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Dissonance: An Echo Trilogy Novella (Echo Trilogy, #2.5)




  Dissonance

  ECHO TRILOGY, NOVELLA 2.5

  By LINDSEY FAIRLEIGH

  Copyright © 2016 by Lindsey Fairleigh

  All rights reserved.

  This book is a work of fiction. All characters, organizations, and events are products of the author’s imaginations or are used fictitiously. No reference to any real person, living or dead, is intended or should be inferred.

  Editing by Sarah KolbWilliams

  www.kolbwilliams.com

  MORE BOOKS BY LINDSEY FAIRLEIGH

  ECHO TRILOGY

  1: Echo in Time

  1.5: Resonance

  2: Time Anomaly

  2.5: Dissonance

  3: Ricochet Through Time (coming soon!)

  THE ENDING SERIES

  0: The Ending Beginnings Omnibus

  1: After The Ending

  2: Into The Fire

  3: Out Of The Ashes

  4: Before The Dawn

  World Before (coming soon!)

  World After (coming soon!)

  FOR MORE INFORMATION ON LINDSEY FAIRLEIGH & THE ECHO TRILOGY:

  www.lindseyfairleigh.com

  DEDICATION

  For Nicole, the Rayanne to my Angela, Dom to my Lex.

  Thank you for being you,

  and for always being there when I need you most.

  CONTENTS

  MORE BOKS BY LINDSEY FAIRLEIGH

  DEDICATION

  PREFACE

  Chapter 1: Hopes & Fears

  Chapter 2: Wanting & Waiting

  Chapter 3: Was & Is

  Chapter 4: See & Believe

  Chapter 5: Bad & Worse

  Chapter 6: Ah… & Awe

  Chapter 7: Tick & Boom

  Chapter 8: Matter & Antimatter

  Chapter 9: Exist & Live

  GLOSSARY

  CAN’T GET ENOUGH OF LEX & MARCUS?

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  PREFACE

  Hello, dear reader!

  First off, thank you so much for joining Lex on her adventures through time! After many, many requests I’ve decided to include a quick and dirty little recaps of the previous books in the series. So…

  Previously in the Echo Trilogy…

  In the first book, Echo in Time (was Echo Prophecy) Lex discovers she belongs to an ancient race of people, the Nejerets, who can see the past, present, and future. She discovers that she’s the central figure of an ancient prophecy, falls in love with an enigmatic and gorgeous 5,000-year-old “god”, and is gifted the ability to travel through time…so she can stop her evil father, Set, from destroying the world. She also learns she has a half-sister (Kat) and half-brother (Dominic) through that same evil father, and that her dead grandfather, Alexander, isn’t so dead after all. Oh, and her childhood best friend and first “love” was really Nuin, uber-god in disguise. Plus there’s archaeology and an excavation, and Lex assists in destroying part of Hatshepsut’s mortuary temple…by getting shot. Whoops! In the end, Lex and Marcus, in possession of different parts of Nuin’s godly power, defeat Set, who runs away to hide while he regathers his forces and plans his retribution.

  Then, in Resonance, the novella following Echo in Time, Lex discovers a statue that Marcus has been hiding in the Galleria dell’Accademia in Florence that just happens to look exactly like her. An attempted abduction of Lex is thwarted, and Marcus kills a whole slew of Set’s people with nothing but his bare hands. In the end, Lex and Marcus fight, make up, and Lex realizes the statue’s uncanny likeness to her means she’s destined to travel at least back to the Renaissance, maybe further.

  And then, in the second book, Time Anomaly (was Echo Queen), Lex travels back thousands of years to Old Kingdom Egypt, where she must learn to control her borrowed power over time (and space, sort of), to keep it from destroying her. Also, she gets to fall in love with Marcus (Heru, in ancient times) all over again, tension and steaminess ensues, yada yada yada… While she’s in the ancient past, Lex discovers that Set isn’t actually evil, but is possessed by an “evil” being, Apep. She also learns that Nuin is similarly possessed by Apep’s less-evil counterpart, Re. She makes new friends (Aset, Heru’s not-so-dead twin sister, Nekure, Aset’s son, and some pretty cool priestesses who decide Lex is actually the goddess Hathor and devote a whole ancient religion to her). She spends some time at the ancient Nejeret homeland, the Netjer-At Oasis, almost destroys it, saves Heru’s youngest daughter, Tarset, by freezing her in At, and adopts a kitten, Rus—who she also freezes in At. Oh, she also goes back even further in time to rescue Aset from an earlier incarnation of Apep, but not before the evil turdball can violate and impregnate Aset with Nekure. Lex returns to the future, gets knocked up with twins who are destined to be uber-gods fated to restore ma’at, universal balance. The book ends with Apep’s soul trapped in a sphere of solidified At that looks an awful lot like a snow globe.

