Category Archives: Reading

Memorial Day

Memorial Day is a time of remembrance, and as some have said, to be grateful for those who lived and gave the ultimate sacrifice that we might see a better day.

I was fortunate on both my time in Afghanistan and in Iraq that the units I was with came back with everyone. Other units around us were often not so fortunate. Whether Soldiers or Marines or Sailors that lost their lives, whether it was bullet or explosion or accident, there were far too many that didn’t come home.

Stretching back to the revolutionary war, there are many who have given their everything for a brighter, better future. Remember them, today. Be grateful that such people lived, and pray that there are those willing to make such sacrifices in the future.

Andor Season 2 Review (non-Spoiler)

TLDR: Rushed, but still good.

I quite enjoyed Andor season 1, in part because we didn’t have the caricatures and cardboard cutouts of characters. There were complicated figures and, frankly, some of those side characters stole the show.

Season 2 comes in under a looming threat, and here I’m not talking about the Empire.

I’m talking about the studio telling the director that he got season 2 to wrap up 5 years of story and not the seasons 2-5 he planned and scripted.

That leads to some rather severe compromises. Season 2 has 4 segments of 3 episodes, all telling the broader story that Gilroy wanted to tell over multiple seasons. These three episode segments are each about an hour and thirty minutes of story, telling one portion of how everyone gets to the start of Rogue One.

The question is… does it work?

Well, sort of. There are pieces that work brilliantly and there are some that feel like filler. The first three episodes sort of flailed a bit, there wasn’t the connection or bite that Season 1 had and, with far less time to build the characters, the losses didn’t have the bite that they could have.

There were easter eggs and cameos galore, but some of these felt like needless insertions, while others were just sort of put there and ignored afterward. There was no meaning or value to the works of the

The second and third segments worked better. In my opinion, the 3rd set of 3 episodes is straight out the best, though, again, it all felt very rushed.

The last 3 episodes were what it all built towards and elements of it are incredible… but there’s also not really a climax, a pay-off… you have to go watch Rogue One for that. In my opinion, with more time, more episodes, more story, that could have worked better.

There were also character and plot choices where they were “this close to greatness” and they flinched back at the last moment from making the hard decisions, or in some cases, the logical decisions. Whether that was studio execs weighing in (as with a deleted scene between Mothma and her husband Perrin) or simply made because they didn’t have the time to do what would have made more sense, I can’t say, but there are certainly marks here and there that frustrate for the fact that the rest of it was pretty good.

And that’s what I came away thinking… overall, highly entertaining and worth watching. There are a couple of insertions at parts that I found… well, irritating and annoying enough to fast forward through. Have your remote ready for the interactions with Cyril and his mother, because the irritation and emotional distress she causes her grown man-child is nails on the chalkboard irritating.

The rest, though? Perfectly good storytelling, high tension stakes, and even though we know how it all ends, it had me wanting to see what came next the whole time.

I recommend it. Though don’t watch it expecting white knights to come save the day.

Kal’s February Update

I generally try to stay positive on my social media posts. Sometimes there’s no pulling the punches, though. I figure brutal honesty is the best way to go with this.

For me, there’s been a lot of stress. My wife was diagnosed with cancer the day after Christmas. There’s been a lot of waiting, we’re still waiting. Insurance (ha, ha, “free” insurance with Tricare, it’s *sooo* great), doctor’s referrals, first available appointments, then waiting in doctor’s offices. Calling insurance people and continuing to call them until I finally got someone who could help. Becoming a nuisance until we got seen.

This isn’t an ask for help, we think we have things settled at this point (even got congress-critters involved, like I said, government insurance, so much fun). I just want to provide context for those who know me and those who read my stuff and wonder what the heck, why aren’t there more books out?

We don’t know much at this point about my wife’s diagnosis. She gets her CT scan tomorrow, we should know more after that. Prayers, positive vibes, and happy thoughts are all appreciated. We already know she’s in for surgery and radiation treatments. We’ll know more soon.

I’m spending time with my wife as much as I’m able, because she needs the support. She’s the most important thing in my life and, quite frankly, everything else falls off in comparison.

