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white dawn (Black Tiger Series Book 3)

Page 1

by Sara Baysinger




  Table of Contents

  PART I: the chaos

  PROLOGUE

  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

  PART II: the cure

  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

  CHAPTER THIRTY-SIX

  CHAPTER THIRTY-SEVEN

  CHAPTER THIRTY-EIGHT

  CHAPTER THIRTY-NINE

  CHAPTER FORTY

  CHAPTER FORTY-ONE

  CHAPTER FORTY-TWO

  CHAPTER FORTY-THREE

  PART III: the contagion

  CHAPTER FORTY-FOUR

  CHAPTER FORTY-FIVE

  CHAPTER FORTY-SIX

  CHAPTER FORTY-SEVEN

  CHAPTER FORTY-EIGHT

  CHAPTER FORTY-NINE

  CHAPTER FIFTY

  CHAPTER FIFTY-ONE

  CHAPTER FIFTY-TWO

  CHAPTER FIFTY-THREE

  CHAPTER FIFTY-FOUR

  CHAPTER FIFTY-FIVE

  CHAPTER FIFTY-SIX

  CHAPTER FIFTY-SEVEN

  CHAPTER FIFTY-EIGHT

  PART IV: the commencement

  CHAPTER FIFTY-NINE

  CHAPTER SIXTY

  CHAPTER SIXTY-ONE

  CHAPTER SIXTY-TWO

  CHAPTER SIXTY-THREE

  CHAPTER SIXTY-FOUR

  CHAPTER SIXTY-FIVE

  CHAPTER SIXTY-SIX

  CHAPTER SIXTY-SEVEN

  CHAPTER SIXTY-EIGHT

  CHAPTER SIXTY-NINE

  CHAPTER SEVENTY

  CHAPTER SEVENTY-ONE

  CHAPTER SEVENTY-TWO

  CHAPTER SEVENTY-THREE

  CHAPTER SEVENTY-FOUR

  CHAPTER SEVENTY-FIVE

  CHAPTER SEVENTY-SIX

  CHAPTER SEVENTY-SEVEN

  CHAPTER SEVENTY-EIGHT

  CHAPTER SEVENTY-NINE

  CHAPTER EIGHTY

  ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

  Rain’s Playlist

  Aurora’s Playlist

  white dawn

  the black tiger series—book three

  SARA BAYSINGER

  StarFinder Press

  white dawn

  Copyright 2017 Sara Baysinger.

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of the author.

  Published by StarFinder Press

  Martinsville, Indiana

  This is a work of fiction. Characters, incidents, and dialogues are products of the author’s imagination and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events is strictly coincidental.

  Composition/Song Title: THE SOWER'S SONG

  Writer Credits: Andrew Peterson and Ben Shive

  Copyright: © 2015 Jakedog Music (admin. by Music Services)/Junkbox Music. All Rights Reserved. ASCAP Song Time: 00:00

  % Controlled by Licensor: 50.00%

  Per Unit Rate: 0.1000 (Based on 100% Control)

  Dollar Rate: 20.0000 (Based on Licensor's Share) All Rights Reserved. Used by Permission.

  Cover Design by Sara Baysinger

  Manuscript edited by Sarah Grimm

  Typesetting and formatting done by Perry Elisabeth Design

  Printed in the United States of America.

  This one’s for Sarah Kate.

  Dedicated fan. Fellow writer. Dearest friend.

  Thank you for believing in this story.

  I kneel

  At the bright edge of the garden, at the golden edge of dawn

  At the glowing edge of spring, when the winter’s edge is gone

  And I can see the color green, I can hear the sower’s song

  Abide in me. Let these branches bear Your fruit.

  Abide in me, Lord, as I abide in you.

  -Andrew Peterson, The Sower’s Song

  PART I: the chaos

  PROLOGUE

  Rain pours from the sky. Thunder rumbles overhead. The ground trembles with its groans.

  Defender Shepherd stands amidst the dead bodies, watching the procession roll away in one chaotic parade of confused chiefs, brainless Defenders, and two helpless prisoners: one who used to be chief, the other with gray eyes and a newsboy cap.

  The rain soaking through his clothes, Shepherd kneels beside Ember’s body. Rainwater splatters against her olive skin, dripping down her neck and mingling with her blood. True to its training, the tiger mauled her neck, but her face remains intact, free of any scars, and with an almost…peaceful aura. She looks so much like her mother.

  Shepherd places his fist on his chest, trying to ease the pain. It’s been nearly a decade since he last saw Ember Carter, since he last took art supplies to her and gave her a brief lesson in sketching. A terrible shame his next meeting with her ended like this. After her mother died, he’d stayed away to keep Ember safe. He should have stayed close by instead.

  Take the bodies to the royal mortuary, Aurora said as she gestured toward Forest’s and Ember’s bodies. Who knows whose side Aurora is on. She arrested Titus, but she arrested Rain, too.

  Shepherd waits until the procession is out of view, disappearing behind a crumbling building. The bombs have finally stopped going off. But the ringing in his head still resounds, telling him he failed the one order Lily Whitcomb ever gave him.