  And that brings us to this novella, Dissonance. Continue on, dear reader, to see where Lex’s journey takes her next…

  1

  Hopes & Fears

  “I’ll be right back,” I called through Denny Hall’s closing glass door and hurried down the steep stairs on my way to get coffee, careful not to slip. I hugged myself to fend off the damp chill as I made my way along the slick paved pathway. I was antsy and fidgety, so much so that I’d completely forgotten to retrieve my jacket before rushing outside, and a brisk walk through the seemingly constant Seattle drizzle would do my frayed nerves good.

  It had just been a nightmare—or daymare, I told myself. It had all been in my head. But I couldn’t help stopping on the sidewalk by the scene of the imaginary crime and staring down at the spot on the asphalt where Dr. Ramirez’s lifeless body had lain what felt like only moments ago.

  I blinked, squeezing my eyelids shut in an attempt to block out a memory from a dream that had felt far too real. When I opened my eyes again, my heartbeat tripped over itself, and I screamed, “NO!”

  Dr. Ramirez was there. He shouldn’t have been; I’d just left him in the lobby of Denny Hall. He was supposed to be inside the old building, safe and sound and not here. Not in danger. This couldn’t be happening.

  He’d just stepped onto the street and was jogging across. At hearing my shout, he paused to look back at me, and not a second later, a speeding station wagon slammed into him.

  Dr. Ramirez’s body rolled up onto the hood, his head hitting the windshield with a sickening crack before he slid back down and was dumped on the asphalt. His arm flopped out to the side, landing in a grimy puddle.

  “Oh my God! Dr. Ramirez!” I stumbled across the sidewalk and onto the university’s main drag. But I already knew it was too late. I already knew, because I’d dreamed about almost this exact, horrific thing happening mere minutes ago.

  I already knew that Dr. Ramirez was dead.

  ***

  “But there are no guarantees, Meswett.” Dr. Julian Sands, veterinarian to the Nejeret stars, stared down at Rus, the tiny, still-as-stone kitten curled up in near-eternal slumber beside Marcus’s ancient little girl, Tarset. Both were frozen in time, appearing to be statues carved from quartz—Tarset, to prevent her body from giving in to the effects of a lethal poison, and Rus, because it was the only way to bring him with me into the future. “Not in cases like this,” Dr. Sands continued, “because, well, there aren’t any other cases like this.”

  “I see.” I crossed my arms and cleared my throat. Disturbed as I’d been all morning by the third recurrence of the unsettling dream about my former graduate advisor being hit by a car—it was a near-exact replay of the first echo I’d ever witnessed, thoug
h thankfully it had never truly come to pass—I’d managed to pay attention to the highly esteemed and even more highly recommended vet pretty damn well.

  Dr. Sands reached across the corner of the bed of solidified At and touched my shoulder. I made a small, unobtrusive hand gesture by my thigh—a preemptive attempt to keep Nik from taking offence at what he would no doubt perceive as an inappropriate and potentially threatening touch. I caught only the slightest movement from him in my periphery, but his heavy exhale told me he wasn’t pleased that Dr. Sand’s hand was on my shoulder.

  Sometimes Nik could be so overprotective that he made Marcus’s efforts to keep me safe look negligent in comparison. Considering my current delicate condition—that I was carrying unborn twins who were fated to restore balance to the universe, otherwise known as ma’at to the Nejerets’ godlier ancestors, and that I was almost constantly on the verge of having a full-on freak-out breakdown worthy of my very own padded room because of said current condition—I didn’t mind so much.

