"It's a beautiful day in this neighborhood
A beautiful day for a neighbor
Would you be mine?
Could you be mine?" - Fred Rogers
The walls of the courthouse needed painting. The chipped grey enamel showed a layer of tan and white underneath, and the dark wood wainscots that lined the lower half of the walls were dull with a build-up of dust and grime. There had been a time, probably about the time the century old building was brand-new, when craftsmanship and quality were highly prized, when people respected the Courts of Law and the government and fought to protect them. Varia had felt that way, too, once.
At that moment, Ghost felt like the neglected courthouse. She walked along Historic Main Street, passing haughty store fronts and eaves laced with dead ivy. The 19th-century cobblestone clicked underneath her workman's boots.
The rich center of Moorefield was completely and utterly deserted.
The fox continued trudging through the quiet town, shouldering a dusty but sturdy duffle bag, picking up discarded bottles or cans that the traveling passerby thoughtfully forgot. Glass, aluminum was going to become scarce soon enough, and they would be useful to trade.
She never quite imagined that the end of the world would be like this. Except it wasn't really the end, it was just making room for the next uberspecies to inhabit it. Nothing personal.
Ghost left Main and began making the ascent to her new residence. It really was a hike without a vehicle, along a dirt road flanked by beautiful clapboard cabins, flanked by farmland.
The house that she lived in was a modest affair, with two bedrooms and two stories and ugly furniture. Yet there was an old-fashioned ice box that didn't require power to keep cold, a water pump in the backyard, and a rusted Ford pick-up that had enough gasoline to get her to a settlement if she needed to. But there were no hospitals in this old farming town, none for miles, and no point in going anyway. She knew they were out there, with supplies and probably running water and electricity. But women were traded along with the merchandise and everything had a price. Nothing personal.