Slivers
(The Prospero Chronicles #3)
Author: Fiona J.R. Titchenell & Matt Carter
Genre: YAHorror/Scifi
Release Date: June 20th, 2017
Book Description:
Ben
Growing up is hard, and growing up in Prospero is even harder, but I think we manage. I mean, yeah, my friends and I spend more of our time fighting a race of shapeshifting aliens than we do hanging out, but we have our fun. We go to parties, help each other with our classes, maybe even fall in love…
I’ve no illusions that we live ordinary lives, but they’re our lives, and I’m going to make sure we make the most of them whether the Splinters want us to or not.
Mina
The truce is temporary. We will not humor the Splinters forever. It's only until the Slivers can be stopped, until the army of Shards being planted among our classmates can be disassembled, until we get our hands on the thing I'd almost given up believing in.
The humanity test.
For the chance to know, once and for all, who can be trusted, some dealings with monsters must be excusable. Inevitable. Just like this feeling between Ben and me.
And that has to be temporary too.
(The Prospero Chronicles #3)
Author: Fiona J.R. Titchenell & Matt Carter
Genre: YAHorror/Scifi
Release Date: June 20th, 2017
Book Description:
Ben
Growing up is hard, and growing up in Prospero is even harder, but I think we manage. I mean, yeah, my friends and I spend more of our time fighting a race of shapeshifting aliens than we do hanging out, but we have our fun. We go to parties, help each other with our classes, maybe even fall in love…
I’ve no illusions that we live ordinary lives, but they’re our lives, and I’m going to make sure we make the most of them whether the Splinters want us to or not.
Mina
The truce is temporary. We will not humor the Splinters forever. It's only until the Slivers can be stopped, until the army of Shards being planted among our classmates can be disassembled, until we get our hands on the thing I'd almost given up believing in.
The humanity test.
For the chance to know, once and for all, who can be trusted, some dealings with monsters must be excusable. Inevitable. Just like this feeling between Ben and me.
And that has to be temporary too.
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EXCERPT
1. Sabotage
Ben
At the time, my instincts told me that jumping onto the hood of a
moving SUV was a brilliant idea.
After half a second of trying to find something to hold onto, I told
myself I’d reconsider my instincts when I got out of this.
If I got out of this.
A voice in my ear—I hadn’t lost my Bluetooth after all. Haley’s voice,
by the angry sound of it.
“Ben, what the hell are you doing?”
“I have no idea!” I yelled back, finally grabbing the roof rack with
both hands and holding on for dear life, doing my best to block the windshield.
The driver accelerated down the empty suburban street, jerking the wheel back
and forth, trying to shake me off. I knew behind the tinted glass of this
anonymous, plateless SUV were the gray faces of Slivers. Today they were
supposed to be kidnapping one of Prospero High School’s nicest teachers from
her home, and we were going to stop them. It wasn’t exactly a piece of cake,
but we’d done it before and should’ve been able to do it again.
I looked to the sidewalks, trying to spot any other members of the
Network.
There was a heavy blow against the windshield near my chest. The
tinted glass spiderwebbed beneath me. The Slivers were trying to break through.
Not for the first time, I cursed The Owl.
“Everybody close on the house! They’re still on the move!” Courtney
called over the party line.
“Where’s that spike strip?” Haley asked.
“About twenty feet behind Ben before he decided to go Shatner on us,”
Greg answered.
The spiderweb of glass expanded as the Sliver continued to force its
way through.
The next voice was impossibly calm. “If we can stop this vehicle,
there’s every chance we can capture multiple Slivers at once in addition to preventing Ms. Craven’s
abduction. Ben, do you think you can slow them down?”
Mina Todd.
She always asked for the impossible so reasonably.
The windshield broke open in front of me, safety glass exploding
outward as a long, muscular arm with a seven-fingered, clawed hand burst
through. It raked back and forth, opening up a large gash in the glass that
allowed me to see the three Slivers inside. They were of slight frame with
gray, hairless heads and bulging black eyes, and they had begun sprouting extra
limbs and tentacles to better mangle me.
