Read The Chrysalid Conspiracy Online

Authors: A.J. Reynolds

The Chrysalid Conspiracy

Contents

Dedication

Synopsis

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four

Chapter Five

Chapter Six

Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight

Chapter Nine

Chapter Ten

Chapter Eleven

Chapter Twelve

Chapter Thirteen

Chapter Fourteen

Chapter Fifteen

Chapter Sixteen

Chapter Seventeen

Chapter Eighteen

Chapter Nineteen

Chapter Twenty

Chapter Twenty-one

Chapter Twenty-two

Chapter Twenty-three

Chapter Twenty-four

Chapter Twenty-five

Chapter Twenty-six

Chapter Twenty-seven

Chapter Twenty-eight

Chapter Twenty-nine

Chapter Thirty

Chapter Thirty-one

Chapter Thirty-two

Chapter Thirty-three

Chapter Thirty-four

Chapter Thirty-five

Book Two Preview

About the Author

Copyright

Dedication

This book is dedicated to my wife, (my best friend and mentor,) and our extended family for their support, encouragement and extreme tolerance, with a special thanks to Amelia Jayne, my inspiration, for her courage and determination in the face of her disability.

Synopsis

Two adolescent school girls discover they are victims of a genetic experiment to enhance their faculties. Although forced to keep a low profile at school, witnessing their Headmaster’s suicide accelerates their development drawing them into conflict against powerful enemies; where science and myth are almost indistinguishable. Joined by a third ‘victim’, the trio become confused and frightened by a burgeoning telepathic sense, and as the body count rises they form a hypothesis; that they are being prepared by the remnants of an ancient ‘super race’ to rescue mankind from some impending mass extinction event? And can they face the destiny thrust upon them?

There are no runes or angry gods, only the stars like sand.
Will she who guides the ‘Mill’ return, Once more to seed the land.

(Nordic Mythology)

Chapter One

Amelia knew she was dreaming, at least at first, but who remembers the beginning of a dream? It’s as if some somnolent personal cataclysm triggers a response, leaving the sleeper dropped in at some crisis point trying to find a logical reference to an illogical concept.

Fortunately, or unfortunately, this wasn’t Amelia’s first experience with this particular dream, but on this occasion that thin layer of reason, the barrier that protects the conscious from the subconscious during sleep, was swept away by an almighty crash of thunder, screaming its age-old warning out of the darkness. Travelling from the base of Amelia’s neck and using her skull as a resonance chamber the amplified sound sliced through her overloaded senses, peeling away her very being before lodging in her temples. The violent flashes of lightning surrounded her as if searching for a target and the combined bone wrenching thunder told her the storm was directly overhead. It made her mouth taste of fear, as though she’d eaten something, which had been dead for a very long time; with fur.

Forcing her eyes open she squinted through wind driven rain, each drop as cold as iced needles with the after effect of a bee sting. It lashed at her body, her only protection being her inadequate nightclothes; T shirt and boxer shorts. Standing on a wide tree branch she was unable to decide whether it was instinct or something more primordial that prevented her from looking down.

Turning towards the trunk she found herself looking at a wall of ancient gnarled bark with a torrent of rainwater pouring down the maze of indentations and growth furrows in a bid to reach the roots first. Needing something solid to hang on to she took an unsteady step forward, slipped and plunged into the bole formed by the join to the main trunk. A mass of rotting vegetable matter, insects and animal faeces turned to primordial soup by the rain left her on the edge of hysterics as she climbed out. With humans never having evolved beyond this level of tolerance her only response was to retch in disgust, the only up-side being the driving rain scouring her free of the repulsive slime. Foliage lashed at her relentlessly while she crouched on the branch of this giant tree while she tried to piece her mind back together. She felt more than heard her name being called, again?

“Amelia!” Although the cry wasn’t loud, it was heavy with fear and she knew she had to hurry, but where to? Which way? Where was she? With the thunder reverberating in every bone in her body, rain lacerating her skin and the wind trying to force her into the abyss below her, she used the almost continuous flashes of lightning to make her way along what seemed to be a well-worn path. Looking back to where the trunk should have been, she could just make out through the chaos of the storm that the branch and the path curved away and down into the darkness to vanish into a three dimensional tangle of giant branches and foliage, flash lit by the lightning and stretching out in all directions into the night. The trunk had vanished and once again panic reached out to her, perspective toyed with her mind and she could no longer judge distance or time.

The panic dissipated as quickly as it had arrived to be replaced by an almost uncontrollable fear as she felt a presence. Some instinct, or was it a memory, warned her there was someone or something close by, above her. Trying to control the madness clawing at her mind she realised she was being hunted and fled, not knowing from what or to where.