  Protect my family, she’d said.

  I’m so, so sorry.

  “Shepherd.”

  Shepherd looks up, and his eyes meet Isaac’s. Though Shepherd mainly stayed in Frankfort, he knows the key leaders of the Resurgence and was in regular contact with the Fearless Five when they paid their rebel visits. The Five and few other Resurgence members climb up from the river bank, soaking wet from the rain. They slow down when they spot Ember’s and Forest’s bodies.

  “She’s dead,” Shepherd says, his voice thick with agony.

  Isaac blinks in shock, then shakes his head and looks back at Levi. “Call President Mason. Tell them about Ember. Tell them if they have any hope of helping Ky, to get here as soon as possible.” He nods at Shepherd. “Let my crew take her.”

  “What?” Shepherd straightens, tension creeping into his shoulders. “Aurora ordered a proper funeral for them. I think she means well.”

  Isaac releases a hollow laugh. “Not well enough.” He jerks his head at his comrades, and they crowd around Ember, gently lifting her limp body off the ground and heading back toward the makeshift raft.

  “Please,” Shepherd says, looking back at Isaac. “Tell me what’s going on.”

  Isaac closes his mouth, considering. Then finally says, “The Indy Tribe has technology that can bring her back. But we have to work fast. They only hav
e so long before the technology won’t work anymore.”

  Shepherd frowns. “Back to…life?”

  Isaac nods.

  “That’s impossible.”

  “Not entirely.”

  Unbelievable. Impossible. Shepherd shakes his head, tries not to allow the flame of hope to burn in his chest. If Ember came back to life, all might not be lost. There could still be hope, still be a brighter future for Ky.

  “Take her, then,” Shepherd says. “And take Forest, too.”

  Isaac looks at Forest. “Unfortunately, the technology won’t work on Forest, since the bullet went through his head.” He frowns. “A shame. He could have been a huge asset with all the information he had.”

  Shepherd nods, then orders his Defenders to take Forest’s body. He had been starting to like that politician.

  He wipes rainwater off his face and looks back at Isaac. “What would you have me tell Aurora?”

  “Proceed with the funeral arrangements,” Isaac says. “We’re not even sure if the Indy Tribe will cooperate in reviving Ember, but if they do, I still want everyone to think Ember is dead. We can’t risk anyone chasing her down to kill her again.”

  Shepherd cringes. “I can’t imagine Aurora will be happy about me lying to her like this. If she’s anything like Titus, she’ll have my head if she finds the coffin empty.”

  Isaac nods. “If Aurora is on our side, she’ll understand why we withheld this information. If she’s not—and if she is like Titus—then it’s better she be left in the dark.” A look of disgust comes across his features. “In fact, don’t tell anyone what we’re doing with Ember. Not even Rain or Walker. I don’t want anyone catching wind of what’s going on.” He swallows, pins Shepherd with dark, determined eyes. “There’s no way in hell I’m letting anyone interfere with our plans this time.”

  CHAPTER ONE

  AURORA

  The dirt stares at me, mocking, laughing, taunting as it swallows my sister’s coffin. She is ours now, the dirt says. She will become one of us.

  Ember told me once she saw herself as the dirt. I doubt death is what she pictured.

  Death.

  Unforeseeable. Unavoidable. Unimaginable.

  It just happens. It happens to all of us. It happened to our ancestors. Our fathers. Our friends. And soon, our children.

  It happened to Forest.

  And then Ember.

  And I’m left to clean up the ashes. I’m left to watch the smoke clear and to see what the future holds. Because whatever is about to happen can’t possibly be good. This country is going down in flames, and not all the water in the world could put out the fire.

  Ember’s coffin is lowered into the grave.

  And Rain Turner is staring at me like he would love nothing more than to murder me.

  Here. Now.

  I can’t really blame him. To him, I must appear as cruel as Titus. As indifferent as every other elite, high-class Patrician. I wish there were some way to make him understand that I didn’t want this any more than he did. That’s why I set up an elaborate procession for his brother. That’s why we’re having a memorial set up for Ember—in the orchard in which she grew up.

  The orchard that has been burnt to a crisp by my brother, Titus.

  My name is Aurora Whitcomb.

  And I am the Chief of Ky.

  CHAPTER TWO

  RAIN

  I stare at Aurora across the gaping hole that is waiting to swallow Ember Carter’s coffin.

  I stare at her.

  And I want to kill her.

  Because this is her fault. We’ve exchanged one Whitcomb dictator for another. Ember was supposed to lead. Ember Carter was supposed to take the helm. The Resurgence counted on her. I counted on her. All of Ky counted on her.

  And now…

  she’s…

  gone.

  It all happened so fast. I still have a difficult time processing the impossible events. We were close—so close to freedom. And this girl held us back. This ignorant child slipped from the railing of the bridge and fell into the water. And what does my brother do? Goes after her. And what does the girl I love do? Goes after him. The whole situation was a big train wreck, one boxcar derailing after the other. Even as I replay the events in my mind, my heart wrenches with the cruel agony of it all. And I curse the day Ember brought Aurora to the caverns. All for nothing. All these deaths.

