Young Adult Sci Fi/Dystopian
Date Published: October 17, 2014
Book One: Unstrung Series
Lexa Pate, seventeen-year-old thief extraordinaire, has burned a bridge or two in her life. You don't make a career out of stealing other people's property without making enemies.
When a risky job goes from bad to worse, Lexa and her adopted family find themselves on Precipice Corporation's hit list because they've accidentally stolen the wrong thing--plans for a new model of genetically-engineered super humans. Now every bounty hunter, cop on the take, and snitch in the city is after them.
Lexa's world crumbles around her as she fights to keep her family safe even as someone strolls out of her forgotten past. Quinn claims to know who Lexa really is, but can she trust a stranger she met while robbing his boss?
More importantly, does she really want to know what Quinn has to tell her?
Based on the fairy tale Pinocchio, UNSTRUNG takes you into a near future world where the lines between fake and real are blurred, all that's pristine isn't always innocent, and being a criminal isn't always wrong.
BUY LINKS
Amazon:
Barnes and Noble:
Smashwords:
Kobo:
iTunes:
EXCERPT
Chapter One: Chips and Crackers
The safe unlocks with a quiet click.
Moving slowly, just in case there’s a tripwire I haven’t disabled, I open the
door and reach inside. The chip rests in a foam-lined box. I ease it free and
slip it into a small pocket inside the gear pouch strapped around my waist.
Robbery number sixty-three: success.
I close the safe, then start a
cautious trek back to the window. I’m careful to retrace my steps, traveling
the exact path I used to come in. So far I’ve bypassed a laser tripwire net, a
few pressure plates, and a motion sensor. Kind of disappointing. I thought one
of Precipice’s labs would be more heavily secured, and I like a challenge. This
room is too easy—just four wide lab tables with thick, black tops, some data
equipment on the counters and the wall safe. A few terminals even provide a
soft blue glow to work by. Nothing to get in my way or force me into the motion
sensor’s path. Much, much too easy.
Which means something’s wrong.
I take a deep breath, trying to
refocus. C’mon, Lexa. Time to concentrate, girl.
It’s no good; the nagging feeling
I’m in trouble won’t shake loose. The Quad’s businesses aren’t usually lax on
security. Their systems are top-notch and with the cops in their pockets, it
takes an audacious thief to break into a Precipice Industries building.
Honestly, I’m the only one crazy enough to take this job, but being seventeen
means I’m allowed to do stupid things, especially for a good paycheck.
I’m almost back to the window when a
cool breeze ripples across my skin, like the climate control system has
started. Immediately, a blue light clicks on in the ceiling and my whole body
goes numb. The beam has me flash frozen in place. Skies, what is this? Why
can’t I move? My mind’s screaming for me to get out of here, to run, but it’s
like my legs don’t understand the commands.
I push against whatever is holding
me still, willing it to leave me alone. As if it hears my thoughts, the blue
light turns off and I can move again. It’s too late, though—the alarm starts
shrieking. I dash for the window and slide onto the ledge. My heart slams in my
chest, almost like it’s trying to reboot, which is bad since I’m on the eighth
floor and the ground is far below. There’s no time to catch my breath, no time
to calm down. I pat my gear pack, feeling for the data chip in the little
pocket deep inside. At least I got what I came for. Making it home with my
prize in hand will be a different story altogether.
It takes thirty seconds to test my
climbing anchors, clip onto my cat-line and swing off the ledge. It takes
another thirty seconds to rappel down the side of the brick building. The alarm
is still shrieking overhead. From the dark of the alley, each light that comes
on in the windows makes me move faster. At one point, a member of the night
watch peeks outside. I flatten against the wall. This is going to be a close
one. Maybe the closest yet.
A bead of sweat runs down my chest,
trickling its way into my navel. It’s torture, but I stay pressed against the
wall. Another bead follows the first, then another. I want to wipe them away so
badly I have to grit my teeth to stay my hand. If I get caught…no, I can’t
think about that right now. I won’t get caught.
