Sneak Peek: Hadean 3, Chapter 4

SmashwordsChapter Four

“Head, torso, arms, and toes. Severed toes.” The man’s sing-song voice echoed in the empty hall.

Rosa Robelski hummed along to the children’s song. Her office chair creaked as she leaned back. Hitting the pause button, she rubbed the grainy satellite images from her eyes. Einstein’s count was off by one. This Third World War was being fought with sticks, stones, bats, and fists. Apparently the crazy pandemic affected the infected’s higher brain function.

She stared at the computer monitor.

Arms and legs tangled in a frenzy of action and spilled blood pooled in glossy black puddles. Red and blue marked the opposing bands of crazies. Crowns in matching colors picked out the leaders of the groups.

So did the presence of assault rifles and the blasts of heat from their muzzles.

Only a few crazies retained the ability to use sophisticated weaponry.

God help everyone if any of them learned to use a nuke or chemical weapons. Rubbing her neck, she stretched. The kid’s song slipped past her lips. “Heads. Shoulders…”

No. That hadn’t been what she’d heard. She’d heard a new apocalyptic version, complete with chopped up body parts. In the four months since she’d been airlifted from a country club in Cave Creek, Arizona, she’d let herself get comfortable, deluded herself with ideas of safety.

That was the fastest way to end up dead.

The crazy hadn’t slowed down. If anything it was accelerating.

And spreading.

Twice now, bullets had sprayed the halls while she’d been locked down in the lab for hours. Officially the military hunted escaped subjects. But rumors circulated. And scientists like her had disappeared.

Keys jingled. A shadow drifted across the opaque glass at the front of her laboratory.

Heart lodged in her throat, Rosa hooked her finger through the drawer handle and eased it open. Only the military personnel carried guns on Area 51, but she was far from helpless. The fire extinguisher three feet away would work in a pinch. So would the array of scissors in her desk drawer. She shook her head.

She was safe.

The lab was accessible only by key card. A metal door and bullet-proof glass separated her from the hall. The crazies didn’t use reason. And if they tried to smash their way inside, she’d have plenty of time to exit through the drop ceiling or garbage chute.

She slipped her hand into the drawer. Cold steel bit into her fingers as she wrapped them around the scissors. Still, it was better safe than sorry.

The light on the black electronic pad above the fire extinguisher switched from red to green. The door locks clicked.

Mouth dry, she eased out her weapon. Stab out the eyes. Slash the throat. Whatever it takes to survive.

Keith Gills shouldered the door open. The thirty-something janitor stopped singing mid-severed toes. The meaty, fetid stench of decaying corpses infiltrated the lab despite the higher air pressure in the room, thanks to the bin of body parts in the hall and waiting to be taken to the incinerator. Real human garbage.  Pale green eyes blinked at her from under ginger eyebrows. Gel darkened the spikes on his oval head to golden brown. “Dr. Robelski. You’re here.”

Obviously. Rosa forced her lips into a smile, the better to stop everyone from spreading rumors about her. “It’s Rosa, Keith. And I’m not a doctor.”

Red washed Keith’s cheeks subsuming his freckles in the tide of embarrassment. “Sorry. I keep forgetting.”

“No problem.” The base was stuffed with Ph.D.s. Even her boyfriend had two. She was one of the rare exceptions with her bachelor degree.

“Any word on a cure?” Sidling inside, he retrieved her waste basket and dumped it into a larger garbage can on wheels.

Rosa rubbed the goosebumps pressing against her lab coat. “I wouldn’t know. I’m studying how the disease works, why some people are unaffected, and why not all the crazies are treated the same.”

She stared at the screen. The crazies tagged in red had no obvious phenotypic similarities—old, young, man, woman, European, Asian, African. They blended together, fought as one unit. Despite millennia of dividing ourselves in artificial categories, the crazy recognized only one thing—human. True equality. And no one would be around to enjoy it. Yippee.

“You know, you’re the only one to talk about what you do.” Keith dragged the trash can into the center of the lab. “Guess everyone thinks a janitor is too dumb to understand what’s going on.”

DNA sequencing machines hummed on every bench top. Racks of blood filled vials crammed the two fridges in the back. Cables tethered the sequencers to the main frame before the data popped up on the screen. She glanced at her boyfriend and labmate’s computer, catching a whiff of Marcus Westmoreland’s pine soap.

“I don’t think it has anything to do with you being a janitor.” Returning the scissors to the drawer, Rosa spun around on her chair and faced Keith. “The disciplines being studied are pretty unique, few outside the field would understand the work.”

Keith pulled a yellow and white pipette tip box from the next bag and set it aside. “Then many doctors could be researching the same thing, but no one would know?”

“General Simbury oversees all the projects, redirecting those that need it where he thinks it might do the most good.” Unlike her project that hadn’t produced anything worth her presence in the top secret base.  She rested her hands on her thighs. “I doubt anyone’s duplicating any research.”

Resources were tight and getting scarce. The daily announcements had stopped reporting the number of patrols lost on hunting expeditions.

“Good to know. Good to know.” Keith removed another tip box and stacked it on the first one. “You think they’ll find a cure for the crazy?”

Rosa sighed and sank deeper. It had been four months. Four. No one could find a specific vector and most poo-pooed the notion that the genetically modified food had contributed anything to the pandemic. Worse, the research she and Marcus had collected over the years had disappeared, putting them at square one.

And they were still at square one four months later.

Keith scratched his nose, watching her, waiting for an answer.

She’d like to say yes, but didn’t like to lie. “I hope so. My family is out there.”

Safe so far. But until the crazy was cured, no one was safe for long.

Nodding, Keith tugged the bags from the remaining two baskets, tied them off, then chucked them into the bigger garbage can. “How come your research doesn’t end up with bodies?”

Rosa blinked. Bodies. She’d been given subjects to study. The thirty people lay in chemically induced comas on slabs four stories below. And that’s where they’d stay if she had anything to say about it. Just because they went a little nuts, didn’t make them less than human. She didn’t experiment on humans, but she could watch them. “I study how the crazies act toward each other. Their tribal dynamics. And how they form societies.”

And they were forming societies. Independent fiefdoms. Unfortunately, she hadn’t figured out how to join one tribe. Those that tried ended up with crushed skulls. It was a hell of an initiation…

Tucking the stack of pipet boxes under one arm, Keith rested his free hand on the edge of the garbage can. “You and Dr. Westmoreland are the only ones that don’t have a body count. The others… The others, they’ve been taking bets on who survives the arena.” Keith opened and closed the top box lid. “No one survives. They kill the ones that survive.”

A chill snaked down Rosa’s back. The classrooms in the basement were supposed to be used to see if the crazies were teachable, able to be redeemed by learning basic skills. Instead it was a private coliseum with battles to the death.

Not all monsters were crazy.

And she had to work with them. Thankfully, she and Marcus spent most of their time together in the lab or their personal quarters. Enough of that. Half of survival lay in the attitude. Boxing up her gloomy thoughts, she shoved them in a corner of her brain where they could pop out just as she drifted off to sleep. “So what are you collecting the boxes for?”

“My daughter. She—” Keith paled. His freckles flashed like stop lights on his pale skin. “I… I mean…”

Poor guy. Good laboratory practices forbade picking through the garbage. He probably thought he’d be fired from his job for the safety violation. A death sentence for him and his family. She wouldn’t report him. In fact… Pushing from her seat, she crossed the lab and stopped by the hood holding Marcus’s reagents. She opened the drawer on the right and scooped out four more boxes.

“You can take these.” After handing them off, she returned to her desk and removed red, green, black, and blue Sharpies. “And she can draw with these.”

Keith blinked. “Thanks.”

“Not a problem. According to my mom, my niece and nephew are going a little nuts with so much time on their hands. Thankfully, they’re starting a school. Not an option here. I think you have one of the few kids…” Except the ones experimented on. Don’t think about it. Don’t think about it. Rosa glanced at her desktop computer. A miniature Kokopelli sat next to a doll-sized tea cup. She bit her lip. If her computer didn’t have a totem, bad things would happen to her work. But did she need both of them?

She filched the flute-playing green lizard before she changed her mind. “And she can have this, too.”

Keith’s mouth opened in surprise. “Are you sure?”

“Just until the crazy is over. Then I’ll want it back.” Rosa laced her fingers together before she snatched it back. The tiny teacup was enough.

“Thank you.” He tucked the toy into his pocket next to the pens then patted it. Shuffling toward the door, he perfumed the air with a touch of body odor. “I—thank you.”

“You bet.” She rubbed the smell from her nose. If she hadn’t had a back-up deodorant in her bug-out bag, she’d be stinky, too. God help her.

The wheel of his garbage can squeaked as he pushed it out. The door closed quietly behind him just as he started signing again. “Head, torsos, arms, and toes. Severed toes.”

Reaching up, she shifted aside the vertical blinds.

Keith pushed the garbage can ahead of him while pulling a bin.

Through the clumps of hair and brownish smears of blood, she made out an eyeball, a cheek, and part of a nose. The head perched like a cherry on top of a body part sundae. Gah. She let the blinds shut her inside. Scrubbing her hand down her face, she plopped into her seat. “The crazies are everywhere.”

And speaking of crazies…

She tapped the mouse.

Violence erupted across her screen as the two tribes of crazies battled it out. The two men marked with red crowns fired their assault weapons into the melee. Heads exploded like watermelons. Some turned their faces into the fountains of red and gray. Arms swung, punched and battered their opponents. Even without sound, she knew no one screamed or cried out. Everything was in silence.

Bile rose in her throat. Same crazy; different city. Her hand twitched on the mouse and she hit fast forward.

Victims fell. The red tribe dog piled onto the enemy still standing. The crowd thinned. At twenty minutes, only the red tribe remained on their feet. Most panted. Their hands clenched and relaxed.

Adrenalin still coursed through their veins, needing an outlet. Rosa picked up her pen, tapped it against her lab notebook. Nothing new in this battle. She scanned the pages. Nothing new in any battle for the last month. So much for her learning theory.

One of their leaders climbed a pile of corpses. He opened his mouth and screamed. And screamed. And screamed.

Okay, that was new. She turned up the speaker then mentally smacked herself. This satellite feed didn’t come with sound.

The crazies relaxed. Tight shoulders bowed. Arms swung loosely at their sides.

Holy crap. Were they communicating? She replayed the scene. Pen scratched paper as she recorded the time code. They were communicating. She palmed her chin, staring at the screen.

The leader trudged into the camp of their fallen enemy. He paused by a pile of cans. The crowd shifted, dividing itself in groups. Young women and men in one line. Children next. Everyone else last.

She pinched her bottom lip. What did it mean? The young adults ranged in age from sixteen to maybe thirty. The last four months had made most lean, but there were still a few heavy set people in the tribe. Heck, they weren’t even the best fighters, the older ones had more kills. But many crazies sorted themselves this way when it came time to divide up the spoils of war.

“Why? Why are you giving these people the food first?” She glanced at Marcus’s workstation. Genetics had confirmed these weren’t the children of the older people. So what was up with the sacrifice? Without their genes surviving onto the next generation, altruism was an evolutionary dead end.

She noted the pattern in the lab book. This behavior was becoming the norm amongst the tribes instead of the exception. She’d have to ask Marcus to look for a genetic component. Maybe by focusing on this group, his research would have a breakthrough.

They needed a breakthrough.

Desperately.

The red button on the electronic key pad switched to green.

The man always did have the best timing. “Hey, Marcus, I—”

Solange Poole sashayed into the lab, dressed in her trademark vintage 1950’s housewife chic. A frilly white apron covered the blue checked dress poured over her curves. Perky breasts pointed like arrows at Rosa. Her glossy jet ponytail slapped her rounded shoulders. “Marcus isn’t here?”

Rosa’s knuckles flashed white. She dropped her pen and carefully closed her lab notebook. Stabbing one of those silicone floatation devices on Solange’s chest was the best way to get evicted from the base. “No, he’s getting us dinner.”

To enjoy in their room. Alone together.

“Oh.” Solange’s puffy lips puckered into a scarlet hole. “I was sure he would be here.”

Just as the perky bimbo thought he’d fall for her charms. Not gonna happen. Marcus was Rosa’s and she was his. Her fingers clenched into a fist itching for just one punch. Just one. Was that too much to ask? She tamped down the anger. “Do you want me to give him a message?”

Solange’s perky nose wrinkled. “That really is all you’re good for, isn’t it? Taking messages.”

Rosa bit the inside of her mouth. She wouldn’t give the woman the satisfaction of rising to her bait. Instead, she jabbed the mouse, halting the video stream on her monitor. How could someone be so mean and not be crazy?

Folding her arms across her chest, Solange hoisted her breasts almost to her chin. “We have enough secretaries. We don’t need you, and….” Her black eyes twinkled maliciously under her fringe of bangs. “And finally the general understands.”

A hard knot formed in Rosa’s stomach. If Solange was happy, then somewhere puppies wept.

“Projects are being cut.” White even teeth flashed between Solange’s crimson lips. “Useless, stupid projects. And your first up for the hearing scheduled in twenty minutes.” Ponytail bouncing, she sauntered to the door. “Once you’re gone, I’ll take care of Marcus and your lab rats.”

A rush of lavender perfume hit Rosa in the face as the other woman left the lab. Oh God. Oh my God. With shaking hands, she scanned her notebook. Nothing. She had nothing to justify her presence in the facility.

She was as good as dead.

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There’s always this one house…

I’ve lived in my current house for 13 years. During that time, there’s a certain set of houses that are up for sale every few years. In some cases it’s been months since the for sale sign came down.

For  a while I blamed the economy. Bad prices. Maybe even lost jobs.

Compounding matters, I know I live in a transient state where most folks only come for 3-5  years before moving on.

But these homes have a shorter life span than that. One house has been on the market and sold for 9 years out of the 13.

Something odd is going on there.

Given that I’m a writer, I’ve come up with my own ideas. My favorite is that the house is haunted  and about the year mark after creepy signs, some disembodied voice tells them to get out. And they do.

Option 2, the house just doesn’t like them. And so it causes the families to fight and bicker until they just can’t take it anymore and split up, forcing them to sell the house. This is what my mom calls Sour land.

Option 3, the house is an attention whore causing things to constantly break thereby bankrupting the owners and forcing them to sell.

Which option is your favorite or do you have one to share?

Until next time.

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Sneak Peek: Hadean 3: Completely Forked Chapter 3

SmashwordsChapter Three

Seventeen year old Raine Czekalski balanced a stack of dirty dishes in her hands as she sidled into the house. Her nose wrinkled at the tang of tomato sauce and spices. Bits of chips and bread crumbs clung to the white stoneware plates. Gooey syrup kept the dessert plates from sliding too much. She heaved the stack onto the farmer’s table in the center of the kitchen. “Something’s up.”

Standing at the sink under the kitchen window, her best friend Cheyenne Zindell pulled her hands from the soapy water. Fear flashed in her eyes. Suds rolled down her thin arms and she swayed on her bare feet. “Have the crazies found us?”

Next to her, Raine’s third Musketeer and other best friend Colton Talbot wrapped a wiry arm around Cheyenne’s shoulders. “The guards would have fired a warning shot if they spied any strangers.”

Raine tamped down the left out feeling. Up until four months ago, she would have been included in the huddle. Now her friends had shifted into the realm of boy and girl friend, leaving room for only two. She was happy for them. Both of them, but…

The screen door squeaked. Jason DeWitt swaggered inside. His brown eyes skipped off the couple to stick on her. He winked before joining her at the table. Silverware jingled as he plopped a rolled napkin of it beside her plates. His muscled arm brushed hers. “Raine’s right.”

Her bestie’s relationship hadn’t been the only thing to change. Raine slipped her hand into Jason’s. His callouses were rough from working on the farm. Her insides tingled and tightened. “Before this last summer, it would have killed you to admit I was right, wouldn’t it?”

He shrugged. The motion smooth, betraying his gymnast training. “I wouldn’t have even thought it. As my only serious competition for high school valedictorian, I had to undermine your confidence and take you down. I’d already let you win for middle school.”

“As if.” After one last squeeze on his hand, Raine grabbed a fork from the dirty pile and began scraping uneaten food off the plates into the slops bucket to feed the goats later. “You had to study for your grades. My smarts come naturally.”

“Raine would have won.” Cheyenne dried her hands on a tea towel. “She had all easy classes her last year. Or would have had.”

Raine pursed her lips. “AP English, Algebra, and Biology aren’t easy classes.”

“For you they would have been.” Colton kissed Cheyenne’s temple then released her. “And I promised to give you my notes and old tests.”

“Ha. I knew it. You cheated to get good grades.” Jason tugged the napkin free of the utensils and snapped the cloth at her. “I win by default.”

“That’s not cheating.” Raine snatched the napkin from Jason’s grip. “That’s time management. Focusing on what I need to know.” She twisted her hands, twirling the napkin into a rope. “Besides, I wasn’t the one selling tests, answers, and essays to other kids. That’s cheating.”

She snapped the napkin at him.

Jason shifted away, avoiding the hit. “That’s free enterprise. And it saved our lives.”

Memories of the nerd court and their drive to beat her and her friends to death slammed against Raine’s skull. She caught her breath and locked her knees. Her last day of school had almost been her last day on Earth. “Yeah.”

“We survived. We’ll keep surviving.” Jason wrapped his fingers around her hand. Shifting, he pressed against her back. “We’re smart. We can do this, Miss Salutatorian.”

Raine allowed his chest to support her spine. Touch was good, so was her unsettled stomach and racing heart. Soon, stolen kisses and a little petting wouldn’t be enough. Then her aunt and uncle would have a shit fit. She pulled his arms around her stomach, and boxed up the past to deal with later.  “Dude, you so wouldn’t have bested me academically. You would have been number two in the class.”

“Guess, we won’t know.” Jason rested his chin on her shoulder. His warm breath washed down her chest.

Raine shifted as her body warmed.

“We could vote who is smarter.” Cheyenne embraced them both. Placed a loud smooch on Raine’s cheek. “My bestie is the smartest. That’s two. Colton?”

Colton hugged them from the other side and kissed Cheyenne’s nose. “Sorry, dude, but Raine is smarter.”

“You both would say that.” Jason tensed in the embrace, but didn’t squirm out of it as he had the first month. “You’ve been her friend since you guys were in diapers.”

“Not quite.” Colton pulled away first, then grabbed the stack of dishes and carried them to the sink. His oversized shirt flapped around his lanky frame. “Raine didn’t come to live with her aunt and uncle until she was eight.”

Raine shivered. She’s suffered through one day in a group home after her parents had been killed in a car accident. And her world had ended. This time, she still had her family. “And I met Cheyenne first. She lived across the street from my aunt and uncle.”

Scooping up the silverware, she shook the bunch at Raine. “But we met at the library during kids’ reading time. When you corrected the librarian’s pronunciation.”

Jason’s shoulders shook. Laughter slipped past his lips. “You corrected the librarian at eight?”

Raine rolled her eyes. Why did he find that funny? For the last six years, he was always trying to correct her in class. “It wasn’t a librarian. It was a teenage volunteer, and she didn’t pronounce the words right.”

The screen door squeaked. Thirteen year old Brien Patricks trundled inside, napkins formed a cloth bouquet in his arms. Acne spotted his chubby cheeks. A shock of red hair curled atop his round head and exertion painted his cheeks red. “Did anyone hear what the adults were talking about?”

With a sigh, Jason released Raine. “Every one of them clammed up when I delivered their meatball subs or peach cobbler.”

“Same here.” Raine propped a hip against the table. How could she have been so easily distracted? Could that be the first symptom of the crazy?

“We’ve been stuck in the kitchen cleaning all evening.” Cheyenne plunged the silverware into the soapy water, then chucked a towel at Raine.

Raine caught it, shook it flat, then sauntered toward the counter. Large stainless steel pots, bowls, and pans covered the chipped linoleum counter. Cooking for fifty people created a lot of dirty dishes. Thank God, she wasn’t the only one who had clean-up duty.

Nodding, Colton peered out the window. Adults and little kids moved under the twinkling Christmas lights. “Something’s up, though. I think everyone’s out there.”

“Everyone?” Rising on tiptoes, Raine stared over Cheyenne’s shoulder. Her mouth moved as she counted. Everyone. Fear trailed an icy finger down her spine. “Who’s keeping watch?”

What if the crazies snuck inside when no one was looking? They could be murdered in their beds. Her attention darted to the entrance in the living room. All the sporting equipment was in the hall, thirty feet away. A lot could happen in thirty feet. Her lungs stained to draw air. Blackness trimmed her vision.

Jason cleared his throat.

Her attention cut to him across the room, then the knife in his hand. Right. They were hardly defenseless. Raine breathed easier.

“Maybe it’s over.” Jason placed the knife on the washing machine, then finished sorting the fabric into piles for tonight’s wash load. “Maybe your sister Rosa found a cure for the crazy.”

Raine nodded. Although technically Rosa was her cousin, they were raised as sisters. Rosa was the smarter, more annoying one. Grabbing the clean sauce pot from the counter, Raine dried the interior. “Wouldn’t they have made an announcement by now?”

“A cure for the crazy?” Cheyenne dropped the clean plate. “My parents…”

Colton caught the dish and dipped it into the rinse water. “Will be among the first to get treatment. You know Mr. Robelski promised that and Rosa did, too.”

Raine held her breath. Brent and Kelly Zindell had walked off the sanity pier on the way to the ranch. They’d nearly killed Drew and Dogooder. And Mr. Brent had gotten old man Hauf beaten to death. Raine shivered. He’d nearly gotten them all slaughtered.

And Cheyenne still dreamed she’d join her parents on the crazy side.

Granny Hauf rapped on the window pane. She urged them to come out with a liver-spotted hand. “Your folks are making an announcement.”

Raine placed her hand over her chest, making sure her heart hadn’t leapt out.

A moment later, the backyard disappeared as the old lady covered the glass with corrugated metal shutters. Two slots suitable for a rifle barrel betrayed their true purpose—protection.

“I don’t think the crazy has been cured.” Raine hung the pot on its hook then draped the damp towel on the oven handle.

The lid of the washer clanged shut. Brien paled, highlighting his freckles. “Could they be close?”

Raine started. She’d nearly forgotten the kid was there.

“Not with all the guards here tonight.” Jason nudged the thirteen year old.

They’d all faced the mobs of crazy, but Brien’s encounter had been two months ago. And he’d watched his parents die. As horrific as the car accident had been, Raine knew it hadn’t compared to the attack at the Bar Margarita ranch. Still, they’d formed a bond. Being the only five teenagers on the ranch had helped.

Raine nodded. “They would have told us to grab our weapons if there’s a chance of an attack.”

The screen door creaked. Uncle Paul huffed inside the kitchen. At barely, five-five, he was nearly as round as tall. His suspenders struggled to hold up his worn jeans. White fringed his bald head and bushy eyebrows wiggled over his blue eyes like albino caterpillars. He rubbed his pudgy hands together. “Mrs. Hauf didn’t have to interrupt your K.P. duties. I was just coming in to talk to you.”

Aunt Grace slid out from behind her husband. Stick-bug thin she smiled at them. “We have exciting news.”

“The crazy…” Cheyenne bit her lip.

“We’re safe here, dear.” Aunt Grace’s gray hair curled in delicate waves from the top of her head to her pearl earrings. A diamond wedding ring caught the light from the CFLs overhead. “That’s why we’ve decided to start school back up. And we’ll have a little graduation ceremony next spring.”

Uncle Paul beamed at them.

Raine’s stomach clenched. “School?”

Her aunt and uncle were starting up school at the end of the world. And they acted like that was a good thing. Maybe they had gone crazy. They had to be crazy. There were more important thing than Algebra, English, and biology.

“School?” Cheyenne parroted.

Colton carefully set the rinsed plate on the counter. “Do you have the books and such?”

Aunt Grace waved her slim arm. “Ellen will pick up everything when she and her boyfriend go to town tomorrow.”

Silence settled in the room like a ghostly entity.

Raine blinked. Had she heard correctly? She replayed the memory. “Ellen is going into town?”

“Yes.” Aunt Grace tutted. “You yourself remarked at how low supplies had gotten.”

Uncle Paul nodded. His triple chins wobbled. “Of course, she and her fiancé aren’t going alone. Detective Dogooder will go with them. And a handful of others will wait by the stock trailer near the trailhead.”

Jason stepped forward. “I’d like to help, sir.”

Brien cowered behind Jason, tried to slip between the washer and the fridge.

Raine stiffened. If they wanted volunteers… “Me, too.”

Uncle Paul’s lips tightened.

“I have self-defense training.” Raine clasped her hands in front of her. This was what she had waited for all summer—payback. “And Dogooder said I was the best student. I hit nine out of ten of my targets.”

“I hit ten out of ten.” Jason stood next to her. “We can cover them.”

Geez, didn’t he know when to reel in his competitive streak? Raine elbowed him in the gut.

“Oh, dear.” Aunt Grace twirled her left pearl stud.

Uncle Paul cleared his throat. He straightened.

Raine ground her teeth. Uh-oh. He was assuming his lawyer persona.

“We need you kids at the house.” Her uncle looked them each in the eye. “Everything you do helps to make things normal. You don’t want the children traumatized further by recent events, do you?”

Cheyenne studied her cuticles. Colton clenched his hands but shifted his attention to the screen door.

Her turn. Raine raised her chin. Guilt no longer had power over her.

Uncle Paul squinted at her. “This school will go a long way to help them adjust to life here. You do want to help around the ranch, don’t you?”

Jason huffed. A whisper of fabric revealed him caving under pressure.

The chicken. Raine wasn’t so easily cowed. “We help around the ranch. We take care of the dishes, help with the cooking, pull weeds from the garden and harvest the produce. We’ve picked all the peaches in the orchard, dried some of them. And we gather the eggs, milk the goats, and help with the butchering of the pigs. Plus we keep our room neat.”

Not something she’d done while living at home in Phoenix. Messy was a form of self-expression. It was not an option when she shared the living room with her friends, and had Granny Hauf’s eagle eye watching them.

“You’re not going, Raine.” Uncle Paul raised a sausage finger. “I promised your parents I’d keep you safe. I won’t break that promise because you’re sulking.”

Raine stumbled back a step. Her parents. That was the first time her uncle has used them. It sucked. Crossing her arms over her chest, she glared at him. “Fine.”

“Fine.” Uncle Paul glared back.

Aunt Grace chewed on her bottom lip. “Well, now that that’s settled. We just wanted to let you know that school should start in a couple of days.”

A couple of days. A lot could happen in a couple of days. Like a trip to town? Would her friends be up for it? Raine glanced at Jason.

His eyebrows rose.

“Raine Czekalski,” Uncle Paul growled.

Raine’s spine stiffened. If he forbade her to go…

“Come along, dear.” Aunt Grace pushed on her husband’s meaty shoulder. “Let the kids finish cleaning the kitchen.”

Uncle Paul spun on his heel and lumbered out the back door.

Jason latched the screen door, then shut the interior one. Leaning against it, he faced her. “What are you thinking, Raine?”

“It’s four miles to the trailhead.” Stooping, Colton glanced through the gun ports in the corrugated metal shutters. “Maybe six or seven miles to town from there.”

“You want us to walk there and back?” Cheyenne returned to the sink and fished out a handful of silverware. “We can’t carry much for that distance.”

Raine smiled. She had the best friends ever. Together, they’d show her aunt and uncle they weren’t kids anymore. “There’s four bicycles in the barn. Each has a basket on the handlebars and saddle bags.”

“What will we take for weapons?” Jason threw the sliding bolt. “They’ll notice if we take the equipment in the hall.”

“There’s hammers and axes in the barn.” More than enough for them to have two different weapons each. Raine rubbed her hands together. This was so much easier when everyone contributed.

Transferring her handful of forks into the rinse water, Cheyenne angled her body slightly toward them. “Your sister, Drew, and Dogooder are going for food. We can’t hit the same places they will. You know they’ll send us back.”

“Let ’em get the food.” Colton swished the silverware in the water. “The golf course has some of those smaller solar panels, we need more power and those should fit into the saddle bags.”

“We’ll bring some rope, just in case. And we’ll grab the cameras from the course.” Jason removed the towel from the oven handle. “We could watch more ground than the guards can.”

“What about a solar water heater for the roof?” Cheyenne grabbed a saucer from the stack. “I heard your aunt saying they might run out of gas before the winter is over.”

“We could probably gerry-rig one from black piping.” Jason quickly dried a cookie sheet. “Do you know if there’s a hardware store nearby?”

Yes, yes. This would be perfect. Raine would show her aunt and uncle they didn’t need anymore schooling. “There’s one by the senior center. Although the maintenance shed on the golf course might have something, too.”

“I don’t want to go.” Brien whispered and pressed further into the space between the washer and fridge.

Raine stiffened. She’d completely forgotten about him. Again. After all he’d gone through, she’d taken him under her wing. So had her friends. Plastering a smile on her face, she approached him. “I’m glad you don’t want to go Brien, because your job is the most important of all.”

The kid blinked. “It is?”

“Yep.” She quickly came up with an idea. Her aunt and uncle would punish her for it. But, it would help make her point. She, Jason, and Cheyenne were seventeen, hardly kids. And Colton was nearly nineteen. Definitely not a kid.

It was time they weren’t treated as such.

Raine held out her hand. “We’re going to have to leave early. If asked, I want you to tell my aunt and uncle, we went to Polk Spring to go skinny dipping.”

Brien flushed. Even his ears turned red. “S-skinny dipping?”

“Exactly. Then if they decide to look for us, they’ll be looking in the opposite direction.” It was perfect. Raine hugged the chubby kid.

Jason planted his face in his palm. “You’re going to get me and Colton shot.”

“Don’t worry, Uncle Paul will know I’m to blame.” Raine hoped he would. She didn’t want her friends hurt. “Besides, he’ll be so pleased once he sees what we’ve brought, he won’t care. And no one will dismiss us as kids anymore.”

Everyone nodded.

“Now, if you guys will finish the dishes, I’ll move the bicycles out of the barn and hide them in the trees so we can leave at first light.” Raine wiped her hands on her pants and grabbed the slops bucket.

Colton checked the backyard through the opening. “Everyone’s still in the backyard.”

“I’ll help with the bikes.” Jason tossed his towel at Brien. “We should be back before they miss us.”

Brien shuffled forward, gnawing on his bottom lip.

“Relax.” Raine circled the table and headed toward the front door. “My uncle will probably assume I’m having a snit fit and Jason is talking me down.”

Cheyenne snorted. “She does it every time she doesn’t get her way.”

“Come on.” Dashing by her, Jason grabbed her hand. “Let’s hurry anyway.”

The screen door opened silently. Her mouth dried. Her heart hammered against her ribs. Pausing on the porch, she glanced left then right. Nothing. Hunching low, she darted forward.

Jason kept pace.

Reaching the barn, she pushed on the latch. Wood bit into her palms when she eased open the door. Chickens scuttled out of the way. A few goats glanced up. She beelined to the workbench in the back.

Jason selected a few adjustable wrenches and screwdrivers, before removing two hand axes, a pry bar, and two ball peen hammers. He winced as they clacked together in the saddlebags.

Raising the kickstand, she grabbed the handlebars of her favorite bicycle and wheeled it out of the horse stall into the corral at the back of the barn. “Come on.”

“Behind you.”

She looked left, then right. “It’s clear.”

Mounting the bike, she stomped on the pedals. The back tire dug into the mud then the bicycle shot forward. Standing, she powered on. Leaves crunched. A twig snapped.

No one called out.

They’d done it. A twisted pinon loomed around the bend. She swung her leg over and coasted closer. Dismounting, she ran from the momentum and plunged into the vegetation, ducking branches. She checked on Jason.

His teeth flashed white in the moonlight.

“There’s a clearing up ahead. We’ll park the bikes there.”

He flashed a thumbs-up.

Her heart slowed to normal. They really needed those cameras. If there’d been enough guards, someone would have stopped them by now. They were doing the right thing. The trees thinned.

White flashed in the clearing.

She stopped. Her sneakers slipping on pine needles. Had she imagined it?

“What?” Hissing under his breath, he stopped beside her.

“I thought—”

A woman sprinted through the clearing. Twigs caught in her hair. Tears marred her clothes. Mud stained her cheek.

And the gun in her hand glinted in the moonlight.

 

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Happy Labor Day to those in the US

Today, we celebrate Labor Day in the US. This holiday traditionally marks the end of summer with barbecues and picnics. It is a celebration of the labor that contributed to the prosperity, strength and well-being of our country and was proposed by Labor Unions.

Like many of our holidays, the celebration was honored at local levels first. New York was the first state to propose the holiday, but Oregon passed the law first. And while Unions pushed to have the holiday celebrated on Monday, in New York the first Labor Day was celebrated on a Tuesday in 1882.

Labor Day as a national holiday was approved by the Federal Government on June 28th, 1894, but originally only extended to the District of Columbia and the American Territories.

Enjoy the day off, America, but take a moment to reflect as well. We’ve come a long way.

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The Prize at the End of the Book

One of my favorite genres to read is cozy mysteries. I’ll admit that I binge read on them between books and sometimes when I’m supposed to be writing.

Lately, I’ve downloaded a large number of mysteries with food on the cover and a chef, baker, chocolate-maker as the main character. At the end of the mysteries are recipes usually mentioned in the story somewhere.

 This is the latest book I finished. It had a recipe in it with chicken and noodles. Definitely Asian inspired. I can’t cook Asian food, not even stir fry. I do not understand how this can be and yet, there it is.

But I’m never one to give up, so I bought the ingredients and tried it. It was quite tasty. My youngest even liked it.

I won’t be including recipes at the backs of my books. I’m sure the cannibals would be willing to share their secrets for roasting humans, but you know, I think I’ll pass.

Until next time.

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I’m Wishing…

I find amazon’s wish list a dangerous thing. I keep finding books to add, then I get obsessive about it and start spending money on buying those books. Money I should be spending on other things. I do try to keep my list under 3 pages. Here is what remains on my list:

Journey’s End (Penguin Modern Classics)

by Robert Cedric Sherriff (Kindle Edition)

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Charms and Murder (Pumpkin Valley Witches Book 1)

by Elizabeth Autumn (Kindle Edition)

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The Nutshell Studies of Unexplained Death

by Corinne May Botz (Hardcover)

$29.24 
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$2.99
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The American Plague

by Molly Caldwell Crosby (Kindle Edition)

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Operation Tabarin: Britain’s Secret Wartime Expedition to Antarctica 1944-46

by Stephen Haddelsey, Alan Carroll, HRH Princess Anne (Princess Royal) (Hardcover)

$21.15 
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Admiral Byrd’s Secret Journey Beyond The Poles

by Tim Swartz (Kindle Edition)

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Born of Stone (Gargoyle Masters Book 1)

by Missy Jane (Kindle Edition)

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Night of the Shadow (The Shadow Series Book 2)

by J. K. Winn (Kindle Edition)

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Savor (The Fredrickson Winery Novels Book 3)

by Barbara Ellen Brink (Kindle Edition)

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Altered Origins

by T. L. Devault (Kindle Edition)

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Wisdom

by Patrick Tylee (Kindle Edition)

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Sneak Peek: Hadean 3: Completely Forked, Chapter 2

SmashwordsChapter Two

Ellen Duncan raced across the yard. Her stomach knotted into a hard ball. Dad was going to send someone into town for supplies. And not just anyone but Drew. And where Drew went Dogooder would follow. The two of them bickered and called each other names, but they were brothers even if it was marriage not blood that bound them together.

Men and women streamed out of the barn. Slack jaws and dazed gazes told its own story. She’d missed the announcement.

“Ms. Duncan.” Henrietta Humphries staggered out of the barn with her arm linked with her husband Joel’s. Having spent their lives raising cattle on their own ranch, their skin had tanned to a fine leather and the Arizona sun had bleached their hair bone white. Grizzled and bent, the old couple moved agilely—a testament to a life spent in motion. Neither met her eyes.

They knew about the plan to send Drew and Dogooder into Payson for supplies, and felt guilty and relief they hadn’t been chosen.

Ellen didn’t blame them.

They’d survive the attack on the Bar Margarita by hiding in a sweltering attic with their grandson. As usual, Henrietta spoke for the pair. “Spaghetti done, Hon?”

Ellen’s stomach clenched. She’d had enough spaghetti for a lifetime. But they needed to stretch their reserves. Soon they’d be eating meat, meat, and occasionally meat, until the corn and squash harvest. “Meatball subs tonight.”

And the last of her flour went to make the bread.

“Nice change.” The elderly couple shuffled by, heading toward the backyard where the evening meal was being served. Five teens moved under the blinking Christmas lights, setting the picnic tables arranged under the sprawling pine tree.

“Yes.” Ellen didn’t want to think about the new menu if the farm didn’t get supplies soon. And she planned to be there with Drew and Dogooder when they entered Payson.

Stepping back, she watched the barn empty. Couples first, then the five bachelors, the two single mothers, and a couple of old timers. No Drew. No Dogooder. No Dad. Nodding to those she passed, she waited for the way to clear, then entered the barn.

Chickens and peacocks roosted on the posts and on the hay bales. A couple of milk goats trotted inside and hurried to their stall. Their flaccid utters proof they’d already been tended.

Drew and Dogooder squared off against Dad.

No one said a word, but tension thickened the air like cooling gelatin.

Ellen cleared her throat.

The men faced her.

Drew’s lips thinned. Dogooder’s fists hung at his side. Dad’s shoulders were squared, ready for the fight ahead.

She took a deep breath. “I see Dad finally saw reason and agreed to send you into town like I suggested.”

Drew stumbled back, hunched over as if she’d just punched him in the gut. “You suggested?”

Dogooder’s mouth dropped open.

With a shake of his head, Drew straightened. “If you wanted me gone, you coulda just said.”

Oh, good gravy. She knew he was dense, but how had his brain twisted her idea into a rejection? She glared at her father. Dad must have approached everything all wrong. Hadn’t he listened when she told him how sensitive Drew was? She swept her bangs out of her eyes and went on the offensive. Her lover understood attack and defend.

“Don’t even think to use this operation as an excuse to get away from me.” She advanced, finger raised in accusation. “You agreed to stick it out for the duration. Well, sugar beets, the apocalypse is just the beginning.”

Confusion furrowed Drew’s brow.

Dogooder side-eyed his brother, a speculative gleam in his ebony eyes. He stepped back as she advanced.

Smart man, but then it was by watching him that she’d learned to communicate with Drew. The man had serious issues. Good thing, she was more stubborn than he ever dreamed. “You’re mine, until we end our relationship by mutual agreement, so don’t think you can get lost in the big city and ditch me.”

She poked his shoulder.

He caught her finger, wrapping it in his fist. His hold was gentle. The calluses were new. The idiot was determined to prove himself by working at every job on the ranch in addition to his guard duties. “Sugar beets?”

He stroked the inside of her wrist before moving his hand until their fingers laced together.

Tingles raced up her arm. Eventually, she’d teach him what they had was real and lasting. “I can’t exactly call you whippersnapper now, can I? You are older than me.”

She’d never asked his age, didn’t have to. Her father had him investigated after her ex-husband had moved in with his mistress-of-the-week and asked Drew to keep an eye on Ellen.

“Thirty-four to your thirty-three.” His brown eyes glinted. Thick brown hair tumbled around his round head and stubble sprayed his chin even though he’d shaved at lunch. “So, yeah Betty. I’m older, wiser, and skipped the tee-shirt to get the scars to prove it.”

She’d counted his scars. Had each of them memorized. But he rarely talked about the cigarette burns, the stab wounds, or the stitches. He would, eventually, he just had to get over this odd notion of protecting her from the ugliness in his past. “I told you, if you must call me by a cook’s name. I prefer Julia as in Julia Child.”

Drew tugged on her hand.

She stumbled against him, placed her palm flat on his chest.

He buried his face in her neck then licked her earlobe. “No one ever pictured Julia in nothing but a frilly apron. But Betty, she wasn’t just a cook but a pin-up girl. Lots of men pictured her in nothing at all. I get to see the real thing.”

She shivered.

Dad cleared his throat. “Here now. This is supposed to be a meeting.”

Dogooder gagged. “If I had food in my stomach, it would be on my shoes by now.”

Slipping his arm around her waist, Drew pulled her against his side and glared at his brother. “You’re just jealous, poop head.”

“They’re dreadlocks, D-bag. Dread. Locks.” Dogooder pointed to the knots of hair on his scalp. “The ladies love ’em.”

“Dung beetles love ’em.” Drew corrected.

Dad rocked back on his heels and stared at the barn rafters.

Right. Time to bring the guys back on track. She had her own reasons for suggesting Drew and his brother set out for Payson. “I’m sure Sergeant KickAss will have an opinion on them when she sees them.”

Drew’s teeth clicked together. “Sergeant KickAss? You mean the little woman he saved from the ambush at the school? But she—”

Red washed over Dogooder’s ebony cheeks.

Ah, ha. Ellen knew she hadn’t imagined the vibe.

Smiling, Drew poked his brother’s shoulder. “Ho, ho.”

Dogooder latched onto Drew’s finger and bent it back, just a bit. “Don’t.”

Ellen squeezed Drew’s waist. He had loved his sister, surely he didn’t want his brother-in-law to mourn her forever.

Drew sobered. “You should have invited her to come with us.”

Dogooder shrugged. “Her duty was to her unit. She had to stay.”

“Duty. Booty.” Drew rolled his eyes. “I coulda kidnapped her, questioned her. Made sure she could handle your fat ass before you started mooning over her. After all, to be in this family, there are certain expectations.”

Ellen kissed Drew’s cheek. He’d handled that better than expected.

“I should break off your finger and feed it to you.” Dogooder’s lips quirked as he released his brother.

“Well, hell, Dogooder. No wonder your chica decided to stay with the other soldiers if you started advocating cannibalism. It’s not to everyone’s taste.” Drew flexed his finger.

Dad winced.

Dogooder squinted at his brother.

“Gentlemen, please.” Ellen patted Dogooder’s massive arm and dug her nails into Drew’s side. “We have a mission to plan.”

“We?” Drew stared down at her.

“Yes, we. It was my idea remember. There was no way Dad would let me go to town without having suitable bodyguards.” She beamed at both of them. Soon, they’d see how clever she was. How she’d thought of nearly everything. “And you two are the best.”

Drew pinned her father with a glare. “You’re letting Ellen go into town?”

Dad’s blue eyes twinkled. “I’m not letting any such thing. This is your mission. You pick who goes and who stays.”

“What!” That wasn’t the plan she presented to her father. He wouldn’t dare…. Her chest tightened. The son of a biscuit would use Drew’s love for her to keep her here! “No. You can’t.”

“You’re staying on the farm, Betty.” Drew set her away from him and stalked out of the barn. “Ain’t no way in hell you’re coming with us. No way. Just no.”

Like that was anyway to have an argument. The coward knew she would wear him down. She had the plan, knowledge of the area, and the determination. She stomped after him. “I will follow you.”

Drew paused in a mud puddle. “I will tie you to our bed. I’m very good with knots.”

He was good at a lot of things, which was exactly why she had to keep him alive. “I have a plan of which places to hit first, to keep us away from the city center. And I have Rosa’s number so we can get updated on the location of the crazies.”

Her middle sister, Rosa, worked on a cure for the crazy at a secret government base, but she’d promised to check the satellites when they were over Payson and give Ellen a description of the crazies’ location. Only Ellen. The satellites would be over the town three times, and they would need each bit of information.

“And what will you tell your kids?” Drew stopped short and planted his fists on his hips. “Little Erin and Rafe have already lost their father to the crazy. Do you think they could stomach losing you, too? They still crawl into our bed after a nightmare.”

Guilt churned low in her stomach. She wrapped her arms around her waist, holding in the pain. “That’s a low blow, Drew.”

“I fight dirty, Betty. Always have, always will. You think the crazies play by the rules?”

“I know they don’t. And I’m counting on you staying one step ahead of them.” She closed the distance between them. Raising her hand, she froze. To touch him or not to touch him. The worse he could do was shake her off. She cupped her hand around his shoulder blade. “We both know this ranch is a soap bubble some crazy is just waiting to poke and pop.”

