Please welcome Ami Blackwelder as she brings us her book The Mers.
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The Mers: A Mermaid Dystopian
By Ami Blackwelder
Book 1 Mer Chronicles
What lies beneath the surface?
One hundred years from now, the world has changed and brought with it, new forms of life.
Who are the Mers? Who is Mira?
Mira always knew she was different. Growing up with Mers, she never quite fit in. When Mira breaks the rules and takes Niren across the border that divides Ellis Island and New Jersey, a border that divides two vastly different worlds, she thought the journey to find out who she really is would be an easy one.
But as the world in Jersey proves to be a convoluted mix of Aristocrats who hate the Mers, Pirates who want to sell them, and Magi who want to use them...finding her true identity will be a challenge, especially when her best friend Niren is a Mer willing to fight to the death.
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EXCERPT:
Liberty Shore
On the abandoned shores of Ellis
Island, New York, Mira watched the pink horizon blend with subtle tones of grey
and muted purples until the broken sky became an endless abyss of blackness and
countless stars. Even the Statue of Liberty was barely visible anymore. Only a
faint tip of Liberty’s torch stuck out of the brazen waters that had risen
steadily each year for the last one hundred years.
Most of the land masses on Earth were
now covered in water, with exception to mountains, and a few regions that had
been prepared before the Great Deluge. Because scientists warned of the events
that would transpire, the wealthiest of the world built upward upon some of the
existing land to create higher ground level. Manhattan, along with Ellis
island, being some of these coveted regions that the wealthiest did not want to
give up to flooding.
Mira only knew of
a few places still in existence, such as New York, New Jersey, and Washington
state. She heard rumors there were bits of land on Africa, Europe, and Asia,
but she never traveled outside of her home to know for sure. Besides, she would
miss Nerin too much if she ever left, and she had everything she would ever
need right here, right now. Hadn’t she?
Sliding his webbed fingers over Mira’s
left shoulder, Nerin plopped next to her and took a deep breath. Handing her
one of his many paper origami designs, he placed a dove into her open
palm.
“For you. For peace....and overcoming fear.”
Taking in a deep breath, he took pleasure in the smell of the salty sea. The ocean
had captivated him, maybe as much as any young lady in Liberty Shore might
captivate him. But his fixed gaze fell to Mira time and time again, more than
anyone else. Something about her innocence and frankness drew him to her.
“Thanks,” Mira blushed. He always gave her
things.
“I knew I’d find you here,” Nerin glanced in
her direction, his eyes lit up like fire crackers.
“You know me well, I guess,” Mira
blushed, her freckled cheeks reddening as she tilted her head towards him.
Curling her legs underneath her chest, she shivered in the cool breeze and
hugged her legs with arms covered in a maroon sweater. Nerin, enchanted with
her beautiful, cherry-red hair, softly combed his webbed fingers through it.
“What is it about this spot?” Nerin
raised a dark brow above his yellow eyes, untangling his hand from her
hair.
“I don’t know,” she shrugged. “I feel on
the brink of discovery here....like there is something more beyond the
horizon.”
“Yes, more ocean,” he chuckled, the crooked
corner of his lip rose when he laughed.
“Don’t poke fun,” Mira nudged him with a
hard elbow, “Besides, this place is important to your...you too.” She almost
said, “your kind, too,” but remembered she didn’t want to make that distinction
yet. Others noticed her differences. She saw her differences. But no one said
anything out loud.
“Yes...” Nerin rolled his neck back in
thought; his shining, yellow eyes matched the stars radiance in the darkened
purple sky. Mira never got over the fact that his eyes, everyone’s eyes, glowed
yellow. Why hadn’t hers? “A lot of history here. It’s not called Liberty Shore
for nothing. My parents told me this is the one place where Mers can live
freely.”
Mira sighed, the mention of the word
Mers always nearly brought her to tears. As if they somehow did not belong to
the human race. As if their unique features existed only to remind the human
world of the abominations of God. Why were there such class distinctions?
After all, it wasn’t their fault the flood had happened.
