Tuesday, February 24, 2026

THE CONDEMNED - Book 1, Rowen, a Sci-Fi/Time Travel Romance by Linda Mooney - Chapter 2, 8:43 pm

Posted by: Linda Mooney

THE CONDEMNED
Book 1 – Rowen


*Note: For purposes of this blog, the content here will be kept to PG standards. However, upon publication, the full novel will include more adult content. 

Chapter 2
8:43 pm

            To the traveler, transporting to a new time period felt as if it took several minutes, when in fact it was instantaneous. Rowen kept his eyes closed until he felt his body stabilize, letting him know the transfer was complete. The sensation was similar to whenever an elevator reached its designated floor, and there was that brief moment of weightlessness before it settled.

            It had been nighttime when he was ejected back into the past. It would still be nighttime, at almost the exact moment he’d left to when he arrived at whenever he was.

            A hot wind blew over him. Opening his eyes, he found himself standing alone and completely surrounded by…

Nothing. No buildings. No streets. No people or traffic. No anything. He was in the middle of a barren field with only the stars and a three-quarter moon overhead to light his way.

“But at least it’s not cold,” he whispered. “No freezing to death. No storm to deal with. I’m still alive, Campanelli. I don’t know what you thought would happen when you sent me back here, but I’m still alive.”

He took several deep breaths to steady himself and try to figure out what to do next. Gazing around him, he studied the horizons, trying to spot a light or something that might indicate dwellings. Habitations and humanity. Hell, even a passing vehicle in the distance would be welcome.

Rowen checked his watch. It was a rare and valuable antique, handed down to him via several generations. It was not automatically synched to technology. It didn’t light up because the numbers and hands on the face were made of a luminescent material that glowed in the dark. And the best part of it was that he had to wind it every day or so to keep it running. No batteries were needed. No charging of any kind was required. It was perfect for whenever it was his turn to travel back because he never had to worry about losing all track of time—especially when it was imperative he know he was approaching the end of his hour and he finish his business before the conduit jerked him back to his present.

8:43 pm.

Sighing, Rowen stood straight and faced forward in the same direction he had on the platform. He knew he faced due south. He knew he was still in the city, or what would become the city in the decades or eons to come. He also knew that if he started walking and remained on a southerly course, he’d eventually reach the ocean. Hopefully there’d be settlers there. If not…

“I’m screwed.” He shrugged as he took off walking. “Well, I always wanted to learn how to fish.”

He kept an eye on his watch to see how far he’d gone. Doing some basic math calculations based how many steps per minute he took and the approximate length of each step, he figured he was clocking around three, maybe three and a half miles an hour. It was a mental struggle not to break into a run, but he was beginning to wonder if he was truly alone out here in the middle of nowhere. There were wild animals to take into consideration. Hungry wild animals, not to mention creatures like snakes and insects.

“Remain calm and keep it steady,” he told himself. “If you try to go faster, you could attract the attention of something you don’t want stalking you. You’ll also wear yourself out faster, and the last thing you need is to collapse out here where you’ll be vulnerable to who knows what.”

He searched the semi-darkness for some sign of trees or anything that broke the horizon. By now he knew he hadn’t gone back a few years or a few decades. He’d been sent hundreds of years into the past.

At one point, he had to stop to briefly rest. He took the chance and sat on the ground to give his legs a break. As he strained to hear anything unusual coming from the surrounding landscape, he placed his hand on the dirt. It was dry and packed, but not sandy.

“That’s good,” he murmured. “The only sandy soil I want to feel is a beach, not a desert.” He sniffed his fingers. “This place is untouched. There’s been no farming or tilling. It’s almost barren wasteland.”

He checked his watch again. 11:16 pm.

“Get up and get moving, Taylor. You gotta find shelter before you try to get a couple hours’ of sleep.”

As he plodded along, he tried to remember the history of this part of the country. When had it been founded? Who had colonized it? More importantly, when had it been colonized? Unfortunately, exhaustion was catching up to him. He wasn’t moving as swiftly as he had earlier, and he knew why. For one thing, he hadn’t eaten since…when?

“A little over twelve hours ago,” he reminded himself. And that had been just a small bowl of bean soup he’d taken with him to work to have for lunch. Right after he’d gotten off his shift and gotten paid, he’d gone to the dispensary to get his mother’s medicine and took it straight to the apartment they shared with his younger sibling. Then he’d headed for the labs, hoping there’d be a few food items waiting for him.

He recalled the bag sitting in his locker, and the heaviness he’d been fighting wrapped around his heart. The crushing pain became too much, and he was forced to stop. Bending over, he placed his hands on his thighs as his new reality rose up, along with hot tears, and he wept.

He’d never see his mother and sister again. They’d never get the food he’d been bringing home almost on a regular basis. Worse, it took both his and Gretchen’s meager pay to afford their apartment, pay the bills, and get their mother the care and treatment she needed. Without him there to no longer help provide his half of their support…

Rowen shook his head as hard and heavy sobs continued to wrack his body. He ended up collapsing on the ground until he finally managed to pull himself together. Using the bottom of his shirt, he wiped his eyes and blew his nose before getting back to his feet and pushing on.

By 1:29 a.m., weariness threatened to overtake him. He was fighting dizziness, and he desperately needed something to drink. Giving himself another couple of minutes to rest, he stopped as something caught his attention in the distance.

A light, or several lights dimly shone, but they appeared to be moving. Shimmering. In addition, was it his imagination, or could he hear the surf hitting the beach? Rowen sniffed, hoping to catch the smell of the sea. No such luck. Worse, the dry heat was getting to him, sapping every drop of moisture from his body.

“It’s not far, old man,” he promised himself. “You’re almost there. Keep pushing just a little farther. You can do this. You got this!”

It took effort to stand up again. Walking now was more of an exercise in trying to keep from falling, but he knew that if he didn’t force himself, there was the chance he may never wake up come daylight. And the last thing he wanted was for Assemblyman General Campanelli’s fervent wish for his death to come true.

He had no idea how far he’d gone when the ground gently sloped upward. He had to crawl on hands and knees to climb it. Once he topped the rise, he paused to watch the waves lapping the shoreline ahead of him. Now he could smell the salty tang. And the lights he’d observed shimmering were the stars reflecting on the water.

He’d reached the bay and the other side of the city that had yet to be built.

Rowen didn’t care if his shoes got wet as he slowly waded into the water. The cool waves gently splashed his ankles and calves, and he gratefully fell onto the moist sand. Lying on his back, he gazed up at the panorama of stars in the clear sky. The moon was nowhere to be seen, but it didn’t matter.

“You gotta get up, Rowen,” he told himself. “You can’t stay here as much as you want to. There are crabs and other critters who’d love to nibble on you. Get up. There’s bound to be something around here safe where you can rest. Just not here. Not here. But that water feels so damn good.”

He was on the verge of passing out. Half of him wanted to succumb. The other half was yelling at him not to.

The need to survive won out.

Rolling over, he somehow got back on his feet and began following the beach to wherever it led. There had to be habitation somewhere. He prayed he’d find a small settlement or village.

He was about to round a set of dunes when something pointed was shoved in his back.

“Stop right there,” a deep voice demanded. “Who are you, and what are you doing here?”

Rowen never got the chance to answer. His knees buckled, pitching his body sideways into the dune, hitting the soft sand, and he slid unconscious down to the water’s edge.

TO BE CONTINUED

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