“I’ll try,” I said, diving into the jagged hole where the windshield
used to be.
Their brief, startled pause before attacking was all I needed.
I reached into my pocket and pulled out one of the cheap stun guns
Mina loved to make out of disposable cameras and jammed it into the driver’s
chest. The creature shuddered violently, jerking the wheel to the side and
stomping on the gas reflexively.
I forced the gearshift into neutral and pulled on the parking brake.
The SUV lurched to a violent stop in the middle of the street.
So far so good.
Less good was the sound of snapping wood that came from the passenger
seat as its occupant’s body began to shift. Its rib cage broke open into a
giant, vertical mouth full of jagged teeth and swirling tentacles. The
tentacles lashed out at me, wrapping around my arms and neck, and squeezed. The
Sliver in the backseat joined in, grabbing the leg I tried to anchor myself
with against the dashboard and forcing me closer to that terrible maw.
The passenger door flew open. The Sliver let out a howl of pain as
Julie buried a large meat hook in its back and began pulling it from the car.
Courtney wrapped her hands around Julie’s on the hook, throwing her track team
muscles into the effort and hardly wincing when the gelatinous Splinter blood
began to soil her neatly pressed blouse. The tentacles released me, and soon
enough the two girls wrestled the Sliver from the vehicle and tased it.
One down.
The driver’s mutated arm reached across my chest and pulled the door
shut. It looked deep into my eyes with those empty, black orbs. Its narrow
mouth curled into the faintest of smiles as it held me pinned to the seat with
that monstrous arm. Though its face was formless, its flesh waxy, I couldn’t
help but feel something familiar in that smile and those soulless eyes.
“Soon,” it whispered to me in its chittering, popping voice.
A new arm burst from its shoulder, splitting into two insectoid hands
that allowed it to shift gears and disengage the parking break simultaneously.
I watched helplessly as Greg and Kevin finally caught up to us with the
jury-rigged spike strip we’d built for just this occasion, tossing it uselessly
to the ground just as the driver swerved out of the way.
I didn’t know if the Slivers were still going to try for Ms. Craven or
if they would content themselves with taking me instead. Would they try to drag
me to their Warehouse (assuming the Slivers had a Warehouse) and replace me, or
would they kill me as soon as they found a nice, quiet place to pull over?
They weren’t slowing down. If anything, they seemed to be speeding up.
They swerved down the street, aiming for the side of an old duplex. Ms.
Craven’s duplex.
I took advantage of the driver’s focus to pull one arm free, fasten a
seatbelt around me, and brace myself.
The SUV slammed through the duplex’s wall with a crushing impact that
knocked the wind out of me and whipped my neck forward. The unsecured driver
flew through the jagged remnants of the windshield and landed in what used to
be Ms. Craven’s living room. The passenger from the backseat climbed over me
with spindly spider’s legs, following the driver out the windshield.
A woman screamed inside.
Slowly, painfully, I undid my seatbelt and crawled through the
windshield, landing on the floor in a dazed heap.
Somehow I stumbled to my feet and pulled the mini flamethrower from my
back. It wasn’t much—just a kitchen lighter duct-taped to one of those recalled
aerosol fire extinguishers that Mina had stocked up on, but it did the job.
Flicking the lighter on, I lifted it high.
The driver had Ms. Craven wrapped in a set of tentacles and
interlocking claws, lifting her off the ground. Ms. Craven looked at me
fearfully, trying to cry out through the tentacle lashed across her mouth. The
flamethrower wouldn’t do much good at this range, standing as much a chance of
burning Ms. Craven. I was going to have to wait for backup.
“Let her go,” I said shakily. All of my experiences with Slivers so
far had proved that they loved to talk. I only had to stall them long enough
for Mina and the rest to get here.
