Description:
The battle that began in Life After the Undead continues.
Zombies changed her life completely...
Tough teenager Krista escaped to the safety of Florida after her parents were killed by the zombie horde. She united with General Liet, a distant cousin, and moved with him to North Platte to help build a wall to keep the zombies in the West. Krista fell in love with Quinn, a survivor and fighter from the zombie-infested wildlands of the West, and together they freed the garrison at North Platte from the power-hungry Liet.
But zombies aren’t the only enemy they have to face...
Now, North Platte is free, but Liet was not the only one using the zombie apocalypse to control their people. Florida is ruled by five ruthless Families, who use intimidation and the threat of the zombie horde to coerce their populace. Krista and Quinn hatch a desperate plan to run guns into the state and help the people revolt. Krista and Quinn, labeled as rebels run for their lives when the Families attack North Platte. The Families want them captured, the zombies want to eat them, and other survivors want them dead. Caught in between powerful forces, they must survive long enough to devise a new plan and put it into action, all while trying to solidify their new relationship and trying not to self-destruct in the meantime.
Zombies changed her life completely...
Tough teenager Krista escaped to the safety of Florida after her parents were killed by the zombie horde. She united with General Liet, a distant cousin, and moved with him to North Platte to help build a wall to keep the zombies in the West. Krista fell in love with Quinn, a survivor and fighter from the zombie-infested wildlands of the West, and together they freed the garrison at North Platte from the power-hungry Liet.
But zombies aren’t the only enemy they have to face...
Now, North Platte is free, but Liet was not the only one using the zombie apocalypse to control their people. Florida is ruled by five ruthless Families, who use intimidation and the threat of the zombie horde to coerce their populace. Krista and Quinn hatch a desperate plan to run guns into the state and help the people revolt. Krista and Quinn, labeled as rebels run for their lives when the Families attack North Platte. The Families want them captured, the zombies want to eat them, and other survivors want them dead. Caught in between powerful forces, they must survive long enough to devise a new plan and put it into action, all while trying to solidify their new relationship and trying not to self-destruct in the meantime.
CHAPTER
1
“Rome wasn’t built in a day.” God, I can’t tell you how many times I’ve
heard that cliché. Dad was particularly fond of it when I had issues with
homework or a dilemma in my personal life. I knew what his point was. He was
telling me to be patient, to let things progress the way they were supposed to.
But, I wasn’t good at that. I never had a lot of patience. I imagined my Dad
reiterating the cliché after the North Platte takeover, wondering what he would
think of what I’d done. What we’d done. We liberated Nebraska, but we still had
a long road ahead of us. I knew Rome wasn’t built in a day, but I was pretty
sure the zombies could destroy it in one.
I stood in the guard tower, overlooking the field. My body pressed
against the railing. Corpses still littered the ground, but there weren’t as
many as when I first came to North Platte. The crews had done a great job of
cleaning up, though there was little they could do about the atrocious smell.
The sun sank beneath the horizon, casting hues of orange, pink, and
purple onto the silhouettes of the undead. A bullet was chambered into a gun
behind me. Quinn had been sitting in a chair behind me in the tower the whole
time.
“Quinn, what happened to your parents?” I turned so I faced him.
Quinn rested the butt of his gun on the deck and wrapped his arms around
the barrel. He sighed. “My mom died about seven years ago from cancer. I don’t
know what happened to my dad.”
I furrowed my brow. “What do you mean?”
“Well, when we heard about the first zombie attacks, Dad wanted to help.
Most of the neighbors lived within a few miles, so it didn’t take too long for
him to move them onto the ranch. One morning, him and a few of the others
decided to venture a little further, see who else might need some help, and he
never came back.”
My stomach felt queasy. I averted my gaze to the floor, then glanced back
at Quinn. “Did you go look for him?”
Quinn shook his head. “He told me not to. He said no matter what happens,
I was to stay at the ranch and take care of the people.”
“Yeah, but you must have been curious what happened to him.”
Quinn nodded and stood from his chair. “Of course, but I did as I was
told.” He shouldered the rifle and lined up his sights. He fired.
I moved so I stood next to him. “Do you think he’s out there somewhere?”
Quinn glanced at me. “Probably. But I doubt he’s anything like I
remember.”
“Doesn’t that make you sad?”
He returned his attention to the sight. “Every day. But there’s nothing I
can do to change it now.” He fired another round.
I slumped against the rail. Tears welled up in my eyes, and I averted my
gaze back to the field. I rubbed my sore shoulder. A breeze picked up, bringing
a chill and the smoke from the funeral pyre. I wrinkled my nose.
“We need to do something about that.”
Quinn straightened. “Like what?”
I shrugged the good shoulder. “I don’t know. Maybe we could put a
building around it. It might help contain some of the smoke and smell.”
Quinn nodded. “You should suggest it at the next meeting.”
I opened my mouth to speak, but the sound of footsteps on the stairs
interrupted me. It was Pam. She still wore her old guard uniform, a relic from
Liet’s reign, but it was obvious whose side she was on. Thank goodness she was
on our side. She trained me; I knew how tough and skilled she was. It would’ve
been a battle to take her down.
“Krista,” Pam said. “There’s someone who needs to see you.”
I pushed myself away from the rail. “Who?”
Pam motioned toward the courthouse. “I think it’s best if you just head
over there.”
I looked at Quinn, who shrugged, then the three of us headed to the
courthouse.
My stomach fluttered as I pushed opened the door. Visions of Mrs.
Johnson’s bodyguard flooded my mind, and I didn’t think I could stand another
visit like that. I held my breath as I opened the door. The person stood at the
end of the room, her head down as she chewed on her thumb nail. Excitement rose
in my chest and relief loosened my shoulders. A smile crossed my lips. I held
out my good arm and hurried across the room. Normally, I wasn’t one for hugs,
but anyone besides guards from Florida in the office was a welcome relief.
“Tanya! What are you doing here?”
Tanya looked up. She balled her hand into a fist and swung it over her
head. I flinched, and the blow hit me on the bicep. Tanya lunged forward,
flailing her arms. I crouched and covered my head. I didn’t know what else to
do. I was so shocked, I froze. I couldn’t react. Several more hits landed on my
back and head before someone pulled Tanya away.
“How could you?” Tanya yelled. “HOW COULD YOU?” She kicked and caught me
on the knee.
Pain radiated through my leg, and I rubbed at the minor injury. Anger
replaced the shock. Who did she think she was coming into my courtroom and
attacking me?
“What are you talking about?” I tried to keep my emotions in check,
common sense told me I needed to know what was going on.
“Don’t play dumb with me! You know
what you did.” She jerked her arms out of Quinn and Pam’s grasp.
Really? Was she mad that we liberated Nebraska before we helped Florida?
I didn’t think it was a big deal, but I guess it upset her.
“I’m sorry, Tanya. We had to move quickly. We had to set the people of
North Platte free.”
She narrowed her eyes. “I’m not talking about the attack.”
I stared at her for a moment. “Then what are you talking about?”
“You sent zombies down in the truck of supplies! You figured if you
couldn’t overthrow The Families, you’d overrun the state with the undead!”
Tanya yelled, then attempted to attack again. Pam and Quinn restrained her and
stared at me.
I picked myself off the floor, staring at Tanya wide eyed. Zombies in the
truck? What? When? Why would I have done that? I hate those things! I would
have to get pretty close to put those in the truck, and I wasn’t willing to do
that. But someone must have. Who would be stupid and conniving enough to do
that?
“Tanya, honestly, I have no idea what you are talking about. Maybe you
should fill us in on some details.”
Tanya snarled. “The truck showed up a few weeks ago, with Mrs. Johnson’s
bodyguard behind the wheel. He said it had come from North Platte, and I
assumed it had another shipment of guns. As usual, I was going to wait until
night to collect the weapons. My father took the vehicle to the storage yard,
like he always did. I was done working at the coffee shop, so I decided to see
what you guys sent. I stood at the chain link fence, watching the guys work,
when I heard my father scream from the trailer. The others ran to see what was
going on, and a zombie lurched out of the vehicle. They ran.”
Tanya continued her story, and I pictured the whole scenario in my mind.
She was a bit lacking on details, so I filled in the blanks with my own
imagination. It wasn’t hard, especially when you’ve seen as many zombies as I
have. There were three creatures, buried under crates. Two men, newly turned
with just the slightest hint of yellowed skin. Their clothes were dirty but not
yet torn. The third, a woman, she had been a zombie for a while. Her stringy
blonde hair was knotted, caked in mud, and falling out of her head, only wisps
remained on the bottom and right side. Her clothes had almost completely
decayed, tatters of a floral print dress clung to her the bones exposed in her
chest and legs. Her gray, wrinkled skin looked like leather. They hid in the
shadows, hard to see, and for some reason, they didn’t moan like the others
when food was near. The workers didn’t know they were there and had unloaded
almost the entire truck. They were almost finished when the attack started.
