Alice’s Fancy Gloves is a lovely little novel about a world free from want, and the hologram determined to save it. It is still very much in progress…
โWhereโd you nick those fancy gloves?โ asked Uttey. โLet me try โem on.โ
โFuck off!โ Alice snapped. โI did not nick them. I found them.โ
โOh, of course. I completely believe you simply found themโ Uttey repeated, with the sort of voice you might use to tell a prostitute โI believe you have no STDsโฆโ Sarcasm. Yes, that was the word.
โI did,โ she insisted.

โJust lying around in our little luxury burnt out warehouse, eh?โ Uttey said, again in the tone โ sarcastic. Uttey is in a sarcastic mood, he thought. โYou want me to believe some bloke left a perfectly nice pair of silver gloves with all them fancy bit bobs on โem? Are you drinking again?โ
โYes,โ she said, though he couldnโt tell which question she was answering. Probably the latter.
โAnd look what they do.โ She pointed, with the gloved finger on her right hand, at the overturned cable spool that passed for their coffee table. At once, a milk appeared, in a clean round glass. She pointed again, and a plate of Hydrox cookies materialized beside the milk.
โWhat in theโฆโ Uttey said, with the sort of voice you use when cookies appear in front of you from nothing, a voice for which he could recall no descriptive term.
โTheyโre magic,โ said Alice, her lips lightly pursed.
The little bit bobs โ if that was even a real term โ had lit up as soon as the milk appeared, but their light was now fading.
โThatโs not magic,โ said Uttey. โLook at all them lights. Those are science gloves of some sort. From the future or what not.โ
โWell that means theyโre magic,โ said Alice. โAny sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.โ
โWhatโs that from?โ said Uttey. โIt sounds familiar, and too smart for you.โ
โItโs from a book,โ said Alice.
โOf course,โ Uttey said, plucking a dog-eared paperback from the arm of Aliceโs coffee-stained loveseat. Profiles of the Future, this one was called, by a bloke named Arthur, whose last name could be found wherever the torn off bit of the bookโs cover had gone. โYou and your bloody books. I say, any sufficiently wordy nonsense is indistinguishable from bullshit.โ
โYou lay off my books,โ Alice warned, scowling.
โYour books are losing the war for your brain, luv,โ he laughed. โTheyโre no match for all the booze and methamphetamine. Surrender is imminent!โ
Alice snatched the paperback from his hands; his fingers recoiled quickly, uncertain whether they ought to touch her strange, silver gloves.
โNow, can you make anything you like with those, Alice? Or is it just cookies?โ
Alice nodded. โAnything, I suppose.โ
โThen why did you make bloody Hydrox?โ he asked, biting one of the dry black biscuits. โWhy not Oreos?โ
โIโve never had an Oreo. Mum always said they were too posh.โ
โCan you me a car?โ he asked, chasing the cookie down with a swig of the milk โ powdered. Dammit.
โWhat kind?โ she asked
โAston Martin,โ he said.
โColor?โ
โSteel blue.โ
She pointed her fingers at a patch of empty floor, just beyond the rat-eaten couch, at the one area of the second-story warehouse floor which wasnโt littered with items theyโd rescued from Londonโs dumps. Then she bunched her eyebrows together for a moment.
โI canโt,โ she said, relaxing her brows. โIโve never seen an Aston Martin. Would you like a yellow Vauxhall?โ
โOh for Peteโs sake,โ Uttey groaned. โJust give me the gloves and Iโll do it.โ
โOh. I suppose you have seen an Aston?โ Alice said. Sheโs no stranger to sarcasm herself, that one.
โI seen loads of โem,โ he replied. โI was a valet, you little cheeky. Iโll have you know I drove Astons every day.โ
โYou mean you parked Astons every dayโฆ until you got high and crashed one,โ she reminded him.
โYes, but the point is, I can make one if you give me the gloves.โ
โNo,โ Alice said.
โThen make me my own.โ
โWhat? Your own pair of gloves?โ
โRight.โ
Alice seemed to consider it. It always looked to him like her eyes vibrated a bit whenever she thought deeply, as though her brain were some old diesel engine shaking itself awake.
โIsnโt that like wishing for more wishes?โ she said, finally. โProbably ill-advised.โ
โItโs science,โ said Uttey. โItโs not magic, so thereโs no genie whatโs going to punish you. Whereโs the harm in trying?โ
And so, Alice pointed at the sham coffee table and created, from nothing, an identical pair of silver gloves with strange bit bobs. Uttey picked them up and carefully brushed off cigarette ashes and Hydrox crumbs before putting them on.
He stood up and went over to the empty space, kicking away some old tyres and a pile of used, water-stained books which Alice had intended to read. Conjuring an Aston Martin from thin air required a bit more ceremony than creating a plate of Hydrox. This was a big job, and called for him to crack his knuckles.
โCareful, donโt stretch them. Theyโre probably delicate,โ Alice said.
โNonsense,โ he replied. โFuture stuff is always more durable.โ
And he pointed at the space, picturing in his mind a steel blue Aston with red leather seats and an iPod connector. He could make the iPod later, he thought.
