A prank. I think not. Activate your zombie survival plans now.
Tuesday, February 12, 2013
Saturday, February 9, 2013
Zombie Proof
Well, I think Nemo has zombie-proofed my yard for me. Unless they have snow shoes. Then we might have a problem.
Thursday, February 7, 2013
FREE ON AMAZON!
Act fast and get a free copy of Rising Tide: A Novel on Amazon. Today and tomorrow only!
Couldn't Put It Down
I just finished
Rising Tide and it was one of the easiest reads I have had all year. I couldn't
put the book down once I picked it up. You feel very drawn to the characters
and can't help imagining yourself into the storyline. Fischer has made you feel
like you are right there with the friends as they try to navigate and survive
in their hometown after a virus takes over. I can see this book becoming a
staple for high school students as well as for those who love a good
action-packed post apocalyptic zombie story. Now I would like a second and
third please.
- Andrea Carr
A Very Entertaining Book
Rising Tide is a fun
book. It is easy to identify with the characters - to the point where you are
yelling at them for doing something stupid, and empathizing with them during
their struggles. It is a good read and good at capturing your imagination for awhile.
- Butters
Great First Book (actually just great)
I also received a
copy of the Kindle version (.mobi) in exchange for an objective review.
Fortunately good reviews are easier to write.
This book could could easiely fit into regular fiction or teen fiction. The subject matter can be gruesome, but wasn't dwelled upon in a gratuitous fashion. It has zombies, people got eaten, but not in a manner that I would need to shield from my teen readers. The characters are teens themselves and were very well written. I have teens in my house and I recognize the characters; they aren't adults or children written as teens, they rise off the page as teens with all of their imperfections and idiocyncrasies. They acted and sounded like teens: believable. The story was well written, well paced and included almost everything I was looking for in the book with the exception of more.
Of note, there are a host of e-books out, in Kindle and others formats, that are rife with typographical or other editing errors. They detract from the story, sometimes to the point of jarring you out of the story. Not here. In all 187 pages I noticed one minor spelling error (and that's NOT a challenge).
Bottom line, a great read; buy this book. I got it free, but would have been happy with a $3.99 very well spent.
This book could could easiely fit into regular fiction or teen fiction. The subject matter can be gruesome, but wasn't dwelled upon in a gratuitous fashion. It has zombies, people got eaten, but not in a manner that I would need to shield from my teen readers. The characters are teens themselves and were very well written. I have teens in my house and I recognize the characters; they aren't adults or children written as teens, they rise off the page as teens with all of their imperfections and idiocyncrasies. They acted and sounded like teens: believable. The story was well written, well paced and included almost everything I was looking for in the book with the exception of more.
Of note, there are a host of e-books out, in Kindle and others formats, that are rife with typographical or other editing errors. They detract from the story, sometimes to the point of jarring you out of the story. Not here. In all 187 pages I noticed one minor spelling error (and that's NOT a challenge).
Bottom line, a great read; buy this book. I got it free, but would have been happy with a $3.99 very well spent.
- David A. Larson
Wicked Tale Told Well
I love a good yarn and
Leigh Fisher has given us a pretty good yarn in Rising Tide. It has all the
requisites of a good story: engaging characters, romance, intrigue, danger and
an almost unstoppable antagonist. This small group of survivors experience many
situations that test their character and temper their resolve to carry on.
Their are some adults
aspects in the book, but no more than a young adult would get watching
television. A good read, enjoy!
- Steven Reneau
Excellent Read
I received a copy of this book as a
free promotion with the understanding that I would leave an honest review.
I really liked this book. It was a short read for me, finished in an evening - which was actually pretty stupid of me considering the subject matter and the fact that it is storming outside. =)
The only thing that stopped me from giving it five stars, is that I'm hoping for more of the story. The sentences were very short and easily read but not so short that it seemed choppy. It really led to the feeling that this was a narrative told from the perspective of a seventeen year old girl.
