Alternity

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Authors: Mari Mancusi

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ALTERNITY

 

By Mari Mancusi

ALTERNITY

 

Marianne Mancusi Beach

Copyright © 2012

All Rights Reserved.

 

AGENCY INFORMATION

NLA Digital Liaison Platform LLC

 

This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

 

Writers spend years laboring over a single book. Please respect their work by buying their books from legitimate sources. The scanning, uploading and distribution of this book via the Internet or any other means without the permission of the publisher is illegal and punishable by law. Please purchase only authorized electronic editions, and do not participate in or encourage electronic piracy of copyrighted materials. Your support of the author’s rights is appreciated.

CONTENTS

 

Prologue

One

Two

Three

Four

Five

Six

Seven

Eight

Nine

Ten

Eleven

Twelve

Thirteen

Fourteen

Fifteen

Sixteen

Seventeen

Eighteen

Nineteen

Twenty

Twenty-one

Twenty-two

Twenty-three

Twenty-four

Twenty-five

Epilogue

 

An excerpt of Mari Mancusi’s TOMORROW LAND

 

About the Author

 

PROLOGUE

 

Running.

I am running for my life. That much I know as the heels of my silver boots click a staccato beat against the metallic road below. But where am I? Who’s chasing me? And, most importantly, why?

I have no idea.

Run faster. Run harder. Run from the moon.

A strange chant echoes through my head, with urgency I can’t comprehend. Endless demands competing with my own frantic thoughts skitter across my brain like a bum needle on a worn record.

Where am I?
Run faster.
Who’s chasing me?
Run harder.
And why?
Run from the moon.

But there is no moon. The corridor is black, skyless, and deep underground. And I’m already running as fast and as hard as I can.

Sucking in a breath I take in my surroundings without slowing down. Trying to think, to process, to find a shred of familiarity in the dark steel beams crisscrossing the tunnel’s ceiling, the mammoth fans cut into the walls expelling hot, sour air. It all seems so familiar and yet completely foreign. Like an episode of déjà vu pricking at the dark recesses of your brain, or a name on the tip of your tongue—the one you always remember at 3:00 A.M., when it no longer matters.

Except, this time I think it might still matter. And 3:00 A.M. may be too late.

“Don’t let her reach the hatch!”

My heart slams against my chest as I realize my pursuers—whoever they might be—aren’t far behind. Sweat pools in the hollow of my throat, then drips down, soaking my breasts. My muscles burn, my lungs refuse to take in air, I can barely swallow, and my vision has gone spotty. Soon I’ll have to stop.

But to stop is to die. That much I know. And so I keep running.

I turn a corner and catch sight of a ladder in front of me, embedded firmly into the wall, a potential salvation ascending into the darkness. Where does it go? Could it lead to the hatch my enemies seek to keep me from? To stop and check it out will eat up valuable time—time I don’t have. But I have to take a chance. I can’t run forever.

I throw myself against the ladder, wrapping my hands around each rung as I climb, step after step. The ground falls away, and with it the dim tunnel lighting. Soon I am engulfed in blackness.

A few seconds later I bang my head against something, almost falling off the ladder from the impact. I steady myself, then reach up with one hand, fingers exploring the ceiling until they come upon a latch. More frantic exploration reveals a handle. There’s definitely some kind of trapdoor.

“Up here! Get her!”

I hear feet clanging against the metal rungs as my pursuers start up after me. I don’t have much time left. Wrapping my hand around the trapdoor handle, I yank on it with all my might. This is my one chance to escape.

It doesn’t budge.

I pound on the door, my heart exploding in my chest as I realize that I likely have precious seconds to live. Surprisingly, my life does not flash before my eyes; in fact, I’m still having difficulty remembering any life at all. Who I am. What I do. How I got into this mess.

Run from the moon
, the mysterious voice in my head demands.

“Shut up,” I mutter, tired of its nonsensical advice.

The first man reaches me, paws at my feet through the darkness. “We’ve got her!” he cries. And indeed, it seems he has.

Not willing to give up without a fight, I slam my foot down on his hand, the stiletto heel driving into his palm. A crunch of bone. A yelp of pain. I repeat the blow, then follow up with a wild kick to where I estimate his head to be, all the while clinging to the ladder for dear life. I don’t miss. Knocked off balance he loses his grip, falls backward, and hurtles into the blackness below. A sickening thud, followed by silence, tells me he’s likely met his maker.

But his death is not enough to save me. The second guy is right behind him and much more prepared for my alley cat tactics. There’s a flash of light—a crimson beam cutting through the darkness—then a sharp, icy pain spreading up my ankle, shooting through my veins at a lightning pace, reaching my toes, my fingers, my brain—one after another. My grip loosens, my head swims, my muscles fail. At first I fear he’ll just let me fall to my death. But my attacker grabs on instead and starts dragging me down the ladder.

Not good.

At the bottom, the men flip me over so I’m lying on my stomach, spread-eagle. I can’t move, my body is Jell-O, my muscles are useless.

But I can see. I can hear. I can feel.

Three men kneel above me, armed with scary-looking tools, including something that resembles a high-tech electric syringe, complete with gauges and lights and a really long needle. I’m not sure what it does, but I know that I don’t want it done to me.

