Faceless
By Jus Accardo
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About this ebook
My name is Brandt Cross, and I died. Again...
I'm living in the body of a Six named Douglass Cain, a certifiable scumbag whose ability is on Zendean Industries-AKA Denazen's-most wanted list. There's some serious bad going down, and Ginger, the leader of the Underground, sent me undercover to obtain information because people are dying.
My cousin, Dez, is dying...
Denazen thought they'd found a cure for the Supremacy decline, but they were wrong. That's the bad news. The good news? Franklin Wentz.
Wentz, the owner of a genetic research company, is brilliant and just a little bit crazy. He's unwittingly created a formula that may cure the sick Supremacy kids, and everyone wants it-including Devin, the super hot Resident.
Get the formula. Save the day. Don't fall for the hot spy. Piece of cake.
The Denazen series is best enjoyed in order.
Reading Order:
Book #1: Touch
Book #1.5: Untouched (novella)
Book #2: Toxic
Book# 2.5: Faceless (novella)
Book #3: Tremble
Book #4 Transcendent
Read more from Jus Accardo
Darker Days Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A Darker Past Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
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Faceless - Jus Accardo
My name is Brandt Cross, and I died. Again…
I’m living in the body of a Six named Douglass Cain, a certifiable scumbag whose ability is on Zendean Industries—AKA Denazen’s—most wanted list. There’s some serious bad going down, and Ginger, the leader of the Underground, sent me undercover to obtain information because people are dying.
My cousin, Dez, is dying…
Denazen thought they’d found a cure for the Supremacy decline, but they were wrong. That’s the bad news. The good news? Franklin Wentz.
Wentz, the owner of a genetic research company, is brilliant and just a little bit crazy. He’s unwittingly created a formula that may cure the sick Supremacy kids, and everyone wants it—including Devin, the super hot Resident.
Get the formula. Save the day. Don’t fall for the hot spy. Piece of cake.
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.
Copyright © 2013 by Jus Accardo. All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce, distribute, or transmit in any form or by any means. For information regarding subsidiary rights, please contact the Publisher.
Entangled Publishing, LLC
2614 South Timberline Road
Suite 109
Fort Collins, CO 80525
Visit our website at www.entangledpublishing.com.
Entangled Teen is an imprint of Entangled Publishing, LLC.
Edited byLiz Pelletier and Erica M. Chapman
Cover design by Starla Huchton
ISBN 978-1-62266-859-5
Manufactured in the United States of America
First Edition March 2013
Table of Contents
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Acknowledgments
Other books by Jus Accardo
Touch
Tremble
Toxic
Untouched
Darker Days
A Darker Past
Ruined
Rules of Survival
Discover more of Entangled Teen’s digital-first books…
Collide
Greta and the Glass Kingdom
Deviate
Bridges Burned
Anomaly
For you.
Yep. That’s right—you.
It’s your enthusiasm that allows me to keep doing what I do.
And I love you for it.
Chapter One
My name is Brandt Cross, and I once ate a caterpillar on a dare…
Not once in life did my view of death include waking up on a sidewalk in too-tight jeans—commando, if the itchy, chafed feeling was any indication—staring into the lifeless eyes of the dirt bag that killed me.
Can you move?
a gruff voice asked. A pair of hands slid under my shoulders and hefted upward. The world danced in blurry circles as the crowd gathering around us and sped in and out of focus like a scene from The Blair Witch Project. If the scenery didn’t stop doing its best impression of a Tilt-A-Whirl, there was a better than average chance I’d puke.
"I—I think so. I pushed the words past still-numb lips and across my tongue. Talking felt weird. It sounded weird, too. Then again, it took some time to get used to using someone else’s vocal chords.
Two police officers stood above me. The one closest extended a hand to brush some debris from my shoulder while the other stood over my former, rather—Sheltie’s—lifeless body, wearing an odd expression. He was either confused or had to take a major dump.
When I was a kid, I imagined death was a lot like Saturday morning cartoons. Fluffy clouds and harps. People zooming around with super-charged wings on their backs. Then, as I got older, my idea of death changed. I was a good guy, so I’d have to be heaven-bound. And heaven meant daily brews with Tony Hawk, Sunday brunch with the family, and all the peanut butter cookies I could eat presented on platters offered by large-breasted Hooters’ girls.