There is some very adult subject matter, but it is not terribly graphic. I think it is appropriate for young adults and tweens, depending on their level of maturity. I feel the book's content matter is certainly nothing above what they would see on primetime television or read in a vampire/werewolf series.
****SPOILERS****
A group of Maine teenagers wake up one morning to find the world has gone to hell in a handbasket. Without any adult supervision, the group of modern teens must not only learn to navigate a world without power, computers, or telephones but also try to survive.
I really liked this book. It was a short read for me, finished in an evening - which was actually pretty stupid of me considering the subject matter and the fact that it is storming outside. =)
The only thing that stopped me from giving it five stars, is that I'm hoping for more of the story. The sentences were very short and easily read but not so short that it seemed choppy. It really led to the feeling that this was a narrative told from the perspective of a seventeen year old girl.
There is some very adult subject matter, but it is not terribly graphic. I think it is appropriate for young adults and tweens, depending on their level of maturity. I feel the book's content matter is certainly nothing above what they would see on primetime television or read in a vampire/werewolf series.
****SPOILERS****
A group of Maine teenagers wake up one morning to find the world has gone to hell in a handbasket. Without any adult supervision, the group of modern teens must not only learn to navigate a world without power, computers, or telephones but also try to survive.
- Libby K
Sunday, February 3, 2013
Delirium Jane: Part VI
Continued from Delirium Jane: Part V
or Start from the Beginning
“Take me with you. I know how to fight. I’m not the man you
remember,” Zac pleads.
I laugh. “The man I remember? You just a little boy the
last time I saw you.”
“That’s not true. I was seventeen.”
“Maybe, but you were all skin and bones and twitchy
nerves.
“Not anymore. I’m as strong as anyone here, except for Cook.
I know how to hunt and shoot and –“
“Oh really? That tree must have really pissed you off
then?”
He crosses is arms in front of his chest. “It was a
warning shot. If I wanted to kill you, I could have.”
“You shot at Jane?” Molly asks in disbelief as she hands
me a mug of water.
“It was just a warning shot, Ma, and I didn’t know it was
her.”
“Have a seat, both of you.” Molly gestures to the folding
chairs she had placed on her platform.
When we had arrived, Molly had been hanging laundry to dry.
Recognizing me immediately she dropped everything and gave me a tight hug,
insisting that I stay around for a while. She would make me dinner and we would
share news and memories.
“What do you guys do during winter?” I ask. Being late summer,
its comfortable sitting outside up in the trees with a light breeze blowing and
a nice shade, but my mind keeps wandering back to what this place will be like
in a few months, when the leaves drop off the trees, the wind picks up and the
snow begins to fall.
Molly smiles thinly. “It’s harsh.” Her face is pale and gaunt;
she has dark circles under her eyes; and her blond hair hangs limply and falls
over her face. Where her son has filled out and grown strong, she has remained
the same tired frail woman I remembered from our journey north. Most people
were half starving and exhausted by the time the made it to the Ridge; hiding
from the horde does that to you, but once some semblance of safety and normalcy
was achieved, they would often bounce back. Molly, on the other hand, appears
to have only grown more hollow and broken.
“We spend a lot of time in the meeting hall,” she points
to the only platform with a permanent structure.
“We were all supposed to get homes. We weren’t supposed to
still be living in tents,” Zac says darkly.
“Zac, don’t get started on that. Not now. You know how
difficult it is to get building materials out here.”
“You know, things have turned out pretty well back at the
Ridge. It’s definitely nothing like before the dead climbed out of their
graves, but it’s safe. Everyone has their own room; families even have their
own houses. We have running water and a little bit of electricity. We work hard
but it’s warm and we have food in our bellies every night. It wouldn’t be much
out of our way, we could take you there.”
Her eyes are wistful and for a moment I think she might
take me up on the offer. “What? And leave Cook?”
“Would that be so awful?” Zac mutters, barely audible. His
mother shoots him a dirty look.
“He could go too.” I know the words are a lie as soon as I
say them. He would never agree to go back to the Ridge and I doubt the Captain
would accept him anyway. He was too . . . troublesome.
