The Parliament of Ghosts

welcome to the world of jokes

Fiction

The Iron Heart Cyclex, Book 1: Cyber Security

I haven’t updated in a while, I know. I want to, but every time I start trying to write something, I get depressed. I mean, come on, the only thing inaccurate about my Presidential Negotiation Flowchart was that it wasn’t pessimistic enough. I literally can’t find anything interesting or clever to say about the current political climate and how fucked we are. I can’t even get overly sober about the whole thing to highlight its importance via a contrast to my usual tone. So I’m just giving up. Time to make my way in the world some other way.

That way? Pandering to nerds. If a racist hack like Jim Butcher can do it, why can’t a slightly less racist hack like myself do the same? So I have. Prepare yourself for the steampunk horror fantasy action cop noir opus of the century: the Iron Heart Cyclex. It’s a tale of a man coming to terms with what it means to be human…with a Lovecraftian twist! So enjoy, or don’t, I really don’t care anymore.

(more…)

Defensive Endings

He sat in his Minneapolis hotel room, staring at the silver trophy in the shape of an extruded star before him. It was polished to a mirror sheen, and in it he could see his distorted face, still dirty from the game. Across his reflected face were etched the words:

Pete Rozelle
Trophy

Super Bowl XXVI

Most Valuable Player

John Offerdahl

He just kept looking at it, like a fish trying to comprehend a submarine. It didn’t seem real to him. But this had been a season of unreality for him. Charles Haley had had a career year, blowing away Mark Gastineau’s record of 22 sacks by a full 7 on the season. That was amazing. Unless you looked up at the number one spot on the sack list: John Offerdahl (MIA) – 102.

102.

It was difficult for him to comprehend that number. There were so many numbers that were difficult for him to comprehend: 15-0-1, the record of the Miami Dolphins in a year they weren’t expected to go much above .500. 7, the number of sacks he had in the Super Bowl. 2, the number of fumbles he forced in the Super Bowl. It wasn’t that he didn’t believe it had happened, it was just that he didn’t believe he had done it. Nothing had made sense this season.

You would think after the first few games, after blowing away the single-season sack record barely a quarter of the way through the season, the offenses would adjust. They’d change their looks, or double team him, or have somebody fill the hole between the center and left guard he busted through every time, but they didn’t. The linesmen would fall into their blocks against the defensive ends and nose guard, and he would just slip from his linebacker position through two of them, get a yard or two into the backfield, and then cut towards the quarterback. If there was a running back, he would wait until Offerdahl was well into the pocket before even attempting a block, and all he needed to do was make a quick move to totally avoid that.

Don Shula coached entirely against the run; he trusted that Offerdahl would take care of the pass. And while sometimes a breakdown in coverage would occur quickly enough the quarterback could get the pass off before Offerdahl was in his face, the majority of the time a pass play had no chance. Which isn’t to say that Offerdahl was ineffective against the run; generally on any run up the middle he’d meet up with the fullback right in the running lane and the back would just try to push forward, making no cut, just bouncing off and running into his lead blocker again and again in hopes it would help him secure the block. But over half the time, Offerdahl would knock the lead blocker down and just stuff the run for a 1 or 2 yard loss. He had, in the offseason, become the greatest defensive player to ever play the game.

So why wasn’t he happy? Why couldn’t he feel anything at all? He kept staring at the trophy, at the blocky, distorted reflection of his face. It wasn’t like he wasn’t a good football player; he’d made the Pro Bowl every year so far, and he had the career tackles record at WMU. It was just that he wasn’t this good. Nobody was this good. He had found the peak of human achievement, and then just blown it out of the water.

John Offerdahl knew that he was a talented athlete and a good enough guy, but he wasn’t beyond the peak of human perfection. Something had conspired to do this, and he had been a part of it. Maybe not a willing actor, but he had played his role perfectly, and so had everyone else. He had free will, though, and he wasn’t going to let something control him.

