Commensalism, or the Labyrinth’s Vessels

Forty-two wakes up in control of his limbs and does not understand what has gone wrong. He wonders how long it has been since the day the Labyrinth won; it did not request anything from humanity but surrender, and over the first few months, forty-two and billions of other humans had given their bodies over … Read more

The Market of Memories

They ask you what Aliyah Danjuma reminds you of, and the word that bursts forth from your lips is the wrong one because you tell them she reminds you of glass. “Glass?” the man closest to you sputters out, a shaped eyebrow raised in condescension, “She reminds you of glass?” Yes, you want to say, … Read more

If Memory Serves

No Memory For Sisyphus Human rights are constantly evolving. The more we learn, the clearer these rights become to us. Usually, our understanding of human rights comes from ethical discussions, but sometimes we get it from science. Think of The Haike process. Before it, could you even imagine rallies worldwide pushing for the right not … Read more

The Future Ancients

Bukata blasted off in her family drifter, accelerating into Chepela’s sky at the planet’s teeth-rattling escape velocity. Gravity pushed her stiffly into her seat, triggering the drifter’s A.I. to take over the rushed flight to orbit. The universe’s dark, radiated womb greeted the drifter with a cushioning embrace as propulsion slowed. She was late for … Read more

Bad Bodies

Part I: Kibera, Naitropolis – Jan 4, 2199 “We are standing live outside the building presumed to be where Jake Ongari, the son of Kentelco CEO and billionaire tech mogul James Ongari, has now been held hostage for the last 4 hours by a group of well-armed and determined criminals calling themselves The Squatters. No … Read more