“No, no. Besides, if it is so great, why are you leaving?”
I shrug. “I’m just looking for something different; something
I’m not going to find safe behind a fence. I’m looking for my place.”
Molly nods. “Well I have found my place and it is here with
Cook, but . . .”
“But?”
“But if you can, you should take Zac with you. He has
turned out to be a fine young man. He works hard and does as he’s told,” she
smiles, “most of the time.”
I look from mother to son. They both look like begging
pups, pleading for my approval and acceptance. “I’ll talk to Skip about it. It
will be his decision, but I’ll talk to him.”
Continue with Delirium Jane: Part VII
Monday, January 21, 2013
Delirium Jane: Part V
Continued from Delirium Jane: Part IV
I drop down to one knee and swing my spear at the back of
the dead woman’s knees. The blow drops her on flat on her back where Graham
brings his wooden bat down into her face, caving in her skull and ending her
life for a second time.
“Behind you,” he says calmly as he turns to meet another
attacker.
I spin to find demon approaching in a slow staggering
gait. It’s ancient and decomposed well beyond identification of age, sex, or
race; maybe one of the originals, if they are capable of lasting that long.
With each step it shutters and groans; its muscles and tendons seem to fight
against the incessant drive of the disease, knowing that they should not work
at all.
It looks like it might fall to pieces before it even
reaches me, but it is no less deadly and I act swiftly. I drive my spear into
an empty eye socket and end its existence. I can’t help but imagine that a
breath of thanks escapes as I release the poor soul trapped inside the rotten
husk.
“I think that’s the last one,” Skip says in a hushed
voice.
“We better keep moving. I’m sure there are others,” I say.
“Skip, I think this is a bad idea. What are these guys
really worth? Certainly, not our lives,” Graham says as he looks back toward
the direction we had come from.
“The further in we go, the more I like these guys. If they
can survive out here, then they will fit in great with us,” Skip answers.
We had left our 4Runner about four miles back at the edge
of the tree line and Graham was uneasy about it being unattended and even less
impressed with us heading into unfriendly territory to locate a band of
unknowns.
“You’re quite the adventurer,” I say to Graham.
He scowls at me but says nothing and continues walking,
checking his compass periodically.
“That’s why he’s my first mate. He’s the level head. You
can’t have both the skipper and the mate gallivanting off into the sunset. I’m
the drive and the ambition, he’s the sanity,” Skip says.
Before I can respond there is a gunshot blast and the tree
next to me explodes, raining woody pine scented shrapnel. I drop flat on my
stomach and shove my face into the layer of pine needles that cover the ground.
“All of you, hands where I can see ‘em,” a vaguely
familiar male voice calls.
“Zak? Is that you?” I call out while keeping my face in
the dirt and lifting my hands clear into the air.
“Maybe . . . who’s there?”
“Jane.”
There is a long pause. “Jane? From Mussel Ridge?” he finally asks.
“That’s the one.”
“Whatchya doin’ way out here?”
“Hey Zak, you think we could have a proper conversation?
One that doesn’t involve a mouthful of dirt and pine needles.”
“Oh yea! Sure thing. You guys can all get up off the
ground.”
I push myself to my feet and dust myself off. I look
around for the lanky blonde headed teenager, but am instead met with a hug from
a great bear of a man.
When he lets go of me I step back with my mouth agape.
“Holy shit man. What did you do with my little buddy? Did you a eat him?”
“I grew a bit,” he says sheepishly.
“Can we have this little reunion someplace else? That gun
shot’s gonna be tolling the zoms,” Graham comments.
“This way.” Zak nods to the north.
“So you know each other?” Skip asks.
“Sure do. Jane helped me and my mom get to Mussel Ridge.”
“He was just a kid then. Sixteen? A beanpole with a shaggy
mop of blonde hair.”
“Yea, that was too much work to keep clean out here,” he
says rubbing his fuzzy crew cut “and I was almost eighteen.”
