Find Me Series (Book 3): Finding Hope

Home > Other > Find Me Series (Book 3): Finding Hope > Page 29
Find Me Series (Book 3): Finding Hope Page 29

by Trish Marie Dawson


  Perhaps more shocking than the fact that Connor was truly dead, was the realization that none of us were safe from the pandemic. We weren't immune. Lily was already sick. Jacks was showing signs. Once this second wave of the plague swept through our refuge, we would all fall victim.

  There would be no survivors. Not this time.

  "What do we do now?" Drake asked, wiping sweaty dirt from his forehead. He looked tired. Dark circles had dug craters below his eyes and his face had a sunken-in shape to it.

  With a sigh, I looked away from him. I didn't have to say it out loud. He already knew he was dying.

  "We wait for tomorrow to come. If we are lucky enough to survive today...we wait for tomorrow."

  He pulled gently on my hand, bringing my body beside his, and placed his shaky fingers on my swollen abdomen. The morning sickness had passed, making the end of the second trimester more bearable.

  "When I'm gone...tell our child about me." The wind snatched up his whisper like it had mine, but the words echoed loudly in my head.

  The intense pain between my temples was back. The clammy sensation on my skin no longer went away. And I didn't have the heart to tell Drake the baby wasn't moving anymore.

  With my knife safely sheathed to my hip, I spit out the iron taste of my former lover's blood and smoothed my hair back again.

  Life was a cruel bitch.

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  Thanks always go first to my family and friends, for putting up with my funky writing schedule that so often pulls me away from the land of the living. Thank you, thank you, thank you. For your love, your support, and your time. Many hugs and kisses your way...

  Next, thank you to the readers of the Find Me Series for continuing to read Riley's story! I hope you found the third installment a fun and exciting read and can't wait for more!

  Special thanks to Ella Medler, for her editing expertise, and Deb Rogers, for her cover design. Love you both to pieces!

  If you enjoyed this story, please return to Amazon and leave an honest and spoiler free review – I can't thank you enough for this!

  NEED MORE?

  Don't miss out on the next release! Sign up for the TMDBooks newsletter HERE!

  * * *

  Pick up another TMDBook while you wait for the next New Release! You can see what's new by visiting my Author Page on Amazon.

  If you like Fantasy with a Sci-Fi twist, you might enjoy The Dry Lands, a Hutch & A'ris novel…

  THE DRY LANDS (EXCERPT)

  As he lay on the cracked and dusty ground unblinking, his eyes stared up at the copper clouds, completely emotionless. They drifted above him like a slow-moving processional, obscuring the harsh light of the sun from his broken body.

  The Workers had tossed him out like the trash; a piece of waste no longer needed. Just like that — his life was supposed to be over. With a grunt and a considerable amount of effort, he bent his limbs at the joints, cringing as the sound of his bones rubbed unnaturally against the breaks sustained from the fall. The dry air zapped all moisture from his mouth and he fought to keep from spitting out the dirt that swirled around his tongue. Spit was precious in the Dry Lands. Even if one was lucky enough to end up in the unforgiving desert with water, a man simply did not spit out his life-source onto the gritty earth because of a little sand.

  Krane Hutch had never been a lucky man.

  It took five minutes to realign his left arm enough to slowly reach across his chest and tug on his right arm. It was broken in more places than Krane thought possible, flopping limply in every direction when he managed to lift his hand off the hot dirt of the canyon edge. The pain was there in full force — stinging at his eyes, creating a dull ache in his head and forcing bile up his throat, but he clamped his jaw shut until it popped into place, along with his right elbow.

  His sweaty head fell back onto the ground in relief. The hardest part was done. Arms took longer to heal than legs. The bones were smaller and there were a lot more of them. Plus, he couldn't align the joints in his lower half without the use of his upper half, so hands and arms would always rank higher than legs and feet. His legs usually took only minutes to repair.

  With a series of deep breaths, he tilted his neck from side to side and rested his swollen arms straight at his sides. Then he rolled his hips back and forth, slowly setting the snapped and protruding disks of his back into their rightful slots. The spine was tricky. The first time he had broken his back was after a night out with a salvage team, who, like all other Workers, spent more time drinking illegal rash than actually salvaging anything. Drunk and unaware of his surroundings, he had stepped off the ship's loading dock and propelled face-first down a cliff. A boulder broke his fall, and he had spent the night in excruciating pain trying to put his snapped vertebrae back together. The Workers never even noticed he was gone. At dawn, when he had stumbled back into the galley, the other men were too drunk or too uninterested to ask about his blood soaked clothing, so he hadn’t bothered filling them in. He was used to doing everything on his own. Always had been and always would be totally alone.

  Spread out in the dirt, just an hour or so before the hottest time of the day, he stretched his legs out carefully, flexing his toes up and down until the muscles of his lower back constricted around the damaged disks. He bit down on his tongue, drawing fresh blood more than once before it was over. But it definitely didn't take all night. Less than one hour after he was tossed mercilessly out of the hot sky, he sat up to investigate his surroundings.

  "Now, isn't this just bloody brilliant?" he asked the whispery wind.

