Welcome to the last week of this month´s Author spotlight with Susannah Noel.
Susannah wanted to share with you an excerpt from her latest book word and deed.
Excerpt from Word and Deed book 2 in the wordless chronicles
Riana Cole had
infiltrated a Union stronghold before, but she’d forgotten how nerve-wracking
it could be.
It had been
almost three months since she’d done anything so risky.
Her heart raced
as she entered through the double glass doors into the spacious lobby of the
Exhibition—as sleek and sanitized as all Union buildings with the requisite
decorative waterfall cascading down one wall.
Connor walked in
front of her, looking masculine, attractive, and rather un-Connor-like in the
charcoal gray uniform of a Union guard and not wearing his glasses.
Without
hesitation, he strode toward the welcome desk and barked out that he’d been
ordered to escort a Reader to the Book Room.
He made sure to
sound less than enthusiastic about his task.
Riana stood
quietly behind him, relieved when the bored attendant behind the desk glanced
at the ID Connor flashed and gestured toward the metal detectors all visitors
had to walk through.
The official
name of the museum was the National Exhibition of Union History, but everyone
just called it the Exhibition. It housed art and artifacts from the past, all
selected and presented in a way to support Union values rather than to encourage
appreciation of the objects in their own right.
The Exhibition
was almost always empty, and Union officials weren’t displeased with that fact.
There were two
armed guards near the metal detector—a normal display of power for any Union
building.
Riana kept her
eyes down, trying to remember how she would have acted in this situation when
she’d actually been a Reader.
Just three
months ago. She’d lived a different life.
“What’s your
business?” one of the guards asked Connor as they approached.
“Escorting her,”
Connor replied gruffly, giving Riana a disparaging look. “She’s a Reader and
needs to look at an old book. Sent by the supervisor.”
The guard was
not particularly interested in a mission so irrelevant. He waved them through
the metal detector without further questioning.
Connor stepped back
to let Riana go through first. When she hesitated, he put his hand on her back
to guide her in.
It wasn’t a
gentle nudge – it was closer to a shove. Even though she knew Connor was
playing a part, she didn’t have to fake a scowl of annoyance over her shoulder.
The second guard
snickered as they walked through the security station and into the Great Hall
of the Exhibition.
Connor slanted
her an apologetic look as they entered the huge airy room, which was lined with
gleaming glass cases of artifacts and supported by stainless steel beams.
The hall was
silent as the grave.
Since there was
no one around, Riana risked a tiny smile which was answered by Connor’s blue
eyes.
Both of them
knew where the Book Room was located, so they made their way to the public
elevator and ascended to the fourth and highest level of the building.
They walked
through an empty hallway to the back corner of the floor where the Book
Room—more like a Book Closet—was located.
Books, of
course, would not get pride of place in today’s Union. They were only kept here
at all as archaic reminders of a past they’d long since left behind. If they’d
pressed the large red button on the wall, a disembodied voice would provide a slanted
history of books, emphasizing how much trouble they had led to in times gone by.
They didn’t
press the button.
Instead, Connor
quietly shut the door so no random passerby could see what they were doing.
After finding no
security camera in the room, they both started scanning the shelves to locate
the particular book they’d come here to read.
“What a waste,”
Riana murmured, running her hand over the spine of a beautiful leather-bound
collection of early post-Cataclysmic poetry. “All these amazing books that no
one bothers to even look at anymore.”
“Try not to think
about it.” Connor smiled at her, causing lines around his eyes to crinkle. He
was wearing contact lenses, since Union guards didn’t wear glasses. He
obviously didn’t like them, since he kept blinking a lot more than normal.
Riana wasn’t
sure she liked them either. He didn’t really look like her old friend of so
many years.
“Do you know
what the book looks like? What size and binding?” he asked.
“It was slim and
leather bound. Maybe a dark red or brown. I can’t remember it very well.”
She and Connor
had been working on their translation project for the last three months. They’d
made some significant progress in translating the coded version of the Old
Language found in the mysterious book so many people had risked so much for.
But they still weren’t very far along.
Yesterday,
they'd had a lucky break, finding that the book’s first section appeared to
quote briefly from a philosophical text they knew was available in full in the
traditional Old Language they both could read.
Riana’s
grandfather, Marshall Cole, had owned a copy. About half of his library had
ended up in the Exhibition when the Union had confiscated his belongings at his
death.
If they could
look at that book and get a copy of the quoted passage written in the Old
Language, then the comparison would greatly help their translation of the coded
language.
Riana felt
familiar shivers of excitement at the presence of all these books, some of
which used to be her grandfather’s. The feeling was old-fashioned and sentimental
in a culture like theirs in which reading was obsolete—replaced by voice
recordings, images, and symbols—and in which excess emotion was frowned upon.
Riana didn’t
care what the rest of the world did. She loved books, and she’d loved her
grandfather.
“Here it is,” Connor said after searching for
about five minutes. He pulled a tall, thin volume off the top shelf. She walked
over and peered at the pages as he flipped them.
It took them a
few minutes to find the page with the quotation they needed and then another
few minutes as Connor meticulously copied out the words.
Soon, however,
he replaced the book on its shelf, and Riana felt a surge of excitement. Their
mission hadn’t been particularly dangerous—certainly not as dangerous as many
of the Front’s normal activities. But there had been some risk involved, and
now they had nearly accomplished it.
“Oh look,” she
said suddenly, catching a glimpse of a familiar book on a lower shelf. “This
one was my grandfather’s too. I loved this book.”
She leaned over
and pulled out the vinyl-bound storybook, scanning through the illustrated
pages of the simple fables. “He used to read the stories to us at bedtime. My
favorite was about a frog who lived under a lily pad.”
Connor
smiled—warm, almost tender—and for a moment they shared a moment of perfect
understanding and appreciation.
Then he said,
“We need to go.”
“Right.” She
replaced the book and fell in step with him as they left the Book Room.
They didn’t
speak as they descended on the elevator, and they’d almost reached the lobby
when they both jerked to a stop at the sudden blaring of an alarm.
She should have
known this trip was going too smoothly.
1 comment:
Oh, darn...and everything was going so well, too. Great excerpt!
Post a Comment