jacket.

“And since you were probably about to ask,” Barb said. “No I'm not going to tell you what I'm going to do. You'll just have to trust me, but if it works, you'll notice right away.”

Both men nodded, and made ready for the night ahead.

****

The Captain was as good as his word and Barb was left with a sharp rod of metal about the length of a thirty cementer ruler. She kept the weapon rolled up in her sleeve and wheeled herself across the town road. Darkness was starting to fall now, and the grey sky was starting to turn to a darker blue. 

Barb had told John to set off about the same time, it would take him about as long to get to the oak as it would for her to get to her own objective. For a few moments she felt a little guilty about sending the boy on such a hopeless task. While he had the shotgun he was hardly trained to deal with stressful situations of the like that was about to unfold. He was as likely to perish as he was to make it through the hour. Barb just had to hope that God really was on his side.

As the town's buildings began to disappear behind her, she started to doubt the logic behind her current plan. After all, before arriving at Egmontstown she hadn't even believed something so supernatural could occur, and now she was staking the livelihood of a town and it's children on, at best, conjecture based around something even science couldn't explain.

For the briefest moment Barb had to wonder if she really wasn't just insane. Had the stress of losing the ability to walk really broken her mind in some way? Maybe Dennehy was just humouring her. Maybe John didn't exist. Maybe it was more than the shadow's dark communication she had dreamed. 

What was she really doing here?

If Barb had any answers to those questions it was far too late now, she had finally arrived at the place where she hoped she could end this.

The Elaney House.

****

John paced the muddy ground back and forth between the oak tree and the nearby fence. His pockets rustled with shotgun shells, bulging well beyond the capacity the leather afforded them.  He bobbed his head and clapped his hands. Of all the places he hoped he'd never have to be it would be in a dark, mysterious town, tormented by the walking dead and otherworldly beings.



Ironically John had always secretly wanted to be a hero. Throughout his youth he'd daydreamed of being a real leader during an apocalyptic scenario, or the first to stand up to the second coming of the Nazis. He'd single handedly fight off terrorists, make first contact with aliens, and rescue beautiful women (and be very respectful to them throughout.)

Most importantly of all he'd always live to tell the tale.

Right now, finally finding himself in such a situation, he didn't even know what to do with himself. Despite spending this ordeal constantly in the presence of a beautiful woman, courting her was the last thing on his mind. In one of his many fantasies Barb Brown would be his ideal woman, but right now he didn't even have the time to consider she'd say yes to a date.

He tapped his feet in the mud, making a squelching sound. 

The first thing he thought was that he should just run. He looked at the watch Dennehy had given to him. He'd barely been there five minutes. He'd never make the hour.

John walked to the oak and put a hand on it to steady himself. He knew if he ran Dennehy would scold him, and if not him Barb certainly would, and that would haunt him for the rest of his life, however long that was. The boy who always wanted to be a hero running away.

Suddenly John noticed that despite being steady the squelching had continued.

He turned to look behind him. From a nearby cluster of trees, the creatures were were coming for him.

Even in the dark John could see there was something.... wrong about them. They didn't advance like the zombies of cinema, instead they moved oddly, as though their minds didn't fit their bodies. As though they were knew how to walk but not how a human walked. Limbs moved in ways they were not designed to do.  Body parts acted heavier or lighter than they normally should. Dead eyes stared out of pale, skeletal faces.

John pumped his shotgun. Seventeen people had disappeared since the whole affair had started. Give or take a vagrant or two that means he only had to survive about twenty, and he had ammo aplenty.

Carefully, John lifted the shotgun, and took careful aim at the first figure.

He fired.

The shot went wide, but it still clashed with the creature's shoulder, knocking it back and sending it crashing to the ground. Quickly, John pumped the next round into the barrel and fired again, this time splattering it's torso and seemingly keeping it down.

