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The Impossible Engineers (The Doorknob Society Saga Book 2)
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The Impossible Engineers
The Doorknob Society
Book II
by
MJ Fletcher
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events or locales is entirely coincidental.
The Impossible Engineers
All rights reserved.
Copyright 2012 MJ Fletcher
Published 2012 Marc Fletcher
Cover design by Marc Fletcher
Photo Credit: Hank Shiffman
Formatting by A Thirsty Mind
Visit The Doorknob Society Saga website:
www.thedoorknobsociety.com
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Table of Contents
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
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Excerpt: The Doorknob Society
Coming Soon
Titles
MJ Fletcher
Chapter 1
Status: Where were we again?
I shifted my weight onto my back heel and focused my power into creating a shield. A blue sphere of energy surrounded me, an explosion of light and fury bouncing off it in all directions as I blocked the blast that had been meant for me. I stepped back behind a large chest and scanned the room but couldn’t see any of my friends. I’d lost them when all hell had broken loose. I needed to round everybody up and get the hell out of Dodge, but first I had to deal with my attacker.
I twisted my Doorknob in my hand and ribbons of blue energy dripped from the ends forming a cat o’ nine tails. I rested my head back and concentrated on the noises around me listening to every creak in the room. The sound flashed in my ear. It was slight though obvious... someone was trying to creep up alongside me.
I reacted, running toward the noise using a surprise attack to keep them off balance. I spotted my assailant, she was creeping along the far wall and her knob wasn’t even activated yet. I leapt into the air and brought my energy whip down in an arc wrapping it around her and knocking her to the floor.
I knelt by my captured foe and yanked her doorknob from her hand. She glared at me, her eyes wide. I smiled down and patted her on the top of the head and then turned back towards the room.
It was large and not well lit. Lights rested high on the walls and were spread so far apart that they only offered small sections of lit areas. I let out a deep breath, annoyed I hadn’t thought to ask Edgar for his goggles. If I had them I would easily be able to find everyone in the dark.
A boom shook the room and a dazzling lightshow followed. I was up and running toward it as fast as I could move. It might be a trap but I had to make it to my friends or else I’d wind up on my own and that wasn’t in the plans for this mission.
As I approached, I could see Faith on her knees. Her shield was failing as her attacker slammed into it again and again. I decided to go for the direct approach and twisted my knob, creating a portal entry and throwing it toward her opponent’s feet. He noticed it too late and tumbled into the portal, screaming out in anger and shock.
“Where are the others?” I knelt beside Faith, my eyes scanning the dark hoping no one else was sneaking toward us.
Faith labored to breathe and speak. “No idea, I got separated when they attacked us.”
“You okay?”
“Yeah, I just didn’t expect it to be so intense.”
“Fighting is always intense.” I stood and grabbed Faith’s arm, yanking her to her feet. “Come on we need to keep moving.”
“You’re not going anywhere.” The man stepped out of the darkness and my shoulder slumped at the sight of him.
“What did I miss?” I sighed as I asked the question.
“Lights!” Dad yelled and the room lit up so that everything was visible.
Standing in a circle around us were four more attackers, the rest of my team was bound and sitting off to the side. I kicked at the floor and groaned.
“Sorry, kiddo,” my dad said, “your team has been caught and so have you.”
“Can we run it again?” I pleaded with a smile.
“Sorry, I think four times is enough, everyone needs to get home including us.” Dad laughed and walked over to me, rubbing my shoulder as he passed.
I had been assigned my training team two months ago after all the craziness with the First Kind. Not many Society Initiates were running their own team at my age, but then again they hadn’t fought a power mad splinter group like the First Kind bent on destroying the Old Kind.
Old Kind is what we call ourselves, people with unique abilities such as using a Doorknob to open a portal anywhere in the world or even other dimensions. If someone had told me a year ago I could do that, I would have thought they were crazy.
But here I was using my abilities to travel all over, including places I didn’t know existed, and also learning to create constructs of portal energy to fight with. I’d learned that trick quickly. I didn’t have much of a choice when the First Kind had kidnapped Dad and my friends and I had to rescue him. That of course led to a brutal battle in the Infinity Library. We’d won, but at that last moment I had seen something that rocked my world. My own mother had helped our enemies. The woman who I hadn’t seen since I was six was a traitor and I was the only one who knew... for now anyway.
Dad had been reinstated to the Doorknob Society after the battle and the first thing he did was amp up all battle training for new DS members. No one complained once word got out about the bloody fight at the Library.
I had gone from being an obscure nobody who hadn’t even declared, to a minor celebrity for my part in the whole affair. I, of course, hated every second of it, people trying to be my friend just because they thought I was popular. It was not my scene at all and most realized it fairly quickly since I remained myself and continued hanging out with my regular friends.