One hundred years ago, humans began to
reap what they had sewn. The Earth fought back with vengeance. Water saturated
the planet in what had been dubbed the Great Deluge. Much of the land on Earth
vanished underneath the seas. Many humans died, but those who survived became
divided.
The human Epigenome began to adapt, more
quickly than anyone realized. Within decades, new features began sprouting up
on a number of babies, but not all babies shared these characteristics. A new
class had been born and separated, exiled as others called it, but it didn’t
matter the name given. The treatment and the result were the same. Humans did
not want to intermix with this new breed....a breed dubbed “the Mers.” The more
strange Mer features became, the more discriminating the human laws became.
“Have you ever
even seen the outside world?” Fixing the falling sleeve from her shoulder, Mira
met Nerin with those grey-blue eyes that pierced into his heart. She could say
a thousand words with only a look. She had that look now as though she searched
the deepest parts of his soul for answers.
“The out...side
world?” The words caught in his throat. He had been to the border where Ellis
Island met Jersey but no further. “Uh...no, not really. Why, you plan on
going?” His expression cast a shadow of dread over her.
“I...don’t know,”
she shrugged again, pretending she hadn’t thought about it or planned it over
and over again in her mind. How she would sneak off in the middle of the night
and peak, only peak, over the border line and, if no one was around, how she
would high-tail it into the forbidden city. Sure, she might get dirty and
acquire a few scrapes. Maybe even have a few hungry and homeless nights. But
what she would find would surely be greater than she could imagine.
“You want to go. I
know you, Mira. You can’t shrug and pretend. I see the longing in your eyes.
You can’t hide from me.” And she couldn’t. Nerin had been her best friend
for ten years. Ever since she had turned seven.
Remembering how he
met her, Nerin saw her standing by the tide, lapping over her bare toes.
Fiddling with her damp dress, she splashed up water with each jump. Giggles
puffed her cheeks and her cherry-red hair caught his attention. No one on
Liberty Shore looked like her. He wanted one kiss.
Tip-toeing up
behind her, Mira’s attention was focused on the salty sea. When Nerin stepped
one foot behind her, he tapped her shoulder, causing her to flip around to
greet him for the first time face-to-face. Puckering his lips, he waited for his
kiss. His toes balanced, teetering as he extended his form forward.
Slapping her hand
across his cheek, Mira’s cheeks turned blood red while Nerin’s face blushed
pink. Surprised, Nerin stumbled backward while keeping his stark yellow pupils
focused on her. Mira’s face bunched up like an animal warding off enemies. But
as Nerin retreated, he felt sure in each step that he would see her
again.
Lifting from his
memory, Nerin fixed his attention on the Mira who now sat next to him...ten
years older.
“I don’t want to talk about this,” Mira changed her mind.
The truth was always too much for her to bear. What could she tell him? She
wanted to break Mer law and jump ship? Well, it was more of a harbor of water
with interspersed boat homes. There were a few walkways made of wood tied from
pole to pole to keep them above the water, but still. Further, it would break
human law and no Mer wanted the wrath of the Aristo City Hall, the highest
branch of human government since the Great Deluge.
The notion of Mira
leaving him, of risking her life, or putting the lives of Mers in danger all
because of her curiosities left Nerin nervous and angry. Dusting her hands off
against her faded jeans, she played with a hole in them that had formed over
her knee, hoping to avoid another conversation about the outside world. But
Nerin turned his whole body toward her; his hand tightly gripped her forearm.
“You DON’T want to
go outside,” his voice rose, and he pressed his face closer. Shimmering yellow
eyes scanned her delicate facial features, revealing his distress.
“You don’t know
what I want,” Mira yanked her arm away and stood with a huff.
“I do. I heard
every word. You-want-to-cross-into-forbidden-land!” He said it like he
discussed the plague. “And risk all our lives!”
“I...I...,” she
couldn’t think of anything to convince him of her reasoning. Mers were taught
all their lives that crossing into human land is punishable. That it would draw
danger to them. He would never understand.
Her eyes glanced
at Nerin’s shocked expression, and then she knew she could say no more.
Instantly, she was remorseful, “I’m sorry, I don’t know what I’m saying.”
Extending her hand to him, he slapped his palm against hers and pulled him up.
