Announcement: Where to buy da books!

I am in the process of revamping this website to make it more user friendly, but in the meantime I’m pinning this post for those of you wanting to get your hands on my books.

I’m really thrilled with the way Ghost Bus turned out and even more thrilled so many of you are enjoying it. Below are the details for where to get both e-books and tree books.

What I love the most about these are that every bit of them is made in NZ. The cover is designed by the very clever Catherine Slavova’s Karnstein Designs , the typesetting and editing was done by Jana Mittelstadt’s Kiwiberry Editing and it was printed by Your Books.

You can get your paws on a copy here for $20 – free postage within NZ.

Ghost Bus paperback $20

For those of you who haven’t read my first book Which Way is Starboard Again? Overcoming fears & facing challenges sailing the South Pacific and extra fiver will get you a bundle of both books – free postage within NZ also.

Ghost Bus/Starboard bundle $25

For those who don’t use Paypal

For those of you allergic to Paypal just drop me a line at annakirtlan@gmail.com and I will flick you my bank account details.

For overseas readers – there is an Amazon print on demand option which might suit you guys better as the rona seems to have made international posting a bit of a hit and miss venture at the moment. You can buy it here:

Amazon.com: Ghost bus – Tales from Wellington’s Dark Side

Wellington retailers

At present you can purchase Ghost Bus paperbacks at some of the coolest retailers in town:

Arty Bees books

Writers Plot Bookshop

Fear Factory Wellington

Watch this space for more!

E-books

Ghost Bus – Tales from Wellington’s Dark Side is available on most ebook platforms. You can check out which ones here: https://books2read.com/ghostbus

Which Way is Starboard Again? Mental Health Foundation fundraiser

A note that I still have an ongoing fundraiser for the NZ Mental Health Foundation tied up with my first book Which Way is Starboard Again? So if you are interested in that book alone and would like to donate to a great organisation, you can find out more here:

Which Way is Starboard Again? the book

Mental Health Foundation fundraiser

Did you know our 8th PM was a giant sci-fi nerd?

The Sir Julius Vogel awards

Up until last year, I’m a bit sad to admit, I knew very little about the Sir Julius Vogel Awards, which recognise excellence and achievement by New Zealanders in the science fiction, fantasy and horror genres. 

As a newbie writer of speculative fiction (the umbrella term for all these genres) this isn’t super surprising, but as a reader it’s a shame because there have been some amazingly talented nominees and winners. You can find out more about the awards here:

Sir Julius Vogel Award Nominations for 2020 calendar year are now being accepted

Sci-fi and girl power

Sir Julius Vogel circa 1870s. Image: New Zealand History – Nga korero a ipurangi o Aotearoa

The awards are named after Sir Julius Vogel, former journo and 8th prime minister of New Zealand, who, in 1889 wrote what is now widely regarded to be New Zealand’s first sci-fi novel.

Anno Domini 2000, or, Women’s Destiny pictured a New Zealand in the year 2000 where most positions of authority were held by women – a pretty radial idea for the time. By the time we hit 2000 our PM, governor general, attorney general and chief justice were all women, so he was clearly onto something!

You can nominate Ghost Bus!

The cool thing about the Sir Julius Vogel Awards (or SJVs as the cool kids call them) is that they are fan-based, so you can decide who gets nominated – and if you take part in the National Science Fiction Convention this year, you can vote for them too.

The exciting thing about this year’s awards (for me at least!) is that Ghost Bus is eligible for nomination. Despite 2020 being, well, 2020, there was some amazing stuff published and I’m super proud to be able to contribute to that in my own way. So even making it as far as being a nominee would be really exciting for me and my ghosties.

So here’s where you come in:

If you enjoyed Ghost Bus, you can nominate it for an SJV for Best Collected Work or, if there was a particular story that tickled you, you can nominate that for Best Short Story. The nomination form is below:

SJV nominations – 2021

And the info you need is:

Title of work: Ghost Bus – Tales from Wellington’s Dark Side (or the title of a story you like. Or both. You can nominate as many as you like!)
Author/artist: Anna Kirtlan
Category: Best Collected Work or Best Short Story
Publisher: Anna Kirtlan
Contact: annakirtlan@gmail.com

Best fan art

The other great thing about the SJVs is that the categories cover all the things that make speculative fiction what it is – services to fandom, zines, cover art and fan art. Which means Shaun Garea’s amazing Ghost Bus fan art is eligible for nomination too. I have shared on here in via my social media, but just in case you missed it, check these beauties out!

Oriental Parade Piranhas fan fart by Shaun Garea
Oriental Bay Piranhas fan art by Shaun Garea
The Ministry for Public Art - fan art by Shaun Garea
The Ministry for Public Art – fan art by Shaun Garea

I think these are absolutely amazing. If you think so too, please nominate them. I certainly will be! The deets you need are:

Title of work: Oriental Bay Piranhas fan art or The Ministry for Public Art fan art (or both!)
Author/Artist: Shaun Garea
Category: Best fan artwork
Publisher: Estrata productions
Contact info: shaungarea@hotmail.com
Other information: Fan art for Ghost Bus – Tales from Wellington’s Dark Side by Anna Kirtlan. Can be found at seamunchkin.com and estrataproductions.com

The award

Finally I’ll leave you with a couple of pics of the award itself because I think it’s just glorious. I hope you’ve enjoyed your little history lesson! Your homework is to think back to the New Zealand created speculative fiction that you used to distract yourself last year. If you loved it then show its creators some love by nominating them for all the things.

Sir Julius Vogel Award trophy
Sir Julius Vogel Award trophy
Sir Julius Vogel Award etchings
Sir Julius Vogel Award trophy etchings

The Oriental Bay Piranhas

The following story appears in Ghost Bus – Tales from Wellington’s Dark Side. I’m putting it up here so I can have a freebie to give away to lure more unsuspecting victims (I mean readers) and also to showcase an awesome illustration done by the very talented Shaun Garea. Details on where to get all the things at the end of the story.

***

They’re in love. A love so true they need to make a grand gesture to the world of its permanence. Perhaps they can’t afford an engagement ring. Perhaps they don’t believe in marriage. Perhaps they’re teenagers whose love burns so passionate and bright that it’s too big for just themselves.

Either way, they buy a padlock – pretty and heart-shaped or sturdy and industrial – and have their initials carved into it. They go to the waterfront footbridge and thread it through one of its metal links, feeling it close with a satisfying clunk. To show how serious they are, they take the key, and its spare, and toss it into the bay, holding hands and leaning into each other as they walk away.

There are hundreds of padlocks on that bridge. Hundreds of different sets of initials – and hundreds of keys. Not much thought is given to those keys once they are ceremoniously tossed in the drink. Sure, there are concerns about the impact they might have on the environment and marine life but those are concerns, not actual thoughts.

You see, when an object is imbued with so much passion – be it a ring or a plaque – it changes. It absorbs those intense feelings. It gains power. When part of that object is thrown away like trash, the power doesn’t go away. It changes. Hundreds of padlocks publicly basking in the glow of love. Hundreds of keys festering on the seabed, growing strong and bitter and hungry.