“What brought you out here?” Skip asks. The question
sounds conversational enough, but there is something in his tone that tells me
he is data mining. In the very short time that I have known him, Skip has a way
of putting people at ease and keeping the information flowing. As a PR manager,
it is a skill I recognize; it is a skill I use myself.
“We stuck around the Ridge for a couple of months. My mom
started dating Cook and when him and the guys decided they’d had enough of the
Captain’s rules she went with ‘em. She wanted me to stay, but I wasn’t gonna
leave her.”
“How is your mom?” I ask.
“Pretty good. As good as anyone. S’pose you could say her
and Cook got married.”
“Is he your leader? Cook?” Skip asks.
“Well . . . we don’t really have a leader. But I guess if
we did, I would be Cook. People don’t fuck with him and when he speaks they
shut their traps.”
“No leader, aye?” Skip digs a little deeper.
“We all live together and help each other out, but we
don’t play games. When it comes to survival, it’s every man for himself. Or at
least that’s what Cook says.”
“But you don’t agree?” I ask, hoping that he hadn’t lost
all hope for humanity and become so cynical.
He ignores my question. “We’re here.”
Twenty feet in the air, a dozen platforms connected by a
series of bridges have been built onto the oaks and sturdiest of maples; most sport
a tent or two, with the largest housing a fully enclosed building.
“We skipped the fences. Too difficult to build, secure and
maintain,” Zak says, recognizing our surprise.
“Zak! What do you think you’re doing?”a middle aged man
yells down from the closest platform.
“It’s OK. I know them.”
“Cook’s not gonna’ be happy.”
“Just let the ladder down. I can handle Cook,” Zak says
and then turns to us. “We’re not s’posed to bring people back here. The last
time we brought strangers back, they tried to attack us. We dealt with them
alright but it wasn’t good.”
A rope ladder drops from the platform and Zak motions for
us to climb. I scramble up the swaying ladder after waiting my turn behind Skip
and Graham.
“So you can handle me, can you boy?”asks a man with a crew
cut and black goatee, dressed in fatigues; whom I assume is Cook. I can’t place
him, even though we were supposedly at the Ridge together.
“It’s Jane.”
Cook smacks the back of Zak’s head hard. “I don’t give a
fuck who it is. You know the rules. Did you check ‘em for bites? What about
weapons? You have any idea what they’re carrying?”
Cook’s aggression has put me on edge and before I know it,
I have my knife in hand ready for all hell to break loose.
“This is what I’m talking about fuckhead. See, she’s
already drawn her knife.” Cook waves at me dismissively. “We don’t need you
bringing any crazy bitches back here.”
“She’s not crazy,” Zak growls.
Cook turns and faces me. “Alright little girl, prove him
right and put your knife away.”
My jaw clenches and I tighten my grip on my knife. You don’t
survive the zombie apocalypse by doing as you’re told; you survive by listening
to your gut. That applies to dealing with the dead as well as the soon to be
dead.
I prepare to stand my ground as Cook moves towards me.
“Don’t you touch her,” Zak yells and charges at the man.
At least six feet tall, Zak has a good three inches on him and pushes him away
easily, but Cook recovers quickly and responds with a lighting fast hook to the
kid’s cheek.
“THAT IS ENOUGH! Jane put your knife away! Graham stand
down!” Skip barks.
Thrown off guard by a command and tone that was so out of
character for the easy going guy I met in the pub, I do as I am told. I glance
over my shoulder to see Graham unclenching his fists and struggling to relax
from a position ready to pounce.
“Cook, I presume? I am Captain Leo Pearson, this is my
first mate Graham and I believe you may already know Jane. We are not here to
cause trouble; we are merely looking for some adventurous men to join our crew.”
Cook seems to respond favorably to Skip’s tone because he
releases Zak’s shirt collar and relaxes his fist. “I am Cook. It looks to me like you’re here to cause
trouble; skipping our security protocols and drawing weapons on me, unprovoked.”
“Things escalated quickly. We are in unfamiliar territory
and Jane is new to my command. She is a bit . . . reckless. I will deal with
her myself. And in our own defense, I would not say that we were entirely unprovoked.
