The Universe Box
The Universe Box
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Author(s): Swanwick, Michael
ISBN No.: 9781616964504
Pages: 304
Year: 202602
Format: Trade Paper
Price: $ 26.15
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available (Forthcoming)

Excerpt from "Starlight Express" Flaminio the water carrier lived in the oldest part of the ancient city of Roma among the popolo minuto, the clerks and artisans and laborers and such who could afford no better. His apartment overlooked the piazza dell'Astrovia, which daytimes was choked with tourists from four planets who came to admire the ruins and revenants of empire. They coursed through the ancient transmission station, its stone floor thrumming gently underfoot, the magma tap still powering the energy road, even though the stars had shifted in their positions centuries ago and anyone stepping into the projector would be translated into a complex wave front of neutrinos and shot away from the Earth to fall between the stars forever. Human beings had built such things once. Now they didn't even know how to turn it off. On hot nights, Flaminio slept on a pallet on the roof. Sometimes, staring up at the sparkling line of ionization that the energy road sketched through the atmosphere, he followed it in his imagination past Earth's three moons and out to the stars. He could feel its pull at such times, the sweet yearning tug that led suicides to converge upon it in darkness, furtive shadows slipping silently up the faintly glowing steps like lovers to a tryst.


Flaminio wished then that he had been born long ago when it was possible to ride the starlight express away from the weary old Republic to impossibly distant worlds nestled deep in the galaxy. But in the millennia since civilization had fallen, countless people had ridden the Astrovia off the planet, and not one had ever returned. Except, maybe, the woman in white. Flaminio was coming home from the baths when he saw her emerge from the Astrovia. It was election week and a ward heeler had treated him to a sauna and a blood scrub in exchange for his vote. When he stepped out into the night, every glint of light seemed bright and every surface slick and shiny, as if his flesh had been turned to glass and offered not the least resistance to the world's sensations. He felt genuinely happy. Then there was a pause in the constant throb underfoot, as if the great heart of the world had skipped a beat.


Something made Flaminio look up, and he thought he saw the woman step down from the constant light of the landing stage. An instant only, and then he realized he had to be wrong.


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