Title: The Facility
Series: Psychic Underground, Book One
Author: Sarah Elkins
Publisher: NineStar Press
Release Date: March 5, 2018
Heat Level: 1 - No Sex
Pairing: No Romance
Length: 70000
Genre: Suspense Thriller Paranormal, LGBT, action, asexual, paranormal, science fiction, thriller
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Synopsis
Being psychic is just another aspect of
life for Neila Roddenberry. So are dreams of a past life as Nikola Tesla. She's
sure that last part is the result of reading the wrong mind at the wrong time
without realizing it. Neither are things she talks about much. Her friends know
she's psychic, but no one knows about the dreams. She's twenty-three, asexual,
and unemployed with ambitions to become a freelance artist and writer.
On the way home from visiting friends,
Neila gets caught up in a terrorist attack, then wakes up in an underground
psychic testing facility. Raised by a doomsday-prepper father, Neila is
unusually prepared for the possibility of being whisked away to a secret lab
somewhere. When she is faced with the choice of working for the scientists studying
psychics at the facility, she takes the job as both an agent and a test
subject.
But not everyone in the facility wants
to be there..
Excerpt
Psychic Underground
Sarah Elkins© 2018
All Rights Reserved
Chapter 1: Oh, Well Shit
Traffic from the shift change at Fort
Hood was clogging up the perpetually construction-riddled highway that ran
through the town of Killeen, Texas near the base. Neila sat in her Camaro,
inching along behind a short army convoy on the highway not far from the
military base. To distract herself from worry she had said or done the wrong
thing at lunch with friends she let her attention hover around the military
vehicles ahead of her to play a bit of a game of trying to identify what they
were. One armored personnel carrier, three Humvees, and a water truck. There
was a small red car with a primer-colored hood in front of the convoy. She
pushed her Third Eye higher to see over the traffic jam. A wrecker was in the
process of moving a car that had stalled in the one open lane. She snapped her
attention back to her car when she smelled the sweet humid odor the radiator
gave off when it was beginning to overheat.
“Crap, crap, crap, crap.” Neila hurried
to turn on the heater and roll down the windows. She didn’t bother to reach
over for the passenger side nob; instead, she used her telekinesis because it
was faster.
It was a warm day, and the heater would
make the interior of the car almost unbearable inside of ten minutes. The
needle on the engine’s temperature gauge began to fall back down to read in the
middle. She really didn’t want to take her hoodie off but would have to once
the car got hotter.
Three motorcycles sped by on the narrow
shoulder while Neila stared at the temperature gauge on the car. “Please cool
off. We’ll be moving again soon. Great, shit, I’m talking to my car. Maybe I
should cut the engine off?”
There was a loud noise, like a car wreck
ahead of the traffic jam but louder. Neila thrust her Third Eye up to see what
happened. Smoke rose from the remnants of the car that had been between the
army convoy and the stalled car. The motorcycles that had passed were facing
against traffic, and the riders were armed with assault rifles. She pushed her
Third Eye closer to get a better look, AR-15s with M203 grenade launchers
attached.
Thanks, Dad, for teaching me about
high-powered weapons. Neila was thrust back to herself when the Humvee ahead
backed over the front of her car. Without thinking, she slipped out the
driver’s side window next to the concrete barrier before the military vehicle
flattened the cab of her car. The other trucks in the convoy were scrambling to
move, but the six-foot-high barriers on either side made escape all but
impossible.
Neila was glad she wasn’t a big person
as she raced forward, running down the thin gap between the convoy on her right
and barrier to her left. She heard the familiar sound of shots from assault
rifles and the loud unfamiliar sound of the slugs impacting with the armored
personnel carrier ahead of the Humvees.
A series of loud bangs echoed down the
road as if someone was breaking wood against metal, beating the side of the APC
with mechanized baseball bats. She stopped next to the APC as she let her Third
Eye trail up so she could see the motorcyclist who was firing at the window of
the APC. Then she extended her “sphere of influence” toward him and wrenched the
gun from his grip.
“What the fuck?” the man in the black
motorcycle helmet shouted as his weapon abandoned him to tumble toward the
hillside past the concrete barrier.
The driver’s side door to the APC
opened. “Get in!”
Neila climbed up the side step of the
truck and slipped in the door, which the driver shut behind her just as one of
the motorcyclists began firing where she had just been. The driver and his
passenger were the only other people in the APC.
