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Posted: 4/7/2014 9:57:03 PM EDT
[Last Edit: DCBourone]
Table of Contents
COPYRIGHT    4
DEDICATION    4
BOOK 1    6
CHAPTER 1: THE DAY THE WORLD CHANGED FOREVER    7
CHAPTER 2    52
CHAPTER 3    79
CHAPTER 4    86
CHAPTER 5    115
CHAPTER 6    125
CHAPTER 7    134
CHAPTER 8    180
CHAPTER 9    209
CHAPTER 10    215
CHAPTER 11    228
CHAPTER 12    235
CHAPTER 13    260
CHAPTER 14    274
CHAPTER 15    286
BOOK 2    292
CHAPTER 1    293
CHAPTER 2    306
CHAPTER 3    322
CHAPTER 4    331
CHAPTER 5    336
CHAPTER 6    352
CHAPTER 7    366
CHAPTER 8    378
CHAPTER 9    394
CHAPTER 10    406
CHAPTER 11    449
CHAPTER 12    454
CHAPTER 13    473
CHAPTER 14    501
CHAPTER 15    517
CHAPTER 16    534
CHAPTER 17    543
CHAPTER 18    546
CHAPTER 19    561
CHAPTER 20    569
CHAPTER 21    628
CHAPTER 22    653
CHAPTER 23    657
CHAPTER 24    659
The Devil's Hand    659

COPYRIGHT

Copyright  DCBourone, 2018
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form whatsoever.

PUBLISHER'S NOTE
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

DEDICATION
"A nation can survive its fools, and even the ambitious. But it cannot survive treason from within. An enemy at the gates is less formidable, for he is known and carries his banner openly. But the traitor moves amongst those within the gate freely, his sly whispers rustling through all the alleys, heard in the very halls of government itself. For the traitor appears not a traitor; he speaks in accents familiar to his victims, and he wears their face and their arguments, he appeals to the baseness that lies deep in the hearts of all men. He rots the soul of a nation, he works secretly and unknown in the night to undermine the pillars of the city, he infects the body politic so that it can no longer resist. A murderer is less to fear."

Marcus Tullius Cicero

"The very concept of objective truth is fading out of the world. Lies will pass into history."

George Orwell

"Is not liberty the destruction of all despotism - including, of course, legal despotism?"

Bastiat

"Chaos liberates not only the evil, but the good."

Billy Spears

THE SOLDIER'S SON

BOOK 1

By DCBourone

CHAPTER 1: THE DAY THE WORLD CHANGED FOREVER
~Zero Hour:  The Massacre At The Cantina Tejas
~Words Of His Father
~The Apocalypse Has Already Happened
~A Murderer Recalls a Very Peculiar Killing
~And As They Murdered, So They Are Murdered

~~Somewhere In West Texas

Billy Gehr was a boy on a mission.
A boy?
Or a man.
He wasn't sure.
He had just turned fourteen years old.
And today he was going to kill the men who had killed his father.
Kill as many as he could.
Or be killed himself.
So.
Boy?
Or man.
He would find out soon.
In his right hand Billy carried a Norinco .45 caliber pistol.  The Norincos were Chinese copies of a captured 1943 Remington Rand, or so the rumors went, near perfect duplicates of the original John Moses Browning 1911.  Made out of 5100 series carbon steel, his grandfather had said.  Or maybe scrapped Chinese railroad tracks, his father had mused.  Same steel, Billy's grandfather would murmur.  Billy's father and grandfather had spoken with reverence and sorrow that some Chinese factory had made such a superb copy of John Browning's classic fighting pistol.
It was gunsmith talk.
Soft voices in the dark.
On a Texas porch
Under a Texas sky full of stars  
The Norinco's original sights were copies from that first Remington, so small as to be virtually decorative, but Billy and his father and his grandfather had replaced the original rear sight with a hooked wedge you could use to rack the slide, one-handed, on a boot heel or a belt or a pocket seam or the steering wheel of a car.  They had replaced the front sights with copies of the long ramp found on the Smith and Wesson M28 Highway Patrolman.  His grandfather had machined the new sights one by one on an ancient Pratt and Whitney bench top mill the size of a sewing machine, or a Victorian dollhouse.  They had replaced the guts of the Norincos with all stainless internals from Cylinder and Slide.  Some of the guns had been salt-bath nitrided, making them virtually rustproof and indestructible.
His grandfather had called them Forever Guns.
Because you could build them.
And maintain them.
And use them.
Forever.
Billy had loved being the son, and grandson, of gunsmiths.
His family had been gunsmiths, soldiers, and lawmen, for generations.
So Billy had learned about these essential tools.

And how they were made.

And he had also learned a lot about how these killing tools were used.

Billy had learned a considerable amount about killing, in general.

Killing men is both art, and science, his father had said.

So you will study the science.

And the art will come.

Words of his father

So in his right hand, Billy carried the Norinco .45 caliber pistol.
And in his left hand he carried a yellow Big Gulp cup of gasoline.  
Almost thirty ounces of Chevron 93 octane, mixed with three heaping tablespoons of bacon grease.  The mix had slicked up nicely.  He had practiced.  Flinging the mix onto a department store mannequin propped on a folding chair.  With just a gentle twist of the wrist.  Because Billy wanted his mix to sticknot splash.  And practice makes perfect, his father had said.  Now there were twenty Diamond strike-anywhere matches epoxied together in a bundle sticking out at the base of the Big Gulp cup full of gasoline and bacon grease.  And a foot-long strip of sandpaper carpenter glued down the front of his tattered Vietnam era army jacket.

So.

Toss the contents.

Strike the matches down the vest

Throw the cup

So Billy came around the corner of The Cantina Tejas, a dusty barn turned into a dusty dance hall in a dusty part of west Texas, tossed the contents, struck the matches, and turned Hector Mejor Calinas into a human torch from Hector's knees to his tattooed face.  Billy saw a good dose of his incendiary mix of Chevron 93 and bacon grease go straight into Hector's open mouth.

Hector Calinas, torturer.

Hector Calinas, rapist.

Hector Calinas, soldier for the Cartel.

Hector Calinas was a fairly recent resident of Texas, his rubbery face and thick neck covered with blue tracings of Gothic script and winged angels and crosses and clenched fists with daggers.  Only tracings now because while Hector's tattoos had been very useful for impressing psychopaths in Sinaloa and Jalisco, Mexico, those tattoos seemed to be a disadvantage in Hector's new home of Texas.  Too many contemptuous cashiers, difficult traffic stops, sullen cops meticulously photographing his trademark symbology.  So for several months now Hector had been driving to San Antonio and having his facial tattoos lasered away.

I'll take care of those tattoos for you, Billy thought.

Fire will clean up those tattoos just fine.

Burn, Hector.

No hurry.

Go ahead.

Take your time.

Now Hector rose in a giant swirl of flame.

A man on fire will go for help, Billy had thought.

But Hector lunged forward.  Right hand outstretched.  Cartel torturer and murderer, but Hector was nothing if not courageous.  And then Hector inhaled, mouth open wide, sucked in a big curl of orange flame, and dropped to his knees.

And lunged for the door of The Cantina.

Good enough.

Go for help, Hector.

Because I promise you

Help is not coming.

It's just me:

Billy Gehr.

And clearly?

I'm no help at all.

Billy waited a second or two.

