February 11

Last Brother, Last Sister Snippet

Last Brother, Last Sister is now available! Enjoy!

In the beginning, it is said, there was only the Great Serpent, whose seven thousand coils lay beneath the earth, holding it in place that it might not fall into the abysmal sea. In time, the Serpent began to move, unleashing its undulating flesh, which rose slowly into a great spiral that enveloped the Universe. In the heavens, it released stars and all the celestial bodies; on earth, it brought forth Creation, winding its way through the molten slopes to carve rivers, which like veins became the channels through which flowed the essence of all life. In the searing heat it forged metals, and rising again into the sky it cast lightning bolts to the earth that gave birth to sacred stones. Then it lay along the path of the sun and partook of its nature.

– Wade Davis, The Serpent and the Rainbow

1

They’re always asking him for how-to articles these days. How to survive the zombie apocalypse. How to live afterward. But the thing he can’t tell people is they won’t survive it. They can’t come out the same person they were before and for most people it’s easier to just surrender and die.

If they’re not most people then they’ll find pretty quick how relative terms like ”apocalypse” are. They think it means mass execution. Genocide, or an attempt thereof. The large scale deaths involving hordes of people. But he knows apocalypses have nothing to do with volume. They happen all the time to people on the street who leave the house in the morning as normal and come home dead inside. Apocalypse is a personal thing that no one can really define for anyone else.

Another interesting misnomer is the term “zombie.”

Leslie Petersen, for example, sat on a rocker in the crook of her kitchen. Behind her was a pretty, sun-filled window that took up the whole corner of the house and a shelf stuffed with the plants she’d collected over sixty years of life. Her husband, Lester, hid in the basement and had been doing so for two days now. It had a lot to do with the way Leslie twitched, muttered, occasionally screamed out to the ghosts of people from her past, now as long dead as herself.

Mostly, though, Leslie’s husband hid from what lay in front of her. There was a pleasant social idea that after death people stopped hurting. Pleasant and a complete lie, Papa Murphy knew. When you bring a soul back to a diseased body death doesn’t magically hold the sickness in stasis. In life Leslie had suffered from a most insidious illness, Alzheimer’s. A creature of habit and unable to function without his wife of fifty years, he hired a hack who promised the process would heal her savaged brain.

He lied.

Now Leslie sat in her rocking chair, the only safe place in the world, blood painted up to her elbows. Her gore-covered hands fluttered, broken birds in her lap against the cadaverous background of her empty abdomen.

The glistening jewels of her internal organs sat in a careless pile in front of her. Lester didn’t know about the uncle who had raped her as a child. Or about the baby which had been stillborn in the cold, isolated halls of a home for troubled girls. But Grandma Leslie remembered. Her dead, damaged brain took her down paths that humans couldn’t follow. She had carved herself clean trying to get rid of ghostly bodies and phantom touches.

Murphy crouched down into the range of her vision, the pile of organs – slowly desiccating now that they were cut off from the magic embedded in her veins – between himself and the animated corpse. “Hey, Mama Leslie. Bad times, eh?”

Leslie didn’t look at him, but she answered. “Bad times. Bad girl getting a baby in her belly.”

“It’s not your fault, Mama Leslie.”

Tears sparkled in her eyes. “Not my fault.”

Leslie and Murphy had a lot in common. The Baron touched them. Both communicated on a different level than normal people.

“No, darling, it’s not your fault.”

After sixty years she finally could believe someone. The magic in his blood touched her own and made her listen. She still cried, but now it was a thing of relief, joy. She leaned across to Murphy, grabbing his dark face in her wet hands. “Not my fault,” she whispered. “It’s not my fault.”

Murphy kissed her forehead, opening his mouth slightly at the last moment. When their skin touched he released the psychopomp he’d been holding inside himself. For a moment the world went dark with the soft sound of wings.

“Murphy, son.”

Murphy’s eyes flew open. It wasn’t Leslie’s voice. Gravelly with a hint of amusement, even if it still held the edge of a grandmotherly voice.

