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"The Stately Homes of England, How beautiful they stand,
To prove the upper classes, Have still the upper hand."
Noel Coward, British dramatist (1899-1973).


It is currently 2009-11-20 11:18pm


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 Post subject: Re: SDN In the Sea of Time PostPosted: 2009-11-02 10:45am
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Good story, but yeah, doesn't make sense to have you out there alone unless the 1st Mess Recon Force has snipers out there covering you from an overlord position.



They say, "the tree of liberty must be watered with the blood of tyrants and patriots." I suppose it never occurred to them that they are the tyrants, not the patriots. Those weapons are not being used to fight some kind of tyranny; they are bringing them to an event where people are getting together to talk. -Mike Wong

But as far as board culture in general, I do think that young male overaggression is a contributing factor to the general atmosphere of hostility. It's not SOS and the Mess throwing hand grenades all over the forum- Red

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 Post subject: Re: SDN In the Sea of Time PostPosted: 2009-11-02 12:07pm
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Yeah, sending out one man is a death sentence, especially since practically all local tribes value warriors and the warrior culture, it would make sense to send a soldier along.

As an aside, I'd like to get in. My name's Paul Zuk (read like Zhuk, as in Zhukovsky), and my only relevant skill is sailing, so I guess I'll be participating in the fishing operation, training people, or perhaps getting the Eagle running with Marina :D

EDIT: I'm also married. So the situation would suck doubly for me, damn...



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If you believe your government murdered 3000 people in cold blood, help us find out and make a blog post about it.

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 Post subject: Re: SDN In the Sea of Time PostPosted: 2009-11-02 06:36pm
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This is starting to get really interesting.

I was wondering if I could be in the story as well, I sort of was thinking that on the first day I probably would search for some of the more level-headed SD.Neters as well as head to the library to search for some books and information to help us survive in this new world, as well as get a few political books to help make suggestions for the long-term government of the new nation.

You can call me either Wes or Wesley in the story, I'm about a 5' 8" tall 21 year old, I have blond hair, blue-green eyes and somewhat of a fair complexion. and I'm slightly overweight with a tiny bit of a gut but it is not that visible when I have clothes on and I also have stitches along my abdomen from my many surgeries as a baby.



My Political Compass:
Economic Left/Right: -5.12
Social Libertarian/Authoritarian: -3.28

Designation: Libertarian Left (Social Democrat/Democratic Socialist)
Alignment: Chaotic-Good

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 Post subject: Re: SDN In the Sea of Time PostPosted: 2009-11-02 07:09pm
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If you need a bitch to get stabbed or something, I'm game. Derek, 19 years old, my only real skills is that I swordfight (Broadswords, sabers, and I dabble with kendo, though ironically, we're actually too far back for that to matter) I shoot recreationally and I can draw. I'm pretty good cannon fodder methinks.



RIP My Sig

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 Post subject: Re: SDN In the Sea of Time PostPosted: 2009-11-02 07:36pm
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If you want to insert me, I'd be honored. James Baerne, tallish, missing an eye due to a fencing accident. Useful skills...Nothing specific, I dabble in just about everything though. I might be able to contribute to the Eagle crew.



Beatrice: I wonder that you will still be talking, Signior Benedick: nobody marks you.
Benedick: What, my dear Lady Disdain! are you yet living?
Beatrice: Is it possible disdain should die while she hath such meet food to feed it as Signior Benedick? Courtesy itself must convert to disdain, if you come in her presence. - Shakespeare, Much Ado About Nothing

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 Post subject: Re: SDN In the Sea of Time PostPosted: 2009-11-02 07:37pm
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open_sketchbook wrote:
If you need a bitch to get stabbed or something, I'm game. Derek, 19 years old, my only real skills is that I swordfight (Broadswords, sabers, and I dabble with kendo, though ironically, we're actually too far back for that to matter) I shoot recreationally and I can draw. I'm pretty good cannon fodder methinks.


Sorry for the doublepost, but I'm glad to know that there is another saber fencer on the board. Hi there! :D



Beatrice: I wonder that you will still be talking, Signior Benedick: nobody marks you.
Benedick: What, my dear Lady Disdain! are you yet living?
Beatrice: Is it possible disdain should die while she hath such meet food to feed it as Signior Benedick? Courtesy itself must convert to disdain, if you come in her presence. - Shakespeare, Much Ado About Nothing

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 Post subject: Re: SDN In the Sea of Time PostPosted: 2009-11-02 11:02pm
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SM Sterling (the author of the Island In The Sea of Time books) is a member on SDN, or at least he used to be. I wonder how he's reacting to this.



"From the finest lumber our mills can supply!"
Adenoid Hynkel, dictator of Tomania, responding to complaints about sawdust in the bread (The Great Dictator).

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 Post subject: Re: SDN In the Sea of Time PostPosted: 2009-11-03 12:03am
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Junghalli wrote:
SM Sterling (the author of the Island In The Sea of Time books) is a member on SDN, or at least he used to be. I wonder how he's reacting to this.


He probably doesn't check the board much, if at all. However, given the some members' previous work with the Draka, his reaction could have been quite interesting.



In Johnny Mnemonic we finally learned the answer to that age old question: Who would win in a fight, Dolph Lundgren or a Dolphin? Except this time, they were both cyborgs! - Shroom

I'd like to voorwerpen op her verschillende afstanden fotograferen, if you know what I mean. - Rye

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 Post subject: Re: SDN In the Sea of Time PostPosted: 2009-11-03 12:06am
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That gives me the hilarious picture of Stirling waking up on the island, looking about him and the situation, realizing what is going on and crying out Vader style "Noooooooooo!"

Definitely something not to be included in any actual stories, but an amusing thought nonetheless.



I love learning. Teach me. I will listen.
You know, if Christian dogma included a ten-foot tall Jesus walking around in battle armor and smashing retarded cultists with a gaint mace, I might just convert - Noble Ire on Jesus smashing Scientologists

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 Post subject: Re: SDN In the Sea of Time PostPosted: 2009-11-03 12:15am
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Ford Prefect wrote:
He probably doesn't check the board much, if at all. However, given the some members' previous work with the Draka, his reaction could have been quite interesting.

I meant how he'd be reacting in this scenario.



"From the finest lumber our mills can supply!"
Adenoid Hynkel, dictator of Tomania, responding to complaints about sawdust in the bread (The Great Dictator).

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 Post subject: Re: SDN In the Sea of Time PostPosted: 2009-11-03 02:14am
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Stirling came over to the Divine Salamis forum to comment at length on Drakafic and was very cool about. Got into an argument over aircraft design with Stuart and praised Norseman for his work on it. While he was over there he commented briefly on Marina's take on ISOT, the "Shang scenario" and seemed interested in it. This is even more focused on board culture though so it may not make as much sense once divorced from the SD.net context.

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 Post subject: Re: SDN In the Sea of Time PostPosted: 2009-11-03 08:51pm
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Do you have a link to those comments on Drakafic? I would very much like to see them.

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 Post subject: Re: SDN In the Sea of Time PostPosted: 2009-11-03 09:59pm
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Unfortunately Divine Salamis is gone and it's unlikely to be back...well, maybe not ever, but definitely not for a long time. Marina might have backup logs on one of her computers somewhere, but it'd be a serious hassle to get them transferred to some sort of usable form.



