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INTRODUCTION

My first collection of Short Stories, Around The Bend, was also published by Double Dragon when it first came out in electronic editions, commonly called E-books. The difference between Around The Bend and Back From The Bend is that my first collection included all my short fiction written over a period of almost fifteen years, most of which had never been published. It wasn't until I became somewhat of an icon in the world of electronic fiction that I was able to get most of it looked at.

This present volume consists of stories written and published in 2005 and 2006 with the exception of Three's A Crowd. I pulled that little gem from a bunch of old unpublished material I was going through to see if any of it could be salvaged. Most of it was over twenty years old and suitable only for lining trash cans or as kindling to start fires with on cold winter mornings (and yes, we do get cold mornings in Houston. Besides, my office where I do all of my writing is converted from a garage and not well insulated. I need those fires some mornings to get my fingers working properly).

Three's A Crowd had to be extensively re-written before it was publishable, but it did receive a good reaction from fans. (And yes, E-book authors receive fan mail just like print authors. I get lots of it these days, relatively speaking). Other than that one story, all the material here is relatively new, and hopefully shows signs of a more mature writer than the stories from my first collection. The fans have rated them pretty well, anyway, so that's encouraging.

The stories here are listed in no particular order other than three which are grouped together. You'll see the explanation for why that is when you come to them.

A few fans have asked, why so many short stories all of a sudden? The answer is easy. I had pretty well burned up my keyboard from late 2004 to mid 2005 writing novels, and decided I needed a break. I keep a little folder of ideas for prospective stories on hand. Several of the ideas weren't the type I wanted to make a whole novel of, so I decided to try my hand at short stories again. Well, actually, I rewrote Three's A Crowd first, but never mind. Anyway, there was this idea I had lurking in that folder, about a scientist using genetics to improve his personality so he could pick up more girls. I batted about 0.025 during my bachelor days so perhaps that's the origin of the idea. Or maybe it came from my habit of overindulging quite frequently in my younger years. Whatever, that began the exodus from novels into short stories for a while.

I also started a newsletter in 2005 that has proved popular, and for this collection I've added excerpts from the newsletter which got the most reaction from readers. The complete newsletters are archived on my web site, www.darrellbain.com for interested readers. Shucks, I found it kind of interesting to go back and look at them again!

This collection also includes a couple of articles published on the internet but probably not seen by my regular readers.

I'll have a few more words to say in a prologue to each story that follows, but for now let's have me stop my ramblings and let you get on with reading some fiction, which I'm pretty sure is why you bought this book to begin with.

Darrell Bain

May, 2006

Shepherd, Texas

I mentioned Cure For The Morning After briefly in the introduction, so there's no need to say much more about it here, other than I enjoyed writing it, and so far as I know, it was an original idea for a science fiction story, something pretty hard to come by. Most science fiction stories and novels are simply new twists on old themes. It's been said that just about every idea imaginable in science fiction has already been used so I felt particularly pleased to come up with this one. However, using genetic information to change behavior or physical characteristics isn't new so perhaps I shouldn't get a swelled head after all. At any rate, here it is. You may judge for yourself.

CURE FOR THE MORNING AFTER

The only two things Timothy Meeker had going for him were a good job and a brilliant mind. Other than those, he was a pretty pitiful specimen. Timothy had unfortunately inherited both alleles of the shyness gene. Coupled with that was an appearance that left little to cheer about. His hair was mousy brown, his nose was so upturned so that from a front view it almost presented the appearance of a pig's snout. His chin was badly undershot, leaving him bucktoothed. His beard grew in scraggly patches but was unaccountably very dark and thick where it did grow. By noon, his face always looked as if he had forgot to wash it that morning. His ears stuck out from the side of his head like crumpled oak leaves bereft of chlorophyll to give them color. And this was just his head.

Timothy's odd countenance was set atop a scrawny neck, and sported a prominent adam's apple that looked like an unattended tumor. His shoulders were narrow, his chest sunken and he had a round little potbelly that no amount of exercise seemed to help reduce. Besides all that, he was shorter than average and splay footed. He walked like a duck, and this made the wildly incongruous colors of his shirt, trousers and jacket appear even more ludicrous.

Some unfortunate men like Timothy quickly give up competing for women and devote their time to other pursuits, such as pornography, stamp collecting and science, to name a few. Being brilliant, Timothy chose science. However, being persistent and possessed of a very high libido, Timothy spent what time he could spare away from the genetics laboratory where he worked making the rounds of the singles bars in the affluent part of Dallas, north of the central city. He wanted to find a companion, a pretty female companion, who would overlook his obvious shortcomings. His quest for a pretty girl friend always failed, but he kept trying. Sometimes (usually right before the bar closed) he did find a companion for the night, though in the sober light of the next morning he always wished he hadn't.

On this Friday night, Timothy didn't score until the very last moment, which was usually the case when he scored at all. The last call had been called and the few unattached men and women were settling for what was left if they intended to get laid. By this time, the woman who had moved onto the barstool near him looked very attractive indeed, the result of Timothy having imbibed a substantial load of ethanol. He had to drink substantially in order to overcome that awful, painful shyness which had plagued him all his life like a worthless, messy relative who wouldn't move out and couldn't be controlled. Even so, it was the woman who began the conversation.

"Where d' y' work?" She asked, surreptitiously checking her watch as she brushed back a tangled mass of horrid red hair that had a half inch of black roots showing. She grinned lasciviously, displaying cavities in her teeth and cracked makeup that was disguising her true age, somewhere well north of fifty.

"Uh, I'm a schientist, uh scientist at Bors... I mean Border Labs," Timothy slurred, peering myopically at the woman. He tried a grin and spittle leaked from the corner of his mouth. To his alcohol sluiced brain, the woman he was talking to appeared attractive, with nice red hair, a pretty smile and pert little nose. His befuddled mind traveled no further than her face. In his condition, he almost certainly wouldn't have noticed her dumpy body anyway. It bulged from her clothes in unsightly mounds, in unsightly places. Where mounds should have been was an almost flat plateau.

"You maksh rockets? Vroom!" The woman made a flying gesture with her hand. Unfortunately, it was the hand holding her drink. It sloshed over the brim, wetting them both.

Timothy didn't even notice. He was enthralled with the beautiful woman sitting next to him and taking such an avid interest in him. "No, I'm a genetishist," he corrected. "Whash y're name?"

"Alicsh. Whatsh yers?"

"Tim. You wanta drink?"

"I think they're closhed."

Timothy's conversational gambits were exhausted for the moment, but Alice didn't suffer from shyness. "I gots shomethin' t' drink at my plascsh."

"You do?" Even with a load on, Timothy was too shy to follow up on the obvious gambit. The woman was simply too beautiful. No woman that good looking would ask him home.

"Yesh. Wanna go?"

Timothy nodded gratefully, unable to speak. He wobbled to his feet and followed Alice outside. Neither of them should have been driving, of course, but they did. Fortunately, Alice lived only a few blocks away and they both managed to navigate that far with only minor damage to curbs, lampposts and fenders.

***

Timothy opened his bloodshot eyes and sat up in bed. The room spun dizzily for a moment then settled down. He vaguely ...