Lunar Tales: an anthology
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About this ebook
The Lunar Tales anthology is a collection of five speculative short stories set on Earth's Moon. Discover what happens when you die in a dream. Examine the mystery of a murderous thief at a well-established lunar colony. Explore one man's conflict as he struggles to save his moon base from annihilation. Find out what happens when explorers enter a sort of lunar Bermuda Triangle. And find out what it really felt like to take man's first step on another celestial body. Includes Dream Soldiers, Philatelist's Gold, Old Wounds, OtherPlace, and Tag-Alongs.
BONUS: Read the first three chapters of the moon-centered action-adventure novel RUFUS QUINCE: BOUNTY HUNTER — DREAMS OF A FOOL, included at the end of this entertaining volume.
Michael D. Britton
Michael D. Britton has been writing professionally for 25 years, including heading up marketing departments, working in huge private corporations, writing for government entities, supporting non-profit healthcare systems, sprinting with tiny tech start-ups, freelancing, and a producing TV news broadcasts in the 90s. His short fiction has received ten honorable mentions in the Writers of the Future contest, among other recognition; and his novels have advanced through multiple rounds of the Amazon Breakthrough Novel Award in various years. His list of indie-published fiction titles exceeds 65 and keeps increasing. Learn more at www.michaeldbritton.com.
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Lunar Tales - Michael D. Britton
LUNAR TALES
A Collection of Speculative Short Stories
Set on Earth’s Moon
by
Michael D. Britton
* * * *
Copyright 2012 by Michael D. Britton / Intelligent Life Books
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Table of Contents
Dream Soldiers
Philatelist’s Gold
Old Wounds
OtherPlace
Tag-Alongs
Bonus Content
Dream Soldiers
I watched as the other man, clothed in a blue coverall, stepped out from behind the rocky outcropping, and brought his weapon up to his eye to sight it.
A blinding flash of light and then sudden darkness.
I could feel a stinging sensation behind my eyes, and knew it was time to activate the wake sequence.
As I came around, the hot pain in my skull dissipated, and I opened my eyes to see Colonel Glen Shafter standing over me, dressed from head to toe in white, his head shaven and his hazel eyes piercing. The stuffy room was dim and quiet except for the hum of the blinking computers that lined every wall.
What happened?
I mumbled.
You lost another battle,
said Shafter, turning to peck at a few buttons on a control panel with his left hand. The enemy took you out – and you’re only alive because you remembered to wake up.
I always remember to wake up,
I said. That’s why I’ve survived more battles than any other soldier in this company.
"You’ve survived more battles than anyone in this whole brigade, Adams. But I need my men to win battles, not just survive them! The rebels won’t stop until they’ve taken over the entire Earth government. We cannot let them move their ships any closer than one hundred thousand kilometers from the upper atmosphere. But the key is keeping the ones on the lunar surface occupied – preferably asleep, fighting you."
The lunar rebels were a powerful force of settlers on the moon who’d dissented and were claiming independence. Their struggle to be free of the central Earth government garnered a fair amount of sympathy among Terrestrials at first - until they mobilized and started taking out Earth cities with orbital-launched plasma bombs.
The Earth Armed Forces pushed them back till they were out of range and held them at bay, but the real battle was taking place in labs like this one in Los Alamos. EAF specialists like me took a Richtodyne pill that produced lucid dreaming. It was originally a recreational drug, but the military had put it to good use.
With our brains under the influence of the compound, we’d meet the enemy – also asleep – on the battleground of the unconscious mind, in a shared reality that changed the nature of warfare completely.
A well-trained fighter like me could quickly wake himself if mortally wounded in the dream, allowing himself to start over again fresh.
But if you were shot in your dream, and didn’t have the wherewithal to snap out of it before dying, your brain would produce the chemicals associated with extreme trauma and stop your heart cold.
"I have been keeping them occupied, Sir, I said.
Even if they tend to shoot me down more often than I can kill them."
We need you to eliminate more of them,
said Shafter. If you can take out enough of their men, they’ll need to send their leadership to the dream front. Then we’ll take our stealth squadron in on the dark side of the moon and destroy their central command while they’re engaged in dream battle.
Sir, we’ve lost most of our best men. There’s just me and Samuels, and Hizeki and Marsh left. We can’t take on all their men in the dream front. That’s why I keep getting knocked out of the fight. There’s got to be another way.
The only reason those Lunes are winning is because they’re a bunch of former druggies. They were popping Richtodyne up on their little moon commune right from the get-go. We just need to beat them at their own game.
I’ll do my best, Sir,
I said. I swallowed hard. I’m ready to go back in.
Shafter gave a jerk of his head – the quick nod that meant he was pleased with my readiness to return to the fight. He turned back to the control panel and spoke while inputting commands on the keypad. I’m providing you a double boost of Alpha Wave Substitute, and I’m sending you in at a new location. This is right at the front where Samuels, Hizeki and Marsh are all fighting right now. You’ll join them in a joint theater.
In addition to the dream enhancing Richtodyne, the Los Alamos computer was programmed to create shared dream spaces by channeling a digital signal in a datastream wave that permeated our minds and shaped the landscape of our dreams, tying us all together in a mutual, virtual environment. The signal was sent internally to the troops, and also broadcast externally in a wide beam that passed through the minds of the enemy on its way out of the solar system to the infinite reaches of space.
This gave us an advantage we needed – we controlled the fighting environments. There were more of the Lunes, and they were more used to existing in the dreamscape, but we were better trained fighters and held the high ground.
As I closed my eyes and regulated my breathing, I felt my body relax as I slipped away into my little nightmare world.
I heard the weapons fire and the yelling, and smelled the sulfuric smoke and dust. I opened my eyes and I was back in my battle body – a physique of much greater stature than my waking self, equipped with protective gear, surveillance devices, and heavy armaments.
I looked around to see that I was on the moon’s surface, under one of the bio-domes, about a kilometer from what looked like a recreation of the Lunar Capitol.
Adams! Over here,
called Hizeki. The enormous Asian man waved me over to his position behind a capsized lunar rover. Of course, in reality, Hizeki was one of the puniest soldiers I’d ever met – but a mental giant and well-suited to this kind of operation.
He laid down some cover fire and I shuffled over to join him, skidding to a halt on the powdery surface. The nice thing about this simulated environment was that it approximated Earth gravity instead of going for the more realistic sensation of moon gravity. This also caused the Lunes some trouble, because they were forced to adjust out of their native environment.
From this position, I could see Samuels and Marsh holed up behind another rover, about forty paces closer to the Capitol.
What’s the plan?
I asked Hizeki.
We’re gonna take the Capitol,
he said, not looking away from his weapon’s sights.
Kinda figured,
I said. "But that’s a goal, not a plan. How, exactly, are we going to execute