I mostly stay sane by keeping busy. Working. Writing. I’ve been writing Substack articles, working 12-ish hours at the day job (I laugh, because my work phone just buzzed again and it’s almost 10 pm here), and writing in the evening and mornings.

Over the holidays I put together an slightly-obscene amount of gaming terrain of which I’ve released some Youtube videos.

For those looking for the next installment of a series, I’m working on stuff, I promise. I have to be careful because the stress I’m under bleeds into the writing, and I don’t want a “fun” story to become… well, a horrorfest.

I am done with one novel and 80% done with another. I have 2 novels sitting with publishers. I’ll get more done as I can. Sorry it’s not more of a cheery update, but I’m saying little prayers for happier posts in the future.

Heart of the Mountain Book Reviews

DON’T BUY THIS BOOK… BUY THE WHOLE SERIES.

Larry Correia has written a lot of great books. What he has done with Heart of the Mountain is wrap up a series of books, closing out an Epic Fantasy series with a huge cast of characters and multiple plot lines.

Get the book here: https://amzn.to/4gvwgFv

His series features an array of characters, including heroes, villains, scoundrels, ronin-like wanderers, wizards, and monsters. Every character has their own motivations, and often when you think you understand a character they turn over a new leaf. Villains have redemption arcs andheroes have falls from grace.

Ashok Vadal strides through it all, a monster, a hero, in a Vedic-style epic, an evolution from a broken and in many ways mentally crippled man into a hero of legend. He is one part man, one part paladin, one part mystically/cybernetically enhanced super soldier, and all badass. Ashok is a looming Darth Vader, if Vader cut down stormtroopers instead of rebels.

Heart of the Mountain does what it says on the tin, it concludes a fantastic series in an epic ending. This isn’t a Disney ending, either, fighting requires sacrifice, some people champion what is good and right, others sink to their lowest level, and still others surprisingly rise to the occasion.

Don’t read this book because talking heads say it is unique or award winning, read it because it is fun, it is engaging, and because Larry manages to slip in interesting things about human nature, about ambition, power, and the lies people tell themselves sometimes to avoid facing hard truths.

Larry slips in fascinating sci-fi elements, prophesy, messiahs, gods, demons, and more, letting things unfold in fashions that leave enough to be understood while still keeping some mysteries to consider.

It takes an incredible storyteller to write a story of this scope, a detailed mind to bring all the plots to conclusion, and a deep understanding of human nature to do it all in a way that feels natural.

Bravo, Larry, you magnificent bastard, bravo!

Kal’s Substack

Some of you may have noticed… I have a substack going now as well. I thought, why not, it’s the trendy thing to do… right?

Jokes aside, it gives me another platform to post on, and it allows me to separate some of my gaming / writing craft stuff from my posts here, which tend to be more focused on my books and general updates.

Speaking of which, I know posts have been pretty sparse around here. Things have been quite hectic in the day job and home life. I’ll try to do better.

Anyway, if you’d like to see what I have going on over there, you can find it at: https://kalspriggs.substack.com/

Now, for my regular readers here, I’d love to hear feedback on what you’d like to see here. More updates? More snippets? Sock puppets? Book reviews?

I’ve done a little bit of everything, so let me know what you all want to see.

Thanks for reading!

Marscon 2025

Hey everyone, for those of you in the States, I hope you all are staying warm in the snowpocalypse of 2025!

I just got home last night from Marscon. I had the opportunity to see old friends, to meet lots of new people, and to bask in the science fiction and fantasy culture.

I wasn’t on any panels this year, it looks like gremlins in the system ate my application, but I did have a table in the vendor’s room and got to see a lot of people as they came through. With everything going on in my life right now, it was kind of a relief not to have to run from panel to panel and to chill out a bit.

I had a blast talking with John Holmes, David Hensley, Mike Morton, Steve Vickers, Dan Kemp, and others of the Cannon Publishing team. They’re approaching publishing like a tactical operation complete with wrap-up AARs. If you aren’t reading their stuff, I highly recommend it, and I’m happy to be among them.