His anger had diminished at her touch and the mini-feud forgiven. He could
never stay mad at Mira for long.
Walking away from
the shore, where the ocean crested some of the scarce and coveted land, Mira
and Nerin walked hand-in-hand. Not because they were boyfriend and girlfriend,
though both had thought about it more than once, but because Mer tradition
permeated Ellis Island -Liberty Shore-; friends always walked hand-in-hand.
Liberty Shore, as
the Mers called it, had been Mira’s home for as far back as she could remember,
and it covered Ellis Island and part of New York. But lately, she kept having
memories of a different life. The kind of life where humans took care of her.
Not surprising, after all, she didn’t look like a Mer. She didn’t have webbed
feet or webbed thighs. She didn’t have gills underneath her lungs. Heck, she
couldn’t even swim that well!
She had known for
a while she wasn’t a Mer, but she would never tell that to her father or
mother. After all, she wouldn’t want to break their heart. They raised her and
told her, despite what she looked like on the outside, she was Mer in her heart
through-and-through, and that was all that mattered.
The Mers, despite
their aquatic features, always had something the human race envied: beauty.
Despite the grotesque webbing of Mer fingers, toes, and inner-thighs, what made
any high-class human jealous were the striking eyes, wavy hair, and creamy
complexions. The human’s jealousy was so intense they did not care if a Mer was
killed for their attributes. And some Mers were. They were hunted like
fish to be sold to the highest bidder as prized possessions. Like slavery long
ago, when humans looked at Mers, what they saw was property and commodity.
The worst of these humans...Pirates.
The practice,
though outlawed, still existed among the Pirate circles. The Pirates stole what
they could to survive. Capturing and selling a Mer brought in plenty of money
but only if the Mer features were at their best. To achieve this, experience
had taught Pirates to keep the Mers alive in coffins of water aboard their
ships, until they could be sold.
However, Pirates
were far from Mira’s and Nerin’s mind. After scurrying around a few ponds and
leaping over puddles like frogs, Mira and Nerin raced across the sporadic spots
of soil. They ran as they did when they were children, racing through the
neighborhood after school, only slowing when approaching her home. Mira always
had the advantage in running as Nerin’s webbed feet were more suited for
swimming.
“You look so funny
in that thing,” Mira pointed at the wavy movements of his kilt.
“What else could I
wear? Pants?!” Niren jested, a tug at his inner legs, catching the webbing of
his thighs. The webbing that extended from his upper inner leg to several
inches above the knee reminded Mira that pants with their inner seams would not
fit Mers. She had grown used to Mers walking around with kilts instead of
pants, but the sight of Nerin in one always made her blush.
“Maybe a long
tunic?” Mira teased, and Niren rolled his eyes.
A minuscule,
three-roomed shack made of wood hung high on thick stilts. What humans would
call a combined living/kitchen area and two bedrooms, the Mers called a litch
and two sleepers. Mers didn’t need homes as much as humans did. They spent most
of their time in the ocean. When they spent too many days out of water, Mer
skin began to shrivel and dry like a snake shedding layers of skin, the sight
not often pretty.
Home really meant
a place to eat and sleep, and other than those two activities, Mers rarely
stayed inside. As bedtime approached, Mira rushed up the cracking wooden steps
and swung the door open. Niren waved good-bye after her retreating form and
leapt off the steps into the puddles draining from underneath her house; a
house, like many others, that harbored puddles...a result of the Great Deluge.
If not for the stilts lifting the shack, the home would be submerged in salty
water.
Entering her home,
Mira’s eyes gazed over the wooden furniture. Most furniture had to be of wood
because the factories were destroyed in the flood and left little capability to
make anything else. But what Mers lacked in material, they made up for in
artistry. Hand-carved flowers and geometric shapes decorated most pieces.
Mira’s father and
mother, otherwise known as Zale and Marina, sat in the litch, relaxing in a set
of wooden rocking chairs that surrounded the table. They rocked back and forth,
making the hand-carved tulips on the arms of the rocking chair appear to blow
in wind. Mira’s father kept a close eye on her as she strolled inside, hoping
they wouldn’t notice she was late...again.
