Read Unpossible Online

Authors: Daryl Gregory

Unpossible (47 page)

But while the tech and the TB and some of the character names survived the transformation from novel to short story, most of the plot did not. In short stories, you have to streamline. So Reg the temp became Reg the roboticist, and the crazy homeless scientist of the novel became Eli the mentor, and Reg’s son doesn’t contract TB, the old man does ... and so on. But I kept the setting of Salt Lake City, where I’d lived for a year, and I kept the dinner with Cora, which is entirely based on my wife’s recipes for lasagna and killer garlic bread.

"
P
ETIT
M
AL #1:
G
LASS"

I got an email from
Technology Review
magazine asking me to write a story, and the page rate was so wonderful I couldn’t say no. But the conditions were strict: the story had to be 2000 words or less, it had to be hard SF, and it had to be about prisons and incarceration? Why? Because they already had a story about prisons and they thought it could be a theme.

I began frantically trolling for ideas. Luckily, my wife is a psychologist, and you can imagine the kinds of books that turn up in our house. Two of them were about psychopaths, AKA sociopaths (the terms are nearly interchangeable). I’d also been reading some reports in the popular press about mirror neurons as a possible explanation for why we feel empathy. The trick, then, was to tell a coherent story, including an explanation of the science, in so few words. The nods to
Alice’s Adventures Through the Looking Glass
were added for my own amusement.

By the time I turned in my story, they’d dropped the theme. Algis Budrys had died, so they’d decided to run my story next to his. I didn’t mind, though. Sometimes being told the exact size and shape of the box you have to fill makes you more creative, not less.

"
W
HAT
W
E
T
AKE
W
HEN
W
E
T
AKE
W
HAT
W
E
N
EED"

This story had a complicated birth. In 1988, while at Clarion East, the science fiction and fantasy writing workshop, I wrote a story about a man who manufactured drugs in sacs and blisters on his skin, and about his son, who had inherited the ability. It was set in a non-specific far future, and it didn’t arrive at any kind of ending. I tried to rewrite it several times over the years, setting it in the present day or the near future, rearranging the plot. I could never make it work, but the images stuck with me.

Years later I was writing a novel called
The Devil’s Alphabet
, about a small Tennessee town named Switchcreek that had been struck by a gene-altering disease. The disease created three clades—three distinct strains of humanity—each with different physical characteristics. I gave the drug-oozing disease to one of the clades, a member of which was the main character’s father.

But I still wanted to see if I could make the story of this father and son work as a short standalone piece, an (almost) two-character drawing room drama, albeit one with syringes and pus and addiction. Out went the clades, the background information on quantum evolution, and most of the other characters. Some of the remaining characters shared names with characters in the novel, but they were not those characters. And why not?
The Devil’s Alphabet
was a novel that talked about parallel universes, so a story about an alternate Switchcreek seemed well within the rules of the game.

"
P
ETIT
M
AL #2:
D
IGITAL"

In some ways this is a companion piece to "The Continuing Adventures of Rocket Boy," which is all about the illusion that there is a self sitting behind your eyes. I wrote it to read aloud at Fractal 2010, a conference about science, technology, and the arts in Medellín, Colombia. I wanted something short and amusing that would be fun to perform, and liked the idea of reading most of the story with my left index finger in the air. I’d like to say it was a hit, but a good portion of the audience didn’t speak English.

"
M
ESSAGE FROM THE
B
UBBLEGUM
F
ACTORY"

Here’s another story written on assignment. Chris Roberson had handed Lou Anders a copy of "The Illustrated Biography of Lord Grimm," and based on that, Lou invited me to write a story for
Masked
, an anthology of stories about superheroes and supervillains, written by both prose and comics writers. Lou’s instructions were to avoid camp and metafiction—just write stories about living in a superheroic universe. I am chagrined to report that I immediately set about disobeying him.

I love comics, and now write them. But the big shared universes of DC and Marvel are messy, irrational places.
Everything
is true: magic, science, demons, mutations. Laws of physics are violated at random. Industrial accidents don’t kill you, they give you powers. And everybody rises from the dead.

I wanted to write a science fiction story that would explain how such a universe could come to be. The secret mechanism of that shared universe would be the main problem of the story, and the solution. It would also circle back to my bugaboos about free will.

Some people have called this story metafictional, and rightly so. It has a protagonist who directly addresses the reader, and the story itself is what’s under interrogation. But it is also a hard science fiction story, in which, unfortunately, there is space only to hint at the underlying science. (I plan at least two more episodes in this story, so explanations will be forthcoming.) But it is also a straight-ahead superhero story, featuring a supervillain prison breakout, something I’ve always wanted to write. My thanks to my college roommate, J.R. Jenks, the best gamemaster a guy ever had, who convinced me to keep the CyberYeti.

"
F
REE, AND
C
LEAR"

Some stories are based on personal experience. Perhaps a little too personal.