“Murphy, my son-”

Leslie went empty. Still startled, Murphy let her slip back into her chair. Something had tried to come through in the moment between the psychopomp taking the soul and the magic bleeding out of the body. Whoever it was, Murphy scowled because he knew, would have to wait. Because he was a nice guy he took the time to put her back together, stitching her stomach with black thread and hiding it the best he could with her nightdress. It stuck to her skin in places, but in death she looked almost dignified.

The state of her soul was his job, not the condition of her body, or her husband. The latter was a task for a shrink, though even the most modern experts in grieving were at a loss on zombies. The church said they were evil, but they said the same of drinking, sex, homosexuality and seafood too, so Murphy wasn’t putting much stock in their usefulness. They’d yet to turn a single zombie back into an empty body.

Of course, Murphy thought, distracting himself, it’s easy to make judgments on the actions of people from a crystal, cold palace a world away. Harder was doing the right thing when ass deep in corpses and entrails.

But Murphy always thought about the aggravating attitudes and people who led to such situations after he’d laid their victims back. Pointless and antagonizing, but that’s where the aftereffects of magic took him. Magic that connected with something beyond, when it wasn’t supposed to.

The check Lester Petersen cut him afterward took Murphy to the front door, before he paused and made the mistake of looking back at the man. Lester stood looking down at his wife. A denser person would think it just reflection, but Murphy saw the way his fingers dug into his arms and how he shook though he tried not to. Murphy cursed and turned back.

“Come on, man. You can’t stay here.”

“I-”

Murphy gave him no choice. He slung a long, black-clad arm around him and gave Lester a little squeeze with his fingers to ensure he had his attention. “No. I have a friend who can take care of this. You’re an old man, you get to take a rain check now and again.”

Sometimes – usually – Murphy felt vindication in letting the living clean up their own messes. But Lester hadn’t known. He’d just made a stupid choice. Murphy gently directed Lester out of the house, and a block down to a little coffee shop-deli thing on the corner. There were two tiny booths inside, so he parked Lester in one.

While he stood in line waiting for coffee he called his cousin Em. “Well if it isn’t my favorite cousin. Whacha need, M?”

He gave her the address. “It got real messy. Do you think-”

“We can clean up? Yeah. Is this one on your bill again, or did you get them to pay?”

Murphy gritted his teeth. “Does it matter?”

Em had a touch of laughter to her voice. “Not really, just curious. Gimme an hour.”

“Okay, we’re at the coffee place down the street.”

“Did it go okay? I mean, not that I doubt you, but you sound a little funny.”

“Long story, Em.”

“So dinner then, too?”

Murphy bit his tongue to keep from cursing again. “Yeah, fine.”

“How’s Chessie?”

“Later, Em. My client just started crying.”

It was a lie, but not much of one. The barista smiled and handed Murphy a pair of tall plain blacks. He flashed his teeth and nodded a “thanks” back as he took them. At the table Lester studied his hands again. When Murphy gave him the coffee he clung to it like the paper cup was a precious object.

They said nothing, made no noise at all, save for the occasional sip. After all, Murphy wasn’t there to counsel the man, just distract him until his home was back to normal.

“She-” Lester said at last. “I-” then he gave up again.

“It’s okay.” Murphy tried to fill in the blanks Lester couldn’t. “You didn’t know.”

“No.” He watched his coffee with sad eyes.

And the system enabled you to make a stupid choice, Murphy thought. Damned stupid raisers. Murphy released his cup to keep from crushing it. A tenth of the population woke up one day with the power to bring back the dead. Not true resurrection, but close enough. Just yank the soul back from Guinee, planted it back in a body and then snatched up their profit.

Murphy’s sympathy and good will only went so far. The man in front of him made the purposeful choice to be ignorant in an attempt to emotionally profit. Not surprising that it went bad, but more than irritating that he turned to Murphy for solace in his stupidity.

