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Metrofloat New York Book Tour & Giveaway – Luv Saving Money

Metrofloat New York Book Tour & Giveaway

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Metrofloat New York by William Quincy Belle Genre: Science Fiction

A Post-apocalyptic Sci-Fi thriller. Several hundred years in the future, Earth is a different planet. Antigravity has been invented and “flying” has given way to “floating”: giant platforms with cities remain above the growing surface temperatures as enclaves of the privileged. A global pandemic has wiped out 80% of those on the ground, and a virulent, flesh-eating disease, necrofasc, has left most with artificial body parts. Insects are the main food staple. A utopia for some, a dystopia for others. Metrofloat New York, a futuristic city of thirty million, is run by an oligarchy of five rich and powerful people. An unknown assassin, working from within the system, attempts to seize control and declare himself dictator by methodically removing all rivals. Detective Matthew Heart of the Metropolitan Police must deal with his partner, a cyborg policewoman, his unofficial family, a transgender woman and her one-legged daughter, and a mysterious assailant bent on taking over the world by killing anyone who stands in his way. Goodreads * Amazon

William Quincy Belle is just a guy. Nobody famous; nobody rich; just some guy who likes to periodically add his two cents worth with the hope, accounting for inflation, that $0.02 is not over evaluating his contribution. He claims that at the heart of the writing process is some sort of (psychotic) urge to put it down on paper and likes to recite the following, which so far he hasn’t been able to attribute to anyone: “A writer is an egomaniac with low self-esteem.” You will find Mr. Belle’s unbridled stream of consciousness floating around in cyberspace. Website * Twitter * Bookbub * Amazon * Goodreads

Prologue
The stars were out. The air was fresh. From the fiftieth-floor terrace, the muted sounds of the city
were a dull roar. Willard Bachmann, balding but commanding in his sixty-fourth year, moved
along the balustrade, sipping an arti-sour and staring at the vista before him: to the one side, the
skyline of one of Earth’s largest floating metropolises — Metrofloat New York — and to the
other, a kilometer below, vast desert plains ending in the silhouette of a distant mountain range.
It was all his. He controlled it. He ruled it.
Years of hard work, important decisions, and backroom dealings had amassed for him an
unprecedented amount of power and influence. The OligCouncil was no longer something he
could lead; it was something he could commandeer and rule. He could bend it to his will. He
could possess it and do with it what he wanted.
This was his opportunity. Instead of going through the never-ending and often useless
democratic process of consensus, he could force his will on everyone. There was no campaigning
for buy-in. There was no vote for agreement. Everyone had to do as he said. Period. Dictatorship:
the fast and easy way to get things done. Willard chuckled to himself. The word had such a
negative connotation. He would say enlightened absolutism or philosophical monarchism. He
was taking it upon himself to bring people together, to get them to pull in the same direction, and
remove the self-interest and deindividuation plaguing society.
Willard put one hand on the railing and leaned out over the dizzying height. He held up
his glass toward the city panorama and said, “To you. Together we will be great once again.” He
took the last sip of his drink then turned and walked across the balcony. Slipping through the
open door, he waved his hand over a sensor to close it. Tomorrow would be a busy day; he
needed to sleep.
He sauntered across a sizable living area to an open kitchen and set down his glass. As
Willard turned toward the bedroom, a movement caught his eye. He looked across the expanse of
floor to the windows facing the terrace. The edge of a curtain fluttered. The door leading to the
balcony was open — the door he had shut moments ago.
Willard crept around the kitchen island into the living room. He skirted a decorative
shelving unit and moved into the corner, his work area. Opening a drawer of his desk, he
removed a pulsed energy pistol. The charge indicator showed eighty percent.
He held the gun up at arm’s length and scanned the room for any movement. Nothing. He
grasped the handle of a Japanese samurai sword displayed on the wall, slid it out of its case, and
moved from behind the desk.
Willard swept the area and looked behind various pieces of furniture. He held his breath
and listened. From somewhere came the hum of machinery, electricity, and background noises
typical of any building in the city, but nothing else.
To the left, the floor creaked. Willard whirled and fired. There was a thump followed by
the crackling of a fireball against the wall. Nothing was there. Willard glanced left and right,
waving the gun in preparation for a second shot. His ears became accustomed to the silence and
he remained still, listening for breathing, the shuffle of a foot, anything. There was nothing but
silence. Was anybody there? The door was open, but he had shut it. He was sure of it. Since this
was the fiftieth floor, whoever came in from the terrace had chosen an unorthodox way of
dropping in unannounced.
Willard checked the other half of the room, walking to the far end of the couch and

