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Abraham Daniel - Inside Straight

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A new generation of aces comes of age as twenty-one of them compete against each other in a series of tasks and stunts on the blockbuster TV reality show American Hero, and John Fortune, son of the shows creator, discovers his destiny.
Abstract: A new generation of aces comes of age as twenty-one of them compete against each other in a series of tasks and stunts on the blockbuster TV reality show American Hero, and John Fortune, son of the shows creator, discovers his destiny

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Contents

THE RETURN OF WILD CARDS

Originally begun in 1987, long before George R. R. Martin became a household name among fantasy readers (The American Tolkien Time magazine), the Wild Cards series earned a reputation among connoisseurs for its smart reimagining of the superhero idea. Now, with Inside Straight, the Wild Cards continuity jumps forward to a new era.

INSIDE STRAIGHT

A Wild Cards Mosaic Novel

Edited by George R. R. Martin,

with the assistance of Melinda M. Snodgrass

and written by

Daniel Abraham

Melinda M. Snodgrass

Carrie Vaughn

Michael Cassutt

Caroline Spector

John Jos. Miller

George R. R. Martin

Ian Tregillis

S. L. Farrell

To Kay McCauley, ace agent,

who always deals us

winning hands


<< || next >>

DANIEL ABRAHAM

Jonathan Hive

1: Who the fuck was Jetboy? Posted Today 1:04 am

HISTORY, JETBOY | REFLECTIVE | THESE ARE THE FABLESTHE NEW PORNOGRAPHERS

Who the fuck was Jetboy?

My grandfather tried to tell me when I was too young. I didnt get it. A flying ace, he said, from before there was the wild card. I could never get my head around that. How could you have any acemuch less one who flewbefore there was the wild card? And that all happened back during the Great Depression, which was right before Napoleon who took over after Rome fell. My grandfather hadnt kissed a girl yet when Jetboy died. That was forever ago.

My sense of history has gotten a little more nuanced since then. I know there was a Middle Ages, for instance. I understand that women existed before Christina Ricci, though Im still not entirely sure why they bothered. Ive read all the underground R. Crumb comics about the Sleeper. My dad told me stories about the Great and Powerful Turtle. My fifth grade babysitterwho smoked pot and sometimes forgot to wear her bratold me lurid tales about Fortunato, the pimp ace who got his powers from sex. I saw Tarantino recycle all the tropes of Wild Card Chic, trying like a lifeguard on amphetamines to breathe new life into them.

When I drew my ace, I thought it was the coolest thing ever. I wasnt Jonathan Tipton-Clarke. I was Jonathan motherfuckin Hive . I was hot shit. I was the kid who really could sting like a bee. Let me assure all of you out there that nothing but nothing stops bullies picking on you like being able to turn into your equivalent mass of small wasplike stinging insects; it shuts those rat bastards down . I figured I didnt need to go to school or worry about how a swarm of wasps was going to pay for an apartment. I was sixteen and an ace. I was God.

Maybe that was why Grandpa always wanted to talk about Jetboy. Jetboy, who didnt have any powers. Jetboy, who tried to stop the wild card from coming into the world and failed.

Jetboy (I thought, through all my youth and adolescence and most of my adulthood to date) was a great big loser who died half a century ago. But heres the thing: He was a hero to my grandfather, and my grandfather was not a stupid man.

When Grandpa started junior high, there were no aces in the world. When he started high school, there were. He was alive when the virus hit. He read about the 90 percent that drew the black queen. He heard rumors of the first jokers back when people still hid them away like theyd just crawled out of a David Lynch flick. And he saw the first aces. Golden Boy. The Envoy.

How can I imagine that change? How do I, or anyone in my generation, put my mind back to think what it would have been like in a world without jokers, much less a jokers rights movement? A world where we didnt think that aliens existed? Where phones had actual dials, and no one locked their car doors?

Its hardits always been hardto look back at that kind of simplicity and ignorance and not sneer. We know better now. We know more . We were raised on President Barnett. We saw pictures from the Rox war. We always knew that if we happened to be around when two aces started fighting each other, they might bring the building down, or cut us down with laser eye beams, or turn us to stone without even meaning to; we could die at any time, in any way, and there was no way to protect against it. You couldnt expect us to get choked up over a guy who fell off a blimp before our parents were born.

Most people my age think of history as being divided into two essential halves: before the Internet and after. But there was a shift before that, and maybe there have always been shifts, back through history. Maybe every generation has seen the world change forever, and we dont know only because we werent there.

Ace or not, I grew up. I went to college. I got a degree and trust fund that Im rapidly spending down. I write a few magazine articles, and Im working on a novel. Im an ace, and thats great. But Im a journalist, tooor will be when I catch a break. Being able to turn into wasps wont help me meet deadlines or pick the right words or forgive a cent of my electric bill. So, maybe what Grandpa was trying to tell me sunk in after all. Or maybe I missed his point and made up one of my own.

Heres the best Ive got, folks:

Jetboy was the end of a world. He was the last man to die before the wild card came, and his age died with him. He is a symbol whose meaning I will never understand, except in the way Ive come to understand King Arthur, JFK, and all the other beautiful losers of history. He will never mean to me what he did to my grandfather, and not because Im more sophisticated or smarter or more jaded. Its just that the worlds moved on.

To me, Jetboys a reminder that there have always been peoplea fewwho fought for things that mattered. And (cue the violins, kids) that maybe being a hero isnt just about whether you win. Maybe its also about whether you die memorably.

Hows that for a Hallmark moment?

2 COMMENTS | POST COMMENT


Dark of the Moon

Melinda M. Snodgrass

SOMEWHERE OFF TO HER right gunfire erupted.

Anywhere else in the world people would flee that sound, but here in Baghdad it was just one theme in the symphony of celebration. The sharp chattering of a machine gun set a high-pitched counterpoint to the deep bass booms of rockets. A shower of golden sparks hung in the night sky, and edged the needle-like spires of minarets like a benediction. The sparks seemed to fall in slow motion. The light from the fireworks briefly lit the faces of the crowd. Men whirled and danced. Tears glinted on their cheeks, and their mouths stretched wide as they chanted for their Caliph.

Kamal Farag Aziz, the new president of Egypt, had come to Baghdad to submit himself to the Caliph and make his nation one with Syria, Palestine, Iraq, Jordan, and Saudi Arabia, under the restored caliphate. In Cairo, Baghdad, Damascus, East Jerusalem, and Mecca, the masses celebrated. In Lebanon, Qatar, and Kuwait, the leaders of the few remaining sovereign Arab states were shivering.

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