“Listen, man.” Murphy made sure Lester was looking at him. “You made a stupid choice, and your imbecile bokor helped you along the way. Now you know to let the dead lie, yes?”

“I dreamed about her, lying in her coffin, crying and calling to me during the funeral. No one else could hear her. No one else would help her as she lay there, terrified and alone.”

A chill went through Murphy, much like the one he’d felt when someone else had stolen Mama Leslie’s voice to try to speak to him. Everyone had the ability to speak with the spirits beyond. What everyone didn’t have was the knowledge. How and what it did to a person who courted with the dead. Murphy’s fist clenched and unclenched as he listened.

“After, I’d hear her. A little cry when I was trying to do dishes. Her voice would call my name as I was trying to sleep. She wasn’t going anywhere,” his voice trembled. “She was just laying there in the ground with nothing else to pass onto.”

Someone had pulled a big number on the Petersens. Someone had spent time coaxing him into spending the money to bring his wife back.

“Who did you call to raise her?”

Lester’s expression changed to fear. Yes, someone did far more to him than just raise his dead wife. When Lester’s face seized up into a snarl Murphy dropped his gaze and put his hands out, palms up, on the table.

“Do you have kids?”

Lester snapped back into the sorrowful man he’d been for the last two hours. “Three. Thomas, Julie and Timothy.”

As Lester prattled on about Timothy the attorney and Julie the doctor and Thomas the engineer Murphy texted Em under the table, offering her an extra fifty to search the house for black magic and any sign of the person who had raised Leslie for him. It was too dangerous to push Lester any further.

Em never answered, but another cup of coffee later she came into the shop, eyes roving for the only other black person in the room. She was the picture of cheerful, round face with a beaming smile and large, pale eyes set inside. She wore plain jeans, a few white spots from bleach along one leg and a red T-shirt with her company name and logo across the chest. Her shoulder-length braids were pulled further back with a black ponytail band and six gold earrings, studs or hoops, dangled from each ear. She had the decency to remove her lip ring during business hours and the rest of her piercings and tattoos were impossible to see while in uniform.

“Mr. Petersen,” she strode over to them purposefully, which took all of two steps, and offered her hand. Somewhat confused, Lester took it. “I’m Emzulie Byrne. I work in conjunction with Mr. Murphy on site clean-up. I just want you to know that you don’t have to worry about anything. We’ve taken care of it.”

Em took his hand in hers, gave it a squeeze and then a pat. “Mr. Healdy at the funeral home has already collected your wife and taken her to be returned. My crew is finishing clean-up right now, and you’re more than welcome to come home.”

It had to be that she was a woman, Murphy thought, why people always reacted to Em in a completely different way than with him. Lester Petersen softened and relaxed at the calm tang to her voice, nodding when she made eye contact and looking relieved, even grateful. Em helped Lester stand, taking his arm in hers and patting him again. Then she led him back down the street to his entirely too large two-story home, where her work van and Murphy’s mud-speckled SUV sat outside.

Em’s coworkers waved cheerily to Murphy from inside the van. Murphy himself paused at the Petersen door when he saw red power peeking out from either side of the welcome mat (which amusingly had been flipped over, as if welcoming the house’s occupants into the world rather than welcoming people to the home.) For the first time Murphy smiled, approving of both measures. There was a good reason he depended on Em.

The charming harlot herself had taken Mr. Petersen into his living room, sat him down with a phone while she made him some tea, and insisted he call his children. Em was good at all the intricate details of people that Murphy missed. She went through life less angry at them, maybe. Calling his kids immediately reaffirmed Lester’s connection with the world, and of course, Timothy or Thomas or whoever, offered to come to their father’s side once Lester, still holding back most of his emotion, told them what happened.

Em bustled about as if she belonged there, until Lester’s son asked to talk to her too, to thank her profusely for fixing the terrible situation Lester had been in and taking care of his father.