It was also great seeing a bunch of the Baen authors, especially Jason Cordova, Christopher Ruocchio, Melissa Olthoff, KC Seville. They’re all super chill people and great to strike up conversations with. They announced a couple of new books coming out soon, and some of their covers were absolutely jaw-dropping. Great stuff coming from them!

There were a host of others I met over the weekend, with a special callout to James Crawford who braved the cold, coming up from Florida. He’s got a really cool series of books, as well, and we compared notes on different conventions here in the south.

As an author, 90% of conventions are networking and talking. Selling books is nice, too, but seeing people and catching up is far more important, in my opinion.

Overall, I had a good time, my wife and son had fun, and we hope to come back next year. Thanks for reading!

Now Available: Giant Stompin’ Robots!

Hey everyone, I’m happy to announce that I have a short story in the newly available Giant Stompin’ Robots anthology from Raconteur Press!

https://amzn.to/4dYi06Y

You like your mecha with a side of alien invasions? It’s in here. Illicit gangs trying to fix heavy mecha demolition derbies? Done. Brave pilots standing between shrieking chaos and everything they hold dear? Good reader, if there was a Heroism Buffet, this anthology would be the restaurant your friends were rolling you out of every weekend. So plop yourself down at your favorite table, pour yourself a stiff one of sake (or soda if you’re the same age as the plucky teenage hero with bright hair) and prepare to be entertained by Giant…Stompin’…Robots!

Now Available: Hell Train

I am happy to announce that Hell Train is now live: https://amzn.to/3SS3DJQ

A single train carries what might be the last vestige of civilization through a hellish nightmare.

A few hundred alive out of millions, lights going out all across what was once America as the possessed arise from the dead and murder the living. A few hundred survivors travel across the country in an armored train, seeking some place to shelter in a fallen world. All that remains is a dystopian nightmare marked by rains of blood, impossible horrors, and portals to Hell opening in the skies.

US Army Captain Jack Zamora is responsible for their safety, a self-imposed burden that wears on him every day. Fighting off living corpses protecting the survivors, keeping the train running and supplied as his team desperately plans their next moves. Ahead looms the city of St. Louis, the only remaining crossing point of the Mississippi, with three million possessed corpses, a well-armed group of fanatics, and their leader, a religious madman who wants to offer humanity’s survivors up as sacrifices to his new god.

It gets worse, because the ancient gods have sent their emissaries, horrific beings of myth and legend that walk the Earth. Things that can drain a man’s very life essence or even that of an entire city. Jack and his companions can’t go over and they can’t go around, all that leaves is to drive their train straight through Hell and right out the other side.

An intense new post – apocalyptic series from Kal Spriggs and Cannon Publishing

Amazon link: https://amzn.to/3SS3DJQ

The second book of the series will be out soon as well!

Hell Train: Snippet 3

“Do you ever notice,” Doc Cedeno shouted, “that they don’t rot?”

“What?” Jack demanded. He looked over at Doc Luis Cedeno. He wore combat fatigues, not a lab coat, but the brown-haired man still looked more like someone’s kindly uncle than a multi-degree professor. Two of those degrees were information technology and accounting, but he also had teaching certifications in physics and biology. Jack liked bouncing ideas off the man, who seemed to have plenty of brain cells to spare for any problem.

“The undead,” Doc Cedeno waved a hand at his operating table. The corpse of the old man fought at the restraints and snapped broken teeth at them. It didn’t stop, nor had any of the other possessed that Doc Cedeno had collected for investigation. “They don’t rot. When I take a sample, there’s no bacteria, no fungi. I can’t understand it.”

“I dunno, Doc,” Jack said. He found it vaguely interesting in a sort of ‘things are trying to kill me and I’m way out of my league, but that’s a random fact that I don’t need right now’ sort of way. “How we looking on fuel?” Technically that was more Tim’s job, but Doc Cedeno had a better head for the exact numbers.

“Oh, we’ll make the rendezvous point, no problem,” Doc Cedeno waved a hand. “And from what your scouts reported, we should have plenty of fuel there.” He walked over and tapped on the possessed’s chest, which seemed to have no effect on the thing’s mindless attempt to escape.