One man reaches into his bag and pulls out a small silver box. He presses his thumb against the top. The box beeps and flashes a green light, then pops open, revealing a vial of some sort. He presents the vial to the man with the syringe, who takes it and sticks the long needle inside, sucking up the unidentified contents. The syringe beeps in approval and a few green lights flash in sync.

“Are you ready, my dear?” the man with the gun asks, his lips curled in a sneer. He’s big, built like a soldier and sporting a trim gray beard. He’s wearing a shiny metallic jumpsuit, pulled tight by a black tool belt.

“Please!” I beg, not thinking for one second that anything I say will make a difference, but at the same time desperate to try. “Just let me go!”

The men laugh, shaking their heads in mirth. “Oh, you’ll go all right,” replies the second guy. He’s smaller than the first, but no less menacing. “Pow!” he quips. “Straight to the moon.”

They grab my arm and flip me over. I watch helplessly as they stab me with the syringe, injecting silver liquid into my unwilling veins. I scream and scream and scream, knowing it will do no good. Knowing that there’s no escape.

Like it or not, I’m going to the moon.

ONE

 

“Skye, Skye! Wake up! Wake up!”

I clawed through the blackness, trying desperately to regain consciousness at the sound of my roommate’s voice. My eyes flew open, and I struggled to take in a breath. My throat had constricted … the air cut off to my lungs. I waved my arms frantically in Felicia’s direction, praying she would get the message before I asphyxiated in my own bed.

She did. Not surprising, I suppose. It wasn’t as if this was the first time I’d woken up to a full-on asthma attack. Especially recently, when I’d been trying to cut back on my medication and use yoga to control my breathing instead. A moment later I felt my inhaler being stuffed into my mouth, sending lifesaving Lunatropium into my airwaves.

My muscles relaxed, and I sunk into the pillow, allowing myself a luxurious sigh of relief. I was back. I was safe. I was me again. I pulled the inhaler from my mouth and scanned my dorm room, enjoying each and every shred of familiarity. My raggedy teddy bear, Melvin, at the foot of my bed. My overstuffed bookcase across the room, crammed with well-worn fantasy epics and textbooks. My prized Alienware laptop, souped up to run the latest and greatest video games, on my desk. And my movie posters above my bed.
Star Wars
,
The Hunger Games
,
Phaze Runner.
I smiled a little as Luke, Katniss, and Deckard all glowered down at me, as if daring me to claim that my nightmare adventure had been more hellish than their everyday realities.

“Are you okay?” Felicia asked, peering down at me with concern, her long blond hair framing her heart-shaped face. “That looked like a bad one.”

“It wasn’t good,” I agreed, sitting up and rubbing my eyes. I realized I was still shaking and wondered if it was from the nightmare itself or my abrupt awakening. “But at least it woke me up. I was having the worst dream ever.”

“Another one?” Felicia sat down on the side of the bed, reaching out to squeeze my hand. I squirmed under her gaze, not liking the pity I recognized in her eyes. “What was it about this time?” she asked cautiously, knowing I didn’t always like to talk about them.

“I can’t remember the details,” I said with a shrug. “You know how dreams are. But it’s like I’m trapped in this underground world, fleeing for my life. Someone’s chasing me and I don’t know who—or why for that matter. In fact, in the dream, it’s almost as if I’m not even myself, but some other person.” I trailed off, not knowing what else to say. It sounded so silly when I explained it out loud. How could I convey how terrifying it had been? How real it felt? It wasn’t like a normal dream that fled with the break of dawn. It clung to me, even now, as if it were reality and this was the dream.

“Is the guy chasing you hot?” Felicia asked, a mischievous grin crossing her face. “‘Cause if so, I suggest you let him catch you next time. I had this one dream a few nights ago where I was being chased by Clive Owen and …”

I tried and failed to muster a smile. I knew she was just trying to cheer me up. And normally it probably would have worked. But after three weeks of horrible, unrelenting nightmares and asthma attacks, accompanied by very little actual rest, I was in no mood for jokes.

“Look,” I interrupted, just as she was getting to the TMI section of her Clive Owen fantasy. “It’s really not funny, okay? I don’t even want to go back to sleep at this point—just in case I have another dream. It’s
that
bad.”

Felicia’s face softened. She leaned down to give me a comforting hug. “Have you told your parents?” she asked. “Maybe they could have you see someone. I mean, if you’re not sleeping …”

I scowled. Sure, many of my classmates at NYU saw shrinks. In fact, it had become almost fashionable to talk about what “my therapist said” at parties. But I’d always resisted the idea of seeking answers from a stranger. I liked to be in control of my own destiny, thank you very much.

“Maybe you’re right,” I said noncommittally, mostly so she wouldn’t press me. “I’ll think about it, anyway. In the meantime, you can go back to sleep. I know you have that big test tomorrow. I’ll be fine. I swear. I’ll keep the inhaler nearby, just in case.”

Felicia looked at me suspiciously. “And what are
you
going to do?” she asked. She knew me way too well, and I felt my face warm at the accusation in her question. I considered lying, but if she woke up again, I’d be busted, so what was the use?

“I was thinking I’d play some RealLife,” I admitted. “Just for a little bit. So I can relax and stuff.” I added the last part a little defensively, preempting the attack.

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