Em smiled, obnoxious brat as always, as she got all the thanks, and earned a chunk of the pay, for the work Murphy had done. When Lester was settled in, with family on the way who could do a far better job of coddling than even the nicest strangers, Murphy and Em left, stopping at the curb to exchange pleasantries. And a small navy blue leather bag Em had found in the boxwood and roses near the Petersen’s door. Em refused to touch it with her bare skin, instead using a cartoonish yellow rubber glove to stick it in a plastic grocery bag after she’d showed it to Murphy.

“Someone put a whammy on him, all right.”

“Any sign of who raised the wife?”

Em shook her head. “It’s not like they leave cards. Maybe someone who came in to the area for a few weeks then left. She looked like she’d been up and moving for about a month, that makes things harder. So, dinner tonight?”

“Em, I-”

“No excuses. And bring Chessie.”

“Em.”

She gave Murphy a glare. “I’ll see you at six.”

Then Em put the van between them, climbing in and pulling off a moment later. Murphy scowled at his reflection in the windshield. Six-foot-five, well-muscled but not bulky with a gaunt, pessimistic face, he could see why people related better to cheerful, perky Em. It bugged him, as he got behind his own steering wheel, until he reminded himself he wasn’t there to relate to anyone, just to get a job done.

And the jobs seemed to be unending lately.

Zombies, Murphy thought as he navigated the upper middle-class streets and headed back downtown toward home base, had become a trend. He couldn’t turn on the computer or the television without seeing some new video of a dumb ass chanting “Baron Samedi, heed my call” and waving chicken blood, cold and sterile bought from a deli, over a corpse. And ‘lo and behold the dead would rise, the audience would clap and a month later the wizard raising the body would be gone with the money, leaving someone like Murphy, or the local cops, who had even less of a clue, to clean that shit up. Sometimes literally.

Murphy’s eyes narrowed when a silver sedan cut him off with little room to spare. All the people around him, they knew that the zombies existed, but they rolled out that old, cliched Rainbow and the Serpent bullshit. Baron La Croix wouldn’t have raised an undead, shambling zombie for all the rum and black chickens in the world. It didn’t work that way.

Trouble was, Murphy wasn’t exactly sure how it worked yet. There was still time, he supposed, but every day that went by was another person dying, another desperate family member, or worse, reaching beyond the grave and grabbing what they could find and keep. He wasn’t sure how Em kept so jovial. Maybe he needed a little of whatever she was on.

That thought helped nothing, and instead threatened to take Murphy down entirely darker roads.

McDonalds it was, he thought, stomach growing from the magical imbalance he’d created when he failed to eat after re-laying Mrs. Petersen. Coffee fueled the body, but not the spirit. Murphy picked up a double burger meal and a chocolate shake for the extra sugar and made his way through the drivers trying to kill him on the streets back to his office.

A block away there was a brand new, state-of-the-art (read: overpriced and glitzy) shopping center. Primarily built of glass, steel, neon lights and backroom deals it was chock-full of bars, restaurants and other businesses that could jack up prices to earn enough overhead. Murphy’s office was little more than a double walk-in closet squeezed between a blues bar and doughnut shop. The former never opened before four, the latter never stayed open past two, which was a suitable neighborly relationship in Murphy’s opinion.

Plus they were both good at what they did.

Murphy’s office was divided into two sides. The front was high on what Em called entertainment value. Mismatched wood shelves lined the walls, carefully filled with neatly-labeled glass jars, from traditional Mason jars to fluted colored glass numbers, pouches and baskets of small Ziploc bags. One wall held candles in nearly every color and shape, and plastic bins of leather bits, spools of thread and feathers in various colors. Under a heavy, old glass case there were handmade drums, rattlesnake rattles and a small selection of ritual weapons. On top of the case were the day’s newspaper and an ancient cash register, by modern standards. Racks of pre-made grisgris, poppets, twiggy “voodoo” dolls, incense powders and dried animal parts from bobcat and raccoon tails to rabbit pelts and dried alligator feet sat behind the glass case to keep the curious from pawing over and damaging the merchandise.

