MOON OF MEMORY
Episode #188 · Written by Bryce Walton · Narrated by Scott Miller
Karl Barstac has spent ten years preparing for one final escape. The New System does not execute criminals; it buries them alive in labor mines and calls it civilization. If he is captured again, he will not be given another chance. Only Deimos remains — a bleak moon where the mist-like Martians offer something stranger than mercy.
His flight from Mars is violent and desperate, but it succeeds because of an unexpected ally. Marian Sayers, heir to immense wealth and a life of privilege, pulls him from certain capture and demands to come with him. She claims fascination. She claims boredom. She claims she wants to live dangerously. Barstac accepts her help, but he never fully believes her. On the long approach to Deimos, suspicion lingers between them like static.
Deimos does not operate by human rules. The Martians who dwell there do not imprison or punish. They reach inward. In their vaporous cities, memory becomes fluid, grief resurfaces, and buried childhood scenes bloom with impossible clarity. For a man who has survived by sealing off his past, this is not comfort. It is exposure.
Moon of Memory narrows its focus to a single question: what happens when a man who believes he is beyond redemption is forced to remember when he was not? As the Martians probe deeper, Marian’s true purpose comes into view. Escape may not mean what Barstac thought it did. On Deimos, there are no nets, no courts, and no executions — only the return of what was lost, and a choice that cannot be postponed.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Bryce Walton published extensively in American science fiction magazines during the late 1940s through the 1960s. His stories appeared in Galaxy Science Fiction, Fantastic Universe, Amazing Stories, and The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction. Walton built a reputation for combining planetary adventure with psychological tension, often placing hardened characters in situations that forced uncomfortable self-recognition. In works such as The Ultimate World and numerous short stories across the digest era, he favored interior conflict over spectacle. Moon of Memory reflects that strength, using an alien setting not for conquest but for confrontation.
LISTEN TO THE STORY
Listen to Moon of Memory by Bryce Walton — a vintage science fiction short story set on Deimos where an outlaw confronts the past he thought was gone.
RELATED STORIES
Bryce Walton was an American science fiction writer active during the mid-twentieth century, contributing almost one hundred stories to many of the major pulp magazines of the era. His work often blends speculative concepts with psychological tension, focusing closely on how individuals react when faced with the unfamiliar.
Rather than relying solely on spectacle, Walton frequently centers his narratives on inner conflict and shifting loyalties. The result is science fiction that feels personal and quietly intense even when the stakes expand beyond Earth.
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