From this morning’s revisions of This Plague of Days.
It seemed it was already too late for most cities. However, many small towns that had survived the plague by brutally defending their borders, shooting trespassers and discouraging strangers. Successful survivors rooted out contagion and walled it off quickly, staying apart from the infected and shooting anyone who would compromise their security. That’s why the hospitals were dead. They took people in. The VA hospital on his own base had become a death house before word of the plague had spread through the forts’s hometown of Helena.
Similarly but on a grander scale of destruction, Carron knew San Francisco had been forced to billet soldiers returning from the Middle East when all the troops were recalled. San Francisco had fallen first and fastest than any American city for that reason. Citizens had welcomed the veterans (some of whom already had Sutr before they deployed from the ships) and so everyone died of compassion. San Francisco had been too kind to survive the New World.
From the safety of a military bunker in Montana, Lieutenant Carron had read the reports, watched the world fall, and passed the incoming intelligence reports to his superiors until his superiors fell sick, too. Some lived through Sutr’s fevers. Most died. Lieutenant Francis Carron didn’t so much as catch a cold and he would not give a sliver of compassion the chance to infect him.
Related articles
- San Francisco fire lieutenant makes $221,000 in OT due to understaffing (foxnews.com)
- Here’s How Long it Will Take You to Find an Apartment in San Francisco (blogs.sfweekly.com)
- Understaffed San Francisco firefighters rake in OT (mysanantonio.com)
- SF’s ‘Hippie Hill’ Pot Rally Attendees Leave Massive Mess (nationalreview.com)
- Photos of the trip to the San Francisco VA Hospital (elkemurphy.wordpress.com)
- The Blissful Adventure in San Francisco; It’s a Wrap (angelinem.wordpress.com)