Thursday, November 15, 2012
Neatherstream - Episode 2: Spanish Fly - Teaser
Development of Episode 2: Spanish Fly is currently underway. Here's a teaser to wet your appetite:
Pain knifed through my skull, bringing me to my knees. My hands trembled, and saliva fell in thick strands from my mouth. How could this be possible? The booster should have carried me through the rest of the week. My head snapped back and body contorted. Please…not now…
“Put on your mask before someone sees you,” Helix whispered to me.
My senses slowed, and a dense fog uncurled in the shadow of my mind. In another hour, I wouldn’t remember my name, and due to the nature of my ascension, the fall would be precipitous.
“H-help me!” My scream echoed in the prison of my mind.
“I’m sorry, Roach, but it looks like your body has used up the antigen. There’s nothing I can do.”
I crumbled to the floor, blood dripping onto the green and beige patterned carpet. My eyes...I was bleeding from my eyes!
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Wednesday, November 14, 2012
Netherstream - Episode 1: Jane Doe Is Now Available!
Now Available! |
In light of everything, why did fate spare me? Because I'm the bitch with the bazooka, ready to blast a zombie's pecker from a mile away if he dares to step inside my castle.
The day of reckoning is fast approaching, but until then, I'm queen of the Black Diamond Regency.
Netherstream is a serial novel by S.E. Gordon, published every 2-4 weeks. Episode 2: Spanish Fly is the next installment, currently scheduled to be published in early December.
Buy it now at: Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Kobo, Smashwords, Lulu, Scribd, Tradebit and directly from the author.
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Wednesday, November 7, 2012
Episode 1: Jane Doe - Chapter 1: Playground
Why does it have to be like this? No matter how hard I try,
something’s always waiting to bite me in the ass. I’ve changed names several
times just to throw bad luck off my tracks, but it always seems to nip me in
the end.
This mess. My life. One.
And now this shit…
I’m not the cure, and certainly not a savior. I’m just a
lowly bellhop. Here are your bags, sir. Thank you for the generous tip. Excuse
me while I put a bullet in the zombie at the end of the hall. Enjoy your stay
at the Black Diamond Regency!
Perhaps it would be easier if I crossed to the other side,
and joined the mindless hordes that skulked the streets at night. But fate had
other plans for me, and would eventually grant my wish.
Three months. That’s all I’d worked at this shit hole. I was
the first and only female bellhop, and you bet your ass I was proud of it. All
of 98 pounds, the hotel staff watched in amusement as I hauled off bags more
than twice my size. My short temper and sassy mouth certainly didn’t endear me
to the critics, but everyone respected me, otherwise, I’d kick their ass.
“You charmed your way onto the staff,” the girls would say,
but that was just a nice way of saying that they thought I was banging the boss
in the bell closet. They were jealous, of course, and never would admit that
such an original idea had crossed their empty skulls. They could be bellgirls
too, if they wanted. It was convenient for them to sit behind the front desk
and look pretty, but it took fucking balls to parallel park some rich asshole’s
Mercedes in public parking during a rainstorm when the garage got full.
All of the attendants were sharks, including me. Leave your
post and you missed out. Everyone knew it, but most of the guys didn’t care.
But I cared, and didn’t expect anything to be handed to me just because of my
athletic body and fair complexion. I busted my ass for every penny and wouldn’t
have had it any other way. And though people frequently underestimated me, it
gave me a significant advantage in my dealings with them. Those chumps!
I grabbed the bar and pulled myself up a dozen times. Damn,
I was already getting tired. I used to be able to do twenty, no problem, but
these days I could barely crack ten. Even worse, it had been an entire week
since I’d performed my trademark handstand atop the bell cart. Somewhere along
the line I’d lost my verve.
Today was my lucky day, though. I pushed off the bar and straightened
my body into a perfect line. I held myself there for a minute before finally relenting.
“You’ve still got it, girl.” I cracked my neck, and hopped off the cart.
Damn, I felt old. I had to be the oldest 20-year-old on the
planet. Even though I still wasn’t legal drinking age, no one seemed to mind. A
shot of Tequila and a few Margaritas didn’t do for me what it used to. These
days, I had to unload an entire magazine from my M16 just to get a thrill.
