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Synopsis
When Lex Alexander called upon his mad engineer friend for help creating a racing simulator, he expected to break a few track records. Instead, he broke time. To get the clock ticking again, he will need to travel to other timelines and alternate realities to pick up the lost pieces of his own world. Will he survive clashes with alternate versions of friends and foes? Or has time run out... literally.
Quantum Shift is the seventh book in the acclaimed Big Sigma series.
The only race Lex can’t afford to lose is the race against time.
Release date: July 11, 2023
Print pages: 366
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Quantum Shift
Joseph Lallo
The power plant of the hoversled rumbled. It was a precisely calibrated machine, gram for gram, watt for watt a match for every other hoversled in the class. The only things that could make a difference in a race were the tuning and the driver. And this one had one hell of a driver.
Lex rolled some dials on the rear of the yoke, shifting the plasma injection timing. The reactor complained. The heat spiked, but top speed ticked two more notches into the red. He could smell the seals in the closed loop of the reactor heating up. A tremor through the microhydraulics let him know the extra speed was robbing him of steering responsiveness. Every system in the hoversled was past its intended operational parameters. Every system but him. And since he was operating at top level, he knew what the sled could take. It wouldn’t blow. It wouldn’t even trip the safeties for another seventy-five seconds. And if he pulled the turns tight enough, the race would be over in seventy-three.
Sweat poured down his cheek. The sled had a cooling system. It was off. Only so much power to go around and he wanted it all for thrust and traction. A telltale honeycomb effect on the windscreen of the sled revealed that some sort of visual overlays were active, but they were doing little more than producing a strange, fuzzy visual artifact, a doubling of the struts and bodywork of the hoversled. They were ghosts, millimeter-accurate replays of prior runs on the track. The idea was he’d be able to see how far ahead he was in other runs, full representations of his sled superimposed onto their precise position on the track. But they were all stacked up on top of him. He was clocking within five milliseconds of his average time. His lip twitched into the hint of a grin. And there was still some slack.
The final turn was ahead. Too sharp to take at full speed, and he was going well beyond full speed. He angled the hoversled, leaning into the turn. It was the sort of maneuver that was really meant for motorcycles, things with physical contact with the ground. All it achieved in the hoversled was lifting half of his repulsors farther from the track and robbing him of traction. But you don’t set records by using the hoversled as intended. He took a hand from the steering yoke and tapped a preset on the HUD controls. A seldom-used metric appeared at the bottom of the collection of red-lined parameters: the repulsor capacitors. They took the place of shock absorbers in this system. He let them steadily charge. Lex chomped the double load of gum in his mouth. The timing was the only variable left. Too early and he’d drift off course at the inside of the turn and lose speed. Too late and he’d overshoot the outside of the turn and lose speed. But just right and…
He juiced the repulsors. They kicked the whole sled up and over. He took the turn without dropping out of the red and landed squarely on the ideal line. All the fuzziness in the viewscreen faded away. He was ahead of all the ghosts. He grinned and snapped his gum as he blasted past the finish line, and the final lap time blinked red on his screen with that fun little star beside it and the two words he’d been working toward for the last seven hours.
Track record.
Lex eased all the systems down from their warning state. Cutting-edge polymers and composites crackled and creaked like the rigging of a pirate ship. Every system on the hoversled would need maintenance. Exactly the way it should be. If you weren’t using it all, you weren’t using it at all, and you couldn’t expect to be the best.
His slidepad chirped as he guided the ailing hoversled off the track and toward the garages. He swiped the screen without looking.
“Lex,” he said.
“Lex. It’s Preethy. Why am I staring at your thigh?” she said.
“Because you won’t let us put hands-free slidepad connectivity into the competition hoversleds.”
“Given the number of collisions you and the other racers have with one another on the track, I do not think it is wise to leave that avenue for distraction open.”
He pulled the slidepad from his pocket and held it in a practiced grip against the steering yoke. “What’s up?” he said. The view of Preethy’s head was bobbing on the screen. He recognized one of the hallways of the office complex at the league headquarters. “Are you still doing meetings?”
“As I’d assumed we wouldn’t be having supper together until you were through on the track, I rescheduled some of tomorrow’s meetings to this evening to make use of the time. I had my assistant put a hook in the track’s time-trial database to give me a notification when a new record is set. It’s been a rather handy way to keep track of your activities. Are you aware you hold seven of the top ten times on the track?”
“Who keeps count?” he said.
“I do. As does my assistant. Are you aware you’ve spent thirty-five hours this week running time trials? And it is only Wednesday.”
“It’s my job.”