After the guard moves away from the
window, I punch the release on my climbing anchors, jumping clear as they fall
to the ground from the roof. My cat-line comes down in a tangled wad. No time
to fix it. I shove the whole kit—anchors, line and descent vest—into the
saddlebag compartment on the back of my hover bike. She comes to life with a
gentle hum and the propulsions on the bottom glow a faint purple. I special
ordered that color because I like a little flash. If I’m going to get caught,
I’ll do it with style.
I’d rather not get caught, though.
Sirens wail in the distance, closing
fast. Hunched over the handle bars, I ease the bike onto the street behind the
lab, then kick it into glide mode. The shadows of giant skyscrapers bear silent
witness to my flight. In the clean order of Triarch City, I’m the one bit of
chaos those buildings and their perfect little occupants might experience in
the next week. Maren—the Quad’s leader—sees to that. Square pegs like me don’t
fit into her world order.
Which is why the sirens are getting
closer.
I kick the throttle into flight mode
as I enter the ramp to the highway. The hover bike runs like molten glass and I
streak down the dark street in a burst of orange light. Streetlamps become
laser beams, their flashes the only indicator of just how fast I’m going. This
time of night, there isn’t much traffic; good thing, because this run is dicey
enough. Call me old-fashioned, but I don’t like endangering innocent people in
the name of a job.
I hazard a look in my side mirrors.
Flashing lights give chase. Stars, they’ve sent a hover tank after me. I have a
jamming signal built into the bike’s computer, which keeps them from seeing me
on their scanner. They have to rely on a visual search. Not easy to do—the
tanks have to fly much higher than my bike, and they aren’t as fast. I have to
hope speed’s enough to keep them at bay. My capture would make the cops’ night,
what with the reward and all. I shiver, thinking about what awaits me in jail,
especially since my boss wouldn’t bail me out. I’d be on my own.
The highway curves around the lake
and I lean into the turn, zipping past the last monorail station. Beyond the
empty train platform, the road stretches dark and cold, leading to the
warehouse district on the far side of the lake. Once I cross the bridge, I’ll
be in the home stretch. I hit the boosters and the hover bike lurches forward,
the thrusters throwing off a brilliant yellow glow that’s reflected in the
water under the bridge. The flashing lights drop back.
The exit ramp at the end of the line
comes up fast. I cut back on the throttle and grind my way onto the side streets,
taking a hard turn between two steel-sided warehouses. At the end of the alley,
I drop the bike into glide mode and the thrusters change back to purple.
Another hard turn—more slowly this time—and the bike pops through the narrow
doorway into Turpin’s building. The metal door rolls down automatically once
I’m safely inside. Holding my breath, I cut the engine so the cops won’t know
I’m here. It takes a minute or two for all the sirens to pass into the
distance. When they do, I permit myself a sigh of relief. Just the one.
I pull off my helmet and toss it in
the corner, where it clatters against plastic boxes used to maintain our front
as a snack foods distributer. My boss likes to joke that we sell crackers
during the day and steal chips at night. Never found that funny, to tell the
truth.
“You’re back early,” Jole’s voice
echoes through the warehouse from the overhead speaker.
“Ran into a problem.”
“Huh,” he says. “Guess that’s why
the boss told me ‘full measures.’”
I give the camera in the corner a put-out
look. “Seriously?”
“Sorry.”
Grumbling, I prepare to strip. My
hair streams down my back, damp with sweat earned during the chase. Pissed at
the formality or not, it feels good to peel off my leather jacket, boots and
tight, black jumpsuit. I hate the jumpsuit, always feeling like a wannabe ninja
wearing the thing. Occupational hazard.
In my tank and boy shorts, I pad
barefoot across the concrete floor to a door marked “authorized personnel
only,” and pose for the security camera. Hand on my hip, I blow Jole a kiss.
“You know your charms don’t work on
me,” he says.