Billy could remember all his father's words.  His father's words were the kettle drums of war, propelling him into the future.  I'm in the soldiering business, his father had said.  Which means I'm in the killing business.  And being a soldier, well, that means I'm also in the dying business.  So if I die someday you will carry on, and you will know that wherever I am, I will always know that you are my son, and now I live through you and only through you, and knowing you were my son was the great triumph of my life.

Honor thy father

So far it was going pretty well.

Now Billy Gehr needed to stand.

Watch.

Listen.

For just a moment.

There were things he needed to see.

Things he needed to hear.

Before the real killing began.

That would be pretty soon now.

He raised the Norinco pistol.

Over-penetration is a problem for civilians, his father had said.  Because when you fight, and you will surely fight someday, because our world is collapsing in upon itself, do you understand, son, you will see the fall of your country the way Romans witnessed the Fall of Rome?  Because our Apocalypse has already happened. Our Apocalypse happened, when we lost our common language. Our Apocalypse happened when we lost our common values, embedded within that language.  Our Apocalypse happened when we lost our honor.  Our Apocalypse happened, when we lost our courage. Do you understand me, son?

So when you fight?

You will be not be fighting as a civilian.

You will be fighting as a soldier.

You will be fighting for whatever is left of your country.

You will be fighting for whatever is left of Texas.

You will be fighting for whatever is left of your family.

And you will be fighting for whatever is left?

Of yourself.

So you will want to see your enemies destroyed.

So when you fire your weapon you will want penetration.  You will want holes in, and bigger holes out.  You will want splatter.  And spray. You will want to see your enemies dismembered.  Deconstructed.  Deleted.  Perhaps a leg here, and a torso there, you will find very reassuring.  You will understand the value of concussive decapitation, because a man without a head is probably no longer a threat.  You will want to see your enemies ground to a rubble of ash and bones.  So you know that your enemies will never rise up, and kill you.

Or even worse: kill your friends.

Now Billy saw what he needed to see.

Heard what he needed to hear.

And Billy fired.

The rounds from his Norinco pistol penetrated just fine.

They were his first shots in what Billy knew would be a very long war.

And he fully intended to carry on his family traditions.

He was, after all?

A Soldier's Son.

~A MURDERER RECALLS A VERY PECULIAR KILLING~

Gabriel Louis Martinez leaned forward on the long board porch of The Cantina Tejas and studied the flaming apparition that had been his friend and fellow Cartel Soldier, a man named Hector Calinas.  Gabriel Louis Martinez was propped against the boards of The Cantina in a chair made out of metal tubing and plastic.  Gabriel figured he might have about three seconds to live.  This odd creature with the big square pistol and that cup full of gasoline and that hideous mask was going to kill him.

Kill him soon, just like he had killed Hector.

Gabriel's thoughts flickered like heat lightning.

Just flashes of light on images, very fast.

So you did not review your life in the seconds before death

You just had random thoughts.

Images, flashing

Pocket litter

Sifting through fingers.

Gabriel was drunk on mescal.

He was so drunk his body could only move very slowly.

But oddly, in these last seconds, his thoughts could move very fast

In the seconds before his friend Hector burst into a tower of flame, Gabriel's random thoughts had concerned a momentous and very puzzling question: a Texas Deputy Sheriff had been killed just a few days ago.  But nothing had changed after the Texas Deputy Sheriff was killed.  Street lights still turned on.  Cash registers beeped and hummed and chimed, most of the time.  The Cantina Tejas was not raided.  The trailers full of young Mexican girls who entertained at The Cantina Tejas were not raided.  No police showed up at The Cantina Tejas.  No other deputy Sheriffs.  No state troopers.  No Justice Department investigators.  There must have been an investigation, surely, but that investigation had never reached The Cantina Tejas, which should have been the target of any intelligent inquiry into the Deputy's murder.

It was all very strange.

In Gabriel's mind this strangeness was only somewhat associated with another kind of recent strangeness over the last year or so: a slow decline in business, in how often they got paid, the number of days when his ATM card didn't work at Bank of America over sixty miles away in Waco, or Western Union offices were closed, and he could not send any money home.

The lines were shorter at Walmart.

The lines were longer at the health clinics.

There had been three bank holidays, when no money could be moved.

The economy was fine, the news would say.

The economy was fantastic, the news would say.

Employment was up, the news would say.

And then there would be a bank holiday.

And riots.

Lots of riots.

It was very confusing.

Gabriel had recently become accustomed to hearing the words 'severe depression' and 'currency crisis' and 'banking crisis' and even 'worldwide economic collapse' from normally sunny faces on television when he strayed away from his sports and Spanish language Univision broadcasts.

Even though the economy was just so very fantastic.

It made no sense at all.

And even stranger things were happening.

Gabriel knew nothing about American politics.

But two attempts on the American President's life was very strange.

Somebody desperately wanted to kill the American President.

And had almost succeeded.

Twice.

Which meant they would surely try to kill him again.

Assassination was a common tool of politics in many countries.

But not here, not in the United States of America.

Not for decades.

It was all very strange.

The whole world was becoming very strange.

Strange small wars in distant countries were becoming larger wars, in big countries that even Gabriel could name.  When he watched television this last year, the screen was filled with foreign cities on fire, and skies full of smoke.  Gabriel was a creature of instincts, and his instincts told him that a great dark wave was coming.  He had a dim sense that the world was changing, and would never be the same, that the world had become like bright and shiny and glittering bubbles of light, drifting on an ocean of filth. And the very strange economy, up and then down, up and then down, that could help explain why the Deputy's murder was not properly investigated.  Just not enough money.  Good law enforcement was very expensive.

But if the old world was dying, and if the U.S. economy had problems, very severe problems, the Cartels mostly saw opportunity.  The Cartels could provide many essential services: organized violence and intimidation, women, drugs, cash, anything stolen because anything stolen could be sold at a discount.  A dying economy and a dying nation and a dying world by definition becomes a kind of black market.

And the Cartels were the ultimate black market.

The Cartels would swim freely, in this ocean of filth.

Gabriel was the farthest thing from an intellectual.

But Gabriel had an animal's instinct for the future.

And he was sure the future was very dark.

And in a dark future?

He knew the world would be ruled by gangs.

And he was a member of one of the world's most ruthless gangs.

The Sheriff's Deputy had been killed several days ago because in just the last year he had shot, run over, or beaten to death at least seven Cartel soldiers, seven of Gabriel's associates and friends.  And maybe two more men who had disappeared, two stone cold professionals, Los Zetas contract killers from Nuevo Laredo who had never shown up, never called in, but had simply

Disappeared.

Vanished.

The job of the Los Zetas men had been to kill The Deputy.

They had been sent to kill him because The Deputy had been the last functional law enforcement in Cochise County, Texas.  All the other deputies had quit, or been persuaded to leave, or been persuaded to park themselves in the shade and look the other way.

This Deputy had been the last one really working.

He had been working for free, it was said.

The Deputy had once been some kind of soldier, it was said.

Some kind of very special soldier.

Back from all these wars the gringos fought.
The Deputy had been a very unusual man.

Gabriel had seen The Deputy kill before, just once.

Gabriel had been at The Cantina when The Deputy had killed Luis.

The Deputy had killed Luis in a very dramatic and peculiar way.