As he slid the pistol into his mouth, he thought of his wife, whose name he couldn’t remember, and the restaurant he’d dreamed of opening after he retired. If it was going to happen, it wasn’t going to happen in this world. Nothing else was.

John Offerdahl, the greatest defensive football player ever, was found dead in his hotel room at 4:27 AM on January 27th, 1991 by a member of the Mighty Bombjack Show.

The T.R.I.A.L.

Someone must have slandered Josef K., for one morning, without having done anything wrong, he was arrested. His landlady, Frau Grubach, had a cook who brought him breakfast each day around eight, but this time she didn’t appear. That had never happened before. K. waited a while longer, watching from his pillow the old woman who lived across the way, who was peering at him with a curiosity quite unusual for her; then, both put out and hungry, he rang. There was an immediate knock at the door and a man he’d never seen before in these lodgings entered. He was slender yet solidly built, and was wearing a fitted black jacket, which, like a traveler’s outfit, was provided with a variety of pleats, pockets, buckles, buttons, and a belt, and thus appeared eminently practical, although its purpose remained obscure.

The purpose of the semi-automatic Luger pistol under his arm was entirely clear, though, and with the sight of this weapon K. sprung from his bed, hurling the sheets he had prior been resting in at this intruder, who was undoubtedly one of the agents sent by the T.R.I.A.L. The tangle of sheets provided an interdiction between the man and K., who took the opportunity provided by this invisibility to roll to his desk and grab the FN Model 1910 he kept concealed there. A gesture from K.’s thumb unlocked the weapon’s safety, and while stretched out upon the ground quite plainly in his nightwear, he stuck the pistol forward in both hands and twice depressed the trigger, creating two neat holes in the sheet that still fluttered in the air between himself and the man who had dared intrude upon him. He heard a body fall to the floor, and as the sheet that had provided him cover floated to the ground, he saw his aim had been true, and upon the ground lay the man in the fitted black jacket, now shining from the bloodstain that was creeping across from the two wounds K. had created in the stranger’s left breast, a half-drawn pistol lying on the ground next to his rapidly cooling body.

A short cry came from the adjoining room; it was hard to tell whether more than one person had joined in. K. took no risks, though, and slid open the drawer where he kept his always-loaded pump-action Winchester shotgun, grabbing it and nestling himself inside the crook of his desk . “It’s impossible!” came a voice from the adjoining room, though he could not have known whether the shots were from his now-dead partner or K. “This means I was to be taken alive,” thought K., “and although this provides me with some advantage, I cannot be sure if I have forfeited it with my actions.” A heavy boot smashed the door inward, and through it entered the partner, his own luger drawn at the ready. His eyes scanned the plain room for K., but K. had the tactical advantage and was in motion before the man had even spotted his frame beneath the desk. He fired off two shots and the man’s body jerked to the side, where it fell upon the corpse of his partner, equally dead. K. edged towards the open door, and peeked around into the hall. For a moment, he saw the head of Frau Grubach poking out of her room, and when her eyes met his, she pulled her head back in and shut the door, though not before sneaking a shaky glance at the door two rooms down from his. K. immediately realized someone was in there, someone who Frau Grubach was more worried by than himself. Still, he heard no commotion, so he assumed he had a moment to put on his pants and affix his pistol holster to his belt. He slid the clip out of his FN and replaced it with a full one before holstering it, then threw two more clips from his desk drawer in his jacket pocket and cocked his shotgun before opening the door to the empty room next door.

Two double doors led from this room to the next, and they were already open. As K. well knew, this room had been occupied not long ago by a certain Fraulein Burstner, a typist, who usually left for work quite early and came home late, and with whom K. had exchanged no more than a few words of greeting. Now the nightstand by her bed had been shoved to the middle of the room for cover and he could see the barrel of a MP18 pointed straight at him. Holding it was the inspector undoubtedly sent to conduct an inquiry. K. had but moments to react as the muzzle of the weapon began to spit fire and bullets, but he managed to throw himself out of the arc of fire provided by the door, trailed in his flight by a line of tiny explosions throwing up splinters of wood and destroying a tea set that had been placed on the small coffee table he leaped over to find cover.

