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  UMBRA

  Prequel 2, the Dimension Drift Series

  Christina Bauer

  Brighton, MA 02135

  www.monsterhousebooks.com

  ISBN 9781945723384

  * * *

  Copyright © 2019 by Monster House Books LLC

  All rights reserved. This book or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express written permission of the publisher except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.

  Contents

  Dedication

  Author Note

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Next In Series - ALIEN MINDS

  Also from Christina Bauer – ANGELBOUND

  Also from Christina Bauer - MAGICORUM

  Also from Christina Bauer - BEHOLDER

  If You Enjoyed This Book…

  ALIEN MINDS - Chapter One

  Collected Works

  About Author Christina Bauer

  Subscribe

  Dedication

  For All Those Who Kick Ass,

  Take Names And Read Books

  Author Note

  Dear Reader,

  * * *

  This is my second novel that retells a story from the hero’s point of view. For UMBRA (Dimension Drift prequel 2), I’m reviewing the events of SCYTHE (Dimension Drift prequel 1). In LINCOLN (Angelbound book 2), it’s the events of ANGELBOUND (book 1). While prepping for both novels, I researched similar titles. Basically, I read an ass-ton of books that were redone from the love interest’s perspective. In the volumes I reviewed, most authors took their original work and kept it, beat for beat, but built out new internal dialogue.

  Which isn’t easy to do.

  Trust me, I tried.

  So I need to be straight-up here.

  There’s no way I could write that beat for beat book. Don’t get me wrong: in some places, that approach worked fine. But in the interests of full disclosure, here are three ways that both UMBRA and LINCOLN are different from other rewritten from his point of view books that you may know and love. You are hereby warned about what you’re getting into, and I won’t feel offended if you decide to click the return button at this point.

  Difference Number One. A lot of the drama in SCYTHE was about Meimi’s life, friends and school. In UMBRA, you’ll see Thorne’s world as an alien prince and inter-dimensional badass, first and foremost. I just couldn’t believe that he’d be super-interested in the details of Meimi’s life at this point. He’s got a lot on his plate already. You’ll see!

  Difference Number Two. Even when a Thorne-Meimi scene was spelled out in SCYTHE—and I also keep it in UMBRA—I didn’t recount every last beat unless I could add something really significant. Meimi’s really concerned about her friends, mother and science projects. Thorne really just cares about Meimi. That said, their interests do align sometimes, and that’s always fun, too.

  Difference Number Three. Expect tons of backstory on Throne’s world. He’s a royal, and power like that only exists with a shit-ton of people trying to steal it from you. Drama ahoy!

  With that, I’ll stop with the caveats and let you get to the book itself! I hope you enjoy it.

  * * *

  Best,

  * * *

  Christina

  Chapter 1

  “Wish to travel the omniverse? First try leaping off a hovercraft without a power chute. Should you live, then you might survive in alternate realities as well.” – Beauregard the Great, Instructions for Visiting Parallel Worlds

  Nine minutes.

  That’s how long before this planet implodes.

  I’m talking about a version of Earth that supports thousands of cities. Millions of buildings. Billions of people. Not to mention what’s almost beyond counting. Like photographs. Sunflowers. Bowling trophies. Baby carriages. As of this moment, I’m the only barrier between all that and instant annihilation.

  Welcome to my Tuesday.

  I’m Thorne Oxblood, and I fight inter-dimensional disasters.

  For my current mission, I’m at placelet 92.248.908, planet X3894-B, strand BT704.35, and branch point 1T.783-50E. The locals have a simpler name for this location, though. Clyde’s Gym. Over the last hour, I’ve memorized every inch of this space, searching for the schism—meaning the inter-dimensional breaking point—that could tear this world apart. Nothing has shown itself yet. Nervous energy corkscrews up my shoulders and neck. What am I missing? For the umpteenth time, I inspect the gym.

  Large, square space with concrete walls? Check.

  Rickety slats in a worn-out floor? Check.

  Faded girly calendars everywhere? Odd decoration, but it’s not my gym. And check.

  Points of access? Three. Main entrance up-front, an office side door, and a small emergency exit along the back wall. Since I arrived, no one’s entered or left.

  Huge letter K glowing on the ceiling? Check. This is something only I can see, and it means my family’s arch-enemy, the Komandir, stopped by this gym at some point. Not as helpful a fact as one might think. It still doesn’t show me where the schism is hiding.

  Humans? Nine. Two boxers pound away in the sparring ring. Another six guys slam into punching bags, lift weights or jump rope. One teenage girl scribbles on papers behind the door marked office. Then, there’s me. To the humans, I’m just an eighteen-year-old in gray sweats. Nothing about my muscular build, short hair, and brown eyes screams, this guy’s an alien.

  But I am from another world. Umbra.