DPDarkPrimus is my boyfriend!

Want to aid in studies of climate science but don't want to leave your comfy computer chair? Now there's a way, through the North American Bird Phenology Program! (You can also stalk people through time this way. I know where you lived, O. M. Bryens!)

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 Post subject: Re: SDN In the Sea of Time PostPosted: 2009-11-05 05:02pm
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Crap. I would really have liked to find out what he thought of the setting.

I love it to pieces, partly because it's a vastly more realistic treatment of the Drakas, and partly because the Drakas make such good unsympathetic villains. They go to incredible lengths to strip out everything admirable, everything human about themselves.

They sort of remind me of the "New Gods" from the Belisarius series, if you've read that.

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 Post subject: Re: SDN In the Sea of Time PostPosted: 2009-11-06 01:46pm
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Date Unknown + 1

I was shaken awake by Jon, having been so exhausted from the emotional rollercoaster of the day before that I could not stay awake for first watch and I would probably fall asleep for the second, so I took the last watch of the night. My response to this awakening is not fear or panic, but rather just a desire to roll over on the couch and go back to sleep. Grumbling though, I eventually shift back and roll off the couch.

Looking up at Jon in the dark, the only real light at the moment being the cherry glow of the banked fire, I ask, “Anything interesting happen?”

Shaking his head, Jon says, “No. I mostly just kept a patrol and catalogued what we have for food in the house. I’ve made some porridge, its keeping warm next to the fire right now. I suggest you add some fruit now before it all goes bad.”

Nodding, I hand the blankets I had been using to Jon and say, “Can’t say I got enough sleep, but here you go. Hope you feel better in the morning.”

“I will if I wake up and find this was all a crazy dream,” Jon replies.

Snorting, I say, “I was hoping for that too. Didn’t seem to work.”

Taking the blanket in exchange for the flashlight, Jon settles in on the couch and says, “You roll around a lot in your sleep.”

“I know,” I reply while going over to the fire. There is a metal pot with some sort of semi-liquid substance in it along with a large spoon, but now that my head is no longer swimming my stomach is roaring. Going into the kitchen, I shine my light on the table and see a pad of paper that has a long list of what is available, along with a bunch of the perishables stacked up on the counter nearby.

Taking a knife, I carefully cut up an apple, and then grab a bowl and spoon, putting the chunks in. Quietly moving back into the living room, I ladle in some of the porridge into my bowl, stirring up the resulting mass. Finding a seat next to a window, I quietly look out into the night while eating.

It’s incredibly quiet and dark, darker than I’m used to living in the city. I can’t see very far, the neighbourhood featuring many trees to provide scenery and privacy, but peaking through the clouds is a sky so full of stars only childhood memories of camping can compare. I wonder if any astronomy buffs have scrounged up a telescope and are peering up at the heavens, trying to discern when we are.

When we are. Not where but when. What a creepy, spine chilling thing, to suddenly be divorced from your world and paired up with such a familiar yet alien one; a world geographically similar to our own, but empty of people, empty of light. I stop the train of thought before I go too far, finishing up the last scrap of my meal and going to get more before I pause and consider that Joe probably has yet to eat. Leaving it, I put the bowl in the sink and then grab up the knife I used to cut up the apple to peel an orange.

Oranges. We are back in a time before citrus farming. No more orange juice. No more lemonade. This could be one of the last citrus fruit I ever eat. It is an almost melancholy moment to peel it.

I wander the house, orange in my left hand, flashlight in my right, and the baseball bat tucked under my left armpit. I occasionally peak outside, scanning for anything unusual, but there is nothing. Eventually I wander up the stairs and begin to check out the rooms there, morbid curiosity compelling me onward.

I look at the pictures of the smiling family that used to live here. Mom and pop, grinning son growing like a weed, maybe fifteen. I had seen them before yesterday and they had weighed upon me, but they take on new meaning in the quiet hours of the new day with the revelation of what has happened. These people whose home we have invaded, what of them? Are they wandering about the wilderness of this time’s island, wondering where their home has gone, National Guardsmen trying to get them to shelter while the world screams about what has happened? Or are they simply erased, like they never were to accommodate our place here? Or is this just a copy? Are we just copies of people still living out their lives back home?

I turn down the pictures so that they will not stare at me with their accusing happiness. I do not want to think about that right now.

I wander into the son’s room and take a peek out the window before I begin to carefully rifle about, just trying to figure out what is in here. The kid listened to Disney-pop and played baseball and probably sang in the choir down at church after dutifully attending Sunday school. Such a sweet slice of cornball Americana.

Lifting up the mattress, I snicker as I pull out the collection of dirty magazines that he probably thought were hidden. I bet his father was his supplier and his mother knew but was just glad he was interested in girls. My smirk turns to a sad smile. This is where people lived, every corner of this house holds a story, just from this generation, but now less than ghosts linger.

I consider putting the magazines back, but then a thought occurs to me. The man on patrol last night had said that it seemed that everyone on the island was from SDN. That meant that there would be a lot more guys than girls. How long would it be until the next time I would get to talk to a girl? How long would it be for the majority of the men on the island?

Food was more important, properly fitting clothes were more important, there were a dozen things more important to survival now, but there was a lot of stuff that would become greater than gold in time. These cheap, glossy magazines were an investment in the future. So long as the acquisition did not hurt the ability to gather food in the present, there were a lot of things worth picking up now for a future date.

An idea was starting to crystallize in my mind. Checking the exterior of the house again, I wander over to the master bedroom. Pausing at the threshold, I require a few minutes to get psychologically prepared before I tip toe in, a thief stealing from people who no longer exist, who may never exist. I do not take anything, not now, but I do open up the jewellery case of the wife, staring down at the reflections of silver, gold, and gemstones off of the beam of light from my flashlight.

I pick up a simple golden band, a wedding ring probably. I feel like such a ghoul, but my mind is thinking. We are in a time before Europeans arrived on Nantucket, but how far back? There were people in North America, so it had to be sometime between the end of the last Ice Age and the Renaissance. The sea levels seemed about the same, if they were radically different presumably the water in the harbour would have shifted, either flooding out or drowning us all. So probably we were sometime after the end of the last Ice Age. The end of the last Ice Age was the start of agriculture.

Somewhere out there, there have to be people who would trade something of value for a gold ring. I drop the little band of yellow metal back into the case and close it up. When the sun comes up, I’ll wake the others and outline the plan. We have to get better clothing anyway, we need to hit at least one other house to do that.

Going back to the windows to check outside, I sweep the flashlight out across the lawn outside and I’m surprised when I see a figure skulking in the shadows outside. Just a black outline in the bushes, the person freezes up as the light strikes them, and I cry out, “Jon! Joe! We’ve got someone outside!” while keeping my flashlight on the person.

Jon is out first, having only gone to bed recently. Hand on the hilt of the sword, he doesn’t draw it, but he is clearly ready to draw if necessary. I can not hear what is being said, but by the time Joe gets up the figure is already coming out of the bushes, hands up. Keeping the light on him until Jon shouts out, “It’s okay, you can come down now,” I then move down the stairs as quickly as I can in the poor light.

Arriving in the living room, I see a kid, not much older than the one in the pictures about the house, shivering in a torn Judas Priest T-shirt and jeans, his sneakers looking rather muddy. Joe was draping a blanket over his shoulders, while Jon was getting a bowl from the kitchen.