Their next rendezvous point wasn’t far and Jack wasn’t really worried about fuel, not just yet. They’d found dozens of trains along their route, pulled aside on split junctions, most parked out in the middle of nowhere. Those trains had provided fuel, food, and other supplies and Jack had taken to using them as rendezvous points for their scouts. They’d meet up, everyone would refuel and restock, and then they would roll out again.

Most times they would pause for a day or two, everyone would get a break. Their next spot wasn’t far, only twenty miles. The train could have traveled there much quicker, but they kept the speed down so the advance team could sweep the tracks ahead of them for raiders or anything that the scouts might have missed.

Ten miles an hour was normally sufficient to outpace possessed. It was also easier on the passengers and kept the noise and vibration down enough that people could sleep.

“How did this happen?” Doc Cedeno grunted.

“What do you mean?” Jack asked. Sometimes he wasn’t certain that the professor was entirely in the real world anymore.

“This,” Doc Cedeno waved a hand through the air, “all this. Billions dead… the dead rising, how did it all happen?” The professor looked back at Jack and for a second, his eyes had an odd light. “How have we come to this?!”

Jack spoke slowly and kept his voice level. Luis wasn’t particularly unstable, but everyone on the train had their moments of crazy. That was just a way of life, now. “Doc, you know as much as I do, right? A billion dead Chinese from their civil war gone nuclear. Hundreds of millions more when the Russians and Indians got pulled into it… a few hundred million more North Koreans, and terrorist attacks in New York, Chicago, and Los Angeles.”

They didn’t know they were terrorist attacks. For all that Jack knew, someone in the US government had freaked out and nuked the three cities to stop possessed outbreaks. The results, though, had been plain enough for most people to see. Mass hysteria and a complete breakdown of society. It had been a slow, but steady crumble after that as people didn’t go into work and as undead outbreaks spread. Food and water became matters of survival and those who died from starvation or thirst or disease… well, they rose as undead, too.

No one knew what caused it. It wasn’t a virus or contagion, not that anyone had been able to identify. The dead simply rose, and the undead sought out the living, any living creatures they could find, to kill. The more people who’d died in an area, the faster they rose. In major cities, especially out east, it happened almost instantly. Even in smaller cities, like back in Springfield, it could happen in just seconds.  They called them possessed because that was how the undead acted: as if they were possessed by some malevolent force that drove them until they were destroyed.

The military had been extremely effective at containment at first. The problem was, they used up a lot of supplies. Jack had been there as they started to run out of bullets and fuel. Smart commanders had shifted to using melee weapons and conserving ammunition, but fuel had been the hardest part. Without fuel, units were stuck to moving on foot and they couldn’t power generators. Without power from generators, they’d lost radio contact with other units… and the collapse had continued from there.

Besides, the tiny five point five six millimeter bullets didn’t do much against the undead. Headshots didn’t stop them, you had to destroy the possessed’s ability to move and attack. Grenades, rockets, and explosives worked well. Driving over them with heavy vehicles, crushing them with heavy equipment, that was the best way.

That’s why we’re on a train, Jack reminded himself. Trucks, even tanks, could get stuck in piles of bodies. The train had far more mass, it could carry far more people… but it was also limited in the routes they could take.

“Yes,” Luis Cedeno said after a moment, “you are right. It just seems so… strange. And some of the stranger rumors…”

“What, like the portal to Hell over Chicago?” Jack snorted.

“Exactly that,” Doc Cedeno nodded, his face intent. “And blood raining from the sky in Cincinnati. We all experienced that, Captain.”

Jack scowled, but it was as much for the use of his rank as the reminder about Cincinnati. In his mind, he didn’t deserve the title. Jack didn’t command a company, not anymore. He’d been a combat engineer. He’d fought in wars for his country and he was proud of his service… but he sure as hell didn’t feel worthy of the rank, not anymore.

“There could have been any number of explanations…”

“It was blood, Captain,” Doc Cedeno said, his face intent. “Blood, raining from the sky.”

“Do you want to go back and investigate?” Jack snapped.