“Yeah, yeah. Next time I’m out, I’ll
pick up a boyfriend for you.”
“Really? That would be great. I like
broad shoulders and a nice smile.”
“Don’t we all?” I ask. “Now, could
you open the damn door?”
The lock clanks open.
I enter a pea-green hallway and stop
when the door behind me relocks. My skin crawls with the tingle of a full body
scan before a light flashes up ahead. We’re going all out with security
tonight. The boss must be feeling extra paranoid. What, does he think I’ve been
compromised. Or worse, copied? Who’d they expect? One of Maren’s Bolt girls?
Sure, she has an army of artificial humans, but it’s too expensive to copy real
people just for the sake of spying on mid-level criminals.
The scan finishes and a green light
flashes. “See? Real girl.”
“That’s what the cellular detector
says,” Jole answers. “Keep walking.”
I pass through the second door into
a clinical white hallway—the clean room—so Jole can scan me for electronic
tracking devices. I don’t know why, but the clean room always gives me the
shakes. Something about the whiteness of it. White floor, white ceiling, white…
“Lexa? Turpin wants to see you.
Now.”
Jole’s voice reverberates off the
hard walls and shakes me loose from whatever hold the white hallway has. I’m in
trouble; that’s enough to get my attention.
He buzzes me through the last door
and the smell of mildewed tile seems like a reward after the night I’ve had.
The locker room’s showers keep the air humid; I can almost feel the warm water
on my shoulders. But no, a soak will have to wait, because Turpin’s summons has
to be answered. Sighing, I pull a pair of jeans and sneakers out of my locker.
“Now” doesn’t mean “right this second” when I’m in my underwear, no matter how
pissed off the boss is.
The adrenaline has worn off and
getting dressed takes a lot of energy. Exhausted, I head for the stairwell with
low expectations.
Turpin lives on the third floor of
the warehouse, and his digs look less industrial than mine or Jole’s. The boss
has carpet, even in the hallway leading to his office, and old-timey wall
sconces with yellow light bulbs put off a soft glow. I pause before the heavy
steel door, trying to gather my excuses into a bouquet of half-truths before
the yelling starts.
“I know you’re out there,” comes
Turpin’s muffled shout.
Well, of course he does. Cameras
never lie. I push the door open, head downcast, hoping he’ll think I’m being
contrite.
“Oh, cut the crap, Lexa,” Turpin
says the second I cross the threshold. He sits up straight in his antique
leather chair, hands folded on his wooden desk. “You wouldn’t know humble if it
tackled your ass.”
Surprised into laughing, I look up.
Turpin glares back and asks, “What happened tonight?”
I choke on a laugh. What had
happened? “I got in just fine, through the eighth-floor window, like you told
me.” Now for the tricky part. “The laser cutter worked perfectly—but don’t tell
Jole. His ego doesn’t need stoking. Anyway, I found the safe, decoded the lock,
and took the chip. I was on my way out when I ran into a new type of security
protocol. I saw this flash of light in the ceiling and was paralyzed for a
moment. When I could move again, the alarm went shrieking all to hell.”
Turpin’s face becomes guarded. “I’ve
never heard of a security measure that paralyzes someone. Are you sure you
didn’t imagine it?”
I glare at him—my imagination isn’t
that good. “No. It was like my feet were glued to the floor. I couldn’t move.”
He takes off his glasses. So what if
we can cure blindness; Turpin likes anachronistic things more than perfect
eyesight, which also explains the wool sport coat and the gray hair even though
he’s only forty.
“Maren didn’t have anything like
that when I worked at Precipice,” he says. “I need to put out some feelers, see
if I can’t figure out what this new safety measure is.”
“Thanks.” If anyone can find the
source of the trip light, it’s Turpin. In a previous life, he’d been a security
expert. The best thieves are always halfway legitimate, working right under the
noses of their marks. “So now what?”
“You lie low for a few days.”
I stare at the ceiling, supplicating
to the crown molding for intercession from this vile punishment. “A vacation!
