Books by Eric Douglas

Thriller fiction and Non-fiction

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    • Held Hostage: Search for the Juncal
    • Water Crisis: Day Zero
    • Turks and Chaos: Hostile Waters
    • The 3rd Key: Sharks in the Water
    • Oil and Water: Crash in Curacao
    • Return to Cayman: Paradise Held Hostage
    • Heart of the Maya: Murder for the Gods
    • Wreck of the Huron: Cuban Secrets
    • Guardians’ Keep: Mystery below the Adriatic
    • Flooding Hollywood: Fanatics at the Dam
    • Cayman Cowboys: Reefs Under Pressure
  • Withrow Key
    • Lyin’ Fish
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    • For Cheap Lobster
    • Heart Survivor: Recovery After Heart Surgery
    • Oral History
      • Batter Up!
      • Memories of the Valley
      • WV Voices of War / Common Valor
      • Capturing Memories: How to Record Oral Histories
    • Dive-abled: The Leo Morales Story
    • Keep on, Keepin’ On: A Breast Cancer Story
    • WV Voices of War / Common Valor
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    • Scuba Diving Safety
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    • Sea Turtle Rescue and Other Stories
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You are here: Home / Archives for New Releases

Catching a Flight

February 27, 2019 By Eric Douglas

By Eric Douglas

Nathan Scott slid into his lightweight dive gear and prepared to explore a new site in the sunken city. His father was a photojournalist and his mother an archeologist, so this work came naturally to him. He had been diving and exploring ancient ruins since he was a boy. Now, he was the archeologist and was leading his own team.

For this dive, Nathan wanted to see how things had changed since the sea had taken over and an earthquake had further dropped the ground below. They used cutting-edge laser mapping gear to map the location.

Simply swimming over the dive site would give them a 3-D model of the entire area.

With a nod from the members of his team, each diver backrolled into the warm saltwater and descended to the bottom. The site was relatively shallow — only 30 feet deep. Just a few miles away, the bottom dropped off quickly, with depths measured in miles, but that was a dead zone.

Swimming nearly unencumbered by his dive gear, Nathan thought back to his dad’s gear and laughed to himself. That stuff was ancient. It all belonged to museums now. Nathan’s dad had died a few years before, but his mom was still alive. At 100-years-old, she loved to tell stories of their adventures together and relive them like it was yesterday.

Nathan caught sight of the building he planned to survey. The architecture was considered “space-age” at the time. That brought another laugh. Now that space travel was common, he realized the science fiction writers and architectural dreamers had it pretty close. The buildings on Mars looked like what he saw in front of him. Minus the corals, of course. The main structure had looked like an ancient satellite with four long legs coming down at angles and crossing at the top in two massive bows. Underneath that structure rose a single pedestal that flared out, connecting to the legs. Storms had knocked the pedestal sideways dropping the main building to the sea floor now.

Approaching the remnants of the building, Nathan could tell a few glass windows had survived the fall,

but other than that it was completely open to the sea. In the shadow of the building, Nathan turned on his underwater light to get a look inside. The water had risen slowly, but inexorably, so the

people who worked in the building had time to remove everything. All that was left was furniture that couldn’t be moved easily and the walls of the building itself. He knew there was nothing of value there, which is probably why it had been left alone all these years.

Sweeping his light to the side, Nathan saw a shadow move. There was something there. But what? There were no sharks left in this part of the ocean. Whatever it was, it was big, though. Bigger than him, big.

Nathan moved inside the building. He needed to see what was there. Whatever it was, the thing kept moving just out of his vision. He kicked further inside. The odd angles of the floor and the walls, with the structure lying on its side, were disorienting.

What was in there? Was it just his imagination? Moving into the cavernous room, Nathan stayed away from the walls. He didn’t want to get backed into a corner. Swinging his light to his right to look around a partition, his heart almost stopped. He had heard stories, but he almost didn’t believe what he saw. The flowing fins and spines radiating from the fish’s body identified it immediately. A lionfish. But this one was as big as a lion. It had to weigh 400 pounds. When Nathan was a kid learning to dive, lionfish weighed a few pounds and the sting caused excruciating pain. Today, he heard their sting was just as painful, but almost certainly deadly.

The fish advanced toward him, stalking him like prey, and Nathan backpedaled quickly. The fish’s spines were as long as he was tall and could deliver enough ichthyotoxic venom to paralyze him on the spot. Lionfish were known to be fearless and aggressive hunters. There wasn’t much left in the ocean that could challenge them these days.

Lionfish hunted by moving close to their prey and then darting forward, lowering their flat lower jaws, and sucking prey into their mouths. If this lionfish got too close, Nathan wasn’t sure there was much he could do. Swimming backward, Nathan crashed into something hard. He managed to run into one of the few remaining glass windows. His reflection in the glass showed him that the huge fish had closed on him.

Nathan raised his light and smashed the window, diving through the falling shards of glass. As he did, he felt a pull against his legs. He grabbed the window frame and pulled himself the rest of the way through the opening just in time. The lionfish’s mouth clamped down on his foot and pulled one of his fins loose.

Fortunately, it was too big to fit through the window opening.

He was safe.

