Their Last Resort Read Online R.S. Grey

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Contemporary Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 84
Estimated words: 80052 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 400(@200wpm)___ 320(@250wpm)___ 267(@300wpm)
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I don’t even bother with a full breakfast. I grab some buttered toast from the cafeteria and scarf it down as I walk-run to the hotel’s main lobby, practically elbowing people out of my way in an attempt to get there even faster. Oof! Sorry! Sorry! But between you and me, I’m not sorry. I would tackle and trample over people to get to the lobby. My shift doesn’t start for two hours; I could be off in dreamland right now, but I purposely set my alarm early. In fact, I regret not camping out here all night.

The doomsday preppers convention is actually titled the Survival Preparedness convention, but these people aren’t fooling anyone. Almost as soon as I come to a screeching halt in the lobby, I see a camo-clad enthusiast spare the use of his tactical laser-sighted “hatchet knife” and instead tear into his freeze-dried meal pack with his teeth.

“Hoo-rah!” he shouts, to no one person in particular, before eagerly sniffing the powdery contents. “Ooh, goody, corned beef hash.”

For reference, it’s 7:30 a.m. He’s just been presented with a complimentary fruit cup and a mimosa. He’s in no need of survival food.

“What did I miss? What did I miss?!” Camila asks, rushing through the side doors of the lobby. She’s in a hurry this morning as well. She’s in uniform, but her hair isn’t done. She’s still working through a cup of yogurt, and her eye makeup is smeared. Her shoe is only half on her right foot.

“Nothing!” I assure her with giddy anticipation. “Nothing!”

Now, the thing I love most about this convention is the pageantry of it all. You cannot say these men (and handful of women) don’t put their heart and soul into this hobby. Yes, hobby. Don’t get it twisted. The army fatigues, the eye black, the night vision goggles—none of it is serving a purpose here. What is that man going to do with his three-in-one Antarctic-approved parka on a tropical island in August? Who cares?! I love it!

Another important thing to mention is that most, if not all, of these “survival” items are brand new. The guy currently stuck in the turnstile entrance—“Help! Someone help!”—still has the tags hanging off his desert-op jacket.

I catch wind of a conversation taking place beside me. A man who looks like he’s currently on the run from raiders in a zombie apocalypse has unzipped his oversize military-issue pack (because none of these people would be caught dead traveling with a normal suitcase) so he can show off his new gear to his friend. “Yup. These are my ice-assault socks. These ones? Rock-infiltrator socks. And of course, I’ve got my sand-raid socks.”

Across the lobby, I hear, “Damn it! I forgot my sleeveless holster shirt.”

Then, at the front desk, a man asks, “Now, do the rooms come with down pillows? Because I’m allergic to most synthetic alternatives.”

I’m immersed in my viewing experience—a veritable fly on the wall—when Cole walks up and falls in line with Camila and me. Without a word, he joins us in surveying the scene. He’s sipping coffee slowly. I’ll bet it’s his second or third cup. Not that it matters. Slightly more caffeine won’t suddenly make these people make sense. I want to look up at him and crack a joke. I know he finds this as silly as I do. We’d never admit it, but we share the same sense of humor. I’ve been in group meetings and conference rooms where something funny happens—a tab is left open on Todd’s computer with the search “hair plug Groupon”; Todd has a disastrous Freudian slip in which he introduces Alicia, the busty new accountant, to us all as our new accountit. I’ll search frantically around the room for someone to share the moment with, and then I’ll see Cole, with his head down, smiling to himself, completely in on the same joke I am.

“This week won’t be easy,” he starts. “Every year these people devise new ways to test my patience. Last year it was an underground government they ratified within the first forty-eight hours. By the time we got word of their insurrection, they’d already established a currency and trade routes to neighboring islands.” As Cole continues, he sounds like a tempered war general giving a prebattle pep talk to his otherwise doomed warriors. “We’ll be outnumbered . . . but we will survive.”

I almost pump an imaginary sword in the air and pound my chest plate, responding with a mighty “For the king!”

“Camila? Where do you start today?” Cole asks, keeping his attention on the growing crowd.

“I have a deep-sea fishing charter that leaves in about an hour.”

“Okay, make sure Oscar goes with you. After last year, I don’t want to take any chances.”

Oh right. I’d almost forgotten about that.

One of these guys insisted on catching fish with a harpoon rather than a fishing pole. The details are fuzzy. I’m not sure the boat captain knew about the harpoon beforehand, and things devolved quickly. A guest ended up in the water by mistake, screaming “Mayday! Mayday!” instead of listening to the boat captain’s calm instructions to swim over and find the ladder to get back up into the boat. Or, at the very least, grab ahold of the life preserver they’d tossed in.


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