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by Megan Fatheree




  Table of Contents

  Books by Megan Fatheree

  CODEX

  [Episode 1] | Everyday Life, Interrupted

  [Episode 2] | First Encounters

  [Episode 3] | A Series of Catalystic Events

  [Episode 4] | Unfortunate, Redefined

  [Episode 5] | Actionable Consequences

  [Episode 6] | An Intervention of Fate

  [Episode 7] | A Change of Scenery

  [Episode 8] | Too Many Chiefs

  [Episode 9] | The Flower That's Watered, Blossoms

  [Episode 10] | Moving Day

  [Episode 11] | What Happens on Friday...

  [Episode 12] | Two Paths Diverged

  [Episode 13] | A Matter of Sincerity

  [Episode 14] | A Game of Chess

  [Episode 15] | More Questions Than Answers

  [Episode 16] | Final Episode

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  Books by Megan Fatheree

  FOR SUCH A TIME

  Dust to Dust

  Beauty From Pain

  A Time to Live

  STAND-ALONE NOVELS

  Codex

  CODEX

  Megan Fatheree

  © 2021 BY MEGAN FATHEREE

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form by any means—for example, electronic, photocopy, recording—without the prior written permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations in printed reviews.

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, incidents, and dialogues are products of the author's imagination and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  For Abbie

  Because every girl should have at least one epic love story dedicated to them.

  THESE ARE THE CHRONICLES of an impossible man. I would like to deny it. I would like to assure that this intrigue is merely a terrible jest, befit to me for the regrets of my life. I cannot, for there is no jest here.

  I thought myself inane to believe these things I saw, however, there is naught but to believe them now. This morn, under a cloud-less and azure sky, I buried the son of my closest acquaintance. He lived, by God’s grace, sixty-three years here on this earth. There were many more laughter lines on his aged face than wrinkles brought about by sorrow.

  Where he has begotten a son, loved a woman, and died after a long and full life, I have not aged a day.

  It is not for lack of want or trying. Would things truly change if I painted lines on my face and stooped to walk? I think not. For what I had feared is now come to pass. It seems I cannot age, and thus I cannot see when my end will come about. How many must I live to bury?

  [Episode 1]

  Everyday Life, Interrupted

  THERE WAS NO REASON to go to work, but there was no reason to stay home, either. Amorette chose the lesser of two evils.

  The others still slept when she crawled from her bed. She would have to hurry if she wanted to arrive on time. Melodia wouldn’t mind it, but Amorette hated to be late. It showed a lack of work ethic on her part and she refused to slack off.

  One day, something would go right. It didn’t have to be today, but she would look forward to it while she waited.

  The sky was overcast again, Amorette noted as she stepped onto the sidewalk. Why did it always have to rain when she had places to be? It wasn’t fair. Fate must somehow think she deserved punishment.

  “What did I ever do to upset you this much?” Amorette asked the sky.

  Only a chilled, whispering wind answered her. Of course, Fate wouldn’t answer. Amorette had always known Fate to be a cruel mistress, especially to her. With a sigh, she tugged her hood over her head, prepared for the impending drizzle.

  “Miss. Miss!” A woman on the side of the road waved a hand to garner Amorette’s attention.

  Amorette stopped to turn to the older woman. A woman with laugh lines around her eyes and mouth, her teeth still perfect despite her age. She was strikingly beautiful, in an envy-inducing sort of way.

  In a semi-polite gesture, Amorette tugged one earphone out of her ear.

  The woman held out some sort of wrapped sandwich. “Here. Take this. Everyone needs a good meal.”

  Amorette wrinkled her brow. Questions flitted through her mind like bees around their hive. “I don’t have any money.”

  “Did I say you had to pay?” The woman clucked her tongue and shoved the sandwich closer to Amorette’s hands. “It’s free. It’s for you.”