Not even close. My version of death wasn’t nearly that fluffy.
I stretched in an attempt to rid myself of a wicked charley horse. What happened?
"We were hoping you could tell us. What’s your name?"
I took a deep breath and instinctively reached into my pocket for my skate wheel, but froze when my fingers scraped up nothing but lint. For a second I freaked, thinking I’d lost the small chunk of plastic. Tightness in my chest stole the air from my lungs. A ridiculous reaction considering it was just a stupid piece of worn plastic and metal, but still… That wheel was like home. The only real piece of the old me I had left.
After a few seconds of irrational panic, I remembered I’d safely tucked it away in the alley before this all started. Placed behind the dumpster less than ten feet away for safekeeping. It was the one thing I wasn’t willing to let go of. A piece of me—the real me—that helped keep things grounded.
Douglass Cain,
I responded after a moment of hesitation. The name, like the words, felt unnatural rolling around in my mouth. Like a piece of clothing that didn’t fit—which made sense since it technically wasn’t my name.
Well, it hadn’t been until I appropriated its body.
My name is Brandt Cross and I’m a Soul Jumper…
Did this boy attack you, Mr. Cain?
one of the officers asked. He had a small, close clipped moustache. The kind my father used to refer to as the Porn Star Patch.
He just—
Check this out,
the other officer said, waving a small slip of paper. He’d found my note. My name is Sheltie Fields and I can’t live with the guilt anymore. I killed a dude. A guy named Brandt Cross. I needed the money and they paid me to do it. I’m sorry…
The officer stepped over to his partner and took the paper. Skimming it, he said, Cross. It doesn’t sound familiar. Old case?
Doesn’t ring a bell. I’ll call it in and see what I can dig up. Sounds like it could be a good one, though.
He disappeared into his patrol car, note in hand, and left his partner to deal with me.
I’d written the suicide note for two reasons. First, because let’s face it, getting arrested for my own murder would really suck a big one and hamper moving forward with Ginger’s plan—whatever that might be—and second, it would give my parents some small sense of closure. It wasn’t much, but it was something, and that made it a little easier to close my eyes at night.
The officer pulled out a small black notepad and flicked the tip on his ballpoint pen. I need to get some information, and a statement, but then you’re free to go for now.
I nodded and proceeded to tell him about the poor, crazy bastard that jumped from the shadows of the alleyway, then offed himself right in front of me by jamming a small knife into the hollow of his own throat.
I didn’t know what was more traumatic.
Reliving the suicide that had enabled me to take possession of Douglass Cain’s body through Cain’s eyes, or remembering it—complete with sensation overload—through my own memories.
My name is Brandt Cross, and sometimes I hate being a Six…
…
The officer gave me a ride home. Not the room I’d been renting at the local roach motel as Sheltie for the last few months, but Cain’s home. Zendean Industries.
Zendean. Yeah…those Denazen posers? Real frigging original.
Known in the area as a pharmaceutical company, Zendean was big into giving back to the community. They had a boarding house next to their plant where they rented rooms to underprivileged students. Underprivileged students being the Sixes—people with an anomaly in their sixth chromosome that granted each a unique ability—that worked for them.
Back in July, my life had been normal. I went to school, hung out with my cousin, Dez, and was on my way to following in my father’s footsteps as an investigative reporter. Then Denazen happened. They used people like me—Sixes—as weapons, and unlike the front they liked to present here at Zendean, they were all about hurting, not helping. They were bastards, and I was here to help put an end to all that.
The main building was huge. Twice as tall as the building my father worked at, and nearly as long as the mall back home. I stood on the sidewalk for several minutes, the icy night air biting at my exposed skin, and simply stared.
An outer brick shell with a large sign at the base of the parking lot said Zendean Industries in bright blue. Underneath it, in smaller, slightly darker letters, were the words cares for community business. We’d had that in Parkview, too. Local businesses that donated time and money to community affairs. In Denazen’s case, the money was probably siphoned into a fund dedicated to world domination. That’s just how those dickheads rolled.