I’m 100 percent the sort of guy who scoffs at these kinds of stories. They’re creepy tales to scare kids at sleepovers, nothing more. But I’ve been down in that murk and seen things that have turned every hair on my body white. There are things in this world that we don’t understand and if we’re lucky, we’ll never need to try. Unfortunately for me, I’m not one of the lucky ones.

The stories about the Oriental Bay piranhas began around 2014. I’ve been hearing them for as long as I’ve been diving in the bay. A disturbance in the water followed by a swimmer losing a finger or a toe. Nobody ever sees them but the story is always the same – searing pain, needle sharp teeth, blood in the water and a piece of a person missing.

Like any sane person I scoffed at those stories, not in the least because those particular fish can’t survive outside of tropical waters. My theory was that someone had a run-in with a barracuda once and spun a tale that grew taller with each retelling. Whatever the origin, the Oriental Bay piranha label stuck.

It was a couple of years ago, though, that things started getting outright weird. The first missing person was a reveller from the last time the Rugby Sevens was held in Wellington. It wasn’t unusual for hypothermic partiers to be hauled from the harbour in their Smurf outfits and mankinis after the booze whispered to them a midnight dip would be a great idea. So, at first, it was thought to be another alcohol fueled tragedy. That may well have been the case, but when he washed up on shore near the Te Papa museum two days later, people had more questions than answers.

His leg was completely stripped of flesh, a cleanly picked bone, attached to a foot sitting neatly in a sneaker. The poor guy had clearly bled to death. It was all over the news: the distraught girlfriend and parents, the ‘experts’ trying to work out whether it could have been a shark. Swimming at the bay was banned until they could track down the culprit.

Things eventually settled down, the swimming ban was lifted and the news cycle moved on – until the next time and the next. There were four attacks, over a period of two years – a kayaker, a man fishing and a couple swimming off the beach on a hot day. The one thing they all had in common was that, when they were found, one limb or another had been completely stripped of flesh.

Even then, after all that strangeness, I didn’t accept that anything unusual was going on. I spent nearly every day in the waters of that harbour as part of my work and I was damned if I was going to be looking over my shoulder for some mystery fish.

I’m a sort of scuba everyman for the Wellington City Council. If the storm water drains get clogged, if a fishing line comes loose and gets tangled around something it shouldn’t, if there’s a big blow and a chunk of the marina electronics end up in the drink, I’m their man.

I’m also part of a volunteer diver clean-up group that hits the harbour once a year to clear up what Wellington has dumped in it. You wouldn’t believe the stuff we find down there. Shopping trolleys, fishing gear, kids’ toys. One memorable encounter with a mannequin that had escaped from a movie shoot gave a few of the guys nightmares for a while. Not all of it can be blamed on people though – the biggest litterer in the city is Mother Nature herself. It’s not uncommon for us to find laundry tangled around pontoons after a particularly decent blow. That doesn’t get you lot of the hook though. A fair bit of the debris we do find is due to people being too lazy to secure their litter or too bumbly to be trusted with technology – as is evidenced by the number of drowned cell phones we have brought to the surface.

***

It was on one of those clean-up dives that my nice comfortable denial bubble popped. My dive buddy Craig and I were in Oriental Bay near the waterfront, filling catch bags with the usual junk. I pointed towards a submerged shopping trolley a couple of metres away and, wiggling two fingers like miniature legs, mimed swimming over. He gave me the OK hand signal and I headed over to tie on an inflatable buoy to mark it for later pick up.

As I fumbled with the inflatable clipped to my suit, the ocean boiled to life around me. Rising from the seabed was a swarm of something I’d never seen before. A massive school of tiny rust coloured fish, only a few centimetres long, were buzzing and vibrating like a swarm of metallic bees. They were heavy too, bonking against my dive tank and scraping skin off my face as they surged past.

As I turned to Craig to signal “what the hell was that?”, I froze on the spot. He was absolutely smothered in the things. All I could see was a mass of bubbles and flailing fins as he tried to beat them off with his catch bag. I launched myself towards him, brandishing my dive knife. I don’t know what I thought I was going to do with it. Stabbing hundreds of tiny fish wasn’t really the most practical option.

It must have done something though because as I approached, the things started to drop back, letting me through. Frantically, I scraped as many of them off my friend as I could, copping a couple of nasty bites through my gloves for my efforts. Craig had stopped flailing and was instead making frantic slashing motions across his throat – “Out of air”. I discovered to my horror that the little bastards had chewed through the hoses connected to his tank. I quickly hooked him up with my spare air supply and buddy swam with him to the dock, scraping the last of the creatures off him with my knife.

Thank goodness we weren’t diving deep and didn’t have to stop to decompress as both of us were desperate to get out of the water. I hauled him up and checked his vitals. He was deeply in shock, struggling to catch his breath and covered in scores of tiny bite marks but he wasn’t going to die.

“What the hell was that?” I gasped as I wiped the blood from his face.

“Keys!” he said in between ragged breaths.

“What?”

“Keys. Fucking keys. With fucking teeth. The kind you unlock things with. But with teeth. They went straight for my air hose!”

Certain my friend was delirious, I helped him up. “Mate, I think we need to get you to the hospital.”

***

I left Craig in the hospital, still blathering about keys with teeth. I’d never seen him that spun out before. A couple of gashes on his forehead needed stitches but otherwise he was physically fine. They wanted to keep him in overnight for observation though, theorising concussion or nitrogen narcosis. I don’t recall him hitting his head at any point and we hadn’t been deep enough for him to be narced, but he certainly wasn’t himself. I left him in the capable hands of his fiancé and decamped to the pub.

Three pints in and I was decided – I was going back down there to find out what was going on. I was certain there was a logical explanation. I had never seen my friend like that before and I wanted to put his mind at rest.

Two days later, I was back at the waterfront, armed with a specimen jar borrowed from another friend who worked at a local aquarium. I went solo this time. I know, diving on your own isn’t smart, but I wasn’t going far and I honestly didn’t want to bring anyone else in on this insanity.

I dropped down into the water and swam around to just underneath the footbridge where we’d been gathering junk before Craig was attacked. At first, I didn’t see anything, just murk and rocks and the odd bit of snot-coloured seaweed. But then I spotted them – about two inches above the sea floor was a metallic cloud of creatures, just milling about, taking no notice of me at all.

I swam closer, watching them lazily weave along the current, darting in and out of the weeds. They seemed solid and heavy-looking but they floated easily, like they weighed nothing at all. The water was too grimy to make out too much detail without getting up closer than I would have liked, but whatever they were, it certainly wasn’t fish.

They showed no sign of the aggression they displayed when they launched themselves at Craig. So, while all was calm, I grabbed the specimen jar, scooped up the nearest one and screwed the lid up tight. I dropped it in my catch bag and headed for the surface.