Murphy flipped the sign on the door to open, and then moved past the shelf of modern occult texts to the back room. Larger than the front, but not by much, this was his proper office. A utilitarian space of a large desk, a chair behind and two in front, more shelves – these containing opaque boxes left unlabeled – and a pair of guardian filing cabinets. On the far shelf was a small television which Murphy flipped on before sitting behind the desk and digging into his fries.

Petersen was his only appointment on the calendar for the day, but that meant nothing. Life had an unbalanced way of dealing with Murphy and he’d long since given up trying to adjust to it. Despite the voodoo look, his shop was one of two genuine occult suppliers in the city. The demand wasn’t huge, but with only two stores it made for nice enough books between Murphy’s other jobs.

The word “bokor” appeared like a smear on the front door and on Murphy’s business cards. At first people thought, when was the last time they met a business card-carrying bokor? Then they thought back to all the loaded, pop cultural definitions of the work and filtered through them in their head trying to match up the idea with the person they saw in front of them. Most people settled on “witch doctor”, so much so that Murphy saw something click behind their eyes in the way they saw him. Some were fascinated. Some a little scared. A few were angry. He’d even been protested once after the magic started rising and the local media did a story about the shop. But a lot, many more people than the religious fundamentalist and the daffy tourists combined, came to him with real problems. Like Lester Petersen and the little blue bag Em had found in his bushes.

Murphy tossed his fast food trash and dug out the baggie with the pouch. He was reluctant to label it a grisgris because he would have to admit someone who really knew what they were doing had targeted Lester Petersen. It could be a bag hiding someone’s pot stash, ditched when a cop car drove by, for all Murphy knew.

First he used a pair of tweezers to pull it out. It appeared to be made of dark blue suede, like most of the pouches he sold himself. Closing his eyes he let his wide hand hover over it, feeling for intent.

Then he swore again, for him nearly as common an event as breathing. Taking out a pair of sewing scissors he cut open the pouch and spread its contents over the desk top. The bag’s innards confirmed what he’d felt. Magic started with focused intent. The actual practice thereof got a little wobbly because it was completely possible to use white magic for dark intent. And it was sometimes possible to use black magic for pure intent.

Lester’s grisgris traditionally fell into the white category. It was a message pouch, commonly hung around a doll’s neck or nailed to a tree in a cemetery. Inside was a letter for Leslie Petersen in a broken, scrawling script that didn’t match Lester Petersen’s. Someone had set up a basic communication attempt.

No one had hexed or cursed Lester into calling someone to raise his wife. They’d just dialed the phone, magically speaking, and let him hear what was already there. Which also meant Leslie’s spirit hadn’t been taken to Guinee like it was supposed to. It had sat and festered with her dead body, crying out until someone had given her a voice.

Which meant though Lester and Leslie Petersen didn’t know it yet, their case wasn’t really closed. It also meant Murphy would have something to talk to Em about tonight at dinner.

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November 15

5 Coping Techniques I Learned From My Autistic Son

Coping, communication and calm down are incredible skills for many mentally disabled kids to learn. Sometimes it’s real easy to forget that it’s not just them that need these skills. We all do. So I decided to work out a few tips that we can all use in those angry, panicked or dark moments in our lives.

1. Take a break.

To Mister, this means literally. It means move away from where you currently are and what you are currently doing to allow your brain to reset itself out of the anxiety cycle. It’s not take a rest, it’s turn whatever is causing your stress off for just a little bit. Physically moving is a great way to do this. So is closing your eyes.

Count to ten.…Or twenty. Or whatever. Give yourself time to respond so you respond to what was is/has actually happened (or what is being asked) rather than responding to the emotions it spikes in you.

In the extreme early days he used to run out of the classroom to “turn off” the stress. It panicked the teachers until they realized why he was doing it and gave him the means to “turn off the room” while staying in the room.