At the time I wrote this, I suffered from terrible allergies. (These days, after burying the cat and moving into a house with almost no carpeting, I suffer from merely annoying allergies.) I did indeed go to a very New Agey massage therapist, told her about my allergies, and tried to relax as she went to work on my skull and back. She was no help whatsoever, except that she helped me get this story.

"
D
EAD
H
ORSE
P
OINT"

As you may be able to guess from the story, Dead Horse Point is my favorite state park. When my wife and I lived in Utah we camped there several times, and a couple years ago we introduced our kids to its epic vistas and vertigo-inducing ledges. As a writer, the park was a ready made metaphor, if I could only find a story to fit.

The idea for Julia’s condition—call it Attention Surplus Disorder—came years earlier. A friend of mine was a genuine mathematical prodigy and very likely a genius. When he was working on a tough problem, he could go into a trance-like state for
days
, barely talking to anyone, rarely making eye contact, and eating whatever was put in front of him. One day he told me that he very much wanted to have children. I told him, Dude, those kids would be
dead
.

Julia, Venya, and Kyle first showed up as characters in an unsold novel called
The Rust Jungle
. I kept coming back to the characters, and their strange relationship: the former helper, the current helper, and the genius they were supposed to support because, well, she was the genius. Science fiction stories are always about the genius who saves the world, with the loyal helpmeets in the background, where the little people are supposed to stand. It wasn’t until I realized that the story wasn’t about Julia that I figured out how to write the story.

Oh, and my genius friend? He’s a wonderful father. Doesn’t get as much math done these days, but he’s happy.

"
I
N THE
W
HEELS"

Ah, the first sale. Is there anything sweeter to a writer, or more likely to cause future embarrassment? I wrote the first draft of the story in the first weeks of Clarion. It ended with Zeke possessed, and Joey gazing off into the distance. A week later, Samuel Delany arrived as our new teacher, and he told me the story wasn’t over until Joey went home. I rewrote the story, because when Chip Delany tells you to do something, you do it, damn it. I mean, the guy looks like God, and not the friendly New Testament version. After I showed him the new draft, he said, Congratulations, this will be your first sale. It was a pronouncement. Of course I believed him; He was God.

I can’t read the story too closely without wanting to edit it. I’ve refrained from doing so, however, because it would be unfair to that kid at Clarion who wrote it, and unfair to the story. But if I squint, I can see some of the themes and tropes that I’d keep coming back to in stories and novels: the Bible verses, the rural setting, the demons that aren’t quite demons, the point of view character who is the guy
next to
the coolest guy in the room. So, here is the story as it is, the first thing I ever wrote that was worth a damn. It turns out that I’m not too embarrassed about this story.

"
P
ETIT
M
AL #3:
P
ERSISTENCE"

Another story about vision, and another response to "The Continuing Adventures of Rocket Boy." A lot of the lab work on consciousness starts with experimenting with vision, or talking to people with visual disturbances, and it’s become clear that the eye is no camera, simply relaying what’s "out there." Vision is instead the brain telling stories to itself, composing a meaningful scene—with actors, mood, intentions, and dramatic revelations—out of sometimes minimal sensory information. Oliver Sacks has written about patients with visual disturbances before, but in his latest book,
The Mind’s Eye
, one of the patients is Oliver Sacks. I listened to an interview with him in which he described being treated for eye cancer in his right eye. He was washing his hands, then closed his eyes, and was startled to see the room still there in front of him. The illusion lasted for several seconds. I thought that was very interesting. But only a few seconds? That’s no place to end a science fiction story.

"
T
HE
C
ONTINUING
A
DVENTURES OF
R
OCKET
B
OY"

This is my second First Sale. For ten years I hadn’t written any short stories, instead knitting away on a sprawling novel that would never see the light of day. But short story ideas kept percolating in the back of my brain. For years I’d been thinking about the illusion that we exist behind our eyes, each of us a homunculus steering the ungainly ship of a body. It seemed to me that that illusion would be particularly attractive to someone whose body was being abused—someone who wanted out of it.

I often find myself writing about the kind of intense friendships that boys can make—and later break. This was going to be one of those stories, so I set about borrowing details from my own childhood, and from the lives of my friends, including days making Super-8 horror films in my friend Ted’s house.

But for the longest time I couldn’t figure out how the story ended. And then I thought about those lunar capsules, returning to Earth after the rest of the rocket had burned out and fallen away, and I knew where Stevie had gone, he was coming back, and how I would return to science fiction.

About You

You are born in 1965, in a suburb of Chicago. Sometime around third grade you read your first chapter book, the novelization of the movie
Herbie the Love Bug
, and you keep reading, so much so that your Southern relatives don’t know what to make of you, though every birthday they buy you more books. You are an only son, the middle child between two sisters. You go to church three times a week, which renders you incapable of reading a page of any book, even a Hardy Boys mystery, without seeing a Christ metaphor. You write a few proto stories that make little sense. You go to college and double major in English and theatre, which makes you twice as unemployable as the usual liberal arts major, and write a few more stories that make little sense. You get married and find a job teaching high school.

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