  For nothing.

  Because we’re back to where we were. A shoddy Whitcomb taking the throne. The Resurgence in hiding, but this time they’re across the river and no doubt have no intention of coming back. And I’ve been left behind, this time as a prisoner instead of a high-class citizen playing the system.

  Aurora says the final words, the final memories, the final goodbye, the final lie. She’s attending this funeral, not in rags of mourning, but in a black toga made of silk as if she’s hosting some ball. Like she’s celebrating instead of mourning. Like an elaborate plan had unfolded just as she intended. Black pearls around her neck, ashen eye shadow, her hair piled up on her head in a mountain of curls. So Patrician. So like a Whitcomb. So like a self-centered jackal. And yet, looking so much like Ember.

  Just one glimpse, and I see Ember in her eyes. I relive Ember’s death like it’s happening right now, and the pain—it’s too much. The chasm in my chest swells. Aurora’s face is an endless, brutal reminder that Ember is dead. And the fact that Titus is still alive only proves where her loyalty lies.

  She grabs a fistful of dirt and sprinkles it on Ember’s coffin. Why does Ember have a coffin? It’s so unlike her. She wouldn’t have wanted to be confined in a box. Her entire life has been focused on being free. She should have been burned, her ashes released into the wind and blown across her orchard.

  Or better yet, across the river.

  But not buried beneath the hard-packed dirt. Aurora doesn’t know her sister like I do. Aurora shouldn’t have been the one to make funeral arrangements. She chose the simplest route, the procession that would most please the media and the people. The elite people. Her people. She picked an easy funeral, but she doesn’t give a damn about her sister.

  I stare at the box that holds the corpse that used to hold the soul of my loved one.

  My Ember. My fire in December.

  My throat closes. Pressure builds behind my eyes, and I shut them, shut out the past five days, shut out the reality that simply cannot be a reality. But when I open my eyes, the truth stands in front of me.

  Ember Carter is dead. There is no changing the past.

  Bending on one knee, I dig up a fist full of dirt, then stand and sprinkle it over her coffin. Ember always imagined herself like the dirt. She thought her life was meaningless. Invisible. She saw no value in her existence, and so gave her life for someone she thought could lead better than her. What she didn’t understand was that dirt is what gives life to the earth.

  And Ember gave life to me.

  The dirt sifts between my fingers the way her spirit slipped from my grasp. I couldn’t hold onto her. I couldn’t get to her fast enough. I didn’t immediately dive in after her; I didn’t stop her from jumping; I didn’t shove Aurora out of the car when I should have.

  And now Ember paid for my mistakes.

  The last chunks of dirt crumble and leave my palms, falling onto the hard wood of the coffin. A coffin. The way all patricians are buried. It’s like the final slap in the face from Aurora to her twin. Ember never wanted to be a Patrician, and now she’s receiving a Patrician burial. I could almost applaud Aurora for her clever jab. I could almost cry because she’s so brilliantly conniving. She has everyone eating out of the palm of her hand. Even Jonah Walker looks up to her. He stares at her now like she’s his long-lost niece, like he loves her as much as he loved Ember.

  Like she is Ember.

  Have you forgotten? I want to shout. Have you already forgotten what Aurora did to Ember? To you? To us? Have you already forgotten that
she led Titus to the ashen city? That she led Ember to her death? In the five days that Ember’s been gone, have you already forgotten who the enemy is?

  But it’s because of Jonah’s devotion and admiration that he is safe. It’s because of his unwavering trust in Aurora that he’s free and not posed as a threat, like I am.

  Defenders step up on either side of me. The one on my left straps an electroband around my wrist, and I’m so acutely reminded of my first meeting with Ember, when I strapped the electroband around her wrist. When I was leading her to her death. How little I knew that she would become my whole world. The whole future of Ky. Now I know why Forest fought so hard to free her. Ember had this effect on everyone, it seems. The ember that grows into a flame that completely destroys the hearts of those around her.

  One more glance at the coffin, and I turn around and follow the Defenders through the burned-down orchard.

  Spring is such a deceptive season. One day of warmth and the whole world thinks summer is coming, and then another winter storm rolls in. And rain and thunderstorms follow. Then more cold. More rain. By the time the season finally settles, it’s summer and too hot to enjoy anything. Spring is that shoddy, insecure sibling of summer and winter that can’t decide if it wants to be cold and heartless, or warm and inviting.

  Kind of like Aurora.

  But I know.

  Holy rot, I know exactly who she is. She might have everyone fooled. She might even have herself fooled, depending on how bat-trap crazy she is. Y’know, being locked in a dungeon all one’s life doesn’t exactly work in one’s favor. And that possibly crazy one is our leader. Oh, God help us. Please.

  Our leader is a shoddy psychopath.

  A bitter wind sweeps across the orchard, biting into my skin like a thousand thistles. This orchard is dead, but already life is peeking up beneath the ashes; tiny blades of grass pushing up through the aftermath with the promise that things will be better.

  But they won’t.

  At least I don’t believe they will.

 

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