  Free wasn’t usually a word in Amorette’s vocabulary, but she couldn’t deny that the sandwich sounded delicious. If she believed in fairy-tales, this might be one of those poisoned apple situations. Thankfully, Amorette stopped believing in those lie-filled stories a long time ago.

  “Thank you.” Amorette accepted the sandwich with a tiny smile. All she could manage today. Especially after the events of the last few days. “I’ll pay you back somehow.”

  “Child...” The woman chuckled. “There is no need. I have other ways to take care of myself.”

  Amorette held the sandwich to her chest like a precious treasure. Today, she would eat more than one meal. Small happinesses were the best, especially when they involved food.

  The rain started as Amorette stepped over the threshold into Melodia’s shop. Another small happiness for today.

  “I’m here!” Amorette ditched her backpack behind the counter and set the sandwich on a shelf. Part of her didn’t want to eat it. Gifts like that were so few and far between. The more logical side of her brain insisted she not let it go to waste.

  Melodia floated from the back room, her arms stuffed to the brim with books. Her face lit at the sight of her only employee. “Just in time! A new shipment came in. Help me shelve them.”

  Amorette nodded as she tugged her hair into a ponytail, high atop her head. “Old or new?”

  “Both.” Melodia waltzed to a nearby shelf and hummed a soft tune as she organized the books thereupon.

  Amorette shook her head at the fairy-like woman. It was amazing Melodia afforded any new shipments with the clientele she attracted. Which, in fact, was none.

  Oh, occasionally a passerby or curious neighborhood resident would darken their door, but for the most part the quaint and cluttered bookstore remained tragically empty. Still, somehow, the paychecks kept coming and the little store managed to stay afloat. Amorette didn’t have enough guts to ask how Melodia managed it.

  Melodia had burrowed her nose deep in a romance novel by the time Amorette returned with a crate of ancient, weathered texts. It wasn’t odd for Melodia to get distracted so easily, and it was a little amusing. Amorette didn’t mind letting Melodia chase her own thoughts. At least then Amorette could take her time stocking each book with a kind and loving hand.

  Today, the books all seemed to be old enough to take precautions with them. Amorette pulled on a pair of white gloves and took special care with each cracked leather tome. Some names she couldn’t read, due to age or language of origin. Others came with lengthy, descriptive titles. One, in particular, caught her attention. There was no title on the cover, nor on the spine. Only a black leather casing and a strap to bind it closed.

  Amorette blew a loose strand of hair from her eye. Her fingers grazed gently over the cover. Some sense of foreboding seemed to reverberate in the room around her, even though she knew that was stupid. It was just a book. She worked for its owner. There was nothing to get anxious over. Nothing at all.

  With a firm but gentle tug, Amorette unwrapped the bindings and spread the book open. The first date shocked her, drew her in. The first sentence confused her entirely.

  “The chronicles of an impossible ma
n...” Amorette muttered the words to herself. She was half afraid to read on.

  Surely this was a cleverly designed work of fiction. Meant to look like a diary but in actuality penned to give young women something to fantasize about. It was the only logical explanation.

  Amorette snapped it closed a little too hard. Still, even if she didn’t read all of it, she wanted this novel. Something to look at on her poorer days. “Melodia, how much do you want for this?”

  Melodia waved a hand in the air. “Take it.”

  “It wouldn’t be right. I’ll pay you for it.” Amorette rose to her feet, the other books forgotten in light of the most intriguing one.

  “You do enough for me. Just take it. It’s a gift.”

  “Are you sure?” Odd, that she would receive two free gifts in one day. Something felt fishy about it.

  Melodia nodded and waved her hand again. “I’m sure. Lunchtime. Go on break and take your book with you.”

  “I’ve only been here two hours.” Amorette couldn’t say she had any clue what went through Melodia’s mind at any given moment.

  “Okay, so early lunch.” Melodia sighed and glanced up from her book. “It’s getting good. Come on, Amy, cut me some slack and take a break! Read that... that weirdly epic looking book of yours.”