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Section: 1 Metrofloat New York
looking behind it. Nothing.
A tiny noise came from his work area in the corner. Turning, he pointed the pistol in that
direction, but it was difficult to see in the subdued light. He could feel his heart beating.
Someone was here. Someone was waiting for the right moment.
As he stared into the corner, trying to discern any movement, something registered in his
peripheral vision. But it was too late. A hand grabbed the gun and twisted forward while another
grabbed his forearm and twisted backward. Willard had tensed his finger and the pistol fired at
the couch, scorching the fabric.
The gun wrenched from his hand, Willard turned toward his attacker and swung the
sword in an arc over his shoulder. The blade hit the upper arm of the attacker with a thud and
buried itself deep in the limb. There was no blood. Willard’s eyes widened as he realized he had
not cut into human flesh.
The assailant tossed the pistol to one side and seized the blade, pulling upward to remove
it from his arm, then back to yank the handle out of Willard’s hand. He tossed the sword aside,
and it jangled against the floor. Willard leaped and kicked the intruder in the stomach, causing
the assailant to lose his balance and fall backward. Willard dove for the pistol, twisted around,
and took aim. There was no sign of his attacker.
He jumped up and ran back to the couch. Seeing nothing, he spun around, checking all
three hundred and sixty degrees around him. His heart was racing, his breathing hard. The
adrenaline had kicked in, and both Willard’s hands shook as he tried to steady the gun.
“Mr. Bachmann.” The male voice was sonorous.
Willard spun toward the sound and fired. He saw part of the man’s head as he ducked
behind a bookcase, just before the fireball shattered a crystal vase.
“Mr. Bachmann,” the voice said, “you’re making this far too difficult.”
Willard moved toward the bookshelf, holding the pistol up with both hands.
“You must face the inevitable. We all have our time, and you, sir, have had yours.”
Willard crouched down, trying to see between the open shelves.
“This can be painless, or it can be painful.”
Willard aimed between two shelves, over the top of a line of books. His hands were
shaking, and his aim was off. The charge sputtered against the spines and a wisp of smoke curled
up.
He ran to the side of the bookcase and spun around behind it, yet saw no one. Wondering
what to do next, Willard heard a step to his right. He fired. The discharge sizzled in the middle of
the man’s chest and singed his shirt. It did not stop him.
The attacker grabbed Willard’s right arm at the wrist, held it over his head, then seized
him by the throat and squeezed.
“Please drop the gun, Mr. Bachmann.”
The two men held each other’s gaze until Willard let go of the pistol, which fell to the
floor with a clatter.
“Thank you.” The attacker pushed Willard across the room into a straight-backed chair.
He snapped restraining devices in place, locking each wrist to an arm of the chair.
Willard looked at his adversary’s arm but could no longer see the cut from the sword.
“Auto-regen. I’ve heard of it but didn’t think it had yet been perfected for the market.”
“If you know the right people and have the money, anything is possible.” The man
uncoupled a tubular device from his belt and fiddled with the controls.
“Do I get a cigarette? A last meal? A final request?”

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Section: 1 Metrofloat New York
“This won’t hurt, Mr. Bachmann. Well, I’ve been given to understand it doesn’t hurt, but
does anybody know for sure?”
Willard gave a warped smile. “Nobody who’s undergone the procedure has ever
complained. Then again, they’re too dead to speak up.”
His opponent leaned over and pressed the device to Willard’s forehead.
“Stop!”
Straightening, the man looked at him. “Yes?”
“I don’t suppose anything I say will persuade you not to do this?”
“I’m afraid not.”
“Money? Power? A job in my organization?”
“Please, Mr. Bachmann, my motives are of a higher calling.”
“Ah, yes, a true believer.”
“I am merely a reflection of your beliefs.”
Willard gave a sigh of resignation. “I wanted to sweep away the past and bring everyone
together: the vision of a harmonious future.”
“That’s your future, sir. That’s your vision. It’s harmonious in that people accept you on
top with everything and everybody else at the bottom, having just enough to get by.”
“Harmony brings something for everyone. There will be inequities in life. However, the
fighting that results from people not accepting that truth is the problem. Do you want war? Do
you want continued conflicts between various groups vying for authority? Stopping me won’t
stop the system. Society is hierarchical. You can’t escape it.”
Willard gave his foe a pleading look.
“Let us begin,” the man said.
Willard sat up straight and shut his eyes in resignation. “Okay.”
The man again leaned in and put one end of the tube against Willard’s forehead. He
pushed a button and the device hummed. A readout on one side counted out a percentage,
starting at zero. The man looked around the room and, from time to time, glanced at the meter.
When the number hit ninety-five he stared at the results, keeping his thumb poised over a switch.
The meter hit one hundred percent.
“Goodbye, Mr. Bachmann.” The stranger pressed the button and kept the device held
against Willard’s forehead. There was a crunch followed by a slurping sound. Willard spasmed,
all his limbs shaking at once. The man watched a long glass container within the device fill up
with a viscous fluid. The counter showed a percentage once again, and when it hit one hundred
the man removed the device, exposing a hole the width of an index finger in Willard’s forehead.
The spasms stopped and Willard became limp, his head slumping forward onto his chest.
The man recoupled the device to his belt and removed the restraints from Willard’s
wrists. He picked him up and crossed the living area, stepping sideways through the door, with
the body lengthwise, onto the terrace. The man followed the balustrade to the far side
overlooking the plains. He looked over the rail. The building was right on the edge of the
metrofloat: the perfect spot.
He lifted Willard up over the railing and let go before leaning over to watch as the body
fell past fifty stories and disappeared into the blackness. With the city floating at an altitude of
one kilometer, it would take Willard’s body approximately fifteen seconds to hit the ground.


