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Free Kindle Nation Shorts – October 10, 2010: An Excerpt from Regression, A Novel by Kathy Bell

RegressionBy Stephen Windwalker
Editor of Kindle Nation Daily ©Kindle Nation Daily 2010

It’s a great day for novelist Kathy Bell, and it’s a treat to be part of it for us here at Kindle Nation.

The debut novel in her Infinion Trilogy of speculative fiction, Regression, was released almost a year ago but it continues to ride high on genre bestseller lists in the Kindle Store. And today, which just happens to be Thanksgiving in her native Canada, is the release date for Evolussion, the second Infinion novel and the sequel to Regression.

We’re paying tribute to the double significance of the date by welcoming Kathy as today’s feature author in our Free Kindle Nation Shorts program, and she has generously provided a 10,000-word excerpt from Regression which has garnered 45 4- and 5-star reviews at Amazon. The full-length novel, a triumph of imagination, comes with text-to-speech enabled and has been discounted by Amazon to just $2.39 in the Kindle Store!

Here’s the set-up:

Fourteen-year-old Adya Jordan is too good to be true and too smart for her own good. Her skills with people, information, and technology make her the perfect new intern at megacorp Three Eleven, the company which covertly controls the world in an alternate 1985.

Could this be because this is not her first lifetime? Or even her second? Or does it have more to do with the strange sequence of DNA in her cells? 

Find out what makes Adya tick as she and a group of elite scientists strive to prevent a global disaster. 

Scroll down to begin reading the free excerpt now


What Reviewers Say About Regression

Adya Jordan, a forty-year-old mother of six, injured in a terrible car accident, awakens to find herself in her fourteen-year-old body once again. Consumed with grief over being separated from her family, she tries to live like a normal teenager. That’s when she begins to notice that things are slightly different than they were the first time around; all minor things that when put together add up to major differences. Adya is offered an opportunity to join the ranks of the most powerful people in the world, an opportunity of a lifetime, making her the envy of most. She seizes it without hesitation, as anyone else would. However soon, she discovers that something will go terribly wrong in the future. With time running out on the human race, it’s up to her to make the most powerful people in the world see the truth and change course before its too late. Kathy Bell has done a fair share of research for this book and it shows. As science comes to life inside the dialogue and plot in her novel, it became easy to suspend disbelief in the possibility of humans traveling Interdimensionally. All told, Regression was an enjoyable read with fully developed characters and enough plot twists to keep me turning the pages long after dark-thirty in the morning. –Amazon.com Review 

The past, present and future meet in Kathy Bell’s debut novel, Regression. Bell, who was born in a small Ontario town on the shores of Lake Huron, is an Owen Sound teacher, and, when she is not in the classroom, a novelist. I puzzled over this one, testing my disbelief as I always do when approaching speculative fiction. At first, I found Adya Jordan’s time regression a bit hard to take but then I sank into the story, a time shaping novel about a mysterious corporation, Three Eleven, out to change the world. Laced with dialogue that races the story on, Regression shows a clever use of plot, time changes and an inventive mind that all add up to a surprise – a wellcrafted work of futuristic fiction. –Andrew Armitage, Book Editor, Owen Sound Sun Times


Click on the title to download Regression (or a free sample) to your Kindle, iPad, iPhone, iPod Touch, Android-compatible, PC or Mac and start reading within 60 seconds!


Check out
the newest release in Cathy Bell’s Infinion Trilogy!

 *     *     *


A Brand New Free Kindle Nation Short:

An Excerpt from 
Regression

A Novel By Kathy Bell


Copyright 2009, 2010 by Kathy Bell and reprinted here with her permission.

 
PROLOGUE
Journal of Doctor Nicholas Weaver
July 27, 98 Post Impact   


To perform the regression requires almost 70 exajoules. The amount of power consumed by humans during one year when we were at the peak of our civilization. Such incredible discharges of energy are virtually impossible to achieve. Meteor impacts, megathrust earthquakes, or a blast of 17 gigatons of TNT might approximate the power. Not simple to orchestrate. It is both to my horror and to my advantage such an instance occurs November 11, 2011, providing thirty times the force required. The phenomenon precipitates the need for the regression while also providing the means to complete it. What tragic irony.