Luis, mostly called just Luis, but sometimes very quietly and respectfully, Luis The Foot, and even Luis The Foot-Cutter, had been responsible for disciplining the girls at The Cantina Tejas.  Keeping those girls in line.  And on their backs.  When they arrived across the border, soft plump girls with hope in their eyes because they had been promised jobs as waitresses or motel cleaners or nannies, Luis tattooed their left feet with a small star.  Or sometimes, a flower. About the size of a dime.  Just inside their little toe.

That way when the girls ran away and Luis The Foot tracked them down, and he almost always tracked them down, the truth was the girls rarely got as far as San Antonio or the border, Luis did not have to bring back their bodies to show the other girls.  Moving whole bodies was difficult, and messy.  The closest mesquite thicket was good enough for girl bodies cut into pieces and folded into Hefty garbage bags, and west Texas was one big mesquite thicket.  So Luis just chopped off that left foot with the little tattooed star, or flower.  And then he would show that foot to the other girls in the trailers behind The Cantina Tejas.  You could fit a young girl's foot in a jacket pocket, rolled up in a Ziploc bag, Luis The Foot used to say

The Deputy had killed Luis on a Friday night.

At one o'clock in the morning.

Almost a year ago.

On Friday nights The Cantina Tejas was very busy, very loud, very bright.  As many as two hundred patrons might be dancing on the barn floor, boards creaking and dust in the air, another ten or twelve patrons down in the trailers with the girls.

The Deputy had come in by himself.

With a big bright picture on his phone.

A picture of a girl's foot.

With a small flower tattooed by the little toe.

The Deputy had shown his picture of a girl's foot to many people in the bar, and on the dance floor.

The Deputy had been very polite.

Just one week before, two girls had got away

Luis and Gabriel had caught one of the girls.

That girl had been punished.

She had not survived her punishment.

The Deputy's picture must have been of the other girl, the only one who ever truly got away, because the foot in the picture was still attached to an ankle.   The deputy had finally walked to the bar and shown the picture to Luis, who was tapping a keg of beer.  Then the Deputy had walked Luis outside to a truck.  An old Dodge Adventurer, four-wheel drive, lifted, painted the dull grey of primer paint.  The Deputy was using his own vehicle, because the county had so little money.

The Deputy had been slow and casual.

Luis The Foot had been slow and casual.

Gabriel had been sitting in this very same chair of steel tubes and plastic on that night almost one year ago.  Drunk on mescal.  Gabriel had been thinking about Luis and the soft brown girls, and how much fun he and Luis had with those girls when they tracked them down.  Luis always rented a motel room first.  The girls were so terrified that they would do anything.

Anything at all.

It had been a lot of fun for Luis and Gabriel, not so long ago

About forty patrons had gathered on the porch of The Cantina Tejas.

Another ten or so on the gravel lot in front of The Cantina.

They were all waiting for Luis to kill the new Deputy.

They all knew in the deep dark Texas scrubland?

Such a crime would never be solved.

Of course there might be an investigation.

Flashing lights, police cars, road blocks.

But then the investigation would disappear.

Because no one who saw anything would speak.

Nobody would ever speak against the Cartels.

So, one more Texas deputy, down in the dark.

Gabriel knew of three dead deputies in just the last year

The Deputy had propped Luis up against his Chevy truck.

The Deputy was going to read Luis his rights.

Then The Deputy stepped back about three feet.

And The Deputy did not read Luis his rights.

Instead he reached into the right-hand pocket of his vest.

Found some gloves and pulled them on.

The Deputy was fairly tall, but mostly he was wide.  Wide shoulders, long arms, sinew and bone.  When he had passed Gabriel and stepped into The Cantina Gabriel had noticed mostly his neck.  The Deputy's neck was very thick, deep, and wide.  Gabriel had always liked small details like that.  He had always thought men with thick muscular necks deserved special attention.

And leaning back in this very same chair almost one year ago, Gabriel had recognized The Deputy's gloves.  Black.  A logo on the wrist strap: Mechanix.  Gabriel knew lots of people who used those gloves.  You could buy them at Home Depot.  But The Deputy's gloves had been changed.  Painted across wrist and knuckles were the bones of a hand, bright and white, like a skeleton.

The Deputy was wearing the hands of Dia De Muertos.

Bones of the Dead, to celebrate the Day of the Dead.

And The Deputy waited.

Still, but poised, maybe swaying just a tiny bit.

Like a soccer goalie, waiting to receive a penalty kick.

Gabriel had known that Luis would kill The Deputy.

Now he was not so sure.

Luis was a blade man, as well as a gunman.

Luis The Foot always carried two knives, filed down from French chef's knives.  Never stainless, always carbon steel.  Luis was very particular about his knives.  He carried one blade tilted right in the small of his back like an Argentine gaucho's facon, the other knife in a shoulder harness under his bright yellow bartender's vest.  At his right hip Luis carried a Colt Presidential .38 Super, a very shiny gun with a gold-plated trigger and hammer.

The Deputy had not handcuffed Luis.

The Deputy had not searched or disarmed Luis.

It was all very strange and interesting.
.    Gabriel had been waiting for Luis to show one of his knife tricks.

Luis The Foot was always playing with his knives.

Once Gabriel had insulted Luis "Chinga tu madre" he had said, which meant "fuck your mother," Gabriel had been trying to be tough and friendly in the manner of men, and Luis had turned with a smile on his face and kept turning, so fast it was like a strobe light and shown Gabriel a gold earring on the tip of his knife.

It was Gabriel's own gold earring, torn out of his right ear.

Gabriel had never again insulted Luis The Foot

So The Deputy had talked, head down low, relaxed.

Then Luis talked, his hands moving, lots of movement, like he was telling a joke.  Then Luis turned to his left.  Looked over his left shoulder with that big 'I'm your friend and you're my friend' smile on his face.

And like a bird twisting in flight

Luis turned the other way.

Just a glance of light on the knife in his hand.

And then

The Deputy was holding Luis' knife.

The Deputy's right hand up, like he was saying, "Halt."

And there was the knife in The Deputy's skeleton glove.

Gabriel was not quite sure how it was done.

And now very quickly they were both on their knees, The Deputy still behind Luis and holding Luis' right wrist in both gloved hands and now The Deputy was somehow up over Luis' back in a blur of quick-kicking dust and motion, The Deputy riding very high on Luis' back, and The Deputy spun twice, two complete turns, as fast as hands clapping, still holding Luis' wrist and arm.  The Deputy spun around Luis' wrist and arm like the girls in The Cantina spun around their poles.

Even over The Cantina music Gabriel was sure he heard a liquid pop.

Like a drumstick twisted out of a chicken.

The Deputy had pretty much torn Luis' arm out of his shoulder.

Maybe there was still some skin holding everything together.

Gabriel saw The Deputy was wearing cowboy boots with low heels.

Ropers, they were called.

But The Deputy's ropers had black rubber soles with those small crosses like Gabriel had seen on rich peoples' hiking boots, when he went up to Plano in Dallas to see how the rich people lived, and thought about robbing them and raping their vain blonde whores with the plastic faces and plastic smiles.

Gabriel had never seen cowboy boots with those black crosses.

As The Deputy spun Luis had screamed like a very young girl.

And now The Deputy and Luis were both back on their knees, Luis still screaming, and now finally The Deputy searched and disarmed Luis, the knife like the Argentinean facon removed and laid in the gravel next to the first knife from under Luis' vest, and then the Presidential .38 Super, all carefully laid on the gravel.  Luis was still screaming and The Deputy put his right hand on Luis' neck and slammed Luis' face and head into the door pillar of his truck, directly behind the cab.