  And as an Umbran, my body stores tiny cybernetic organisms called sentient. These minute creatures enable me to guard the omniverse, which is the universe of universes. Tonight’s mission marks my seventy-first rescue. For the record, my sentient are extra jacked up at this point. They keep sending me mental images of this planet exploding in a silent shower of blinding light.

  Not for the first time, I try to calm them. I got it, I whisper in my mind. There’s trouble at Clyde’s Gym.

  Another explosion image follows. Not helping.

  I rub my temples and try to focus. Think through the problem, Thorne. Since I saw the glowing K, I’ve assumed the Komandir are behind the trouble here. But maybe the symbol is a distraction. Perhaps something else is at work. After all, these humans could be about to develop drift science, which is the ability to open alternate realities. Once you can visit other worlds, it’s easier to implode your own. Drift science would also explain why my sentient keep sending images of exploding planets instead of pics showing Doc Zykin, the Komandir assassin.

  Closing my eyes, I reach out to my sentient. Is drift science the real problem here?

  In reply, my sentient show me beauty queens jumping up and down after winning a pageant. It’s their way of saying, yes already. Amazing how, even though they can’t speak, my sentient still manage to be sarcastic.

  Fresh scenes flood my mind. This time, my sentient review my last mission.

  * * *

  I stand in a huge white space. A sign for New Cosmos University hangs above me; equipment covers the floor all around. There are tall monoliths with computer arrays, a patchwork of workstations, and round databots that zoom through the air. I stand at the drift science station, dressed in a white lab coat. It took me two weeks to infiltrate this place as a research student. After that, I
spent days hacking into university systems so anyone with Umbran DNA would be immune to security. Yet the real time-suck on this mission has been my target, Helen Robbins. She’s whip-smart with long black hair, cocoa skin, and a gaze that could melt titanium.

  She thinks I’m up to something.

  She’s right.

  Trouble is, my secret agenda is to stop this version of Earth from imploding. For that to happen, Helen must ace her latest set of drift science calculations. How do I know her calcs are key? My sentient keep making her data pad glow red. For weeks, I’ve tried to help her, but she keeps blocking any attempts at conversation. My only chance is that the school board wants fresh numbers today.

  “How’s it going?” I ask. “I know you’re on a deadline.”

  Helen presses her tablet against her chest. “What’s it to you?”

  “I want to help. That’s it. Honestly.”

  Helen pauses. Little by little, she starts handing me her datapad.

  At last.

  I could cheer.

  Behind me, the lab door thuds open. My brother Justice bursts into the room. He’s a bulky figure dressed in cowboy boots, a black T-shirt, jeans and a Stetson. In some kind of nod to science, he holds a pocket protector in his left hand. He stomps over to my side.

  “How’s it going, little bro?” Justice closes his eyes. I know what he’s doing—accessing his sentient. “Guess you met the smartest filly in this here lab.” Justice increases intensity as he says ‘smartest filly.’ I get it. Justice means that his sentient pinpointed Helen as the target for this mission. Sadly, my brother already has a loud and gravelly voice. Upping the volume only makes the words ‘smartest filly’ boom through the chamber. Everyone stops working to stare.

  My jaw muscles lock in frustration. Justice came here to check on me, clear and simple. Did it take me a few days to determine Helen was my target? Sure. I don’t have Justice’s power over sentient, so I figured it out on my own. Now, I’m finally finishing my work here, and my brother shows up to ‘help.’

  He could ruin everything.

  I look to Helen. She’s clasped the datapad so tightly against her torso, the girl’s knuckles flare white. “That’s your brother?” she asks, her face scrunched in disbelief.

  I pinch the bridge of my nose. “Yup. Can you ignore him?”

  “I don’t know.” Helen takes a half-step backward. “He’s really really really big.”

  Justice tips the brim of his Stetson. “Thank you, sugar.”

  “Wasn’t a complement,” deadpans Helen. Justice keeps right on smiling. He’s convinced every woman loves him. Mostly because he’s the most eligible bachelor on Umbra.

  I step closer to Helen. “Please. You only deal with him once. I’ve got him for the rest of my life.”

  Helen pauses, then cracks a smile. “I’ve an older sister, too. Name’s Polly.” She hands over the datapad. “Poll’s a lot like your brother.”

  “Is that right, now?” Justice flashes Helen a thousand-watt smile. “Is this Polly of yours all charm and sunshine, just like me?”

  Helen chuckles. “Nope, she’s more of a busybody. Thinks I can’t do anything without her.”

  “So.” Justice puffs out his lower lip. “Not like me.”

  While Helen and Justice chat, I scan the datapad, make a few notes, and hand it back. “Your results from the dark matter tests are off,” I explain. The data comes another team, and I’m not surprised their work sucks. That group’s more interested in clubbing than science. “Rerun the tests yourself and your calcs will be fine.”

  Helen scans the screen. “Thanks. If these numbers were off, it could have caused an explosion.”

  “Through space and time,” adds Justice.