Once out of the water, I pulled my mask off to get a better look and – more shakily than I care to admit – took the jar from the bag, holding it up to the light. Swimming in lazy circles, occasionally doinking into the side of the jar was – exactly as Craig had – a fucking key.

Be careful what you throw away!

***

Three of us stood around the aquarium table, staring down at the jar.

“Yep, that’s a key alright.”

“Definitely the most key-like thing I’ve seen in a specimen jar.”

I was rather surprised at how blasé they were about the whole swimming key situation and told them so.

“I can tell you right now,” Kim, the friend who loaned me the specimen jar said. “This is by far not the strangest thing we’ve seen in this aquarium.”

One look at her face and I could tell she was deadly serious.

“Let’s give it a bit more space to swim around and see what it does,” she said, gently placing the jar into an open topped tank and letting the key swim out.

She didn’t move her hand fast enough. As soon as it escaped, it lunged at her, its oval ‘head’ somehow stretching and splintering into tiny metallic teeth. She snatched her hand out of the way before it could do any damage.

“Well, that certainly woke it up!”

“So, it didn’t react to you at all?” Kim asked, as she, I and her colleague James watched the key/fish/thing fling itself at the glass.

“Is that going to be strong enough?” I asked, taking a step backwards.

“Bulletproof,” she said.

“Oookay …” I said, still dubious. “Well, it certainly wasn’t carrying on like that.”

“Interesting,” she said, staring with fascination at the frenzied creature trying to smash its way to freedom. “Leave it with me. I’ll let you know if I have any ideas.”

“Thanks, I appreciate it,” I said, heading for the door, quietly glad to see the back of the thing.

***

The next day, my phone rang.

“Where did you say you found it again?” Kim’s excited voice asked.

“By the waterfront, under the footbridge.”

“The one with all the padlocks on?”

“Yes, that one,” I replied, only just making the connection.

“I’ve got an idea. I’m going to need you to come in.”

“I was afraid you were going to say that,” I replied, actually dying of curiosity.

Kim and James greeted me at the aquarium.

“Right, experiment time!” Kim said, rubbing her hands together gleefully as the three of us moved behind the front counter towards the tanks.

“You go first,” she gestured to me, keeping herself out of the creature’s sight line – if the thing even had eyes to see.

I raised an eyebrow.

“Just trust me on this. Walk up to the tank.”

I did as I was told, moving slowly towards the glass, bracing myself for the onslaught. They key-thing barely acknowledged my presence, floating calmly just above the bottom of the tank. I moved closer, peering through the glass. Nothing.

“Great!” said Kim from behind the door. “Now, it’s your turn, James.”

James had barely taken two steps into the room when Keyzilla started throwing itself at the walls of the tank, snapping at the glass. I could have sworn the thing actually hissed. He very sensibly backed the hell out of there. Kim was smiling broadly.

“You look like that’s exactly what you expected to happen,” I said.

“Correct. Want to hear my theory? It’s got nothing to do with fish science and everything to do with Marie Kondo.”

“The ‘doesn’t spark joy’-woman who wants us all to fold our undies?” James asked incredulously.

I shook my head, having zero idea what either of them was talking about but concerned about where it might lead.

“I am NOT going to fold my undies,” I said.

“Settle, petals. The last thing I want is to have anything to do with your underwear,” Kim said. “This is going to sound a little woo woo, but hear me out.”

“No more woo than a key-fish that wants to bite me,” James interrupted.

“Good point!” Kim agreed. “Now for those of you who have been living under a rock,” – she looked directly at me – “Marie Kondo is a famous declutterer. She has a TV show and a bunch of books about getting rid of your junk. She’s very gentle and respectful about it though. She gets people to touch each item to ‘wake’ it and only keep those that ‘spark joy’, and when it comes to the things that you want to let go, she thanks them for their service.”

I raised an eyebrow, utterly clueless as to what was going on.

“It’s something that kind of fascinates me,” she continued. “Not the cleaning, but the philosophy behind it. Her method is heavily influenced by the Japanese Shinto religion. Shinto includes the belief that kami – the sacred – exists in everything. That everything, even inanimate objects, contains an essence or power. This power can be good or bad but it is everywhere and in everything. Even the things we throw away.”

I stared blankly, thinking her stark, barking mad but not wanting to come across as an insensitive douche bag. “I didn’t know you were religious,” was the best I could come up with.

“I’m not, but my grandmother was. She had a shrine and talked to everything in the house. The garden too. I used to follow her everywhere when I was little. I completely forgot about it all until the whole Kondo thing started getting air time.”

“I still don’t see what this has to do with ‘that’”, I said, jerking my head towards the thing in the tank.

“Well, think about where you found it. The bridge with the padlocks, objects that have powerful kami, created by people’s love. And after people attach those padlocks to the bridge, what do they do with the keys?”

“Chuck them in the ocean – probably not thanking them for their service when they do,” James interjected, struggling to keep the sarcasm from his voice.

“Okay, it may sound ridiculous, but might I point out there’s a very angry key in that tank,” Kim said.

Having been forced to face the existence of flesh-eating keys, I tried to let myself follow Kim’s logic. “So, what has it got to do with the fact that Bitey McBiteface over there doesn’t want a piece of me?” I asked.

Kim’s eyes lit up again. “I worked that part out when you mentioned that your friend was being looked after by his fiancé while he was in hospital,” she said. “He was engaged. I’m married. James has just met a new fella. We are all, to one degree or another, loved up. You, on the other hand, are the biggest bachelor I know, and as far as I am aware that hasn’t changed, has it?”

“No, it hasn’t,” I replied, smiling. It’s not that I haven’t had the odd bit of fun in the past but I really don’t have that much interest in it all. I appreciate my friendships but really have no desire for romance or relationships. I don’t think I ever really had. I know some people feel sorry for me, but they shouldn’t. I’m happy, it’s just the way I’m wired.

“I did some research into the Oriental Bay ‘piranha’ attacks and sure enough, all the victims had partners,” Kim continued. “I think the keys somehow detect and react to the love pheromone, because that was why they were rejected. At least, that’s my theory. You’re probably one of the few people in Wellington who can get near them unscathed.” James was turning purple.

“Are you trying to say that lump of bad-tempered metal is one of the Oriental Bay piranhas? Are you insane? I grant you it’s bizarre, but it’s just a key. It can’t really do any damage!” Having seen the thing in action, I had to disagree.

“I think that it might be,” Kim said, looking towards the tank in quiet awe.

“Are you buying this crap?” James asked me.

When I didn’t answer, he stomped across the room, opened a cupboard and grabbed a pair of industrial looking gloves. “I did not spend four years studying marine biology to listen to this kind of rubbish. It’s a key. It can’t hurt people. I’ll prove it!”

“James, no!” Kim and I cried in unison but we were too late. James had stalked across the room and thrust his hand into the tank, attempting to scoop up the creature inside. The whole thing took seconds. One minute, James had his hand in the tank and the next, he was writhing on the floor screaming in agony, the water in the tank above him stained with blood.

