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Finegan Fine

Copyright by Nancy Lieder, 2009.

This is a tale about a houseboat living in the Aftertime.

The pole shift has happened and the waters have risen several hundred

feet due to melting poles and glaciers and the heating of the ocean

bottom. The rising sea level is happening slowly but steadily, forcing

survivors to relocate when they discover the flood is not receding.

Finegan Fine has found a niche in this new world by running a trading

boat along the new coastline and up and down ever broadening rivers.

1

Introduction

The main theme is the sociological adaptation of the populace to the

lack of rescue and rising waters after the cataclysms. Finegan meets

survivors from all walks of life:

-

the very wealthy who expected to survive in their well stocked

enclaves,

-

the politically connected who expected rescue on demand,

-

the wealthy who thought their bankroll would buy them comfort,

-

suburbanites unprepared to be self sustaining,

-

those who stubbornly refused to leave their cities and towns and

steadily starve to death,

-

families who are separated from each other,

-

rural folk familiar with local produce,

-

immigrants caught a long way from home,

-

pedophiles peddlers selling children,

-

the handicapped who take hardship in stride,

-

military men cut off from their commanders,

-

former politicians trying to establish a continuity of government,

-

those who turn from their responsibilities and those who raise

orphans and care for the aged,

-

teens without supervision,

-

the deluded who think the good times will return,

-

and those trying to maintain slave labor camps.

A second theme is the devastation itself, which is widespread. Florida

is under water, trapping those who lingered too long. Coastal

subdivisions and river front towns are steadily flooded, often forcing

people to repeatedly relocate. Satellites have been torn from the sky,

so communications are by short wave radio at best. Rescue is simply not

forthcoming.

A third theme is survival techniques. Survivors adapt by eating

atypical but highly nutritious foods. They live in makeshift shacks and

tents. Electricity is generated from windmills or by pedals. Barter is

the mode and the dollar is dead.

A fourth theme is how people react to the crisis – by rising to the

challenge and helping one another or by looting and hoarding. Survivors

are on their own and must rely on resourcefulness and cooperation with

others for survival. Those that mistreat others find themselves without

supplies or friends in due time.

2

Table of Contents

Houseboat Living ………………………………………

4

Burial at Sea ………………………………………………

10

Good Hard Cash …………………………………………

14

Peaches and Cream ……………………………………

18

Political Connections …………………………

22

Jury of Peers …………………………………………

27

Industrial Revolution ………………………

33

Zombies …………………………………………………………

38

The Castle …………………………………………………

44

Love at Last ………………………………………………

50

No Call Home

…………………………………………… 55

Shark in the Water ……………………………

60

The Orphanage

…………………………………………… 64

Continuity of Government …………………

69

Lost and Found …………………………………………

77

Yahoos Afloat ……………………………………………

81

Eating Rats

…………………………………………… 88

The Pawn Shop …………………………………………

94

Slave Labor

…………………………………………… 99

Bear Market ………………………………………………

104

Rust Belt ………………………………………………………

108

New Leaders ………………………………………………

114

Canibals ………………………………………………………

121

Kudzu Canyons …………………………………………

127

Homecoming …………………………………………………

135

3

Chapter 1: Houseboat Living

The humidity and Spanish moss hanging from the trees on the Georgia

coastline is not unusual, but the fact that the coastline is flooded is

unusual. Rooftops and treetops are sticking out of the placid water,

which is lapping gently on suburban lawns.

A houseboat is floating nearby, tied to a sturdy treetrunk sticking out

of the floodwaters. The houseboat is solidly built, a modified

commercial houseboat with metal floatation tubes underneath and a

single story home in the center, and with patios all around. But this

houseboat is not new, is well weathered with paint worm off and a roof

tile here and there missing.

And the houseboat is immensely cluttered.

Bins of vegetables are stacked one on top of the other and side by

side. Engine and mechanical parts are heaped in piles on the corners of

the houseboat, placed for balance. There are pegs everywhere a peg can

be placed, where loops of fishing line, wire, and rope are hung.

Boxes are stacked, smaller boxes on top of larger ones. Some of the

wooden boxes have pull-out drawers. Large plastic containers are

stacked here and there, but only a few are labeled. Folded tarps are on