Thursday, May 29, 2014

The Social Event



The Social Event 

A novel by Don Lively

Release June 11, 2014
In paperback and Kindle ebook formats
at Amazon
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What if there were an app that could understand your every want and need? What if millions of people around the world adopted it and used it for every aspect of their daily lives? And what if the information gathered by this app was used to manipulate the populace into believing that enemies were threatening them, that everything they held dear was under attack and if they didn’t act, everything they valued would be lost? How long do you think it would take for a society to implode? 

Kim Ishida has developed the world’s leading predictive social networking app. In no time, her technology makes the iconic MyPhone indispensable to millions of people across the planet. But unbeknownst to Kim, centers of power are working behind the scenes to use this technology for their own evil ends. Feeding the fear and hatred of the masses, dormant political and cultural hostilities are revived, and erupt into violence and war worldwide. 

In the aftermath, Kim’s focus is singular: she must kill Fortune Teller. Driven to her journey by a burden that will not relent, she will not stop until Fortune Teller is dead. 

But Fortune Teller knows she is coming… 




Read a sample!
Below this post (or at this link) are chapters one and two. 
You will meet Kim Ishida and begin to understand her personal struggle to address the guilt she carries and revenge she seeks.




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Part 1 - Chapters 1 & 2


Part 1

The Start of the End


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“In us all is the desire to be either remembered 
or forgotten for what we’ve done.” – Kim Ishida



Chapter 1




Day 127 of the fourth year A.E. (After Event)

Wind came from the west the day Kim chose to leave. Hot, thick and foul, it was a hard-to-breathe stench pushed by a listless breeze over the coastal hills and downslope into the valley. It was a day the same as any other, a day like all the rest.

From the terrace of the empty house in the hills, the house that stood above the sprawling waste of urban and suburban leftovers, Kim scanned the valley. Noticing the muted gray-brown haze of the poisoned sky had lifted, she stood a moment, regarding its gradual drift. Change in the sky, when it happened, was subtle, yet the sun remained constant with its relentless heat. The acrid humidity that came with the breeze left the taste of rusted steel in her mouth. Each breath held the mephitic sting of a dying ocean littered with the rotting carcasses of dead ships. The west wind was good.

The day Kim would move on from the valley where she had been hiding since The Before had come. She knew if she forced herself onward, she might find peace with her demons. It could be the start of the end, the closing of a chapter in what was left of her life.

“Let’s do this,” she said, as if making audible noises meant something irrevocable. She had started talking to herself aloud some time ago. She needed to remind herself she was real.

Across the distance below, through the dingy haze, she could see the columns of smoke that so often streaked the expanse. They were the Social Sites. They dotted the valley out there, down around the edges where the land rose from the salty, festering waters of the encroaching bay. They were the places where people gathered, those who were left. They were the ones who would try to connect with likeminded survivors. They were the ones who tried to recruit or abduct, or worse.

The sites could be identified from miles away by the signature column of toxic black smoke that rose from fires fed with the skeletal remains of The Before. Old tires and the pervasive plastics were the dye that blackened the caustic plume, the petroleum-based remnants of a failed society. The products of a world once powered from deep within the planet’s crust gave the ominous columns of smoke their strength.

These sites and the billowing black shafts that announced their presence would one day appear off by themselves, separate from the rest. They were brought online by one or two who felt they had something new and different to offer in the way of thought or perspective. Those who were sure their version, their view, was the right view, the superior view. Whether or not they lasted depended upon how many hits they received, how many would like them, friend them, follow them. Each site was different and each could be treacherous or trustworthy. It was always difficult to tell at first contact.

Friends. Kim was not interested in the sites, or their friends. That was the last thing she needed. Her thoughts were of another place and of other people, people about whom she had heard mentioned over the years, people spoken of in the voice of innuendo. It was a voice in the air moralizing truths that did not exist. Her thoughts were about the people of a place, and the place was the Assemblage.

These people held the influence. They had directed the current and channeled course of society’s impulsive actions, its so-called social causes and beliefs. They had dammed and controlled the river, the tide of social flow, what was left of it, and that was wrong. That was not how it should be. Kim knew that now, but then, before this time in which she now survived, she did not see it. Even if she had, she had lacked courage and resolve. The river had to be free to find its natural course. It had to be free to flow wherever the landscape of individual human thought took it. She needed to free the river. Maybe then, she could be free.

She would go alone. She had been alone and preferred to stay that way. Kim was not a follower, and she sure as hell did not want to lead. The cost of being a leader had left deep, painful scars, wounds that had not yet healed. She wanted no more of that. She led only herself, by knowledge and instincts. She followed the whispers and the low words, those unsaid but known things that haunted her. She would go to the Assemblage. Maybe she would find, finally, an opportunity for achieving something positive. It was not happening there in the valley. What she had done there was far from positive. It was time to begin ending that part of her life. It was time to leave.

Leaving the abandoned mansion meant leaving the safety of the known for the uncertainty of whatever might lie beyond. The nearest house to her mansion-camp stood just over a mile away. The surrounding grounds were clear, except for the wild and overgrown vineyard that fed the meager deer population. The open terrain afforded a good view of all approaches and the valley in the distance. Those features had made it a safe place to stay.

Before the mansion, Kim lived in the server room of the place called Obyavit. What started as a hiding place had been, for almost three years, her secret shelter in the midst of the winnowing chaos of a dying population center. It was convenient from a sustenance perspective, for a while. She could move easily among the campuses of the other empty and abandoned corporate headquarters. In the various restaurants, cafes and food stores nearby, she foraged food and supplies while the usable scavenge lasted. The water from the bay eventually came, however, and reclaimed the ground it once owned a few hundred years ago. When it reached the parkway that was less than a mile from where she had been hiding, she scouted and then moved to the mansion.

As she stood there alone above that valley whose vibrancy had faded and crumbled so long ago, she began to think that she was fading, crumbling, a relic of something that had once lived long ago. Anxiety filled her, pressing out against her chest hard and tight. She turned and walked back into the mansion.

I am not old. Not by the standards of The Before, she thought. But life was harder now and the world was different.

A fit woman by any standard, Kim was of average height, slightly underfed, but strong. She could cover many miles in a day and had explored all of the peninsula, South Bay and most of the East Bay. She had learned to hunt and survive. But the elements had left their marks, and her once soft brown skin had become weathered, sunbaked, and harsh, the skin of a wanderer. Her once long dark hair was now short, gray and angry, the hair of a cast-off.

She prepared to leave. Her thoughts, her actions, what she wore and how she wore it, they all served a specific purpose: to hide herself from the elements, to hide the things that could keep her alive and to hide the fact she was a woman. Protection, from mankind and environment, and the ability to carry a lot without looking as if that was the case was what she needed. Anyone who wanted to stay cool in the new and changed world dressed light and loose, as did she. A wide-brimmed hat, which she wore whenever she ventured out, also helped to protect her some. But the raw heat and UV from the depleted ozone ravaged everything it touched, even her. These and other habits of character became her rigid life.

The trip she was planning would be a few days and she needed supplies with which to make the trip. Dried deer meat and scavenged energy bars made up the bulk of the food she carried. She stashed these in a beaten pack along with a few remaining antibiotics she was able to salvage from an abandoned pharmacy in a dead strip mall. She also brought clean water, two quarts; one went in the pack and one hooked into a loop on her belt near the small of her back. Then a hunting knife. Easy to reach, it hung off her left hip. There was a place for everything and everything had to be in its place.

 Always thinking, planning and organizing, she included nothing that had not felt the pressure of her obsessive vetting process. The process she used for every project. The fact that each shoe had a small, unnoticeable, hidden pocket just over the outside ankle was not by accident. Nor was the fact that in the left shoe pocket there was an inch-long, razor-sharp folding knife. The right held two rock-hard pieces of Bazooka Joe bubblegum.

Then there were the guns. There was a time when she could never have imagined carrying such an instrument. But the world was full of dangers, and now one went with her everywhere. On this trip, she would have two. One was a Kahr PM9. It was not much larger than a pack of cigarettes. She carried it in a flexible nylon holster strapped tight to her ribcage, just under her left breast. The way her clothing hung, no one would see it there. The other was an old friend, a Smith & Wesson M&P .357, which she wore on her right hip, out where all could see. The .357 was the deterrent; the red lettered sign that declared don’t mess with me. The 9MM was a safety net, a plan B. She carried seven additional clips that were also a part of plan B.; five in various pockets for the .357 and one strapped to each calf for the 9MM. She knew well how to use those weapons; she knew what it felt like to end a life.

Scanning across the room, she spotted the only thing that served no practical purpose in her survival, the smartphone. It was one of the most advanced in The Before, the flagship model of its time. She had been able to live her entire waking, working and social life through it, when it worked. Few phones worked now. Often there was no signal to receive, no bars to show connectivity or no power with which to keep it charged. She kept hers. She had drilled a small hole in it and had strung a thin leather lace through the five-ounce beaten piece of glass and metal. In its smooth, blank screen she could see herself, her thin, weather-worn face with its short scraggly hair. And, just as the screen, her face held a blank emptiness. She saw what she felt. The device that was once so innocuous was her millstone. It stayed with her, around her neck, so she would remember the purpose of her journey and her part in The Before; the past that gave humanity the present.







Chapter 2



Kim stayed out on the edge and skirted the dead suburbs. There were few, if any, people to worry about along the wild overgrown periphery. When she had been scouting and roaming the East Bay and the Peninsula, she had estimated there were just a few thousand people left. Early on, everyone evacuated in a hurry because that was what they needed to do, what they were supposed to do. It was what was trending at the time. The viral reaction of one emulating the other soon left the homes, towns and cities empty. There were the Social Sites, from where the smoke columns came. Those had people, but they were spaced far apart, on the higher ground of the urban areas, near where the bay was now encroaching. She stayed wide of those places. One person at a time was fine, but experience had taught her, no more groups.

She was keeping a brisk but steady pace as she moved south past the abandoned and burnt city of Morgan Hill. By hugging the eastern side of the wet grassy tidal estuary that extended down beyond what was once the epicenter of technology, she was able to make it safely out of the valley. The jungle was thick and shaggy along the two-lane road she had chosen. It was quiet, subtropical, hot and damp, no people or cars, no sounds. There were no birds either. This made her sad.

 The birds had died first. It was much as in the early years of mining. They were the proverbial canary in the coal mine. A sad anachronism, their death was a signal that something was terribly wrong, but very few people noticed. People were too busy focusing on their collective social consciousness, as delivered to them by their various social information sources. So long as they were connected, they knew their purpose. It was only when the voice of the virtual society went quiet did they look up. Something had gone wrong. And with the blank screens came a realization, which quickly became panic. No one listened for the birds in The Before and no one could hear them in The After.

The old state highway that ran over to the San Joaquin valley stretched out ahead of her on the morning of the second day. She was familiar with the road, both from The Before and The After. Being on this connector of two valleys increased the potential for contact with another person. The plan did not call for that, not yet. Contact probably would not be dangerous. Most just wanted to connect and chat with others in order to get news and share information. Still, there were the Mechs and others like them, the ones who socialized only to harass and intimidate, or worse. Her plan was to head east, staying head-up and aware while trying to make it to the San Luis reservoir by dark.

Just as in The Before, people wanted and needed information in order to make their decisions. In The After, information no longer moved across the web of technology that physically connected friends via their electronic presence. It now moved through human-to-human contact, through people talking to people. Most information was local, seen and shared by people within a day’s walk of each other. Then there was the news of the wider world, news about far-off places such as St. Louis or Chicago. This was the news brought by the Carriers.

About a year after she had found the mansion, Kim was scavenging in a dead big-box home improvement store near the swampy Willow Glen area. That was when she met a Carrier for the first time. He was passing through on his way to the dry Klamath wasteland in the north. She was either not paying attention, or was just too engrossed in trying to pry open a locked cage of specialty tools, when the Carrier walked up behind her unnoticed. He stepped out of an aisle just a few feet away and simply said, “Hi.”

Kim jumped, letting loose with a high-pitched yelp as she turned and drew the .357 strapped to her right hip. Almost as quickly she yelled, “What do you want? Stay back, I will shoot you if you move any closer.”

He took two very large steps back. Holding his palms up above his head so they were visible he said, “I’m not armed, don’t shoot. Please. I’m a Carrier.”

“A what?” Kim said. Pointing her weapon at the stranger’s chest and determined to sound strong, she was not processing whatever it was he was trying to tell her. “Are you diseased, infected? Stay back. Just stay the fuck back away from me, or you’ll not have to worry about your affliction, whatever the hell variant it may be.”

Puzzled, the man who called himself a Carrier tried to hide his bemusement with Kim’s take on his title. Distracted, he began to lower his hands. He had been in this position before.

“Not so fast, up with the hands.”

“Please. Don’t,” he said, lowering his eyes and cringing a little, as if preparing for the pain that was about to come. “You’ve been out of circ for a while, haven’t you? Not much contact since The Event, I’m guessing. I’m a carrier of news, of news and information. I, and others like me, others with strong memories and recall abilities, roam about gathering and sharing news and other information from the places we’ve been. We have markings, see?” And he slowly turned around, hands still raised, to reveal the back of his jacket where there was a crudely drawn and painted rainbow peacock with the word “NEWS” written in large black letters underneath.

Kim looked at the Carrier and was at once confused and suspicious. She recognized the emblem. She knew the association. He was right, however. She had been out of circulation for a while. She had been making a concerted effort to avoid people. Now there was this apparent messenger, this human email so he claims, standing about twelve feet beyond the barrel of her .357. Well, she thought, if he was all about sharing information, then she should start by finding out more about him.

“So, news man, since I’m a little out of the loop, why don’t you catch me up. What’s your name?”

“I’m, I’m Allen,” he said with a nervous hint. “Can I put my hands down?”

Kim nodded, and with a short jerking motion she pointed with the .357 down and to Allen’s left, where there sat a large unopened box of orange buckets. “Sure, have a seat.” She sensed this might take a while.

Allen appeared to be part Anglo and part Asian, maybe Japanese or Korean. It was hard to tell. He was probably in his early to mid-thirties, tall and a little on the thick side, too. He obviously had no trouble scavenging food. His black hair was cropped short on top, even shorter on the sides and stood straight up, almost as if it were a crew cut, but not quite. He smiled a lot, but not a subservient or shy smile, more as if he was enjoying a private joke. At this particular moment, Kim decided he was not to be trusted.

“Tell me, Allen. Why are you here, in this store, in front of my gun?”

“I was looking for an adhesive to fix my shoe when I heard a noise. What about you?” Allen asked.

“You see me and I have a gun, pointed at you,” Kim said in a matter-of-fact voice, trying hard to sound serious and not afraid to blow his head off. “That’s all you need to know. Now tell me your story.”

“Well,” Allen started, looking down and toeing at a loose bolt that lay abandoned on the floor, “I’m from St. Petersburg, Florida. I lived and worked there, in The Before. I was two years out of college and working for an ad company, in sales. I was doing well, but then all hell broke loose. There was this group. They called themselves The Lamplight. They had branches all through the southeast and Atlantic seaboard. Have you heard of them?”

“Yeah, I heard of them,” Kim said, trying to keep a tough demeanor. “There’s a man on the radio here. He’s like a blogger, like an audio blogger. He’s spoken of them, and others. Have you heard him, the man on the radio?”

“Yeah,” Allen replied. “He rants.”

“Yeah. That’s him.”

“Anyway,” Allen continued. “This Lamplight group, they were big in The Before. They were on the net and hooked into all the major social network sites. Nobody knew where they were based or even if anyone was in charge. If you heard of them, then you know that they claimed to be ‘fair and equitable.’ They said that the government was tracking and using data from people’s internet activities to influence societal movements, you know, fads, trends and so on, so people would be easier to control. So that the government could manipulate their behaviors and actions.”

Kim knew of these theories. The attempts to control people by using predictive analytics and big data. Some blamed it all on government spy agencies. Others said it was corporate interests trying to direct consumer trends. She had even heard groups say it was major media outlets trying to drive ratings by sensationalizing the trivial.

“I don’t know how much, if any, of that was true," Allen continued, “but this Lamplight group eventually got people pretty worked up. All that angst, anger and fear they roused was starting to boil over at the same time all the other crap in the rest of the world started happening. It was as if the entire planet became dissatisfied and scared all at once. What did one blogger call it, the Earthling Spring? Just like the Arab Spring a bunch of years earlier, only all the little people all over the planet were fed up with the people in charge.

“Anyway, when the paranoid countries in Asia and the Middle East had their little b.y.o. nuke party, that’s when I hid. People were scared. Hell, I was scared. Those who didn’t die in the riots when order went away began dying from weird new diseases that popped up as the air turned dark orange.”

Kim knew about the death. She knew it well. “How is it you’re still alive?”

“I spent the first year hiding in a theme park in Tampa. I wasn’t necessarily avoiding people, I was just trying to stay safe. I think that’s what saved me.” Allen then observed as he smiled his secret smile to himself, “It surprised me, though I don’t know why in retrospect, but when the world goes to hell no one goes to the theme parks.” 

“That’s it? You just avoided people. You’ll excuse me if I find that a little hard to believe given you just walked up behind a stranger who happened to be carrying a gun. In plain sight.”

“It’s different now. It’s my job to seek out people now. Besides, I won’t carry a gun. I just don’t believe in it.”

“That’s either really brave or really stupid, but I admire the principle.”

“Honestly, I think that’s what caused all this, if you want my opinion.”

“What’s that?”

Allen looked thoughtful for a moment, “Principles, everyone lost their principles. Everyone started following everyone else and stopped thinking for themselves.”

Kim knew what he meant, but she wasn’t ready to hash that out with another person. Not yet. “So what was going on in the places you passed through? What’s the news?”

“Well, let’s just say that most people in most places have not been very kind to each another, and still aren’t. Many people became sick too, and there was no significant or organized medical help, so most died. When I went through Atlanta, it was just a smoldering husk. The smell of death was overwhelming. But there were a few small groups scattered throughout the city. Social Sites. That’s when I found the News group, on the fourth floor of some cable news network building near the heart of the city. There were eleven there at the site but there were sixty-two in the group, most roaming the country, when I joined.”

Kim became incredulous, “You joined a Social Site? After all that happened you went back into that mindless herd of sheep?”

“Hey, hey, they’re not all like that. There are some good ones. Sure, I was wary. I had some bad experiences with Social Sites, especially the small town ones, the ones with four or five people, and the others, the bigger ones that recruit.” The word recruit was tinged with sarcasm. “I kept my distance.”

“But you joined.”

“Well, yes, eventually. They sent people. Different ones at first but, then previous people started coming back. I was able to get a pretty good count of how many there were. They told me they weren’t armed and that they were all about news and information. They and their members are based there, but they go on these tours of duty. The goal, my goal too, I guess, is to cover a great distance while gathering and sharing information along the way. We set out on a route that is planned to intersect with other members, and along the way we try to meet and talk to anyone who wants to talk, and won’t try to kill us. We tell people what we know about the state of things where we have been, and we ask people to tell us about the state of things where they are, if they can. Sometimes they can’t, they’re not allowed to talk on behalf of the group. They’re just a piece, a segment, I guess, of the group they’re with. All they do is listen. Only the leader talks and tells, and then only what he or she wants you to know, nothing more. Along the way though, when our path crosses with a fellow Carrier, we download our learnings to one another, and then we go back on our way. It’s a way to let people know what’s left, what’s working, where’s safe and what to watch out for. It’s the internet without the wires. It’s a news network.”

Eventually, Kim began to relax and came to trust Allen enough to share her camp at the mansion with him for a few days. It was during those days that she learned things beyond the valley and the Bay Area were no better. There were many sites out there, some with as many as a hundred people. There were islands of functioning infrastructure too, parts of the grid that took power from hydroelectric, solar and wind sources. It was from Allen that she learned the location of the Assemblage. He described them as a group of strong minds trying to improve life for those that remained. He thought they were somewhere in the Mojave and were able to pull power from a wind farm spread across the desert floor.

She enjoyed his company. She shared with him what she knew of the current state and health of the places she had been, but no more. He was easy to talk to, like an old friend almost. They shared a few interests, and she felt a sense of hope finding someone with whom it was so easy to connect. It reassured her, somewhat, that not all of the humanity that once existed was lost.

Kim could not talk about everything with Allen. It seemed for all they shared, the reluctance to reveal their entire story was an act of omission practiced by them both. Their shattered pasts were held desperately close in flimsy containers, sealed boxes wet and dripping with their broken contents of pain and loss. They each had them, and they silently acknowledged them, but those boxes remained sealed, stored away. With time, they would dry and the wet freshness of broken memories would cake over with a tough crust. Then the boxes could be opened, their contents handled. Not yet, though. Not yet.