“Hey Matt, this is Brendan, our current night watchman,” Joe says while he takes a log from the bundle we brought inside and throws it on the coals of the fire.

“Hey Matt. Sorry if I scared you, but we were a bit worried about people skulking about after what we’d heard what happened,” I say in apology for probably near blinding him with my flashlight.

Shaking it off he says through chattering teeth, “N-no problem. I just wanted to see if there was anyone inside.”

“Just sit down and warm up. What were you doing outside this late?” Jon asks, guiding Matt to sit down on one of the couches.

Sitting down, Matt looks rather pale and shaken. Shaking, a bit from cold, a bit probably from shock, he says, “I was… I was hiding. I was… I was at the marina. I was waiting to hear that they had everything sorted out, that the Navy would be here to pick us all up in helicopters. It was freezing out there, but we were all huddled up, breathing into our hands, hopping about in our bare feet, trying to stay warm while we waited… waited for good news.”

Frowning, we all look at him. Joe asks, “Were you there when…?”

Matt nods, with tears now leaking from his eyes. My stomach flip-flops for a moment, watching him look so terrified and sad, alone, surrounded by strangers. Sitting down on the floor, I encourage the others to do the same, make it so that we’re not towering over him. I say, “You don’t have to talk about it if you don’t want to.”

Shaking his head, he says, “I… I should have got out when I had the chance. People were starting to get ugly waiting for news. People were breaking into stores and houses to get out of the wind and cold, shoving others around to keep their own spots secure. The… the… I suppose you could call them the guys in charge… they were trying to stop that. Some punks were also harassing girls, like school shit but bigger. Fights were breaking out. I saw this one lady whack this jock looking guy with a big stick when he tried to grope a girl. Most of the girls were escorted out of the area by the people with guns. Then people began to demand to know what was going on.”

Matt inhaled deeply, his breath wet with bottled tears, and then said, “People started shouting, wanting to know what was going on. Finally someone let slip that they couldn’t find the mainland. Someone cried out something like ‘What the fuck?’ and then a brick flew through the air towards the guy with the bullhorn. One of the guys with the guns around him responded by firing. Oh God! The noise! So much screaming! People yelling and pushing, you couldn’t move! A car got flipped and set on fire in the chaos of everyone trying to escape in all directions. Once I got out, I just ran and hid.”

We were all silent, listening to this kid; listening to the fear in his voice, the raw, yet unresolved emotion weighing down on his soul. I asked, “What then?”

“I… I stopped running and found a bunch of people in a corner store. Most of them were my age, and they were all guys. They offered me to come inside. Some of them were talking about how there nothing was left, how we were all going to die, so it didn’t matter what we did. They found booze, started chugging it while pigging out on chips and shit. Then one guy says that he saw a girl outside and that they should rape her. Most of the others get upset, but a bunch of the other guys who are drinking say they don’t want to die virgins. Bottles start getting smashed, people draw sides, and I run out into the dark. I’ve been stumbling around ever since,” Matt explains, his eyes now visibly drooping as the fear keeping him going for hours starts to wane.

We all nod and Jon says, “Look Matt, just get some sleep here, we’ll keep an eye out, okay?”

Matt nods, exhaustion overtaking him, and once he’s cuddled up the rest of us retreat to the kitchen, keeping him and the fire in the corner of our eyes. Joe shakes his head and says, “That’s fucked up.”

“People who are scared, despairing, and have no supervision do fucked up things. Look, I was planning something a little greedy before, but now I think I can put a bit of a better spin on it. We need to start looting the houses around us,” I state.

Jon and Joe stare at me blankly.

“We need food, not just for today or tomorrow, but the whole year. There’s what, enough for a week in here?” I ask.

“I figure we can stretch it to two,” Jon states.

“We need more than that. Much more. There will be stores, but everyone is thinking that if what Matt says is true. We need to crack open the houses around us, see what is inside. We need to empty the fridges, get the perishables eaten now to save the other stuff for later. And we need a glimmer at the end of the tunnel,” I explain.

Jon and Joe stare at me. I can see the gears turning in their heads, but I’ve already thought through this. So I continue and say, “We need to find the things that will let us not just survive but prosper. We need to find the manuals and textbooks that will let us build and maintain things. We need to find the luxuries, like spices, novels, and even porn. And even further into the future, we need trade goods like glass and jewellery.”

“Trade goods?” Jon asks, obviously thinking I’m going overboard.

“Look, they said there were people on the mainland, right?” I ask rhetorically. After getting nods, I continue, “If there are people on the mainland that means that there are people elsewhere, people who will want shiny things. They’re useless now, so if we take an extra minute or two at a house to loot the necklace collection while searching it for things more immediately useful to our survival, we’ll have a leg up for later down the road.”

A tremor passes over me for a moment, anxiety nearly overwhelming me that they might reject it, but Jon nods and says, “We’re going to need to get organized.”

The stress evaporates and I say, “But of course. Here, I’ll go around the house on my watch and start gathering up anything we can use to transport stuff: backpacks, gym bags, suitcases, even plastic bags. We’ll come up with an order and start hitting the houses around us. We hit a house as a team, two guys hitting for food while a third searches for other vitals like the medicine chest, picking up luxury goods on the way. We then bring everything back here for sorting. We can get Matt to do it while keeping an eye out on the house.”

Jon and Joe both nod thoughtfully at that. I then shoo them away, telling them to get back to their rest. Once they are safely away and I am busy upstairs emptying out the school backpack from the son’s room, I quietly collapse from a near heart attack. I thought that they were going to reject my proposal. Breathing deeply, I relax a bit. We just have to keep moving forward, keep from falling and realizing how fucked up our situation is. So long as I can keep dreaming, I can keep from considering the horrible truth of the situation.

By the time pre-dawn begins the paint the sky red and purple, coarse brushstrokes across the bellies of the clouds above, I have a sizeable collection of various containers and have even gone outside to get the wheelbarrow in the shed ready. Rubbing my hands by the fire, I gently wake everyone up. Jon and Joe rouse easily, but Matt has the sleep of the damned about him, the emotional exhaustion that curls you into a ball fit to return to the womb where it is warm and safe. I know the sleep well; know that if I could I would join him.

Rolling over, Matt stares at us with confused, terrified eyes for a moment before he calms down, remembering where he is. I already have a few bits of fruit cut up and hand them over to Matt while Jon and Joe dig into their breakfasts. Looking at the poor kid, I feel a strange weight press into me, and it takes a moment to realize that I’m one of the adults in this situation. A strange thing, responsibility.

“Hey Matt, I know you’re tired and scared, but we need you to do something for us. We’re going to go next door and get some supplies, but we need you to watch the place. If anything goes wrong, just scream bloody murder, okay?” I explain, and Matt nods, scared and young but clearly a smart kid.

“We’re then going to start bringing in supplies, and we’re going to need you to write down what we bring in. I found some paper and some pens, and I’ve already divided up a few categories. We just need you to catalogue everything while we’re busy grabbing that. Got that?” I ask.

Matt nods and says, “I’ve got it. Seems easy enough.”