Once.

And then again.

Maybe ten seconds had passed.

By now Gabriel was very intrigued.

Gabriel realized he was being mesmerized.

Like a snake, being charmed by the deliberate movements of a flute.

Gabriel knew he should have moved, somebody should have moved.

But everybody was watching.

Stunned.

And disbelieving.

And most of all: curious.

What would The Deputy do next?

Luis had fallen over, as limp as a wet cloth.

The Deputy carefully laid Luis down on the gravel, face up.

Then he reached into the bed of his truck, and removed a horse blanket.  The horse blanket was folded very thick, about the size of a phone book.

The Deputy carefully laid the blanket on the center of Luis' chest.

Then The Deputy swiveled lightly up into the bed of his truck.

The Deputy was very graceful for such a big man.

The whole thing had reminded Gabriel of a rodeo.

Like when the calf-ropers were tossing the calves.

And then twirling their hands around the calves' ankles with rope.

Gabriel wondered if maybe The Deputy was once a rodeo cowboy.

The Deputy was somewhat bow-legged

And then The Deputy jumped off the edge of his truck.

Lifted his knees high to his chest as he jumped.

And stomped both feet into the folded horse blanket as he landed.

Stomped both feet practically into the ground through Luis' chest.

It was a very unusual way to kill a man, Gabriel had thought.

It suggested disgust.

And contempt.

And a very deep and calculating mind.

The way The Deputy had laid Luis out so carefully.

The horse blanket, already folded to the perfect size.

And The Deputy's timing:

His timing was brilliant.

Just fast enough to startle

Just slow enough to enchant

Like a dream.

Or a flawless seduction.

It had seemed like The Deputy was dancing with a willing partner.

Or it was a kind of ceremony, like the Aztecs on their stone pyramids.

Killing with their obsidian knives.

Holding hearts to the sky.

I am killing with great deliberation here, The Deputy was saying.

Because I can kill you, I can kill all of you, all of you who are like this man, this man Luis The Foot-Cutter?  I can kill you whenever I want.  Wherever I want.  However, I want.  Do you see me?  Because I see you.

Gabriel knew that is what that elaborate killing meant.

Then The Deputy reached down for the folded horse blanket.

And tossed it back into the bed of his truck.

And a spark lit to fire in Gabriel's mind:

Maybe The Deputy did not care about witnesses.

But maybe The Deputy cared about evidence: those boots.

Those boots would have engraved Luis forever with those hiking soles.

Engraved Luis with those little crosses, stamped into his chest.

Then the same hand that tossed the horse blanket came back.

With a very large rifle.

Scarred and silvered with use.

A big fat square magazine.

Gabriel had spent two years in the Mexican Army.

Gabriel had been instructed by the Cartel to join the army.

So he could learn about weapons, and learn how to fight.

They had been issued a German gun, the G3, and the Deputy's gun had a magazine exactly the same size.  So, 7.62 NATO, they had been taught.  Very powerful.  A car killer, a truck killer, a penetrator of buildings and people in a row, big holes that went all the way into the future.

But the magazine was not the only thing that interested Gabriel.

There was a small handle, a stub, really, attached to the forend of the Deputy's rifle.  And above the handle and to the left was a light, a dull bronze color, about the size of a 7-ounce Coca-Cola bottle.  And as soon as he brought the rifle out of the truck bed The Deputy switched the light on and swept the crowd of watchers and witnesses.  Gabriel immediately closed his eyes but it was too late.  He had seen such lights before, you could buy small ones at Walmart, about the size of a roll of quarters, but this was the brightest ever, it was like staring into the sun, and Gabriel was blinded even through his closed eyes.

Through his closed eyes Gabriel could feel this shattering light bouncing around him, high, and low, and for a two-second period of darkness in which Gabriel assumed The Deputy had turned all the way around.  Or aimed up. To blind anyone who might have been watching from darkness.  Or from the three windows on the second floor of The Cantina Tejas.

For the first time Gabriel was afraid.

This Deputy was no longer interesting.

This Deputy was terrifying.

Gabriel kept his eyes closed.

He didn't want to see anymore.

He wanted The Deputy to go away.

To disappear like the spirits of the dead.

But closing his eyes did not work at all.

Gabriel could hear a few shouts, a few women screaming.

And footsteps on gravel.

And the sound of something being dragged.

The light got brighter and brighter through his closed eyelids.

And he felt something sharp at his throat, his right eye, his left cheek.

The light dimmed but he could still feel it pulsing to his left.

"Hello Gabriel.  Open your eyes," The Deputy had said.

And Gabriel had opened his eyes.

He considered himself a brave man.

But his guts were boiling, he was clenching himself.

And still he knew he was leaking a thin stream of shit.

When he opened his eyes he saw the tip of The Deputy's rifle.

It had been sharpened somehow.

Tiny sharp triangles.

Like a fish scaling knife.

The Deputy's rifle tapped him over his left eye.

Gabriel's left eye was immediately filled with blood.

Tap, tap, tap, more blood in his eye.

Gabriel could just barely see Luis The Foot below him.

Luis had one eye looking this way, one eye looking that way.

Luis The Foot exhaled a last clotted breath, full of snot and blood.

A jet of blood out of Luis' nose had coated his chest bright crimson.

"Look at me, Gabriel.  Look at me now."

Gabriel had looked.

Seen calm grey eyes.

A wide, weathered face.

A broad, ragged mustache.

A short-brimmed grey Stetson.

The eyes very clear behind glasses with yellow lenses.

Then the Deputy laid his rifle on Luis' bloody chest.

Shifted his gun belt with the big square pistol.

Slid an old tape-wrapped framing hammer from the gun belt.

And a six-inch nail from inside his vest.

And nailed Gabriel's left foot to the porch.

The nail going in just inside Gabriel's little toe.

Exactly where Luis had tattooed The Cantina girls' left feet.

Then the Deputy held up his right hand, showed the palm of his glove.

Gabriel was going numb with terror, but he saw a pattern of fabric.

Glued or stitched somehow into the palm and fingers of the glove.

"Kevlar.  Go home, Gabriel.  Keep the nail," The Deputy said.

And then The Deputy spun away behind the light on his rifle.

The Deputy's truck engine roared to life.

And as he left, his truck would stop, and idle.

Stop, and idle.

Stop, and idle.

Because The Deputy was doing one last thing.

When the patrons of The Cantina Tejas finally made it to their cars and trucks and drove down the access road to the farm road and to their homes, they stared straight ahead.  They did not want to look or talk or think about anything.  They had already seen enough.

And because every fifty feet down the service road.

They had to pass a lit candle.

In the shape of a skull.

Candles of Dia de Muertos.

Lighting a day, and a night, of the dead.

Business at The Cantina was not so good for a while...

~
Leaning back on his porch chair Gabriel could tell his time was over.

He had remembered what he could about The Deputy.

It had only taken a second, or two

The pocket litter had sifted through his fingers.

And now his hands, and his mind, were empty.

Gabriel's last seconds were almost up.

And he knew it.

He knew he should try and move, very soon.

But he was numb with alcohol, and fear, and sorrow.

And he knew it would not make any difference, if he moved.

He could hear Hector thumping and burning to his right.

Gabriel could smell chicharron, the smell of fried pork rinds.

Gabriel had burned people before, and knew this smell.