The driver looked to the passenger, exchanging a low series of pops
and clicks. The passenger nodded, calmly raising one of its three arms and
pointing the hand at me, flat. Just like the driver, a small, frightening smile
crossed its face.
I lost all feeling beneath my waist, my legs giving out beneath me.
Then I could feel again—too well. It felt like every nerve in my body had burst
into flames. Violent waves of nausea hit me, and my muscles no longer seemed to
be my own.
Two realizations hit me at once.
First: they had a Shard we hadn’t documented yet.
Second: this Shard had remote control of human bodies.
There was shouting, and then Kevin and Greg slid through the massive
hole in the wall, brandishing their flamethrowers and Tasers. Less than a
second later, a sliding glass door opened in the next room, and Mina and Haley
ran in to join us.
Only Aldo, Julie, and Courtney had yet to catch up.
The two Slivers looked at each other, then at us. They could have
taken me easily, maybe even two of us. But five of us, well-armed as we
were—that gave them a moment of pause. The driver dropped Ms. Craven roughly to
the floor. Both of the Slivers raised their arms, and the driver looked at me,
curling its lips into that faint, unpleasant smile.
“Soon,” it said again.
Long spikes of bone erupted from each of their chests and backs. They
both began to laugh—a raspy, choking sound—as the base of each spike began to
pulsate.
“DUCK!” Mina blurted, falling to the floor.
Everyone dropped, dozens of bony spikes narrowly missing us as they
erupted from the Slivers’ bodies, lodging in the walls and shattering windows.
By the time we regained our feet, the Slivers were gone.
“Is everybody all right?” Mina asked.
There were murmurs of assent. Ms. Craven was on the floor, sobbing.
Finding out about Splinters is never easy for people to deal with
under the best of circumstances, much less while being kidnapped by the extreme
anti-human cult of Splinters that we’d taken to calling “Slivers” last fall.
Not that getting kidnapped by regular, garden-variety Splinters was
all that much better.
I was confident that Ms. Craven would come out of her shock soon—she’d
always struck me as pretty tough. Once this wore off, we’d be able to tell her
the truth. Maybe even make her a part of the team.
Assuming, of course, she was really human.
Haley examined my scratches and scrapes. Content that I must have been
okay, she smiled and threw her arms around my neck, hugging me close. I don’t
know what was more uncomfortable, Haley’s weight against my aching ribs or the
look of annoyance on Mina’s face.
“I’m fine,” I assured Haley, pulling away, “though that Shard they
have sure did a number on me.”
“One of the ones The Owl showed you?” Haley asked.
“No, this one’s new,” I said.
“Dammit, I hate Shards,” Greg said, shuddering. I didn’t blame him;
the last time we’d gone up against a Shard, it had made him feel a swarm of
spiders crawling beneath his skin.
“Tell me about it,” I said.
“Hey, guys?” Aldo said over the group line.
“Did you secure the other Sliver?” Mina asked.
“Yeah, we got her. No problems there. What about yours?” Aldo asked.
“They’ve retreated. They haven’t doubled back your way?” Mina asked.
“No, we’re clear,” Aldo said. There was something held back in his
voice I didn’t like.
“What’s wrong, Aldo?” I asked.
“Uh, I think you need to see this one for yourselves.”
“We’re on our way,” Mina said. “Haley, Greg, keep an eye on Ms.
Craven.”
“I got some stuff that might calm her down,” Greg said, patting a
pocket on his old army jacket.
“Don’t,” I said.
Greg shrugged. “More for me then.”
I followed Kevin and Mina out the front door. By force of habit, I
looked up and down the street, hoping by some miracle that we hadn’t been
spotted—or heard, for that matter. It was early Sunday morning, so the streets
were mostly deserted. Typical abduction timing. The cops would be here
eventually—a vehicle crashed through the side of a house has a way of summoning
them sooner or later—but given the Prospero Police Department’s closeness with
the main Splinter Council, this would all no doubt be hushed up pretty quickly.
