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Aggressor Six

Page 21

by Wil McCarthy


  Our empire stopped expanding

  And

  We stayed that way for a long time

  Long time

  Long time

  We heard voices

  Once

  From deep in the Core

  But

  They were so far away

  And

  We heard them only briefly

  Before they were gone

  #

  The great, slow tides of the galaxy

  Began

  To

  Tear our empire apart

  To stretch it

  To smear it

  We scarcely noticed

  We scarcely noticed

  Not a youthful race any longer

  We had ceased even to dream

  #

  And then you people came along

  With your crazy chattering

  With your crazy chattering

  Less distant from the empire

  Than the empire is wide

  We were very surprised

  #

  We sprayed warships into existence1

  And tried hard to remember

  How to fight

  We wanted to put on a powerful display

  This time

  We wanted there to be no question

  This time

  About who was stronger

  But when we got here

  You did not surrender

  In fact you fought us

  Better than we thought you could

  Not very well

  Not very well

  But better than we expected

  #

  We began to wonder

  You did not seem stupid

  To us

  And yet you fought us

  When

  You knew you could not win

  How strange

  We began to wonder if

  Perhaps

  We had made a mistake

  #

  We would have killed you all

  Just to be sure

  But now you have surrendered

  And we are glad

  We depart now, depart now

  to contemplate our mistake

  1 (This phrase is a peculiar artifact of the J-T translation. Most versions render this as “We assembled a fleet of war.”)

  APPENDIX B:

  HISTORICAL TIMELINE

  Note: If the images in Appendices B and C are not easily readable on your ebook reader, you may download a PDF of them at: http://ReAnimus.com/authors/wilmccarthy/a6appendices.pdf

  APPENDIX C:

  ASTRONOMICAL CHARTS

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  Engineer/Novelist/Journalist/Entrepreneur Wil McCarthy is a former contributing editor for WIRED magazine and science columnist for the SyFy channel (previously SciFi channel), where his popular "Lab Notes" column ran from 1999 through 2009. A lifetime member of the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America, he has been nominated for the Nebula, Locus, Seiun, AnLab, Colorado Book, Theodore Sturgeon and Philip K. Dick awards, and contributed to projects that won a Webbie, an Eppie, a Game Developers' Choice Award, and a General Excellence National Magazine Award. In addition, his imaginary world of "P2", from the novel LOST IN TRANSMISSION, was rated one of the 10 best science fiction planets of all time by Discover magazine. His short fiction has graced the pages of magazines like Analog, Asimov's, WIRED, and SF Age, and his novels include the New York Times Notable BLOOM, Amazon.com "Best of Y2K" THE COLLAPSIUM (a national bestseller) and, most recently, TO CRUSH THE MOON. He has also written for TV, appeared on The History Channel and The Science Channel, and published nonfiction in half a dozen magazines, including WIRED, Discover, GQ, Popular Mechanics, IEEE Spectrum, and the Journal of Applied Polymer Science. Previously a flight controller for Lockheed Martin Space Launch Systems and later an engineering manager for Omnitech Robotics, McCarthy is now the president and Chief Technology Officer of RavenBrick LLC in Denver, CO, a developer of smart window technologies. He lives in Colorado with his family.

  Find more books by Wil McCarthy at http://ReAnimus.com/authors/wilmccarthy

 

 

 


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