It's here, it's here! Cataclysmic Evolution is live!
Barron's dad makes him toe the line, and to keep his friends, they do too. The new guy could never fit in... but Revi doesn't act like he even wants to, which drives Barron crazy. Life takes a drastic turn, and Revi Porter's long hair, soft lips, and aggravating emo dress code are the last things on Barron's mind. There's no room for petty grudges in the struggle to survive. When saving a little girl leaves Barron lost in the dark, will he learn how to really see?
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Excerpt:
“Everyone have their
slipcards? You’re going to need them.” Barron ignored the lecturing teacher.
Everyone waited in the parking lot, at his request, while he went over all the
rules. Like they didn’t all know them already.
Well, maybe not the
new kid.
Who dressed like
that? He was obviously trying to attract all sorts of the wrong attention. Guys
around here did not wear their hair
long and flowing, curling around their shoulders. Jeans were meant to fit
relaxed and held up with a belt, not tight and barely reaching sharp hipbones
just begging to be squeezed in a bruising grip.
Barron could see the
new kid’s hip bones because his shirt was rucked up under his black jacket.
Black on black, how original. Emo brat with the dark clothes, flaring nostrils,
and narrowed eyes. The only thing he couldn’t ruin were his soft lips, somehow
a much darker red than he would have expected from his honeyed skin. Those lips
had been haunting Barron for more than a week. They didn’t have classes
together, thankfully.
“Barron.”
He strutted when he
walked. Cocky bastard.
“Mr. Pernell!”
Barron jerked. He
scowled. “What?”
“Excuse me? You want
to rephrase that.” The now was
unspoken but hung clearly in the air. His teacher could have his dad on
face-to-face conference in seconds. It wouldn’t be the first time, either.
“Sorry.” Barron
abandoned his slouch against the fence, snapping to attention fast enough to
make the muscles in his back protest. “Yes, Mr. Hodge?” He’d better straighten
up and fly right. The same words his father enjoyed snapping at him on a damn
near daily basis echoed in his mind.
“Your permission?”
Barron dug the
frayed slipcard out of his back pocket. They were supposed to last the entire
school career from their very first day, but his saw a lot of mileage.
Demotions, detentions, parent notes… they’d probably have cut down an entire
forest just for him if they still sent letters home. “Got it.” He handed it
over to his teacher who stuck it in his reader, eyeing the screen until it
beeped.
“Oh good, not forged
for once.”
“Who’d do that? It’s
a field trip to a cave.” He frowned. Barron saved his forges for important
things, like covering for when he had to skip. He didn’t want anyone knowing he
took off school to head over to the used bookstore to attend seminars by Erink
Brogherd. The guy was local, but he was going to be a big-name author one day.
Barron followed his blog and always attended his talks.
“One never knows,
Mr. Pernell.” Mr. Hodge handed back his slipcard. Barron shoved it into his
pocket, already back to watching the new guy. He leaned against the fence,
hanging on with his hands above his head; a chunky watch covered one wrist and
the other was layered with leather, yarn, and cord bracelets.
How old-fashioned.
“Time to go!” Mr.
Hodge shouted. “Two to a seat.”
Barron barreled on
to the first bus to nab the last seat. He hated feeling knees in his back from
idiots behind him. “Hey, Creed, sit with me.” His friend was skinny as a rail.
Barron would get more of the seat if Creed sat with him.
Thavin and William
sat in front of them. Barron reached up and yanked on Thavin’s hair.
“What the hell,
man?”
“It’s getting too
long.” Barron tugged on it again. “You need a cut.” He’d only get to keep his
friends as friends if they toed the line his dad made him toe. So he put
pressure on them when he had to. He needed his friends. Luckily, they’d been
listening to him for years and didn’t really question it anymore.
“Whatever.” Thavin
turned sideways in the seat. “I’ll do it tomorrow.”