He could also see the face and hands of Dia de Muertos.

This figure before him, who had just lit Hector on fire, this figure which now swayed gently behind a heavy square pistol, swayed and twitched just like a praying mantis, this figure was wearing the skeleton gloves of Dia de Muertos.  And a mask painted with a perfect skull, the face of Dia de Muertos.

The face of the Day of the Dead.

So this would be Gabriel's day of the dead.

Gabriel studied the skeleton gloves.

And the big square pistol.

Of course, he had seen them before.

When speaking of The Deputy amongst themselves, Gabriel and his friends had just called him "The Deputy."  But everyone had known The Deputy must have been some kind of soldier.  A very good soldier.  In private, many people thought of the Deputy just as, "The Soldier."

And this was exactly the same figure now.

Standing before him.

Maybe a bit shorter, and thinner.

But otherwise almost exactly the same.

The delicate precision of the painted skull mask.

It reminded Hector of the perfectly folded blanket.

That perfect leap into the air.

The Deputy with his knees up high on his chest.

Before he dropped down and stomped Luis The Foot to death.

The skeleton gloves, the poise, even the same heavy square pistol

Gabriel was deeply superstitious and felt he was having a premonition.

Gabriel was quite sure he could only be looking at one person.

That person could only be The Soldier's Son.
Link Posted: 6/21/2015 4:39:54 AM EDT
[#1]
Thanks for the update.
Link Posted: 6/21/2015 10:04:02 AM EDT
[#2]
Another great segment.  A couple of corrections...

It's Harley Davdison PANHEAD not Panhandle

And Abilene, not Abiline.

Link Posted: 6/21/2015 4:27:56 PM EDT
[#3]


--zoe17, that was--fast!



--warhawk, panhead/Abilene--yeah...ouch.  Pretty amazing the stuff I don't see/hear at umpty dark-thirty

in the morning.  "Panhandle" oh man.  And a tiny general note for those of us who routinely substitute

their/there and yours/your's etc.--been doing it for years.  Has something to do with cognition/visuals/

sounds translated to letters/words, of course, and not, ahem, always a sign of gross lethargy, or

intellectual impairment.  Or so I tell myself...
Link Posted: 6/21/2015 4:50:29 PM EDT
[#4]
Excellent.  And dark.  

Buried my best friends 20 year old son the other day.  This is very fitting.  Thank you for the chapter.
Link Posted: 6/21/2015 5:40:58 PM EDT
[#5]
Your love comes through every word.  Thanks for the update.
Link Posted: 6/21/2015 8:18:44 PM EDT
[#6]
Awesome update.

It's cool seeing some of the cogs in the Gehr machine.
Link Posted: 6/21/2015 11:31:58 PM EDT
[#7]
Very cool update...  



I think that you are really plotting out Brian's reaction to his massive reality shift well.  His interactions with those he encountered along the way are quite believable.  Reading about his reactions to those interactions we are able to watch his development into a character that will likely interface with his new reality successfully, but we get to go along with him on the ride until he gets there. I really liked the end with the "retired" soldier delivering his warning about the serious people just north of the truck-stop.  It conveyed a feeling that as a reader was both exciting and yet ominous at the same time.



Thanks for the update!
Link Posted: 6/22/2015 12:11:10 AM EDT
[#8]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Originally Posted By RadioHack:
With the latest craziness in the news, the world has listed more to port. Perspective is further skewed by their overt agenda’s and their fervent indoctrination which is leaking like a sieve from the seams of their distorted, corrupted souls. Another update please as a balm to these tired eyes, something to fix as the horizon, something to mark as buoy of sanity as we are headed for our goal of the sanity Isles far away from this age’s madness.
The mewling of the sheep combined with the bleating of the tethered goats of deception is getting on my nerves…. I know I’m not the only one (considering all the thoughtful thinkers who have posted in this thread), but bugger all, it’s a weight.
So, DC, when may we expect the next fruit of your pen?


Titus 1:15-16
To the pure, all things are pure, but to the defiled and unbelieving, nothing is pure; but both their minds and their consciences are defiled. They profess to know God, but they deny him by their works. They are detestable, disobedient, unfit for any good work.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has its limits.

—  Winston Churchill
View Quote



Here, here! Well said.

And DCB, thank you for another fine update!

Link Posted: 6/22/2015 8:08:04 AM EDT
[#9]
Great Update DCB!  As usual, it's getting (even more) interesting.  

<Add important / pithy comment here when it comes to me!>
Link Posted: 6/22/2015 9:53:23 AM EDT
[#10]
Excellent!
Link Posted: 6/22/2015 10:08:43 AM EDT
[#11]
DCB - been here since the beginning, but this is my first post. I always thought I was well read, but feel like a plebe compared to some of the librarians who regularly post.

One correction:  Her faces- should be Her face is scarred...

Read and reviewed Injured Reserves. My full name matches my username if you look.

I enjoy your writing style and vision. I did have a question regarding the Sabatier knives as that is way specific. What prompted/inspired their use?

Awesome read. As others have stated, I'm in at $2.99 or higher for the full version. Don't sell yourself short.

Link Posted: 6/23/2015 1:39:27 AM EDT
[#12]
Wow, great updates!   I guess it's really bad that I can identify with Brian so well.   Hopefully those in the Gerhiverse will find him suitable for conservation...





TriumphRider


 
Link Posted: 6/23/2015 11:54:07 AM EDT
[#13]

For about the next 120 miles. From here to Fredericksburg, and way past, pretty much all the way to Fort Worth.
View Quote


Deep pockets and long running plans indeed.

The manpower and coordination to lock down hundreds of square miles...yikes.

I hope someone is actually doing this.  I hope lots of someones are doing this.

And locals...they'd have to be for it to work.  Goatee knows the lot lizard.  So not just finding the right people, but finding the right people in the right places.  Or harder still putting them in the right places years ahead of time.  That's a lot of St George challenge coins.  I wonder if they made the coins themselves or bulk ordered from china...wait, no I don't.

I was pawing around on google maps, couldn't help but notice the proximity of Ft Hood.

Noticable lack of comm on these two...has me wondering.
Link Posted: 6/23/2015 12:00:08 PM EDT
[Last Edit: stimpsonjcat] [#14]
removed cause I can't drive the interwebz today...
Link Posted: 6/23/2015 12:09:38 PM EDT
[#15]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Originally Posted By mnmiv:

I enjoy your writing style and vision. I did have a question regarding the Sabatier knives as that is way specific. What prompted/inspired their use?

View Quote View All Quotes
View All Quotes
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Originally Posted By mnmiv:

I enjoy your writing style and vision. I did have a question regarding the Sabatier knives as that is way specific. What prompted/inspired their use?



I am not DC (I think that is the second time I have said that ) but I asked much the same question way back in the thread.

DC's answer was they were chosen because they are cheap, everywhere, easily carried as he specifies, and excellent quality.

Apparently every flea market in Europe has these 'worn out' knives all over the tables.  So the team can pick them up easily and add them to their kit.

Hope that helped.

ETA...in DCs own words...

Ah jeez, stimpson, the knives in Injured--

Apologies, missed that on the first read.

