New Siqdor
by Stephen J. Carter
GENRE: Sci-fi
BLURB:
The environmental
stilling on the planet of Nebura escalates, threatening to advance even beyond
the world-girding storm ring. Meanwhile, Levrok's plan to arm a resurgent
Siqdori Empire with a tulvar arsenal nears completion, and his departure
off-world is imminent. Two survivors' groups join forces as events spiral out
of control.
"NEW
SIQDOR" is the 2nd book in the “Zero Point Light” SF series, and delivers
a thrill ride of untold mayhem, hair-raising escapes, space colonization gone
awry, and a descent to the ocean floor and beyond!
EXCERPT:
Wahid turned to Levrok. “My men will
correct this minor irritation, sir.
Would you care to see the reports on the advance of the stilling?”
“No, I would not. I suggest you
correct this irritation.”
“Sir, the line maintenance bots will
be on hand within minutes. I swear it.”
Levrok again regarded his lieutenant
as he had in the vehicle, with that unsettling mixture of detachment and
clinical curiosity.
“Don’t use the bots, Wahid.”
Wahid nodded, his face a mask. He
turned to the man at the controls and ordered him into the pool. The man’s face
drained of color. Wahid took three steps towards the man and spoke softly. The
man nodded once, removed the holo-array and set it on the console. He stepped
back, saluted crisply, turned and moved to the side of the pool. In one smooth
movement he lowered himself in, the black liquid reaching to his waist.
Rippling spasms could be seen moving up his back and out his arms. His face
remained impassive, showing none of the pain that must be galloping through his
body. He had turned away and was walking across the pool, stepping carefully
between immersed cubes. He moved with a calm deliberation along a clear
channel, like a farmer in his furrow among well-tended crops. He had reached
the end of the tracking line and was removing a cube that had fallen sideways
and jammed the line. He lifted it out and placed it, almost tenderly, into its
immersion slot.
The man began moving back to the
deck. When he reached the side he could not lift himself out – he could barely
stand. Wahid nodded at two men nearby. They stepped forward and hauled him out.
He lay on the parapet, his legs and lower body contorted, twisting before their
eyes into a shrunken, gnarled gnome-like caricature of limbs. The man still had
not uttered a whisper of complaint. The contorting spasms reached up into his
chest, his back arched, and his body lapsed into a violent last-ditch struggle.
In the seizure that followed his rigid arms and legs spasmed up and down.
Levrok stepped back, calmly
returning his attention to the tracking line, as it resumed depositing cubes in
their slots. The man’s body finally stopped its staccato tattoo.
His voice husky with suppressed
excitement, Levrok turned to his lieutenant.
“Let’s see those stilling reports,”
he said pleasantly.
Wahid turned to his master. “Of
course, sir.”
As they walked back along the deck,
Levrok idly wondered what Wahid had said to the man before he entered the pool.
AUTHOR BIO:
Stephen
J Carter is a Canadian writer living in Chiang Mai, Thailand. He completed a
PhD in Social and Political Thought at York University in Toronto in 1997. This
led to an 8-year period of teaching at universities in South Korea, Taiwan, and
Thailand. In 2006 he settled in northern Thailand, and began writing fiction
full-time in 2007.
In
his early years he made several short-term forays into film and video
production while involved full-time in academia. Along the way he tried his
hand at writing non-fiction in and out of academia, and 8 years ago finally
committed full-time to writing fiction.
For
Stephen there is something about this northern Thai city that makes it a
perfect place to write. His preferred genres to date have been horror and
science fiction. On the one hand, he sets his horror novels in Thailand
because Thais have such vivid customs that touch the supernatural. On the other
hand, disheartened by the cultural Marxism that dominates social discourse now
in the West, he feels drawn to writing science fiction for the rational
optimism over possible futures it affords. Approaching SF formerly as pure
escapism, he finds in it now a source of hope and forward thinking that can be
very inspiring.
Stephen
looks forward to writing several more novels in his two current series, Zero
Point Light and Z Inferno.
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13 comments:
Congrats on you release!
If you could share a meal with any 4 individuals, living or dead, who would they be?
I enjoyed the excerpt.
I really enjoyed the excerpt. Thank you for sharing your new book!
I enjoyed the excerpt, thank you for sharing!
Thank you for the interesting excerpt.
Hi Ran, thanks!
Hello Mai, nice to meet again. I guess the 4 dinner guests would be Henry Miller (a modernist writer), Patrick O'Brian, J.R.R. Tolkien, and Bernard Cornwell (2 historical & 1 fantasy writer). All the best!
Thanks Rita! ...
I'm glad you enjoyed it, Ree Dee ...
Thanks Betty. It's a bit dark, but it's near the climax when the antagonist's malice is at its height. LOL All the best! ...
You're welcome. I apologize for how dark it is. It's the climax, good triumphs in the end! ... All the best.
Thanks very much to Avid Reader for hosting my book! Wishing you a happy 2016!
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