“Yeah, you get the easy job, and you’re getting a full share: food, shelter, protection of the group, and one more thing,” I hold up a necklace I have taken out of the box upstairs. Fine gold chain with a little loop in the shape of a heart at the centre, with little crimson gemstones set about the perimeter. The dull glow of the coals in the fire and the wan light of dawn set the whole thing to glowing. I see Matt’s eyes track the flash of red and orange sparking off the piece and I say, “This is absolutely worthless today. We need food much more badly. We need clothing that fits much more badly. We need a dozen things much more badly. But when we have a civilization, this will be worth much, much more. You catalogue the stuff we bring in and keep an eye on it, and we’ll have much more time to explore, to get every last scrap of food and medicine we can, make sure no guns get into the wrong hands, and along the way pick up things like this for the future. You got that?”

Matt nods, his eyes sparking with the jewellery, a glimmer of hope rekindled in his eyes after what he had seen yesterday. I can see it, the little gears in his mind set into motion. I’m not just talking about today, or the next day, but the next year. I’m giving him visions where he’s covered in jewellery, women throwing themselves at his feet to get at his wealth. Pure fantasy in need of moderation, but he’s got hope. He will not collapse today.

I will not collapse today.

The three of us are out of the house as the sun is starting to breach the horizon. I have left the baseball bat behind for Matt with the instructions not to knock anyone’s head off. I can feel my fingers longing for the weight, but I ignore it, instead focusing on the wheelbarrow full of bags that I carry with me.

Running around the hedgerow that separates the houses, Joe goes up to the front door and knocks on it loudly with the butt of the axe in his hands. He cries out, “Anybody in there?” After a short period of no response, he swings the axe into the door above the handle, cutting into the wood.

“You know, I really should be doing this,” Jon comments, a bit of an impish grin on his face.

I consider what he says for a moment before I groan and say, “Bad man, just bad.”

After finishing hacking through the door such that the lock and handle no longer bar entry, Joe kicks it open to reveal shadows within. Oh for electric lighting! We pan our flashlight across the floor and find where the shoes are kept, and to our joy we actually find some in Joe’s size. While Joe puts on a pair of boots, we gather up all the shoes in that size and dump them into the wheelbarrow. We will need spares.

Already Jon has found the kitchen and has started to fill up a garbage bag with perishables. Even though the power has been out for at least half a day, the fridge remained cool with its door unopened. Now it is a race to get whatever we find eaten or preserved.

Cabinet doors are thrown open, seeking useful items. I find the spice cabinet and start shoving everything I can find into a bag. Some of this stuff might be useful for preservatives. Others might have useful vitamins or minerals. Most of it will be saved for later when food gets bland or even later still if we want to trade with other people for things. Pepper used to be worth more than gold at times. Salt controlled the fate of empires.

My bag full, I run it out front to deposit it in the wheelbarrow. Now properly shoed, Joe grabs the handles of the wheelbarrow and takes the bags of food and spices thrown inside back to the house we have claimed as our own. Jon has a duffel bag out and is filling it with cans he found in a pantry, and I quickly join him. We have it waiting out front by the time Joe gets back.

The kitchen now about half emptied of food, I nod to Jon and say, “I’ll start sweeping the rest of the house.” He nods and I make a beeline for a room I am pretty sure is a bathroom. Going inside, I find my suspicions confirmed. Checking it, I begin opening up drawers and cabinets. This is not the main bathroom, just with a toilet and a shower stall, but I loot the various hygiene products. Soap and toilet paper are not just luxuries when you need to avoid getting sick.

Our search slowed from the initial mad dash of grabbing as much food as our containers could hold, Joe rejoins us to begin hauling more cans and boxes of stuff with a long shelf life out of the kitchen while I look for another room, my bag only half full. We could probably slow, but there is a simultaneous sense of urgency and accomplishment that drives us onward. How fast can we drain a house dry of useful goods?

An office. I grab up stationary supplies, we will need them to continue cataloguing what we find. I scan over the books, looking for anything useful, pulling them out to check for anything hidden. I take out a few nature guides and local maps, setting them outside the room to pick up later. Rifling through the desk I also find a false bottom in one of the drawers containing a secret collection of candy bars and porno magazines. Someone was cheating on their diet. I scoop those up, the candy for the calories, the porn for the entertainment.

My bag now full enough, I rush it outside and pile it onto the wheelbarrow, Jon and Joe having already filled it half way with cans. Jon looks up at me and says, “Next is stuff in glass jars, so no extra. We don’t want it tipping.”

I nod and say, “I got some toiletries and stationary, plus about a half box of Snickers with a few Mars bars thrown in for good measure. I also left out some local books and found some dirty magazines for those lonely nights.”

Rushing back in, I hit the next room, a bedroom, and begin throwing socks and underwear into a garbage bag while setting aside shirts and sweaters for a later grab. I also find another few hidden candy bars, several hundred dollars in cash hidden under the bed, and several wooden boxes of jewellery. Wrapping the jewellery up in the bundles of clothing, I move on to the next room.

By the time we have everything we want from the house on that pass, the sun is already fully above the horizon, half obscured by grey clouds, only intermittently providing warming rays. Still, from all the work we’ve been doing, all three of us have developed something of a sweat and Joe has his sweater off, wrapped about his waist.

I can already feel the extra pounds about my gut weighing me down, but there are still more houses to go. We have added another two flashlights and several dozen batteries to our arsenal, along with a crowbar and a pair of claw hammers. Several other sets of tools had also been transported to the house for sorting. We had also found a palette of bottled water, no doubt to go with whatever diet the husband had been sneakily circumventing with his hidden stash of goodies, and had cracked open several bottles to wet our tongues.

By late morning, the sun now high in the sky, we had hit three houses. Each was a story told by the possessions within. The first seemed inhabited by a childless couple, still young but not yet old judging by the pictures, the husband a bit overweight while the wife seemed a touch on the over-enthusiastic athletic side. Unfortunately for us that meant lots of fresh fruits and vegetables that would not keep long. Fortunately for us that also meant lots of organically canned goods.

The second had a lone man, either an electrician or someone who enjoyed working with electronics. We got lots of plenty from that house, and a somewhat heartbreaking amount of alcohol. How sad it was to crack open a person’s home, to see the side of them that they hid from the world, to feel the emotions they carried with them on their possessions, to glimpse at the stories of their lives you would never know about. We also found a blunt nosed .45 revolver, Jon taking care to unload it and carefully stash away the weapon in the attic of the house we had claimed.

The third house was another large home featuring a family. Rich, with two older daughters and a son, they seemed to only stay in the house over the summer months. There were only really spices and a few preserves for food, but the real jackpot was in the antiques we found. We could not move most of them right away, but there were a number of 19th and early 20th century machines that required no electricity to run, like a treadle powered sewing machine. There was also a fair collection of jewellery and perfume that went into our ‘investment portfolio’.

We broke for lunch and consumed some of the meat we had recovered from the refrigerators of the houses, happily digging in while we had the chance, Matt looking somewhat oblivious as to why we are having such a big meal. With us taking the terror of other people off of him, he seemed to not quite fully comprehend just how many things are going to disappear.

Still, we leave him to his meal and then head back out.

By the fifth house of the day, we hit the mother load.

“God bless America,” I mutter sarcastically as we enter into the house of the man who was clearly the NRA member on the street. Hunting trophies line the walls, there are various weapon and hunting magazines spread about. We also quickly recovered a large quantity of camping and survival gear, including several tents and sleeping bags. Best of all, there was an entire room and workshop devoted to weaponry.

