Time, Space and Taxes
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Last Gasp – There is a saying that nothing in this life is certain except death and taxes. Can the future promise a utopia free from taxes and tyranny?
Infinite End – Adam Richardson is an undeniable genius; today his experiment is going to change the world. The problem is… it already has.
The Shadow Man – Detective Kate Reynolds is presented with an impossible locked room murder. With the help of her trusty cup of coffee, and partner, Richard Stana, can she solve the mystery? Can the murderer be found and justice served?
Ghost Advent – What if you had the power to change disasters that occurred in the past, would you do it? What would be the effect of making those changes? And how far would you go to save the past, present and future? For veteran NYPD policeman, Sam Redfield, these questions all come to a head in the shadow of September 11, 2001.
Little Boxes – Just what are little white boxes for? And why does, (nearly), everyone jump exactly 1 megron?
Fatality Factor – James Shepherd is a contestant on 'Fatality Factor', the latest reality show offering huge prizes for the winner, but for everyone else, death. Can he survive to the end to claim his prize?
It's all in your head – Do you believe in conspiracies theories? Harold Wilkins does, and he tells the world the truth via his website and books. But the latest theory Harold investigates is so obviously untrue… isn't it?
Game Unending – Young orphans Kyle Larkham and Jill Valerie love computer games, so when their orphanage announces a trip to Vortrax Software they are overjoyed. But what happens if the game is never actually over?
The Night of the Vampire Ninjas – Tongue firmly in cheek, we join Joshua Stone from W.A.T.C.H. as he saves the world, (again!), from evil vampire ninja's!
The Choice – As the New Year approaches, young runaway Jennifer Michaels is given a choice that will change her life forever.
Richard Bacon
Richard Mark Bacon BSc(Hons) Richard Bacon was born in Nottingham, England, where he still resides with his wife and daughter. Richard has had a keen interest in books and reading since an early age, as well as a highly active imagination. Now a 'grown up' he has begun writing down his ideas and is now almost constantly working on, or thinking about, new ideas and adventures. You can read Richard's work in the following books: 'Cinders - The True Legend', a modern retelling of the Cinderella story. 'Time, Space and Taxes', a collection of Science Fiction and Fantasy short stories. The short story 'Special Delivery' by Richard is also available within the 'Pocketful of Moondust' anthology for children published by Rebel Books LLP.
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Time, Space and Taxes - Richard Bacon
Copyright © 2011 Richard Mark Bacon,
Ivan Cronyn and Chris Preece
Smashwords Edition
This book is entirely a work of fiction. The names, characters locations and incidents portrayed are all the work of the author’s imagination. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events or localities is entirely coincidental.
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system without express written permission from the author.
This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, re-sold, hired out or otherwise circulated without the author's prior consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.
Cover image by Paul Tonner
Contents
Last Gasp
There is a saying that nothing in this life is certain except death and taxes. Can the future promise a utopia free from taxes and tyranny?
Infinite End
Adam Richardson is an undeniable genius; today his experiment is going to change the world. The problem is… it already has.
The Shadow Man
Detective Kate Reynolds is presented with an impossible locked room murder. With the help of her trusty cup of coffee, and partner, Richard Stana, can she solve the mystery? Can the murderer be found and justice served?
Ghost Advent
What if you had the power to change disasters that occurred in the past, would you do it? What would be the effect of making those changes? And how far would you go to save the past, present and future? For veteran NYPD policeman, Sam Redfield, these questions all come to a head in the shadow of September 11, 2001.
Little Boxes
Just what are the little white boxes for? And why does, (nearly), everyone jump exactly 1 megron?
Fatality Factor
James Shepherd is a contestant on ‘Fatality Factor’, the latest reality show offering huge prizes for the winner, but for everyone else, death. Can he survive to the end to claim his prize?
It’s all in your head
Do you believe in conspiracies theories? Harold Wilkins does, and he tells the world the truth via his website and books. But the latest theory Harold investigates is so obviously untrue… isn’t it?
Game Unending
Young orphans Kyle Larkham and Jill Valerie love computer games, so when their orphanage announces a trip to Vortrax Software they are overjoyed. But what happens if the game is never actually over?
The Night of the Vampire Ninjas
Tongue firmly in cheek, we join Joshua Stone from W.A.T.C.H. as he saves the world, (again!), from evil vampire ninjas!