  Amorette followed Melodia’s gaze to the black leather tucked in her arms. Amorette would rather be somewhere quiet and alone to dig her way through this particular story. “I’ll eat my lunch then.”

  “That’s what I thought.” Melodia went right back to her book, choosing to lean her back against the counter as she did.

  Amorette rolled her eyes. Melodia was more mystery than anyone else Amorette knew. With the gentlest of fingers, Amorette settled the book in her backpack and sealed it away. The time would come, one day, to delve into its secrets. Right now, she had a sandwich to savor.

  Thunder rolled loudly overhead, allowing the rain to come in sheets.

  EADRIC WATCHED A SINGLE droplet trail down the thick window before him. Life was a lot like that droplet sometimes, its path redirected by obstacles around it. It’s course intersecting with others and carrying them along with it. Direct yet evasive. Complicated.

  A light knock brought him out of his reverie, back to the present inside this office.

  Eadric turned from the window, his hands folded behind his back. “Yes?”

  The dark metal door opened with a click. “Sir?” Otto bowed as he entered the room, his weathered face serious but pleasant. Exactly how Eadric came to think of him over the past few decades.

  Eadric couldn’t help but smile at his aging friend. “Otto. Please come in. Have a seat.”

  “Thank you, sir.” Otto hobbled a bit, his left knee giving him problems due to the weather. “I won’t stay long, but there are certain instructions that need to be gone over. Is Doon here yet?”

  “I haven’t been alerted to his presence, no.” Eadric crossed his office to assist Otto down into a chair. “Is he so old already?”

  Otto laughed. “He is just turned twenty-seven, my lord. I trust he will serve you very well.”

  “We speak of the same precocious young man I met... oh... twenty years ago?” Eadric couldn’t help but smile back. Being in Otto’s presence was soothing to his soul. Only a great friend, one who knew everything, could have such an effect.

  “Yes, sir. And he is still as precocious as ever.” Otto shook his head. “I fear he may not be the best choice to care for you. If I may say so, he is quite selfish and incompassionate toward others.”

  “Everyone has such moments in their lifetime.” Eadric nodded in understanding. He never expected the young man to be as excellent as Otto. Their family had served him well through the years, but there were always the few who had no respect for the position.

  With a sigh, Eadric scooped up his tablet from the glass table and opened it. A quick message to the front desk should suffice, he supposed. He requested Doon’s whereabouts and set the gadget back down. “I’m sure security will find him soon enough.”

  A mischievous smile spread over Eadric's face. It had been a long time since he dealt with disobedience in those serving him. It might be quite humorous to toy with the young man.

  Otto sighed and folded his hands in his lap. “I have done my best to keep him in line, but...” he shook his head again.

  Eadric leaned forward to pat the old man’s knee. “Have you ever known me to meet a challenge I cannot overcome?”

  “Not in my lifetime.”

  “Then don’t worry yourself. I know how to handle him.” Eadric grinned wider when he heard a commotion in the hall. “That will be him.”

  On cue, the door opened with a bang. Two security guards shoved their captive into the office.

  “He was in the server room,” one offered by way of explanation.

  “You may go now.” Eadric nodded in gratitude to each of them, then folded his arms over his chest. Doon turned to leave with them. Eadric uttered two words to stop him. “Not you.”

  Doon stopped mid-step, his eyes falling shut as if he knew the trouble that awaited him. With the widest, most insincere smile Eadric had ever seen, Doon spun to face him. “Mister Hawkmore! Wow. I didn’t know you owned this entire company. That’s awesome.”

  “Mm. I run it, too.” Eadric jerked his chin toward a chair. “Sit.”

  Doon collapsed into the chair with an audible gulp. “Mister Hawkmore, I-”

  “Silence yourself and listen to what your grandfather tells you.” Eadric arched a brow menacingly. If there was one thing he was good at, it was intimidating those who needed intimidation.