CHAPTER ONE

“No, Daddy. Want Mommy.”
Daniel Davies shook his head, grimacing at his wife as she reached for the struggling toddler.
Adya smiled. “Poor Daddy.” She winked over the head of the little blonde girl. “You just don’t measure up.”
“Ouch.” He buckled the last of their children into the van before rounding to the driver’s side window. “I’ll see you in a bit; Jim wants me to help him put the equipment away.” Leaning in, he kissed her, and then strode toward the ivy-covered stone building still surrounded by people in uniforms.
“Bye, honey.” Adya turned and smiled over the seatback at the young ones. “You were all very well behaved for the memorial service, thank you.” Singing in chorus to “One Tin Soldier” on the radio with a clear, sweet voice, she drove toward her mother’s house. Twelve year old Serina leaned forward from the middle passenger seat.
“Why do we have to sit through that each year?”
“Your great-grandfathers fought in both wars, we owe it to their memories, and to−”
“Blah, blah, blah, you’ve said it all before.”
“Serina, don’t interrupt me. It’s a sign of respect to attend the Remembrance Day activities at the cenotaph. People sacrificed their lives to allow us to be there today.”
Suitably chastised, the child changed the subject. “So if grandma’s turning sixty today how old was she when she had you?”
“I’m forty, you do the math.”
Will, fifteen, spoke up, “She was nineteen, then. That’s really young, isn’t it?”
“Not back then. People used to have kids a lot younger than they do now. I had your brother when I was twenty-four.”
“Is that when you decided to stay home with us?”
“Sort of. I did research part time on my Master’s Degree, so I was still in school.”  Adya glanced at her oldest daughter and smiled. “You guys were too cute to leave.”
“Do you miss it, working?”
“I didn’t give up working, just chose a different way of doing it. I think I would have stayed in school anyway and the experience of having you kids actually inspired quite a bit of my research. My thesis about older siblings setting the precedent for younger ones−”
Luke rolled his eyes as only a seven-year-old could, “Mom, you’re doing it again.”
She pulled the minivan into a gas station flying flags at half mast. “What?”
“Talking big…use language we understand, not your shrink words.”
With an exasperated sigh she replied “Sorry, Luke. Anyway, you were my lab rats.” Serina snorted in laughter and Luke began to squeak like a rat. Two year old Jessica squealed in feigned terror. The gas attendant approached the vehicle as Adya lowered the window.
“How’s the family today, Doctor Davies?”
“They’re just wonderful, John. How are your little granddaughters?”
“Couldn’t be better, and they’d love to come visit again any time you want to study them. They thought it was a real hoot.” He peeked into the van. “Sounds like you have a zoo in there. What’s with all the animals?” The children laughed even harder while making new, louder animal sounds.
“I told the kids they were my lab rats, just like your girls were. Could you fill it up, please?”
“Yes, ma’am.” John quickly topped up the tank.
“You know, I hope you don’t close up this station, there aren’t many full serve places left.” She grinned as she passed him the payment.
“I don’t know…my son doesn’t really want to take over the place. But, folks like you keep coming, I’ll keep pumping.” The old man limped back to his little booth. She drove on through a residential neighbourhood, to pull into the driveway of her mother’s house. The children piled out the sliding doors while their mother unbuckled the infant. Grandmother Samantha approached from the front porch where she had been waiting, grey hair in a long braid down her back. She stopped to toss a fallen branch from the driveway before reaching the van.
“Happy birthday, Mom.”
“Thanks, honey. I saw you at the service, but didn’t see Daniel. Is he joining us?”
“Yes, he got caught up with something at the university so won’t be here till later. Where’s Dad?”
“Out back in his shop, putting the finishing touches on Hope’s chest.” She peered into the van. “You don’t have room to take it with you today.”
Adya shuffled bags inside the vehicle before looking helplessly at her mother. “Shoot. I forgot the diaper bag and your gifts. Do you mind if I drive back to pick them up? I’ll take Hope, is it okay if I leave the others here?”
“These monkeys? I don’t know… but, I do have a new game for them to play inside. C’mon guys, come see grandma’s new video game.” The children rushed into the house as their mother slipped back into the driver’s seat. Adya reversed out of the laneway and turned the corner. The ring-shaped birthmark on her right hand began to throb, distracting her as she rubbed at it.
Her head snapped up as tires screeched on her left. A large sport utility vehicle seemed to approach her minivan in slow motion – she watched in mute horror as the side panel folded beneath the onslaught of the larger vehicle. A rainbow glitter accompanied the groan of bending metal as the windows fractured and refracted the headlights of an oncoming car. The world spun to the right, her stomach lurched, and a piercing pain lanced through her hand as she screamed before all went black.
*        *        *
“Hope!” Adya struggled to rise in the hospital bed while fighting the restraints of the entangling linens. Tears rushed to her eyes as she again cried her daughter’s name. Frantically she pressed the call button. The cord pulled from the wall as she tumbled to the floor, sheets wrapped around her legs. Nurses rushed through the door. From her knees, she wailed, “My baby… how is my baby? Please God; let my baby be okay…please let me know where she is.”
The nurses attempted to restrain and reassure, murmuring platitudes she did not quite hear. “You need to return to your bed. You should sit down. We’ll get things straightened out for you.”
Her heart pounded and her breath came in short pants as she escaped the confining sheets, stumbling into the hall. An older nurse firmly held her arm to guide her back to her room. No patience for anything but answers, she screeched, “I need to see my baby, where is she?” She struck out, flailing with all her might until a needle in her arm finally subdued her with darkness.
*        *        *
Beeping roused her. A regular, low tone sounded every second, punctuated occasionally by a higher pitched double tone. The whirring of a ventilation system and the drone of fluorescent lights nagged at her, bringing her to the edge of consciousness. Muted voices were drowned by the wail of a very young child, the sound of which finally brought recognition. She was in a hospital room. Three people were conversing at the bedside as she cracked open her eyes.