2. Distract yourself if necessary.

We made glitter bottles one day in group therapy. We took small plastic bottles, filled them with water and glitter glue and sealed them. Give it a few minutes for the glue to break down. Then shake it up and make yourself take a break until all the glitter settles into the bottom.

Don’t have a glitter bottle? Skywatch for a few minutes. Listen to a song. Watch a funny YouTube video. Actively engage in a completely different activity for a short period of time.

3. Build Momentum

There’s this thing we use called momentum learning. You start by reviewing a topic that’s fairly easy, then get progressively harder. That way you build up some confidence before getting into frustration.

Outside of school maybe you can arrange your day to take care of some small things (cleaning off your desk, picking up a room, reading a chapter in a research or how to book) first then move into the progressively harder things (getting a broken computer working, mowing the lawn, writing 5K). Even if it doesn’t feel completely possible, like in my case I walk into work and a giant hairy dog is waiting for me, you can often take a moment to better prepare yourself (like in my case, putting all my tools in order/in the right pockets and reviewing which services the dog is getting). Or outright bathing the chihuahua first and the German Shepherd/Newfoundland mix second.

Sometimes it just helps.

4. Reward Yourself.

While stickers and Youtube breaks might not be big motivators to us, a favorite lunch or a good book on break, or a stop at a drive through for a shake on the way home, can be motivators. And yes, sometimes even the tiniest of accomplishments, like getting that desk cleaned off deserve self-recognition.

5. Don’t be afraid to turn the whole world off, for a little bit.

Sensory issues are common in autism. They’re not so uncommon in the rest of us. We often just train ourselves to ignore them. But yes, feeling uncomfortable because of that chair, or that lighting or you’re in your third month of holiday music, absolutely CAN affect our moral and performance.

It’s okay to sit in the dark and wrap yourself up completely in a blanket until your sense calm down. It’s okay to admit that that bright light, or sensation of “being on” (when maybe you aren’t a true extrovert, but you have to pretend to be one on the clock) wears you out. And it’s okay to indulge in a little of the absolute opposite to recharge.

Bonus: It’s okay to admit you aren’t perfect.

Working in the adult world I feel like I am expected to be perfect. To do my job beyond perfectly, also efficiently with 100% cheer and 0% drain on others.

But I’m not perfect. I get angry. I get discouraged. There are some things I just cannot do.

And yes, it’s okay to admit that. Especially to yourself.

 

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October 18

More on EStores and Taboo Ebooks

The conflict is continuing, and so is the dialog. I just wanted to add a few things.

1. There is no reason for eStores to remove non-taboo related works. Really, as much as it squicks me, there’s not much of a reason to remove faux incest and barely legal works. But they should be restricted in some way from appearing on searches for childrens books. That’s a duh. I REALLLLLLY don’t want my daughter looking for books and finding “Taking My Drunk Daughter” or anything.

2. If you’re an author and you’re putting more famous authors in your tags, uploading a “clean” copy to get approval then changing it to  “real” copy after approval, etc. then you KNOW you are gaming the system. You don’t have a lot of recourse when you get caught. Same for if you knowingly publish books that violate the terms of service. Bitching when you get caught doesn’t help your case.

3. And if you didn’t know it was against the TOS, why didn’t you read the TOS in the first place?

4. Being upset? Even if you know you’re in the wrong? Fine. That doesn’t make this a jihad. Or a sexist campaign to attack women. (Way to imply only women read erotica.) Also rhetoric that hurts your case instead of helping.

These are the issues I have. But that doesn’t mean that the wide scale removal of indie books is right. Or that Taboo erotica isn’t squicky.

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September 22

Paying for Reviews

There’s some hubub going around today about paying for reviews (and I’m gleefully immersing myself in that to distract myself from a major personal disaster going on at Lee Kiota). I’ve talked about about it before. I think it’s gaming the system. Not stupid, per se, but playing dirty.

