Listen (Muted Trilogy Book 2)

BOOK: Listen (Muted Trilogy Book 2)
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Contents

Title Page

Copyright

The Muted Trilogy

Dedication

ONE Caged

TWO Tested

THREE Demands

FOUR Searching

FIVE Monotony

SIX Quality

SEVEN Finding More

EIGHT Undone

NINE Expanding

TEN To Talk

ELEVEN Progress

TWELVE Overheard

THIRTEEN Can We

FOURTEEN Cooperation

FIFTEEN Chances

SIXTEEN Unguarded

SEVENTEEN Survival

EIGHTEEN Resources

NINETEEN Options

TWENTY Strings

TWENTY-ONE Lost

TWENTY-TWO Meeting

TWENTY-THREE Binding

TWENTY-FOUR What Could Be

TWENTY-FIVE Conspiracy

TWENTY-SIX Side Effects

TWENTY-SEVEN Apart

TWENTY-EIGHT Risk

TWENTY-NINE Interview

THIRTY Where We Started

EXCERPT:

Voice

Acknowledgments

About the Author

 

 

 

Listen

by

Nikita Spoke

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.

 

Text copyright © 2015 Nikita Spoke. All rights reserved.

 

Cover design and original photography © 2015 by Laura Lynne Ellis.

Stock photography for cover:

©iStock.com/Antonel

 

No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the author.

 

Copyright © 2015 Nikita Spoke

All Rights Reserved.

ISBN-13: 978-1518812521

ISBN-10: 151881252X

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Muted Trilogy

Mute

Listen

Voice

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

For Susan.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ONE

Caged

 

Jemma paced the windowless cell, footsteps echoing off the concrete walls. The only other sound was the hum of the fluorescent lighting, a sound that seemed louder every time she sat on the sterile cot that served as her only piece of furniture.

"Jack?" she tried sending again, though she'd lost track of how many times she'd already tried, with no response. She could still feel their connection, but barely, slight enough she was no longer entirely certain she wasn’t just imagining it.

It had been hours since they'd been taken, at least. Her stomach was in knots, much too tense to let her know whether it was time for a meal.

A meal, though, was the last thing on her mind when the near-silence was interrupted by the metallic screech of the doorknob. The door opened to reveal a man in his forties, wearing a lab coat. He carried a clipboard and wore what looked like a walkie-talkie on his pocket. He shut the door behind him, the door clicking loudly as it latched into place.

As he moved closer to her, she crossed her arms, watching, waiting. There was a small keyboard at the top of his clipboard, and he typed on it, then finally looked up at her.

“Jemma Tyler, correct?” came the artificial voice from the speaker on his jacket.

Was he really asking her whether he’d captured the right person? Jemma raised her eyebrows, trying for defiance. Even if she had a way to respond to this man, she wasn’t sure she would.

He reached into his pocket and pulled out what looked like a cell phone from at least a decade earlier and handed it to her, presumably for her use in responding. She stared at him.

He frowned, shaking the phone at her as if she should be happy to take it. Happy to use the machine to talk to the people who were holding her captive, who’d separated her from Jack. The people who seemed to know about telepathy before everyone had lost their voices. The people who, according to the records she and Jack had found, had been experimenting on blood donors.

She considered him for another moment before taking the phone, typing quickly.

“Where’s Jack?” The speech from the phone was garbled but understandable.

“That’s not what I asked,” he replied. “Please confirm your name.”

“Go to hell.” She glared, hoping the expression helped offset what was lost in the electronic translation.

He frowned again. “Hostility is really not necessary.”

Jemma fought the urge to throw the phone at the man. “Are you kidding me?” she typed, the delivery falling flat as the electronic voice conveyed it. “You take me and lock me up, won’t tell me if my—” She erased the word and continued, “if Jack is okay, and you don’t think hostility is necessary?”

He managed to look even more frustrated, his brow furrowing further and frown deepening, and then he shuffled through papers on his clipboard, finally turning it around to show a photo of Jack, sleeping on a cot in a cell identical to hers.

She felt a flood of relief and nearly missed what the man said after turning his clipboard back toward himself.

“Now, are you Jemma Tyler?”

She nodded, trying to figure out what about the photo hadn’t been quite right, and her eyes were drawn to a point above her door.

A black, translucent dome was above it, a small, red light inside barely visible.

“Are there cameras?” she typed.

“Can you confirm your age?” asked the man, staring at his clipboard again.

“Is that recording everything?”

“Are you, Jemma Tyler, twenty-three years of age?”

“What’s your name?” she typed.

“Irrelevant. Answer the question.”

“No.”

The man looked up, sighed visibly, then turned to the door, knocking firmly. It opened, allowing him to exit, and closed behind him again with a loud clang, leaving Jemma to her thoughts, her cot, and the camera.