Tanya ran through the gate, making her way to the back of the truck, just in
time to see her father beating one of the creatures with a tire iron. The third
one was still pinned behind a crate. Her breath caught as she watched the
creature’s mouth snap for her dad. Her dad panted with exhaustion. He leaned
against the side of the truck for support. Blood, brain matter, and bits of
skull were everywhere, and the smell was overpowering. Tanya was about to climb
in, find out if her dad was all right, but he told her to stop. He collapsed
onto the floor, sliding down the wall. He cradled his hand. The zombie had
bitten him.
Tanya set her jaw. “The other one that got out of the truck attacked
several of the workers before it was put down. I don’t know how many of them
got bit, but within a few days, we had an epidemic on our hands. They got it
under control, but thirty people got infected.”
Pam and Quinn released her, and she pointed a finger in my direction.
“You just couldn’t wait, could you? You just had to make all of us pay.”
My throat felt tight and a knot developed in my stomach. I swallowed
hard. “What happened to your dad?”
Tanya snarled. “Instead of waiting for the plague to take its toll, he
took care of himself.”
I lowered my gaze to the floor. My stomach lurched, bile rose into my
throat. I took several deep breaths, but the feeling never abated.
“I’m sorry, Tanya.” I looked into her face. “I really, truly am. But I
did not put zombies in the back of the truck. Why would I harm the people I’m
trying to help?”
Tanya shook her head and opened her mouth to speak.
“Think about it,” Quinn interrupted her. “The Families were afraid of
losing control. They knew about the rebellion here in North Platte, and they
knew the people would soon hear about it. They had to do something to ensure
the people wouldn’t revolt, so they planted zombies.”
Tanya stared at him for a moment, letting the information sink in.
“Maybe,” she spoke softly.
I stepped closer to her. “Tanya, please, you have to believe us, we would
never do anything like that. Smuggle guns to kill the regime, yeah, but we
wouldn’t infect Florida with zombies.”
Tanya took a deep breath. “Maybe.”
“Didn’t Bill and Kyle tell you what was going on?” Quinn asked.
Tanya faced him. “They did.”
“What happened to them?”
She took a deep breath and averted her gaze to the floor. “After the
attack and my dad’s suicide, guards, um, did random house searches and they
were arrested.”
Pam’s, Quinn’s, and my eyes grew wide.
“What?” Quinn glanced from Tanya to me. “Arrested? Why?”
“They were outsiders.” she responded. “I guess they felt they were a
threat to The Families and Florida.”
“Did they find out about the guns?” I stammered out the question.
Tanya looked at me. “No. Those are still safe.”
“How did you get here?” Pam chimed in.
“After everything calmed down, I took the boat Bill and Kyle came in on
and found their vehicle in Texas. I made my way up here to you.”
“Do you know what happened to them?” Worry coated Quinn’s eyes.
“I’m sure they’re not dead. I’m sure The Families kept them for
interrogation.”
Quinn rubbed his hand over his mouth, staring at me. “What are we going
to do? Everything is ruined. I told you we had to attack simultaneously.”
Confusion and anger coursed through my body. “It’s a moot point now.
We’ll figure it out. It’ll be fine.” What did he expect me to do? I couldn’t
change the past.
The room was silent for a long moment. The group glanced at each other
out of the corners’ of their eyes, then averted their gazes to the floor. My
head spun. When we first took over North Platte and found out there had been a
spy, I felt like I was losing control then, but after Tanya arrived, I knew I
lost my grip. An all-out attack on Florida was out of the question. They would
know what was coming. Plus, we were grossly outnumbered by Floridian soldiers.
Despite the tragic nature of the event, a zombie attack wasn’t a half bad idea.
It would keep the soldiers busy long enough for our people to get in and take
control. There would be some collateral damage, but in the long run, it would
lead to the liberation of the people of Florida.
I shook the idea out of my head. How could I even think of that? There
were innocent people down there. Children. It wouldn’t work. Besides, three
zombies had already done enough damage. I couldn’t believe Tanya thought we
sent the attack.
Quinn grabbed my arm and directed me away from Tanya and Pam.
“We’ve got to evacuate the city.”
“Why?”
“Don’t you see what’s going on? Florida sent men up here to investigate
what happened. They planted zombies in the back of the truck and blamed it on
us. They are trying to rally the masses against us.”
“Yeah? So what else is new?”
“The people they sent here were the dregs of society. They were causing
problems in Florida. They are still causing problems. This is the perfect
excuse to wipe us off the planet.”
My stomach knotted. The color drained from my face. I didn’t want to
believe it, but I knew Quinn was right. They were probably on their way to
level the city.