I’m not sure how much of an impact it has because fake reviews =/= word of mouth with is still the primary way books sell (it’s just some mouths, like those that appear on TV, are bigger than others.) In my own experience my best selling, by a HUGE amount, self published work is the one that still has zero reviews (holy hell, it does have one! When did that happen?) And the books I have with the best sales period? The ones that came out through KHP.

Trying to find a logic in buying readers’ habits is a Lovecraftian task. You’ll go mad.

Point: I’m not sure reviews sell books anymore than anything else. Why pay for them? If you buy reviews of a shit book to sell it people will point out it’s a shit book and your sales will sputter. Also, there are loads of ways to get reviews for free, like GoodReads’ Giveaways, or, you know, networking with authors and reviewers and offering review copies. Or just asking people who email you praise to post it someplace other people can see it.

Furthermore, these sites popping up naming names…aren’t completely verifiable. I mean, it’s a shit business that makes public the names of their clients when no legal wrongdoing is happening. Grain of salt is all I’m saying.

Personally, I’ve never paid for reviews, unless you count buying copies at cost, or postage to send them out. And I HAVE been paid for reviews, but I was paid by a third party as a contributing author to a webzine, NOT by the author or publisher.

I have no plans to do so when I can buy stuff like beads and promo stickers, and, you know, Taco Bell, instead.

Edited: Oh, right. Linkage.

September 17

I feel the love!

I loved this Amazon review (yes, occasionally I check my books on Amazon, mostly when updating my webpage or checking sales) so much I had to repost it <3

It’s easy to be revolted by zombies, easy to fear them and easy to use them as disposable targets to rack up the body count in untold movies and video games. Easy to see them as mindless, soulless monsters and infectious hazards.

It’s also easy to laugh at zombies, that sort of morbid humor whistling-past-the-graveyard thing, their clumsiness, their shambling and moaning. The line between humor and horror is an elastic one, and zombies seem to be the ones we like to laugh at the most.

It’s a little harder to pity them, though that pathos is often brought out at least for a scene or two … when the final headshot is an act of mercy, an act of love. Those are the hardest moments, the painful and uncomfortable ones. The moments that give us the twinge of shame for having laughed or been revolted.

Because, in those moments, the zombies are re-humanized, and we can no longer pretend.

In Rot, you don’t get a scene or two of those moments. You get pretty much an entire book of those moments. If you’re the sort of person who’s wracked by guilt over the prospect of complying with a Do Not Resuscitate, or putting an elderly or disabled relative in a nursing home, even sending a family pet to the pound – heck, if you feel bad about abandoning your old stuffed animals! – then Rot is liable to hit that nerve.

We hate death, we hate losing our loved ones. We pray, we bargain, we wish we could do anything to have them back. And, despite everything we should have long since learned from “The Monkey’s Paw” and “Pet Sematary” – sometimes, dead is bettah – we let ourselves forget or be fooled.

This is the world of Rot, a world where certain people discover they have the ability to raise the dead … and a lot of other people are glad to pay for the service. Glad, that is, until the inevitable home truths begin to sink in. Zombies are high-maintenance and special needs to the extreme.

You think it’s bad when you give in to your kid’s pleas for a puppy after seeing the latest Disney hit or a bunny for Easter or something, only to find out the hard way that you aren’t really prepared to take care of it, or that it’s far more of a commitment than you anticipated? Well, imagine that this isn’t your kid’s puppy or bunny … it’s your KID, or your kid’s other parent, or someone else close to you who’s died and been brought back.

What can you do? Especially after you’ve gone to all that initial trouble and expense, it might seem wrong just to have them laid back to rest. But you can’t keep them at home. What are your options?

How about Silver Springs, a special care community? Where your dearly not-so-departed will be tended by trained, discreet professionals? Seems reasonable, right? Pricey, but reasonable, a balm to the guilt, out of sight and out of mind.

After all, it’s not like any sort of neglect or abuse could go on in a place like that, right?

I’m tellin’ ya. As the meme says, RIGHT IN THE FEELS.

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