Making his way back to the boat was slow going with only one fin, but that was fine. He needed time to reflect on what he saw. The changes to the world he knew, within the span of his lifetime, were unsettling.

Exploring a landmark he had visited many times before brought the situation home for him.

On the way, he swam over the most famous landmark from the area they were surveying. The A and the X in the famous sign nearly reached the surface, but the L had fallen. All three statues were completely covered in coral growth.

LAX.

He remembered catching a flight there with his dad as they were headed off on some adventure when he was just a kid.

Visit the Free Short Fiction page for more stories.

About the original publication

Original title: Swimming Over the Future

Life Plus 2 Meters edited by David Zetland — 1st ed.

Summary: “This edited volume — the second in a series — presents 34 visions by 34 authors of how we might (not) adapt to life in a climate changed world where sea levels are 2 meters higher, weather patterns have shifted, storms have grown stronger, food systems are strained, and so on. These visions take place in the future, but they are anchored in our present.”

Filed Under: Books, Diving, Free Fiction, New Releases

Halloween Short Fiction 2018

October 30, 2018 By Eric Douglas

For the last several years, I’ve put out a call to writing friends to contribute Halloween short stories to a collection. We do it just for fun and for your entertainment. These stories can range from short stories to flash fiction to anything in between. Below you’ll find the links to the stories. They will take you to the respective writer’s websites to read. While you’re there, check out some of their other stories.

Check back today and tomorrow. I’ll add more as writers submit their stories.

Disclosure by Loren Eaton

Game Night by Patrick Newman

Killer Queen by JD Byrne

Stench: A Medical Horror by Connie Kinsey

When a costume isn’t & Left Behind by Eric Douglas

 

Filed Under: Free Fiction, New Releases

When a costume isn’t & Left Behind

October 30, 2018 By Eric Douglas

Below are my contributions to my annual Halloween short story collection. These are two flash fiction stories, each exactly 100 words each. For the last several years, I have asked writing friends to contribute their own stories.

Here is the link to read the rest of the submissions. You can find the links to the previous years, plus loads of other free reading goodies, on the Free Fiction page.

 

When a costume isn’t

“That’s a great costume!”

“Wow, you’re so realistic!”

“How did you get your face to look like that?”

People laughed and shouted to friends. Kids ran past, dressed as…well, just about everything. Celebrities, politicians, witches and ghosts and superheroes.

The young woman walked around the neighborhood stunned. She was confused when she first saw the crowds on the street. And then things got weirder when people handed her candy and other treats.

What sort of weird tradition is this? She thought. This is how I look all the time. Wait until I show them what a witch can really do.

 

Left behind

Eric woke up at his usual time on November 1.

He laughed to himself about the BS he heard the night before. The “veil between worlds grows thin on Halloween” the woman walking down the street said. Such rubbish.

The night before, when the kids came around for trick or treat, he kept his lights off and stayed inside. He didn’t believe in handouts.

Eric flipped on the television, but no one was there. The cameras were on, but the talking heads weren’t in their seats.

No one was outside either. Where was everyone? It was like everyone had disappeared.

Filed Under: Free Fiction, New Releases

Murder: With a Grain of Salt Serial

September 10, 2018 By Eric Douglas

In October, I will be releasing a serial story called Murder: With a Grain of Salt. This is a period story, set in 1855 in what was then Charleston, Virginia. The story involves murder, horse chases and river boats along with the burgeoning salt industry.

It will be delivered to your email inbox on October 2, 9, 16 and 23. 

If you already receive monthly emails from me, you will still need to sign up for this special list. I don’t want to send out weekly emails to anyone who isn’t interested. 

Murder: With a Grain of Salt

When an upstanding citizen is murdered on the streets of pre-civil war Charleston, Virginia, the wealthy salt barons who control the town are the main suspects. It’s up to newspaperman Reed Donahue to solve the mystery, but someone is trying to stop him from finding out the truth. Will he become the next victim?


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Filed Under: Adventure, Books, Free Fiction, New Releases

Eric Douglas’ adventure stories now available through Walmart

August 27, 2018 By Eric Douglas

It’s been coming for several months, but as of the end of last week, Walmart has started selling ebooks in cooperation with the e-book distributor Kobo. Until now, Kobo didn’t have a big foothold in the US but are big in Asia.

All of my adventure stories in the Mike Scott Series and the Withrow Key Series are available on Kobo and now that means you can download them through Walmart.com. (They don’t appear to be carrying Cayman Cowboys, since it is free, but you can get that one directly from Kobo, once you download the Kobo ereader app.)

This is Walmart’s latest effort to compete head-to-head with Amazon and I think it means good things for readers and authors.

You can find my books with this link.

They’ve got some refining to do to make the interface as easy to navigate as Amazon, but hopefully they will put some effort into it.

You can buy a Kobo reader here.

Or download the Kobo e-reader app for all of your devices. (I’m sure there will be a Walmart branded version of this soon.)

 

Filed Under: Books, New Releases

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Real Thugs: A Cult of Murder — Small groups of travelers have disappeared all over the mid-Atlantic without a trace. When bodies turn up with what appear to be ritual markings, FBI Agent AJ West is on the hunt for what might be a serial killer. Or something even more sinister. It’s a race against […]

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