“Certainly it is, and I can tell you that the investors are delighted to see you honing your skills further. The higher the skill level in the league, the better the competition, the better the ratings, the better the advertising rates. You’re making me and the company a bundle, and the public relations are sparkling. But I can also tell you that your net improvement can be measured in milliseconds while your anxiety and fatigue have been ratcheting steadily higher. And while we have spare hoversleds in case you wear another one out, we only have one Trevor Alexander. And I’ve become rather attached to him.”
“This has got you worried about my health? Last time I counted, the total number of killer robots on that practice track is zero. This is practically a walk in the park.”
“Lex, you’re a gifted racer.”
“I’m a skilled racer. And skills need to be kept sharp.”
“This is about your standings, I presume.”
“Where am I in the standings?” Lex said.
“You and Kyle Byres have sixty points for the season.”
“Tied.”
“That is correct.”
“I’ve come in second three times this season. I finished outside the winner’s circle once. Mr. Rival has the same number of first-place finishes, and he’s never been outside the top three.”
“I’d like to point out that Kyle—”
“Don’t say his name,” Lex said with a wince. “I don’t want to hear it any more often than I have to.”
“Are you a toddler, Lex?”
“I’m a grown man with a grand total of a half second of track time across four races keeping me from losing the lead entirely. He’s a more consistent racer than me. So that means I need to get better.”
“He’s also six years younger than you, Lex.”
“You saying I’m losing my edge?”
“I’m saying you could retire tomorrow and be a legend of the sport. You could never win another race and your record to this point would stand the test of time. And that’s without any of your other exploits beyond the track. You have a life outside of racing. And presently the more important fact is you have a reservation tonight at the new Portuguese restaurant that opened this week. Eight p.m.”
“Pet friendly?”
“I believe they will be willing to make an exception in our case.”
“Looking forward to it. You want me to pick you up?”
“No. I’ll meet you there. Don’t be late. It’s been a long day, and I’m looking forward to a good meal and an early night.”
“That makes two of us.”
Two hours later, Lex was sipping wine over dessert. Squee, his pet who as far as the locals knew was an exotic dog, was draped over his shoulders like a mink stole. The little creature had stuffed herself with some very expensive beans and was teetering on the brink of sleep.
“Serradura. How have I lived my life for this long and never had any serradura?” he said, jabbing a spoon into the parfait he’d selected for dessert.
“It is rather delightful,” Preethy said. “Indulgent.”
“Yeah.” He scraped around the edge to catch as much of the current layer of the dessert as he could. “Speaking of indulging things, I was wondering if we could talk about that ‘exhibition race on demand’ thing I was talking about.”
Preethy’s face shifted to an expression Lex had never seen on anyone but her. It was a magic combination of “I’m humoring you” and “Must we go through this again?” with a sprinkle of “You rascal, you” to take the edge off. And she achieved it with little more than a subtle arch of her eyebrow. Linguists ought to be studying those eyebrows. They had their own language.
“That would be your plan to organize nonranked races at the drop of a hat, correct?”
“Yeah. It might be fun. You know. Unscheduled entertainment for people subscribed to the newsfeed.”
“Or, perhaps, a way for you to fill more of your day with training and practicing?”
“Can never get too much practicing, right?”
“You can when fielding a full track of racers costs three hundred million credits and unplanned races with no ticket sales or promotional work are nonearners.”
“Granted. That’s a problem. I get that.” He scooped another mouthful of pudding. “But I can only improve so much without competent racers to race against.”
“There are four more races in the season. And I have it on good authority from the CEO that you’re a shoo-in to have your contract renewed for next season.”
“CEO Misra is a good egg. And quite the looker. And has excellent taste in restaurants. But it’s not practice when it’s the real deal. I can’t get experimental with my techniques if a screwup costs me my place in the standings.”
“I believe that’s the source of excitement, isn’t it?” she said.
“Not for me, it isn’t. I’m not putting a losing season on my record after the long road back to the track.”
“It is mathematically impossible for you to finish below third place.”
“Second place is first loser, and third place is last place,” he said.
She took a sip of her dessert wine. “Lex, I admire your skill, and no one can question your drive. But I worry that your unconventional life has damaged your perspective somewhat. Life-or-death challenges have come along often enough that you seem to equate any failure as absolutely final. It would be a bit of a pot calling a kettle black to say that you work too hard, but there comes a point that you must trust you’ve done your due diligence and simply embrace the challenge when the challenge comes.”
“You’re starting to sound like Ma.”
“That’s a high compliment.”
“I just want to be the best I can. We only get one shot at this life, and I lost a couple of years of racing to a pile of stupid choices. You don’t make up for lost time by taking it easy.”
“As the years go by, you might find yourself defining lost time differently. But there is no sense butting my head against this any further. How can we solve your problem, then? I presume you’ve found the simulators inadequate?”