“Man, can you
believe they’re making us go on this trip again? How many times have we seen
the Doestrin caves?”
“Every other year
since we were old enough not to piss our pants in the dark.” Creed pulled a
pack of gum out of his pocket.
“Nah.” Barron shook
his head when Creed offered it to him.
“What kind?” William
was a mooch, but he was picky about the kind of gum he’d chew.
“CafĂ© Mocha.”
“Kick ass. Gimme.”
William had a thing for retro sayings. Had to match the name his parents had
saddled him with. He snagged two pieces.
“Hey pig, just one,”
Creed objected.
“I am.” He offered
one square to Thavin.
“You know I don’t
like that caffeinated crap.” Thavin shook his head.
“Guess I’ll just
have to keep both squares.” William popped them both in his mouth and chewed
quickly. “Hmm… good.”
“Dumbass.” Creed
smacked him upside the head. “Those better last you all day.”
“Yeah, well, I’m
gonna need them to stay awake. I’m sick of these cave trips too. Thank God we
graduate next month.”
“Let me have your
attention, please.” Mr. Hodge stood at the front of the bus. “We have an hour-long
ride to the caves.” He rolled his eyes at the groan. “Followed by a four-hour
tour of the caves.”
“What?” Thavin
frowned. “Tours are two hours.”
“Hey, Mr. Hodge,
what gives?” William shouted over everyone.
“I will explain if
you guys can shut your traps for a few minutes, so stop talking.” Mr. Hodge was
actually a pretty cool guy for an older teacher. He wore jeans and button-up
shirts over a tee most days. None of the suits and loafers some teachers wore.
He had a sense of humor, too.
Most of the time.
“This trip to the
caves is for the senior class. I know you guys have been to the Doestrin cave
system and really enjoy it”—he rolled his eyes at their boos—“but there are
some very delicate crystalline structures down a tunnel at the back of the
caves you’ve never seen. We hope that by now, as seniors about to graduate, you
can be trusted into an area of the caves not generally open to the public. You
have no idea how much the fines will be if we’re wrong. Fines that the school
will not pay, by the way.”
Mr. Hodge sat in the
seat behind the auto driver controls. As soon as their scheduled departure time
hit, the bus started up and began the drive out of the city to Doestrin
National Park.
Buses weren’t all
that different from the ones his grandpa told him about. Kids were still
crammed into uncomfortable seats, the buses were loud, and they bounced a lot
more than anything with hover air tires should. Barron wished he could’ve
driven his car. It’d taken him three summers to earn the money himself, but he
was determined to have some freedom over the summer when he wasn’t working for
his father’s firm.
Barron sat back and
listened to his friends bullshit each other about the party last weekend. He
hadn’t gone. His dad had grounded him for the less-than-perfect grade on his
trig exam. Not that it mattered what he got. Barron was going to Parks
University in the fall, tuition already paid for the first semester.
His friends were all
going too. Barron idly scanned the bus. The preppy girls all sat together a few
seats in front of them, their squeals audible over the hum of the anti-grav
motor under the bus.
What were they
squealing over? Abbe and Hazea had their heads together, leaning forward to
talk to the people in front of them. He could tell it was the twins by their
garish purple hair. One ducked down and Barron stiffened.
The new kid sat with
his back to the window, talking to the girls seated around him. They were all
fascinated by him, of course. Barron hadn’t seen him get on their bus. The guy
flicked his hair back over his shoulder. Barron ground his teeth together.
“Hey, Bar, what’s
up?” Creed followed the direction of his gaze. “Ahh, the new guy. Who moves
right before graduation?”
“Someone who
shouldn’t be happy. Of course he’s surrounded by all those girls, so of course
he’s probably giddy as a pig in shit.”
Barron blinked.
“What the hell did you just say?”
Creed grinned. His
orange hair, pale skin, and gap-toothed grin always made him look like a
jack-o’-lantern to Barron. The guy was stick thin, but he had a round face. He
shrugged. “William, of course.”