Kim dispatched me to get the first aid kit and, when I returned, was gently prising James’ hand open.

“How bad is it?” he slurred, clearly delirious with pain. “I can’t look!”

I looked and wished I hadn’t. The top half of his index finger was stripped bare of flesh – a clean white bone sticking out of a bloodied knuckle. I suddenly thought of Skeletor from Masters of the Universe, stifling a hysterical laugh as I thrust a bandage into Kim’s hand.

“I’ve seen worse,” she lied expertly. I had no idea how she managed to keep a straight face when all I wanted to do was vomit. “But I think we should get you looked at.”

So, for the second time that week, I found myself driving someone to hospital.

***

Sitting in the hospital waiting room I turned to Kim. “Okay, this is way out of my comfort zone but I’ve seen two people put into hospital, and if you’re right, there are hundreds of angry carnivorous keys, lurking around a popular swimming spot. Do you have any idea what we can do about it?”

“Yes, but you’re not going to like it.”

“That I don’t doubt. Now fill me in.”

“Well, we’re going to have to conduct some more experiments, but I figure since you are the only one they seem to let near them, it could be that they respond to your interactions with them as well.”

“Interactions?”

“Words and feelings specifically. Like the objects imbued with kami were meant to respond to offerings and prayers. If it’s a similar sort of situation, then maybe you could talk it off the ledge, help it not feel discarded. Let it know it wasn’t tossed away for no reason, that it was sacrificed for love and we honour that sacrifice.”

“You want me to give it a pep talk?”

“Exactly! Maybe we can reprogram them not to respond badly to people who care for one another.”

Before I had a chance to respond, a doctor came out to meet us. Kim stood up. “Is he going to be okay?”

“He’s going to need reconstructive surgery on his finger, but otherwise he’s going to be fine. You say he was attacked by some sort of fish at the aquarium?” he asked.

“Yes, a fish,” Kim said firmly.

***

If you told me a couple of months ago that I would be paying nightly visits to the aquarium to whisper sweet nothings to a key in a jar, I would have told you to lay off the weed. Yet here I am. The scary thing is, it actually seemed to be working.

We tested Kim’s theory last night when James returned to work.

“How’s the war wound?” I asked, gesturing towards his bandaged finger.

“Not bad. They couldn’t fix the nerves but they can make it look a bit more like a finger. They are going to graft some skin from my butt. Guess that will remind me not to be such a butthead about things I don’t understand.”

I smiled, glad he’d managed to keep a sense of humour.

“Are you sure you want to do this?”

“Don’t worry. I plan to keep my hands to myself.”

“Okay then,” I said, nervously leading him towards the tank. He walked right up to the glass and – nothing. No reaction. The key-fish barely raised itself from the bottom.

James raised his eyebrows. “Hey! Key thing! I love my boyfriend!” he yelled, taking a step back.

A little waggle, but otherwise nothing.

Kim walked up to the tank, nervously playing with her wedding ring. The key showed no interest in her whatsoever.

“It worked!” she said, grinning and hugging me. I couldn’t help smiling as well, scarcely believing it myself.

The next part of the plan was for me to catch another key (goody) and see what happened when we put it in the tank with its newly chilled-out mate. Kim’s hope was that they’d somehow communicate and, if I could talk enough of them out of their homicidal rage, they might calm down the rest of the pack. School? Bunch? I don’t know what the collective noun is for a bunch of angry sentient keys, do you?

“So, catch and release?” I asked Kim.

“Something like that,” she said with a smile.

I don’t know if it will work, but it’s all we’ve got right now. This is going to take a long time and we can’t guarantee how many we’ll be able to round up. So, if you are loved up and fancy going for a dip this summer, and you don’t want to end up with a butt-skin graft or worse, might I suggest giving the waterfront a miss for a while. Particularly, a certain bridge.

And if you absolutely must do the padlock thing, a quick thank you to a key is not much to ask in return for keeping your limbs.

Want to read more?

Ghost Bus – Tales from Wellington’s Dark Side is available on most digital platforms here:

https://books2read.com/ghostbus

Paperback Ghost Bus in NZ

Get your Ghost Bus paperbacks here

Paperback Ghost Bus overseas

If you live outside of New Zealand I would recommend ordering your Ghost Bus paperback via Amazon because postage overseas from here is all over the shop thanks to the rona.

Ghost Bus – Tales from Wellington’s Dark Side paperback

Want to see more awesome artwork?

Shaun Garea – the creator of the awesome bitey key image is the artist behind The Legend of Gareus – a hilarious webcomic about Gareus, the David Brent of fantasy. You can check it out here:

The Legend of Gareus

All aboard the Ghost Bus!

You thought the Space X launch was exciting?

Well today is the e-launch of Ghost Bus – Tales from Wellington’s Dark Side!

Click below for a one-stop shop of where you can pick up Ghost Bus.

I want to read Ghost Bus! (Books2read.com)

It will also be available on Google Play and Apple books shortly (there was a slight hiccup with the upload because apparently I didn’t put enough capital letters in the title). I will update the link above as soon as it goes live.

Don’t worry print purists, there is a paper copy in production. I will let you know as soon as it is available.

I really hope you enjoy it!

No longer a one-book wonder

Tomorrow I will be publishing my second book and it is a million percent not what I thought my second book would be.

At first my second book was going to be the story of another trip around the South Pacific, but life – in a good way – had other ideas about that.

Then my second book was going to another travel tale about our adventures in the United States when we went there for Paddy’s 50th birthday. That one was called Gators, Guns and Keeping Calm. I got quite a way through writing it and then something terrible happened in my home town involving firearms and I just couldn’t. The tone was all wrong. One day I might resurrect that book. It was a fascinating place and we met some amazing people. I’ll know when the time for that is, but it’s not now.

And then there’s the one I actually finished

My third attempt at a second book is one I have actually finished writing. It’s had a manuscript assessment and needs a bunch of editing but it won’t be long before it’s good to go. It’s the first book in a nautically themed YA fantasy series with a lot of underwater shenanigans and it will see the light of day I promise!

This second book though, my actual second book, started life as a writing challenge. I decided I would take a crack at NaNoWriMo (National Novel Writing Month) for the first time at the end of last year.

Book stores and pick up artists

It started with a running gag I had with a friend that came about after her insistence that a woman chatting with me about the cover of I book I was holding in Unity Books was actually chatting me up. We then started joking about how book shops would actually be an excellent place to score and that there probably was a secret code among browsers in the know. The idea fascinated me and I ended up writing a short story about it for her. With a bit of a supernatural twist it became a tale called ‘The best pick up joint in town.’

After I wrote it I discovered it was NaNoWriMo time. The challenge was to write a 50,000 word novel in a month and a short story collection counted, so I decide to give it a crack.

A creepy love-letter

Well I didn’t make the 50,000 word mark, but what I did end up with was a collection of short stories that formed a sort of warped love-letter to Wellington New Zealand – the home I have chosen for myself. A collection I felt proud enough of to have a crack at publishing.