He jerked his chin once and didn’t move away.

“We have to find out what’s out there. What we’re up against, if we have to bug out fast.” With her free hand, she brushed the map in her pocket. “Will you at least listen to my plan?”

“If I do and it doesn’t change my mind, then you still have to sleep with me tonight. All night, and not wash your hair or do your nails to avoid me.”

Seriously? She rolled her eyes. Did he expect her to be so shallow? She wasn’t going to deprive herself of pleasure because he was being a hard headed numbskull. “You better not make plans to sleep somewhere else.”

Dogooder chuffed and shook his head.

Crooking his elbow, Drew offered it to her. “Over dinner then. I’m hungry.”

“Over dinner.” She slipped her hand through his and leaned against him. He didn’t know it yet, but she’d already won the battle.

She squeezed onto the picnic bench beside him, tugged out the map, and spread it across the table.

Drew leaned back, allowing Ellen’s cousin to set down his plate of food. Three meatballs on a hoagie bun, a shaving of Parmesan cheese on top, and a side of homemade potato salad. Ice tea sloshed in his cup before her cousin moved on.

The personal service was a nice touch, but not everyone realized it was about rationing food. Until now. Until Dad’s meeting in the barn. Now all the adults looked at the food as if it might be their last meal.

It wasn’t. Yet. And with luck and her plan, it wouldn’t ever come to the all meat show.

Sitting across from them, Dogooder propped his elbows on the table and bit into his sandwich. A chunk of tomato plopped onto his plate. He moaned softly. “The meatballs are a nice change from spaghetti.”

“Tell me about it.” But noodles were easy to make and went a long way. Well, they did if there was flour to make them. The flour canisters were empty.

“I like spaghetti.” Drew scooped up the dripping sauce with a chip. “Ellen makes it a little different every time.”

Pleasure spiraled through her. It was nice to have her skills appreciated. “You just like knowing you have a next meal waiting.”

“And I have the hots for the cook.” Drew swiped the cheese off his chin. “Who I planned to keep safe. No matter how stubborn she is.”

Instead of responding, she focused on the map. She got it. He wanted to keep her safe. Unfortunately, keeping her on the ranch was an illusion of safety. Everyone here had talents. Talents the group would need if they were to survive this. And her talent was planning. She tapped the map in the middle of the blank space. “The ranch is here.”

Drew paused to wipe his mouth with a cloth napkin. “Aren’t you eating?”

“I’m the cook.” She blew her bangs out of her eyes. “I eat as I make it. Quality assurance purposes.”

Dogooder snorted. “If you ever need a taster for the desserts, I’m available.”

“Get in line, poo head.” Drew jabbed a chip at his brother before stuffing it into his mouth.

“Man.” Dogooder sighed heavily. “Keep talking like that and folks’ll think you lost your mind. Dreadlocks. Dreadlocks. You should try them over that flopsy do you’re sporting.”

“Neither of you are up for taster. There are children about.” Ellen thumped the map. “And speaking of food.” She added, reminding them of the real issue here. “I propose we take the stock truck to about a mile within the trailhead then use the quads the rest of the way.”

“Why the quads?” Dogooder frowned at his empty plate. “Why not take the stock truck all the way into town?”

“It’s not easily maneuverable and it’s noticeable. The crazies could track us by the sound alone.” Drew sopped up the rest of his sauce with the butt of his bun. “And the quads are electric. They run silent. Better torque and pick-up. We could make several trips at different locations, in and out before the crazies catch wind of us.”

“And the range?” Dogooder grunted. “I don’t want to be in a firefight with a dead battery.”

“The big guys have about 50 miles. The smaller one can go twenty to twenty-five miles. Enough for one trip.” Not the best vehicle, but the silence was an advantage. And cut down the chances of anyone tracking them back to the ranch’s entrance.

“We could block the road with downed trees.” Drew pushed his plate away. “Maybe a few booby-traps to discourage visitors.”

“Do that and you trap us as well. Those blockades and booby-traps could come back and bite us if we have to haul ass outta here.” Dogooder crossed his arms over his chest and shook his head. “Not a good idea. You forget we got millions in Phoenix at our backs and only fifteen thousand in front of us. I know which I’d rather face. Especially with ten thousand rounds of ammo.”

Which would still leave them short and easily overwhelmed. “I propose we don’t get sighted, at least until we can restock and have a few alternate routes out.”

“Makes sense.” Dogooder handed his empty plate to Raine then accepted the dish of peach cobbler with homemade whipped cream.

No one said a word until the teenager withdrew.

Drew cut off a bite of oatmeal crust. “So we access the situation, look for alternative escape routes, and restock, all without painting a big old target on ourselves. Your plan cover all that, Betty?”

“If we have to leave the ranch, the best escape route is up the Arizona Trail toward Pine then cutting across to the Tonto Natural Bridge. If that’s blocked, then we’ll go up the Mazatal Wilderness toward Camp Verde.  We’ll have to leave most of the livestock behind.” Her hands stilled on the map. “And we’ll lose people. The trails aren’t that easy.”

“If the crazies attack, we’re going to lose folks anyway.” Drew covered her hand with his. “They’re not the kind to ask for a cup of tea and sit down for a chat.”

There was that. She cleared her throat. “Rosa is going to call with an update tomorrow at four in the morning. But from what she said this morning, the Bar Margarita and the Rockin’ M ranches are deserted.” She followed a pencil line from their current location to the two ranches directly between them and Payson. “We’ll clean them out first.”

Drew cocked an eyebrow. Just one. “You don’t think the crazies celebrated their kills with a big meal?”

“Both families had large farms. They put stuff up, dried seeds for next year, and stored them in the basement. Farmers and ranchers invented prepper mentality. Plus, they’ll have weapons, ammo, and black powder, maybe even some dynamite.”

Stuff the crazies didn’t use. So far.

Dogooder grinned. “Gotta love dynamite.”

Drew nodded. “And if we don’t get enough supplies there?”

Her nail scratched the paper as she circled the two ranches. “From there, we’ll take Baby Doll Ranch Road toward the city. The senior center and country club might be untouched.”

Drew glanced at the children, eating at the little people’s table in the center of the adults. “Golfers were bat poop crazy before things went sideways, now you want to invade their turf and steal their hot dogs?”

“I want all the bullets I can carry.” Dogooder chased a piece of crust around his plate.

She nodded. There was no way, they could count on what was left of the military to rescue them this time. “The country club hosts parties, weddings, and events. They have stockpiled giant cans of food in their basement.”

“And if they’ve already been raided?” Drew traced State Route 87 into the center of town.

“We avoid the center of town. That’s where most of the crazies have congregated.” She shifted her finger closer to the Beeline Highway, staying well below where it branched into the 260. “There are a couple of hotels on the outskirts we could try, and there’s a hardware store on the way. It should have seeds, plastic sheeting, and PVC piping. Probably black powder.”

Dogooder pinched his bottom lip. “You thinking you can build a greenhouse and extend the growing season?”

She smiled. “Yes. We can build hoop houses, too. Plus, if we have to leave, we can use the pipes to build a travois and the plastic for temporary shelters.”

“Gotta add duct tape to your list, Betty. And cleaning supplies.” Drew wrapped his arm around her shoulder and hugged her close. “Black powder isn’t the only thing that goes boom.”

She stilled. “Does that mean you’re letting me come with you?”

Dogooder’s head snapped up.

Drew shrugged. “Nope.”

She bounced on her seat. “What!”

This wasn’t the way her plan was supposed to go.

“Dogooder and I are going alone.” He squeezed her tight. “Less risk, that way. Besides, if there are any crazies in the area, you may need to bug out.”

Dogooder nodded. “We’re pretty sure you’re the only one who can convince your parents to leave.”

Ellen sagged Drew’s arms. The jerk. “Fine, but if there isn’t anyone close, then you owe me.”

After all, for four months no one had gotten close to the ranch. She saw no reason why that would change now.

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I Never Promised You a…

Rose garden? How about herbs and medicinal plants? And what about the bees?

So we  have this slice of yard in the back of our house that is a blank canvas. Okay, maybe it’s a weed infested, thorny path of hell. But either way, I would like to you know do something with it when the weather cools down in about a month or two.

Here is the area of yard:

IMG_0438

In our old house we had a lovely rose garden with 12 bushes. The great thing about roses is they can take the heat and don’t require a lot of water.

But, I’d like to so something a little different. So I was thinking about planting annual flowers when spring hits in February to help the bees (I feel guilt because I fish so many of them out of the pool where they’ve drowned—personally I’m certain wasps come and stomp on them, shoving them under water so they can take over the territory. I do not like wasps).

I’d love to have some herbs like sage and thyme as well and other plants that serve a purpose other than just look nice.

Any suggestions?

Remember I live in Phoenix (need low water plants) and this wall faces west but our neighbor has a nice tree that gives some shade but this will be pretty much full sun during the heat of the day.

Thoughts?