Maybe I should screw up more often.”
“This isn’t the time for sarcasm.”
Turpin shoves his glasses onto his face. “We’re close to cracking Maren’s
defense systems and our clients aren’t known for patience. Your little mistake
may have cost us weeks, maybe months. Do you want to explain to our employers
why we’re behind schedule?”
Oh, Stars, anything but that. Being
in the same room as our clients gives me the creepy-crawlies and their
bodyguards always breathe down my neck like they’d enjoy sending me to the
afterlife. “No, I wouldn’t.”
“And I trust you wouldn’t like the
Quad to catch you, either, right? We stole plans for the K400s. They may be
early-gen artificials, and obsolete, but they aren’t going to give us a pass on
this. You want to end up in their hands?”
The ice in his tone matches the cold
feeling in my stomach. Suddenly the clients don’t seem so frightening.
“Certainly not.”
“Then you’re grounded until further
notice,” Turpin says. “Jole could use some help cracking the chip—that’ll be
your assignment during downtime. Find out what the K400 data can tell us about
later models. Until we make the handoff, stay inside.”
Holding in a snort takes effort, but
I give him a nice, obedient smile. Turpin knows that working on tech is my
least favorite chore. Helping Jole is punishment, pure and simple. The sick
thing is, I know I deserve it. I failed.
“Yes, sir.”
I turn slowly and close the door
with a quiet snap once I’m in the hall. How did I mess up like this? I pride
myself on being the most careful “acquisitions expert” Turpin has ever had.
With measured steps, reeking of discipline for Turpin’s cameras, I stroll to
the locker room for my shower. Greeted once again by the smell of mildew, I
take a seat on the metal bench.
Book One: Unstrung Series
Lexa Pate, seventeen-year-old thief extraordinaire, has burned a bridge or two in her life. You don't make a career out of stealing other people's property without making enemies.
When a risky job goes from bad to worse, Lexa and her adopted family find themselves on Precipice Corporation's hit list because they've accidentally stolen the wrong thing--plans for a new model of genetically-engineered super humans. Now every bounty hunter, cop on the take, and snitch in the city is after them.
Lexa's world crumbles around her as she fights to keep her family safe even as someone strolls out of her forgotten past. Quinn claims to know who Lexa really is, but can she trust a stranger she met while robbing his boss?
More importantly, does she really want to know what Quinn has to tell her?
Based on the fairy tale Pinocchio, UNSTRUNG takes you into a near future world where the lines between fake and real are blurred, all that's pristine isn't always innocent, and being a criminal isn't always wrong.
BUY LINKS
Amazon:
Barnes and Noble:
Smashwords:
Kobo:
iTunes:
EXCERPT
Chapter One: Chips and Crackers
The safe unlocks with a quiet click.
Moving slowly, just in case there’s a tripwire I haven’t disabled, I open the
door and reach inside. The chip rests in a foam-lined box. I ease it free and
slip it into a small pocket inside the gear pouch strapped around my waist.
Robbery number sixty-three: success.
I close the safe, then start a
cautious trek back to the window. I’m careful to retrace my steps, traveling
the exact path I used to come in. So far I’ve bypassed a laser tripwire net, a
few pressure plates, and a motion sensor. Kind of disappointing. I thought one
of Precipice’s labs would be more heavily secured, and I like a challenge. This
room is too easy—just four wide lab tables with thick, black tops, some data
equipment on the counters and the wall safe. A few terminals even provide a
soft blue glow to work by. Nothing to get in my way or force me into the motion
sensor’s path. Much, much too easy.
Which means something’s wrong.
I take a deep breath, trying to
refocus. C’mon, Lexa. Time to concentrate, girl.
It’s no good; the nagging feeling
I’m in trouble won’t shake loose. The Quad’s businesses aren’t usually lax on
security. Their systems are top-notch and with the cops in their pockets, it
takes an audacious thief to break into a Precipice Industries building.