“They’re great. Fantastic even. Your hoversled sims are the second best I’ve ever used.”
“Second best? I was told they were the state of the art when we had them installed. There are no superior models available. Where did you experience a better one?”
“I got trapped in one being run by a potentially apocalyptic swarm of self-replicating robots under the control of a damaged AI. Sort of a one-off.”
“I see. At least our research team didn’t overlook a consumer solution. But it doesn’t scratch the itch?”
“The simulator’s settings have all these pesky safety limits to keep your brains from getting rattled out. The real world has real physics that I can use to get around them.”
“And loading up rival ghosts on the actual track when running practice laps?”
“Can’t actually swap paint with them. A real hoversled can nudge you around a turn or block the airstream or bump you from behind. It’s not the same.” He shook his head. “Look. Things fell apart with Michella because she couldn’t peel her brain away from the job for the duration of an entire meal. I’m not doing that to you. Right now is about you and me, not me and the track. What’s new outside of the league?”
“Depressingly little. If not for our meals together, I would have no social life. I haven’t even been able to see my uncle in months, and he’s on the board of directors for the league.”
“I never realized running a league would be so much work.”
“I imagine other leagues have a rather larger board. But it turns out when you field a successful and profitable assortment of racers almost entirely from those ejected from other leagues, the leagues who parted with them tend to respond negatively. The number of qualified staff that have been poached from us in just the last three months would be enough to run a normal league. I’ve been picking up a rather impressive amount of slack personally.”
“If you’re going to yell at me for working too hard, I’m going to yell at you for working too hard.”
“I am well aware, and it is well deserved. Four more races, Lex. Then things can be dealt with. When the season is through, there will be time enough to staff up, with a focus on providing superior benefits and compensation so that, at the very least, it will cost our rivals and their overeager recruiters much, much more to steal staff. A more carefully worded contract should help in that regard as well. But presently, in order to have time to make intelligent hires, I need to free up my schedule, and in order to free up my schedule, I need to make those hires.”
“It’s six days until the next race. What are you doing until then?”
“I’m scheduled to be off planet until the day before the race,” she said. “I’m leaving tomorrow afternoon. Hopefully after you and I meet for lunch.”
“You’re heading off planet, and you didn’t even ask me to be the chauffeur?”
“Would you have taken the time from your practice schedule?”
“No, but I would have made up a very compelling excuse, and you would have earned a consolation prize.”
“Ah, well. My loss. Though, I must admit, as thrilling as travel with you at the controls can be, the corporate ship does offer certain desirable amenities.”
“You haven’t had one of my special flights yet,” he said slyly.
“It would certainly be a pleasant change of pace to have a positive experience in zero-g to counterbalance the events in Indra Station.” She shuddered at the memory. “After the race season. Now, I believe it’s well past time we paid the check and headed home. Much to be done, and we’ll both think more clearly with a full night of sleep.”
Lex touched his slidepad to the security panel of his apartment door. His considerably more than professional relationship with Preethy was anything but a secret, but they both had decided to hold off on actually moving in together. Part of it was for the optics of the CEO of a racing league sharing a bed with its top racer. Part of it was… more complicated. Lex emptied his pockets onto the table beside the door. The engagement ring that had been intended for Michella sat in a dish at one corner of the table. No doubt a psychologist would have plenty to say about why it was there, but it didn’t take seven years of expensive schooling to figure out having a yearslong unrequited romance finally blossom and then ultimately fall apart had a way of making one hesitant to fully commit to a new relationship and fully let go of an old one.
He lifted Squee from his shoulders and carted her over to the couch. She scampered back onto his shoulders the moment he was sitting down. After she’d assaulted his ear with licks and tickly whiskers, he opened a drawer and revealed a slidepad with noseprints smeared across its screen.
“Squee, here’s your toy. Just keep the volume down, and don’t buy any more frozen burritos,” he said.
The adorable ball of fluff that had previously housed a supersophisticated AI rolled to her back, clutched the slidepad with her paws, and nosed at it until a wirefeed of a crowded dog park appeared. She stared in rapt interest at the cavorting of canines that were probably several star systems away.
“I should really cut down on your screen time,” Lex said, digging his own slidepad free. “But it’d be a little hypocritical, wouldn’t it?”
Man and beast let their minds settle into the comforting buzz of their chosen digital pablum. For him, it was songs he’d heard a thousand times by a band he didn’t even particularly like—Death Zone Dumpster—and reviews of the top-ten racers’ telemetries synchronized with his own.