She turned away from the camera and toward what would have to pass for a bed, shutting her eyes and running one hand up and down her arm before she realized she still clutched the outdated cell phone in her other hand. She pressed the back button, not expecting to be able to actually use the phone, but needing to check just in case. As expected, when she returned to its home screen, the symbol at the top right indicated that the device wasn’t connected to a provider. The rest of the programs on the phone seemed to be locked, and all she could access was the program she’d been typing into.

She sat on the cot, her back against the wall, knees pulled up toward her chest, and set the phone down on her pillow so she could wrap her arms around her legs.

“Jack,” she tried, focusing on the remaining trace of their connection, picturing Jack as she’d seen him in the photo.

He’d been on his side, head tucked down and knees pulled up, his back to the wall. He’d looked somehow both childlike and defensive, curled to protect himself while he slept. His brown hair, still so much shorter than it had been before they’d started Talking, had stuck out at various angles. How long ago had the photo been taken? How long had they been unconscious before Jemma had awoken?

Jemma shoved the phone under the pillow and lay down facing the wall, running her fingers along the rough concrete, and she closed her eyes, remembering his voice the first time they’d Talked, how startled she’d been to hear it echoing in her mind. There was no echo now as she tried one last time.

“Jack,” she sent into the void, almost a whisper.

The room remained silent, empty. Jemma hadn’t ever really craved company, but never in her life had she ever felt so alone.

***

Jemma blinked up at the unfamiliar ceiling. Her stomach rumbled silently, the accompanying pangs signifying its protest against the recent lack of food. How long had it been since she’d eaten, since she’d shared her last meal with Jack?

She sat, the gray walls giving no hint as to what time it might be, the light unchanged from when she’d fallen asleep. She was stiff, sore where her jeans had pressed into her, her feet cramped from sleeping in her sneakers. She rubbed her hands against her eyes and then stretched, trying to relieve some of the tension in her body.

A clattering noise drew her attention to the door, and she saw a small flap at the bottom had opened outward, and a tray was sliding through. Jemma leapt for the door, reaching it as the flap closed with another clatter. She knelt and ran her hand along the section that had opened, pressing firmly when it didn’t respond to light pressure.

The flap didn’t move. She slid her fingers from it to the main part of the door. Both felt the same, like some sort of cool metal, or maybe very hard wood covered in a thin layer of paint. She could barely feel the seam between the two, and she leaned closer to try to see it, to see whether she could tell how it worked.

A loud buzz came from above the door, and she jumped, heart racing. As soon as she ceased contact with the door, the abrasive noise stopped. She reached out slowly, eyes on the camera above her, and was rewarded with another loud discouragement just before she made contact. Jemma forced herself to take a deep breath. She expelled it through her nose, the sound less affected by the lack of voice than if she’d let it out through her mouth.

Finally looking down at the tray, she saw one of the cheap TV dinners that amounted to little more than a snack. Beside it rested a plastic spork and a juice pouch. With one last glance at the unmoving door and the camera above it, Jemma picked up the hard, plastic tray and sat on the end of her bed, food in her lap.

Was it safe to eat? What if they were trying to drug her or something? She picked up the utensil, holding it over the pasta. Did she really have a choice? She couldn’t exactly leave and go somewhere else to eat, and she’d have to eat eventually, so if they wanted something in her system, it would be there before long.

Her stomach prodded her into trying a cautious bite. The food tasted normal, the lukewarm dish tasting of broccoli, white sauce, and cardboard. She swallowed, urging her body to be patient as she waited to see whether the food would settle right.

After a few minutes, still feeling fine other than tired and hungry and sore, she finished the food, washing it down with the juice, wrinkling her nose at the combination of flavors, then looking down at the empty tray. She wasn’t quite full, but she wasn’t actively hungry anymore, either.

She set the tray to the right of the door rather than in front of the flap. She wondered whether someone would come in to retrieve it, whether it would disappear as she slept, whether she’d soon be left with a stack of dirty, empty trays.

Jemma made a quick circuit of the room, running her hands along the rough walls, trying to feel for any additional hidden doors or flaps, but the search turned up nothing. It only reinforced how small the room she was confined to really was.

She closed her eyes, turning her exploration inward. She could feel it still, the slight presence she thought was her limited connection with Jack.

After having slept for a while, and after having been unconscious previously, she wouldn’t still be feeling a phantom connection, would she? He had to be okay, still there, still connected, just without the connection functional. Her attempt at sending his name remained without the echo that would let her know it had reached him.

She tried feeling for the residual imprint of the connections from Kendall and Marcia, but there was nothing at all, not even the trace she had with Jack’s.

A couple of months ago, she’d wondered how long voices would be removed, how long it would take to adjust to the new reality. Now, she found herself wondering the same about being trapped in this tiny room by herself. At least if she had a book, she could pass time with something other than her own thoughts.

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