A Future We'd Like To See 1.21 - Death Before Yielding By Twoflower (Copyright 1993) And on the third day, Ytt'iok made the land rover. And it was Good. That's what my bumper sticker says. Alright, so land rovers aren't mentioned ANYWHERE in the Scrolls of Ytt'iok. Even so, Yttian Motors has elevated the production of rovers to a divine level. Every casing is fitted perfectly. Ritual layers of paint are added, creating the perfect blend of colour. The engine rumbles and roars like the breath of a mighty beast, as the muffler spews fourth the fumes of hell and ozone depletion. This was the definition of the word ROVER. Cost me quite a bit of money, but it was worth it; I got the most dependable, sturdy, and above all FAST car out there. I performed weekly rituals to keep it clean and moving along at the right speed. Once a month, it was treated to an oil change and new chunk of sucrose-like material to feed upon. I treated it better than I treat my own children. All it had to do was get me from point A to point B. This is no easy task on Yttia. We've got about 500 major cities, with vast networks of highways, superhighways, underground tunnels, bridges, overpasses, underpasses, rotaries, and even some self-morphing roads which add lanes to ease the flow. None of it works. If you'd like an accurate vision of the Yttian transit system, cook up fifty four pounds of spaghetti as one incredibly long, twisted, tangled strand, and put seventy five thousand ants on it, each crawling over each other and pushing each other out of the way to get nowhere quickly. All I can do to stay sane in this mess is to keep a well-maintained rover. Fortunately I work in my home city, so my commute is just down a few normal blocks and intersections to the office. However, since I am a field researcher for D-FENS technologies (some Terran pun... sure, you're reading this in flawless english, but it's all Yttian to me) I have to travel across- planet occasionally. I had my wife pack up a large lunch and a few rations, with water supplements, to put in the back seat. I brought a few changes of clothing, and some money, as well as a blaster for any would-be roverjackers. I kissed my wife 'n kids goodbye, and fired up the rover. The sun gleamed off the well-polished hood, as the airbag below the car inflated, hover jets synchronizing. The airbag serves a few purposes : it keeps the gravs and jets concentrated on the road, keeps gravel out, and ensures that if I slam into another rover I'll merely bounce off. I shifted the gravs into reverse and pulled out of my driveway, sliding along the suburban lanes. There it was : the huge Y-270 sign. The gateway to hell, the point of no return. Hate the highway, love the car, I always say. I slammed it into 17th gear and rocketed into the fray. My car bounced off of a few creeps attempting to merge into the 25th lane, causing a spinout or two and a bumper banger behind me. I didn't care; I just wanted off of the highway as soon as possible. I gunned the engine past the 263 M'wwts an Hour mark, the normal speed limit. Nobody really pays attention to the limit. It's every Ytt for himself. I weaved through fourteen lanes or so, following the route given to me by my boss for getting to G'thrsB'yg city. Take Y- 270 to the G'hh cutoff, head down the subpass and swerve through the undertunnel to Y-78, where you immediately cross five lanes and head up the spiral ramp back to Y-270. If you don't make the five lane crossover in three seconds, you'll miss the ramp and have to circle around through the next three crossovers until you can try again. Back on Y-270 (neatly missing the ten lane bottleneck... yeesh, only TEN lanes? Are they insane?), I cruised along, cutting off a few losers and maneuvering into the left three passing lanes. Wouldn't you know it? Just my luck, three hatter hap g'llars are hogging the passing lanes! These are a bastard breed of driver that sputters along at 200 M'wwts an Hour to conserve sucrose and plays Adult Contemporary at top volume with the treble cranked up. They usually wear large hats as well. I considered pulling out the blaster and deflating a few airbags to clear the way, but they'd probably just swerve out of control like the cheap sunday drivers they are and cause an accident. So, I sat, gripping the stick with light green knuckles, waiting for these offs k'li ann tramps to get the hell out of my way. Several other drivers gave up on it and decided to form a new passing lane next to them by rear-ending anybody who didn't want to. There was a bit of high speed bumping, a few traffic insults and obscene gestures were exchanged, but the traffic kept at a sluggish 287 M'wwts an Hour. Jeez, at this rate, it'll take me three hours to cover the 1,400 terran-mile span! Luckily, the cavalry arrived, in the form of a bulky lowrider rover. Airbag variably inflating and deflating to make it bounce along the road sinusoidally, it cruised a few lanes closer, attempting to get in the passing lane. The few lanky youths piloting it didn't seem to enjoy the three slowpokes either, so one of them pulled out an automatic blaster rifle and pumped six rounds of red-hot energy into the rightmost hatter hap g'llar. I cursed and swerved to my right as the car exploded and knocked the other two hatters off track. The middle one spun out and flipped over, traffic flowing around the accident like a river around a rock. The one closest to the edge of the highway was pushed over the railing, where it fell about a hundred feet and exploded violently against the rocky Yttian terrain below. There was a number of cheers and honks from the drivers, who quickly reassumed normal formation. One of the kids leaned out a window to take a bow. That was the mistake. An eighteen-grav transport rocketed by the lane on the passenger side of the lowrider, the front cabin plastering into the kid leaning out of the window. The lowrider skidded sideways, cutting off two lanes. I yelped, slamming the BURST button. As several cheaper, less option packed models slammed into the lowrider, my rover's computer pumped about 10% of the sucrose block into the engine at once. The gravs spasmed, causing me to leap twenty feet into the air over the accident, and land in the empty space in front of it. Then I could just cruse along, lauging at the poor fools that didn't buy the Traffic Survival Options Package like I did. Well, it SHOULD have been empty space, but someone apparently tried to cut the land rover off. I landed on them instead. My gravs pulverized the roof of the landee, crushing the driver. The rover under me awkwardly curved into traffic and hit another car, causing a chain reaction accident. My car was thrown about fifty feet through the air, bouncing off the road and rebounding on the right barricade. I screamed, bending the stick as hard as I could to the left. Wait! What was that about turning into the direction of a skid? Oh shiiiiii... My rover spun out of control, as various drivers attempted to avoid it. One slammed into my back side, as my torso was thrown forward. Yup, should have worn my seat belt today. After a nice trip through the windshield, I slammed into the pavement face first with several painful lacerations. My left eye had redded out completely, and my face was all hot and runny. I stumbled about, as drivers shouted insults at me and dodged the flaming wreckage of my car. I was a pedestrian in the middle of a thirty four lane superhighway. My survival chances were slim to none. I ran, screaming, for the right barricade, trying to time my steps with the cars grinding down the road at me. I leaped over the barricade to safety before realizing I was one hundred feet up. The ground rushed up to meet me, or I fell down to meet it, the syntax doesn't matter. Either way, I had about two seconds to reflect on life as I knew it before impact. Impact. Ow. I can't feel my left leg, and my chest is spurting some horrible purple liquid. I tried to crawl away, to move at all, but my remaining leg was going numb. Alright, maybe it wasn't that bad. Sure, I had lost a leg, was probably losing motor control and had an eye poked out, but medicine these days can patch you up quite well, even if you lost all your limbs and your head. There was an emergency phone box on that highway support there, I just had to crawl there, scream for an ambulance, and I'd pull through. There was a bit of honking and cursing far above me, and a large flaming object was pushed over the railway. I recognized it as the wreckage of my car before it crushed me and burned me alive. I've got to admit, even on fire, the paint job looks pretty good.