At least I wasn’t in demand anymore. It’s nice to be
ignored, especially by my zombie brethren. Feeders no longer seek nourishment
from my flesh, though at the time, I wasn’t exactly sure why. They’d learned
their lesson, and now barely noticed me at all.
I had plenty of scars to show for it, though. Some people
collect tattoos; I collect bite marks. They reminded me of how many times death
had visited me and come up empty.
Fate can be a slippery thing sometimes, and roles can be
reversed in the blink of an eye. Before I was just a drone, not unlike the
walkers outside, fulfilling the customer’s every wish for the “greater good” of
the company. Now I owned the place, or close to it. And once the customers had
devoured the staff, the keys to the kingdom were entrusted to me.
Unleash an army of the dead and you shall become king; at
least, that’s how Ash did it.
I made myself a cup of Earl Grey, and watched a few lost
souls stagger by. Zombies used to come right up to the door and snap at me.
They always left a bloody mess, and sometimes I wondered if I’d ever get the
front of the house back into respectable condition. But once they’d had a taste
of me, and realized that there wasn’t an ounce of fresh meat inside, they lost
interest in the hotel. Little by little, their ranks dwindled. These days only
a handful came by. Hopefully they wouldn’t change their minds.
I swallowed the last of my tea, and set the cup on the empty
bell cart. Rarely did I use the carts for anything other than transporting dead
bodies, but occasionally there were a few other uses for them. I pushed the
cart, broke into a sprint, and jumped aboard. The cart sailed through the lobby
before veering off and crashing into the concierge’s desk. I fell off the cart
and landed on my back.
The crazy shit I did these days just to get a laugh. It was
fucking pathetic.
The cherry wood desk was a French import, made exclusively
for the hotel. It was one of many rare items that adorned the lobby, but the
only one that I liked to fuck with. The concierge who sat behind it treated it like
her throne. Anyone who did not sit at her table was beneath contempt, even the
General Manager. Although Marge was a cranky old bitch, she had something that the
others didn’t: a ravenous, killer instinct. And if I had to pick who would
survive a nuclear winter, I’d pick her every time, even over the almighty
cockroach.
If Marge had something to say, she’d tell it to your face.
Once, and only once. Hell, she was going to die anyways; she didn’t really give
a shit. And in the paradox of this life, I found that I enjoyed her far more
now that she was dead.
“Sleeping on the job again, Marge?” I got up and pushed aside
the cart.
The zombie groaned, rubbing her face in a pool of blood and
spit. She peered up, caught a glimpse of me, and then planted her face back in
the muck. Bloodstained files and papers were strewn over the desk, remnants of
a personal project that would go unfinished without divine intervention.
“Come on, let’s clean up this mess.” I scooped up a handful
of papers and dumped them in the trashcan.
Marge clung to the pile in front of her for dear life.
“You won’t find what you’re looking for in there, no matter
how hard you try. Eventually you have to let go.” I grabbed a bottle of
disinfectant and sprayed her in the face.
Marge squawked and then sneezed blood all over the cherry
wood finish.
“I should have seen that coming.” I swabbed her nose with a
paper towel, and then used the other end to wipe the desk clean.
The zombie stared at me, her memory sparked for an instant.
She rose on her weary legs, grabbed the roll of paper towels, and rubbed the
desk. When Marge grew tired of imitating me, she dumped the entire roll in the
trashcan and looked back.
“That’s the spirit, Marge!” I patted her gently on the
shoulder. I guess you can teach a decomposing corpse new tricks.
Margaret Smith was a middle-aged woman on the wrong side of
forty, originally hired as a Front Desk Agent when she graduated from high
school. Over the course of her employment, she had stints in Housekeeping and
Room Service before returning to the front of the house for good.
Marge was old school, raised by nuns and emphatic that
everything had to be done in a precise manner. “Everything has a proper place
if you look,” she’d remind me at least once a day. The hag was hardcore, and
wouldn’t let anyone outwork her, not even me.
Though a shadow of her former self, she still patrolled the
lobby and picked up debris off the floor, making a bigger mess in the process.
