Time Agents: Complications (sample)

Autographed Copy

298 pages

Paperback: $17 (shipping included)

Buy it today at Pikes Peak Unique on Etsy

Get a digital copy on Amazon for only $4.99

Prologue

“Cory, I don’t like the look of this one. We could go up like Dorothy.”

Cory looked at the swirling clouds not too far in front of them as he leaned over the steering wheel. “I know, Ash, but I don’t think we have a choice. We barely made it through that last blockade, and we’re down to our last few bucks. If there’s any lightning at all, we’ve got to head into it.”

He leaned back and blew out a breath, running a hand through his greasy dark hair. He’d done a lot of crazy, adrenaline-inducing things with his former girlfriend before she’d died in a motorcycle crash, but even Rachel would have balked at driving into the path of a tornado. A flicker of light in the clouds caught his eye. “Did you see that?”

“Yeah,” Ashley breathed out, barely above a whisper.

Cory reached for her hand. Neither of them could have guessed their lives would take this turn, but everyone who had witnessed the debacle at Trace Research was being hunted down. If not for the vial of VX10 Jewel had given Jeff, they wouldn’t stand a chance. With it, they would be jumping into a complete unknown. After much deliberation, they had chosen the future. Three hundred years in the future to be precise—a date Jewel had slipped into his pocket without him knowing.

At least they hoped they simply wouldn’t get fried to a crisp.

Jeff had snooped around the Trace lab just long enough to determine a dose for the vaccine, and they did all develop a lightning mark, but hell, it was anyone’s guess if it would really work. Not long ago he would have laughed till he hurt at the notion of jumping through time on a lightning bolt. Now he was banking on it. They’d gotten separated from Jeff two days ago, and Cory hoped he’d made it back to Nellie in 1908.

Lightning split the sky, and Ashley jumped. Cory squeezed her hand and pulled off to the side of the Oklahoma backcountry road just as rain started to sputter. “I think we need to get out. We don’t know if your car will come with us, and we have no idea where we’ll land.” He gave her a lop-sided smile as he put it in park. “We don’t want to squish somebody.”

She nodded and hooked her blond hair behind an ear, but Cory could see she was coming unglued. He didn’t blame her. They hadn’t had more than a few hours of sleep in several days, and reasonable people didn’t try to get hit by lightning.

He turned off the ignition but didn’t bother taking out the key. After getting out, he grabbed their oversized duffle bag out of the back seat and slung it over his shoulder. It was large for a bag, but small when you considered it was all he and Ashley had to take with them on this next trip into who-knows-what.

Ashley’s door opened, and he jogged around to help her out. He wanted to have a good hold on her when it happened. She shivered as she stepped out, pulling her hood up over her head. They both had jackets on, but it was nearing October, and the storm had cooled things down considerably. The rain wasn’t helping either. He slid an arm around her, and they began walking toward the heart of the storm. If it started to pour, at least he’d get that shower he’d been needing for days.

Raindrops splattered Ashley’s face as she looked up at the thunderclouds illuminated by the setting sun. “I’m glad that spinning cloud has gone over.”

“Yeah, thank God for that.”

A sizzling bolt had them both pulling up short, sucking in a breath, but since they didn’t appear to have been hit, Cory exhaled and urged Ashley forward again. Her sudden sobs had him stopping once more and wrapping her in his arms. “Ash, I know you’re scared, but this truly is the only way out for us. And I promise, I will not let go. No matter what happens. Either we’ll die together or jump together.” He pulled back just enough to lift her chin. “The last month with you has been everything I needed after Rachel,” –he gave her a smile— “so I could die happy right now, but I’m counting on a _future_ with you.” He was hoping to distract her as the rain came harder—keeping her eyes off the clouds. “Say the date.”

She held his gaze and swallowed. “2325.”

He felt a tingle run up his spine, and he put his lips on hers, his heart galloping. The bolt that found them felt as if it were turning him inside out with blinding intensity, but there wasn’t any pain.

Then the glaring light focused into a pinpoint and disappeared, leaving only black.

Chapter 1

“I’m really struggling with this, Cory. ‘Regulated history’? Come on!” Ashley forked off a bite of her sticky chocolate cake. She’d gotten very attached to the rich dessert since they’d found their way to Stockholm and the Time Agent Academy.

Cory nodded as he set down his cup of coffee. “I know; It feels wrong. But the reasoning makes sense. The temptation to change things is just too great.”

Ashley leaned in and lowered her voice. “But what keeps agents from just jumping back to a time when history wasn’t under lock and key and read about it then?”

“That pledge we’re supposed to recite on graduation day. We jump back to do the job we’re given to do and nothing more.”