“Of course not,” the professor snorted. “I’m just saying that strange things are afoot.”

Jack gave the man a level look, “Doc, there’s millions of possessed undead roaming the countryside. Tell me something I didn’t know.”

***

Preorder now: https://amzn.to/3SS3DJQ

Hell Train Snippet 2

Snippet 2 of Hell Train:

“That shouldn’t have happened,” Hector Chavez growled as the group walked forward along the train cars. They were all more than a little deaf from the noise and the rushing of the wind, but with Hector’s prior hearing loss, Jack was pretty sure anyone in the general vicinity could overhear him. “I checked the lid on their latrine, it was latched open. Someone left it open!”

“I know,” Jack shouted back. The train had picked up speed again and he focused a lot more on his balance as the train cars swayed and the wind buffeted them. He ran a hand across his shaven scalp, still wet from being hosed down. He and his team had stood in the car while the cleanup guys had hosed it out. He wasn’t remotely clean, but at least his clothes were just wet, and not soaked in blood. Jack’s lean face went grim, “Odds are, whoever did it is dead too.”

“Stupid,” Hector snapped. “Not just stupid, lazy! It’s one of the first things we tell people, check to make sure the cover is latched down. Anyone who left it up doesn’t deserve to live!”

Jack couldn’t really argue with the man. Over the past six months, he’d seen all kinds of stupidity and death, often as a shared experience. He’d seen people try to reason with the undead and seen people fail to take even simple precautions that got them killed… He’d seen death on a scale that his mind shied away from.

This wasn’t a plague, it wasn’t a pestilence. It was death that led to more death, it was magic, it was supernatural… and Jack suspected that many of the “stupid” people just wanted to die, to be free of this living nightmare.

He didn’t say that, though, as he came off car one and dropped onto the back deck of Engine Two. It and Engine One provided the main propulsion for the train. They also had Engine Three hooked onto the back end of the train, but that one they only used when they had no other choice, most often to back out of a really bad situation like back in Cincinnati. He shuddered a bit as he remembered that. “Put everyone down to alert status,” Jack shouted up to Josh Wachope.

He stepped into the whisper cab and it was as if he’d stepped into another world. The crew compartment wasn’t big and he suspected he would have thought of it as loud before, but the sound-proofing reduced the constant roar of the engines to a distant rumble.

“How are we looking?” Robert Brockman looked up from the maps spread across the narrow table. He and Tim Kennedy shared the tight space and with the addition of Jack and his armor and weapons, it was suddenly much tighter.

“We lost fifteen adults, two kids,” Jack said as he took off his helmet. The latter number was the only part that really mattered to any of them. People came and went. Jack had seen men and women fall between the railroad cars, dragged down by possessed, and quite a few suicides. Death was a matter of life in their world. Kids though… Kids shouldn’t have to pay for the mistakes of adults.

“Shit, man, sorry,” Tim said. His face was serious, but Jack saw relief there, too. Tim and Robert’s families were both in car one. And if Jack had any family left, they’d be there, too. It was the best defended car besides the hospital car, which was car number two. There were perks to having essential skills to the survival of their group. Car three held the orphans, many of them babies, children found along the way who had no family to care for them. In dangerous times, Jack stationed his best people to protect those three train cars and the engines.

“How about our route?” Jack changed the subject. 

Tim, a former logistician, shifted the map around so Jack could see it, “We heard back from Team Three and Four,” Tim said. He pointed out red x-marks on the map. Jack recognized the two towns that they’d hoped to find crossings at. “The bridge at Hannibal is just gone, explosives or flood, no idea but the tracks just end in open air, they said.” He pointed at the town of Louisiana, Missouri, “The bridge there is some kind of turnstile thing, to allow barge traffic. But somebody left it swinging open. There’s no way across.”

“Power?” Jack asked.

Robert shook his head, “Um, no. There’s no lights on as far as they can see. All of Missouri is dark. Richard Cartwright volunteered to swim across, but Tom told him not to try it.”