But when the two ton steel blue Aston Martin appeared beside him, on the second floor of the condemned warehouse, Uttey realized, in the last few seconds of his life, why theyโd condemned the building in the first place.
—
Sam woke with a start as the silver helmet around his eyes folded in on itself and vanished with a slight pop.
โThat was amazing!โ he said. โDo it again!โ
โNo,โ said the hologram.
โThat helmet,โ said Sam, โwhat was it?โ
โWe call it a passing thought projector. On the quantum level, human brain activity leaves a faint trace in the atmosphere for centuries. The device reads those traces, and employs a complex probabilistic algorithm to reconstruct the thoughts of a given person at a given moment in history. Iโve just played for you the last moments of Uttey Corker, twenty years ago, on the day a pair of our maker gloves found their way to Earth.โ
โWhy didnโt you put me in Aliceโs head,โ Sam asked, โif sheโs the one who found the gloves?โ
โThe algorithm is based on an average brain for the target population. It cannot reasonably approximate a brain which deviates sufficiently from the norm.โ
โAre you saying she was an imbecile?โ Sam asked.
โIn a way,โ said the hologram. โSadly, a lifetime of alcohol robbed her of the ability to retain new information.โ
โSo if not for the drink,โ Sam said. โShe might have been a doctor, or prime minister, orโฆโ
โNo,โ said the hologram. โShe was also an imbecile.โ
โCould I use these gloves to make one of those helmets?โ
โNo,โ said the hologram.
Sam slipped on his maker gloves and pointed. A silver helmet appeared in his lap.
โOh by all means, try that on,โ said the hologram. โThis should be most interesting. A reconstruction of something you only saw from the inside, and know next to nothing about. I am curious to see what it does to your brain. My money is on electrocution, but liquifying is also a contender.โ
Sam hesitated a moment, his hands hovering over the helmet as he prepared to put it on. At last, he reconsidered and snapped the fingers on his gloved left hand; the device vanished.
โMister Puddle, I donโt understand why youโre being so tight-lipped about your technology,โ Sam said, wistfully.
โMy name is Pesseudahl,โ the hologram corrected. โThird son of Arch-minister Chyrogani, and special agent in charge ofโฆโ
โPuddle will be easier for me to remember, if thatโs okay,โ Sam said.
Puddle sighed. โTo answer your question: the reason I donโt share our peoplesโ technology with you is because it would be irresponsible. You may have been a child then, but surely you were old enough to observe how a single pair of our gloves nearly destroyed your planet.โ
โStrange that Alice didnโt learn a lesson from her mate dying,โ said Sam.
โShe did learn a lesson,โ the hologram continued. โShe simply learned the wrong lesson. You see, after Uttey Corker and his new sports car fell through the warehouse floor, Alice called an ambulance and a fire truck โ but of course, she was drunk, and didnโt have a phone, so she conjured them out of thin air, and they both landed on top of Uttey and his Aston Martin. I suppose after that, her little mind snapped and she decided she could only make things right by giving gloves to everyone in her neighborhood.โ
โSo thatโs how it startedโฆโ
โYes,โ said Puddle. โThe rest is horrific history. Within a year, every nation on your planet was at war. Folk dropped tanks on top of buildings, and buildings on top of tanks. I suppose I donโt have to remind you about the day statues of liberty literally rained down on London while their creators shoutedโฆ what was it? oh yes… freedom, bitches!โ
Sam shook his head.
โAnd letโs not forget all the other good times,โ said Puddle. โThe Summer of Nukes, the Marmite Massacre, Asbestos Wednesday, the Boston Tea Glacier, or the dozen other statue-of-liberty-ings of perfectly democratic cities around the world.โ
โOkay!โ Sam said, raising his gloved hand. โPoint taken. But they sorted it, more or less. After the Summer of Nukes, they found Aliceโs original pair and unsnapped all the other gloves. They started a corporation to protect the remaining gloves and now itโs all nice and regulated.โ
โAh yes,โ said Puddle. โTop LLP. They control all the gloves left in the world. But for how long? How long before their management has a disagreement and starts dropping Bentleys on each other?โ
Sam considered this a moment. โProbably not long.โ
โMy algorithm says six more weeks,โ said Puddle.
โSo thatโs why youโre here…โ said Sam, standing solemnly as realization came over him. โThatโs why you, an alien hologram have come all this way, to bestow upon me, these gloves. I am the one man in a million… chosen to wrest destroy the evil Top LLP corporation and restore balance to theโฆโ
โThere are only six hundred thousand and twenty-four people left on earth,โ the hologram cut him off. โOur options are limited. So yes, you were chosen, butโฆโ
โChosen from roughly a million people, though!โ Sam exclaimed, gleefully.
โThatโs not how rounding works…โ the hologram remarked.
โWhatever it is, thatโs pretty great! I was always chosen last for sport, but not this time!โ
โWell, the algorithm picked twenty-eight others before you,โ said Puddle. โBut they are all dead now.โ
โSay again?โ
โFear not Sam,โ said Puddle. โI have been refining the algorithm. Your chances of success should be well into the low teens. Shall we begin?โ