She sat back, letting out an exasperated breath. He knew what she wanted to know. He did too. But if they were going to do this time agent thing, they had to abide by the rules. He reached across the small table to take her hand. “You need to stop worrying, Ash, and trust that your family lived out their lives with the typical ups and downs of American life, but were overall happy and healthy.”

She wouldn’t look at him as she scraped up the last of the gooey chocolate. “It’s… it’s just hard.”

Cory rubbed his thumb over the back of her hand. It hadn’t been easy for him either, although he and Nonnie had probably never been as close as Ashley and her four sisters. “Maybe you should… I don’t know… talk to someone about it.”

She looked up then, blinking. “I talk to you all the time.”

He smirked. “Someone other than me. A professional.”

“A professional counselor?” she said with a good deal of sarcasm. “You mean like me?”

He raised a brow. “Come on, you know even professional counselors sometimes need to talk about their feelings to another professional. Just because you’re a counselor doesn’t mean—”

“I know.” She pulled her hand away and swept up her plate and mug to take to the cleaning station in the Academy cafeteria.

Cory quickly downed the last of his coffee and followed. Both of their chronometer’s beeped for an incoming message, and they each looked to their wrists. “No Time-Travel Ethics this afternoon.”

“I guess we’re done for the day then.”

Cory pushed a button on the wall, and a panel slid open. They set their dishes inside and heard the whoosh whoosh hum of this very modern dishwasher. Vaporizers zapped both food and germs, using no water at all. “So how about we get off campus and do something fun?” He was hoping he could take her mind off of what she’d lost for a bit.

“Like what? I suppose you want to go to that absolutely insane amusement park?”

Cory grinned. “That would be awesome, but no, you should pick. What would… make you happy?” Until it popped out of his mouth, he didn’t realize how much he missed the woman who had ridden four hours into the Colorado wilderness with him to find Jeff when he’d been kidnapped. The woman who had relished his kisses. The woman who smiled.

“I don’t know, Cory. I’m kinda tired.”

She headed toward the door, and Cory found himself suddenly annoyed. Spending the afternoon in their tiny apartment watching Ashley mope, or worse, sleep, was not what he needed. They’d been there several months now. It was time to put the past behind them and get on with living. He tried for an empathetic tone he didn’t feel at the moment as they moved out into the hallway. “You can’t grieve forever, Ash. You—”

She turned on him. “What do you know about grieving? You’ve never done it. You’ve never let yourself do it. You said yourself, you just went from woman to woman to forget Rachel. For your information, that’s not healthy, and it’s not really grieving. And now you want to do the same thing with your sister and your parents. Just move on in a rush of activity so you don’t have to think.” She turned and continued walking, oblivious to the people staring as they passed.

Cory hesitated a moment then strode forward, catching up with her, although he contained his rebuttal until they were in the lift alone, heading down. “You call what we’ve been doing ‘a rush of activity’? Aside from the Academy, we’ve practically been standing still.”

She swiped at the corners of her eyes, and Cory felt immediately guilty. “I’m sorry, Ash. I just—”

“This was a mistake.”

“What? Enrolling in the Academy?”

She wouldn’t look at him. “Leaving our time. We could have—”

“What? Where could we have gone that they wouldn’t have found us? Who could we have trusted?” When she didn’t answer, he turned her to look at him. “Ashley, this was the only option left to us.”

The lift doors opened to people waiting to get on, so he released her, and she went out ahead of him. He suspected “fun” was probably out for the afternoon. Ashley confirmed it. “If you need to get out and do something, I understand, but I’m just not in the mood.”

“Why don’t you go shopping?” he said cheerfully.

She stopped and looked at him, a crease forming between her brows. “Because shopping is the female equivalent of an amusement park, right?” She rolled her eyes. “Gees Slowenski, what a stereotype.” She shook her head. “I’m going home.”

He nodded, feeling pissed, but tried not to show it. “I’ll… see you later then.” He intended to give her a kiss, but she turned abruptly, heading in the direction that would take her to ‘The Tube,’ a kind of high-speed subway.

He stared after her a moment, his lips pursing in thought. He was trying very hard to hold onto their relationship, but Ashley wasn’t making it easy. Sometimes he thought she was only staying with him because she’d be completely lost in this time without him. _She needs to find a purpose._ Turning abruptly, he headed the other direction. He needed to use the john before venturing out. “And she won’t find purpose staying in bed all day,” he muttered, jamming his hands into his jacket pockets.

“Hmm,” a sexy voice purred at his elbow, “that depends on who you’re with, I think.”

Cory looked over to shining, green eyes. Feminine eyes. His own slid down her picture-perfect face to pause a moment on coral lips that matched her long, wavy hair. She looked younger than him, but not ridiculously so. Not that long ago, Cory would have pounced on a line like that, set up a date, and had this gorgeous set of curves in his bed by evening.