Your man shot at us in the woods, so forgive us if we are a bit on edge.”
Cook glances at Zak, whose eye is swelling and turning
purple. “You shot at them.”
Zak nods. “I didn’t recognize them.”
“Pearson, let’s talk,” Cook says turning towards one of the
two bridges leading from the platform.
“Let’s. Come Graham,” Skip calls, as if Graham were his
obedient hound.
I begin to follow.
“No Jane. Stay here.”
My blood simmers at his flippant tone towards me. I accept
that I hardly know him; I didn’t even know his real name until just now, but he
was the one that told me I would have to defend myself and bring my attitude. Just
as I am about to say something he offers a quick wink that tells me to hold my
tongue and play nice for now.
“Zak, take her to see your mom. They’ll probably want to
catch up,” Cook says.
I follow behind, as Zak leads me toward the other bridge. We
both have our orders to be good little children while the men go discuss business.
Continue with Delirium Jane: Part VI
Friday, January 18, 2013
Delirium Jane: Part IV
Continued from Delirium Jane: Part III
“Skip! I’ve been looking for you all over town,” I yell to
the sailor who is sitting at picnic table next to the fence.
He looks up from a notebook and puts down his pen. “It’s
nice to know a pretty girl like you is looking for me.”
I flush at his flirtation. “Have you had any luck with
finding your crew?”
“No, no takers. We will head north. I spoke to the Captain
and he tells me that there is a small group of survivors not too far from here.
Some might be will to come and the rest might be willing to assimilate.”
I nod, knowing the group of which he speaks. Nice guys but
they had been too liberal to sign up to the Captain's code of conduct, so they
chose to live on the outskirts.
“I want to go,” I say.
“North? Do you have business with them?”
“No. I want to join your crew.”
His eyes sparkle, his grin grows wide and he lets out
rumbling belly laugh. “This ain’t no day sail. No picnic with dock shoes and
salmon pants.”
“I’m serious.”
His brow furrows and deep creases appear in his forehead
beneath his shaggy bangs. Instantly he looks years older and his face shows the
true impact the last two years have had on us all.
“I have nothing here. No family, no husband, no boyfriend.
Not even a lover. I have no useful skills other than hauling the dead to a burn
pile.”
“Why would I want you then?
“I have no useful skills here. I know how to sail.” It wasn’t a complete lie. As a kid, I
had spent hours at my uncle’s camp on Sebago sailing a little sunfish. I had
also dated a boy in college who had been on the varsity sailing team. I knew the basics.
His brow knit tighter until I thought it might merge, never
to separate.
“I can learn and work hard. I know hard work. I haul dead
bodies.”
“What do you carry for a weapon?”
I point to the knife strapped to the inside of my left
calf. “That and a double ended steal tipped spear.”
“How are you with guns?”
“I’m shit with a pistol but I’m OK with a rifle. I was
good enough to get myself here with one.”
“You don’t have it anymore?”
“No, all firearms were conscripted for the armory. We are
allowed to keep and carry all of our other weapons though.”
Skip raises an eyebrow. “Population control?”
I shrug. “No, I never got the feeling that it was about
controlling us. The Captain is all about the greater good and so far it has
worked. Besides we have far better shots that put my gun to better use. In
exchange the Captain lets us use Kyle, the machinist, to repair and make our
own weapons, within reason.”
“So your spear –“
“Is custom for my height, strength, and abilities.”
Skips nods and seems to approve of my interest in my
weapon of choice. “Where did you come from?”
I swallow hard. I don’t like to remember. “Portland.”
“You made it out of Portland?”
Sure it’s not as impressive as Boston or New York but as
Maine’s largest city in the most populated part of the state, it is a red zone
of infection. Or at least it was, I have not met another survivor from
Portland so I don't know it's current status. “With a will to survive and a whole lot of luck.”
“And what brought you this far north?”
“I was headed to the County. Figured I would have better
chances with the moose and potatoes.
Just south of Augusta I ran into a small group that had heard about the
Captain. When I got here and saw what he was doing, I decided I would stick
around.”