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Section: 1 Metrofloat New York
Alan and Terry were skinny enough to slip through the security perimeter into the antigravity
zone. Already, they heard the pounding of the AG machines. Workers in the area often wore ear
protection, as the constant noise could damage their hearing, but when one is young and foolish,
protection is for wimps. They climbed down to the lowest scaffolding and looked out over the
panorama below. The ground was a good kilometer down, speckled with the twinkling lights of
the settlement. Each light was a potential target for a jump-and-grab, so tonight looked to be an
excellent opportunity.
Rumors had been circulating around the high school for over a year about thrill seekers
doing the unthinkable: bungee jumping from the metrofloat. Alan and Terry had pooled their
money and bought the latest in equipment, including a controllable elasticized cable, a double
safety ankle harness, and a precision-positioning system with automatic height detection. The
flexible anchor allowed them to set up the bungee in any location in record time, so they could
get in, jump, and get out before the authorities knew they were violating restricted areas.
In the last few months, they had brought along groupies of the informal thrill seekers
club, and because of those witnesses, the two of them had become underground heroes. Who in
their right mind would do such a thing? Tangible proof was good for their reputation, so they
brought things up from their jumps. Over open land, they returned with a rock or a plant, but the
real fun was over settled areas. So far, they had taken pieces of clothing drying on lines, things
on outdoor tables, and toys and tools left out. Tonight they wanted to go an extra step and steal a
village marker. The other items could come from anywhere, but a sign showing the name of the
community would prove they had jumped over a settlement. By using the max extension on the
cable, they hoped to remain down long enough to use their tools to unfasten a sign from its
support.
Alan would make the first attempt. He had decked himself by attaching various tools to
his belt and wearing a helmet with a lamp. He had double-checked his ankle connectors and
made sure the safety harness was in place. Terry gave him the once-over, enumerating each item
out loud so they both knew they had checked everything. Alan climbed over the railing and held
on as Terry fed out the cable so it was free and clear of the scaffolding.
Quivering with excitement, Alan looked over at his friend. Terry grinned and gave him a
thumbs-up. Alan turned back to the open space, took a deep breath, and spread his arms out. He
bent his knees, then pushed off into a swan dive.
Alan had ten seconds of free fall before the cable slowed his descent. Ten seconds of
weightlessness as the wind whistled by his head. It was peaceful. And surreal. It wasn’t every
day somebody jumped from a height of a thousand meters.
Looking toward the ground when he jumped, Alan twisted as he now fell, upside down,
and brought his head up to look off into the distance. The light from his helmet flashed on
something. He swept his head back and forth until the object was again visible. There was a
human body three meters from him, falling at the same rate. It tumbled in the air. Judging by the
looseness of the limbs, Alan guessed the person was unconscious. Or dead. Wouldn’t somebody
falling to their death be thrashing about?
He looked toward the ground. The lights were coming up, and he felt the cable tense to
reduce the speed of his descent. Alan looked back at the body, which continued to fall at a steady
rate and was moving away. He bent his head up so he could follow its path. There was a crash
followed by a thump. Holy crap! he thought. This was unexpected. They had better get the hell
out of there.

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Section: 1 Metrofloat New York
Alan slowed to a stop, hanging upside down two meters from the ground. He fumbled with the
controller, pressing the button to ascend. The mechanism set into motion, pulling him up. He
looked back down and saw, in the semi-darkness, a hole in the roof of a nearby building. What
the hell was going on?

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Author: Angie

Mom, blogger, social media influencer, healthcare worker

3 thoughts on “Metrofloat New York Book Tour & Giveaway”

  1. Thank you for your interest and taking the time to participate.

    Being an indie author is an uphill struggle.

    According to Wikipedia, there are 2.2 million new books published each year, 300,000 in the U.S., 150,000 in the United Kingdom, 20,000 in Canada. The book review section of The Washington Post states they get 150 new titles each day. Each day! What are the chances of anyone getting noticed? Even if somebody has written the next classic, there’s the harsh reality of statistics. Having the public choose any particular book out of the annual American field of 300,000 strikes me as being the equivalent of winning the literary lottery. Congratulations, E. L. James: over 70 million copies of the 50 Shades of Grey trilogy sold.

    By the way, the above is about new books published each year. According to Google, there are over 150 million books in existence! Literary lottery, indeed!

    There’s a lot of junk out there, which means the public is leery of investing their time in anything unknown. Who wants the literary equivalent of bad movie? “I want two hours of my life back.” Cheers to the risk-takers who brought E. L. James to the forefront.

    Thanks again for spreading the word.

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