Tquavious Johnson
Bio
I graduated from Anderson University in S.C. with a Bachelors degree in Creative Writing in 2016. Since then I have edited the book “Chasing Dandelions” while working on my own novel by titled “Future’s Light.”
Stories (3/0)
Technology's Edge
If you ask the everyday citizen, more than likely they would tell you that the advancement of technology Is one of man's greatest achievements. The ability to speak to someone on the opposite side of the planet with a push of a button, The power to see inside a person's body to identify disease or injury, so on and so forth. Technology has saved many lives, of that their can be no doubt. Then again, has mankind become too dependent on the code's that reside within the website's and machines we use on a daily basis? Take for example the cell phone. If a person can afford it, they more than likely will always have one on them. Powerful miniature computers that can fit within the palm of our hands. It can hold within it's lifeless core information about your entire life. Phone numbers of your relatives, Banking information, important addresses. Such information is so easily stored within a compact, highly advanced combination of energy and metal. That very same information can be taken, distributed, and used against us at any given moment. Such is the danger of the internet, of technology. One minute you've logged into your bank account to determine if you have enough money for lunch tomorrow, and in the very next second someone across the world could be hacking your phone to pull your routing and checking account number. Such incidents happen more often than most people think, but the convenience of having a phone in this day and age outweighs those risk, does it not? After all, It would be unfortunate if we could not check for the weather via the weather app, or If we could not call our bosses at work to let them know we may be running slightly late.
By Tquavious Johnson 2 years ago in Futurism
Death's Reward
Huntress Lythalia walked down one of the corridors in the Nortabian flagship Titania's Hammer towards the meeting room where the Commodess awaited her arrival. The rose gold interior of the ship reflected Lythalia's tanned skin and auburn hair perfectly. The Nortabian's prided themselves not only on their strength, but also in their meticulous nature. The ship was scrubbed clean daily by the grunts of their forces, the frontsman. Lythalia passed many of them on her way to the meeting room. They all looked down as she approached, not daring to catch eye contact with her. Rumors had spread over the years about the huntresses. One such rumor claimed that if you looked one of them in the eyes, you would be doomed to die a horrible death. Lythalia didn't care to much about rumors, but that particular one made her smile slightly. Her job, after all, required her to be particularly efficient at dealing death out to Nortabian Empire's enemies. Unfortunately for Lythalia, her last mission had called those very same skills into question.
By Tquavious Johnson 3 years ago in Fiction
A Fool's Relic
The city of Ausk was once the shining capital of the planet Juth. The buildings that formed the inner cluster of the city were large, rigged domes. Inside each of the domes were essential work and living spaces for the citizens that called this place home. One dome would be responsible for handling the power management that each of the other domes relied upon, while the other domes handled things such as produce, water treatment and distribution, etc. In total there were five domes. Four of the domes circled around the largest dome that sat in the center of the city. This dome, dubbed the "Conclave of Judgement," was where the planets government, military, and judicial administrations resided. It was the first dome to be destroyed during the Nortabian Invasion.
By Tquavious Johnson 3 years ago in Fiction