Total pages in book: 82
Estimated words: 80431 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 402(@200wpm)___ 322(@250wpm)___ 268(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 80431 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 402(@200wpm)___ 322(@250wpm)___ 268(@300wpm)
Who he’d been before this moment was just out of his grasp.
Dr. O’Reilley cleared her throat. “Zorion, can you hear me?”
That name felt wrong. Alien.
She shifted, her hands trembling as she clutched her clipboard. “I know you’re probably feeling a bit disoriented, but I promise we can help you.”
Help me?
“Your body has undergone a sort of transformation. You may feel odd or different, but trust me, we’re here to help.”
Trust you!
Sawyer stayed silent. He heard each distinct heartbeat. Their erratic pulses. But his was as steady as he was focused.
Dr. Pheung took a cautious step forward. “Can you nod or speak if you understand us?”
He could, yes, but he wouldn’t. His instinct was telling him to remain still. To calculate and observe. He remained that way until the silence stretched into discomfort.
Dr. O’Reilley’s eyes began to fill with moisture. “God help us. What have we done?”
Sawyer tipped his head in an odd, curious gesture.
If these mad scientists only knew what they’d created, they’d know he didn’t need divine intervention. He was beyond that now.
Chief Aiken Oakley
Valor
Another week passed and Valor continued to have the same dream every night.
A predator loomed in the distance, its wings stretched wide, talons curved and hooked like daggers, gleaming under a crescent moon.
Valor stood frozen in the depths of a dense jungle, watching the creature descend through a gloomy sky that seemed to stretch on for miles.
Like all the other times, he had no fear, only a feeling, a connection to this creature pulsing in his core.
When the large beast was just beyond his grasp, it released an ear-deafening screech sharper than nails down a chalkboard.
And then he woke with a hard jerk.
Silence consumed him in his dimly lit room. His new living quarters smelled of polished wood and fresh linen.
Valor exhaled, his senses tingling from the remnants of the dream. It all had to mean something.
The images never changed: a black bird with intense gold and green eyes, unlike any bird he thought existed, and a soul, a screech that screamed for him to understand it.
He tossed the sheet from around his waist and sat up.
He walked across the room, his bare feet making no sound on the white marble floor.
Valor’s suite was nothing like the clinical walls he’d once been confined by. But he recognized his new plush environment for what it was.
A psychological trick to make him feel as if he wasn’t still captive, to make him feel at ease, as if he had privileges.
He didn’t.
At least he had fresh air and knowledge of when the sun rose and the days turned to night.
Valor stepped onto the wrap-around terrace that resembled a hidden paradise suspended high up in the sky.
At least they’d gotten this part of his list right. He’d simply asked for a place to sit and enjoy the weather and meditate beneath the night sky. They’d gone above and beyond.
The moment he’d entered his suite, he marveled at the sight of the towering pine trees, thick ferns, and climbing vines cocooned in verdant greens.
The scent of damp earth and blooming orchids made the air crisp and fragrant at such a high altitude. It gave him a sense of being in an untamed wilderness despite the steel and glass horizon.
Valor walked along the stone walkway that led him to an intimate corner with a beam of sunlight early in the day.
The sounds of the city below were muted and replaced by the rustling of leaves and the trickle of a fountain flowing between smooth rocks and thick roots.
Over the last week, he’d received his treatments in his room. The serums were still injected, but he was no longer put under sedation. He felt stronger and wiser with each dose.
He spent the rest of his days acclimating to his new body and environment.
The weight of his dream lifted as he sank into the lush grass, waiting for the warmth to soothe him.
The dawn meditation had become his anchor. Hours passed as he remained still, the only movement being the slow rise and fall of his chest. His body was motionless, but not his mind.
The jungle-like terrace reminded him to breathe and exist for now, but the day was coming when he’d truly be free.
Valor sought out who he was. Tried to put together fragments of memory he’d experienced over the weeks he’d been forced to change into a different man.
Faint footsteps broke into his quiet time. He counted them. Six, no eight, all moving in the same direction. He listened to their measured pace, the cadence of their breath. Seven of them stopped short, but one continued until he stood outside his door.
“Valor,” a man called out.
Even through the steel door, Valor could hear the caution in the stranger’s tone. “I’m here to escort you to the training facility.”
He growled low in his chest, no longer surprised he could make that sound. Now, he needed to learn to control it.