Things I Could Get Out of My Mind
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About this ebook
A collection of six short speculative fictions by William Mangieri, in which we learn some life lessons:
It doesn’t do to dwell in the past.
To get back one life you need to give up another.
Love can either blind you or light the darkness.
Don’t make deals with dishonest people.
Don’t insult the people who prepare your food.
Don’t turn the radio up when cruising the neighborhood.
Includes the short stories:
Passed Life
Talk about an identity crisis! Ed thought he had a good handle on who he was - but a family death, adoption, phone calls from the past, and time travel can really mess with your sense of self.
Sometimes it's better to leave the past alone...
B.I.T.
A man with a life-altering, gene-hacking virus must decide whether to accept his new existence, or try to regain his old identity. As often happens, we must wonder: what are we willing to give up to be cured?
Through Her Eyes
Jennie had a surprise planned for Pete, but Pete had one for her, too. Things aren’t always what they seem.
They say that we’re blinded by love, but sometimes it's the only thing that can light the darkness.
Business is Business
In this fairytale taken from a different perspective, an honest craftsman enters into a business relationship, but soon finds himself ensnared in the machinations of a voluptuous gold-digger.
Then she has a child and declares it’s his. No, wait, it’s not quite the way it sounds; this is Rumpelstiltskin we’re talking about.
A Dish Best Served
A self-aggrandizing faux-French intergalactic food critic runs afoul of a prideful chef, and gets an unexpected lesson in alien cuisine, living, and manners. If you can’t say something nice...
Quiet!
It's been 40 years since men last visited the moon. Since then it feels like we've abandoned manned space exploration. What if that's not all we abandoned?
I've taken some liberties with the Apollo 17 transcripts, but this is fiction, right?
(stories are available individually, and THIS collection is also part of “The First Three ‘Things I Could Get OUT OF MY MIND’”)
William Mangieri
William Mangieri is a karaoke junkie, former theater student, and recovered wargamer who spends as much time wondering "what if?" as "why not?". He writes from Texas, where he and his family live at the mercy of the ghost of a nine-pound westie.William writes mostly speculative fiction (that’s science fiction, fantasy and horror), although he also has a detective series with a soft sci-fi element (Detective Jimmy Delaney.) He completed writing his first novel (Swordsmaster) in 2019; prior to this, he has honed his skills on short fiction. He has been published in Daily Science Fiction and The Anarchist, and six of his stories have earned Honorable Mentions in the Writers of the Future contest.
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Things I Could Get Out of My Mind - William Mangieri
Things I Could Get
Out of My Mind
A collection of short speculative fictions
by William Mangieri
Copyright 2012 by William Mangieri
Smashwords Edition
This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to Smashwords.com and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.
Stories contained in this collection are copyrighted by the author:
Passed Life: Copyright 2008
B.I.T.: Copyright 2010
Business is Business, A Dish Best Served, Through Her Eyes: Copyright 2011
Quiet!: Copyright 2012
Table of Contents
Passed Life
B.I.T.
Through Her Eyes
Business is Business
A Dish Best Served
Quiet
Origins
About the Author
Passed Life
1
Rain poured from Ed’s tricorn hat as he huddled in front of a newspaper vending box. He was in Philadelphia, but in 1976, not 1774. He’d have to return to 2008 so Steve could send him again. He pulled out the palmed-sized thought amplifier to reconnect, concentrated, switched it on...and was bumped by a young couple as they struggled to get out of the rain. The amp was knocked from his hand and slid on the rain-slicked street.
No!
Ed darted forward, but a horn blared and brought him up short. He slipped and cracked his skull on the curb. He struggled to a sitting position, trying to focus through the pain, until he saw the crushed bits of plastic and circuitry in the street. He stood slowly, checked to make sure it was clear, then scooped up what was left of his way back.
His head throbbed. He needed some shelter, somewhere to sort things out. A storefront window painted with Liberty Antiques and Collectibles
beckoned him. The place was cluttered with all sorts of pseudo antiques; he shouldn't have any trouble staying out of sight, even dressed as a colonial merchant. As he opened the framed glass door, the little bell hanging on the inside jingled.
Why was he here?
2
Ed arrived in Camden, New Jersey four months ago. Steve Ashford picked him up at the airport and drove him out to the deserted dockside offices where they would be working. They had a small suite, with a conference room that served as their lab.
Steve's work table was against the right wall, beside the six-by-six glass shifting chamber which occupied a quarter of the room. There was a whiteboard on the wall alongside the door, with an illuminated digital date and time readout above it. The Inter-Temporal Navigator was on the left wall, along with the high speed computers, controls, and recording devices. The ITN had been calibrated to Steve's brainwaves first, but then Steve discovered that, although he could send objects forward or back in time, he couldn’t retrieve them. The real power - the brain - needed to be at the point of recall, too.
They calibrated the ITN to Ed’s brain pattern, and he practiced shifting objects. Once those were coming easier he sent himself forward a day. He felt a low droning in his head, his vision blurred, blackened, and then came into focus. He could see from the digital readout that it was tomorrow. Standing in the center of the chamber, he focused on returning, but nothing happened.
Then he noticed the message scrawled on the whiteboard:
Call me.
Steve explained that Ed’s recall didn’t work because the ITN didn’t have enough temporal range to pick up Ed's brainwaves from another time; they needed something to boost the signal. Ed went back to shifting objects while Steve built the tool he’d need to be able to return.
When Ed got the call that his mother had died, Steve booked the flight to New Mexico for him. It surprised Ed how calmly Steve was taking the delay.
What delay? Don't worry Ed - you'll only be gone a week, right? It’ll probably take me that long to finish the amplifier.
Ed wouldn't have blamed him for being anxious. Steve had funded the project himself to keep out of his father's shadow, but his money was running out. If they didn't have some results soon, Steve would have to ask for help.
3
On the flight back from the funeral, Ed glanced again at his mother’s letter.
You were adopted.
Your father and I wanted to have children, and when we decided to try adoption, the first one fell through. Then we had a chance to adopt you outside of the traditional method and took it.
When we moved out to Socorro we hoped our secret would be safe, but we were