“Josef K.?” the inspector asked, perhaps simply to distract K.’s attention from the sound of him affixing a new drum to his submachine gun. K. grunted something like assent. “You’re no doubt greatly surprised by this morning’s events?” asked the inspector. “Of course,” said K., overcome by a feeling of relief at finally having a chance to discuss his situation and find out more information, “of course I’m surprised, but by no means greatly surprised.” “Not greatly surprised?” asked the inspector, sliding the bolt of his weapon into place with a soft click. “Perhaps you misunderstand me,” K. hastened to add, for he had to act quickly before any additional backup arrived. “I mean–” here K. interrupted himself, grabbing onto a wheeled steel chair next to him and kicking off against the wall, his momentum carrying him across the door way. The inspector was surprised by this sudden movement, and before he could pull his trigger, K. had already unloaded a shotgun blast that only the nightstand prevented from ripping apart the inspector’s midsection. K. cocked his shotgun again and fired once more, but the inspector had ducked behind the nightstand, so the bed and window behind where his head had been moments before took the brunt of the damage, throwing up stuffing and shattering glass. As he slid across to the other side of the door, K. rolled off of the chair and pushed his back up against the wall between himself and Fraulein Burstner’s room. “I mean,” K. continued without further pause, “I’m of course greatly surprised, but when you’ve been in this world for thirty years and had to make your way on your own, as has been my lot, you get hardened to surprised and don’t take them too seriously. Particularly not today’s.” “Why particularly not today’s?” “I’m not saying I think the whole thing’s a joke, the preparations involved seem far too extensive for that. All the lodger at the boardinghouse would have to be in on it, and all of you, which would go far beyond a joke. So I’m not saying it’s a joke.” “That’s right,” said the inspector, leaning over the nightstand with his shoulders tense, waiting for K.’s return attack. “But on the other hand,” K. continued, and suddenly the chair came flying across the open doorway again, but the Inspector was ready for it and opened fire. Too late, he realized the trick, for K. had placed upon the chair not himself, but rather an ottoman wearing his long cloak to create the illusion, and a shotgun blast caught the inspector along his right side, knocking him to the floor. K. ran into the room, his Winchester still smoking, and jumped upon the inspector, kicking away the MP18 and roughly driving the other boot into his chest, pointing his shotgun’s barrel at the inspector no more than six inches from his head. “On the other hand, it can’t be too important a matter. I conclude that from the fact that I’ve been accused of something but can’t think of the slightest offense of which I might be accused. But that’s also beside the point, the main question is: Who’s accusing me? What authorities are in charge of the proceedings? Are you officials?” He shoved the barrel of the weapon closer into the inspector’s face, and he blanched. “You misunderstand,” said the inspector, “we are but marginal figures in your affair, and in fact know nothing about it. I can’t report that you’ve been accused of anything, or more accurately, I don’t know you have. You’ve been arrested, that’s true, but that’s all I know. If, as a result, I can’t answer your questions either, I can at least give you some advice: think less about us and what’s going to happen to you, and instead think more about yourself. And don’t make such a fuss about how innocent you feel; it disturbs the otherwise not unfavorable impression make. And you should talk less in general; almost everything you’ve said up until now could have been inferred from your behavior, even if you’d said only a few words, and it wasn’t terribly favorable to you in any case.”

K. stared at the inspector. Was he to be lectured like a schoolboy by what might well be a dying man? To be reprimanded for his openness? And to learn nothing about why he had been arrested and on whose orders? He grew increasingly agitated, and tightened his grip on the shotgun. “If you know nothing,” said K., “then you at least know to whom you report. Very well then, go back to them and relay this message: I am not under arrest, and they may think to put me on trial, but I will be coming for them. They have made a mistake, for while I am not guilty, I am most certainly not innocent.” K. took the shotgun away from the man’s face in a quick motion and pointed it and his hand and fired, turning it into a mangled clump of meat. The inspector cried out in pain, clutching the bloody stump, and K. roughly hauled him to his feet by the collar. He dragged the man to the front door and kicked him out into the street, throwing the man’s hard bowler after him with a disdainful flick of the wrist. “You tell anyone who cares to know that if they wish to find me, I will be at work, going along with my life as this had never happened, and it would be in their best interests to behave the same.