Jack nodded at that. Rivers were dangerous. It wasn’t just that the undead didn’t need to breathe, so they’d drag swimmers down. No, there was other stuff in the rivers, too. That was how they’d lost so many people in Cincinnati. They’d moved some across in boats since they hadn’t trusted their makeshift repairs to the bridge.

For just a moment, Jack wasn’t in the engine cab. He was perched on top of a stopped train car, covered in blood and listening to the screams of the children in the car below him as he hacked possessed down. Behind him, men screamed as something dragged them over the sides and into the cold black water below.

The moment passed and Jack wiped a hand across his shaved head. “Okay, so that’s not an option, further north?” That was the problem, Jack knew. He’d looked their maps over just as much as Tim and Robert. The junctions that went through Hannibal and Louisiana didn’t join up with any northern tracks after they crossed the Illinois River, not until after they crossed the Mississippi.

Tim shook his head, “Team Five couldn’t find a way across the Illinois River, not south of Chicago.”

Jack rubbed his face tiredly as he considered that. No one in their right mind wanted to go near any big city. The more people who’d died there, the more undead there would be. Worse, cities seemed to be focal points of whatever weird shit had happened. Things that shouldn’t have happened, like stories of monsters and blood raining from the sky.

Cincinnati, had a population of a few hundred thousand and it had been a nightmare. Chicago had a population in the millions. Jack was in charge, he knew that if he told them to go to Chicago, that his people would do it. And they’d all die if he gave that order… and then whoever survived would still have to cross the Mississippi.

“Okay,” Jack said after a long moment. “Alton or St Louis proper, then?”

“Yeah,” Tim cleared his throat. “Look, I know it’s the least bad of our options, but I can’t say I’m crazy about us going there.”

Jack gave him a level look, “You’re the one who pretty much told me we had no other options.

“Yeah,” Tim nodded. He looked down at the charts. “Yeah, I know. I just wonder if…”

He didn’t need to go on. There were plenty of people on the train who had, at one point or another, expressed a desire to stop, to settle down, fortify, maybe to start anew.

Jack didn’t look at Tim, he looked at Brockman, “How many people in St Louis, Robert?”

The former architect didn’t have to boot up his laptop, they’d already gone over it. “Around three million in the city proper.” They’d pulled every bit of census data, every bit of information they could get their hands on. His laptop and the other backups held that data, five terabytes of maps, encyclopedias, and detailed manuals on everything from sewing to blacksmithing.

“And in Chicago?” Jack asked.

“About ten million,” Robert said.

Jack gave Tim a nod, “There’s a few hundred thousand back in Springfield, I’d guess. We just went through a town, I dunno, twenty thousand I’d guess. That’s how many used to be alive, of course. There’s also the ones crawling out of the graves.”

That was something of an exaggeration. Most of those bodies were too decomposed to rise. But Tim blanched anyway as he thought about it. The undead were drawn to sound and light. Any place they holed up would have to be a fortress… and more and more of the undead would gather every day. They would pile themselves in to fill a moat, they’d pile bodies on top of one another until they scaled a wall. They’d beat on doors and windows until their bones shattered or the barriers did… and then they would kill every living thing they came across.

“We can’t stop here, Tim,” Jack said softly. “There’s too many of them. We’re headed to the only safety we’ll be able to find.”

“That’s assuming the Free States transmission isn’t a hoax or some nut,” Tim growled.

“Yeah,” Jack nodded, “But they’ve had a few other people on, so if they are nuts, there’s at least a few of them together.” The shortwave transmission came on in the evening, and the Free Western States claimed to be survivors who had banded together, a number of enclaves across Utah, Colorado, Wyoming, and Idaho. They said that they held out, that any who came in peace were welcome.

Almost everyone had heard those transmissions and they were how Jack had been able to make the train work. Most survivors they’d come across were only too eager to join them on their journey. Not all, Jack thought as he remembered more than a few holdouts who’d sneered at the very idea. But the ones who had stayed in touch after the train had left, their transmissions had been ones of dwindling supplies, of growing desperation, reports of increasing numbers of undead… and most ended in silence.

Short-wave transmissions from across the east had been going quiet. A big enclave up in Maine had been holding out for months, but they’d gone silent only a few days ago. Jack pointed up at the map of the United States taped to the back wall of the cab. “We hear anything from Chattanooga?”

