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Supernal Dawn

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by J. A. Giunta




  Supernal Dawn

  Transcendent Powers

  Book One

  J. A. Giunta

  &

  Sharon Skinner

  Brick Cave Media

  brickcavebooks.com

  2018

  Copyright © 2018 Joseph A. Giunta, Sharon Skinner

  ISBN: 978-1-938190-41-4

  Available in Paperback at: 978-1-938190-42-1

  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, electronic, mechanical, recording or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the authors.

  Printed in the United States of America.

  The characters and events in this book are fictitious. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is coincidental and not intended by the authors.

  Cover Illustration by Kyna Tek www.kyteki.com

  Interior Illustrations by Kyna Tek www.kyteki.com

  Brick Cave Media

  brickcavebooks.com

  2018

  I’d like to dedicate my half in this superhero endeavor to my wife, Dr. Lori Highberger-Giunta. She is the real hero.

  --J.A. Giunta

  To Alan, my very own superhero sibling.

  --S.A. Skinner

  Also by J.A. Giunta

  Available from brickcavebooks.com

  The Ascension Trilogy:

  The Last Incarnation

  The Mists of Faeron

  Out of the Dark

  Kinights of Virtue: The Guardians, Keepers of the Magic

  Summoned: Caught by the Tale

  Also by Sharon Skinner

  Available from brickcavebooks.com

  The Healer’s Trilogy:

  The Healer’s Legacy

  The Matriarch’s Devise

  The Exile’s Gift (Forthcoming)

  The Nelig Stones

  Mirabella and the Faded Phantom

  Collars & Curses

  In Case You Didn’t Hear Me the First Time

  Supernal Dawn

  Transcendent Powers

  Book One

  J. A. Giunta

  &

  Sharon Skinner

  Brick Cave Media

  brickcavebooks.com

  One

  Wed, Aug 24, 4:10pm

  - Lee -

  It was the quiet that woke him.

  The vibrations had stopped and left behind a lonely stillness. Everyday sounds filled the world, but it was just the clamor and shake of noise.

  They had called it the Rumbling, though to Lee it had been more of a hum, a soothing inner melody, like a lullaby for his entire being. While people online had celebrated the existence of alien life, he’d become lost in the song of its embrace. It had made them want to drink, scream to the skies and dance together.

  It had only made him want to sleep.

  He rubbed his eyes and yawned, grabbed his phone off the nightstand, checked the time and groaned. He’d missed a day of school. He didn’t know which was more annoying, that he’d been asleep for 23 hours or that no one had even bothered to try to wake him.

  Lee sat up and stretched, yawned again. Aside from the stabs of hunger, he felt pretty good, better than he had in a long time. But he also felt disconnected, as if sensing the world from outside his body. It was like the hair of his arm standing on end in response to a static charge, but this response was in his brain, a fuzzy tingle from nape to forehead.

  He wasn’t sure how or why, for better or worse, but wondered if the Rumbling had somehow changed him. For all he knew, it’d changed everyone. It made sense, in a way. Why else would they have left technology on the planet, if not to guide or shape the civilization that came across and understood it?

  Either that, or he was losing his mind.

  The first Pillar had been discovered a hundred and twenty-eight days ago, on April 18th at Challenger Deep, the lowest point of the Mariana Trench. Only a foot of its top had stuck out from the ocean floor, and even though it was the length of a soccer field across, at that depth and shrouded in sediment, it had been easy to overlook. Once the Remotely Operated Vehicle had touched a symbol on the exposed side, the entire Pillar had lit up like a computer display, pulled free and rose up to its full height.

  A thousand meters long, like smooth black glass, its top and bottom had remained clear, but the cylinder was covered with strange symbols, familiar basic shapes and dots all in rows. 1,618 of them, arranged like sentences or mathematic formulas, there was one for every Pillar that drove upward through the earth at the same exact time. Each one identical in every way and equidistant to one another, they covered the entire planet.

  Governments had tried and failed to control them, to limit access, but there were too many to secure in such a short time. Within hours, pictures had appeared online of the Pillars and every one of their markings. It was impossible to hide, and despite misguided efforts at disinformation, countries relented one by one to work together at solving the puzzle.

  In the end, after months of unparalleled cooperation, of discovery and realization, it was determined that the alien language was based on the mathematics of nature. The culmination of each row formed a pattern, an answer to a simple question: Are you ready? Once scientists had entered mankind’s reply, the Pillars activated in unison, and the Rumbling began.

  That was nearly twenty-seven hours ago.

  When the resulting sounds and vibrations had first emanated from the Pillars, many across the globe thought it would never stop. Some had even hoped that it wouldn’t. It had been like a drug, the happy warmth that came from knowing humanity was no longer alone. Lee wondered if he would’ve just kept on sleeping if it hadn’t.

  He pulled himself out of bed, changed clothes and headed for the bathroom to wash up. He sensed someone downstairs, like the way it felt when a person looked over a shoulder and got too close. It was a palpable presence, again like a static charge pressing against the edge of his mind. At this time of day, his mother would be working at the spice shop with aunts Gwen and Brianna.