“You’re gonna have to spend some quality time with Mina’s first-aid
kit, brother,” Kevin observed.
“I’ve looked worse,” I said.
“You’ve looked better, too,” Mina interjected coldly.
“What’d I do?” I complained.
“You nearly ruined the operation. This didn’t go half as smoothly as
our other interceptions,” Mina shot back.
I didn’t have a good defense for that. Ever since she’d started
receiving those messages from the Owl, giving us the Slivers’ plans for
abductions, we’d had a pretty good (though not perfect) track record of
intercepting and stopping the Slivers before they could take their intended
targets. Over the previous month and a half, we had managed to save the mayor’s
son, Sheriff Diaz’s wife, and the head of the PTA from being taken without
their ever knowing anything was going on. Things could have gone better this
time, I knew that, but they also could have gone a lot worse.
“I didn’t have a choice. They know what we’ve been doing, and they’re
being more careful. I did what I had to do,” I said.
“You could’ve been killed.”
“But I wasn’t!”
Kevin squeezed his way between us and put an arm around each of our
shoulders.
“Let us not forget, my friends, that we did stop them from replacing Ms. Craven. It may have been sloppy,
and she may have been needlessly introduced to our world, but we saved her. We
did a good thing; the forces of evil are in check for another day. We should be
celebrating!” Kevin said, smiling that easy smile he always used to defuse
tense situations.
Mina sighed. “Please try to avoid unnecessary risks in the future.”
“Will do,” I said.
“There, isn’t that better than fighting like a couple o’ freshmen?”
Kevin said.
“So says the senior commencement speaker,” I replied, punching him in
the ribs softly.
“Hey, I’m as surprised as you guys are that I actually got the gig,”
Kevin said, grinning.
“Right… so how long have you had that speech written?” I asked.
“Seventh grade, give or take a month.” Kevin laughed. “Come on, it’ll
be my last chance to try to change a few minds here before I move on to the
real world.”
“Freshmen don’t fight any appreciably more or less than any other
students,” Mina said as if she’d missed half the conversation, looking a bit
lost in thought.
“Really? Maybe we should ask Aldo,” Kevin joked.
Tall tales about Aldo’s secret second life, or third life in our case,
had become something of a running joke among the Network, given his habit of
accumulating even more scrapes and bruises than the rest of us in spite of
spending most of his time behind the scenes, digging for information or
tinkering with the equipment.
Underground cage fighting and undercover spy operations were common
speculations.
This conversation did lead to one topic that had been eating at me
lately: the passage of time. Of the eight members of the Network, Kevin and
Courtney were both seniors and were going to be moving on from Prospero within
the next six months. I didn’t know how we were going to keep the fight going
without them. We would find a way to manage, Mina always had in the past, but
it would be rough without Courtney’s organizational skills and Kevin’s ability
to put things in perspective.
Julie, Courtney, and Aldo had dragged their captive Sliver to the
privacy of Courtney’s backyard, a good five blocks from Ms. Craven’s, and by
the time we caught up with them, they already had it tied up in copper wire and
were threatening to touch the wire to a car battery. As usual, Julie (her jet
black hair streaked with hot pink and red for Valentine’s Day coming up) smiled
at us perkily beneath her thick goth makeup.
“Ya all right, Ben?” she asked, eying the scratches on my face.
“I’m fine.”
Aldo’s concerned expression was unsettling. Ever since our fight with
Robbie, Aldo had assumed a bravura I’d never known he had in him. He was the
first to cheer any victory lately. If he wasn’t smiling…
“What is it?” Mina asked, looking down at the Sliver, which looked
more human now despite the few extra limbs it still possessed.
Courtney held the end of the copper wire above the car battery with a
plastic pair of tongs. “Show them again.”
The Sliver hissed something in its chittering language that must not
have been kind. Courtney and Mina exchanged a glance. Mina nodded. Courtney
dropped the wire onto the battery’s contact.
