Interrogation 3

“You’re moving to another facility tomorrow, puppy.”

At first you don’t understand. Your brain’s a bit hazy, with your head between her thighs and her taste lingering on your lips. And her fingers in your hair, again, longer than it was when you arrived. Not regulation.

“… I am?”

“Mhmm. Things are in motion. Your empire’s getting desperate, too,” a sharp-toothed grin, “maybe we’ll trade you for something good.”

“… oh.”

Read on … ( ~10 Min.)

Interrogation 2

“So,” you ask, “why am I still alive?”

She’s sitting at the little table outside your cell doing paperwork again. The Liberation has more paperwork than you ever suspected. “We disabled your mech’s countermeasures,” she says, not looking up. “About an hour before you spotted us, in fact.”

“That’s not what I meant—WAIT, an hour!? But I spotted you barely an hour into the patrol!”

“Yes,” she finally looks at you, smiling, “your command/control system is full of holes, dear.”

Read on … ( ~5 Min.)

Flesh-shaping

“Has anyone ever done this for you before?”

“No. Uh, a bit lower …”

Sparrow barely holds in a moan as their hands find the right spot on his shoulders. “Really? A cute morsel like you … well, I’m honored you chose me, then.”

“Um. Could you, uh.”

“Yes?”

“… u-use a different word. For me.”

“Oh, of course! What would you prefer?”

“U-um. Something, uh,” he hides in face in his hands, not that it matters much, “something masculine?”

Read on … ( ~4 Min.)

Interrogation 1

“… this is an abuse of power.”

“Is it?” She tilts her head, genuine curiosity flitting across her face. By now you know that she’s a perfect actor. On the table behind her, far out of reach, a bowl of soup—your dinner—congeals.

“Yes. There are rules for prisoners of war.”

“Hmm. No, I don’t think so.”

“It doesn’t matter what you—!”

She shushes you. When you’re able to breathe again she continues, “the purpose of power is in its exercise. It doesn’t care how it’s used. There’s no platonic ideal that I’m twisting out of shape, no laws written that matter more than how they are enforced. All hierarchy is unjust. That’s what this is about, dear.”

Read on … ( ~2 Min.)

Propaganda and Its Consequences

The first shot is cinematically wide, obviously an anamorphic lens with a slow aperture. Everything is in focus: the ruins of fallen skyscrapers. The rubble-strewn beach. The smoking carcasses of tanks and troop carriers, and the cloudless sky above. Silent except for the wind.

The ground shakes.

A massive machine strides out of the ocean, up the beach. Two-legged, four-armed, festooned with armor and shields; a massive claymore strapped to its back. The overall impression is a polished and heavily armed sphere, its sharp angles accented by red strips. Patriotic music swells.

Read on … ( ~12 Min.)

Swollen Glands

Lily’s jaw aches, just below the corners of her wide lips. A full sensation, more like a bloated stomach than a sore tooth. It’s been there all day, ever since she woke from a dream of delicious release, but in the last hour it’s grown near intolerable.

Read on … ( ~20 Min.)

Rue and Arlene, on Halloween

“Have I ever told you that I hate this time of year?”

“No, I don’t think so,” Rue swings her feet, kicking at the air; a tiny dinosaur and a harried zombie meander along the street three stories below. “You do?”

Arlene hums in reply, and glares at a giggling mass of sexy fruits. A bare-chested nurse runs after them, abs glistening in the fading light. “It’s just so surface.”

Read on … ( ~4 Min.)