Honestly, I’m the only one crazy enough to take this job, but being seventeen
means I’m allowed to do stupid things, especially for a good paycheck.
I’m almost back to the window when a
cool breeze ripples across my skin, like the climate control system has
started. Immediately, a blue light clicks on in the ceiling and my whole body
goes numb. The beam has me flash frozen in place. Skies, what is this? Why
can’t I move? My mind’s screaming for me to get out of here, to run, but it’s
like my legs don’t understand the commands.
I push against whatever is holding
me still, willing it to leave me alone. As if it hears my thoughts, the blue
light turns off and I can move again. It’s too late, though—the alarm starts
shrieking. I dash for the window and slide onto the ledge. My heart slams in my
chest, almost like it’s trying to reboot, which is bad since I’m on the eighth
floor and the ground is far below. There’s no time to catch my breath, no time
to calm down. I pat my gear pack, feeling for the data chip in the little
pocket deep inside. At least I got what I came for. Making it home with my
prize in hand will be a different story altogether.
It takes thirty seconds to test my
climbing anchors, clip onto my cat-line and swing off the ledge. It takes
another thirty seconds to rappel down the side of the brick building. The alarm
is still shrieking overhead. From the dark of the alley, each light that comes
on in the windows makes me move faster. At one point, a member of the night
watch peeks outside. I flatten against the wall. This is going to be a close
one. Maybe the closest yet.
A bead of sweat runs down my chest,
trickling its way into my navel. It’s torture, but I stay pressed against the
wall. Another bead follows the first, then another. I want to wipe them away so
badly I have to grit my teeth to stay my hand. If I get caught…no, I can’t
think about that right now. I won’t get caught.
After the guard moves away from the
window, I punch the release on my climbing anchors, jumping clear as they fall
to the ground from the roof. My cat-line comes down in a tangled wad. No time
to fix it. I shove the whole kit—anchors, line and descent vest—into the
saddlebag compartment on the back of my hover bike. She comes to life with a
gentle hum and the propulsions on the bottom glow a faint purple. I special
ordered that color because I like a little flash. If I’m going to get caught,
I’ll do it with style.
I’d rather not get caught, though.
Sirens wail in the distance, closing
fast. Hunched over the handle bars, I ease the bike onto the street behind the
lab, then kick it into glide mode. The shadows of giant skyscrapers bear silent
witness to my flight. In the clean order of Triarch City, I’m the one bit of
chaos those buildings and their perfect little occupants might experience in
the next week. Maren—the Quad’s leader—sees to that. Square pegs like me don’t
fit into her world order.
Which is why the sirens are getting
closer.
I kick the throttle into flight mode
as I enter the ramp to the highway. The hover bike runs like molten glass and I
streak down the dark street in a burst of orange light. Streetlamps become
laser beams, their flashes the only indicator of just how fast I’m going. This
time of night, there isn’t much traffic; good thing, because this run is dicey
enough. Call me old-fashioned, but I don’t like endangering innocent people in
the name of a job.
I hazard a look in my side mirrors.
Flashing lights give chase. Stars, they’ve sent a hover tank after me. I have a
jamming signal built into the bike’s computer, which keeps them from seeing me
on their scanner. They have to rely on a visual search. Not easy to do—the
tanks have to fly much higher than my bike, and they aren’t as fast. I have to
hope speed’s enough to keep them at bay. My capture would make the cops’ night,
what with the reward and all. I shiver, thinking about what awaits me in jail,
especially since my boss wouldn’t bail me out. I’d be on my own.
The highway curves around the lake
and I lean into the turn, zipping past the last monorail station. Beyond the
empty train platform, the road stretches dark and cold, leading to the
warehouse district on the far side of the lake. Once I cross the bridge, I’ll
be in the home stretch. I hit the boosters and the hover bike lurches forward,
the thrusters throwing off a brilliant yellow glow that’s reflected in the
water under the bridge. The flashing lights drop back.
