Eight Minutes of Usable Daylight

A Short Story

Fiction & Literature, Short Stories, Science Fiction & Fantasy, Science Fiction, Fantasy
Cover of the book Eight Minutes of Usable Daylight by Peter M. Ball, Brain Jar Press
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Peter M. Ball ISBN: 1230003193341
Publisher: Brain Jar Press Publication: April 19, 2019
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Peter M. Ball
ISBN: 1230003193341
Publisher: Brain Jar Press
Publication: April 19, 2019
Imprint:
Language: English

There has been no daylight in Brisbane for five years, a hundred and twenty-three days, and fifteen hours. People have learned to adapt.

Mika makes his living hustling blackmarket daylight to Brisbane's rich and powerful, but he'd prefer to spend his days hanging out at his favourite cafe. When he gets his latest delivery of product, all he wants is enough cash to buy cup of real coffee and coast through the next few months of darkness. Then his little sister makes a request for half his product, because Pavio has built a machine that might be able to replace the long-vanished sun. All she needs is a little fuel to get things started, and the good sense to avoid the authorities who monitor the daylight trade.

Caught between profit, love for his sister, and fear for her safety, Mika needs to make a decision about how to use his stash...and then accept the consequences for what happens next.

Eight Minutes of Usable Daylight is the second short story in the Short Fiction Lab series from Brain Jar Press—home to stand-alone short story experiments in fantasy, science fiction, horror, and fabulist literature. This experiment has been filed under: weird dystopias; strange science; and mismatched siblings.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

There has been no daylight in Brisbane for five years, a hundred and twenty-three days, and fifteen hours. People have learned to adapt.

Mika makes his living hustling blackmarket daylight to Brisbane's rich and powerful, but he'd prefer to spend his days hanging out at his favourite cafe. When he gets his latest delivery of product, all he wants is enough cash to buy cup of real coffee and coast through the next few months of darkness. Then his little sister makes a request for half his product, because Pavio has built a machine that might be able to replace the long-vanished sun. All she needs is a little fuel to get things started, and the good sense to avoid the authorities who monitor the daylight trade.

Caught between profit, love for his sister, and fear for her safety, Mika needs to make a decision about how to use his stash...and then accept the consequences for what happens next.

Eight Minutes of Usable Daylight is the second short story in the Short Fiction Lab series from Brain Jar Press—home to stand-alone short story experiments in fantasy, science fiction, horror, and fabulist literature. This experiment has been filed under: weird dystopias; strange science; and mismatched siblings.

More books from Fantasy

Cover of the book Überlebende der Oberwelt: Sag niemals Nether by Peter M. Ball
Cover of the book Andòrax, Il marchio dell'albero Vol. 1 by Peter M. Ball
Cover of the book The Astro-Dragon by Peter M. Ball
Cover of the book Marked by Peter M. Ball
Cover of the book Cinder Ed and the Princess: A Twisted Cinderella Fairy Tale by Peter M. Ball
Cover of the book The Good, the Bad and Evil by Peter M. Ball
Cover of the book Legend of the Galactic Heroes, Vol. 2: Ambition by Peter M. Ball
Cover of the book Buso Renkin, Vol. 9 by Peter M. Ball
Cover of the book La Guerre des vampires by Peter M. Ball
Cover of the book Racconti Oscuri by Peter M. Ball
Cover of the book Casually Cursed by Peter M. Ball
Cover of the book Mammon by Peter M. Ball
Cover of the book bevu bella by Peter M. Ball
Cover of the book Skulduggery Pleasant 2 - Das Groteskerium kehrt zurück by Peter M. Ball
Cover of the book Foreverland by Peter M. Ball
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy