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Scattered Seeds

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by Alice Sabo




  Scattered Seeds

  Alice Sabo

  Published by Alice Sabo

  Copyright 2015 Alice Sabo

  This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to your favorite ebook retailer and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright Page

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  Chapter 39

  Chapter 40

  Chapter 41

  Chapter 42

  Chapter 43

  Chapter 44

  Chapter 45

  Chapter 46

  Chapter 47

  Chapter 48

  Chapter 49

  Chapter 50

  Chapter 51

  Chapter 52

  Chapter 53

  Chapter 54

  Chapter 55

  Chapter 56

  Chapter 57

  Chapter 58

  Chapter 59

  Chapter 60

  Chapter 61

  Chapter 62

  Chapter 63

  Chapter 64

  Chapter 65

  Chapter 66

  The End

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  About the Author

  Chapter 1

  When the disease had run its course in the fall of Zero Year we acted like a war had ended. The dead were buried in mass graves. World leaders declared a day of mourning. We met in public parks, singing hymns and holding hands. Those of us left alive were grieving and battered. We had survived a cataclysm of unknown proportions. And then, fools that we were, we tried to return to normal.

  History of a Changed World - Angus T. Moss

  WISP FELT A TIDE OF worry rush over the people in the vegetable field. The concern he felt had an edge of fear to it. He detoured to the field out of curiosity and because he could sense Nick’s presence. It was just after dawn on a drizzly, overcast morning when most of the people at High Meadow were still asleep. He’d been on his way to the cafeteria to catch a quick breakfast before all those quiet minds woke making it too uncomfortable to stay in the building. Barely a week of living here, and he knew he’d gotten too complacent around these amicable people.

  He cut through the tidy rows of vegetables, in what had once been a ball field, toward a group of people hunched in the chilly rain. Since it was such a gentle sprinkle, they hadn’t set up the storm sheeting over the crops. Nick, Lottie, Harlan and old man Larson stood around the blackened tangle of vines that had once been a tomato plant. Harlan shook his head. Despite being nearly blind, Harlan was proving to be surprisingly capable. Lottie, head of the Growing Committee, looked like she was ready to cry. Her sense of loss was so strong, Wisp wondered if this could be about more than losing a plant.

  “What kind of blight?” Nick asked the group in general. He acknowledged Wisp with a glance, his green eyes clouded with concern.

  “Must be late blight, don’t ya see,” Larson said in a countrified drawl. “Early blight comes first. Be already dead iff’n it were early blight.”

  Wisp looked around for the grandson that always tagged along after the old man, but he might be with the chickens, as that was the main chore for both of them.

  “But they were fine yesterday,” Lottie said. A solid woman, she had tanned skin and frizzing gray hair cut short. There were notes of frustration about her that were tangled with helplessness and tainted with fear.

  “Naw. They had the start of it. A couple yeller leaves. Spreads on the wind, ya know.”

  “No,” Harlan shook his head. “No, it’s in the dirt.” He stamped his foot in emphasis.

  “But the wind blows it up,” Larson countered, windmilling his arm in explanation. Harlan gave a shrug of tentative agreement. The two old men seemed sure of the information they were imparting.

  Wisp looked down the twenty foot row of staked tomatoes. The first two plants in the row were dead. Their vines black, spotty fruit, the color of muddy water, hung like half-deflated sacks. The next plant had more than a few yellow leaves spattered with black spots.

  “What causes it?” Nick asked. He pushed a few stray locks of damp hair off his forehead.

  Wisp sensed a layer of resignation holding back a low lying anger in him. This morning Nick looked unkempt. He needed a shave, and his short brown hair looked like it hadn’t seen a comb in a few days. That was unlike him. There must be more to his sour mood than the dead vegetables.

  Larson raised bony shoulders in a plea of ignorance. “Always had blight here abouts. My meemaw used to spray hers with milk.”

  Harlan bobbed his head in vigorous agreement. “Right. Mine did, too.”

  “But we didn’t have any last year,” Lottie said in a mournful tone.

  “First year luck,” Harlan said.

  Larson snorted a laugh. “Eh yup, that’s it.”

  “What does that mean?” Nick groused. His irritation hit a tipping point, cascading into anger.

  Larson took a step back, watching Nick with a careful eye. Lottie turned an impatient scowl on him.

  “First year of a garden is always the best,” Harlan explained. “Bugs and diseases haven’t found it yet.”

  “But this isn’t our first year,” Lottie countered. She folded her arms and took a solid stance as if to physically bar the disease.

  Larson raised his hands palm up in a sympathetic gesture. “So you a got a couple free years.”

  Lottie nudged the first plant with the toe of her shoe. Three rotten tomatoes fell, bursting open to spread dark slime over the ground. “What do we do about it?”

  “Rip ‘em out,” Larson said. “Burn ‘em.”

  Nick turned to Lottie. “Can you handle that?”

  Lottie squared her shoulders and set her jaw. “Of course.” Her frustration bumped up into indignation. “We’ll take them out down to...” She walked along the row to a plant that remained uniformly green. “...about here. Can we plant something else?”

  “Nothin’ in the nightshade family. They’re all susceptible.”

  Lottie recited all the nightshades she knew, “Tomatoes, potatoes...”

  “Peppers, eggplant,” Larson peered up at her with a sly look. “Tobacco, um, husk cherry.”

  “We’re not growing any tobacco,” she said with a finality that sounded like the response to a very old argument. “Maybe I can put a couple of pole bean plants in here.”

  Feeling a resolution of the agitation
, Wisp headed towards the school building, knowing Nick would catch up. He had the feeling that Nick wanted a few last words of reassurance from Lottie. Their hopes for self-sufficiency rested on her success with the crops.

  Wisp looked across the converted school’s campus. He admired the plan of how the sports fields had been reused for food crops. Despite Lottie’s alarm, the rest of the plots seemed untouched by the blight. Shiny green foliage filled bed after bed with lettuces, mustard greens, the red-veined leaves of beets, frilly spikes of carrot greens. Cucumbers and beans clambered up trellises. A damp breeze rattled through shaking drops from leaves and kicking up the scent of wet earth. Despite the arrival of the disease, the fields had a healthy smell.

  Nick came up beside him, his pant legs soggy to the knee. They walked side by side past the other vegetable beds. “Neither Larson nor Harlan seemed surprised or worried,” Wisp offered.

  “It might be normal, but it’s another problem to deal with. Something we didn’t know about yesterday. And the solution is milk, another thing we can’t get our hands on.”

  “You could ask Creamery,” Wisp said. He almost sent a tendril of thought toward the dairy, but it was too far to feel anything useful.

  “That’s a long ride for supplies we won’t be consuming,” Nick grumbled. “If they have enough to share. Or want to share.”

  Wisp didn’t call Nick on his half-truth. Creamery had been more than willing to barter their cheese when Nick was there. “How badly do you want or need the tomatoes?”

  Nick stopped, looking back toward where Lottie was shooing her consultants on their way. “I don’t know. I hope Tilly’s on top of this, because I have no idea how important they are to the food supply. What if we do lose them all?”

  “I think the Growers Committee can deal with it,” Wisp said. “If the disease is indigenous to the area, they need to develop methods to counter it.”

  “I guess. Do you think Kyle could come up with something?”

  Wisp bit back his initial denial realizing he couldn’t say if his brother would be interested in the project or not. Kyle and Ruth were spending most of their time looking at the impact the virus and vaccines had had on human DNA. That might seem like more important work, but protecting the food supply could trump it. “It’s possible he might know how to fabricate a fungicide.”

  “I’ll ask him.” Nick’s mood lightened, but he continued to stand in the light rain, staring over the vegetable field. His gaze moved to the road up to Barberry Cove.

  In the wistfulness of Nick’s emotions, Wisp could almost feel the memory forming of the day that the superstorm hit, and they found all the children out on the road. “You are unsettled.”

  “I want to get out of here,” Nick grumbled. “We promised the Barberry Cove kids that we’d look for their parents. It’s been a week and no new information. We got a name for the man we found with the gut wound−Glen. He’s still in a coma. We may never get any information out of him. If he even saw anything. His kids are toddlers, can’t give us anything more.”

  “It’s one parent found,” Wisp said. He felt the need to move, also. He’d made a promise to the children. And maybe it was time for him to be back on his own.

  “Right,” Nick muttered. “The unconscious father of two kids barely old enough to feed themselves. That’s not making me feel any better.”

  “I have no commitments,” Wisp said. “I can leave today.” Saying that gave him an odd touch of disappointment.

  “I’ll tell Angus we need to go,” Nick said. A calmness settled over Nick once he made the decision. He started toward the building again.

  A spike of fear shrilled across Wisp’s senses. “Trouble.”

  “What?”

  The glass doors to the school clanged open as Lily burst through them. From the slight height of the terrace, she scanned the fields before bolting down the three steps towards them. Nick jogged over to meet her, Wisp on his heels.

  “Nick, Nick, Nick!” Lily hollered as she ran. “Angus is hurt!”

  Chapter 2

  In the rush to return to normalcy, people found themselves in jobs they had no aptitude for. Janitors were promoted to executives and file clerks found themselves as managers. It was ludicrous, but we played along with the charade in hopes of finding our way back to the world we wanted. That winter was a time of scrambling and failures. The people who were most capable were struggling to stabilize the systems most needed: utilities, security, food distribution, unseen work that felt like abandonment to the average citizen as grocery stores were looted and neighborhoods burned unabated.

  History of a Changed World - Angus T. Moss

  NICK RACED INTO THE building, all thoughts of plants and blight jettisoned. Angus was the beating heart of this settlement. If anything happened to him, it could all unravel. At a time like this, with so many things in flux, they needed his gentle guiding hand. Nick trotted down the hall toward the infirmary where a crowd had started forming. Nick shouldered his way through.

  Martin, the head of the Watch, positioned himself in the doorway, stolidly blocking the entrance. Brawny arms folded, a scowl on his weather beaten face, he kept the residents at bay just by staring them down. He gave Nick a tight nod, stepping aside to let him enter.

  The curtains were closed around the first bay. Old Dr. Jameson stood with his back to the room, a veiny hand holding the curtain open just enough for him to peek through. His white hair was tousled, and he had a white coat on over pajamas. He turned as Nick approached. “Not life threatening,” he said.

  Nick let out the breath he’d been holding. “What happened?”

  “Stumbled on the stairs.”

  “How bad?”

  “Possible break. Ruth is examining him.”

  Nick’s anger kicked in again. She was too new here. An interloper. “Why her?” he demanded.

  Jameson’s hazel eyes held a sheepishness, tainted with sadness. “I was asleep. She got here first.”

  Nick peered into the curtained area. Angus looked a little more disheveled than usual. His shaggy white hair veered in all directions. His face was paler than usual. He held a cold pack on his forehead with another propped against his other elbow. Ruth stood over him with a sonic wand. She looked up, caught Nick’s eye and pointed to Angus’s hip. “Broken,” she mouthed.

  Tilly erupted into the infirmary, shoving people out of her path. Her gray eyes, sharp as glass, sought Nick first.

  “Broken hip,” Nick said.

  Tilly’s eyes widened. Nick knew what she was thinking—the same thing he was. A fall and a break like this could often be a precursor to a quick and irreversible decline. She rushed past Nick, through the curtains. “What have you done, you silly old goat?” The gentle lilt to Tilly’s voice didn’t quite hide her terror.

  When no answer came, Nick joined her at the bedside. Angus opened his eyes looking disoriented making Nick’s heart sink with despair. Tilly took Angus’s hand.

  “Angus?” her voice had a tremor in it now.

  Nick bit back his curses. They needed Angus at the top of his game. They couldn’t afford to have him muddled or confused. He looked away, watching Ruth putter with the machines. Who could take his place? No one here had the breadth of thought or the depth of insight.

  “It was a cat,” Angus grumbled. He shifted on the bed and sucked in a breath. “Ow.”

  “A cat?” Tilly looked to Nick. “There aren’t any cats anymore. Are there?”

  Nick thought about lying, but knew better. “I haven’t seen any.” He didn’t want to think about that statement. All the cats had died in Year Five, the cat flu.

  “I swear it was a cat. I came down the steps to the storm tunnel to meet with Martin. Something he wanted to show me, and I stepped on the damn thing.” He scowled at the people bunched around his bed. “Squealed like a cat,” he insisted. “Shot off down the corridor. It looked like one of those orange tabbies.”

  Nick’s fear eased hearing Angus sound more l
ike himself. He wondered if Wisp could sense something as small as a cat. He’d been able to find Harlan’s horses that had gotten trapped down by the river.

  “Did I hear him?” Martin peeked in through the curtain. “Scared the life out of us, Angus.”

  “Me, too!” Angus grunted. “What’s the bad news?” he asked scowling at Ruth.

  “Bruises, contusions, sprained elbow, minor concussion and a broken hip,” she ran down the damage for them.

  “Broken?” Angus looked surprised. “Are you sure? It hurts, but not like a break should.”

  Ruth waved the sonic wand at him. “The machines don’t lie.”

  “Huh.”

  “Bed rest for the next five days. When the swelling comes down, we’ll reevaluate then.”

  As Angus began arguing with Ruth and Tilly over his restrictions, Martin signaled to Nick, indicating the far corner of the room.

  “He sounds okay,” Nick said as he joined Martin.

  “Only fell about five steps. Could have been worse. I want him to have a shadow.”

  “No argument from me. What about William?” Nick remembered how desperately Lily’s brother had wanted to join in the fight against the raiders. The boy needed a job to distract him from the torture he’d endured at the hands of Rutledge’s mercenaries.

  “Exactly who I was thinking of.” Martin nodded distractedly as if plotting things out in his head. “If I get everybody upstairs, you think Wisp can find that animal?”

  “Did you see a cat?”

  “I was right inside the door waiting for him. I heard a weird sound before he tumbled. I got over to him by the time he hit the ground. Didn’t see any animal, cause I had all eyes on him.”

  “So he really did step on something,” Nick said trying to hide his relief. Angus wouldn’t lie out of embarrassment, which only left a hallucination. And he didn’t want to think what might have Angus hallucinating.

  “I’m afraid it might be a rat. We gotta find it, get rid of it and then figure out how it got in.”

  Nick agreed. “I’ll speak to Wisp.”

  Chapter 3

  Winter of Year One was a desperate time. The government put all its focus on the disease and possible vaccine. They pulled scientists from every field and institution to work on it. The private sector downsized and reorganized issuing platitudes to their shareholders. The economy teetered precariously. Military personnel were recalled from other countries. The President issued an emergency order allowing the use of them here at home. They were loaned to the National Guard to be used as first responders. And cities burned without enough firefighters, looting became common and mail service collapsed.

 

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