Sabatier carbon steel, thick spines, fine edges. After multiple sharpenings by chefs and home-makers throughout Europe, they can be found in any European flea-market with the tips narrowed to slivers, but the spines, bases, hafts, the sixty percent closest to the handle in perfect shape. Useful junk. Judicious use of a file, five minutes or so, gives you a fairly thick and springy wedge, as useful as the tip of a Roman gladius. A ceramic coffee cup or plate and you have a razor. Shape as you will. No finer and cheaper and more disposable tool, if you are roaming about Europe. Folded cardboard, rubbed with a candle or lip gloss, on both sides, makes a fine and sticky temporary sheath.

The Argentinian 'falcon' appeals. Pretty much a chef's knife. Shorten as you will.
Four to five inches is probably enough, and doesn't dig when you sit.
Link Posted: 6/23/2015 1:10:56 PM EDT
[#16]
Just saw this article on Drudge:

Amazon to pay self-published authors based on pages read

Sounds like at least for now it's only on Kindle Unlimited and Kindle Owner's Lending Library.  I was curious as to your thoughts on this, and how it might affect you.
Link Posted: 6/23/2015 1:46:56 PM EDT
[#17]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Originally Posted By stimpsonjcat:


I am not DC (I think that is the second time I have said that ) but I asked much the same question way back in the thread.

DC's answer was they were chosen because they are cheap, everywhere, easily carried as he specifies, and excellent quality.

Apparently every flea market in Europe has these 'worn out' knives all over the tables.  So the team can pick them up easily and add them to their kit.

Hope that helped.

ETA...in DCs own words...

View Quote View All Quotes
View All Quotes
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Originally Posted By stimpsonjcat:
Originally Posted By mnmiv:

I enjoy your writing style and vision. I did have a question regarding the Sabatier knives as that is way specific. What prompted/inspired their use?



I am not DC (I think that is the second time I have said that ) but I asked much the same question way back in the thread.

DC's answer was they were chosen because they are cheap, everywhere, easily carried as he specifies, and excellent quality.

Apparently every flea market in Europe has these 'worn out' knives all over the tables.  So the team can pick them up easily and add them to their kit.

Hope that helped.

ETA...in DCs own words...

Ah jeez, stimpson, the knives in Injured--

Apologies, missed that on the first read.

Sabatier carbon steel, thick spines, fine edges. After multiple sharpenings by chefs and home-makers throughout Europe, they can be found in any European flea-market with the tips narrowed to slivers, but the spines, bases, hafts, the sixty percent closest to the handle in perfect shape. Useful junk. Judicious use of a file, five minutes or so, gives you a fairly thick and springy wedge, as useful as the tip of a Roman gladius. A ceramic coffee cup or plate and you have a razor. Shape as you will. No finer and cheaper and more disposable tool, if you are roaming about Europe. Folded cardboard, rubbed with a candle or lip gloss, on both sides, makes a fine and sticky temporary sheath.

The Argentinian 'falcon' appeals. Pretty much a chef's knife. Shorten as you will.
Four to five inches is probably enough, and doesn't dig when you sit.


Thanks, fellow Georgian. I thought I remembered the question being asked/answered but we are at 51 pages. ??

Gotta admire practicality and adaptability.
Link Posted: 6/23/2015 2:46:45 PM EDT
[#18]
Excellent update!!!
Link Posted: 6/24/2015 8:57:51 AM EDT
[Last Edit: kc215] [#19]
Excellent post..... This is a story I cannot put down.  I caught one typo....
big man with a black beard so full it almost hid his eyes, dusty Carhat work jacket and dusty stockman boots watched from a folding chair at the end of
View Quote

Carhartt

Even though I cheap SOB, and like free stuff.  I will gladly play $3.   Off to research sabatier knives....
Link Posted: 6/25/2015 12:35:44 PM EDT
[#20]
Welp, DCB, you called it.  Here is a GD post I made today:



"As I see the SCOTUS Obamacare ruling, I'm reminded of something our friend DCBourone wrote in his excellent story "The Soldier's Son" over in the Survival Fiction section of the Outdoor Forum.

"You see, Lou,” Billy said, and looked very old for such a young boy, "You need to understand that whoever arranged this, or at the very least, tolerated it, and plans to profit from it, when they break all laws? When they are all the ultimate breakers of all laws, and when they write laws which are already broken? You have to understand that as our Rulers, and Owners, and False Priests, and Slave-Makers, have freed themselves to be lawless? So they have freed us, to be lawless. They are telling us there is nothing left for us, unless we break our chains. So. We can do anything we want. As they are lawless, we are now lawless."
View Quote


The law is a social contract between the government and the governed.  If the party responsible for upholding the integrity of that social contract decides to break that arrangement, they release the governed from their side of the contract.  

In other words, if the government decides to become lawless, there is no obligation for the people to follow the law anymore.



Just sayin' "


Pretty scary the times we live in.  

Thanks for your story.  I think $3.99 is good.  Keep up the great work!

-Highstepper
Link Posted: 6/25/2015 2:13:05 PM EDT
[Last Edit: Trapshooter12] [#21]
I'm starting to see or Liberal Government and Right-wing Extremists much like ISIS.
ISIS believe they are more Muslim than those of the past so the past must be destroyed.

Look at what is happening with the Confederate Battle Flag, the past must be destroyed.

How long before they start cleansing the history books off anything mentioning the Confederate South.
Link Posted: 6/25/2015 2:26:35 PM EDT
[#22]
I find it interesting how they shut down Mapquest and any other internet mapping. The people get sucked in by technology and forget how to do for themselves much less looking at the Sun to figure out which way is North..

I am a long-range shooter and I watch other shooter bring out their Ballistics calculators to help them hit a target. What will they do one day when their batteries die  and they can't judge the wind and punch in the numbers for a wind hold they are going to be screwed.

I am waiting for your next installment about the Sniper.
Link Posted: 6/25/2015 7:46:04 PM EDT
[#23]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Originally Posted By Trapshooter12:
I'm starting to see or Liberal Government and Right-wing Extremists much like ISIS.
ISIS believe they are more Muslim than those of the past so the past must be destroyed.

Look at what is happening with the Confederate Battle Flag, the past must be destroyed.

How long before they start cleansing the history books off anything mentioning the Confederate South.
View Quote



The cleansing has begun, Sircar's Corollary of Godwin's Law has gone from an amusing predictor of human behaviour to an absolute. It's a social media version of the 1930's Nazi Book burnings.
Link Posted: 6/26/2015 6:31:14 PM EDT
[Last Edit: RadioHack] [#24]
Another book recommendation whilst we await an update, it may help as we wade through these troubled times -  The  Long Fuse, How England Lost the American Colonies by Don Cook

ETA; This reminded me of a poignant George Washington quote -


Unhappy it is ... to reflect that a brother's sword has been sheathed in a brother's breast, and that the once happy and peaceful plains of America are either to be drenched with blood or inhabited by slaves. Sad alternative! But can a virtuous man hesitate in his choice?


GEORGE WASHINGTON, letter to George William Fairfax on the Battle of Concord, May 31, 1775
Link Posted: 6/26/2015 7:13:53 PM EDT
[#25]
better hurry up and finish or history will overtake your story...
Link Posted: 6/26/2015 9:56:56 PM EDT
[#26]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Originally Posted By greyguy:
Very cool update...  

I think that you are really plotting out Brian's reaction to his massive reality shift well.  His interactions with those he encountered along the way are quite believable.  Reading about his reactions to those interactions we are able to watch his development into a character that will likely interface with his new reality successfully, but we get to go along with him on the ride until he gets there. I really liked the end with the "retired" soldier delivering his warning about the serious people just north of the truck-stop.  It conveyed a feeling that as a reader was both exciting and yet ominous at the same time.