“She was hysterical, insisting she needed to see her child. We had to sedate her to get her back into the room. I don’t think she has a child, her mother never mentioned one.” The nurse’s voice sounded familiar, an echo in her head predating the panic.
“She’s likely delusional from the head injury. We need to work through the delusion without allowing her to become too agitated.” This voice familiar too.
She opened her eyes. “I’m not delusional; I just need to see my daughter.” One of the speakers approached the bed as she propped herself up on her elbows. Closing her eyes again against the dizziness, she regained equilibrium and reopened them. The man standing in front of her towered over the bed, she had to crane her neck to see him. He spoke softly, with gentle concern.
“Hello there, I’m Doctor Redborne. Nurse Skinner tells me you gave them a bit of a scare. I need to ask you some questions, alright?” At her nod he continued. “What’s your name?”
“Adya Davies. Where’s my daughter?”
The doctor frowned. “When were you born?”
“April 28, 1971. Why won’t anyone tell me if Hope’s okay?”
“What’s the last date you remember?”
“November 11, 2011…”
His frown deepened and he wrote a quick note on the chart in his hand. “How old are you?”
“Forty. I want to see my husband and children. Can you at least let me see them?”
The physician rested his hand on her shoulder, his face still clouded. “I need to check your vitals, make sure you can tolerate visitors. Can you remain calm while I do that?” She inclined her head, closing her eyes against another wave of pain. The doctor raised the head of the bed and flashed a light directly into her pupils. As she began to get restless, he addressed her. “Adya, you were involved in a serious car accident and suffered a head injury. You’ve been in a coma for seven days. This is the first time you’ve been conscious during that time.”
She looked toward the nurse for confirmation. The nurse nodded encouragement and agreement. Her gaze returned to the doctor, still confused. “What about Hope? Is she okay? Where’s my husband?”
“The brain is a mysterious organ. We’re never quite sure how it will respond to trauma. During your coma you may have experienced a dream which seems like reality to you. The current year is 1985 and you are a single young lady of fourteen−”
She interrupted him. “That doesn’t make any sense. You’re telling me I’m only fourteen?” Seeing stars with a vigorous head shake, she persisted, “What is this, some kind of joke?”
“I realize this might be very difficult for you, you need to−”
“I can see it all so clearly, though, all the little details, everything about them. I have children, a husband, a home…and you say this was all my imagination? There’s just no way.” Standing up, she was ready to run from the room to find the truth. A flash of movement caught her eye, the mirror where her reflection moved in the glass. The familiar laugh lines around her eyes were missing although the clear blue colour was unchanged. No parenthesis lines at the corners of her mouth echoed decades of smiles. Not the face of a forty year old.  She slumped down on the bed while the doctor continued.
“Today is Saturday, July 27, 1985. You’re in Stamford General Hospital. Your mother’s in the cafeteria on the bottom floor having lunch and should return shortly.” The doctor gently laid a hand on her shoulder as he spoke. “You are indeed only fourteen and have your whole life ahead of you to have those children, the husband, the house, and everything else you could ever imagine.”
Adya looked solemnly into his eyes. “I’m fourteen.” He nodded. “It’s 1985.” The doctor agreed again. “I guess I get to relive the eighties again. Perhaps this time the music will be better.” He laughed with her, his relief evident, and then jotted more notes on her chart. “Will I have to stay here much longer?”
“We need to run some tests and keep you under observation for a little bit. You had a serious concussion. But, if things look normal you’ll be out within the week. I’ll look in on you again later in the evening. You should try to rest.” With a reassuring smile on his angular face, he left the room.
The nurse added her own notes after lowering the bed, and departed as well. Adya closed her eyes and visualized the life she had been living. The faces of her husband and children were clear in her mind, especially the children. The slightly chubby cheeks of her eldest daughter. The wiry hair of Tyler as a toddler when he snuggled beside her in the morning. Hope’s blue, blue eyes.
Stomach churning, she sat up again. Swinging her legs over the side of the bed, dizziness returned, prevented her from standing. Panic slid up her spine and her panting breaths ruffled the front of the hospital gown as she tucked her chin to her knees to fight the rising vertigo. Bare feet stuck out from under the edge of her gown and she focused her concentration on her toes to fight down the queasiness. Looking more closely at her feet, her eyes widened.
“The scar’s gone.” At seventeen a bicycle accident had left a large scar across the top of her foot. Riding on the handlebars of her boyfriend’s bike when he lost control speeding down the hill toward his house, she had spilled onto the pavement and abraded the top layer of skin off her left foot and forearm. Slowly elevating the arm, she inspected the intact skin. Twisting and turning foot and arm, she gazed at the smooth flesh, running her fingers where the scars should be. She shook her head again, “No. No…they can’t just make twenty-six years disappear.” Her feet were steady as she slid to the floor.
Cautiously, she checked the hallway from the door. No nurses within view. The elevators were across the way and the nurses’ station out of sight around the corner. She slipped over to the elevator, pressing the down button before hurrying back to her room. At the ping of the indicator, she rushed through the open doors, holding the ‘close door’ button down with a white-knuckled finger. The portal whooshed shut, and Adya paced the confines of the car while it glided downward.
With a quick glance through the doors, she darted toward the front entrance.
“Hey.” An older lady yelled as she pushed past her. The front desk attendant rose, concern written across her face.
“Wait, young lady. Hold on.” The authoritative voice did little to slow her flight. She made it through the entrance and stopped short, her gaze locked on the hospital sign. A rushing sound built in her ears and the corners of her vision blackened.