  “Thanks,” I tell my brother. “But I’m handling this.” Which in family-speak translates to: shut the hell up.

  Helen gives me the side eye. “How could you know those tests looked wrong? This is all new. No one’s seen proper results yet.”

  Justice taps his temple. “My little brother here’s a thinker. He’s got to be, considering how he’s low on sentient and all.” Justice closes his eyes for a moment. “Good news. Now those numbers are put to rights, this here universe is safe again. Nice how things work out, huh?”

  Helen frowns. “Did you say sentient?”

  “Yes indeedy,” replies Justice. My brother then turns to me. “Speaking of sentient, did you catch how mine said our work here is done? We aced this mission together, little bro.”

  “I caught that part, yes.” I’d add that Justice did no actual work to ace said mission, but that will only lead to more humiliating speeches about my weakness with sentient.

  Justice slaps his hand on my shoulder. “Let’s get back to Umbra.”

  Helen’s brows lift. “Umbra?”

  I shake my head. “Oh, it’s definitely time to leave.”

  * * *

  The memory replay ends. It’s obvious why my sentient showed me that scene. In Helen’s world, fixing drift science was the key to saving her planet. The same could be true here as well. Even so, Helen’s mission lasted for weeks and took place in a laboratory. This time, I’ve only got eight more minutes and a gymnasium.

  Not gonna lie.

  I’m at a loss here.

  The main door swings open; five teenage guys step inside. All of them sport pomade-slick hair, white T-shirts, and cuffed jeans. Classic greasers. Which makes sense. After all, this parallel Earth broke off from the prime reality sometime in the 1950’s. Branch worlds often get stuck on their exit point.

  The tallest in the group pauses just inside the door. He’s got a square face, a flat nose, and a great swoosh of blond hair. His stocky body seems ready to burst from his leather bomber jacket. A smaller teen pulls at the tall guy’s elbow.

  “Axel,” he begins.

  “Quiet, Runt.”

  “The name’s Ralph,” squeaks the little guy.

  “You’re whatever I call you.” Axel elbows the smaller kid in gut. Ralph gasps in pain, but he doesn’t fight back. Interesting. So whatever this group is, Axel is both their leader and a total dick. Not good. Axel’s beady eyes narrow as he inspects the room.

  He’s looking for someone.

  Beep… beep…

  My earpiece lets out a soft tone that only I can hear. Based on the rhythm, I already know who’s calling. Justice.

  “Accept inbound comm,” I say.

  My brother’s gravelly voice echoes across the line. “You’ve got less than seven minutes left, little brother. Vamoose.”

  “Not an option,” I declare. “My mission isn’t over.”

  “Then I’m coming after you. Now.”

  Right. Justice would be here already if I hadn’t hidden my placelet data. After the disaster with Helen, I figured out that trick.

  “Any news for me?” I ask.

  “The S-Man got us some info.”

  By S-Man, Justice means Slate, our youngest brother. Together, the three of us make up the royal family for Umbra. As Emperor of the Omniverse, our father Cole wields the all-powerful Crown Sentient, while Slate’s abilities focus on visions and knowledge.

  “This Earth is developing drift science tech,” continues Justice.

  “My sentient already showed me that.” In my head, images of cheering crowds appear from my sentient. They rarely beat out Slate in getting me news.

  “Come on, now.” Justice sighs. “You know what that means—most worlds destroy themselves once they reach this stage. Why save this planet?”

  “Universes are born and die all the time,” I counter. “Sentient pick which ones to save. Not us. You know that.” While I chat with Justice, I can’t help but notice how Axel keeps glaring at the office door. Something tells me I should take another look in there. “Unless you’ve got other news, I’m signing off.”

  “Hold your horses, now. Be reasonable. You’re not like me and Slate.”

  My voice lowers. “I’m aware.”

  B
oth Justice and Slate are far stronger with sentient than I am. Hell, there are grandmas on my planet with more sentient power than I carry. And I get what Justice means. In this mission, he and Slate could escape an imploding planet much faster than I ever could. Which is why I must succeed here or else. I’m about to say precisely that when something happens.

  The side office door opens. My sentient stop sending images of cheering crowds. Instead, fresh sensations course through me.

  A buzz of excitement.

  The pang of anticipation.

  A rock-solid weight of willpower.

  These aren’t my emotions, though. It’s all coming from my sentient. This is their way of saying, the schism is close by.

  “Hold on,” I tell Justice.

  A girl steps through the newly-opened side door. She’s the same teenager I counted before, only now I can catch a better look. She’s young, red-haired, and wearing a poodle skirt. The name Emma is embroidered on her sweater. A pile of books and papers lie cradled in her arms. To my eyes, the documents glow with crimson light. As with Helen, my sentient are telling me that I found it.

  The schism.

  At last, this is familiar territory. If this mission is like Helen’s, then those papers will carry drift science calculations. Once I fix a few numbers, then the schism will close. I check my watch once more.