John continued this method with the next three that came for him. Not every shot rang true, but by and large he was slowing them down. They'd be crashing to the floor long before he was within grabbing range, and if they were down, they were easier to hit. Once his initial rounds were spent he backed off away from the tree, and reloaded the gun quickly.

Before long John had found his rhythm. Aim, shoot, pump, aim, shoot, pump, aim, shoot, pump. If he just focused on that, then he didn't have to think about the insanity he'd found himself in. The possibility of impending death, or worse. 

Soon enough, forgotten he had. All he had to think about was the next target in his cross-hairs. He'd lost track of time, as each nightmarish body fell before him.

He was almost surprised when they creatures began to retreat. He even afforded himself as smile.

That's when he heard the scream.

John turned, and from behind him, approaching at terrifying speed, was a dark silhouette of nothingness. A void. 

A screaming shadow.

****

Barb had found her way around the Elaney house easy enough. She took the elevator, and made her way to the study. Everything was waiting for her, just as it was last time. The fallen book was still on the floor.

She looked around the room, trying to wonder what it must have been like for Hugo Elaney to toil away in this room. Day after day, night after night.

Was it worth it? She wondered.

Barb wheeled herself over to the soil sample, and she took great care to pay attention to the years. Finally, she found the one she was looking for.

1818.

Barb pulled out the metal rod and held it up. It ran about the height of the shelf, and she could clearly reach the soil sample with it. As the rod got closer, she could swear that the soil was squirming in the class jar, as though repulsed by it.

She tapped the jar, and the lights flickered again.

Carefully, Barb wedged the rod between the jar and it's neighbour and slowly levered it behind. Then she pulled it back.

The 1818 jar fell from the shelf, and shattered on the floor.



The lights went out.

Barb could see nothing for a few moments. It was pitch black and dead silent. She moved her hands, felt that the chair was still there. That was when she heard the whispering.

“By the spirit... do not find... worthy of... that I am ready to make.”

Out of the corner of her eye, Barb could see a light. Suddenly she realised that the study door was half open, and the light was coming from a gas lamp that someone was carrying past.

Carefully she wheeled herself to the door and waited for the light to pass. Once it had she slowly edged the door open and looked out. She could see a man, the one holding the lamp and whispering, making his way down the corridor. He seemed to be wearing a baggy shirt and waistcoat.

Without skipping a beat Barb began to follow him. By virtue of her wheelchair, she didn't make a sound on the carpet, and the man seemed to be oblivious to her presence. Edging closer, she tried to hear what he was saying. 

“Lord of... I beseech your incantations that... find the... between two worlds.”

Barb followed the man further, to a room at the end of the corridor. He left the door open, and once she had caught him up she peeped inside.

The man was standing over a bed. In it was a grown woman and a very sickly looking child. The lamp now rested on a table next to them.

“From before there was form, become form. From before there was soul, become soul. From before there was want, become want.”

The man put a hand in his pocket and threw a clump of soil onto the ground.

The lamp flickered.

Then the man, carefully, methodically, pulled out a knife.

“I'm sorry,” he said.

Then the man raised the knife above his head.

****

John had fired off shot after shot, but the gun had no effect. The shadow was closing now. He could feel it gripping his head by some invisible force. The scream growing louder now, vibrating his skull.

Without paying attention to where he was, John fell back against the oak tree, dropping the shotgun. He screamed. The shadow was over him now. Mere inches away. He could barely focus on anything else. Tears began to run down his eyes and sweat ran down his back.

He threw back his head, and the darkness, and the scream was all there was. He closed his eyes.

“Upper...” came a struggling voice.

He opened his eyes again.

“...Body strength bitch!” shouted Barb as she lunged through the shadow, stabbing it through the torso with the metal rod.

Suddenly the shadow coalesced into a figure. Someone more human, and the scream became more human too. A man. He was stocky looking, hair a little grey dressed in a shirt and waistcoat.

Then, with the metal rod through his chest, he evaporated into dust.