After finding the keys to the gun cabinet and starting to check the large collection of rifles and shotguns for proper storage protocols, I pick up one of the more personally useful bits of kit, a compound fibreglass hunting crossbow, one of several along with other hunting bows. I had no illusions of keeping the firearms. Only Jon had any training with them, and I doubted that the gentlemen from last night would let us keep them, but the bows could be trained with and were much less of a threat to guys with guns.

“This is the future here Joe. We won’t be able to keep looting forever; this is just to get us set up. But we find stuff like this, we pick up useful skills like hunting, and we have a future where we can spend silver and gold again one day,” I say while getting the feel of the weapon in my hands, trying to engrain safety habits with something obviously not loaded.

“I don’t know about the future man, but these will definitely be useful today,” Joe says while checking out another crossbow.

Satisfied that the former owner of this house, while perhaps a bit over-enthusiastic about hunting and firearms from a Canadian perspective, was a safe keeper of his weaponry and left nothing loaded, Jon begins to pack the guns away in various carrying cases and invites us to join him.

“What will we do with these once we get them packed away?” Jon asks.

“Load ‘em up in the wheelbarrow, take them back to the place, and hide them until the guys on patrol return so we can donate them to the cause. Buy us a lot of good will, make sure we aren’t marginalized,” I state, shrugging.

“And if we are marginalized?” Jon asks.

“Then we may be looking at jobs shittier than this,” I state. “There’s going to be a lot of work to do. Best to seize the jobs we want than get assigned jobs we don’t. Like latrine duty. Incidentally…”

“I’ll teach you guys how to take a crap without running water,” Jon says, shaking his head.



I love learning. Teach me. I will listen.
You know, if Christian dogma included a ten-foot tall Jesus walking around in battle armor and smashing retarded cultists with a gaint mace, I might just convert - Noble Ire on Jesus smashing Scientologists

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 Post subject: Re: SDN In the Sea of Time PostPosted: 2009-11-06 04:14pm
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Dammit, my Priest shirt got ripped!

Our group seems like it will be decently well off. Weapons, good will from the higher-ups, etc.



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My Xbox Live Gamertag is Sergeant Matt

"Faith is the great cop-out, the great excuse to evade the need to think and evaluate evidence. Faith is belief in spite of, even perhaps because of, the lack of evidence." -Richard Dawkins

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 Post subject: Re: SDN In the Sea of Time PostPosted: 2009-11-06 04:28pm
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Also two thirds of the founding members are metal fans, so you should be in good company :D

The next chapter I'm planning on introducing other problems for our little group, namely political ones.



I love learning. Teach me. I will listen.
You know, if Christian dogma included a ten-foot tall Jesus walking around in battle armor and smashing retarded cultists with a gaint mace, I might just convert - Noble Ire on Jesus smashing Scientologists

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 Post subject: Re: SDN In the Sea of Time PostPosted: 2009-11-07 01:16am
White Mage
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Location: Tahalshia Manor
Quote:
I saw this one lady whack this jock looking guy with a big stick when he tried to grope a girl.

Gee... wonder who THAT was... :angelic:

So, did we de-nut the rapist?



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Librium Arcana, for Gamers! "It is not so much our friends' help that helps us as the confident knowledge that they will help us." - Epicurus

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 Post subject: Re: SDN In the Sea of Time PostPosted: 2009-11-07 01:18am
Scrapping TIEs since 1997
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I've got a question. Is everyone on the member list along? Darkstar? The Elite Fitness clowns? Arminius?



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HAB | KotL | VRWC/ELC/CDA | TRotR | The Anti-Confederate | Sluggite | Gamer | Blogger | Staff Reporter | Student | Musician

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 Post subject: Re: SDN In the Sea of Time PostPosted: 2009-11-07 01:30am
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The assumption I'm running for this is that if a member was banned then they are not brought back in this scenario. However, even if inactive, so long as the member was not outright banned, they will be brought back. This allows for extra bulk for 'NPCs' and the like.

We probably brought back more than a couple of spammers and trolls along with some people who have moved on with the site, but the number of neo-Nazis should be minimal, although by statistics we probably got a couple of sociopathic nutbars.



I love learning. Teach me. I will listen.
You know, if Christian dogma included a ten-foot tall Jesus walking around in battle armor and smashing retarded cultists with a gaint mace, I might just convert - Noble Ire on Jesus smashing Scientologists

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 Post subject: Re: SDN In the Sea of Time PostPosted: 2009-11-07 02:51am
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Location: Edmonton
Quote:
although by statistics we probably got a couple of sociopathic nutbars


o_O Do I have to be worried about this?



Just me. No funny quotes, not funny lines of text. Just plain old me.

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 Post subject: Re: SDN In the Sea of Time PostPosted: 2009-11-07 01:56pm
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More so than everyone else? I don't see why you would.

I mean, for crying out loud, the percentage of deranged nutbars in the population is on the order of 1%, at least; surely in a forum invented in large part for the purpose of argument, with nearly four thousand members, you're going to see a respectable sized population of them.

Add to that another good-sized chunk who are largely sane and functional in normal society but start getting wacky in extreme conditions (and "we're stranded in prehistory with a three to one male-female ratio" is pretty damn extreme), and everyone should be worried.

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 Post subject: Re: SDN In the Sea of Time PostPosted: 2009-11-07 06:27pm
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Day 175, Dawn, Cape Cod

Alferd Packer's first word that morning was quite simple. "FUCK!"

As he drifted towards wakefulness on that fine spring morning, his delusion had snapped, his good humor evaporated. Now, he was simply mad. That which could be called human about him was gone. He thrashed uselessly around in his tent for a moment, nearly destroying it in the process. When he finally disentangled himself and was on his feet, he attempted to ball up his sleeping bag and hurl it into the woods. It traveled exactly three feet before re-expanding and fluttering gracefully to the dewed grass of the forest clearing.

He choked on a frustrated string of expletives and stomped with excessive force towards the bay. When he got to the beach, uncaring about anything else, he screamed at the water. He yelled incoherent things at the sand. He even flipped off the sun as it peeked through the trees in the eastern skies.

But a single thought made him stop.

You're going through the five stages of grief.

He sat on the sand roughly, as though shoved down by the thought. Denial, then anger. Bargaining, then depression. Finally, acceptance. He'd heard it all before; his mother had died when he was twenty-one, so he was well-acquainted with the process. He'd been grieving for his wife (though she wasn't technically dead, for all he knew) for the last six months.

Most people jumped around the stages of grief; repeating some, ignoring others entirely. When his mom died, he distinctly remembered skipping straight to the depression, then leaping back to formless anger for the better part of the summer. With his wife, it'd been mainly depression. Since he did not believe in any sort of God, there was no one to bargain with. He had finally reached acceptance with his mother, but his wife...that was going to take a while.

But this? What was this insanity?

"I'm coming to terms with my own death," he whispered hoarsely.

Packer was amazed at the notion. He had successfully deluded himself for this long? How had he managed that? Dimly, he tried to think back to the boat ride out here. He'd been uneasy, but confident. He'd danced around the issue, or flat-out ignored it. He'd believed what they told him to believe; he'd created the delusion for their benefit! Even when the boat captain had confronted him with the truth (at least, her estimation of the truth), he still ignored it, or at least tiptoed around it. Then, with revulsion, he realized:

I was so convinced, I even lied to my wife about it.

