I wrote Lattice in high school.
I wrote the first version, at least. Six thousand words for Colin Chisholm’s senior creative writing class. Mr. Chisholm was a western romantic, a real Zane Grey-Larry McMurtry kind of guy. He made you feel like writing was the most noble thing a person could do. And he was a poet to boot. He wrote about the old west, about dust and distance and people who said very little and meant all of it. I adored the guy.
So naturally, I handed him a science fiction story.
I don’t remember what I was thinking. I don’t remember the assignment, or the prompt, or what I was reading at the time that made me think a story about people turning to crystal in deep space was the right move for a class taught by a man who probably had a framed map of the Oregon Trail somewhere in his apartment. But I wrote it. And he liked it. And that was enough to convince me, at seventeen, that I was a fiction writer.
I was not a writer of fiction.
I became a journalist. Then, a marketer, a teacher, eventually a podcaster, a film writer, a guy who talks about stories for a living. Two decades of it, now. Two decades of sitting in front of a microphone and explaining why a scene works, why a character lands, why the third act collapses, and why the director should have trusted the audience. I got good at the talking part. The writing part, the part where you sit alone in a room and try to make something out of nothing, that part I mostly left to high school Pete.
Somehow, that original story survived. It moved from a floppy disk to a zip drive to a hard drive to a cloud folder, migrating forward through decades of storage media the way horseshoe crabs survive mass extinctions: not through fitness, but through sheer indifference to the odds. I just… never deleted it. I never opened it either. It just sat there, 6,000 words in a folder I hadn’t clicked since the Reagan administration.
Then a conversation happened on a podcast.
I was recording an episode of Craft and Chaos — a podcast about creative work — and somebody said something that knocked loose a memory of a story I’d written a long time ago about a ship and a conspiracy and a man whose body turned to glass. And I thought: huh. I wonder if that story still exists.
Would you look at that? It did.
I opened it. I read it. It was, and I say this with the deep affection of a man suffering through his own teenage prose, not great. The bones were there, though. The premise held up, I think. But the writing was exactly what you’d expect from this seventeen-year-old who thought adjectives were MMA. The characters talked like they’d swallowed a thesaurus. The science was hand-wavy in places where it needed to be precise and precise in places where nobody asked. The ending was abrupt, not because the story was finished, but because this writer had run out of things to say.
But the bones. The bones were pretty good.
So I did what any reasonable person would do when they find a forty-year-old document on their hard drive: I decided to turn it into a novella and self-publish it on Amazon!
The rewrite took about two months. The original 6,000 words became 30,000. The single storyline became three. Characters who had been sketches became people I had to sit with and figure out. The conspiracy in the high school version was basically “bad guy do bad thing.” It became a systems argument about the human organizational machine that builds itself, a structure nobody can shut down because it works too well. I gave it chapters. I gave it a timeline. I gave it a title that maybe meant something. Hell… I gave it an epigraph with a boss pull-quote from one of my favorite grown-up books.
I am not going to pretend I what I am doing. I’m a guy who has spent twenty years telling other people what works in their stories from a distance, and I can report that this expertise is absolutely useless when you’re staring at your own blank page at 11 p.m. trying to figure out why your protagonist won’t do the thing you need him to do. Talking about craft and doing craft are stupidly different muscles. I knew that intellectually. Now I know it in my lower back.
The book is called Lattice. It’s about a bail-skip investigator named Jacks who goes home for the first time in fifteen years and finds out that the people running all the things have discovered a new use for the condemned. It’s a story about systems. The ones we build, the ones we feed, and the ones we can’t shut down because they work too well. It’s about sons, their father, and the distance between them.
It’s also not-so-secretly about a seventeen-year-old kid who wrote a weird story for a class taught by a man who loved the west, and a fifty-something who found the file and thought maybe there’s something in here.
Lattice is available now. If you read it, thank Mr. Chisholm.