All posts by George

Pandemic Pivot and Pause

Understatement of the year … “things have changed drastically in the past seven months”.

No kidding.

I can’t even imagine how some folks are coping; with no work, children about to go back to school, and the threat of a second wave hanging in the air.

I feel for them.

As a relatively established self-published author, Covid 19 has forced me to face some realities as well – low to no print book sales, bookstores reducing inventories, publishers holding off on their next titles and not considering new submissions, and so on.

On the ebook side of things, sales have picked up slightly but I’ve also decided to give ebooks away, as my small contribution to helping people make it through self-isolation, quarantine, and the other isolating effects of the pandemic including cabin fever.

But while the bank account is dwindling and the path forward is still murky, “there is only do”.

Because The Rhino’s Horn, the fifth book in my Dyed In The Green series is set in Tanzania and Kenya, and because I want to get there first to be able to do justice to the story I want to write, Covid 19 travel restrictions and a desire to live longer have forced me to put Book 5 on the shelf and pivot my writing to focus on the next story, Harking.

Like everything else before it, Harking has been in the works for a while but this story is a little different from previous books, a little more geared to younger adults but still, I think, a great adult read.

I’ve shopped it around to traditional publishers (unsuccessfully so far) but I’ve also been pushing forward to once again self-publish this story, working with my cover designer and layout person to prepare the two files (cover and text) printers need to put a book out.

Now comes the hardest part – marketing.

And with everything that’s going on in the book industry right now including Indigo shuttering some of its smaller stores, independent bookstores struggling to stay afloat (with some closing permanently), as well as overall uncertainty about the future, I’m now forced to pause and consider my options.

I think every author will tell you they want their stories in the hands of readers.

We need the feedback to satisfy our efforts (and our egos) and we need it to grow as writers. 

Pausing is not usually my way.

But pause I must.

As much as I like to write and get my stories out there, I can’t afford (financially) to get this wrong.

Yet I’m busting at the seams to move forward with the next great story (there’s that ego talking again).

Now if only Covid would go away!

RPTR

Chapter 2

“You understand the implications of a repeat offence?”

            Tavon nodded. “I do.”

            The young judge staring down at him scrolled through a list of charges, simultaneously projected onto the screen in front of Tavon. 

            “I’m surprised you’re still in the city,” said the judge, running a hand through his neatly coifed hair. “But then I see Minister Dresden has intervened on multiple occasions.” His voice dripped with acrimony as he said the older man’s name. “But I don’t see him here today,” he added as he looked around the courtroom.

            Tavon lowered his head. “He’s busy.”

            “Very well, let’s get this over with. As I see it, you’ve had multiple space violations. And you’ve been fairly warned about the consequences of any further offences. I have no choice but to evict you from the city.”

            Tavon nodded but said nothing.

            “Immediately,” added the judge.

            “But Your Honour?”

            The young judge looked surprised by the reaction. “No buts Mr. Dresden. You were fairly warned. Take him away.”

            Tavon’s body stiffened but relinquished as the officer gripped his bicep. Until now, the ramifications of being evicted from the city had eluded Tavon. He’d been able to count on his father’s interventions and wrote off the seriousness of being an outcast. The wilderness was a foreign concept to him and he ignored the stories.

            But as the officer led him out of the courthouse, the weight of his situation caused him to falter.

            Looking around, the lack of a familiar face scared Tavon, but at the last moment he recognized the eyes, suspended under the black fedora hidden at the back of the packed courtroom.

            “Father,” he called out.

            Suddenly the fedora seemed to disappear, reemerging then vanishing again toward the courtroom’s main entrance.

            “Father.” Tavon mouthed the word. For the first time in his life, a sense of panic overtook him and he felt his body go limp.

            Thrusting his hand into Tavon’s armpit, the officer lifted him and pushed him along the corridor toward the waiting shuttle.