He reached into his pocket and found his phone. Turning it over on in his hand, he stood, facing the water. "I've been talking to someone who will never exist every night because I can't face the fact that she will never exist. I convinced myself that this trip was anything other than a death sentence. I went ballistic for like ten minutes there. Fucking losing it, man. Fuck, now I'm talking to myself?"

No. You had a little hiccup, he told himself soothingly. Maybe a bit of a psychotic break. It was all a defense mechanism. You tried to cope with an impossible situation the best you could. Put on a good show for everyone around you, so they think you're a good guy, all well-adjusted. But when they sent you out here, it was too much. You couldn't keep it all balanced. It was going to come crashing down, no matter what you did. And now, it's all laid bare.

Your wife is gone. She'll never exist. Because you could not get over her, you squandered your opportunity for companionship and happiness back on Nantucket. You obviously fucked with the wrong people. And now, you've been sent out here to die in a way that will only benefit them. You're angry. It's not fair. But that's life. No one said it would be easy.


"No, it's not easy," he muttered. "To face death cannot be easy."

"Dying is not an easy thing," he called out to no one.

But even though he addressed no one, he was not unheard.

Day 42, Evening, Nantucket

Packer weaved his way through the crowded cafeteria, a bowl in each hand, a look of happy concentration on his face. All around him, men joked, laughed, and shouted over each other as they wolfed down dinner. Packer was stopped at least half a dozen times, exchanging pleasantries with sailors, fishermen, lumberjacks, and wreckers.

When he finally got back to the tiny table in the corner, he found Jason Terrance waiting for him, two mugs of beer in front of him. "Christ, boss, I never knew you were such a Chatty Cathy."

Packer set the bowls down. "I would like to extend to you a formal invitation to jump up my ass. There's a step stool back in the kitchen if you need it."

Terrance grinned, then eyed the stew in the bowl. "What do we have tonight?"

"Cod and mussel, along with some vegetables? Beats the fuck out of me, man. Smells good, though. What's the beer situation like?"

"Bad. They're apparently down to Coors here. We should've eaten at the one of the other places; they've still got decent beer!"

Because beer does not keep for more than a few months, it, unlike wine or hard liquor, had to be consumed as though it were a perishable item(which it in fact was). Since the numerous restaurants on the island all had bars with multiple beers on tap, there was quite a bit of beer to drink; enough that part of the standard dinner ration was a twelve-ounce mug of whatever was being served. It was the perfect way to get nearly everyone an extra hundred to two-hundred calories per day.

At first, it had been the good stuff. Sam Adams, Guinness, Stella, even the island's local brew. But that hadn't lasted long, and now they were down to Coors. Soon, it would be the abhorred Lite Beers. Then, nothing until next winter at the earliest.

"At least this shit'll be gone from the earth soon," Packer said. He lifted his mug. "Bottoms up!"

Each man quickly and decisively chugged their beer. There were two prevailing schools of thought on how to drink the Nightly Beer: sip it with the meal, or chug it straight away, while the soup/stew cooled off. Even on an empty stomach, it didn't provide much of a buzz, but that was fine by Packer. What little there was was enough to relax him for a few minutes.

Packer set his mug down and belched. Terrance set his mug down and belched louder. They regarded each other for a moment. "You nervous, boss?"

Packer shrugged. "Honestly, not as much as I thought I'd be. I'm glad you're here, along with the other guys from the shop. At least I know I'll have some support out there."

Terrance sat up in his chair. "First of all? There wouldn't be any lights on in this goddamn high school if we didn't do what we did. No one would have heat, except for the wood they could burn. The gasoline and diesel would be almost gone. Everyone knows that. You'll have a friendly crowd to greet you, and they'll eagerly listen to whatever you have to say. Second of all..."

"Goddammit, Jason, don't say it."

But he said it. "...You're Alferd Packer. You can do anything if you just put your mind to it!"

"It's a good thing no one else at the shop has picked up your little catch-phrase." Packer eyed his stew. "And why are we even talking? Let's friggin' eat!"

And so they ate. The stew was good, though they each could've done with a bit more. According to the committee who devised the menu, eating at the community cafeterias would provide a balanced diet, as well as enough calories for most people. Still, Packer surmised that he'd lost quite a bit of fat since arriving on Nantucket, though he still weighed the same. Now, when he bulged up against his clothes, it was more likely to be muscle than blubber.

When they bussed their table and left, they immediately wove through the halls of the high school towards the auditorium, where tonight's town hall meeting was taking place. Packer had not been to any of the town hall meetings so far. He thought that there had been two before tonight's one, but he just couldn't muster up the interest. Besides, his work at the shop meant that he dealt with the council on a regular enough basis. Now, though, he'd been asked by the council to give a short speech about he machine shop, and its current gasifier project. He thought it a fine idea.

The entire crew was amongst the crowd waiting in the hall outside the auditorium. After getting slapped on the back more times than he could count, Packer said, "Alright, I need to go in. If you chucklefucks sit up front and try to make me laugh or something, I swear..."

"Good luck, boss!" Terrance said with gleeful menace.

Packer winced and separated from his guys. Heading over to the door, he withdrew from an inner pocket his writ. A runner from the council had dropped it off at the shop earlier that day, and it was the only way he'd get in. He showed it to the guard, who was packing twin pistols on his belt. "Mister...Packer, is it?" he said, consulting a clipboard.

"Indeed it is," Packer said, just because he thought he should respond.

"And there you are on the list. Go on in, sir. I'm looking forward to your speech."

"Thanks?" Packer couldn't help the incredulous tone from creeping into his voice, and he went in.

The auditorium was large, but not large enough. No building on Nantucket had a room large enough to house three thousand people at a stretch. Fortunately, groups of people tended to send one or two representatives to these meetings, which kept attendance under a five hundred or so. Still, they were expecting the place to be packed tonight, or at least this what Packer had been told three days ago, when he'd been invited.

Yeah, it might only be half the island showing up. No pressure 'r nothin, Mistah P.

"Mister Packer!" a voice boomed across the auditorium. He was met halfway to the stage by an average looking man in his thirties. "Thank you so much for showing up. I'm Bill Weems, the coordinator for these little events."

"Meetcha, Mister Weems," Packer said, offering his hand and getting loose shake in return.

"So, the council tells me you'll be speaking tonight. Right now, I have you going last, after the Chairman speaks. Is that alright with you?"

"Uh, fine, I guess. Do I close out the meeting, or...?"

"Oh, I'm sorry! I didn't realize you hadn't attended previously. No, the Chairman will adjourn the meeting after the last speaker. Now, as you can see, there are two podiums on stage. You and the two other guest speakers will be speaking from the one stage left, while any council members will be speaking stage right. We have you seated on stage, of course, and you'll have water as you need it. Have you eaten supper yet?"

"Yes, I have," Packer stated blandly, eyeing Weems with admiration. An event planner who managed to make himself useful in this weird world of theirs. Good for him!

"Excellent. Well, we're almost ready to let the general public in, so why don't you take your seat on stage? It's labelled with your name."

"Thank you, Mister Weems," Packer began, but Mister Weems was already moving off.

Packer was almost off stage, there were so many chairs crammed on there. If everyone on stage is speaking tonight, I might as well just go straight to work after this, Packer thought miserably.