Some of the stories are spooky, some of them are silly and some have a pretty high body count, but all, I hope, in some way will make the reader smile. It’s escapism, pure and simple – my gift to a world that might need a little bit of that right now.

The Wellington that was

This is my first foray into fiction, but when I was putting the stories together for publication, it wasn’t the ghosts, aliens and witches that stood out. It was the normal things that aren’t so normal anymore. Hanging out in bookstores, sitting on a crowded bus, buying a kebab at 3am.

What my second book actually turned out to be was a love letter to a Wellington that was. A Wellington I miss, and one I very much look forward to seeing again.

A socially distanced hug

So here it is, book number two. A very different book from number one in many ways, but similar in the most important one. It’s for you. It’s to make you smile if you are feeling shit. It’s a distraction if you are feeling scared. It’s not the great New Zealand novel – instead it’s a written hug from me to you.

I hope you enjoy it was much as I enjoyed writing it and tomorrow I will let you know where you can get your hands on it.

In the meantime check out this amazing cover, designed by the very talented Catherine Slavova’s Karnstein Designs

Oh, and a very important disclaimer!

Sorry historians, it’s aliens or nothing

Before our entire country was (quite rightfully) sent to our room, I was already seeing a bunch of messages from historians in writers’ forums asking people to write about the pandemic.

It was a moment in history we were living through and we should be documenting it, they said. I thought about it, I really did. I write non-fiction, I write about mental health and I write about people. It really is right in my wheelhouse.

But it turned out I just couldn’t. While I was living through it and trying to process it and wondering what was going to happen next, I just couldn’t write about it.

Ghosts, sea monsters and cats, oh my!

Instead I found myself gravitating towards something that had absolutely nothing to do with the giant ‘thing’ that was affecting the entire globe. I turned to a series of stories I started during NaNoWriMo (National Novel Writing Month) last year. It’s a challenge that gives you a month to write a 50,000 word novel or, as I discovered, a bunch of short stories. I didn’t make the 50,000 mark in time, but I did get a decent collection of stories together, which I was quite pleased about.

It was my first crack at fiction – a sort of odd combination of sci-fi, horror and humour and I found the whole process a huge amount of fun.

At the time we were being asked to write about Covid-19, I jokingly tweeted about it:

I’m hearing a lot from historians asking writers to journal/blog about life during the pandemic. Historians I love you, but that’s the last thing I want to do rn. All ppl are getting from me is sea monsters, aliens, witches and Mittens the cat #escapist #soznotsoz

Giving through escapism

My cunning plan was to finish the last of the stories once we went into lockdown, find myself a local editor and cover designer and turn the stories into an e-book.

I can’t do much to fix this mess we’re in, but I can use my powers to provide a silly distraction and support some local creatives in the process. That’s why I want to design and edit locally and why I want to self-publish and make the collection as cheap as the e-platforms will let me.

Lockdown writer’s block

The thing was, once NZ went into lockdown proper, I couldn’t make myself do even that. I had around 600 words left of the last story, and do you think I could finish the damned thing?

I’ve been working from home (and I am not complaining about that because I know I am privileged to be working at all) but it has been really hard to switch from work brain to writing brain when I’m in the same location. I just had a massive block about it.

Finished!

So on Friday I took at day’s leave, in my house/now workplace and finished the damned thing.

It was the most amazing feeling of accomplishment and relief. Sort of the way I felt when I had Starboard ready to send out to publishers. It’s probably the best I’ve felt since we all got grounded I think.

I’ve now got myself an editor and am working on finding someone local to help me with a cover and I will self-publish it as an e-book. So sorry, no deep insight about Virus McVirusface or mental health during lockdown. I probably could write a whole book on that, but not now, not while I’m living it.

Instead you get aliens in Cuba Mall, piranhas in Oriental Bay, haunted nautical artefacts and true agenda of Mittens, Wellington’s celebrity cat.

At present that collection is titled Ghost Bus – tales from Wellington’s dark side, and I will let you all know as soon as it’s available.   

The face (and gin) of finished

When normal becomes the fantasy

One of the strange and sad things that happened when I was re-reading the first stories I wrote was that all of a sudden it wasn’t the ghosts and the aliens that stood out. It was the things happening in the background – browsing in a bookstore, stumbling down Courtney Place in search of a kebab, being squished together on a crowded bus.

The stories are now about a world that, at the moment, doesn’t exist. Now I look out the window and see our bus, still doing its run for essential workers, basically empty on each loop. It makes me sad but I also have hope. I am super proud of how our little country has stuck together and protected each other and one day I am sure those bits will stop being fantasy.

Don’t worry non-fiction readers and sailors

If you are one of my non-fiction readers, don’t despair, I won’t be stopping that any time soon, it’s my natural writing home, and I have a couple of projects tucked away.

For the sailors, I’m not quitting that either, even if it does take a while before I’m out on a boat again.

And if you like a little bit of both, there’s a nautically themed YA novella in the works too.

Our lockdown in pictures

Finally, to make up for the fact that I’m not writing about lockdown, here are some photos of ours instead.

From our bubble to yours, stay safe, wash your hands and be kind xx

My home office
My supervisor
Office clothes
Our take on the ‘We’re not scared – great NZ bear hunt’
Disturbing my bubble buddies!
Chef Paddy making lockdown stew
Paddy’s lockdown birthday cake
Cutting the lockdown birthday cake – yikes!
Colouring therapy
‘Help’ with the colouring therapy
Easter in lockdown
Not impressed with our contribution to the Great NZ Egg Hunt
Like seriously not impressed!
Driveway Anzac service with our amazing neighbours
Anzac day 2020
Bubble walks have reminded us how beautiful our neighbourhood really is
Yep, that’s right down the street!
Bubble walk view

Learning to let go

This is a blog I have been putting off writing for a while. It’s about letting go, but I have to keep reminding myself that it’s not about giving up.

We’ve talked about this for a while but it wasn’t until the last time we took the boat away that we officially made the call.

We’re putting Wildflower up for sale.

It’s a really hard thing to do. She’s been a massive part of Paddy’s life, and a big part of mine for the last 10 years. It’s like letting go of a family member or, the way I prefer to look at it, preparing your child for every possible eventuality and sending them out into the world.

Wildflower is tough and beautiful and created by Paddy to be the ultimate ocean-going vessel – but she’s not crossing oceans. All the little things that went wrong when we last took her out were simply due to lack of use. She needs to be out on the ocean waves.

New adventures

Part of me is really struggling to fight the feeling that this is giving up. I gleefully signed off my book with plans to take her away again in 2016 (note to self: never put a date in print). That year came and went and we are still here in Wellington.
We have taken the boat away on smaller adventures – across to Tasman Bay and Nelson and over to the Sounds, but also embarked on different adventures of our own.