The town in Tennessee had been a bastion. The combination of mountains and good organization had kept the town in a good state. Many survivors on the eastern coast had headed there and Jack had originally planned to head his train that way… but too many train tracks were out in the Appalachian Mountains. Their scouts hadn’t been able to find a route south through Kentucky, not short of backtracking all the way to Virginia at the least… which had meant he’d had to turn the train north and go through Cincinnati.

Tim looked away, “Nothing.”

“They said they were having some issues with their generator…” Robert started to say.

“That was a week ago. If they haven’t got a replacement and checked in by now…” Jack shrugged. “It doesn’t look good, does it?”

Their policy with their own scouts was that they gave them three days to check in. Anything after a week and they just assumed that they were dead. It didn’t pay to send people to search for them. The scouts had rail cars or trucks with rail wheels that could transit quickly, that should be able to outrun anything that they couldn’t fight.

A city didn’t have that.

“We keep moving,” Jack said. He pointed at the map, “So, tell me about St Louis.”

“Alton is north of the city,” Tim spoke. “Team Two said the bridge is still up, but it’s not a rail bridge, so we’d have to unload the train, move across, and try to find alternate transportation.”

Jack nodded. It wasn’t the best option, it would either leave them entirely on foot in close proximity to millions of undead, or if they got lucky they could put together some kind of convoy on the other side of the river.

“What else?”

“Merchant’s Bridge is up and so is MacArthur,” Robert said, pointing at the two railroad bridges they’d circled on the map. Both of them were at the center of town. “But Team One didn’t get close enough to look at them, not before…”

“Before they died,” Jack finished for him. Sam Robb had led Team One. He’d volunteered to lead his team into St Louis. He and his team had reported clear tracks and seeing both rail bridges still standing. They’d also reported growing numbers of undead… and then a last, panicked call from Sam had ended in screaming.

The train could bull through a few hundred bodies, but Jack didn’t know if it could push through thousands or tens of thousands. If enough bodies clogged the tracks, could they derail the train?

Three million undead, he thought to himself. Yet those three million possessed would come at the sound of the train, anyway. If they had to stop, to move the survivors on foot across the Alton Bridge…

“We need more information,” Jack said. He glanced at Tim, “Call Team Three and Four, have them head back this way. Is Team Two headed back?”

“Yeah,” Robert nodded.

“Have them see if they can get a better picture of things down there. We’re not going to push in, not yet, but we’re going to have to send someone back into St Louis.” Jack frowned and pointed at an antenna symbol drawn on the south side of St Louis, “There’s some survivors there?” He didn’t remember any transmissions from St Louis.

“Some nutjob,” Tim snorted, “Nadal Malik; he calls himself the Lord Regent. He claims he has an army of hundreds and he’ll protect anyone who recognizes his divine stature.”

“Raider?” Jack asked.

“I don’t think so,” Tim frowned. “Sounds more like the strictly delusional type. We’ve never heard anyone else on his radio and he’s pretty sporadic.”

“Doesn’t take much more than a high powered rifle to take someone down. Team One didn’t have time to tell us what went wrong…” Jack thought out loud. “He transmit anything around the time we lost Sam?”

“No,” Tim shook his head.

“Well, keep an ear out. If it was normal survivors, I’d be willing to see if we could get people over there, but…” Jack shrugged. He wasn’t about to risk fighting people they’d need to try to get to someone who sounded crazy and might be dangerous.

Though if I could get him to make some kind of disturbance on the right part of town, Jack thought to himself, and that would sure be convenient… At this point, it didn’t bother him to think of using someone else as a diversion for the undead, especially not when that person was probably already unhinged.

“Okay,” Jack nodded at the others, “I’ve got to go spread the news.” He turned to step out of the cab, but then froze as he saw the small chalk board on the door. The numbers 953 were written on it. He smudged out the last two numbers and corrected it: 936.

As he stepped outside, he told himself that the tears were from the wind stinging his eyes.

***

Preorder now: https://amzn.to/3SS3DJQ