It begins with a fading odor and darkness. Lights out, dark as night. Outside the college building, there are flames, lumps of metal and flesh, and no one moving. When Asher finds his car, he's surprised it works and he drives aimlessly, trying in vain for a radio station, any sign of life. Recove
Night Scenery
โ Scribed by Emery C. Walters
- Book ID
- 110899917
- Publisher
- JMS Books LLC
- Year
- 2019
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 62 KB
- Category
- Fiction
- ISBN-13
- 9781646561520
- ASIN
- B081FGP7LL
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
It begins with a fading odor and darkness. Lights out, dark as night. Outside the college building, there are flames, lumps of metal and flesh, and no one moving. When Asher finds his car, he's surprised it works and he drives aimlessly, trying in vain for a radio station, any sign of life.
Recovering his wits, he parks at a truck stop and loads up with things that might be useful. In the dark, someone runs into him and urges him to flee. The thought of maybe having to repopulate the world doesn't appeal to either of them โ Asher is gay, and Sandy isn't sure what she/he/they are.
Sandy knows a place they might hole up while the world dies around them. It's a cabin that belongs to a friend who might be there.
Sandy's friend Wade turns up the next day when there's light, again. Are Wade and Sandy an item or just friends? Asher feels like odd man out, but survival is their first priority. Can relationships be sorted out, later?
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
In this paper we give a counterexample to a conjecture mentioned in Benw ลฝ .x jamini and Kesten J. d'Anal. Math., 69, 97แ135 1996 about distinguishing sceneries by observing them along a simple random walk, giving an explicit construction of 2 / 0 sceneries that are all pairwise indistinguishable.
A man goes to see a therapist to deal with a problem: He thinks that he and everyone he knows are merely actors in a play. The story is written in the form of a one-act play.
A man goes to see a therapist to deal with a problem: He thinks that he and everyone he knows are merely actors in a play. The story is written in the form of a one-act play.