Igor Ljubuncic's Blog, page 6
January 24, 2020
The Golden Horde, Chapter 17
They needed rest. But they couldn’t rest. Not yet. Lip had probably recited these numbers a dozen times to “rookie” teams over the years—a lack of sleep was a powerful enemy. A full day without sleep rendered you 15% less efficient. Two days, it was 70%. Three days, you had one in three chance of injuring yourself with your own weapon. The longer you went without rest the more dangerous it became. They were all hurt, exhausted, and have not...
Published on January 24, 2020 04:00
January 17, 2020
The Golden Horde, Chapter 16
Lee Qiang came about to see a Chinese soldier bearing down on him. He instinctively reached for that which wasn’t there; his rifle was pinned under him, the strap torn off his harness. Without thinking, Lee Qiang pulled his pistol from his thigh holster and fired a dozen rounds into the man’s legs and groin. Whatever words or screams the East Alliance man may have uttered were lost in his sophisticated helmet-mask. There was a whole bunch of enemy soldiers...
Published on January 17, 2020 08:48
January 10, 2020
The Golden Horde, Chapter 15
Over many tens of thousands of years, human motor skills and reflexes evolved as a response to biological threats, long before any technology made things faster than neural signals could move the muscle tissue. The average response time to a visual stimulus is about three-quarters of a second, or half that for people who are alert. That does not sound like a lot until you take into account other factors, like rocket motors. A typical anti-tank missile flies at about...
Published on January 10, 2020 11:38
January 3, 2020
The Golden Horde, Chapter 14
Lee Qiang remembered his grandfather’s stories. He had been an electrical engineer working in the Middle East in the 1980s, dabbling in some rather expensive projects in Libya and Iraq, and then later, in the 1990s, in Afghanistan. Grandad would proudly boast, sober or drunk, that he’d been one of the few Polaks with a passport and an unrestricted travel visa back in the day, before the collapse of the Soviet bloc. And he had seen some rather gruesome things,...
Published on January 03, 2020 04:00
December 27, 2019
The Golden Horde, Chapter 13
Sveta walked with a funny, stilted gait. She must have been stiff from the ride in the boot—as Lip liked to call it—of the car, and probably nauseated from having her sensory deprivation. There was a scowl on her pretty face, mirroring the one on Lip’s chiseled, whiskered features. He was waiting impatiently for her to waddle over. The captain pointed at the large binoculars, resting on a solid tripod in the middle of an old industrial rubbish heap, half-buried...
Published on December 27, 2019 10:29
December 20, 2019
The Golden Horde, Chapter 12
A whimper. It was a sound that did not belong in his fitful dreams. Lee Qiang woke up, kicking the thin, camo-patterned top half of his space sleeping bag off him, rising, walking toward the source of the sound. For half a second, he felt disoriented and weak from low blood pressure before a rush of adrenaline made him alert and sharp. He wasn’t the only one to wake up, but he was the first to intercept the situation. Sergeant...
Published on December 20, 2019 04:00
December 13, 2019
The Golden Horde, Chapter 11
A woman? When you think you’ve seen everything. “Do not shoot,” she repeated. “Everyone, hold your fire,” Lee Qiang instructed over the comms, his mind on fire. “This could be important.” “Check,” Cem acknowledged. “On your knees!” Marc ordered. He spoke urgently but did not shout. She complied. Within seconds, Marc’s team was searching her, looking for explosives, beacons, hidden electronics, poisons, weapons. They undressed her, dressed her again in plain overalls, and strapped a...
Published on December 13, 2019 04:00
December 6, 2019
The Golden Horde, Chapter 10
An abandoned power plant. No. Not abandoned. “Turn around. We are going back.” Lip frowned. “Come again?” “Turn around. We are going back. I want to inspect that power plant we just passed,” Lee Qiang said. There was a moment of hesitation. “Why?” Lee Qiang rubbed a speck of dirt off the stock of his rifle. “I don’t think it’s abandoned.” Their eight cars left the gravel path, circled back, and started a slow, careful progress toward the power plant...
Published on December 06, 2019 08:42
December 4, 2019
The Binary Conundrum published by Electric Spec
Dear readers, here’s some good stuff. Electric Spec, an online speculative fiction magazine has published my short story The Binary Conundrum in their Volume 14, Issue 4. The story has a simple premise: To kill? Or not to kill? What if the question does not have an optimal answer? An AI system faces the dilemma even as the war against humanity draws to a close … “There,” Senior 9 communicated. Junior 48 focused on the transmitted coordinates. It didn’t have...
Published on December 04, 2019 08:36
Dear readers, here’s some good stuff. Electric Spec, an o...
Dear readers, here’s some good stuff. Electric Spec, an online speculative fiction magazine has published my short story The Binary Conundrum in their Volume 14, Issue 4. The story has a simple premise: To kill? Or not to kill? What if the question does not have an optimal answer? An AI system faces the dilemma even as the war against humanity draws to a close … “There,” Senior 9 communicated. Junior 48 focused on the transmitted coordinates. It didn’t have...
Published on December 04, 2019 08:36