The Sliver screamed too humanly as it shuddered and arched what could
best be approximated as its back, and the wire sparked violently. When Courtney
took the wire away, it reluctantly took the face of its true, human form with a
look of pure spite.
It was the face of Ms. Claudette Velasquez, my calculus teacher. That
she was a Splinter was not news; we had known this for a few months.
That she was working with the Slivers was a surprise. The last time we had seen her, she had a seat on
the Splinter Council.
“What are you waiting for? Kill me. That’s what you want, isn’t it?” she
challenged.
“We’re not that stupid,” I said.
Ms. Velasquez looked at the battery with a mix of anger and fear.
“Then what is your plan for me?”
“You’re going to tell us everything you know about the Slivers’
plans,” Mina said simply, taking the tongs from Courtney and holding them a
little closer to the battery. “And when we’re convinced you’re not holding out,
we’ll hand you over to the Splinter Council.”
Ms. Velasquez’s eyes went wide with genuine fear. “And if you’re never
convinced?”
“We turn you over to them anyway, only we don’t tell them how
remorseful and cooperative you were.”
Ms. Velasquez’s eyes scanned us, probably trying to gauge whether or
not Mina was telling the truth. She must have believed her, because her body
visibly slumped.
“Fine. I will cooperate. Just don’t—”
She let out an ear-splitting scream, her eyes bulging—then fell still
with mouth agape. We stared, trying to figure out if it was a trick, when the
flesh began to melt from her bones in thick gray rivers.
“What the… no, no…” Aldo muttered, trying to scoop bits of dissolving
Splinter into one of his specially rigged containment boxes, watching with
confusion as the liquid continued to evaporate after the box was sealed.
The entire Splinter corpse down to the bones was deteriorating into
nothingness as the raw Splinter matter became incompatible with our world.
“What the hell just happened?” Courtney asked. “She was going to
talk!”
“Was she?” Mina asked doubtfully.
“Well she sure as hell wasn’t going to die!” said Aldo, staring at the
last vanishing remnants of the body. “Splinters just don’t do that
spontaneously.”
“They might if they got one of those in ’em, brother,” Kevin said as
he pointed to what was left of Ms. Velasquez’s deteriorating bones.
What looked like a foot-long, white caterpillar made of tumors and
small air sacs disentwined itself from around her spine. Slowly, it walked away
from the dissolving remains of my math teacher, shaking off bits of gray slime.
Then it started to glow a faint, pulsing white, lifting off the ground
and beginning to float away like a plastic bag in the breeze. Mina grabbed it
with her tongs.
“That a Splinter?” Kevin asked.
“No, I don’t think so,” Mina said.
“Then what is it?” Aldo asked.
The answer hit me before Mina could say it out loud.
“A game changer,” I said. “If they’ve got themselves some sort of
alien suicide pill hiding inside them to keep them compliant, we might have to
reconsider our capture strategy.”
Capturing a Sliver for information had been one of our dreams ever
since we started receiving information from The Owl.
Just when we thought we had the Slivers figured out, they had to come
up with something like this.
I would’ve laughed if it weren’t so damn depressing.
Other Books in the Series
Fiona J.R. TITCHENELL is an author of young adult, sci-fi, and horror fiction, including Confessions of the Very First Zombie Slayer (That I Know of). She graduated from Cal State University Los Angeles with a B. A. in English in 2009 at the age of twenty. She currently lives in San Gabriel, California, with her husband, coauthor, and amazing partner in all things, Matt Carter, and their pet king snake, Mica.
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MATT CARTER is an author of horror, sci-fi, and yes, even a little bit of young adult fiction. He earned his degree in history from Cal State University Los Angeles, and lives in the usually sunny town of San Gabriel, California, with his wife, best friend, and awesome co-writer, F.J.R. Titchenell. Check out his first solo novel, Almost Infamous.
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Yeah, life would be perfect if it weren't for those classes.
ReplyDeleteThe book description and excerpt sounds intriguing. Thanks for sharing. Love all the covers in the series too.
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