The whole scene looked innocent enough—but it wasn’t. Inside that plant, a collection of Denazen bastards were training a host of new Sixes to use for their own selfish purposes. Zendean, one of the many offshoots of Denazen, was dedicated to gathering as many special mice for their twisted Six-Rat Race.
I resisted the urge to flip off the building and made my way around to the back. The boarding house sat behind the plant, a quaint three-story brick building with a stone path and fall flowers—those little red and yellow ones my mother loved—lining the walk on either side. The weather had been mild so far, so they were only now just starting to die off. I pushed aside the bubbling feeling of homesickness and slipped inside the building.
Everything was still hazy, leftover memories and images from Sheltie’s life twisted with mine, and the new ones from Cain’s, but I managed to find my room, getting lost only once. Luckily, since Douglass was still fairly new here, making a wrong turn didn’t attract any unwanted attention.
I pushed through the door and kicked it closed with the heel of my shoe, cringing when the sound echoed through my brain like shattering glass. Without turning to flip the lock, I fell face first onto the bed and closed my eyes. My head pounded and every muscle ached like I’d just spent the entire day boarding down at Memorial Park. I felt like an elephant that had been crammed into an egg shell.
The same thing happened last time—the first time—I jumped. When Sheltie Fields killed my original body. The Brandt body. Sheltie worked for my Uncle Marshal, who had me offed because I was poking my nose in the wrong places—a skill I’d proudly picked up from my journalist father.
My father. I missed him—and my mother. Unlike most teenagers that go through that I hate my parents stage, we’d always been close. Dad, next to my cousin Dez, was my best friend. Being forced to walk away from them was one of the hardest things I’d ever had to do. I knew it was a bad idea, but twice a month I called the house just to listen to the sound of their voices. Sometimes I got the machine. That was nice. I could call back over and over and listen to the message—the same one that had been on the voicemail for years. The three of us singing my mother’s favorite Beatles’ song. I knew eventually they’d change it, but for now, it eased the pang of homesickness—at least, a little.
Just like before, I couldn’t figure out where Cain began, and Sheltie ended. Add me to all that, and the fact that I had access to the abilities of each Six I took over, and you had a major bucket of overcooked brain soup. The only thing that helped—besides the skate wheel, which was still stuck in the frigging alley—was constant affirmations from my old life.
My original life.
My name is Brandt Cross, and I love peanut butter…
I needed to rest and let my brain sort itself out. It was a little easier this time around. I knew what to expect—sort of. Every jump would probably be a little different from the one before—not that I intended to make a habit out of swapping bodies. The whole process was traumatic. It felt like being ripped apart and stitched back together in the wrong order with a rusty fishing hook and a handful of dirty string. All I could do was ride it out and wait for things to level off. There wasn’t much a guy could do to get over killing himself. They just didn’t make support groups for shit like that.
I shifted on the bed trying—and failing—to get comfortable. Cain’s blanket smelled like stale beer and cigarettes, and the mattress was lumpy. With a deep breath, I dug around for something to hold on to. Since the skate wheel was so painfully absent, I focused on the one emotion I knew without a shadow of a doubt belonged to me.
Brandt, me.
Guilt. No matter how you spun it, and despite the noble reasons behind what I’d done, I’d killed someone. Maybe I hadn’t killed Cain with my own two hands, but I knew what the end result would be when I jammed the knife into Sheltie’s throat. I’d evicted Douglass Cain from his body and sent him…away. For good.
Being a Soul Jumper meant that when I died, my essence—my life force—jumped to the nearest person. A cat with nine lives, squared to infinity. It was a shame I couldn’t go public with my ability. Girls found immortality hot, right? Slap on a pair of fangs and add some glitter and I could probably hook up with my choice of rabid Twilight fangirls.
I pulled the pillow over my head and did my best not to gag. It smelled like camel ass and old cheese, but thankfully muffled the obscenely loud ticking clock on the wall and blotted out the annoying red light from the alarm on the nightstand. Everything was amped in this stage of the jump. Noises were louder, colors were brighter, and smells were ten times more potent. It was like motion sickness and the super flu rolled into one.
I let my eyes flutter closed and tried to focus on something good. The time my parents took Dez and me to Disney World. Or the day I’d taken