  “I’m not suggesting we don’t move forward with little Rus’s transition,” Dr. Sands said, “I’m just saying we should proceed with extreme caution … take it slow. Pathogens are tricky, and they evolve quickly—it would be impossible to predict what will and won’t harm him. Any immunity he’s developed so far will be irrelevant. He’ll have to start over from scratch.”

  I swallowed, and it sounded obscenely loud in the barren, sterile room. Again, I said, “I see.”

  We were underground, in the basement of the main house in the Heru compound, in a small room on the periphery of Neffe’s intricate home-lab setup, where she and Aset were leading up a team hard at work trying to find a solution to the Tarset problem—how to revive a little girl who’d been poisoned thousands of years ago and frozen in time ever since. Tarset and Rus had been down in this room since we’d returned from the Nejeret Oasis in the Sahara a week earlier. It was a cold space, hardly ideal for a child, and we were all eager to restore Marcus’s little girl—and me my ten-week-going-on-five-thousand-year-old kitten—to life as soon as possible. Or, rather, as soon as was safe.

  Dr. Sands was renowned throughout the Nejeret community for being the most experienced and knowledgeable practitioner of animal medicine alive today. He had over a millennium of caring for Nejeret pets under his belt, and he’d traveled halfway across the world to Bainbridge Island to help me with my tiny, out-of-time kitten situation. If anyone would be able to help Rus survive the transition into the modern world, it was this man.

  Dr. Sands withdrew his hand from my shoulder and ran his fingers through his dirty blond hair. “Give me a couple days to draw up a plan and put together a full series of vaccinations, Meswett.” He flashed me a brilliant smile, belying the mild uncertainty in his eyes. “I’m confident we’ll have little Rus running around and bothering Thora in no time.”

  At the thought of Rus catting around with my older tabby, Thora, I actually managed to return the veterinarian’s smile. I nodded and held my arm out toward the open doorway, where Nik and Dominic stood sentry and Carlisle, Marcus’s “man,” waited with his ever-present smartphone in hand. “Please, make yourself at home in the lab. Neffe won’t mind.”

  Dominic snorted.

  “Much,” I added. “And just let Carlisle know what you need, and he’ll help make the arrangements.”

  “Wonderful,” Dr. Sands said. He started toward Carlisle and the guarded doorway to the lab, but he paused midway and looked at me over his shoulder. “It will be the same for the girl, you know … the adjustment to modern pathogens.”

  With a slow blink, I redirected my focus to Tarset’s opalescent cherubic face and felt a single tear sneak over the brim of my eyelid and glide down my cheek. Tarset had been poisoned over five thousand years ago, and not only did we not know what Apep-Ankhesenpepi had used to poison the Oasis’s water supply, we didn’t even know if an antidote could be created or if the damage the poison had caused to Tarset’s young body could be reversed. Her suspended state was the only thing keeping her from death. Once we unfroze her, the ancient little girl would be lucky if she survived long enough to worry about modern pathogens. Which was precisely why Neffe had hunted down the best and brightest scientifically minded Nejerets to assist her and Aset in finding a way to save Marcus’s little girl.

  “That’s the least of her problems,” I said quietly.

  “Aren’t you finished with your consult yet?” Neffe said, brusque as ever. I turned in time to see her brushing past Carlisle and Dr. Sands on her way into the room, what appeared to be a small insulated lunchbox slung over her shoulder. “My team can’t do anything more until we have our samples.” She strode toward me, stopped beside the At bed, and set the insulated container down next to Rus, then met my eyes and winked. “Which means I need your help right now, Nik, so I can get my samples.”

  I suppressed a grin. For whatever reason, Neffe loved being a pain in ass. It had taken me a while to pick up on it, but once it became obvious to Neffe that I was on to her, she started to find little ways to let me in on the joke. So far as I could tell, she simply liked to see how far she could push people. Probably because she was bored. Living for several millennia tended to do that to a person.

  Nik let out a heavy sigh. “I just don’t know if I’m up to it today.” Due to his unusual circumstances of birth—being born of two Nejerets—Nik had his own minor sheut that, much like the borrowed sheut I’d been carrying for the past couple months, gave him certain powers beyond the normal Nejeret. In Nik’s case, he could manipulate the very fabric of the At, giving it physical form or, as Neffe needed him to do, reverting At particles to their original molecular structure—Nejeret flesh and bone.