The exit ramp at the end of the line
comes up fast. I cut back on the throttle and grind my way onto the side streets,
taking a hard turn between two steel-sided warehouses. At the end of the alley,
I drop the bike into glide mode and the thrusters change back to purple.
Another hard turn—more slowly this time—and the bike pops through the narrow
doorway into Turpin’s building. The metal door rolls down automatically once
I’m safely inside. Holding my breath, I cut the engine so the cops won’t know
I’m here. It takes a minute or two for all the sirens to pass into the
distance. When they do, I permit myself a sigh of relief. Just the one.
I pull off my helmet and toss it in
the corner, where it clatters against plastic boxes used to maintain our front
as a snack foods distributer. My boss likes to joke that we sell crackers
during the day and steal chips at night. Never found that funny, to tell the
truth.
“You’re back early,” Jole’s voice
echoes through the warehouse from the overhead speaker.
“Ran into a problem.”
“Huh,” he says. “Guess that’s why
the boss told me ‘full measures.’”
I give the camera in the corner a put-out
look. “Seriously?”
“Sorry.”
Grumbling, I prepare to strip. My
hair streams down my back, damp with sweat earned during the chase. Pissed at
the formality or not, it feels good to peel off my leather jacket, boots and
tight, black jumpsuit. I hate the jumpsuit, always feeling like a wannabe ninja
wearing the thing. Occupational hazard.
In my tank and boy shorts, I pad
barefoot across the concrete floor to a door marked “authorized personnel
only,” and pose for the security camera. Hand on my hip, I blow Jole a kiss.
“You know your charms don’t work on
me,” he says.
“Yeah, yeah. Next time I’m out, I’ll
pick up a boyfriend for you.”
“Really? That would be great. I like
broad shoulders and a nice smile.”
“Don’t we all?” I ask. “Now, could
you open the damn door?”
The lock clanks open.
I enter a pea-green hallway and stop
when the door behind me relocks. My skin crawls with the tingle of a full body
scan before a light flashes up ahead. We’re going all out with security
tonight. The boss must be feeling extra paranoid. What, does he think I’ve been
compromised. Or worse, copied? Who’d they expect? One of Maren’s Bolt girls?
Sure, she has an army of artificial humans, but it’s too expensive to copy real
people just for the sake of spying on mid-level criminals.
The scan finishes and a green light
flashes. “See? Real girl.”
“That’s what the cellular detector
says,” Jole answers. “Keep walking.”
I pass through the second door into
a clinical white hallway—the clean room—so Jole can scan me for electronic
tracking devices. I don’t know why, but the clean room always gives me the
shakes. Something about the whiteness of it. White floor, white ceiling, white…
“Lexa? Turpin wants to see you.
Now.”
Jole’s voice reverberates off the
hard walls and shakes me loose from whatever hold the white hallway has. I’m in
trouble; that’s enough to get my attention.
He buzzes me through the last door
and the smell of mildewed tile seems like a reward after the night I’ve had.
The locker room’s showers keep the air humid; I can almost feel the warm water
on my shoulders. But no, a soak will have to wait, because Turpin’s summons has
to be answered. Sighing, I pull a pair of jeans and sneakers out of my locker.
“Now” doesn’t mean “right this second” when I’m in my underwear, no matter how
pissed off the boss is.
The adrenaline has worn off and
getting dressed takes a lot of energy. Exhausted, I head for the stairwell with
low expectations.
Turpin lives on the third floor of
the warehouse, and his digs look less industrial than mine or Jole’s. The boss
has carpet, even in the hallway leading to his office, and old-timey wall
sconces with yellow light bulbs put off a soft glow. I pause before the heavy
steel door, trying to gather my excuses into a bouquet of half-truths before
the yelling starts.
“I know you’re out there,” comes
Turpin’s muffled shout.
Well, of course he does. Cameras
never lie. I push the door open, head downcast, hoping he’ll think I’m being
contrite.