Barb fell into the mud.

After a few moments of breathing heavily, and realising he wasn't dead, John helped her up. Barb struggled with him, before something caught her eyes. Something glinting in the mud.

“Is that my wheelchair?” she asked. 

****

By the time they had made their way back into town the sun was up and the sky looked more familiar than it did before.

As bizarre as Barb's wheelchair appearing in full working order was, the fields around them being no longer muddy was just as odd. Instead they were filled with corn and long grass, a bountiful form that had sprung up from nowhere.



Once they had arrived in town things had finally become clear.

Gone were the old stone Georgian buildings. Gone was the town entirely for the most part. In it's place was a handful of buildings, few older than fifty years. Each one a cookie cutter template looking identical of that of millions of other small roadside American towns. At the far end waiting for them was a Sonic and a Longhorn Steakhouse.

“The town...” John said in disbelief.

“I know,” Barb said.

“How?” he asked.

“Do you believe in time travel Mr Hartley?”

John looked at her. He took a few moments to ponder over what he'd seen and what he'd been through over the last couple of days. “No,” he said finally.

“Yeah,” Barb said. “Me neither. I think, Mr Hartley that we've seen a glimpse, just a glimpse, of something that could have been. A side step. An alternate history. A parallel world if you will.”

“Okay,” he said, lost for the most part.

“I think something had gone very wrong in the natural order of things and we were part of it putting itself right again,” she said, glancing over at John's hand with a weak grip on the shotgun. “Maybe you weren't God's chosen Mr Hartley. Maybe you were just the universe's.”

****

The Egmontstown police station was little more than a collection of mobile cabins assembled next to a large car park full of squad cars. Upon entering Barb was immediately hit by the smell of disinfectant, a far cry from the musk of the old building she was used to.

“Hello,” she said to the woman at the reception, flashing her badge. “Agent Barb Brown, FBI. I'd like to talk to Captain Dennehy if I may?”

“Of course,” the lady said. “May I ask what it concerns?”

“I'd rather keep that between me and him for now,” Barb said diplomatically.

The woman nodded and wandered off to get the man. Barb looked back towards the glass doors to see John hovering around outside like she had told him to. Given all that had happened over the last few days she had to wonder what was going on through his head.

“Agent Brown is it?” came a voice she recognised. “I've got to say I didn't expect a big shot FBI agent would be frequenting our parts.” Dennehy was now sitting at the desk in front of her.

“Captain Dennehy?” she asked.

He nodded and smiled, but the look he gave her was not one of familiarity. He was greeting her as a stranger. “That's me.” he said.

Barb lifted her glasses and rubbed her eyes. “Sorry for taking up your time,” she said. “We're just doing a routine investigation into a few disappearances in nearby towns and wanted to check that all your folks are accounted for.”

“Disappearances?” Dennehy asked. “Can't say we've had anything reported.”

Barb smiled. “That's all I needed to check,” she said, and held out her hand to shake. “Thanks for your time.”

Dennehy shook, a little bemused that that was all she asked. “Uh... okay then, safe travels.”

****

Barb's bike was somehow waiting for her in the station car park.

“So,” John said, as she helped him on to the back. “What now?”

“Now,” she said. “We get you to the British Embassy and the hell out of my hair.”

“No,” John said. “I mean, what do you do now? You can't just carry on after all this.”

“I'm going to file an honest report to my superiors,” she said. “And they'll probably call me crazy and give me a leave of absence for stress, and then I'll get on with the rest of my life.”

“But,” John said, showing her the shotgun. “What about this?”

“Well,” she said. “The gun chose you, and it didn't vanish with everything else from this ordeal. So I guess it's yours to keep.”

John looked down at the gun, and nodded his head.


Barb started up the bike to make made her way home, leaving it at that. Her job was done, and she tried not to wonder what plans the universe still had for John Hartley.

                                              
Jack Harvey 2018