THANK YOU FOR HELPING REACH OUR 1985 FUNDRAISING GOAL  $250,000

A horn blared. Adya turned toward the sound. The angular fenders of a tiny Toyota reflected the light from the sign. A 1984 Toyota. She slowly wilted to the ground.
*        *        *
“−fluctuations in serotonin and dopamine. Right now her levels are high.” She faded in and out of consciousness.
” -aggression and paranoia at the high end, depression and apathy at the low end.”
“Will it improve?” A familiar female voice, soft with worry.
“Hard to say. She’ll be under observation here for at least a week.”
“What does it mean? Is she going to be normal?”
“She might exhibit paranoia and delusions. Serotonin is involved in the control of emotions, but I expect levels will return to normal after she recovers from the shock of awakening.” The sound of quiet weeping echoed in her ears before she succumbed to shadows again.
*        *        *
Adya could barely take her eyes from her mother’s more youthful visage as she came to.
“Hi.” Samantha’s voice quavered.
“Hi.”
“How do you feel?”
“Okay. I…”
Samantha approached the bed and gathered the young girl in her arms. Softly caressing her daughter’s back, her voice was thick.  “I love you so much. I’ve been worried about you.”
A tide of tears welled from deep within, great wracking sobs rocking her shoulders within the confines of her mother’s embrace. The flow slowed and finally stopped.
“I heard from the nurse you lived a whole lifetime in the past week…” Uncertainty dulled Samantha’s eyes. “I’m supposed to ask…”
“I guess I was really out to lunch when I woke up.” A tremulous smile crossed her lips. “Have we ever been to Brighton?”
“We’ve driven through on the way to grandpa’s house but we’ve never stopped there. Did you dream about Brighton?”  
“Yes, that’s where I lived.” She shook her head, pushing out the memories. The lancing pain twisted her lips.
“Are you alright?”
“Yeah, shouldn’t have moved my head so fast. Is Dad coming to visit?”
“Your father will come in tomorrow. He’s working out of town tonight, dear. He really misses you.”
“How’s everybody? Evan and Annie are okay?”  She shrugged her shoulders with a wry smile. “It really feels like years.”
“Evan got the job at Colbert’s he was shooting for. He’s been working lots of hours. They’re really pleased with him.”
“Colbert’s?”
“The grocery store downtown…you don’t remember it? It’s been there for years, hon.” Samantha gently patted her child’s head. “I’m so sorry, sweetie. We don’t know what effects the coma will have. Do you remember the accident at all?”
“No, not really…everyone else okay?”
“Yes, but the deer didn’t make it. Aunt Sarah felt terrible about that but she felt even worse about you. She asks every day if you’re gonna to be alright, you really should write her a letter to reassure her you’re fine. She won’t take my word for it.” At Adya’s continuing puzzled expression she added, “You were on the way to grandpa’s cottage with Aunt Sarah, Uncle Jack, Penny and Cyndi when the deer ran out.”
“Oh, no, I ruined everyone’s holiday.” The cottage, located on the shore of Lake Huron, was a favourite family activity each summer.
“Don’t think of that, honey, just get well, okay?”
A nurse entered the room. With businesslike brusqueness she turned down the lights and ushered Samantha out. Adya sat quietly in the darkness, barely moving. A chill shook her body, then another. One small, muffled sob escaped before she regained control. Inhaling deeply, she collected herself. Resolve straightened her spine. She would make the best of this, and figure out if she was crazy, hormonal, or just recovering from a head injury. Turning on her side, she fell into a restless sleep.
*        *        *
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