But that was before Ashley.

Ashley had turned the playboy he’d become after Rachel’s death into someone who only needed one woman. Her. But it had been a long couple of months with her wallowing in the past. He gave the woman a small smile. “That’s probably true.”

He continued down the hall, but she followed. “I’m Lynisa. Are you new to the program?”

“Cory. And yeah.” He knew when a woman was on the hunt. He’d been the hunter many times. “Really new.”

“Oh, well, I’m a second year,” she said brightly. “About to graduate. I’d be glad to help you with your studies.”

Cory spied the restroom sign, hoping to escape this vixen, then remembered that gender-specific restrooms seemed to be a thing of the past. He stopped, not wanting her to follow him in and stand there jabbering while he took a piss. “Thanks, I’ll keep that in mind.”

He took his hands out of his pockets, and she grabbed his wrist, pulling it and his chronometer toward her lips. “Begin recording. Lynisa Venus 2305GBDA.” She released him. “There. Now you’ve got my name and code.”

Cory couldn’t help but admire her chutzpah. And her name. “Thanks, Lynisa Venus. I’ll… I’ll call you if I need help.”

She gave him a dazzling smile and a lift of her brows as she continued down the hall. Pivoting, he disappeared into the curving hallway that led to the facilities. Thank God the future still believes in stalls.

***

Ashley wiped her eyes and blew her nose, then tossed the tissue into the growing pile on the bed.

She’d spent the last hour looking through pictures on a small tablet that supposedly had a thousand times the computing power of the computers they’d left behind in 2015. She didn’t much care about that. She was just glad that the pictures from her phone could be transferred to this new system.

She’d cried so much, her nose was sore and her eyes were red and puffy. She got up to find the salve that could un-puff them almost instantly. She’d used a lot of it lately.

As a counselor, she’d helped others through the grieving process. She could quote the five stages of grief and expound on each at length. She’d just never really experienced this level of grief herself, and she wanted to go back and apologize to every single person she’d counseled through their tears. She’d had no real idea what they were going through.

She felt like a complete fraud.

She wiped the gel gently over her eyelids and felt the cooling sensation that brought immediate relief, wishing there were a salve for the emptiness she felt inside. She looked at herself in the mirror, feeling most of the stages all at once. She was having a hard time accepting this new normal, she was angry at this new normal, and she was depressed about this new normal. She blew out a breath. “I’ve never felt like I fit in anywhere. Why should I fit in neatly to the stages of grief?” She turned, knowing that statement wasn’t completely true. She had felt like she fit with Cory.

At least until recently.

He was firmly in “Denial,” pretending he had accepted never seeing his family again, not to mention Jeff, his best friend, who was like a brother. She walked to the window, wondering what “fun” he’d found to take up his afternoon. “He’s completely full of B.S. I hear what he says in his sleep.” She shook her head, not quite believing he thought that shopping could fix everything.

Her chronometer beeped, and she strode to her bedside table where she’d left it, expecting to see a message from Cory. Instead, she saw an “Official Summons.” With her heart racing, she touched the screen to open it up. As she read, her eyes grew round, her butt hit the bed, and the bottom dropped out of her stomach.

Chapter 2

Cory wandered through the rides at Aerial Amusements, a place that was billed as the “Tallest Amusement Park in the World.” It boasted the highest drops, swings, slingshots and waterslides, as well as the wildest roller coasters—one with twenty loops. He’d thought since Ashley wasn’t really interested in anything having to do with heights or speed, this would be the perfect time to check it out, but he found his heart wasn’t really in it.

Once again, he couldn’t help thinking of Rachel, who loved skydiving, hang gliding, fast cars, and fast motorcycles. It was the latter that killed her. He’d been content to leave speed behind, but he thought he would still enjoy a really great roller coaster. Standing there, looking up at the twisty contraption that hadn’t really changed much in three hundred years, save the addition of loops, he just wasn’t feelin’ it.

He forked off a bite of Swedish apple pie, thinking the pie alone was worth the price of admission, although he knew he could have gotten it at almost any café. He squinted as a line of people went sailing through the loops, their hands in the air. They looked like nothing was holding them in, but he supposed he just couldn’t see the seatbelts from his vantage point.

“Oh wow, I can’t believe I ran into you twice in one day!” Cory looked to the right to see the woman who had dared to enter her name and code into his chronometer heading his way. Lynisa Venus.

She was with another woman, both still wearing their Academy uniforms as if, like him, they’d come straight from campus. At least she wasn’t alone—that would have seemed an awful lot like she’d followed him. He gave them a smile. “Your classes cancelled too?”

The long-haired brunette answered. “Yeah. Evidently there’s a broken water pipe in that building.”