The Choice
As the New Year approaches, young runaway Jennifer Michaels is given a choice that will change her life forever.
tmp_0505bb5e81c929ec16ccfe3de224d6e2_Oz4cPo_html_m4158cb84.pngBy Ivan Cronyn
Although they seem to have been first used by the Ancient Egyptians, around 3000BC, they weren't a permanent feature of life in the USA until 1913. Before the Fuel Wars of the early 21st century, before the Great Wars of the 20th Century, they were levied to pay for conflicts, and sometimes imposed on alcohol, slaves and other goods.
Taxes.
You have to admire the ability of governments to use the issues of the day to raise them. During war, they create war taxes, few of which are ever repealed. During peace-time governments need to be more creative, using energy scarcity (or surplus), population growth (or shrinkage), the cold winters (or the warm summers), and everything in between as an excuse to raise taxes.
In the late 20th century, people finally started realising that pumping CO2 into the air, chemical sludge into the sea, and salting the earth with heavy metals really wasn't a very clever idea. The politicians stepped up to the plate, agreeing with the noble sentiments, ready with their taxes that were going to save us all. Like beggars with machine-guns. Ratcheting up the burden.
Take transport, for example. You pay tax on the vehicle when you buy it, a tax when you sell it. Road tax each year for the privilege of using it. Most of the cost of fuel is made up of taxes of various kinds. Toll roads. Congestion charging. Taxes on parking. A per-mile tax on usage. Tax for building and maintaining the roads, taxes to pay for the public transport that few use because it's more expensive than private vehicles. Even a tax to pay for the cost of recycling the vehicle when you abandon it because you can't afford the taxes on it anymore.
Sometimes the wind here is so strong, it whistles around the houses. It sounds like voices, like screaming. Yes, it must be the wind.
Before the penal reforms of the early 20th Century, defaulting on tax payments made you just another debtor. Prisons weren't fun, but most survived them to re-build their lives again. We no longer put debtors in prison. We seize their houses and other assets. We confiscate their savings and freeze their bank accounts. We put permanent black marks on their credit rating. We force their companies to fire them, adding them to the shared corporate databases of people unsuitable for employment. We drive their families into poverty and shame. Suicide is common, but unlike the song's promise, seldom painless.
As the environment worsened and the sea-levels rose, the Green taxes began to mount. Penalties for contravening environmental agency regulations became steeper. Eco-terrorism, at first a label used by the media, was finally enshrined in the law in 2018. Surveillance, interception, detention, rendition, interrogation, execution. The legal tools first put in place against the suicide bombers were easily tweaked to include those accused of environmental damage. Curiously though, the worst polluters, large corporations and government agencies, were seldom targeted. Several small business owners were imprisoned after show trials, and in 2025 the first house-holder was executed. His crime: persistent failure to recycle.
Now that was a scream. And gun-shots. Earlier than I had expected. I had better finish soon, while I’m still able.
Then, last year, they introduced the O2 Tax. Sure the Moon colony and the Orbital’s had had similar charges since inception, but that stands to reason. Their O2 has to be shipped to them or generated, so it's fair that they should pay.
It was one tax too many.
Charging citizens for the air they had always breathed for free seemed wrong. Millions took to the streets, braving the sonic panic cannon and the riot foam of the police. They came out on the streets and marched, banners held high. For a week or two it looked like we were going to see a Western version of the Tiananmen Square Massacre, but the government backed down at the last minute, withdrawing the tanks and the troops. Millions celebrated, and many tore up the tax demands when they came, and refused to pay. The will of the people had overcome an uncaring government. Or so it seemed until last week.
Faced with losing the forth-coming elections, the government declared martial law and a curfew. In the words of the official statement, it is a temporary action: To ensure the safety of all law-abiding citizens from the eco-terrorists and saboteurs that are seeking to destroy our way of life.
Before the web-casts were shut down, I watched the summary executions begin. Those venturing outside are being shot on sight for breaking the curfew, while the black-armoured soldiers of the Environmental Agency go house to house, dragging people out onto the street. If you haven't paid your O2 Tax, you and your family are no longer allowed to breathe. Those who did pay stay inside, curtains drawn, waiting for the garbage trucks to take the bodies away, for the blood stains to be scrubbed clean.
That's it. The knock at the door. I'm hiding this short note under the floor-boards, a record of this dark time. I hope you who read this are living in a better world.
When I put my pen down, I'm going to take one last, long breath of fresh, free air to calm myself.
And then I'll answer the door.
tmp_0505bb5e81c929ec16ccfe3de224d6e2_Oz4cPo_html_6a44ffe0.pngBy Richard Mark Bacon
7.09 AM Friday 18th May
The alarms shrill sound echoed around the room as Adam