  Doon rolled his lips together and lowered his gaze.

  Otto cleared his throat and turned slightly. “It’s time for me to step down from my lord’s service, but I cannot leave him without a valet.”

  “Grandpa, do you really think he needs a valet?”

  “Doon.” Eadric lowered his voice dangerously.

  Doon wasn’t about to be dissuaded from his spiel just yet. “I mean, he owns this whole company. If you ask me, our family is far too generous to him. And why do you call him 'my lord' anyway? It’s weird. I was born to be more than a manservant!”

  “These things will be explained given time.” Otto reached to pat Doon’s shoulder, an affectionate gesture. “Until then, please serve your lord well. He is not a man that refuses reward to those who obey his orders.”

  Doon froze, the connotations of that sinking in one slow second at a time. That ridiculous smile returned as he spun in his chair. “My lord! Is there anything you need? Laundry? Housecleaning? Coffee? I’ll get you some coffee.” He was out of the chair as quickly as he sank into it.

  “Sit down, I don’t drink coffee.” Eadric couldn’t believe he was about to have this conversation with the hyper, overactive man now sitting across from him. But there was no choice. “I need you to find something for me. It’s a very precious article that has been lost for far too long. Do well and we’ll see about that credit card you keep asking your grandfather to collect for you.”

  Doon gave a sheepish nod. “Okay, okay. What is this little thing you need me to find?”

  Eadric stood and retrieved a photograph from his desk. He held it out to the new steward with a heavy, regretful sigh. “This.”

  Doon stared at the photo for a long time before he looked up. Only one outraged word left his lips, in disbelief or utter fear, Eadric wasn’t sure. “This?!”

  AMORETTE TIPTOED THROUGH the front door. Just once, she would like a peaceful return instead of the welcome she usually got. For the first time in a long time, she made a wish. A wish that she would be able to make it silently to her room.

  The living area appeared empty, which usually meant they were out or in their own rooms. Amorette blew out a quiet sigh and stepped into the room.

  A rolled newspaper whacked her arm, then her head, then her other arm as she lifted it to shield herself.

  “Wicked girl!” Her s
tepmother screeched as the newspaper came down against Amorette’s side. “We’ve been waiting for dinner for hours! Where were you? Who were you with? Were you trying to desert us?”

  “Why would I desert you? Ow!” Amorette shied far enough away that her stepmother stopped hitting her.

  Her stepmother hissed at her like a feral cat. Not a bad description of the woman. Amorette never liked her much. “Stop being selfish. We’re all hungry. Go cook something.”

  “Is it so hard for you to cook something for yourself?” Amorette rubbed at her arm where the first, strongest blow had landed. “I worked all day and you can’t even reheat something left in the fridge?”

  “Why, you...” Amorette’s stepmother raised her hand to strike again, then took a breath and managed to lower her arm. “It doesn’t matter. There was nothing left in the refrigerator. Go make soup or something. We’re starving.”

  Amorette rolled her eyes, but pushed past her stepmother to bolt for the kitchen. She learned a long time ago that it didn’t matter what she did or didn’t do. It would never be enough. Her stepmother never loved Amorette. Not for a single second since they first met.

  “Ugh, what was your father thinking? Leaving his first daughter with me...” She clicked her tongue.

  Amorette would have liked to know the same thing. Her father must not have known how horribly his second wife hated Amorette. A true Cinderella story, but without the happy ending. Amorette had no other place to lay her head, so she needed to keep her stepmother happy.

  There were few ingredients in the refrigerator, perhaps because certain residents were more concerned with beauty products and expensive fashion than their own stomachs. In the end, Amorette began work on a simple chicken soup with vegetables. It would have to be enough, despite the fact that they would all complain.

  One thing made it a little easier to push through her exhaustion and finish cooking. An old, black leather book still nestled in her backpack. Maybe tonight she would get around to starting it.

 

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