Cory nodded. Even the future could have infrastructure issues. After setting his fork on his plate, he extended his hand to the new girl. “I’m Cory.”

“Fleur,” she said, putting her hand in his.

“Fleur and Lynisa. Two pretty names for two—” He cut himself off and released her hand. How easy it was to fall into old habits. “Two Academy Cadets,” he amended awkwardly, then looked around. “You, know it’s almost weird to see something like this in 2325. In my time, some projected that all amusement parks would be virtual by this point.”

Both girls laughed. “That’s so last century,” Lynisa quipped. “After everyone got fat—”

“And died young from sitting on their butts all day,” Fleur interjected.

“There was a swing back to reality,” Lynisa continued. “People wanted to experience real life and real thrills.”

He looked between them. “So what are your favorite rides?”

Fleur said, “Devil’s Drop,” while Lynisa said, “The Tempest.”

“I saw Devil’s Drop. That thing is wicked tall.” He shook his head. “I’ve done skydiving, but I had a parachute, for Crisik.” He was proud that he’d remembered to use the modern curse word they all used now.

“It’s insane,” Lynisa threw in with wide eyes.

“Which one is The Tempest?” Cory asked, forking off another bite of his pie and wondering how he could move away from these two without being rude.

Lynisa pointed to her right. “This one. The sign’s on the other side.”

He looked up at all the colorful loops going this way and that. “Yeah, I was thinking about this one,” he said while chewing, “but—”

Before he knew what was happening, the coral-headed scamp was pulling him toward the other side and the line of boarders. “Then you have to go with me. Fleur hates roller coasters.”

He nearly choked on his pie. “Oh, well, I don’t know… I’m uh… eating at the moment, and—”

“I’m sure you’ll have it gone before we reach the front of the line.”

He looked at her smiling, upturned face and caved. “Okay…” He glanced over his shoulder. “What about your friend?”

Her smile turned sassy. “This is just payback for making me wait while she did Devil’s Drop.”

Cory turned anyway to make sure Fleur was really okay with it, actually hoping she looked angry so he could bow out, but she was moving toward a group she seemed to know.

He turned back to see Lynisa studying him. “What’s it like?” she asked in an almost conspiratorial tone.

“What’s what like?”

She leaned in, and Cory caught a whiff of her perfume—orange blossom that seemed to change after a few seconds into a sensuous musk. The surprising allure of it had him leaning in too when he should have stepped back. Weird that he didn’t remember such a strong scent when they’d talked in the hallway.

“Rumor has it that you jumped to this time from hundreds of years ago,” she continued. “I mean, were there even lightning domes then?”

The line moved forward, so Cory took the opportunity to step farther away. “Not nearly as sophisticated as what you have now, but there were Tesla coils that created lightning. We didn’t use one, however.” He gave her a crooked smile. “We chased down a storm.”

Her eyes went wide. “Oh my gosh! That’s amazing.”

It probably wasn’t wise to eat anything right before getting onto a roller coaster, but he’d be damned if he’d throw away delicious pie. He continued to eat it as they moved forward, and Lynisa quizzed him about jumping with real lightning.

“It’s a crazy sensation, to be sure,” he said as they were loaded into the seats that felt far too insubstantial. “And we both had a pretty powerful headache for a day.” He looked around, and when nothing clamped over them or around them at all, he started to panic. “What the hell is going to keep us on this thing?”

“A gravity bubble.” She put a hand to his leg. “Don’t worry, it’s completely safe.”

Cory wasn’t so sure, but he had witnessed people exiting the ride hale and whole, so he supposed he could trust it.

Maybe.

He was grateful he wasn’t in the front where it would have to feel like you had no protection at all. His heart started racing anyway, and as the line of seats moved forward, he felt a twinge of panic. “They should make the bubble blue or something so you can see it,” he muttered.

 Lynisa laughed and slipped her arm around his. “Does this help?”

He looked over at her. “No. If I fly off, so will you.” He faced forward, knowing his heart had taken on an even more rapid rate. It doesn’t help one iota. If there was one thing he was certain wasn’t safe, it was the woman beside him.

What People Are Saying…

“Watch out for whiplash when you buckle in for the roller coaster twist from year 2015 to 2325 and then, just when you almost acclimate, back to the chaos of 2020. Action, romance, adventure, true love and genuine forgiveness, this book has it!”

“The exquisite blend of sci-fi, crime, and mystery makes this a novel you won’t want to put down. The numerous “Complications” will keep you turning the pages!”
M.J. Evans, Award-winning author

Autographed Copy

298 pages

Paperback

$17 (shipping included

Get yours today at Pikes Peak Unique on Etsy

Or buy it on Amazon in paperback or digital

298 pages