Leaping from branch to branch with a practised ease, swinging and diving through and over secondary growth she was moving with a strength and balance with which she was as confident as she was unfamiliar. There was no fear of falling as she moved through the tree – it was as if she were born to it, and as her body adapted itself to this new dimension her mind grappled with reality to try and control the situation.

The terrain under her feet changed. She was now running on grass; in a tree? There were shrubs and plants, a patch of freshly dug earth. She was in a garden, speeding past a crude dwelling of some sort; an open-fronted structure of woven branches covered with broad leaves. The noise of the rain hitting the hollow shelter was deafening.

Amelia skidded to an ungainly stop. A small fire lit up the interior of the hut revealing a woman sitting on a stool among the curious angles and shapes in the shadows and that she was of all things, playing a cello. As the bow drew slowly across the strings the sonorous sound somehow undermined the storm, stealing its intensity, offering hope. By the light of the fire she was astounded to see that the bow was actually a long, flat-bladed sword. All other dangers suspended, Amelia stood spellbound by this bizarre scene.

The woman moved and deftly threw the sword to her. It tumbled end over end and she caught it expertly by the handle. The weight and balance were perfect and Amelia knew, somehow, that it was her own weapon.

“Quickly, hurry!” the woman shouted to her, Amelia turned and ran on. The sword felt as if it were part of her, moving with her rather than being a burden. She skidded to an abrupt halt just in time as the garden gave way to – nothing?

An astronaut had once visited her school and explained that without gravity your concept of up and down was dictated by the position of your head and feet so, if you stand at the door of your spaceship and look ‘down’, you begin to realise that down is forever. Amelia knew now exactly what he’d meant; only this time someone had taken away the stars.
This is all wrong,
she thought as she stepped back from the abyss.
Where am I? I want this over with, right now.
But the storm thundered around her, mocking her human fragility and confusion.

The silent voice called her again, much weaker now and exhausted, and as her sense of predator grew sharper she knew she had to go on; there was no choice. Grabbing a hanging vine, she swung out into the darkness.
What am I doing? Why me?
She thought, half terrified.

Someone laughed. It was a woman, and the laugh was one of sheer elation.
You’re too late Amelia, she’s mine now.
It called.

Amelia heard the voice with its faint trace of a foreign accent inside her head. It seemed to come from outside the storm, somewhere between a dream and reality. She hoped it was a dream, otherwise she was already dead. Not knowing how, she used the silent sound as a direction finder and looking up saw a shadow swinging towards her, sword poised for attack. With a skill she was unaware of Amelia managed to deflect the initial blow and had time for a defensive slashed at the figure, but she was too late, agile as a cat the shadowy figure moved above her.

There was a flash of reflected light as her sword sliced through the vine Amelia was on, and she was falling, falling down into the darkness which closed in around her. She could see nothing. The laughter had stopped and she felt the other voice again, somebody calling her for help. The voices, the storm, the cello – all faded away as she plummeted through a black abyss of fear. No sight or sound, no light or dark, not even time or space, just complete and utter emptiness. She tried to scream but no sound emerged.

Landing on her back, pain tore through her body, she tried to roll but something was clawing at her legs. Dragging air into her lungs through the pain, she lashed out with her sword, but the creature clung more tightly. Panic verging on madness engulfed her as she kicked her way free and rolled clear. The thing seemed poised to attack her again. Was it moving? She could see its single large eye – a great glowing green eye that told her it was 2.47 a.m.

The next flash of lightning showed up the straight lines and familiar angles of her bedroom. She was on the floor about to attack her crumpled, lifeless duvet with a hair brush. The thunder from outside laughed at her as she became fully awake.

Struggling upright, her back hurting between the shoulders where she’d hit the floor, clammy with sweat and disorientated she stared reality in the face muttering, “Not again,” now fully awake.

Getting up from the floor she made her way out to the landing and flicking on the hall light and ran down the uncarpeted stairs, leaping down the last few and, using the newel post to change direction she landed on the stone floor of the long wide corridor. Ignoring the cold medieval flagstones against her bare feet she didn’t break her stride as still shaking and breathless she broke into a run.

Silently she passed the wide French window-style double doors on her left which opened onto her mother’s flower shop, then the kitchen and bathroom to her right and her mother’s bedroom at the end of the corridor.

It was a large room, longer than it was wide – but with the traditional ancient oak beams, low ceiling and the dim light from the bedside lamp, it looked more like a cave. What furniture there was had been placed against the walls to allow her mother to manipulate her electric wheelchair and gain access to her dressing table and personal belongings.

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