“Please tell me you have backup coming,”
Neila said quickly.
“Traffic’s backed up. They’re going to
send in a helo, but the closest place to land is a mile up the road.”
“Do you have any guns?” she asked.
“No, just moving the trucks on a civi
highway, no arms authorized this mission,” the driver replied. “Suppressive
fire would save our asses—shit.”
“Oh, well, shit,” Neila echoed.
Neila wasn’t his boss, wasn’t even a
soldier, but knew from spending time with her family who weren’t exactly
“normal” that life-or-death situations required confidence and force. Her
default was to take charge. Her family always joked that she sounded like a
“little drill sergeant.” It had annoyed her, but she needed that experience now
to survive.
That little drill sergeant found she
couldn’t see outside the APC with her Third Eye. She went up to the scarred
front window to get a better look at the cyclist who was firing at the truck.
More bullets slammed into the side of
the vehicle. The windshield cracked a little more, and she ducked reflexively.
“I’m gonna try something. Don’t freak
out,” she shouted to the two men in the truck as she tried extending her sphere
of influence toward the biker who was still shooting. It was more difficult
than normal, but she was able to wrench the gun away from her hands and slide
it under the burning car ahead of them.
“You did that? How the fuck did you do
that?” the soldier in the passenger seat of the APC barked. “What the fuck are
you?”
The driver was on the radio. “We need
that helo. Two hostiles engaging. Non-com casualties. Requesting permission to
engage hostiles.”
“There’s three,” Neila corrected. “I saw
three of them. One red helmet, two black helmets. Two men, one woman. AR-15s
with grenade launchers attached.”
“Correction. Three hostiles engaging
convoy,” the driver continued into the radio.
“You, girl. How the fuck did you do
that?” the soldier in the passenger seat barked again. He wasn’t in
follow-the-confident-person’s-orders mode like the driver had been.
“You mean you can’t?” Neila replied and looked
back out the window. She assumed he couldn’t. Most people weren’t psychic.
Playing dumb about it always seemed like the thing to do.
Neila managed to pull the brake lines
off one of the bikes just as the female biker ran to it. The biker stared at the
bike for a moment as it tipped over onto its side seemingly of its own accord.
The woman in the red helmet looked up and locked eyes with Neila in the APC.
Police lights twinkled over a mile down the highway. Neila couldn’t see where
the other two bikers had gone due to the APC’s damaged windows.
“What the fuck, lady!”
Oh, now it was lady, such an upgrade. At
least, it wasn’t girl anymore. She had been knighted.
“Requesting permission to engage
hostiles. We are being assisted by a civilian,” the driver continued into the
radio. So he had noticed her using her powers and wasn’t fazed by it. Maybe he
was psychic or knew someone who was.
“Do not engage. Helo en route, coming in
hot. Sit tight.”
Neila looked around at the angular
interior of the APC. Rows of seats lined the sides of the truck. She couldn’t
see any weapons inside. “How much does this weigh?”
“Six tons,” the soldier at the radio
replied automatically.
Could she move six tons? She’d never
tried because that was a lot of fucking weight.
“You need to drive forward, over the
burning car.” She pointed ahead of them.
“Over the car?”
“Your buddies in the hummer in back
already smashed my car. You can drive this beast over a fucking Kia. Get us out
of here!”
The driver gunned the gas and plowed
into the burning car, knocking Neila off her feet. She fell backward and hit
her head hard on the metal floor of the APC.
Shouting. Muffled gunfire. The sound of
a hail slamming into the side of a metal barn in a thunderstorm. The heavy
thumping of a giant drum.
Darkness.
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Meet the Author
Sarah Elkins is a 30 year old comic artist and writer who nearly had to give up art entirely due to a form of ossifying tennis elbow that forced her to be unable to use her dominate hand for nearly a year. She spent much of that time writing novels with her left hand as a means to deal with the pain and stress of possibly never drawing again. Thanks to a treatement regimen she is able to draw again albeit not as easily or quickly as she once did.Sarah enjoys reading science fiction, horror, fantasy, weird stories, comics of every sort, as well as any biographical material about Nikola Tesla she can get her hands on (that doesn’t suggest he was from Venus.) She has worked in the comics industry since 2008 as a flatter (colorist assistant,) penciler, inker, and colorist. She contributed a comic to the massive anthology project Womanthology. Currently she (slowly) produces a webcomic called Magic Remains while writing as much as her body will allow.
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