We bought a house, I tamed a feral garden, we got engaged (there’s a half-finished blog about that too. We had a party which involved putting 3000 ball pit balls in a spa pool. It was awesome.) We inherited a new fur child, I wrote a book and got it published and I am writing more.

When we moved from living between the boat and a flat to a house (a move that went amazingly smoothly and, I would like to point out, was Paddy’s idea so no rubbish about me making him swallow the anchor) we thought we would have more time to sail the boat because we weren’t living on her. We could keep her set up for sailing all the time and it wouldn’t be such a drama having to pack up our life every time we wanted to take her out.

The best laid plans

Unfortunately things didn’t happen that way. For a million, very valid reasons, we just didn’t get the chances we thought we would. As I have mentioned before, one of the issues with having a cruising boat in Wellington is the fact that you are in Wellington. You can’t just pop over to the Sounds for a weekend and be back for work on Monday. You need several days either side to make sure you get the Cook Strait crossing conditions right. So, while it’s a lovely idea, it doesn’t happen that often in reality. And in reality, with the new directions our lives have taken, we aren’t going to be able to take a year or so off work to get the boat ready and head over to the tropics any time soon.

This isn’t a bad thing. We are both in a really good place right now and I am happier and less crazy than I have been in a long time. It’s just that it’s a different place than we thought we would be.

Not the end of the adventure

This isn’t the end of sailing for us. There will always be a boat, just a smaller one that means less maintenance and more sailing. One thought is a trailer yacht that Paddy can actually sail and maybe get back into racing. The other possibility is to get a berth down in Picton and have a smaller boat there, so we can fly over in the weekends and already be in the Sounds.

One of the things Paddy asked me when we were talking about this was “what part of sailing do you like best, getting to places or being in places?” And when I honestly think about it, being in places is the winner for me. What I loved about our Pacific trip was the access to islands and villages and people that you normally wouldn’t have on your standard tourist holiday. And while I am super proud of myself for crossing oceans and it gave me a huge amount of confidence, I can’t say I enjoyed it hugely.

The odd clear night with bright stars and a calm sea made it all worth it, but that was the exception rather than the rule. Most sailors I have spoken to don’t enjoy long passages. A couple of days between countries is all good, but I can’t say I get much out of anything longer – other than bragging rights. So another option for us could be flying and chartering a boat. The sailing isn’t over, it just might be a different kind of sailing.

Rules for dating our daughter

It’s not the end of adventures on Wildflower yet either. It can take years to sell a boat and we are certainly going to vet potential purchasers. Our baby isn’t going to go to just anyone. It has to be someone who will love her and look after her and can handle the fact she’s a little bit ‘extra.’ If you are going to date our daughter, you are going to have to get past us. (So don’t worry Mum, you will get your ride round the harbour!)

So, as Paddy has said  ‘the star of Which Way is Starboard Again? is up for sale’. She’s strong and beautiful and has more whiz bang gadgets than you could possibly need (don’t even get me started on the fridge) and a piece of me will go along with her.

She is sturdy and safe and got my anxious arse around the South Pacific and back. She is the goodest girl and we are very proud of her. We want to find someone who will love her as much as we do but give her the freedom to sail she needs.

The deets

For those interested, Wildflower is a Bruce Roberts designed R432.

She has a “Solent” cutter rig and an 80hp Ford D series engine.

On board there’s a generator, water maker, dive compressor and SSB radio.

She has new or upgraded pretty much everything.

Paddy has a complete inventory for anyone who is interested. Just drop us a line at whichwayisstarboardagain@gmail.com

We are happy to answer any questions – and will probably have a few for you as well!

The bestest boat

Look Mum, we’re sailing!

Happy captain

Which Way is Starboard Again? the book
Cover girl

Supervising

Adventures

Labour of love

First time behind the wheel

Big Red the engine

The galley

Paddy and I

Learning to forgive myself – and a big splash

A while ago I learned it is never wise to put a date you are going to do something in print.

If you miss that date for whatever reason its just staring at you and you spend more time beating yourself up about it than getting on with things.

When it comes to work or writing for other people, I eat deadlines for breakfast. When life gets in the way of my own self-imposed ones though, I get unreasonably mad at myself.

I should have learned after publishing Which Way is Starboard Again? the book, which I ended by saying we would do the South Pacific trip again in 2016. For various reasons that didn’t happen. Life moved in different, and amazing directions. There will be more sailing and there will be other trips, they may just be at a different time and in a different form. I don’t regret that at all, but I still have that 2016 date glaring accusingly at me from the page.

I did the same thing to myself when I announced the new book ‘Gators, Guns and Keeping Calm’ about our trip to the US. It started with a hiss and a roar, I had the chapter summaries ready to send to publisher and was all ready to self-publish as an e-book if they weren’t keen this time. I was taking regular ‘writing days’ as leave from work when I could and, if I’d stuck to my self-imposed deadline, I would have finished by now. But I didn’t, and I haven’t. And the reasons I haven’t have been mostly out of my control, but I am still bashing myself up over it.

And don’t even get me started on the half finished fiction…

I realised it was getting beyond a joke when I found myself getting all panicky and angry at myself and the world because I hadn’t written a blog. Well I had written it, but in a notepad, which has been sitting on the coffee table looking disappointed in me for months now, waiting to be transcribed.

It’s an important blog. It’s our engagement blog. (For those that don’t already know, after 10 years, the Captain finally proposed -spoiler: I said yes!) It was getting so long between the event and the blog that it was ridiculous. At least that was what I was telling myself. Yes I had a whole lot going on in my life, but what kind of writer am I if I can’t even make the time to write about my own engagement?

It was a couple of days after that last meltdown that I realised the only person who was upset and angry about this was me. That the voice I thought I had chased away during my earlier battles with mental illness was coming back.

“You’re a failure.”

“You’re letting everyone down.”

“Who do you think you are calling yourself an author? You’ve written one book. You should give up now before everyone realises you are a fraud.”

It is a voice that a lot of people have and it can be really hard to accept that it is a voice that is actually full of shit.

People aren’t thinking those things. They never have.  But it doesn’t make it feel any less real. I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again, the hardest battle anyone can fight is the one against their own brain.

But I am telling that voice to shut up and get back in its box. No doubt it will pop up a few more times, but I fully intend to slam the lid shut.

I am capable, and I will do all those things I said I would.

There will be a trip.

There will be a book.

There will be a blog (with lots of lovely photos from our engagement party).

But they will happen when they happen and I refuse to feel guilty about that anymore.

Speaking of deadlines, another one we missed, through no fault of our own,  was getting Wildflower back in the water for summer. Instead of the usual paint and scrape, her butt was due for a major overhaul – sandblasting 14 years worth of antifoul right off and giving her a whole new beautiful paint job.

Wildflower takes up stilt walking

Last time Paddy did this he had a bit more time on his hands (and he was also 14 years younger) so this time we decided to enlist a bit of help.

Events that were mostly beyond our control meant the process took a lot longer than anticipated and crept into the colder season which meant then having to wait on the weather. The end result was that we missed the summer’s sailing, but Wildflower now has a lovely arse.