“I don’t get it,” he said, scrutinizing the footage of his primary rival in frame advance. “He holds the line perfectly every time.” He flicked to the next turn and framed through it as well. “Turn after turn. Race after race. He’s following the perfect line. If he’s alone, it’s the mathematically perfect ideal line, or if there’s someone else—me—jockeying for position, he’s as close to it as physics will allow. It’s not just reaction time. It can’t just be reaction time. No one has reaction time that fast. He’s anticipating and correcting for things instantly.”
He brought up the postrace inspection certificate for the hoversled. “Nothing extra in the navigation system. Nothing bolted onto the steering rig. Everything in software is within standard tuning. Everything within the hardware is in standard tuning. No unusual transmissions. Just little quirky things. The guy rides the standby for the safety system a little hard. He’s threading the needle between racers at the speed of sound. You’d have to be either crazy or me to not be thinking about safety at those speeds.”
Lex’s mind swirled and bumped into the walls of his head. Simply being gifted wasn’t enough for that sort of result. And if the postrace and prerace inspections hadn’t turned up anything, then the only difference was… what? How was he doing it?
He swiped away the footage. It didn’t matter. If he couldn’t prove this guy was doing something shady, then he’d have to assume the only way to beat him was to sharpen himself to that same impossible razor’s edge. And he was almost there. The two of them were a match, on average. Lex had more wobble in his performance. That was it. If Lex could just drop a few more of the lows and add a few more of the highs, he could get at least one good, solid, satisfying, convincing win. But to do that, he would need practice. Not just simulator practice. At least, not with this simulator. And he couldn’t very well rope in a bunch of other racers to help him get practice on the real tracks. Getting random nobodies wouldn’t give him realistic opponents, and getting the real crew together (aside from being expensive) would also be giving them practice, which would rob him of some of the benefits.
What he needed was a better simulator. And a couple more weeks to practice on it. He flicked up his contact list. His thumb hovered over a contact.
“This is dumb, Lex,” he muttered to himself. “This never ends well. But, on the other hand, the alternative is potentially failing at the only job that’s ever really mattered to me.” He turned to Squee. “What do you think? Wanna go visit Mommy and Daddy?”
The funk’s ears perked up. She dropped the slidepad and scrambled up to sit attentively.
“See, now I have to do it. Can’t disappoint the cutie.”
He tapped a contact. After a moment of the connection negotiating, a choppy combination of three human voices answered.
“Lex. Always a pleasure to hear from you.”
“Hey, Ma. How are things?”
“Things have settled into a comfortable routine, periodically interrupted by brief pauses for Karter to heal, repair, or upgrade himself.”
“What’s been punching holes in Mr. Engineer?”
“Most recently, he fractured his two remaining synthetic vertebrae after a proposed upgrade to his modified inertial inhibitor applied excess torque to his torso. He is recovering well and now has cybernetic replacements. How are you?”
“My spine is intact, thanks for asking. I guess if he’s on the mend, he probably doesn’t have any time to work on a little side project for me.”
The audio crackled.
“It is him,” Karter said. “I thought the idiot was calling.”
“Lex is inquiring about your schedule. He may have a project for you,” Ma said.
“Oh? Did he get military funding or something so he can afford my services?” Karter said.
“No. I just figured, you know. For old times,” Lex said.
“Old times don’t pay for tritium. I need credits or services. No friends and family discounts.”
“Look, I’m not even asking you to make something new. If you don’t already have it, I probably can’t use it. My next race is in six days, and I’m hoping to get access to a simulator so I can drill some specific parts of the track so—”
“You think a couple days of simulations will make a difference?” Karter said.
“They’ll be better than nothing.”
“You don’t hire Karter Dee for things to be better than nothing. You hire Karter Dee to pervert the laws of physics to your petty whims. And it just so happens I have something that might fit the bill. Get down here and we’ll put it through its paces.”
“This isn’t one of those beta projects, is it? The Hall of Rejects?”
“Of course it is! Why would I need you to put it through its paces if it wasn’t under active development? Now get in that ship of yours and get down here so we can see what sort of effect it has on a human test subject.”
The audio crackled again.
“Ma? You still there?” Lex said.
“I am. But Karter has left the call and is heading for the development floor.”
“Give it to me straight. If I come down there, what are the odds I end up regretting it?”
“Exceedingly high. Karter’s social graces have degraded somewhat in the past few months.”
“All right. I’ll rephrase. What are the odds I’ll end up getting badly hurt?”
“I shall endeavor to ensure a high standard of safety. As such, I would place your odds of injury as mid-to-high.”
“For comparison, how would you place my odds of getting badly injured while racing?”
“Mid-to-high.”
“That settles it, then. No harm in giving the lunatic a chance to help me train. I’ll see you soon.”
“I eagerly anticipate the visit,” Ma said.
He tapped the slidepad to end the call and gave Squee a pat on the head. “What’s the worst that could happen?” he mused.
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