“Oh, cut the crap, Lexa,” Turpin
says the second I cross the threshold. He sits up straight in his antique
leather chair, hands folded on his wooden desk. “You wouldn’t know humble if it
tackled your ass.”
Surprised into laughing, I look up.
Turpin glares back and asks, “What happened tonight?”
I choke on a laugh. What had
happened? “I got in just fine, through the eighth-floor window, like you told
me.” Now for the tricky part. “The laser cutter worked perfectly—but don’t tell
Jole. His ego doesn’t need stoking. Anyway, I found the safe, decoded the lock,
and took the chip. I was on my way out when I ran into a new type of security
protocol. I saw this flash of light in the ceiling and was paralyzed for a
moment. When I could move again, the alarm went shrieking all to hell.”
Turpin’s face becomes guarded. “I’ve
never heard of a security measure that paralyzes someone. Are you sure you
didn’t imagine it?”
I glare at him—my imagination isn’t
that good. “No. It was like my feet were glued to the floor. I couldn’t move.”
He takes off his glasses. So what if
we can cure blindness; Turpin likes anachronistic things more than perfect
eyesight, which also explains the wool sport coat and the gray hair even though
he’s only forty.
“Maren didn’t have anything like
that when I worked at Precipice,” he says. “I need to put out some feelers, see
if I can’t figure out what this new safety measure is.”
“Thanks.” If anyone can find the
source of the trip light, it’s Turpin. In a previous life, he’d been a security
expert. The best thieves are always halfway legitimate, working right under the
noses of their marks. “So now what?”
“You lie low for a few days.”
I stare at the ceiling, supplicating
to the crown molding for intercession from this vile punishment. “A vacation!
Maybe I should screw up more often.”
“This isn’t the time for sarcasm.”
Turpin shoves his glasses onto his face. “We’re close to cracking Maren’s
defense systems and our clients aren’t known for patience. Your little mistake
may have cost us weeks, maybe months. Do you want to explain to our employers
why we’re behind schedule?”
Oh, Stars, anything but that. Being
in the same room as our clients gives me the creepy-crawlies and their
bodyguards always breathe down my neck like they’d enjoy sending me to the
afterlife. “No, I wouldn’t.”
“And I trust you wouldn’t like the
Quad to catch you, either, right? We stole plans for the K400s. They may be
early-gen artificials, and obsolete, but they aren’t going to give us a pass on
this. You want to end up in their hands?”
The ice in his tone matches the cold
feeling in my stomach. Suddenly the clients don’t seem so frightening.
“Certainly not.”
“Then you’re grounded until further
notice,” Turpin says. “Jole could use some help cracking the chip—that’ll be
your assignment during downtime. Find out what the K400 data can tell us about
later models. Until we make the handoff, stay inside.”
Holding in a snort takes effort, but
I give him a nice, obedient smile. Turpin knows that working on tech is my
least favorite chore. Helping Jole is punishment, pure and simple. The sick
thing is, I know I deserve it. I failed.
“Yes, sir.”
I turn slowly and close the door
with a quiet snap once I’m in the hall. How did I mess up like this? I pride
myself on being the most careful “acquisitions expert” Turpin has ever had.
With measured steps, reeking of discipline for Turpin’s cameras, I stroll to
the locker room for my shower. Greeted once again by the smell of mildew, I
take a seat on the metal bench.
Kendra C. Highley lives in north Texas with her husband and two children. She also serves as staff to four self-important cats. This, according to the cats, is her most crucial job. She believes chocolate is a basic human right, running a 10k is harder than it sounds, and that everyone should learn to drive a stick shift. She loves monsters, vacations, baking and listening to bad electronica. If she's not writing, she's reading. If she's not writing or reading, she's likely a little cranky.

Website: www.kendrachighley.com
Facebook: www.facebook.com/kchighley
Twitter: www.twitter.com/KendraHighley
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Website: www.kendrachighley.com
Facebook: www.facebook.com/kchighley
Twitter: www.twitter.com/KendraHighley
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