Doc Sherwood
Bio
Stories (540)
Filter by community
Bendigo and 4-H-N
4-H-N stepped out of the Royal Palace gates and into the starry Martian night, feeling happy and contented and a little bit guilty for doing so. She knew that earlier in the evening there had been some bad news from her sister Neetra, and the problem, whatever it was, had made their parents argue, so 4-H-N had decided to go round and see Crosius while they were still clearing the air. Of course, it was always nice to spend a couple of romantic hours with your boyfriend, and when he was king of a whole planet and lived in a great big luxurious palace it was nicer still. That was what made 4-H-N feel slightly bad, to have been having such a good time tonight when things were obviously amiss between her mother and father. It just went to show, 4-H-N thought to herself as she set off for home, that there was always someone worse off than you…
By Doc Sherwood4 years ago in Fiction
Iskira and Joe
Joe held his solitude some time at the Castle Jaw site, attended on only by a number of increasingly turbid thoughts. The suns had begun to dip, and in this shaded space the uncut grass was already wearing its coat of dusk when Joe heard someone join him. He looked up from where he sat, and saw Iskira.
By Doc Sherwood4 years ago in Fiction
Lost Friends, Chapter Five
The Four Heroes and friends hurried the refugees back to the hideout, beneath a thunderous black sky that was now torn every minute by furious flashes of lightning. Their arrival was greeted with a hundred happy reunions as the former prisoners ran to loved ones and relatives they’d feared they would never see again. Proteus made his way over to his comrades through the joyful laughing crowd, beaming and exclaiming: “You did it, guys! I knew you would!”
By Doc Sherwood4 years ago in Fiction
Lost Friends, Chapter Two
The Four Heroes Ultimate Cycle climbed into Earth-orbit, Dylan piloting, Phoenix and Neetra strapped into the side-seats, Bret manning the guns at the rear and Joe in his preferred place crouching on the drive-section. All five were wearing satellite link-up headsets and microphones that connected them to Doctor Mendelssohn in his laboratory on Mars. Planets glittered coldly in the black emptiness above as they reached the desired altitude and Dylan brought them back about, so that the prow was pointing directly down. Before our heroes’ eyes glowed the blue-green topography of their homeworld, thousands of feet below.
By Doc Sherwood4 years ago in Fiction
Lost Friends, Chapter Three
Even as Kumiko spoke, those she referred to stepped into the main room together. One was an alien with a white and dark-blue humanlike form, and the other a short schoolboy whose body was shaped exactly like a rubber ball. If, as Kumiko said, they were happy to see The Four Heroes, the emotion was more than reciprocal. Neetra ran to the boy at once and joyously swept his rotund form up in her arms.
By Doc Sherwood4 years ago in Fiction
Lost Friends, Chapter Four
A short jog through the ruinous neighbourhood brought Dylan, Bret, Joe, Phoenix, Jeffrey and Kumiko to the monolith of concrete and chrome that was the Mekanikron building. Gone was the bright sunshine and clear blue sky of earlier that day. A preternatural twilight was throwing all into oppressive gloom, and in the heavens beyond the skyscraper’s peak the clouds were circling as if caught in the beginnings of a hurricane. Dylan was wearing his satellite headset, and said into its microphone: “Talk to me, Doctor Mendelssohn, how much longer do we have until the rift opens?”
By Doc Sherwood4 years ago in Fiction
Lost Friends, Chapter One
“Here’s the situation,” said Dylan. Behind him the many viewscreens of the meeting room in The Four Heroes’ house flashed into life, readouts and graphs and schematics blinking into being across their luminous many-coloured surfaces. All those assembled around the long table looked attentively on, as Dylan indicated the main monitor that bore an electronic aerial map of Nottingham. Over a part of it, a red-glowing circle blinked insistently.
By Doc Sherwood4 years ago in Fiction
Heredity, Chapter Five
The seven heroes abandoned the assault as one and rocketed to the safety of their vehicles. Tidshaw, the fastest flier, scrambled upside-down into the Hero Cart’s pilot chair and reconfigured the passenger half into shield mode, while his fellows converged on one or other of the vehicles and Dylan threw the Ultimate Cycle’s forcefield generator into life. At that instant Harbin made his free hand into a fist, and the Baax freighter crunched like a can. Blinding white light and raw howling force enveloped the universe.
By Doc Sherwood4 years ago in Fiction
After the Flood, Chapter Three
They climbed back onto the F.P. Lightspeed, and Joe brought the platform through the time-portal Gala opened and forward several years. The day they emerged upon was a rare one for the first Dark Advent, with sunlight of a somewhat purer quality than the usual pinkish-yellow murk breaking through the black sky in a few shafts that made ripping golden patches upon the ocean. Below the travellers on the deck of the plague-ship was Gala, by now grown to a small girl in a simple white dress. She was playing with a ginger kitten, while her mother sat close by in a wooden chair and watched her with a sad smile full of love. She looked to Joe to be in her mid-twenties, though the plague’s ravages had made her as much like a weak old woman as an early adult. Our hero remembered what Gala had told him about the life-span of all that sickness’ victims, and knew at once the impending sorrow that overshadowed this apparently happy scene.
By Doc Sherwood4 years ago in Fiction
After the Flood, Chapter Two
Gala directed Joe to steer the Lightspeed beyond the tumbledown walls of Nottingham and out across the ocean. Soon the island lay far behind, and they were streaking over boundless roils. At long last a row of ships began to draw into view, all of them standing at anchor, and all of them long overdue a watery grave. Their black sodden timbers creaked and dripped, seeming to decay even as Joe and Gala watched, while frayed and patched sails flapped sadly in the breeze. Off the bow of one of these skeletal hulks Gala had Joe bring the flying platform to rest, and told him to psychically shield himself again.
By Doc Sherwood4 years ago in Fiction











