Scooter
Nation (Unapologetic
Lives #2)
By: A.B.
Funkhauser
Genre: Gonzo Mortuary Revenge Fiction
Publisher: Solstice Publishing
Date of Publication: March 11, 2016
ISBN: 1625263473, 978-1625263476
ASIN:
B01CT9GCQK
Number of pages: 194
Word Count: 48,854
Cover Artist: Michelle Crocker
Aging managing director Charlie Forsythe
begins his work day with a phone call to Jocasta Binns, the unacknowledged
illegitimate daughter of Weibigand Funeral Home founder Karl Heinz Sr. Alma
Wurtz, a scooter bound sextenarian, community activist, and neighborhood pain
in the ass is emptying her urine into the flower beds, killing the petunias.
Jocasta cuts him off, reminding him that a staff meeting has been called.
Charlie, silenced, is taken aback: he has had no prior input into the meeting
and that, on its own, makes it sinister.
The second novel in the Unapologetic
Lives series, Scooter Nation takes place two years after Heuer Lost and Found.
This time, funeral directors Scooter Creighton and Carla Moretto Salinger Blue
take center stage as they battle conflicting values, draconian city by-laws, a
mendacious neighborhood gang bent on havoc, and a self-absorbed fitness guru
whose presence shines an unwanted light on their quiet Michigan neighborhood.
1967
The old humpback with
the cloudy eye and Orwellian proletarian attitude pushed past the young
embalmer with a curt “Entschuldigen Sie bitte!—Excuse me!” That Charles E.
Forsythe, bespectacled and too tall for his own good, didn’t speak a word of
German was incidental. The man grunting at him, or, more accurately, through
him was Weibigand senior embalmer Heino Schade, who’d been gossiped about often
enough at Charlie’s previous place of employ: “Weibigand’s,” the hairdresser
had winked knowingly, “is like a Stalag. God only knows where the lampshades
come from.”
Whether she was
referring to Schade specifically or the Weibigand’s generally didn’t matter.
What he gleaned from the talk and what he took with him when he left to go work
for them was that he was not expected to understand, only to follow orders.
Schade, muttering over a
cosmetic pot that wouldn’t open, suddenly tossed it; the airborne projectile
missing Charlie’s black curls by inches. Jumping out of the way, he wondered
what to do next.
Newly arrived from
Seltenheit and Sons, his new master’s most capricious competitor, expectations
that he perform beyond the norm were high. Trading tit for tat, his old boss
Hartmut Fläche had fought and lost battles with Karl Heinz Senior since 1937,
and wasn’t about to abandon the bad feeling, even as he approached his
ninetieth year. That his star apprentice had left under a tenacious cloud to go
work for the enemy would no doubt hasten old Harty’s resolve to plot every last
Weibigand into the ground before he got there first.
It was incumbent upon
Charlie, therefore, to dish some dirt hopefully juicy enough to shutter
Seltenheit and Son’s for good.
Stories of the two
funeral directors’ acrimony were legend: late night calls to G-men during the
war asserting that Weibigand was a Nazi; anonymous reports to the Board of
Mortuary Science that Fläche reused caskets; hints at felonious gambling;
price-fixing; liquor-making; tax evading; wife swapping; cross dressing; pet
embalming; covert sausage making; smokehouses; whore houses; Commie-loving;
Semite-hating; and drug using sexual merry-making of an unwholesomeness so
heinous as to not be spoken of, but merely communicated through raised
eyebrows, was just a scratch.
Ducking under the low
rise water pipes that bisected Weibigand’s ceiling in the lower service hall,
Charlie shuddered with the thought of retributive action, if only because old
men were scary and he was still young. At twenty, he had finished his requisite
course requirements, albeit at an advanced age. A lot of the guys were
finishing at seventeen, only to be packed off to Vietnam. But Charlie had been
delayed by way of the family pig farm which in many ways, could save his hide
in a pinch. As the eldest male in a houseful of women, running the farm made
him essential if the Draft ever became an issue. It hadn’t so far—he was too
old, the 1950 and up birthdates pulled by lot would never include his. Yet he
was haunted by the prospect of a violent end.
His mother—a gentle soul
who knew the Old Testament chapter and verse—never missed an opportunity to
discourage his dreams for a life in the city. This only aggravated matters. He
was different, and he knew it. For that reason, he had to leave.
“You’ll wind up in hell
if you try,” she said fondly, every time he negotiated the subject. In the end,
it was a kick in the ass from the toothless old neighbor that sent him running
far and fast off the front porch: “Yer not like the others, are ya sweetie?”
“Don’t expect an easy time from the Missus,”
Heino Schade said offhandedly from his vantage over a pasty deceased.
“Mrs. Weibigand?”
Charlie asked, noting that the old man used Madame Dubarry commercial cosmetic
in place of the heavy pancake Seltenheit’s favored.
“You assisted her out of
a particularly difficult situation. She will expect more as a show of your
constant devotion.” He knocked his glass eye back into place with a long spring
forceps.
Charlie understood. He
hadn’t expected a call from the Lodge that infamous night, but then, it wasn’t
every day that a good friend of the Potentate was found dead in a hotel room
under a hooker.
“In flagrante delicto,”
Schade continued ominously in what appeared to be Latin.
“Indeed,” Charlie said,
faking a working knowledge of the dead language; the unfamiliar term, he
guessed, having more to do with what Karl Heinz Weibigand was doing with a
woman in a seedy hotel room, than his desire to ask Schade how he made his dead
look so dewy.
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Toronto born author A.B. Funkhauser is a
funeral director, classic car nut and wildlife enthusiast living in Ontario,
Canada. Like most funeral directors, she is governed by a strong sense of
altruism fueled by the belief that life chooses us and we not it.
Her debut novel Heuer Lost and Found,
released in April 2015, examines the day to day workings of a funeral home and
the people who staff it. Winner of the Preditors & Editors Reader’s Poll
for Best Horror 2015, and the New Apple EBook Award 2016 for Horror, Heuer Lost
and Found is the first installment in Funkhauser’s Unapologetic Lives series.
Her sophomore effort, Scooter Nation, released March 11, 2016 through Solstice
Publishing. Winner of the New Apple Ebook Award 2016 for Humor, Scooter has
also been nominated for Best Humor Summer Indie Book Awards 2016.
A devotee of the gonzo style pioneered by
the late Hunter S. Thompson, Funkhauser attempts to shine a light on difficult
subjects by aid of humorous storytelling. “In gonzo, characters operate without
filters which means they say and do the kinds of things we cannot in an ordered
society. Results are often comic but, hopefully, instructive.”
Funkhauser is currently working on Shell
Game, a subversive feline “whodunit” begun during NaNoWriMo 2015.
Website: www.abfunkhauser.com
Amazon Author Page: www.amazon.com/author/abfunkhauser
Twitter: https://twitter.com/iamfunkhauser
Facebook: www.facebook.com/heuerlostandfound
Branded: https://branded.me/abfunkhauser
Google Plus: https://plus.google.com/u/0/118051627869017397678
Publisher: http://solsticepublishing.com/
Goodreads: http://bit.ly/1FPJXcO
The Complete Scooter Q&A: https://abfunkhauser.com/the-complete-scooter-q-a/
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