“Hey, that’s a good
one!” William snickered. “My gram taught me it. She grew up on a farm. Back when
they actually had farms, that is.”
“Whatever.” Barron
went back to staring at the new guy.
“His name’s Revi
Pore-something or other.” Thavin frowned. “I don’t remember exactly. He moved
from Alabama? I think.” He worked in the office and often got them information
before everyone else got it. “I processed his ID file yesterday for his
slipcard. Wherever he lived last was super slow sending the data.”
Revi.
“He looks like a
girl,” Barron muttered.
“Yeah, you and your
obsession with hair. He’s gotta set your OCD on fire.” Thavin snapped his
fingers. “Porter. That’s his last name.”
“Or maybe other
parts of him are on fire.” William raised his eyebrows and leered at him.
Barron reached up and smacked him upside the head.
“Knock it off. He’s
not my type.” Barron sank down, wedging his knees against the seat in front of
him. “Wake me up when we get there.” He closed his eyes, but he didn’t sleep.
If he listened hard, and filtered out all the other sounds, he could hear him.
The new guy.
Revi.
His drawl stood out
against the clipped tones of the guys and high-pitched gabbing girls. His looks
might drive Barron crazy, but his voice was very… nice. Shit.
Not part of the
program. Barron was going to find a nice jock boyfriend who liked sports and
beer and could hold a conversation with his dad.
Barron’s irritation
spiked as he ended up standing behind the kid as everyone shuffled off the bus.
He should have made William and Thavin go first. Two of the girls had stepped
into a seat by their friend so they could get off together. Of course he waved
them ahead of him with a campy limp wrist wave, removing the buffer between
Barron and the annoyance that was Revi Porter.
The guy didn’t even
shuffle like the rest of them. He might as well have minced down the aisle.
Barron clenched his hands into fists. They approached the steps, and he
couldn’t take it anymore. When Revi went to step down, Barron kicked his back
foot, pushing it off the edge of the step.
Revi stumbled down
the steps, yelping as he twisted and then fell onto the rough gravel parking
lot. Barron smirked, and then glanced over his shoulder at his friends.
“Whoops. I’m so
clumsy.”
Just finished it and have to say... want more!! How can it end there? "anguished wail" Don't want to spoil anything but, what happens to them and the others? Good job on all the creative chapters. Love reading your stories more and more!!
ReplyDeleteThank you! I don't think I can write a longer story and NOT have it be something to expand later, lol. This story, for me, was really about Barron's evolution both emotionally and physically, but I agree--there's more there! Thanks so much for reading Carrier Violet!
DeleteWow! Loved it!! I can't believe snippets of a school trip to some boring caves would be wound spun and end up with this amazing adventure!
ReplyDeleteYep, the story takes a real series of twists and turns. I'm so glad you enjoyed the story, Pat, and thanks for commenting!!
DeleteI would never have thought the start of the story or the prompt would lead to the place it ended. An amazing journey. Loved it. And I would love to read more sometime (but only after you finish saving Caeorleia, in the third book). Definitely more that could be done on the planet sometime, and more characters we care about.
ReplyDeleteOh yeah... I like to write twists, lol! I'm so glad you enjoyed it! Never fear, I'm not expanding/continuing this story right now. Other projects (Yes, Nicklaus) do come first. :)
DeleteGlad to know you plan on giving us more. I tried to leave a comment on Goodreads, but it gave me some sort of error message. I was finding it hard to believe that you would end the story like that, but then, I've come to know how your twisted little mind works, lol.
ReplyDeleteAnd, I have to agree with Jean, as much as I want more of this story, I want Caeorleia even more.
I loved this! The twists and turns were definitely unexpected, and very good! Great story, and i am very glad to see that you may consider more sometime! I was actually disappointed that i had finished reading it so fast, it was so good i couldnt stop or even pace myself!
ReplyDeleteScottie