
In this stark, near‑future tale the narrator is an Executioner—a citizen drafted to oversee the final, state‑sanctioned removal of those deemed mentally unstable. The story opens with him stepping into a repurposed theater‑turned‑Arena, feeling the familiar knot of dread mixed with an odd emptiness as he prepares for another round of duty. The setting is a society that has outlawed escapist art, replacing it with relentless surveillance and brain‑scanners that flag any hint of deviance.
Within the cold, fluorescent glare, a handful of young rebels are led in, their nervous energy palpable. The Executioner’s attention is snagged by a lone girl, her disheveled blonde hair a stark contrast to the sterile uniform she wears, hinting at a hidden defiance. As the electrodes are fastened and the crowd holds its breath, the narrator senses a personal memory stirring, suggesting that his role may be more complicated than the cold bureaucracy allows.
Language
en
Duration
~17 minutes (16K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Greg Weeks, Mary Meehan and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
Release date
2020-02-07
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

b. 1938
A lively force in science fiction fandom and publishing, this Hugo Award winner helped shape the field as both a writer and a magazine editor. His work ranges from fast-moving novels to influential behind-the-scenes editorial work that left a lasting mark on the genre.
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1937–1987
A lively force in science fiction, he helped shape the field from several angles at once—as a fan, writer, editor, and teacher. He is especially remembered for editing influential anthologies and for his long-running annual best-of-the-year collections.
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