Thanks for the update!
View Quote


I couldn't agree more.   Excellent as always DC.
Link Posted: 6/27/2015 1:29:55 PM EDT
[#27]
the story (and events of the last week!) has me feeling like pippin at this point:
Link Posted: 6/30/2015 1:55:22 PM EDT
[#28]
There's an update coming. I can feel it.


I will distract myself in the mean time with the The Lays of Ancient Rome and a pillar/bedding project.  
Link Posted: 6/30/2015 2:07:10 PM EDT
[Last Edit: RadioHack] [#29]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Originally Posted By airsix:
There's an update coming. I can feel it.


I will distract myself in the mean time with the The Lays of Ancient Rome and a pillar/bedding project.  
View Quote

I'm using single malt and J.L . Bourne's new book.
Link Posted: 6/30/2015 5:34:58 PM EDT
[Last Edit: DCBourone] [#30]






--all is well.  Checking in when I can.





--airsix/Radio/all, good timing, update next 24.





--pretty sure we have self-selected down to a group


of core readers/minds.  For those of you who are on


the fence, please read the SAMPLE of ( Amazon DCBourone


Injured Reserves ) or download for FREE ( Amazon DCBourone


The Listening Room ) which contains first third of Injured Reserves.


Injured Reserves will play a significant


part in the world of this story, and all that follow.





Ok, back to work, a few more paragraphs tonight, and update


will go up.





Good to see everyone.





DCB



 
Link Posted: 7/1/2015 2:48:12 AM EDT
[#31]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Originally Posted By DCBourone:


--

--pretty sure we have self-selected down to a group
of core readers/minds.
 
View Quote



I don't presume to speak for the others, but I believe you are cultivating a group of aspiring librarians.
No pressure regarding updates. They are a gift and not an entitlement. If it comes tomorrow I am grateful, if it comes next year I am grateful.
I hope you will take the time to have an enjoyable celebration of Independence Day. Thanks, friend.
Link Posted: 7/1/2015 3:21:43 AM EDT
[#32]
When I see this thread has activity, I am like whoo, update. Waiting per SOP, thanks for the story.
Link Posted: 7/1/2015 3:33:12 AM EDT
[#33]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Originally Posted By zoe17:
When I see this thread has activity, I am like whoo, update. Waiting per SOP, thanks for the story.
View Quote


Me too. Looks something like this.  

--
Link Posted: 7/1/2015 4:25:12 PM EDT
[Last Edit: DCBourone] [#34]
Update follows comments:

General Note: obscure--the Brian Distrop 'going north' passage was originally
blocked out at about twenty pages--looking like more than thirty-plus.  Issue
of detail, depth, etc.  But I like Brian tremendously, and he is the most 'normal'
of all these characters.  He is our 'everyman' lens through which we can view
this world.  So...lots more work.

Comments going back a ways, I missed a few--


--zoe17, going back to 6/21, as always, appreciate your patience, z.

--Warhawk, on Panhead...um....oops.  Afraid we will see more of those.  Much
thanks the catch.  And see all the courteous, who noticed, but were to polite
to shout.  Shout, friends.  As needed.

--Mounger, on epic loss, just...damn.  What can be said.  Nothing.  Except endure.

--DesignatedMarksman, much thanks, and yes there are some pretty good people
here.  I think in general this genre of fiction routinely misses the good in favor
of exploiting the bad.  There will be plenty of bad to go around for everyone.

--PFunk--cogs in the Gehr machine--the last 10,000 words I'm going to expand
that machine to the stratosphere.  A big reveal.  The Gehriverse is "big."

--greyguy, much thanks and much appreciate your patience.  You've been here
since the beginning.  Over a year, now.  Writing time has been eons.  Living
time has been a quick sprint.  Yep, Brian is our pseudo-regular guy.  He's
actually a pocket saint, he just doesn't know it yet.  He will harden up, but
his instinct will always be to heal.  Good dude.

--airsix, RadioHack's quotes are always worth re-quoting.  And very concerned
we are heading into The Deep Strange.  Very very hard to watch, will be very
hard to live.  If I had/have the time I would write a manual on cognitive dissonance,
how to manage, etc.  Long complicated subject.  "Stress/other related" issues, and so
on.  Understand this cognitive dissonance/stress creation/friction are finely articulated
purposeful tools of the not-us.  Nasty business.

--GreenGiant, just posting here is a huge help.  Pithy comments, on your clock.

--ny15, much thanks your patience.

--mnmiv, huge thanks review Injured.  Injured will take very careful tending at some
point.  Right now it is mostly sleeping.  But a close read between the lines and Injured
will, and has, provoke(d) serious rage.  And yes, the Librarians here are exceptional.
And these really are the 'footnotes' to Soldier's, and even Injured.  The Sabatier knives--
spent a lot of time in Europe.  Italy, Spain, Portugal, still have a pretty serious knife
culture.  Can't resist a flea-market.  Worn out blades abound.  Not so worn out, unless
you're cutting celery.  And much appreciate your comment on pricing.  But a 2.99
price point will still be promoted here, with a big heads-up.  Should be enough
to head off the drive-by/casual purchaser/reviewers.  Sorry guys, but a lot of them
are going to hate this.

--TriumphRider, we all identify with Brian.  At the very least, everyone who is not a
sociopath started as a Brian.  I am very wary of men who don't have some of Brian
in them.

--StimpsonJ, a post where every line deserves a paragraph.  As usual.  Yes, deep
pockets and long plans.  Idealized, but manageable.  Have a very good friend who
builds 'secure facilities' and I have been on a number of sites.  He approves of
my...message.  "Right people/right places"--the key is to always be looking.
Briefly: making friends, like finding a wife, is not a task in which luck should
be the primary driver.  It's a job.  A task.  With a very specific task sheet.
No news to anyone here: it starts with character.  And more on the St. George
coins coming up this installment.  On Ft. Hood--yes and good eye and the location
of Gehr Waffen is giving me fits.  Nuff said at this time.  Good to see you, St.

--StimpsonJ, good eye on the knives.  More than knives.  Europe is now a giant
arms bazaar.  The leakage out of the Eastern Block is a giant problem.  Black
market used to be heavily supervised.  The new volume/certain ethnic/tribal
groups is just...yeah we get it.  Europe has severely ffed itself.  But that was
the plan.  Somebody's plan...

--armstrong001--been following the KU/borrow/paid per page issue fairly closely
as a new color in the overall issue of pricing.  The only 'promotion' I am doing so
far, and which suits my nature, is this.  And I think my 'market' will be narrow, but
deep.  In other words, loyal readers, but not many, compared to let's say, werewolf/
shapeshifter/erotic/romance/pornography.  And I intend to write fairly 'long' books,
if long is 300-500 pages.  Long complicated subject: briefly, I think I would benefit
from KU borrow/pay per page.  Big disadvantage: KU requires being exclusive to
Amazon.  Amazon is not my/our friend.  Big Heads Up: Amazon does not care if
they make money on books. They consider books a tool to get you on the site---
and keep shopping.  We shall see.

--mnimv--if you haven't, everybody needs at least one trip to Europe, self-guided.
Our history is profound, but short.  Fascinating to walk where Romans walked,
while you study maps on your phone.  Might go sooner, rather than later.
Like everyone else, they've got hard times coming.