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Would you rather?

Would you rather:

a) Live in a world that mimics the most popular show on TV from the previous nights?

b) Live in a world where people constantly broke out in song and dance?

c) Live in a world that mimics the most popular movie of the previous weeks?

I’d pick the musical:D What about you?

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Coming Soon: Hadean 3: Completely Forked

SmashwordsChapter One

Andrew Whiteangel tugged his neatly folded hoodie off the cane back rocker in the corner of his bedroom. Drew fingered the neat stitches closing the tears in the hoodie’s sleeve before pulling it over his head. Ellen’s strawberry-scented shampoo tickled his nose. He preferred to inhale it directly off her skin in the quiet hours before he headed out for guard duty.

Ellen Duncan planned to keep Drew in her life.

The world may have lost its lunch basket on the way to the picnic, but Drew’s life had never been better. His boots whispered on the ancient pine planks; his steps automatically avoided the creaky parts of the floor. Baseball bats, hockey sticks, and a couple of golf clubs hung on pegs over the yellowed family pictures lining the hall.

Enough weapons for everyone in the house, including the children.

Over the clang of a pot lid and the rhythmic thump of a chopping knife, feminine voices swirled in the kitchen.

He paused on the threshold of the living room. Shoulders tensed. Wait for it. Wait.

Ellen laughed.

She was safe. He stepped into the living room. The aroma of oregano, garlic, and tomatoes drifted out of the opening to the kitchen. Spaghetti night. Silhouettes drifted over the chipped linoleum floor. Three cooks tonight. No one was ever left alone for too long.

Isolation caused the crazy.

Or one theory about it anyway.

And speaking of completely nuts, but in a good way. He winked at the elderly woman by the window.

Granny Hauf winked back, holding court over four children at the card table. Autumnal light painted her white hair with purples and reds as the sun deserted them for another night. A rifle leaned against the wall within her reach, and a rectangular box of cartridges pressed against her apron pocket.  Extra skin on her arms flapped when she shook the red cup in her gnarled hands. “Heading out to the meeting, whippersnapper?”

Ellen’s chocolate lab, Boo, surveyed him with brown eyes before resuming his snooze on the couch.

Whippersnapper. Granny Hauf always had a new name for him. She said she was looking for just the right one to describe him.

He hoped she had quite a few years left until she found it. The old bat had kinda grown on him. Like a fungus.

“Yeah. A meeting.” Drew’s skin itched. Normal meetings usually occurred when he relieved a watcher from his or her post. Tonight was different. All the guards were meeting. His balls drew up. Nothing good ever happened when a routine changed.

“I expect a full report over dinner.” A moment later, Granny emptied the cup, spilling dice across the card table.

The four children around the table leaned over them.

Six-year-old Erin grinned, peeled away from the group and zoomed over to him. “Mister Drew. Mister Drew.”

Two feet away, Erin launched herself at Drew.

It was a routine they’d perfected over the last four months.

“Miss Erin. Miss Erin.” Drew caught her, then spun her about, careful to make sure her bare feet avoided the coat rack and pictures on the wall. He hadn’t broken either of the children yet, but wasn’t taking any chances. He liked them. They were honest, and he always knew where he stood. Coming to a stop, he settled the child on his hip.

Erin flattened her small hand against his cheek. Although her eyes were brown, she had the same oval face, wide cheeks, and bow-shaped mouth as her mother, Ellen. “I got a Yahtzee.”

He scanned her from brown pigtails to painted pink toes. The word tugged at his memories but didn’t connect. He didn’t know what a Yahtzee was, but didn’t see anything different about her. “You did? Where are you hiding it?”

He checked behind her right ear, then her left, before blowing a raspberry on her neck.

She giggled and squirmed out of his hold, landing on her bare feet. “It’s not a thing, silly. I gots all five threes on the dice.”

“I see.” Kinda. Mostly. It was coming back to Drew, but he had never taken the time to play games. There hadn’t been any money in it. Although, he might have figured out a way to cheat the system.

“It’s your turn, Erin.” Her brother, Rafael, snorted from his seat on Granny Hauf’s left. “Yahtzee isn’t a big deal. It took her three tries to get it.”

Pigtails slapping her back, Erin skipped back to her seat. “You haven’t gotten one.”

She stuck her tongue out at her brother.

The twin eight-year-old girls at the end of the table caught their giggles in cupped hands.

Rafe straightened. “I will. You’ll see.”

Drew veered back to Ellen’s son. He recognized the need to have what he didn’t possess. Yet. For Rafe, it was Yahtzee; for Drew, it had been food, clothing, and shelter. He set his hand on the boy’s shoulder—small and sturdy. “I’m sure you’ll get a Yahtzee this game. And when everyone’s had one, I’ll give each of you a special prize. Just tell Granny Hauf, and I’ll give it to her to distribute.”

The twin’s mouths rounded in awe. Erin bounced in her seat.

“Is it toffees?” Rafe tilted his head back, staring at Drew through a curtain of shaggy brown hair. “I haven’t had a toffee in ages.”

“Neither have I, young man.” The old woman’s blue eyes crackled with an amused light. “And if Mister Drew is holding out on us, I say we tackle the scalawag and tickle him until he gives up his stash.”

Erin’s eyes narrowed. Raising her hands, she wiggled her fingers in a tickling motion. “I want candy.”

The white-blond twins mimicked her actions. “We want candy.”

Good Lord, he’d created Frankenstein’s monsters. Sweat beading his forehead, Drew flashed empty palms as he backpedaled. He hadn’t been around children long enough to know whether this was normal or a new kind of sugar-craving crazy. “I promise I’m not holding back any candies. Now put those fingers away.”

“Oh.” The three girls donned identical frowns.

Rafe thrust his pointed jaw out and crossed his arms over his chest. “Then what do we get?”

“It’s a surprise. One you all will get, once everyone scores a Yahtzee.” Drew reached above the door and removed a bolt-action rifle, then retrieved the box of cartridges from the side table, where mail used to rest. The weight was familiar, comfortable, after nearly four months.

Just showEd how upside-down life had become.

He opened the door, leaning against the screen door to push it open. The corrugated metal rattled where it had been screwed to the wooden frame. “You want me to shutter the windows?”

Granny looked up from watching Rafe record his sister’s score on the paper. “No, whippersnapper, I do not. I have to do something to prove my worth around here.”

“Cause sharp shooting, laundry, cooking, cleaning, and watching over the kids ain’t enough?” Drew closed the door before she could open her mouth. Compared to the octogenarian, he was a slacker. He knew next to nothing about farming and less about ranching. Lifting the screen door in place, he double-checked to make sure it was latched.

Maybe he should check the back entrance by the kitchen.

He strode across the porch.

A shadow shifted in the shade of the pine at the corner.

Drew’s stomach leapt to his throat even as the rifle butt settled against his shoulder. Damn, he’d forgotten to load the thing before leaving the house. He reached for the bolt with a slow, smooth action.

White teeth flashed as a big, black man stepped into the fading light. Knots of hair bristled from his formerly bald skull. White striped the baby dreadlocks at Dogooder’s temples. Drew’s brother shook his head and stared down the six feet to the ground. “You came outta the house with an empty gun? You’re gonna get your Casper donkey plugged.”

Donkey. Ass. His brother-in-law thought he was so clever replacing one word with the other so Granny Hauf didn’t yell at him.

Slipping a cartridge from the holder on the butt of his rifle, Drew used the tip of the bullet to slide the round into the follower. Five rounds entered smooth as butter before he closed up the weapon and joined his brother. “I don’t need a loaded gun to beat some sense into your meat head, jack wagon.”

Dogooder snorted and adjusted the strap of his assault rifle on his shoulder. A machete thumped his thigh as they walked toward the barn north of the house. “You and what army, D-bag?”

Drew bumped his brother’s shoulder. Contact was another thing that kept the crazy at bay. Not that he was going all touchy-feely at the end of the world, but damn, it was good to have his brother watching his back. “Don’t need an army. Just a couple Girl Scouts selling cookies to distract your fat ass.”

Granny rapped on the window, then shook her finger at Drew. “Language, whippersnapper. There are little pitchers around.”

Drew’s ears burned. Dang, the old bat had good hearing. He thought folks were supposed to go deaf as they aged. Someone forgot to tell Granny.

Dogooder threw back his head. Laughter bubbled up his throat. “She still hasn’t settled on a name for you?”

“Yeah, well, you were easy.” Drew nudged his brother, enough to send him stumbling into a rut in the dirt road. “Phoenix Dick with a shiny badge. She didn’t even give much thought to calling you Dogooder.”

“You are such a donkey donut.” Dogooder’s boot splashed in the puddle. Bubbles swirled in the murky water when he pulled out his foot. A quick shake and mud splattered Drew’s pant leg.

“Hey!” Drew stomped his sneakers, sinking deep into the mud. “I have laundry duty this week.”

“That’s right.” Dogooder bent and scooped up a handful of mud. “Thanks for reminding me.”