“What?” Mira’s
guilt gave her away, and she threw her arms up, fingers fanning.
“You know I expect
you home before dark. No telling what kind of dangers you might run into out
there.” Crossing his arms over his chest, her father stood. A strong man with
muscles carved from years of hard, outside labor. No stubble grew over his
pointy chin as Mers didn’t have body hair over their soft, luminescent skin.
Like most Mers, he remained shoeless. They preferred to travel over land
on webbed feet, for the thick layers of extra skin provided comfort like a
shoe.
“I...,” she didn’t
want to fight, and she had recently learned in school all of the real reasons
for danger, but she had to stand her ground. After all, she was notorious on
Liberty Shore for her out-spoken personality. “I wanted to see the sunset on
shore. Is that so wrong?” She innocently batted her long lashes, a habit she
couldn’t help. Being the only one in Liberty Shore with long lashes, legs, real
toes and fingers, the Mers thought of her as an angel. The young Mers anyway,
the older Mers knew better. They’d seen war between humans and their kind.
They’d seen how fiendish humans could be.
But the brutal
history that led to Liberty Shore, wasn’t taught to Mers in school until they
turned seventeen. This violent history is what Mira and Niren now
understood. Until seventeen, the Mers lived in a bubble of ignorance.
They were only warned to come home before dark. The reasons extended as
far as, “because I told you so,” or “because it’s dangerous,” but rarely did
parents talk about the real reasons.
“Yes, it’s wrong
when you know good and well that we expect you back before dark and especially
since learning about all the atrocities our Mer ancestors had to endure at the
hands of humans and Pirates. I would think school would have scared you
straight.”
“I...” What could
she say? I’m not a Mer. “I’m sorry. I won’t stay out late again.” But both she
and her parents knew she would. Something on the edge of the horizon, between
Liberty Shore and New Jersey, beckoned to her, like a taunting ghost calling to
her night and day. Too many unanswered questions left her restless.
She quickly fell
asleep after she flopped on her small, quilted cot. It was not very large, not
a king-sized or queen-sized bed, but more of a twin-sized bed. And all hers.
How could she complain, no Mers slept in anything larger than two yards of
space. Space was an expensive commodity with land so scarce. Somewhere in the
middle of her dreams, she awoke.
A “who-who” sprung
from the mouth of the owl perched on the lone, naked tree outside of her
stained window. Midnight, a sliver of moon reflected silver light over the tree
like the delicate veil to a wedding dress. She couldn’t take her eyes off the
spotted owl that wore his feathers like a wise man wears his beard. Each
sound he made posed a question to her. “Who-who,” the owl sang again and she
flung her legs off the cot with a huff and pressed her pudgy nose to the
window, “who-who.”
“What?!”
“Who-who.”
“Yes,” she sighed
with a set of hands to her hips, “I want to know w-h-o I am too.” With that,
the owl flew away and disappeared into the black abyss of sky.
About The Author:
Ami
Blackwelder is a forbidden romance writer in the paranormal, scifi, and
historical genres. Growing up in Florida, she went to UCf and in 1997 received
her BA in English and teaching credentials. She travelled overseas to teach in
Thailand, Nepal, Tibet, China and Korea. Thailand is considered her second home
now. She has always loved writing and wrote poems and short stores since
childhood; however, her novels began when she was in Thailand. She also wrote
three nonfiction spiritual books at this time.
Achievements:
In
university, having won the Best Fiction Award from the University of Central
Florida (Yes, The Blair Witch Project University;), her fiction From Joy We
Come, Unto Joy We Return was published in the on campus literary magazine:
Cypress Dome and remains to this day in University libraries around the
country. Later, she achieved the Semi-Finals in a Laurel Hemingway contest and
published a few poems in the Thailand’s Expat magazine, and an article in the
Thailand’s People newspaper. Additionally, she has published poetry in the
Korea’s AIM magazine, the American Poetic Monthly magazine and Twisted Dreams
Magazine.
2 comments:
I would love to read this book! Thansk for hosting :)
amber.hrkns at gmail dot com
Amber, I loved Ami's books. She definitely has a great style on her writing. I completely love it. Hope you do too!
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