  It’s probably Ember, he thought. Bet I can convince her to take me to Finley’s for a burger.

  He leaned forward on the sink and jerked back at the creaks of protest. The whole thing had sounded like it might break free of the wall. He chalked it up to the house being centuries old. It was a thing of pride with his relatives that they were one of the founding families to settle Sungrove, but he couldn’t count how many times he’d wished they could just buy a new house.

  Then it was the wiring acting up again. Either that or his electric toothbrush had finally died. No matter how much he pushed the button, it wouldn’t turn on. A last push in frustration, and the whole thing snapped in half. He did his best to use just the brush half between two fingers, ignored the rest dangling from the break, but he squeezed way too much toothpaste onto the bristles.

  He sighed and left it all in the sink.

  The deodorant can broke next, the button smashed into place. It wouldn’t stop spraying. He tried to fix it, but the bathroom quickly filled with the overwhelming aerosol fumes of mountain spring. He stuffed the can into a towel and buried it in the garbage.

  He ran a brush through his hair and shrugged at the mirror. Good enough.

  Once he was downstairs, he found his sister in the kitchen and came up short. The tingle became focused, like he’d gotten too close. It wasn’t just that he could see she was agitated, the furrowed brows, fingers tapping against the counter, staring ahead at nothing in a deep concern. He
could feel it. The increased heartrate and blood flow, the emotion coming off her, all felt like it was his own. It was strong. She was strong.

  He blinked. What the hell’s wrong with me?

  Ember looked up, and agitation became annoyance.

  “Hey,” he said and cleared his throat, headed for the refrigerator for a soda. “What’s for dinner? I’m starving.”

  She made a snarky comment but then nearly gagged.

  “What’s up with the cologne bath?”

  Lee popped open a can of soda. The sensations were still there, nagging at his mind and trying to supersede his own, but talking made it easier to pull his attention away from the barrage. He thought to shoot back a snide remark but remembered he wanted something from her.

  “Deodorant malfunction,” he explained instead, with pursed lips and a bashful smile. “When’s mom coming home?”

  “How should I know,” she said and crossed her arms, gave her best big sister know-it-all look. “By the way, you might want to check voicemail.” She nodded at the home phone. “School called. They wanted to know where you were. Not like you to skip so early in the year.”

  Nervous? he thought when the sensations struck. He’d been about to accuse her of not waking him when she left but saw the rumpled clothes from yesterday. He realized she hadn’t gone to school either. Is that why she’s nervous?

  “I overslept,” he said and nodded at her clothes. “What’s your excuse?” He thought but didn’t add, Like you ever have a shortage of them.

  “Whatever.”

  She rolled her eyes and looked away. Her hair was a tangled mess, a serious case of bed-head. She tried to comb through it with her fingers.

  Lee’s stomach growled.

  “Wonder why mom didn’t wake us,” he said and took in a deep breath then slowly let it out. He wanted to steer the conversation away from himself and put them on the same side.

  “I don’t know,” she said offhandedly. “I’m not a mind reader.” He nearly sighed when it didn’t work, but then she added, “Maybe she thought we were sick.”

  “Maybe we were,” he agreed and hoped it was enough. “Want to go grab a burger? You like Finley’s, right?”

  Ember struggled with a stubborn knot in her hair. “You just want to see Emma.”

  Emma was attractive enough, and he’d even thought he might like her, until she asked him for help with her computer science homework. He’d flat out told her no and wanted nothing else to do with her. Lee was done with girls who were only interested in what he could do for them.

  “Like I have her schedule memorized or something,” he said instead of giving away how he really felt about her. “Seriously, I’m hungry and there’s nothing to eat here.”

  “There’s plenty,” she said and laughed, waved her arm at the cupboards. One of them had a handle broken off. He would’ve pointed it out but didn’t want to distract her. Besides, he’d probably get blamed for it, like everything else in the house. “You just have to make it.”

  “Well, that’s not going to happen.” Her emotions were all over the place. He needed a different approach. “Come on, first week of school. You just got mom’s old car, and you’re telling me you don’t want to use it?”

  “Maybe,” she said with the irritating rise in tone that signified sarcasm, “I just don’t want to be carpooling your ass over to see your girlfriend.”

  Lee ignored the jab. Emma was no more a girlfriend than Jen was, and he’d been friends with Jen ever since she’d moved in next door in the first grade.

  “Call one of your friends,” he suggested, tried putting the focus on his sister, “Allison or Sarah. Have them meet us there. I just want to eat.”

  Ember scratched at her scalp.

  “Fine,” she said and glanced over at the empty coffee pot in the sink. “I need caffeine, anyway.”

  Normally, Lee would’ve made a comment about her being too lazy to make it, but he’d put all that aside if it meant getting some decent food.

  “I assume Jen’s coming?” she asked.

  “I haven’t talked to her yet,” Lee said and realized he hadn’t checked mail or messages. He wondered how many Jen had left him. “But, probably.”

  “Give me a minute. I need to get dressed.”