Drew’s grip tightened on the rifle. “Throw that and I’ll play whack-a-mole with your meathead.”

“You think getting blood out is easier than mud?” Grinning, Dogooder squished the mud through his thick fingers. “You need laundry duty more often.”

He had it every other Thursday, rain, shine, or apocalypse. At least the washing machine still worked. Granny Hauf mentioned pounding clothes against the rocks in the East Verde River when the modern marvel failed. Then the world truly would have ended, and not in a good way. Cradling his rifle, Drew peered around the ranch. “Any idea what’s so important that we’re pulling everyone off watch?”

Two people sat on the pitched roof of the barn ahead of them. The red glowing eyes of cigarettes danced among the rows of apple and peach trees. Shaggy wikieups formed rows of man-sized tombstones between the rectangular bunkhouse and the garden. A few horses grazed in the freshly harvested acre of hay. Chickens and peacocks waddled after a couple heading toward the barn.

Dogooder rolled his eyes. “My crystal ball says old man Robelski is tired of you giving cooties to his favorite eldest daughter, and he’s gonna force you to marry Ellen. That’s why everyone’s sporting weapons.”

“Ass hole.” Drew nearly swallowed his tongue. For a moment, he could picture it. Him and Ellen married. It was a nice picture. One he didn’t deserve. Not that he suffered from enough stupid to tell her that.

The line to the barn grew. Ten. Fifteen people. A third of the people on the farm. Nearly all the adults.

He didn’t like it. Not one bit.

“The words you’re looking for are donkey donut. Otherwise, I tell Granny about your potty mouth and give her that lovely bar of lye soap Ellen uncovered from last century.” Dogooder grinned. “That taste you won’t wash out with all that tequila you’re fermenting in the back forty.”

“Bite me.” Drew growled. “The old man likes me.”

Dogooder shook his head. “If I bit you, I’d need all the tequila to wash out the foul taste.”

The rotund figure of Ellen’s father appeared backlit by the strings of electric lights in the barn. The last of the sunlight sparked off the solar panel array by the corral then faded away.

Drew tightened his grip on the rifle as his brother’s words haunted him. Ellen was tight with her family. If one didn’t like him, would she let him go? “Did old man Robelski say something about me?”

Dogooder bumped Drew’s shoulder. “You know this is pretty fertile ground. Might wanna plant and grow a sense of humor.”

Drew’s shoulders relaxed. His brother would tell him if there were rumors. “That’s big words from someone growing dog turds on his head.”

“They’re dreadlocks, D-bag.” Dogooder drilled his finger into Drew’s shoulder as he emphasized each syllable. “Dread-locks.”

“Looks like dog turds.” Drew inhaled deeply. The crisp hint of autumn hung on the air over the fecund scent of the barn and its animals. “Smells like dog turds. Gotta be dog turds.”

“You’re gonna need a doctor to remove my boot from your ass.” Dogooder raised his leg as if to kick.

Drew danced out of range. “Um, you swore. Granny is gonna visit you with her bar of Nineteenth Century soap.”

Dogooder flipped him the flightless bird and filed in behind a couple who’d been hiking the Arizona Trail when the crazy broke out. The granola-eating tree-huggers had quickly picked up a weapon after their first encounter with the crazies on Doll Baby Ranch Road.

Life and death situations had a way of clarifying priorities.

Drew always had his priorities straight. Straw crunched under his boots. Avoiding a chicken, he sidled to the back of the barn along the empty horse stalls.

The others shifted, gathering in a semi-circle around the man who’d opened his family ranch to everyone—Paul Robelski. Sweat glistened on the old man’s bald head. He smoothed a fringe of gray hair forming a horseshoe around his scalp. A scab marred the first of his three chins where he’d nicked it shaving. Although he’d grown up on the ranch, he’d spent most of his adult life defending criminals in Phoenix.

But city life hadn’t made Robelski soft. Round maybe, but not soft. He’d slaughtered a cow and butchered it without blinking.

The guy may look like Santa Claus, but he had a backbone of steel and a rigid moral code, he expected everyone to abide by it.

Drew respected the man. He could count on four fingers the number of people he’d said that about. Although with this lot, that number was growing. He nodded to a few of them now.

A nut-brown woman tugged hay out of her white hair and yawned behind her hand. Beside her, a grizzled man about the age of rocks combed straw from his bushy whiskers. The barn was their domain and no one entered when the doors were closed.

Boots rasped against the metal roof overhead before two thirty-something males peeked over the loft and scuttled down the wooden ladder. They joined the cluster of other single men on Robelski’s right.

The old man looked each in the eye as he scanned the room. Conversations stopped mid-sentence. Men and women straightened.

Drew could see how the old man won so many court cases.

Robelski’s attention paused at Drew.

Drew held his breath. Maybe the old man did have a problem with him. Dogooder shifted closer.

Robelski’s gaze bounced to Drew’s brother-in-law before moving along.

Drew’s skin prickled. What the hell was that about? He glanced over his shoulder.

Dogooder shrugged.

After a moment of silence, Robelski cleared his throat. “Thank you all for coming, and for everything you do to keep our loved ones safe.”

Nice. A touch of humility always helped bad news go down. Drew had used it when he’d been an up and comer on Wall Street.

Dogooder sieved air through his teeth. As a detective in Phoenix, his brother had to be used to the trick.

Robelski squared his shoulders, not an ounce of weakness in his posture or a wobble in his voice. “I’ll get right to the point. I’m sure some of you are aching for your beds, for dinner, or to get on watch.”

Heads nodded.

Drew’s stomach grumbled.

Dogooder jabbed him in the side.

“We don’t have enough food for the winter. Not for all of us.” Robelski’s teeth clicked around the words.

There was a collective gasp. People blinked as if to process the thought before it escaped their thick skulls.

The sun-tanned older couple clasped each other’s hands. They locked gazes for a moment before she spoke. “Where we supposed to go? The folks at the Bar Margarita left. It may be six miles outta town, but the crazies found them. Killed them most of ’em. Including the four children.”

Robelski nodded.

“The Rockin’ M is between them.” One of the thirty somethings shifted to the front. “That family was massacred in their beds, along with the folks they’d taken in. Those two ranches are between us and Payson.”

Drew rolled his shoulders. Had they really thought the crazy wouldn’t eventually find them here? He checked their faces. Damn, they actually had believed they were safe smack dab in the center of the Mazatal Wilderness area.

Dogooder nudged him and shook his head once.

Right. Drew had no intentions of busting anyone’s paradigms. He wasn’t a hero.

Robelski flashed his palms at everyone. “We need food. Seeds for next year. And we need ammunition.”

A forty-year old ranchhand with bowed legs and a tear-drop tattoo on his right eye shuffled forward. “We have over ten thousand rounds. How many more do we need?”

Dogooder shifted forward. “Payson has a population of fifteen thousand. The Valley has more than five million. And we’re between them.”

“Surrounded by desert.” The ranchhand snorted. “Most folks will die of dehydration and heat before they reach us.”

Drew clapped his hand on his brother’s back. They always tag-teamed it. “Winter is coming. If we’re running out of food after growing our own all summer, what do you think is happening in the cities?”

The ranchhand scuttled backward and propped up the stall door. His wife, a sturdy woman with mouse brown hair, leaned against him. They’d left their twin daughters with Granny while they’d gone on watch.

Mrs. Nut Brown cleared her throat. “So we draw straws to see who has to leave?”

Leaving here meant death. Everyone knew it.

The single men shifted. Jaws thrust forward. Muscles tensed.

Things could get ugly real fast. Drew shifted his finger closer to the trigger of his rifle.

Dogooder shrugged swinging his assault rifle to the front.

“No drawing straws. No one’s leaving. At least, not permanently.” Robelski kept his arms open, a subliminal maneuver to build trust and transmit honesty. “But we need volunteers to check the ranches closest for supplies, then head farther into town and gather whatever they can to help us through the winter.”

Drew inhaled deeply. Damn. He didn’t know anyone here had a cape to go with the superpowers that mission would require.

“It’s suicide.” Mrs. Nut Brown exhaled.

The single men nodded.

Tear-drop tattoo hugged his wife close. “You might as well just shoot them now and save them the pain of being beat to death.”

Drew would definitely vote for a bullet over a beating.

“Have a little faith.” Robelski strolled in front of the group. “We’ll send a team of our best people to help ferry supplies from the trailhead to the ranch. So no one is going alone. Plus, my middle daughter will tell us where the crazies are. And lastly, the volunteer I had in mind is skilled in urban warfare and survival against the odds.”

The old man stopped in front of Drew.

Drew frowned. No. Oh, hell no. He knew that look. Nothing good ever came of it.

“I have faith in you, son.” Robelski set his hand on Drew’s shoulder. “I know you can get in, get out, without being killed by the crazies. Rest tonight. You’ll leave at first light.”

Drew swayed on his feet. That bastard Dogooder had been right. Robelski wanted Drew out of his daughter’s life and had found the perfect way to achieve it. Sacrifice Drew to the crazies.

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