Last weekend we made a massive splash, plonking her back in the water again, where she is most definitely in her happy place.

Poor thing had been sitting so long that a bunch of gunk had clogged the switch of my nemesis the bilge alarm and jammed it on, meaning alarm bells ringing in the middle of the harbour.

Paddy calmly said “would you mind steering the boat for a bit?” and popped down to check things out and I only (internally) freaked out a little bit. Firstly over whether I could actually still remember how to steer the boat and secondly, well,  those who have read the book will know why that particular alarm gives me the heebie geebies. It was good news though. I did remember how to steer and the issue was with the alarm, not the boat sinking. I kept my nerves in check and any anxious meeping stayed inside my head. I was quite proud of myself!

I don’t see the point in dwelling on past frustrations, so while it was sad we missed the summer sailing, I am super happy our boat is back in the water and look forward to restoring her from a cesspit of dust and toolboxes to our floating home away from home again.

Also, if you pick your days, winter sailing in Wellington can actually be more settled. We might even enter her in a couple of races in the cruising division of the Evans Bay Yacht Club winter series – though no firm commitment, and definitely nothing in writing!

Skipper watching like a broody chook

Nice arse! Shiny new paint job

All aboard!

Relieved Skipper is relieved

1000 subscribers! Let’s have a sale! (proceeds to NZ Mental Health Foundation)

I’m super excited to see that 1000 lovely people have subscribed to this blog (especially since I have been a bit rubbish at regularly updating it of late) and a big wave hello to the new followers on the Starboard Facebook page!

This is an awesome surprise and a good wake up for me to share more with you all.

To celebrate I’m selling signed paperbacks of Which Way is Starboard Again? for NZ $9.99 with free postage in New Zealand.

50% of the proceeds still go to the New Zealand Mental Health Foundation  . Mental health is severely underfunded in New Zealand and this is a fantastic organisation that deserves all the support it can get.  I have already made our first donation of $200 so thank you so much for everyone who has been a part of that.

For those of you who would like to donate more the $19.99 full promotion is still available and there is more information about it here

Mental Health Foundation fundraiser 

You can also purchase it, and other cool stuff, through the Mental Health Foundation website (where they have also done a really cool review!)

NZ Mental Health Foundation – buy useful stuff

If you live outside of New Zealand and are interested in buying a copy, drop me an email at whichwayisstarboardagain@gmail.com and we can sort postage. The book is also available on most ebook platforms, but I don’t have control over the pricing of those. Do shop around though, I have spotted it on sale at different sites. At the moment Amazon has it at $6.59 

In other news, book number two is definitely on the way and I will share a sample with you shortly. I am also investigating turning Starboard into an audio book, I just need to get my head around the technological side of that!

Will keep you posted.

Again, thank you so much for the support. It might just be a matter of pressing a subscribe button, but it means an awful lot to writers like us – so yay you!

Goodbye Mr Pies

Nearly 16 years ago I got into an argument with my flatmate (housemate or roommate for non-Kiwi readers) about whether or not we should get a cat.

“Don’t be ridiculous!,” I said (in a rare moment of sensibleness). “We are going to go our separate ways in a year. Who is going to take the cat? Who is going to pay for the food and the vet bills? We are not getting a cat. End of story.”

It was not the end of the story.

Around midnight said flatmate woke me up to say she thought she had heard an injured cat in the back yard. I muttered something about her probably being high and turned to go back to sleep when I heard it too. A woeful yowling noise that could have woken the dead.

We woke another flatmate up and the three of us headed out to the back yard, armed with a cigarette lighter, because students didn’t have useful things like torches. We followed the noise into the bushes down the back of the property and when I thought we were close I grabbed the lighter. After burning my fingers several times (I didn’t smoke) I found the source of the caterwauling and tried to grab it before it could run away. Still thinking we were hunting for a wounded adult cat, I was shocked when my hands closed on a ball of fluff the size of a regular cat’s head. Where was the rest of the cat? How could it still be meowing? Once my eyes got used to the light I realised I had captured a tiny black kitten. I was amazed that something so small could have made so much noise.

The first thing we noticed when we got the poor thing inside was that it absolutely stank, like something had peed all over it. We gave it a bath in the sink, dried it off and popped it in a shoebox with a towel and a hot water bottle. A fourth flatmate woke up. “Is that thing staying?” he asked. We shrugged, if we couldn’t find an owner, then probably yes. We popped the shoebox in the bathroom, where we surmised there would be less damage if its occupant peed everywhere, and went back to bed. As soon as the lights went out the howling commenced in earnest. “Is that thing staying?” flatmate became “if someone doesn’t shut that thing up it’s going out the window” flatmate and Anna the sucker stepped in. I picked the kitten up and popped it on my pillow, where it promptly fell asleep. The choice was taken out of my hands, I was Mum from that night forth.

The next day we tried to deduce gender, but the kitten was so tiny it was almost impossible to tell. We couldn’t spot any boy bits so we declared our new friend a little girl and named ‘her’ Holly because we found her just before Christmas. A check up at the vet some time later told us a different story, our little fleabag was actually a little boy, and we might want to consider a name change. To keep things simple we just decided to drop the H and Holly became Ollie.

If Harry Potter was the boy who lived, then Ollie was the cat who lived. Right from the start we were told not to get attached to him because he probably wasn’t going to make it. He was only about three weeks old and we were told by various well-meaning cat people that if his mother had abandoned him, if he had been peed on, if we didn’t have a heatpad or fancy food then he was probably going to die. Nevertheless we purrsisted, feeding him kitten milk with an eyedropper and keeping him warm. Before long he was drinking milk from a dish by himself (give or take a bit of faceplanting) and using a litter box. Score one for the cat who wasn’t supposed to make it! Since then Ollie made it through a lot, getting hit by a car, a dicky thyroid, getting lost at new homes. He was the poster child for a cat’s nine lives.

I’m a big kid now! (blurry pre digital camera shot of Ollie graduating from bottle feeding. Note milk beard.)

Because he was so young when we found him, Ollie didn’t really know how to cat. This meant he was a terrible hunter. He knew he should chase things but he had no idea what to do with them if he accidentally caught them. Other than the 3am live mouse chases after having them proudly delivered to the foot of my bed, this was something I didn’t actually mind that much.

Because he wasn’t weaned properly Ollie also sucked his tail. It was kind of adorable when he was a kitten, curled up like a tiny doughnut, but not so cute when he was still doing it three years later. We tried to stop him, but if you pulled his tail out of his mouth he would just slurp it back in like a piece of spaghetti. It was really quite gross. His tail was crusted and pointy like a paint brush (in fact somewhere I have a tail painting where I gave in to temptation and dipped it in some water colours). At one point the tip of his tail became ginger. I kid you not. I have no idea what is in cat saliva but he actually managed to suck the colour out of his tail.

Students. I don’t actually have an explanation for this photo.