“There are two thousand and eleven people in North Platte.” I couldn’t
raise my voice over a whisper. “Where are they going to go?”
Quinn pinched the bridge of his nose between his thumb and forefinger and
shook his head. “I don’t know. All I know is they can’t stay here.”
“What about Liet? What are we going to do with him?”
Quinn didn’t have the opportunity to answer.
“Everything all right over there?” Pam asked.
We faced her.
“No. I don’t think it is,” Quinn responded.
“Well, maybe you’d like to fill the rest of us in.”
Quinn glanced at me for a second, then back at Pam. “I think you need to
call a town meeting.”
“For what?”
“Just do it!” I didn’t mean to yell at her, but I had no control over my
emotions. The room spun and breathing was difficult, it just slipped out.
Pam hurried out of the room, and I sank to my knees. I lowered my head
and closed my eyes. I felt light-headed and nauseous. I couldn’t believe it was
this hard. It wasn’t supposed to be this hard. I felt Quinn’s hand on my back.
“You all right?”
I looked up at him. “I’ll be fine. Just give me a second.”
Tanya moved so she stood in front of me. Her knees popped as she knelt
down.
“What are we going to do now? Everything has been ruined.” She lowered
her gaze. “I ruined it. I can’t believe I was so stupid to believe you would
have sent zombies!”
I took a deep breath and stared at her face for several moments. Anger
clenched my chest. I wanted to tell her it was her fault, that she should have
known we would never do anything so devious, but it wouldn’t get us anywhere.
Her eyes were red rimmed and her shoulders slumped forward. She probably didn’t
stop traveling until she made it to the city. Rage kept her moving. Her desire
to see me dead or maimed fueled her journey. After she found out the truth, rage
was replaced with sheer exhaustion. Sadly, her journey wasn’t even close to
being over.
Besides, I wasn’t mad at her, I was angry at the universe. I was upset
that my luck had run out. The same rage that kept her moving was going to have
to sustain me. We still had a job to do, we just had to rethink it.
“You didn’t ruin it,” I told her. “You were just reacting to a situation
you thought we created. It’s understandable.”
She placed her hands on the floor and leaned forward. “I want to help you
fix it. Please tell me what I can do.”
“First of all, we’ve got to get the people to safety. Then, we’re going
to disappear.”
“And go where?”
“The only place we have left. The West.”
Goodreads ** Amazon ** eTreasures
Description:
The world has come to an end. It doesn't go out with a bang, or even a whimper. It goes out in an orgy of blood and the dead rising rom their graves to feast on living flesh. As democracy crumples and the world melts into anarchy, five familes in the U.S. rise to protect the survivors. The undead hate a humid environment, so they are migrating westward to escape its deteriorating effects. The survivors are constructing a wall in North Platte to keep the zombie threat to the west, while tyranny rules among the humans to the east.
Book #1
Description:
The world has come to an end. It doesn't go out with a bang, or even a whimper. It goes out in an orgy of blood and the dead rising rom their graves to feast on living flesh. As democracy crumples and the world melts into anarchy, five familes in the U.S. rise to protect the survivors. The undead hate a humid environment, so they are migrating westward to escape its deteriorating effects. The survivors are constructing a wall in North Platte to keep the zombie threat to the west, while tyranny rules among the humans to the east.
Goodreads ** Smashwords ** Amazon ** eTreasures ** Barnes&Noble
About the author:
I write fiction under
the pen name Pembroke Sinclair, and I have had several short stories
published. My story, “Sohei,” was named
one of the Best Stories of 2008 by The Cynic Online Magazine. I have novellas and a short story collection
forthcoming from Musa Publishing and eTreasures Publishing. I have two novels, Coming from Nowhere (adult,
sci fi) and Life After the Undead (YA, horror), that are available from eTreasures
Publishing, as well as Death to the Undead (YA, sequel to Life After the
Undead), which is forthcoming. Life
After the Undead was a Top Ten Finisher in the Preditors and Editors Reader’s
Poll in the YA category and the cover art category.
Under my real name,
from March 2008 to January 2011, I wrote scientific articles for Western
Farmer-Stockman. I have a nonfiction
book, Life Lessons from Slasher Films, scheduled for release in July 2012 from
Scarecrow Publishing (an imprint of Rowman and Littlefield).
I have my Master’s in English, and I am a freelance content editor for
Musa Publishing, as well as a former content and line editor for eTreasures
Publishing.
1 comment:
Thank you so much for having me on your blog! I really appreciate it. And I might add, I'm a HUGE Conan fan, so I lover your banner!
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