  While she went upstairs to change, Lee tried to get a handle on what was happening to him. He leaned against the counter, closed his eyes and stopped fighting down these sensations invading his own, gave up holding back out of fear of what it could mean. There was a history of mental illness in his family. If he was losing his mind, he wouldn’t be the first.

  He knew exactly where Ember was. More than being able to follow her every footstep or opening drawers by hearing alone, he could sense what she was doing. There was a vague outline of her body in his mind, as if she were encompassed by a million gnats flitting about her frame. The bulk buzzed and thrummed around her, but some went inside. It was from those that he felt the waves of emotion and physical activity threatening to overrun his own.

  So which is more likely, he opened his eyes and considered, that I’ve been changed by alien technology, or I’m going crazy like Aunt Kayley?

  His aunt had died in a psychiatric hospital three years earlier. Like him, she’d had no previous signs of a condition, but the sudden onset of psychosis and swift decline of her mental health seemed all too familiar.

  He felt before he heard Ember coming downstairs.

  “I don’t know what happened in that bathroom,” she said and fished keys from her purse, “but I won’t be the one cleaning it.”

  Lee nodded. He was still coming to grips with the notion of whatever extrasensory ability had come over him. He could’ve just been imagining it.

  Maybe I am sick, he thought. I did sleep for a day. He put the back of a hand to his forehead. Kind of warm. Could be a fever.

  He followed Ember to the door leading out to the garage and was overcome by another set of sensations.

  “Jen’s here,” he said more to himself than his sister.

  He didn’t know for sure it was her, but it was a logical conclusion. When the garage door lifted, he was both unsurprised and a little afraid to see her sitting against the wall. She looked up from her phone.

  “Finally,” Jen said. There were streaks of light blue in her blonde hair, a close match to her eyes. “Saw your light on. Figured you’d be coming out soon.” She got up and dusted off her jeans. “Why’d you ditch without telling me? I would’ve stayed home too.”

  Ember said something under her breath and went to the driver side of the car.

  “It wasn’t on purpose,” Lee said and opened the back passenger door. “We’re going to Finley’s. Want to come?”

  “I could eat.” Jen cocked her head to one side. “You do look a little pale.” She pushed past him to get in. “Are you okay now?”

  “Not really.”

  Jen spent most of the ride tapping away at her phone and talking to him about friends at school. Lee was in a bit of a daze but tried to follow along. Every car that went by was another assault on his senses, a brief barrage in passing that made it difficult to think. He tried to push it all from his mind, focus on the radio, but Ember kept changing the station.

  In the end, she turned it off.

  “Hey, Jen,” Ember said, and her voice trailed off into the haze of people on the road and on the sidewalks.

  He may have said something, tried to join in on the conversation, but it was like that part of his brain was disconnected from the rest. It only got worse when they pulled into the parking lot at Finley’s.

  There were two police cars with lights flashing, four officers on one side of a girl and a crowd of fourteen people on the other. Lee blinked and shook his head, could barely climb out from the car without losing his balance in the brewing storm of emotion.

  �
��Careful with the door,” Ember said, but her slight anger was quickly lost in the flow washing over him.

  What, he thought and looked back to the door, did I slam it or something?

  “Sorry,” was all he could manage.

  His attention was drawn to the girl at the center, at her rising panic and lonely fear, at the betrayal of her own body. From fingertips to elbow, her arms pulsed with a soft glow, as if sunlight shone through her skin and lit up her veins a dark crimson. Heat radiated off her, warped the air and kept the crowd back.

  Lee recognized most of them from school, felt their outrage and unease. They were afraid for themselves, but that fear was momentarily overcome by concern for the girl. Some had their phones out and were recording.

  Two officers had tasers drawn, pointed at the girl who’d broken down into tears. Lee realized who it was, but Ember was already crossing the lot toward them.

  “Is that Allison?” Jen asked.

  There were scorch marks on the building, sidewalk and pavement. They formed a path that led to Allie. She grew more frantic as police continued to yell at her, to calm down, to keep her hands up, to stay still, not to move, to get down on her knees. Allie wiped away tears, which drew more shouting because she’d lowered her hands. She didn’t know what to do, how to follow their mixed commands.

  Wisps of smoke began to rise up from the pavement at her feet.

  Lee and Jen followed, as Ember pushed through the crowd to reach her friend. An officer with his taser drawn spoke nervously into a radio at his shoulder, called for more backup. A second was pushing the crowd back, trying to keep everyone clear of Allie. The police were afraid, but the others didn’t share the sentiment. Allie was their friend. In their eyes, something was happening to her, not the other way around.

  “Allie!” Ember shouted and reached out a hand.

  Lee didn’t know why his sister thought she could be of any help in this situation, but he understood the need to comfort a friend who so desperately needed it.

  Allie was visibly shaken, stared down at her hands, tear-strewn face framed by long dark curls. She’d been changed, like Lee, and felt helpless to stop it. When she caught sight of Ember, she ran for her friend. Their hands touched briefly, before the nearest officer shoved Ember back.

 

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