“You know it’s considered bad luck to have a woman aboard.”
“The dead are walking. How much worse can our luck get?”
“The crew is going to be
. . . salty . . . misfits and mongrels. I won’t always be there to
protect you. I can’t guarantee your safety.”
“I can handle myself and any dickhead that wants to fuck
with me.”
Skip lets out a deep sigh of resignation. “When can you be
ready to go?”
“Fifteen minutes?”
He smiles. “We’ll leave first thing in the morning. Say
good-bye to your friends and cash in any chits. Bring everything you can carry
and don’t forget your attitude, you’ll be needing that.”
Continue with Delirium Jane: Part V
Wednesday, January 9, 2013
Delirium Jane: Part III
Continued from Delirium Jane: Part II
I slip in through the front door of the house that I
share with a Kendra, Lewis and Sam. In the beginning it had been a bit
awkward, three random strangers assigned to a house simply because they happened
to arrive at the same time. Lewis had been convinced that he had died and gone
to heaven. He couldn’t believe how lucky he had been to be assigned to live with
three women, all under forty. But the novelty wore off as he learned the dangers
of women in close confines and his fantasy of an orgy with him at the center
was replaced by a delicate dance around hormones and mollification. With time
he did manage to pair up with Sam, allowing Kendra and me to lower are guards
and ease into the communal life style.
“Hey Jane, I got an extra pub chit today. You wanna go
down to the center?” Kendra says, looking up from her book in the
waning daylight of the living room.
“Another one?”
“Cameron brought it in for me. I think his dad is trying
to get into my pants.”
“Or Cam is.”
“He’s only fourteen.”
I blink at my roommate; as smart as she is, she can be a
bit dense. Kendra is one of the useful people. She had been a high school
teacher. Not one of those “my-career-as-an-artist-didn’t-pan out-so-I’m-going-to-teach-history-or-something”
teachers. She is brilliant, well rounded, and has a real knack for explaining
complicated things simply. Teaching is her gift and the community rewards her
well for her skills, usually with extra rations which she graciously shares
with me.
“Sure, let me get cleaned up.”
I stop at my room on the second floor for a change of
clothes before I head to the bathroom. I strip out of my coveralls and do a
quick sniff test. I had showered the day before and today had not been
particularly grueling, so I settle for washing my face and cleaning the grime
from my hands.
That’s one of the things we have had to get used to; the
useful people, somehow, keep us flush with running water but we have all
learned the hard way how valuable and sacred it is. We have grown to respect
and conserve it. We have learned not to take the twist of a knob for granted. Well, some of us accept that running water a
luxury. Those that haven’t quite learned that lesson are policed closely by
their roommates and the fear of running out.
*
“Thank God for apples,” I say as Kendra places a mug of
cider on the table in front of me.
“I was always more of a wine drinker,” she says.
“Shoulda’ been in California when the dead decided to not
stay dead.”
“I heard Kirk is working on building a still. He’s gonna
make some potato vodka.”
“Waste of spuds if you ask me. I only ever drank vodka with
a mixer and apple juice is the only juice we have. Might as well just drink
cider.”
“I was thinking we might mash up some tomatoes and make Bloody
Marys.”
“I would kill for a Bloody Mary. Even a crappy one, you
know those pre-mixed ones?” I say, trying not to drool at the thought.
“He was going to grow some hops for beer, but the Captain
shot him down. Told him our grain was too valuable as flour to be use as wort.”
I take a sip of my cider. It is a bit sweet for my tastes
but I’ll take what I can get. “We’re lucky the Captain lets Kirk make cider.”
“He’s playing with a mead recipe. He says he could make
that year round, because honey stores well.”
“You’ve been talking to Kirk a lot lately, haven’t you?” I
say with a wink.
Her cheeks flush and she avoids my comment by taking a
drink.
Some people reminisce about clothing; others lament the
loss of the flat screen TV and cable. Kendra and I, we dream of alcohol. Beer.
