by Meghan Riley
Genre: YA Sci-fi
Release Date: 2016
No longer on Earth, Anna must now piece together her memories on the strange, new world of Enki. Guided by Julianus, the mysterious man who brought her back, she soon realizes this isn’t the same world she was starting to remember, making it even more difficult to figure out why she was sent to Earth. Will she be able to solve the mystery before the people who sent her away realize she’s back? Or will her memories forever remain lost?
Book One (click on image for Goodreads link):
Below
is an excerpt from Chapter 1 of Quintina (Book 2 of the Starseed Series),
available in paperback and ebook on Amazon.
Chapter 1
Awakening
A steady, low pitched hum radiated from above
and pulled me out of the darkness. I rolled over to my side, buried one ear in
the soft pillow I laid on, covered the other with my hand, and prayed for it to
go away. Whatever it was – my brother, a neighbor – I didn’t care. All I wanted
was sleep. Lots of sleep.
But the sound didn’t go away. My attempts to
block it only seemed to make it louder, like voices echoing down a tunnel. I
tucked my hands under my head and told myself to ignore the sound, to focus on the
blissful feeling that came from being on the edge of slumber.
But I couldn’t. My senses were uncontrollable.
I tried to reign them back in, but it was too late. I became increasingly aware
of my surroundings.
An annoying chill stretched up my legs from my
feet. I promptly drew them toward me banging my knees against something cold
and hard. I gasped and squinted firmly against the pain, letting out a groan.
The room…it didn’t smell right. It smelled like a…shower curtain.
I rolled over and opened my eyes. Something
clear like glass hung low
and distorted the dark ceiling above me. Confused, I reached out and touched the
barrier, sliding my hand
across it from where it met the white padded bed I laid on to the slick curve
it made over me like the lid of a coffin. This wasn’t the thin, flat glass of a window
pane, but thick and molded. I followed it with my eyes to the foot of the bed
where it continued to surround me.
What
the –?
I twisted my body and looked behind me, toward
the source of the humming. It was coming from a large white case attached to
the head of the bed. When the doctor was trying to figure out the source of my
hallucinations, he put
me in an MRI machine about this size, but it wasn’t as large. I stared at it trying
to process what I was seeing, but the longer I lay there, the more it felt like
the glass was closing in around me.
As I reached up with both hands and gently
pushed on the glass, the
long sleeves of my plain white shirt slid down my forearms toward my shoulders.
It held firmly in place.
I ran my hands along the seam between the
barrier and bed trying to feel for a latch or button, but there was nothing. I
once again reached up with both hands and pushed, harder this time. The glass
refused to budge. My heartbeat quickened.
I’m trapped!
I looked down at my white pants and bare feet.
What am I doing here? I thought back
over the last 24 hours. It was fuzzy, but it was starting to come back to me –
stargazing, Jared, Doctor McCormick, Steve, the shadow man…some hazy images of
space. Is it true? Did I really travel to
another planet?
The sound of a voice broke my train of
thought. The glass acted like a conductor, making it resonate around me. I
couldn’t understand exactly what was being said, because the language was none
I had ever heard before, but I could tell it belonged to a man and he was
angry.
Through the distortion of the glass at my
feet, I noticed something moving. Focusing on that end of the room, I could
just make out a gray door with a window. It was closed, but someone was
standing in front of it. Their body blocked part of the white light that was
passing through the window. I was sure they were the source of the voice. Their
shoulders rose at the climax of each angry sentence and it occurred to me,
whoever they were, there was a chance they were hostile.
With both hands, I hit the glass full force.
It lifted off the bed a little, which was just the encouragement I needed. I
hit it again. It gave a little bit more and fell back into place.
I hit it again and again and again. All my
emotions from the memories of Jared, Dr. McCormick, Steve, and my family came
flooding out of me.
I pounded the glass until my knuckles split
open and tears streamed down my face. Then, surprisingly, the glass slid back
behind me. When I blinked away the tears, someone was standing in front of me.
“Quintina?” It was the man with the blue eyes
I had seen when I first arrived. Now, fully awake, I saw I was wrong: he wasn’t
the man I had seen in my visions on Earth. He had the same blue eyes, thick
angular brow, and close-cut brown hair, even the same chiseled jaw, but the
mouth was wrong. It was smaller and carried a permanent hint of disapproval at
its corners, not the teasing of a playful grin. And the nose didn’t match. The
ridge was bowed, like it had been broken and never healed correctly, but it
seemed fitting for the 5 o’clock shadow and general ruggedness that he seemed
to encompass, a contrast to the man in my visions, who was more refined and
polished, like the gentleman you’d find in a Jane Austen book.
The Starseed Series on Amazon:
About the Author
Meghan Riley graduated with a bachelor’s degree in English from the University of Maryland and immediately pursued her lifelong passion for the written word. Her debut novel, Anna, presented itself as a way for Riley to inspire teenage girls to expand their interests beyond the typical teenage quandaries, ultimately encouraging females toward an interest in science. She is currently hard at work on the next book in The Starseed Series.
Author Links:
Thanks so much for the excerpt and great giveaway
ReplyDeleteSounds like a great read.Thanks for the chance.
ReplyDeleteSounds like a great read.Thanks for the chance.
ReplyDelete