Page List

Font Size:

PROLOGUE

Night of the Evolution

31 Years Ago

Nicholas wasn’t one to avoid danger but he didn’t exactly go chasing after it either—except tonight. Testing the latest variant of the Cure required Nicholas to walk directly into the devil’s den, or as the locals in Denver, Colorado called it:Crank Palace. He pulled his black hooded cloak tighter around his face so that no man, woman, or Crank could see his features. In his right pocket he clicked two syringes together like Chinese medicine balls as he walked, each hypodermic needle circling the other in a relaxed rhythm as he entered the hallowed gates.CLICK CLACK, CLICK CLACK. . .

Screams and wails surrounded the inner walls of the dismal place. Fires ignited from Flare pits. Smoke hung in the air and bodies hung in the shadows. No matter how many times he’d visited these hellholes, and he had proudly visited them all, nothing prepared Nicholas for the fresh curdling cries of desperation he felt vibrating through his whole body when he walked through the gates. Screams of death that Nicholas imagined as souls being cooked from the inside out.

He continued to circle the syringes around each other in his pocket,CLICK CLACK, a dance of opportunity for someone tonight within the sacred walls of the original Crank Palace.What better way to rescue the past from itself but to come to Colorado?Nicholas felt someone approaching and looked to the footsteps behind him. A Crank stumbled past. He needed to be more careful with how his test went this time around. The last test subject nearly drew unwanted attention. In testing the Cure, he needed those possessed with only the purest of minds. And even then, his most recent experiment proved that anyone’s intentions, anyone’s mind, could change in an instant. A person became a different version of themselves when they were dying, and not just the part of them that slowly turned into a Crank. Even when using his telepathic gift, Nicholas found that a person could say almost anything when they themselves were closer and closer to the end, but when given the chance to live . . .

That’s when their own beliefs, fears, and desires came back into awareness quicker than what could be controlled. Quicker than what was safe.

Nicholas needed to be more selective this time.

And he wanted someone past The Gone.

If thisworkedas well as it worked last time, he needed to be sure the Cured Crank—reverted back to healthy DNA—could stay under his study for years to come without waver. Nicholas didn’t know how long the Cure held true.A year? Two years? A lifetime?He wasn’t sure of that, but he knew the variant within the syringes in his pocket worked more quickly than imaginable but might someday wear off just as quickly. Many more studies were needed.

A Crank more human than not walked past Nicholas and let out a deep-bellied groan. A sound that could have been from hunger or the vocalized grief of having his deepest memories resurface. A groan of one’s sanity slipping away. Nicholas walked on. He wouldn’t choose a walking Crank, no. He needed to choose a Crank more dead than alive. One on the ground who writhed in pain perhaps, but one close enough to death that the promise he or she made to Nicholas would forever be kept.

He had tested variants of the Cure on so many Cranks that he had lost count.

Of course, somewhere hidden in the journals of his library were the observational notes, the number of experiments and trials that attempted to prove his hypothesis right time and time again: that DNA changes from the Flare could be reversed, and that the same Cure that erased the Flare could unlock a multitude of dormant DNA in the human body. Dead-end genomes that scientists had called “junk DNA” for centuries in their scholarly journals. Nicholas tried to hold back his smile, thinking of the discovery, but how could something so monumental as evolution not make him feel like a God?

But it was a fleeting feeling, to be sure.CLICK CLACK. . . he circled the two syringes together as he watched the Cranks before him. A failed experiment was a failed experiment. Successes were only temporary. He reported back to the Villa what they needed to change in the next batch. Side effects, advanced symptoms, deaths. Most deaths happened naturally—not everyone’s DNA was reprogrammable and not everyone’s body could take the Cure. Death was a natural part of scientific advancements, even thosedeliberatelycaused by the advancer. As when Nicholas’ last Crank subject shouted about the Cure within the walls of Crank Palace and put Nicholas’ life in danger. “I’m turning back. My hands, look! He’s cured me! This man is a God!”The Cure itself was at risk as soon as one muttered of its existence. The Crank had promised to stay silent and obedient but as soon as his life became his own again, he betrayed his own thoughts and Nicholas had to end the life he brought back that night.Easy come, easy go, you might say. Nicholas wanted to test on someone past The Gone, someone easier to influence. Manipulate. Control.

Nicholas wandered toward an alley behind the westside buildings as it started to rain, and he squinted at the sight of a Crank on the ground with limbs as limp as a butchered deer. But huddled over the Crank sat another, and Nicholas couldn’t test on two subjects at once. He tightened the hood of his robe again, but the falling rain enhanced his telepathy and he couldn’t help but overhear the woman’s thoughts.I’d take this pain from you if I could. I wish I was infected with this, not you.Nicholas stopped walking and looked on from the shadows of the alley.

Why the hell was someone healthy inside Crank Palace?

Nicholas wasn’t infected, but his presence would be swift and purposeful. This figure in front of him seemed to be mourning her long-lost love.Had she no fear of the Flare?The only reason Nicholas proved fearless was because he had been a test subject of his own unique study, something the Villa knew nothing about. Using one of the variants as a preventative, Nicholas knew it couldn’t harm him with the Flare but might just protect him from it. What he didn’t expect were the powerful side effects—weird and frightening things like telepathy.

Human DNA was a funny thing. For a Crank, it was about healing. For the non-infected, the Cure resequenced DNA structures that had been left abandoned in humankind, opening new pathways and abilities whose potential had been lost or never discovered. Like clicking in the last pieces of a puzzle.

But Nicholas’ gift of telepathy was also his curse.

He could trust no one.

“Can you help us?” asked the voice huddled over the Crank writhing in pain. Nicholas read her mind again.Please. Please say you can help us.He suddenly felt naked, as though she could see right through his cloak to his hand that held the Cure. “Help us.” She spoke with an unwarranted confidence.

Nicholas was drawn to her. Her assuredness. Her fearlessness. He walked from the shadows, closer. “What makes you think I can help you?”

“Because you’re not infected.”I can tell you’re different.

Nicholas danced with her thoughts again as the rain came down harder.

“And why do you think that?” he responded.

“Your eyes.”Please help us. I’ll do anything to save him.

Nicholas leaned in and asked an impossible question. “Would you sacrifice your life for his?”

Without hesitation she answered, “Yes.”

He changed his mind. He’d do something unplanned that night.

Something he had never done before.