“If not, they will be the ones on trial.”

The Parliament of Ghosts

If one views the human condition as a giant prisoner’s dilemma, then politics is the means through which the deal is offered. It is through politics, the act of making people make choices about exactly how much they value their own rights (a lot) in comparison to other people’s rights (not so much) that we can really delve into the way the human mind works.

The adoption of the Parliament of Ghosts was meant to change this, but, in practice, very little changed. In fact, things arguably became worse. What if the only certain path to immortality was through an election? What lies would people tell, if the reward was never to die? Interestingly enough, the Parliament’s founders seem to have cared little for this possibility; instead they simply hid themselves away as the inaugural members of a new, immortal ruling class of minds in a machine, free to deliberate upon the matters of the day in a sea of pure thought.

Of course, a government is powerless without he consent of the people it governs. Therefore, the citizenry must be given the ability to affect this august body through elections. Otherwise, it would be impossible for each new generation to accept the legitimacy of a government their parents created. So the Parliament gains two new members every year, elected from the populace after a year of difficult campaigning that begins the day after the previous year’s elections. Two people, selected by their peers, represent the influence of the newest generation upon the giant machine that houses the minds of all those elected since the Parliament’s inception.

Some argue that the Parliament is inherently unfair, as mathematics would seem to hold out that each subsequent election has less influence on the composition of the Parliament than the previous, but older members seem surprisingly flexible, and an proposition that was one year denied by the parliament will be taken up after the following year’s overwhelming public response in favor, generally defined by the election of a candidate who makes the issue the core of his campaign. In this manner, the Parliament more resembles direct democracy than most governmental systems. Each election is more of a referendum on the issues of the day, as embodied by the candidates, than a traditional election. Of course, there are some issues that rarely come up, particularly issues regarding the regulation of corporate interests. Running a huge, national campaign requires a great deal of money, and the donors still keep certain things from the general dialogue during the campaign. Still, corruption is not considered an issue–what influence can money have on someone who does not need to worry about re-election?

One interesting provision within the constitution of the Parliament is that a citizen cannot again run for the Parliament if he or she has already run and lost. It is unsure why this provision was constituted, as it only raises the stakes for the candidate to nearly unreasonable levels. If you spent your entire life working towards immortality, and you only had one shot, how cautious would you be? Losing candidates often totally retire from public life, many of them going into the Church: one life of immortality denied, they move their investment from a certain eternity to an uncertain one. And the connections accrued from a lifetime of service are valuable even after a failed bit for the Parliament, so the Church’s forgiveness extends quite a bit beyond the usual limits when a former candidate offers to join.

With the rules of the Parliament and the election of its members such as they are, imagine, if you will, a candidate who has spent his whole life working towards this goal, and who has finally achieved it. Imagine the party he throws, the balloons that drop, the enthralled supporters who have made a difference by getting this politician elected. Imagine him hugging his wife and children, tearfully, knowing he will outlive them, but knowing that he goes to a higher calling, an eternal life of servitude to the people. Imagine the inauguration day, when he delivers his speech along with the other member of his Parliamentary class, when he makes promises and looks forward to helping those brave citizens who worked so hard to get him elected. Imagine his awe as he is ushered into the Chamber of Parliament, a vast white room dominated by a silent monolith with blinking lights and panels and all sorts of technological-looking devices, the purposes of which are beyond him. Imagine his pleasant surprise when the executive of one of his chief donors is there to meet him. And imagine his unpleasant surprise when he and his fellow classmate are both executed by the Steward of the Parliament, who takes their bodies and throws them in the furnace behind the false front of machinery, to make them eternal members of the Parliament of Ghosts.