
The pleasure ship’s infirmary looked like a crime scene where the weapon was cheap liquor and bad judgment. Passengers were draped over cots and trash cans, retching like they were trying to cough up their souls. Perry Gordeaux, the baby-faced pre-med working the voyage as an assistant medic, wiped his brow and shook his head. “That’s what happens when you guzzle chocolate martinis till dawn,” he said. “Even Doc Merlin went down swinging. I handed him our last barf bag five minutes ago.”
“I’ve never known Doc to drink,” said Jennifer Brooks, the ship’s head nurse—tall, gorgeous, and built like trouble. “But with him out cold, it’s just you and me holding this circus together.” She lowered her voice. “Lucky for us, Boris Pug is a passenger. Not licensed, but he knows more medicine than anyone with a diploma. Unlucky for us, that means his owner Jonny M. will be sniffing around. So forgive me if I keep my back to the wall—he’s got wandering hands.”
She barely finished the sentence before fate kicked in the door. Boris and Jonny were suddenly there. Jonny flashed Jennifer a grin that belonged in a police lineup, already making her skin crawl, but Boris was all steel nerves and cold logic. “Our last port of call was Freedonia,” the pug said. “Did any of the passengers engage in anal sex with a proboscis monkey?”
“Probably a few dozen,” Jennifer said, swatting away Jonny’s creeping hand. “That’s the main attraction.”
Boris’s eyes darkened. “This isn’t simple alcohol poisoning. All that monkey business brewed a virus mean enough to crack the world wide open the moment we dock anywhere civilized.” He paused. “I might be able to cook up an antidote. Long shot. But to get the key ingredient…” He looked at Jennifer. Then at Jonny. “You’ll have to merge bodily fluids. The old-fashioned way.”
The infirmary groaned. The ship rolled. And somewhere out at sea, the end of the world cleared its throat.