--Mongo7382, good to see you again.  Really appreciate everyone sticking with this.

--kc215 much thanks your comment, and the spelling catch.  And yeah, I never
would have seen it.  Thank god I have a brilliant lady who misses nothing.  She
is regularly appalled at what I don't see.  Lots of tsk tsking... ON PRICING: I will
regularly advise all, do a countdown, on pricing.  More on this later.  Hopefully
in a month or...a month.  Yep, it's always a month.  On the other hand I thought
I would bring this in at 110k words and we're at 118k and might have 20k more
words to go.

--highstepper--yep they are really spiking the ball in our faces.  Very concerned at
....the speed.  Of the ball.  Nuff said at this time.  On pricing: prices will be shown
here first, with countdown to changes, etc.

--Trapshooter....stepping very lightly: the historical revisionism and deletion is already
in full force.  The flag issue is a pallid version of far more dangerous 'adjustments'
which have been going on for many years.  Nuff said at this time.  And I agree with
you on the tech gizmos.  And gizmos/tools in general.  No news to anyone here, but
social engineering/mind set will be vastly more important than any particular tool.
But to your point: I never tell anyone what a K98 with a decent throat and a good
crown can manage.  They don't believe me.  They have to do it themselves.

--and now RadioHack, with another quote requiring that I expand my library--
ah, Sicar's corollary, I see what you are doing there.  So I will propose my own:
Bourone's corollary: "Those who avoid referencing the Holocaust prefer novelty
over truth"--why, because the Holocaust/Nazis etc. are a perfect view into the
complete range of human character/institutions/depravity/language/propaganda, etc.
--bet the egotist must always be seen to be saying something new, and novel.

--heron, good to see you.  Yes, history at warp speed.  Welcome to the future.
Grim grim grim.

--KOW much thanks to another early adopter.  More Brian coming up here.

--heron163, yes, the future, when I drafted this story over a year ago, plus,
I had all the trend lines in place.  Deeply unfun to see them accelerate.

--airsix, your update is here.  And yes, latent librarians, hope to see as many
as possible in my lifetime.  The 4th, one of the few 'holidays' that still resonates.
Wonder how much longer it will last.  Someday it will be called "international
self-esteem day"

--zoe17, a real issue: post to keep up with comments and prove I'm alive.  Or==
no post, wait for update.  No solution.

--same same BigDam. --------------

------TEXT REMOVED 01072019 .RE EPUB TOS ETC.-----

Link Posted: 7/1/2015 5:39:18 PM EDT
[#35]
Brian should just hang tight where he is for the 3 days.  Then he can go see Maria.
Link Posted: 7/1/2015 5:47:04 PM EDT
[#36]
A delicate crunch of gravel and Camou Man stood in front of him again.
View Quote


That won’t be so common, soon. If it ever was. So, it’s your call, Brian. You will always be welcome her. Gotta go. Get some rest.
View Quote


A couple of typos I noticed.  Wonderful update.  Thank you.


Link Posted: 7/1/2015 5:54:08 PM EDT
[#37]

Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Originally Posted By DCBourone:



         "Do you know why you’re welcome here, Brian?  Because you’re a nice guy.  That won’t be so common, soon.  If it ever was.  So, it’s your call, Brian.  You will always be welcome her here.  Gotta go. Get some rest.”



View Quote


Very cool.  Thanks for the update!  even in death Fernando just keeps popping up doesn't he?





 
Link Posted: 7/1/2015 6:15:17 PM EDT
[#38]
Thanks for the update. Our schedule must be off, a update during daylight hours. Man I am slipping by not seeing it sooner. But we all have to sleep a little.

Good work and keep it coming.
Link Posted: 7/1/2015 6:44:25 PM EDT
[#39]
As usual, spellbinding!



The "tail" is following the dog ...  
Link Posted: 7/1/2015 7:21:20 PM EDT
[#40]
But Brian considered that the Sinai Nude might have done something stranger, and even worse than killing a city of millions, if such a thing were possible.

I might have to do this twice since I'm on a note book.   But that should have been Nuke unless you finally decided Porn is going to get you more sales.
Link Posted: 7/1/2015 7:27:42 PM EDT
[#41]
As soon as he heard her voice, the word realigned itself.

know not to Ass u me anything but I assume this should say ( world realigned itself)

Great read I really enjoy your writing style.
Link Posted: 7/1/2015 7:54:07 PM EDT
[#42]
Very well done!  placed the reader write were he should be.  My congratulations you've done topped most of the writer I've recently read.  A voice in the wind that tells the tale that many foresee maybe the future?  

Been to many a land that's foreign to the civilized person.  Your writing reflects whats been seen by some here but never convoyed....A city person living a metropolitan life has no understanding of our message'  it's usually lost in translation within the first 13 words spoken from our lips...Their minds shield our message and in the confusion which it sparks they gently back away and move on.

Well done!
Link Posted: 7/1/2015 8:26:08 PM EDT
[#43]
DCBourone,



Thanks for the update. I like where it appears you are taking the story, and your continued development of what I suspect to be key figures. Looking forward to learning more about Brian and his interactions with the Gehrs.



The tablet during the interview adds some additional intrigue.



I'll be patiently awaiting the next installment.

Link Posted: 7/1/2015 9:45:28 PM EDT
[#44]
Great installment.  And longer than recent ones.  Well worth the wait.
Link Posted: 7/2/2015 1:25:51 AM EDT
[#45]
Awesome update DCB. I love how you can put us into the scene in secs a way that we can feel the seconds tick by in both the characters little environment and take us to a world wide focus without diluting the clear image in our heads.

It's always a pleasure reading your updates.
Link Posted: 7/2/2015 7:04:28 AM EDT
[#46]
Excellent work allowing us to visualize it as if we were right next to Brian.

No hole up somewhere Brian.  Don't get caught in the open alone and asleep.

Not good, not good at all
Link Posted: 7/2/2015 8:05:12 AM EDT
[#47]
Thank you for the update, excellent as usual.
Link Posted: 7/2/2015 11:42:21 AM EDT
[#48]
For those trying to get an idea what a civil panic looks like, look at what has happened to the AR's and Ammo after this President was elected.
We have had overly inflated prices and shortages on everything gun related all in the last eight years. This has been a warm up and practice for the real thing coming soon.

Look at the 22lr hoarders and picture that being food and picture the desperate people that don't have any food. Add the riots that we have had lately and it creates a break picture.

It scares me to even think of what's coming our way in the future.
Link Posted: 7/2/2015 12:08:03 PM EDT
[#49]
DCB,
Thank you for that great update! It had a nice length. The hardest part about this pre-screening is not quoting you!  
Link Posted: 7/2/2015 1:47:18 PM EDT
[#50]
Is it out of place to ask about Texas in this thread?  

Having had the pleasure of visiting the general area where this story is set, I can't say that it seems much different from a lot of other places that I've visited. Maybe a slightly higher number of pickups with Christian or gun related stickers on them, and also a higher number of folks who like to drive slower than the flow of traffic in the left lane. lol

I'm curious why Texas is always portrayed as the last of the real America.  I'm not trying to knock anyone, or anywhere, but in my experience, Texas has the same issues that most other states have.  I'm wondering what it is that sets Texas, and the "L " shape that was mentioned earlier in this thread apart.  I'm mostly curious, because I feel like it may be time to get closer to the place that you want to be, if that makes sense.
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