Then there were the wet patches. If you tuned out the weird slurping noises and let him stay in your lap for too long he would leave large drool spots in rather embarrassing places. He did it in the bed too, necessitating a few awkward conversations with new boyfriends.

Blep!

Our first real challenge came at Christmastime when we were all going to go our separate ways. Who would take the kitten? As predicted, it turned out to be me. I put him in what from memory was a bird cage and took him to my Mum and Dad’s, where we separated him from our adult cats Pirate and Topsey. He took it all in his stride, getting cuddles from my little sister and posing for a family photo. By then it had been unofficially decided that the fuzzball was mine.

Ollie’s first Christmas

Mum only just told me recently that when I turned up with Ollie she thought it would be a disaster. “Oh god, she’s got a cat. How is she going to cope with that while she’s flatting?” she said to Dad. After a few years of watching me with Ollie, she quickly changed her tune. Yes I saved him initially, but he saved me in so many ways. Those were her words, and they are so true. Through struggles with mental illness, messy breakups, living arrangements falling to bits, work and study stress, Ollie stuck to me like glue. I was never really on my own. He never judged and he was always there.

Renting with a cat isn’t easy (that’s a subject for a blog all of its own) but I wouldn’t have had it any other way. Ollie and I have lived all round the country – several flats (and a brief stint in a friend’s Kombi van) throughout Christchurch, another few rentals down south in Timaru when he went with me to journalism school, a number of homes further south in Oamaru where I worked for the local newspaper and we lived on our own like grownups, and finally across the Strait to Wellington where we moved about a bit before buying our first house together (with the help of some bloke called Paddy).

It felt like Ollie and I against the world for such a long time but when we allowed Paddy into the mix, we became a funny little family.

Meeting Ollie was a pressure moment for Paddy. He knew that if the cat didn’t like him it would be a deal breaker. In fact I’m pretty sure I wore a black cat T shirt on our first proper date, just to hammer the point home. Luckily for Paddy Ollie was a bit of a hussy when it came to men and he let him cuddle him straight away. A couple of years later and they were best buddies. Ollie even came to stay on the boat a few times.

Bros

 

When Paddy first met Ollie he was a little rotund (Ollie not Paddy!). At one point the vet told me if he got to 7kgs we were going to have to talk. Unbeknownst to me Paddy had a history of renaming people’s cats and this time took to calling mine Mr Pies  (as in who ate all the…).

Annoyingly, the name stuck. Mr Pies, Pies, Pie-eater, Piesy, Pie pies, His Royal Pie-ness. Ollie started coming when called Pies, he knew that ‘pies’ equated to food and that ‘pie time’ was dinner time. In the end I was calling him Pies too, despite my concerted efforts to call him by his real name.

Sadly every story does have an end and Mr Pies’ was just over a week ago.  It wasn’t a shock, he wasn’t in pain and he let us know when it was time for him to move on. We knew our time with him was coming to an end, it just happened a little quicker than anticipated. Ollie’s 16 years made him quite an old man in cat terms and unfortunately his kidneys had just worn out. Right up until his last week with us he was just as playful as when he was a kitten. A miracle kitty arthritis drug had given him a new lease on life. He would hurtle up two flights of stairs and be squawking at me from the top to get up there and feed him in the time my creaky knees had got me a third of the way. When he started struggling with his favourite thing (eating) and started pooing in strange places though, we knew something was up. He was so thin too. From his fighting weight of nearly 7kgs he had dropped down to 3kgs.

The vet told us we might have a couple of weeks, but unfortunately we had just days. The morning I woke up and he was still in bed with me not demanding breakfast I knew things weren’t good. When I popped him down and he was wobbly on his feet I knew they were even worse. We’d read that with kidney issues they aren’t in pain, their bodies just aren’t processing toxins and it is a little bit like being very drunk. Sometimes they just naturally go to sleep. Paddy told me to stay at home with him that day and if things still weren’t good we would take him in to the vet. Ollie and I snuggled all day; He rested his paws on me and purred. When his breathing started to get shallower I told him it was okay, he didn’t have to stay, he could rest now – but if my boy was anything it was stubborn. He started hassling me like he wanted food (he was on a special diet for his thyroid but by that point we decided he could have whatever he liked. Raw eggs and bacon flavoured baby food were his favourites – thank you internet!) I carried him upstairs and we sat in the sun (it was a rare sunny Wellington winter day) and he had a good chow down. The little bugger kept wanting to wander off though and he kept falling over. His body wasn’t doing what he wanted it to do. He let out a yowl of frustration and I knew. It wasn’t fair, he was in distress. I called Paddy and he came home early. Ollie cuddled up to him and started purring, which he hadn’t done for a while. When I said to Paddy we should try to get an earlier vet appointment he started purring louder. I am so sure he was telling us yes.

I sat in the back of the car with him and we cranked up the tunes. Ollie was a bogan, he liked car rides but only if accompanied by loud music. Like his Dad he was a bit of a fan of Tom Petty, so that is what he got. He didn’t want to be in his carry cage and I figured this time he didn’t have to be, so he sat on my lap, peering out the window and watching the traffic go by. When we got to the vet it was amazing. Pretty much as soon as we put him on the table, he fell asleep. It was like he had waited until we were all together and decided ‘okay, it’s time for me to go now’. When the vet put him to sleep we didn’t even see him take his last breath, it was so quick and so peaceful, it was obvious he was ready to go.

I’m crying as I write this, but I am also grateful. I am grateful that we got to say goodbye as a family. I am grateful for all those wonderful years, for all the times he drove me insane, for all the times he made me smile. I’m grateful for the friends we made together and the adventures that we had. I’m grateful for all the times he was there for me when times were dark, when the responsibility for a little animal that loved and trusted me helped keep me going.

As my little sister said, I was literally with him from the beginning to the end – and all the highs and lows in between. As a kitten he used to eat my books. As a cat he is immortalised on the cover of my first published book – pride of place, exactly where he belongs.

Om nom nom!

Cover cat

I am a witch without a familiar. He was my best friend. I am bereft but also so glad he was a part of my life for so long.

We buried him in a grove in the forest out the back of our property where he liked to lurk. Eventually we will clear a path down there and put in a bench so we can hang out. He’s got his blankie and his mousies and a tonne of catnip to keep him company in kitty cat heaven.

When I broke the news on Facebook it was really lovely. People from so many different parts of my life who remembered him from different times got in touch. It made me sad, but it made me smile.

So goodbye Ollie, Mr Pies, Piesy, Wolliver, Woozle, Mow mow, Boop Kirtlan. I will miss your chattiness, your attitude, your cuddles, and your incredible ability to find the most noisy thing in the room at 3am. I will miss seeing you at the door when I come home from work, having you steal water from any unattended glass an typing my blogs from underneath your furry butt.

You were the handsomest, bravest, loyalest, craftiest, naughtiest, most loving cat in the world and I will love you forever.

I will end with a million photos of Ollie, because he deserves a million photos.