Wine. Whiskey. Rum. It doesn’t matter. I had only ever been a social drinker and a moderate one at that, but I missed it. Perhaps it was the loss of the option
that I mourn.
“If they ever opened up the apprentice program to adults,
that’s what I would want to do,” I say.
“What’s that?”
“I’d want to apprentice under Kirk.”
“Ladies, mind if I join you?”
I look up from my drink to see a short broadly built man
with shaggy red hair and a neatly trimmed beard. I smile at the stranger and
motion to the empty chair.
“New in town?” Kendra asks. The question comes from habit,
after years of making small talk. It’s obvious he’s new to town; take a
population of two hundred subtract women, children, and taken monogamous men
and you’ll have a tendency to notice a new face.
“Just passing through, name’s Skip,” he says.
“Kendra.”
“Jane. I didn’t know there was a convoy in town.” I glance
around the quiet, dimly lit pub that had been a senior activity room in an
earlier life; there is a poker game in progress and a teenage boy flirting with
an older woman at a corner table. Next to the bar, another stranger was working
a small group of men.
We aren’t the only survivor community. There are pockets of
them around, some larger and more sophisticated than others. Mussel Ridge is one of the larger and
more organized towns in the area and so we periodically get convoys passing through looking
to trade and share information and resources. People don’t travel much these
days, but when they do it is heavily armed and with great fanfare. The last time
a major convoy passed came through, the Captain ordered it a holiday and
cancelled all non-essential work.
“No convoy. Just passing through.”
I raise an eyebrow and take another sip of my cider. “Alone?”
“Me and my mate.” He nods toward the stranger at the bar.
“Mate? Are you British? I don’t hear an accent,” Kendra
asks.
Skip laughs and shakes his head. “He’s my first mate.”
“You’re pirates?”
“I’m from the coast. I have been living in a community
like this in Rockland.”
“Rockland has been secured?” I ask and lean forward, eager
to hear more news of the outside world.
“Not exactly. We’ve secured Port Clyde and when we are
organized and feeling lucky we make supply runs into Rockland.”
“So the coast is bad?”
“It was the peak of the tourist season when the virus hit,
plus people were fleeing from New York and Boston to their summer homes. The
coast is crawling with brain-deads.”
“Is there any other type of tourist?” I smirk.
“Ha!”
“I heard Lobster Fest was in progress,” Kendra comments.
“The coastal towns are a mess. Their populations were
swollen from seasonal residents, but Rockland had an additional 70,000 people
in town for the Festival.”
I shake my head. “So stupid. They should have cancelled.
There had already been reports and warnings at that point.”
“Meh, no one expected it. It all happened so fast.
Outbreaks are for the cities, not rural Maine. If it hadn’t been for the influx
of visitors from out of state, things could have turned out different.”
With the thought lingering and painting alternate
realities in my mind, I down the last of my cider.
“Want a re-fill,” Skip asks.
“That was my last chit.”
“I brought my own.” He pulls a silver flask from his jacket
pocket. “Jameson. The real deal.”
Kendra and I stare at him wide eyed. No one just carries around
liquor with them. It is too valuable; only broken out for special occasions or
as a bargaining chip.
He takes our silence as consent and pours some whiskey
into our empty glasses.
“So you were telling us about being a pirate?”
Skip leans back in his chair. “Our leader has approved my
request to take one of the Rockland windjammers and set up trade. Graham, my
first mate, and I are looking for crew. We need a dozen hardy souls to sail the
coast, set up trade routes and relations, witness the devastation, and maybe
even cross the pond to see how Europe fared.”
“So . . . why are you here? You’re a long way from the
coast,” I ask.
“It’s harder than you’d think to get people to leave
secured communities.”
“Sounds like suicide if you ask me. There are crazies out
there. Real militant fanatics. Pull into the wrong harbor and you’ll wind up
with your ship stolen and throats slit,” Kendra says.
“Bright ray of sunshine, you are,” Skip says.
“And I’m not even going to start on the horde of rotten
corpses just waiting for you to fuck up.”
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