RPTR

Prologue

Dodging the hordes making their way along the boulevard, Tavon glanced at his watch as he sprinted the final blocks toward the base of the large skyscraper. Avoiding other’s personal space at all cost, his lithe figure wove a path through the masses, seeing an opening and claiming it for his own for the split second it took to move on. Now within sight of the large red canopy extending over the sidewalk, its embossed lettering announcing the Dresden brand, Tavon relished the notion of finally showing his father he could be trusted to be on time. 

            He was almost there.

            Crossing the last intersection as the yellow light ceded to red, the only thing now standing between him and the skyscraper’s entranceway was a homeless man, gathering his belongings as the authorities tried to extricate him from the shadows.

            Tavon recognized Kronos instantly. His old friend was well outside his zone. Still, Tavon frowned at the officers’ excessive use of force, but knew better than to intervene as they pried the old man’s wrist to gain his compliance. His face racked with pain, Kronos saw Tavon and reached for him, his hand shaking as he struggled to his feet.

            “Tavon. Please.”

            Tavon stopped and held his ground but saw Kronos’ predicament.

            He needed a hand up, nothing more.

            Surely the authorities would not begrudge him that.

            Reaching into Kronos’ space, Tavon noticed the initial pulsing of his wrist sensor but ignored the impulse to stop, as well as the stares of those now forced to go around him as they tried to avoid violating their own space limits.

            As he clasped his hand around the frail fingers, pulling Kronos upright, Tavon could feel the eyes of the two officers bore into him as he patted the elderly man on the shoulder then bound past him to the top of the stairs and pressed the button for the penthouse suite.

            Looking at his watch, Tavon realized he was late again, but only by a matter of seconds. Still, his father would not be impressed.

            “Tavon?” He could sense the displeasure in his father’s voice.

            “Yes Father,” he said, looking over his shoulder as Kronos was escorted away by one of the officers. “Let me in,” he added, as the other officer focused his attention on Tavon and made his way up the stairs toward him.

            “I’ll be right down,” his father said.

            “Just let me in.” Tavon tried the door then pounded it with his fist. Burying his face into his arm, the red light of the wrist sensor pulsed in unison with his breathing as he felt the officer closing in. 

            Hesitating to turn around, Tavon knew he had crossed the line.

            Literally.

            It was a minor transgression, mere centimetres, but a transgression nonetheless. 

            And the sensor didn’t lie.

            For a first offence, there was some leeway, a buffer allocated around every citizen’s personal space. Within the hierarchy, even a homeless person was granted some flexibility.

            But this wasn’t the first time for Tavon. 

            Far from it.

            He could run, but running was pointless, and in all likelihood, paying even less attention to the boundaries, he would only add to the seriousness of the charge against him.

            Resigned to his fate, he held his ground as the officer approached. For even though he was an offender, his own space remained a constitutional right. At least until a determination was made. 

            If found guilty, not only would he lose that right, he would probably become an outcast. 

            Leniency was not a characteristic of the judiciary. 

            Already overpopulated, space in the city was at a premium, and while shedding one more human to the wilderness didn’t ease the situation, cumulatively it was the only way to make room for growth. And growth meant prosperity.

            Or so his father said.

            As an architect of The System and a retired senior Minister, the man had intervened on every occasion, arguing for diplomatic immunity for Tavon’s many transgressions. But even he wielded only so much power and authority, and the judges had issued their last warning. 

            Pleading would be of no use.

            They would make an example of his son.

            “Tavoner Dresden,” said the officer, reading from the digital display on his wristband.

            Tavon nodded, his head still buried in the crook of his arm as he heard the door open and his father’s muted voice say, “What now?”

            “You are in violation of the Boundaries Act,” the officer continued as he placed a hand on Tavon’s shoulder and pulled him around to face him, ignoring Tavon’s father who raised a hand to interject. “Come with me please.”

            Tavon looked to his father, then to the officer and back again, catching the subtle nod as his father motioned to the officer. 

            “Father. Do something.”

            Stepping back inside, the old man frowned, then turned around and walked away as the large door closed behind him and Tavon was led down the stairs.