  I glanced at Nik, taking in his bored expression, his usual hint of a smirk, but I didn’t miss the sparkle of amusement in his too-pale blue eyes. My attention returned to Neffe just in time to catch the tail end of what appeared to be a rather pleased grin.

  Carlisle escorted a somewhat confused Dr. Sands out of the room, leaving Nik, Dominic, Neffe, and myself behind.

  “If you do not do what she wants, she’ll go out of her way to make your life difficult until you give in,” Dominic said, his French accent making the words sound like even more of a warning. “Trust me, I know.”

  Neffe gave me a look that said, “Yeah, he’s probably right,” as well as words ever could.

  With a sigh, Nik pushed away from the wall and made his way to the bedside, feet dragging just a bit. “My sheut is at your disposal, princess.”

  Neffe closed her eyes for a moment, collecting herself. True, she liked acting the haughty, irritable vixen for fun, but she genuinely had a quicksilver disposition, and Nik’s new favorite nickname for her—princess—was one of her triggers. It didn’t matter that she’d grown up a princess in Middle Kingdom Egypt, the daughter of Queen Hatshepsut, or that her father had been the Nejeret equivalent to a king but had abdicated the figurative throne during Neffe’s adolescence. She hated being called “princess.”

  “If you call me that one more time,” Neffe said through clenched teeth, “I will tear that ridiculous ring out of your eyebrow.”

  Nik leaned in close to Neffe and whispered, “Promise?”

  I could practically see the shiver work its way over her body, could all but sense her sudden discomfort as she sidled closer to me. Nik had that effect on people—whether it was the array of tattoos covering his body from the neck down in various shades of fading gray, his standoffish attitude, or the fact that Re, the godly being who’d once been the father of our kind, resided within his body, most people found him disturbing, Nejeret and human alike. Me? I just liked to think of him as unique.

  Nik tossed me a shit-eating grin. He knew the effect he had on Neffe and pretty much everyone else. He liked it.

  “So, um …” I looked from Nik to Neffe and back. “Should we get started? I know Marcus wanted to catch the ten o’clock ferry, and it’s got to be nearly nine …”


  “It’s a quarter till,” Dominic offered. I glanced at him, still standing sentry by the doorway, and offered him a small smile and a nod.

  “Yes, yes, very well.” Neffe pointed to Tarset’s arm, shrouded in a thin but impervious and unmovable blanket. “Nik, I need you to restore her elbow area, maybe an inch above and an inch below. Then her mouth, just for a moment. That will give me blood, tissue, and saliva samples,” she said, ticking each off on her fingers. “Which will have to be good enough. We can’t risk restoring her vital organs, not even for a second, so be careful.”

  Surprised by the sudden heat in her voice, I glanced at Neffe’s face. Her caramel eyes burned with an intensity I’d only seen a time or two before. And then it struck me—this wasn’t just some little girl we were trying to revive, this was her sister. Though Neffe had never actually met Tarset, having been born over a thousand years later, they were sisters. I hadn’t met any of Marcus’s other children in modern times. Honestly, I wasn’t sure if there were any others still living; his past families were a touchy subject for Marcus, and though I’d unearthed a fair bit of his humanity under the stony wall built up by millennia of life and death and love and loss, I still had a colossal amount of chiseling to do. In some ways, Marcus was almost as ensconced in time as little Tarset.

  When Nik didn’t respond to Neffe’s cautioning to take care, Neffe made to reach for his arm, but stopped herself short. Instead, she made a fist. “If you’re at all unsure …”

  “Nik is not entirely confident in his ability to wield his sheut so specifically.” The words had been uttered using Nik’s vocal chords, tongue, and lips, but their cadence and accent hinted at another speaker entirely. One quick glance at Nik’s face, at the open, relaxed expression and the opalescent irises now staring back at me, confirmed it—Nik was no longer in control; Re was. “I will do this for you instead, Neferure.” His lips curved upwards in a smile that looked nothing like Nik’s. “Personally, I’d rather not feel the pain of this ring tearing through our flesh.”