
- Pages: 22
- Duration: 26 Minutes
Collision
A Science Fiction Short


You Meet the Strangest Folks at a Car Crash Evelyn Lancaster has crashed her beat up old car for the last time. Unfortunately, what she crashed into is an alien vessel carrying a disembodied sentient being who’s about to die in the toxic atmosphere of this strange planet called Earth. Together, they’ll have to figure out what’s to become of them and whether, perhaps, salvation for both of them might demand a price neither is willing to pay.
Story Behind The Story
As I write this afterword for Collision, on of my favourites among the short stories I’ve written, I’m mindful of three strange yet connected phenomena: the first is that I’m currently involved in three separate science fiction novels, one of which has already sold to a major publisher. The second oddity is that I never set out nor imagined I’d become a science fiction writer. My natural métier is fantasy and, to a lesser extent (mostly because publishers keep telling me I’m terrible at it), mystery novels. Science fiction, though, with al those aliens and space ships and – heavens help me – science? I never thought that would be a genre in which I’d be spending so much time lately. Ah, but now we come to the third strange fact – the one that ties it all together. A couple of years ago, long after I’d already become pleasantly successful writing novels full-time, I decided to take a course on short story writing taught by Dean Wesley Smith. For those who haven’t encountered Dean before, he’s one of those writers who’s published literally hundreds of stories and novels during his career and whose passion for teaching has him forever sharing his secrets with other, less experienced authors. Dean’s course was fun, challenging and illuminating. The first story students were required to write came with a simple brief: write a story that begins with a car crash. Now, I’m not one of those writers who handles exercises well. To me, it feels like hard work for which no one’s likely to pay me. Also, I’m obstinate about never quite following orders. So, I contemplated the assignment and observed that Dean hadn’t specified what the car had to crash into. Could’ve been a unicorn or a demon or . . . a space ship that was itself in the midst of crashing to Earth?
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