Continuity Failure: Tales of Apocalypses and Aftermaths
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About this ebook
The threat of a civilisation-ending event has haunted us since the nineteenth century. As our technology gives the fortunate incredible advantages, many more go without. That same technology brings with it escalating risks of disasters humanity may not be able to survive.
This anthology collects stories that feature a range of catastrophes and their legacies, drawn from the first nine volumes of his Visions of the Future anthologies.
This is the fourth of an occasional series of themed collections drawn from his annual ‘Visions of the Future’ anthologies. (All of which are available from Amazon worldwide in standard, OpenDyslexic font, and Kindle editions, as well as being available for all devices from Smashwords.)
Julian M. Miles
Julian’s first loves were science fantasy and magic; the blending of ancient and futuristic. This led him to a love of speculative fiction, initially as a reader, then as a reader and writer.He started writing at school, extended into writing role-playing game scenarios, and thence into bardic storytelling. In 2011 he published his first books, in 2012 he released more (along with the smallest complete role-playing system in the world).With over 30 books published in digital and physical formats, he has no intention of stopping this writing lark anytime soon, and he'd be delighted if you'd care to join him for a book or two.
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Continuity Failure - Julian M. Miles
Continuity Failure
Tales of Apocalypses and Aftermaths
A Visions of the Future Omnibus
A science fantasy anthology by Julian M. Miles
Copyright 2020 Julian M. Miles
Smashwords Edition
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Smashwords Edition, License Notes:
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.
*****
Contents
Apples
Come Tomorrow
Old Ways
Floribunda
Crux
Felix
Run Like Hell
The Oldest Game
Father’s Day
To Kill the Dead
The Art That Keeps
Defenders of Dog Isle
On the Wind
Sanctuary
Gretchen
Better the Devil You Know?
Extinction 74
Storm Season
Where Honey Came From
De-terminator
Hills
Witnesses
Growing Back
Potential
Silo One
Fire Place
Apocalypse Poet
Right and Rules
Down to the City
Continuity Failure
Final Solution
About the Author
Connect with Julian Miles
Other Books by Julian Miles
Credits
*****
Apples
The moon picks out bright lines from the vegetation-shrouded hulks at the sides of the road. High above, our Night Ravens duel with watch drones; so high that any kills fall outside our ken, leaving the night undisturbed.
A long time ago, they had names for every living thing.
Dappen nods as he works the wheel.
Everything?
Graea’s unconvinced.
He nods: Everything. Had a special language for it, too. Called it ‘Latin’. Never got on with it myself.
You learned Latin?
Too much!
He looks at me with a grin: Never did. My grandma had a smatterin’, got it from her grandma. I sided with me mum; it’s past. Best let it go.
Graea leans forward: Everything? We still got that. I knows oaks and hornets and jackdaws an’ such.
Dappen reaches back and ruffles her hair: Not like that. This language told how things came to be and where they came from, making great big chains of what became what from where.
Why?
He looks at me: There’s the question. Hang on.
The rig swings wide round the forested hill that sticks up from the centre of this expanse of cracked blacktop.
Used to call this the A24, back when they named everything. Funny how the oldest bits last longer.
Cheap tradesmen?
He grins and reaches out to ruffle my hair, but I duck out of reach.
Likely as any other theory.
With a sigh, he brings the rig to a standstill. Midpoint. Letting the Night Ravens clear the skies for our run down to the coast.
Right, while we wait. Why did they name everything? I don’t know. But I’ll guess what it did. Made them think they had a handle on everything, like the ancestors really did back in the times of power when naming something gave you control over it. Except, with these new names, it didn’t. All it did was give them a feeling of comfort, like when you collect stuff. Don’t do nothing but make you feel a little better.
Like Dee’s rocks-in-a-row?
I feel myself blush.
Just like them. But, for these folk, they were so sure they understood how everything worked they put names to all the stuff they couldn’t see as well, then pretended like they knew how it all worked together.
Don’t seem clever. Some of the stuff they guessed at might have turned out grimmer than they thought.
He grins: Why do you think we’re sitting in a century-old truck, about to drive down a road that’s even older, while our patched-up robot birds destroy the enemy clan’s noisy flying discs? All we got is what survived when them what gave the names ran out of words against the fury. Too many people, too few things to keep them alive. Nothing left but the children of the lucky, and any technology that was useful. Everything else got left in the ashes.
Graea leans on my shoulder: So we’re the lucky and we don’t need to know the names of everything?
I look across at Dappen: Not quite. The lesson I get is that knowledge is pointless on its own.
She claps her hands: You got to do something with it, not just collect it.
Dappen nods: Close enough. Dee used her knowledge to find a possible orchard on an old map. Doing something with it means we now need to get this haul of apples home.
He swings the wheel and the truck moves ahead. With a chuckle, he glances over at us: One of you two needs to make tea for the driver. I know he’s parched.
***
Come Tomorrow
The echoes are thunderous, something that keeps away most of the predators down here. This far along, everyone is fatigued. Even the children no longer have bursts of energy. Existence is eating, sleeping and marching to the beat. The chant cadences our footsteps through the netherways: the deep tunnels that were once used to move building materials between the growing United Cities.
Come tomorrow, we’ll live in a far better place.
Each Petacity is a continent-covering sprawl that incorporates everything into an extended conurbation. Intensive automation, overseen by computers fast enough to map DNA in minutes, made them possible. Mankind quickly became dependent on the hyper-infrastructure that provided everything. Then the control systems worked out that growing replacement labour was far more ecologically efficient than building it.
Come tomorrow, we’ll suffer no machine-led pace.
We went from dependent to subservient in two generations. Some objected, of course. But ancient tales of rising against robot masters were glaringly short on overcoming the details. Death came in crush corridors and gas clouds. When you’re inside the thing you fight, nobility and righteousness count for little in the immune system versus disease deathmatch.
"Come tomorrow,