Still, I didn’t mind. One percent of Marge was better than one hundred percent
of the dimwit douche bags that used to run this joint.
“Do you know what day of the week it is?” I held up a thin
bar of soap.
Marge looked at the bar, and then at me.
“That’s right, Tuesday. Time to get washed up and-” I caught
a whiff of her. “Uh…you smell absolutely rank.” I coughed, the odor clinging to
my nostrils.
With surprising speed, the zombie snatched the bar of soap
from me. She bit off a chunk, wrapper and all. When she realized that it wasn’t
Hershey’s, she moaned, dropped it on the floor, and walked away.
Marge was the third to be infected on that fateful day six
months ago. As always, she was sitting behind the concierge’s desk when a young
man staggered into the lobby and vomited on a Front Desk Agent.
If you’ve ever worked behind the desk, you’ve probably heard
a million stories about customers behaving badly and experienced quite a few
yourself. My coworker Brad told me about a cranky European lady who spit on him
when he handed her the bill, and a gay guy who tried to lure him into his room
with a bottle of Heineken and a coupon for free Petroleum Jelly. Customers had
cursed him out, flung boogers at him, farted, and thrown popcorn in his face all
during the same shift. But all of that paled in comparison to the infected drone
that plastered him with the contents of his stomach.
Oh, my good friend Brad. How I miss all of you…
Brad was the first victim and very first to bite me. His
death and reanimation triggered a series of disturbing events, compromising the
hotel once and for all. After regurgitating on the staff, the customer jumped
the counter and bit the manager. Although Brad initially hadn’t been bitten, he
was already starting to turn, making me realize that the first strain of the virus
was transmitted exclusively by blood. Of course, that was only one of many viruses
that soon visited us.
Before I understood what was going on, Marge was out of her
chair and sprinting towards the disturbance. I had to hand it to that crusty,
old bitch. She had rockets in those stiletto heels. While I contemplated what
to do, she pushed me aside and jumped behind the desk. She peeled the customer
off, blood flying in a crimson wave. Intrigued by Brad’s convulsing body, the
infected slipped away from her and turned his attention on the easy kill.
He started with the face, chewing off Brad’s eyes and nose. Damn
it, why did it have to be him? Why couldn’t it be Darcy, that flakey whore who was
less than discreet at hiding her affair with her older, married boss? She
wasn’t even on hand when it all went down, the result of a last minute favor
that Darcy promised to make up to Brad. I could only imagine...
“I should have done more!” I pounded my fist on the desk.
I jumped behind the counter and snapped the customer’s neck
in one violent thrust. Damn. Where did that come from? The zombie slumped over
and then rose again awkwardly, making a meal of Brad’s leg. I stomped on his
face over and over again, but it did little to curtail his voracious appetite.
Desperate to stop him, I grabbed a pen and stabbed him in the head. No dice.
Like most guests, his skull was just too thick.
Suddenly something spun me around, shattering my arm like a pane
of glass. “Are you out of your fucking mind?” I grabbed my shoulder, but it
wasn’t Neal’s fault. The security guard couldn’t see anything behind the
counter, just some crazy bitch who was stabbing someone over and over again.
Amidst the chaos, he’d mistaken me for the perpetrator and missed a second
zombie that stumbled into the lobby and latched onto his neck.
Before I could assess my wound, Brad grabbed my other arm
and bit into it. “Fuck!” I shook him off. Shot in one arm and bitten in the
other, the night was quickly going to hell.
Brad was far worse for wear, though. His quirky smile had
been ripped off; the rest of his face now hamburger meat. Instantly he realized
his mistake and spit out the missing chunk of my forearm. It was the first time
that I realized that zombies took exception to me. Besides, why bother with a
slice of venison when you had a room full of prime rib? I was too tough
anyways, and would certainly to give them an afterlife of gas. No kidding.
Abruptly he turned his attention back to his boss Adam, and
the three hungry thieves took turns devouring each other’s flesh. The employee
gnawed on the manager, who in turn gnawed on the customer, while the customer
gnawed on them both.
Your typical day at
the Black Diamond Regency.
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