  The only answer he received was a faraway call of a bird of prey he'd rather not meet face to face. Fisting his hands, he pushed his knuckles into the dirt and shakily righted himself. He had managed to land less than one hundred feet from the edge of a massive canyon. Other than the gargantuan split in the earth, there was absolutely nothing to see. A blanket of dry, brown rock and blowing sand stretched out before him.

  His six-foot frame barely cast a shadow. The sister suns were high in the east and rising quickly, filling all the cracks below their massive sizes with light. They seemed close enough for Hutch to reach out and touch, if he jumped. He had no plans on being out in the open when it was high noon. The heat alone would blister his skin. The thermal rays beating down on the Dry Lands had killed all but the smallest of creatures, except perhaps the ones that slithered beneath the ground. No man had lived to tell an honest tale about those beings, so he doubted their actual existence. Still, he walked quickly and with focus, even though he wasn't exactly sure where he was or where he should go.

  With no food or water, not even a flask of rash in his back pocket to swig, he figured he had less than two days in the awful and uninhabited region before the birds found his corpse and picked it clean. It wasn’t enough time to cross the massive expanse of dead lands, yet he had no choice but to try.

  While whistling the tune of a song long forgotten, his feet kicked up bowls of dust with each gaping stride as he paced toward the mountains. From afar, they seemed to be nothing more than scraggly rocks jutting from the fractured crust, spouting steamy vapors into the sky. The spiked mountains were probably too frigid at night to keep even a gnat alive, he figured, but it was his best option. Shelter was essential to survival.

  The hard knock to his head had obliterated the last day of memory from his mind, but he knew why he was there. He had been cast out with no supplies, yet not stripped of his clothes or boots — a loss that would certainly mean instant death in a place like the Dry Lands — a place that was famous even off planet. The hot and arid terrain was the perfect place to dump a man you wanted to suffer. Otherwise he’d have been jettisoned into space, ensuring an instant death. Someone was making a statement. They wanted him gone, but not too quickly. Nah, someone wanted Krane in agony. The fall had hurt like a bitch, he'd be the first to admit that, but the recovery was worse. Crashing to the earth took only seconds — putting the bones back together took fa
r longer than that.

  He supposed he was lucky they had dumped him and flown off. Had they stayed to admire their work, his former peers would have found Krane in a state of reconstruction. Workers weren't the smartest group of men, but even they knew it wasn't normal for a man to do what Krane could. He was different, in more ways than one, and people like him were killed for far less remarkable reasons. If they came back and found no sign of his body, they'd simply assume that predators dragged off his busted corpse and had him for lunch. He wasn’t important enough to be given a second thought.

  With a ragged sigh, he shook his head at his predicament while his strides slowed on the incline of a steep hill. He’d known that girl would be his undoing. Girls always were his undoing. Damn him for thinking he could bed the Captain's daughter and get away with it. No, Krane Hutch had never been a lucky man.

  * * *

  Want more of Hutch and A'ris? You can find the Kindle edition of The Dry Lands on Amazon today!

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  Trish was born and mostly raised in San Diego, California, where she lives now with her family and pets. She began writing short stories and poetry in high school after an obsession with Stephen King's 'The Stand'. After over fifteen years of crazy dreams and an overactive imagination, she began her first book, 'I Hope You Find Me' in December of 2011. It was then that her first Fantasy series was born.

  When she is not writing, researching or editing and formatting, she's homeschooling her children, reading during her free-time, and enjoying the Southern California sun. She's an animal lover, and regularly saves mice, lizards and birds from her three rescue dogs, Zoey, Bear and Kaylee. They all share the house with River, the rescue cat, who is part dog and part old man.

  Find out more about Trish and TMDBooks by checking out her Website today.

  ALSO BY TRISH MARIE DAWSON

  Ebooks are available at Amazon. Print books may be purchased at CreateSpace.

  FIND ME Series

  I Hope You Find Me

  Lost and Found

  Finding Hope

  THE STATION Series

  Dying to Forget

  Dying to Remember

  Dying to Return

  Niles, a Novelette

  Mallory, a Novelette

  Kerry-Anne, a Novelette

  HUTCH and A'RIS Series

  The Dry Lands

  ANTHOLOGIES & COLLABORATIONS

  Madness, The Bitten

  A Tale of Two Kitties, Write to Rescue

  OFFICIAL FOLLOW LINKS

  Stay Updated: Newsletter Sign Up

  Twitter at: https://twitter.com/Trish_Dawson

  Facebook at: https://www.facebook.com/WriterTrishMarieDawson

  Instagram at: https://instagram.com/trishmdawson/

  Pinterest at: https://www.pinterest.com/trishmdawson/

  Website & Blog: http://writertrishmariedawson.com/

  Trish's work can be found online as well as in print on Createspace. Please support your favorite Indie Authors by buying their books and leaving them honest reviews. Thank you for reading!

  Table of Contents

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Prologue

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  To Be Continued . . .

  Acknowledgments

  Need MORE?

  THE DRY LANDS (Excerpt)

  About the Author

  Also by Trish Marie Dawson

  Official Follow Links

 

 

 


‹ Prev