No sooner had he sat down, though, than people started filing in. What made him sit up a little straighter was the fact that the first people in were women. All of them--at least, all the ladies who hadn't chosen a mate.

He tried to remember the last time he saw a woman. It had to be when they installed the gasifier at the Point Breeze Hotel, which the women claimed as their own haven early on. Or had he seen some out in the marina that one day? Could've been; there were some women who were sailors, and one certainly couldn't teach someone how to sail from your hotel room.

Most of the women were sensibly dressed for the cool night, bundled up in pants and parkas, but some were made up to the nines, opting for low-rider jeans, trendy wool coats, and fancy scarves. One girl(and a pretty one at that) was even wearing high heels and a skirt. And she sat in the front row, almost directly in front of the podium!

Suddenly, Packer longed for Terrance and Andrew and Rustbucket making faces at him and surreptiously flipping him off as he tried to speak.

The women weren't unescorted. Aside from a cadre of armed men, there were, of course, the several den mothers: older women who'd protected the younger, vulnerable girls during those crazy first few days and since vigorously defended their charges in all matters. If a woman on the island had chosen a man out of fear for her own safety and subsequently changed her mind, a den mother would see them safely separated. And as the den mothers demanded, the council acceded. The spurned man had no recourse: he either got over it quickly, or he went up the rope.

At any rate, the entirety of the island's women seemed to be there tonight, and they and their escorts took up nearly a quarter of the seats. Packer felt strange; not aroused by these women (though, if he stared at High Heels Girl's legs long enough, he'd be thankful the podium blocked the lower half of his body from view), but rather interested. What were their days like? How were they coping with the difficulties imposed on them? Would he ever get a chance to ask?

As Packer pondered this, the men started to pour in. Packer's crew was, perhaps mercifully, seated somewhere towards the back, where the lighting was a little murkier. When all the seats were filled, people started sitting on the floor, in the orchestral pit, then up the aisles. When those were full, they were standing three rows deep in the back of the auditorium and the doors could barely close.

The meeting began, and Packer immediately tuned out. It seemed to consist largely of facts, figures, and the recitation of those facts and figures. The one thing Packer did distinctly hear was that they should have enough food to make it through the winter, as this was punctuated with wild applause. Then there was some debate between some Council members and some of the audience over common usage of certain berths in the marina, followed by some other debate about what to do with the wind turbine over on the Bartlett farm. Otherwise, he ignored everything that was said, and instead he split his time between casually ogling High Heel Girl's legs and chastising himself for being such a demented pervert. She's got to be at least eight years younger than you...if not younger! whipped through his head more than once.

He was so absorbed, that he nearly missed his cue. "And finally," the Chairman said, "we'll hear from Mister Alferd Packer, who's been doing a hell of a job at the machine shop, getting our generators running again. Mister Packer?"

The applause thundered in his ears as he stood up. If he hadn't been nervous before, he was now! He stood stock still for half a heartbeat before he could force himself to the podium, while the applause seemed to roll on politely. It died precisely when he reached the podium, and he cleared his throat, heart thumping palpably.

"Thank you, Mister Chairm--" the rest was cut off in a hideous whine of feedback, loud enough to cause Packer to recoil. It cut out just in time to clearly pick him up muttering, "...piece of crap microphone," and the crowd burst into good-natured laughter.

Face the color of steamed lobster and greasy sweat beading on his forehead, he said, "Guess I should've practiced on Rock Band or something, huh?" The crowd applauded more than the lame joke deserved.

"Anyway!" he said when the noise had died down, "I'd like to begin by thanking the Chairman and the Council for inviting me to speak tonight. Also, I'd like to take a moment and thank them for giving us not one, but three soup kitchens! Now that's delivering on a promise! How about it!" And he started clapping.

The applause caught on and was respectable. "But we're not here for a damn circle-jerk, are we? Let's talk gas.

"I know you've probably got some idea of what we do down at the metal shop. Most of you have seen the gasifiers we install. But what is a gasifier? Why does it work? This is what the Council asked me to discuss tonight, and since I'm sure all of you have to take a leak, I'm going to be quick."

A smattering of laughter. Packer noted that High Heels Girl had laughed, so as far as he was concerned, he was the funniest man on the goddamn planet at that moment. "A gasifier is exactly what its name suggests. It takes something that's not a gas and makes it a gas. In our context, we're taking wood and making gas from it. How? by burning it.

"You probably remember reading stories of people who suffocated in their homes due to carbon monoxide leaks, right? Well, carbon monoxide is produced when any number of things, wood included, is combusted. What is interesting is that when wood is incompletely combusted, other gases are produced, including hydrogen. This collection of gases, if it can be directed and concentrated, can then be burned in its own right.

"It turns out that an engine which normally utilizes gasoline as fuel is just as well-equipped to burn this gas we have created in its stead, completely obviating the need for liquid fuel. With a few trivial modifications, any gasoline engine can be made to run on this gas we've created through burning wood. When this gasoline engine is hooked up to a dynamo or an alternator, we have electrical power. Power for light. Power for heat. Power for tools for carpentry and metalwork. Power for medical devices. Power for refrigeration. Power for construction. Power for destruction. You name it, we can do it...so long as we have power!"

Everyone applauded. Even the Council members were clapping. Packer held up his hands, but that seemed to spur people on. Eventually, though, he got things quiet enough. His fear was gone. "I need to stop things right there, though. None of what we've done in the last forty days would've been possible if I didn't have my crew. They're the ones who deserve your applause. Guys, get your asses out your seats." And there was another round of applause, even louder this time and punctuated by shrill whistles and hoots. Packer grinned as the eighteen men on his crew wriggled under the glare of public adoration. When things were quiet again, Packer continued:

"Now, I was told to keep this brief, as all the Chairman's favorite TV shows start at nine," the Council members laughed more loudly at this than the audience did, "so I'll just say this. We're working as fast as we can to get as much power to the island as we possibly can, but we are understaffed. If you've ever worked with metal before, we can use you. If you've worked with wood before, we can use you. If you just want us to teach you something, we can use you. Come on down to the shop and give it a try. We work every day, but the hours are fair.

"Also, if you just want to learn more about gasifiers or our operation, please stop on by. Most of us are well-behaved, and if you bring snacks, you can usually coax us into doing tricks. Thank you."

The applause was raucous and warm, and Packer basked happily in it. When it died, Packer moved to return to his seat. The Chairman was already talking, but suddenly, something struck him. He hadn't planned on it, but the idea ballooned in his mind so rapidly, the impulse was so strong, that before he knew it, he was at the podium again.

"Mister Chairman? Mister Chairman!" Packer looked across the stage.

The Chairman was so stunned, he simply said, "Yes, Mister Packer?"

Packer looked out at the audience for a moment; all eyes were trained on him. What was he doing? "I'm terribly sorry to do this, sir, but I just realized something. When I was speaking, I said that we at the shop work every day. And that's true of everyone in this room...no, everyone on this island, just about." Packer licked his lips quickly. "For the last forty days we've all gone nonstop, trying to survive in impossible circumstances. We've been running on adrenaline and fear, and only now do we have a concrete hope that we'll make it through the winter. We can look further into the future than to our next meal, or our next day on the job.

"We should have--we deserve--a break." The crowd began murmuring in an excited way.

The Chairman said placidly, "A break, Mister Packer?"

"Yes, Mister Chairman," Packer said eagerly. "In a few weeks, the winter solstice will occur. That'd be a perfect time to have ourselves a day off and a party: a party for everyone on the island, if they want to come! We celebrate everything we've accomplished so far, and we also celebrate the fact that there will finally be more goddamn daylight."

"A fine idea, Mister Packer, to be sure," The Chairman began, "but we don't have the facilities--"

"Sure we do!" someone in the audience with balls of wrought iron shouted. "The Nantucket Inn, out by the airport! It's got a big reception hall and a bunch of other rooms. And we can set up bonfires out in the fields nearby!" A chorus of affirmation rippled across the crowd.

"Order!" the Chairman barked, and he rapped his gavel a few times. The crowd quieted down. "The Nantucket Inn may be large enough, but there's absolutely no power on that side of the island. We would need to divert gasifiers which run essential services, causing critical lapses elsewhere."

"Mr Chairman?" Packer spoke up. "Since I brought up this idea, I'll volunteer my time, and the time of my crew. We'll pull double shifts between now and the solstice to get the extra gasifiers built in time for the party. We'll live in the shop if we have to, but we'll fill all of our scheduled orders, as well the extra ones to bring power to the party. Am I right, gentlemen?"

"You can count on us, boss!" Terrance hollered somewhere from the middle distance. Someone else called out, "And we woodcutters will make sure you've got plenty of fuel for the celebration!" If anyone else offered their services, it was drowned out by a happy babble. Packer grinned, and turned to look at the Chairman, who once again had to call for order.

"Very well, the motion has been put forward by our esteemed Mister Packer here to have a party, and apparently has been seconded about nine hundred times. Since it appears that the extra labor needed for such an event will be provided by the appropriate parties, I have no material objections to the event. However, our procedure calls for this motion to be discussed by us in committee before we put the vote to the general public, which will have to take place at the next meeting. Since the next meeting isn't for two weeks, it appear we'll miss the solstice."

"Hey, fuck the procedure!" some daring soul yelled out from the back. "Let's get the vote done now, so we can have the party on the solstice! Figure out all the bureaucratic shit later!" A ripple of rough agreement worked its way across the crowd. "Yeah, we need some time off!" another person called out. "We're gonna go fuckin' bugshit if we don't get a break!"

The Chairman's mouth worked helplessly for a moment, then he shot a glance at Packer, who grinned amiably and shrugged. Finally, he said, "It appears I am outmatched. Very well. Secretary, please amend the current motion to today's list of votes." He tapped the gavel twice, then called out, "It has been motioned and seconded that on the winter solstice, some ten days hence, that we furnish the Nantucket Inn for an island-wide party. All in favor?"

"AYE!" so loud it shook the walls.

"All opposed?" Not a peep. "As I thought," the Chairman said with a wry smile. "The motion carries, and with that, I think it's time we adjourn. We'll be posting information about the party at the ferry slip, so make sure to check it out. Goodnight, everyone." The gavel came down, and the audience burst into wild cheers and applause. Some of that is for me, Packer thought. Some is for the Council and the Chairman. But most of it is for themselves.

He stepped back from the podium and quietly snuck out a side exit, a dreamy smile on his face. Good for them. Good for us. We deserve it.

Day 175, Early Morning, Cape Cod

Packer was resolved: they sent him out here to die? The least he would do is die with dignity. No suicide. No "accidents." He would face whatever awited him, and thus he would die in his right mind. Or whatever he had left.

He turned to go back to camp, to clean it up, but he stopped. His phone was still in his hand.

"Sorry, babe," he said sadly, "you can't come with me on this one. I'll always love you, though, and I'll remember. Goodbye." He hesitated for a moment, but then with sudden conviction he whipped the phone into the bay. It burbled once as it sank. He watched it go, then went back to his camp.

He struck the tent, repackaging it as best as he could. He rolled up his sleeping bag. He stripped naked and strapped to his thigh a Velcro band which had on it a small pocket. The pocket contained a few wedding bands he'd managed to hold on to, as well as someone's diamond engagement ring. They'd probably be safer up his ass, but he was gonna be goddamned if he pulled a Christopher Walken now. To his left ankle he strapped the sheath for his short, narrow-profile knife(and the knife itself). He didn't plan on fighting anyone, but what would happen in the short remainder of his life was anyone's guess.

After this, he donned all of his clothes: two pairs of socks, his winter boots (with a zippered leather flap covering the laces, so that snow wouldn't get caught in there), thick woollen long underwear under his heavy-duty waterproof work jeans, a leather belt, a t-shirt, two sweaters, and his bomber jacket. He thought about carrying the crossbow with him, but decided against it, instead attaching it to his pack.

Now, he was ready. But where to go? Wander inland until he got ambushed by natives? Or perhaps a bear would choose him for lunch? Say, weren't there wolves to worry about, too?

Nah. Just because he was going to die, he didn't have to seek death out. That'd be crazy. He might as well go back to the bay and have breakfast.

He saw them through the trees at a distance of twenty feet. There were four of them, and they were rifling through the bag of cod fillets. He made no effort to mask his approach, and when he stepped out onto the beach, they all had their spears pointed at him.

Hollywood had spoiled him. His intellectual mind told him that the tall, iron-faced, stoic Indian of the Wild West was a stereotype. It still didn't allay the shock he felt at observing the men in front of him.

They were downright tiny! Packer, at two inches shy of six foot, was by no means a tall man on Nantucket. Here on Cape Cod, though, he was a giant. The tallest native amongst the group might've been five-one on a good day.

But still, they sort of looked like Native Americans as one would expect...if they'd gone through the dryer one time too many. The skin color was right, a kind of ruddy copper. The eyes and hair were dark. They went shirtless, and wore some kind of hide breeches and moccasins...at least, that's what Packer thought they were.

At any rate, they did not regard this strange white giant with friendship and warmth. Their spearpoints were dangerously close to his body, and though they were stone, they looked nastily sharp.

So, this it how it ends? Stabbed to death by hostile natives? Well, we all gotta go sometime. But Packer would not provoke them. Let them be the aggressors.

Slowly, he raised his right hand to shoulder height, palm forwards, and simply said, "Hello!"

He then had the faintest notion of something behind him. Then a brief, crushing pressure on the right side of his head, then....

Nothing.



"There is a principle which is a bar against all information, which is proof against all arguments and which cannot fail to keep a man in everlasting ignorance--that principle is contempt prior to investigation." -Herbert Spencer

"Against stupidity the gods themselves contend in vain." - Schiller, Die Jungfrau von Orleans, III vi.

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 Post subject: Re: SDN In the Sea of Time PostPosted: 2009-11-07 11:51pm
Padawan Learner
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Joined: 2006-12-11 10:44pm
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Location: Rhode Island
WOO! PARTY!

I hadn't thought of that, how our modern diets would make us giants in those times. Might be a big advantage if we get into armed conflict with them.

So, was he knocked out or killed?



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 Post subject: Re: SDN In the Sea of Time PostPosted: 2009-11-08 02:42am
Jedi Master

Joined: 2009-05-23 07:29pm
Posts: 1308
The advantage would tend to be offset by the fact that we'd be going up against wiry little bastards who have been practicing hand to hand combat all their lives. Also, there seems to be a shortage of authority figures capable of organizing effective formation fighters; sort of a cross between "too many chiefs" and not nearly enough. But that's just me reading between the lines.

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