“Sorry,” Faith said, avoiding my eyes by gazing at the floor.
“No worries, Faith, at least you defended yourself.” The other two members of my team skulked out of the room.
“How many did you get?” Faith asked.
“Two.” I pulled a piece of cloth from my pocket and cleaned off my Doorknob and slid it into the leather pouch that hung from my belt. I had taken to keeping it on me since it made it more easily accessible.
“Wow, that’s three times you got two and you caught one in the first session too.”
“Yeah, but we still got nabbed. We’re going to have to keep working on it.” We exited the training room into the hallway of the Doorknob Society Manor.
The Manor is where I was initiated into the Society and I was still as impressed with it as the day I first came here.
This place is flat out huge, with over twenty-five bedrooms and three kitchens. The training rooms are basement level as are the DS archives, which I had been meaning to visit but hadn’t had a chance yet.
“Any plans tonight?”
“I’m meeting my boyfriend at the Cape Beanery and we’re going to see a movie.” I smiled in spite of myself. Slade and I had been dating for a while now and I was still getting used to calling him my boyfriend.
“You’re dating Slade right?” Faith asked.
We walked into the kitchen and I grabbed an apple from the dish on the island. I hadn’t eaten since breakfast and I needed some energy. “That’s right. How about you, do you have a boyfriend?” I bit into the apple and leaned against the counter.
“No, no boyfriend,” Faith said grabbing a bottle of water from the fridge.
I was surprised Faith didn’t have anyone. She was attractive with long blonde hair and crystal blue eyes. She was athletic and had plenty of friends, but then again who was I to judge. Most people would have thought it unthinkable two months ago that Slade and I would be dating.
My phone buzzed and I pulled it from my pocket and tapped the screen. I had two texts, one from Slade and one from Val. I read Val’s first, asking me what time I would be at the Beanery. I figured she must be working tonight and was looking forward to seeing a friendly face. Poor Val, if she only knew that her friends were a bit strange due to their special abilities, though the news might cause her brain to overload. I sent back that I would be there by eight.
I clicked on Slade’s message and held my breath... the moment we had been waiting for had just arrived.
Mr. Miller back from searching 4 artifact.
“Chloe.” Dad rushed into the kitchen and from the look on his face it appeared that he had heard the news as well. He looked from me to my phone and stopped in his tracks. He turned to Faith. “Could you give us a moment please?”
“Of course, Mr. Masters.” Faith sent me a sympathetic look as if she assumed that I was in some sort of trouble, waved and left the room.
“I take it you know Levi is back.” He gestured to my phone still in my hand.
“Slade just texted me.”
“I just got word myself.”
“Did he find it?” I stepped forward chewing at my lip.
“No, he ran into some trouble with the First Kind. They’re searching for the artifact as well.” Dad slid his hand around the back of his neck and rubbed it.
“Is he alright?” Dad and Levi Miller were old friends and he had been one of the few people who had stood up for Dad when he had been booted from the DS.
“He’s hurt but he’ll be okay. Chloe, I don’t want you to get any ideas.”
And there it was... I knew he had wanted to talk to me about this ever since the battle at the Infinity Library.
“I don’t have any ideas, Dad,” I lied, though not quite since my thoughts were not actually formal ideas... yet.
“I don’t believe that for one minute. Let me handle this. I know you and your friends have your reasons for wanting to deal with it, but you have to leave it to me.”
Dad was beyond right about that. Ms. True, a trusted member of the Societies, had betrayed me and Jess, and almost got our grandmother killed. Caleb Darker, evil personified, had actually killed Nightshade’s girlfriend and then there was my mom who had disappeared, walked out on us, or whatever, ten years ago when I was six.
I still hadn’t told Dad that I had seen her that fateful night in the Infinity Library, when all hell had broken loose, or that she had been the one to help True and Darker escape. I didn’t want to do that to him, to tell him that the woman he loved, my mom, was a traitor. My thought was to find her, talk to her and make things right, but down deep I feared it wouldn’t work out that way and that scared me more than anything.
“Dad, don’t worry about me or my friends. The only plans I have are to go out with Slade tonight.” I smiled and took another bite of my apple trying to keep from looking directly at him since he had the uncanny ability to know when I was lying.
“Fine,” he sighed, seeming relieved and planted a kiss on my forehead. “Don’t get into too much trouble and never forget how much I love you.”
“Love you too, Dad.”
What he really meant was to be careful because there was next to zero chance that I wasn’t going to get involved. Dad left the room and I tossed the rest of my apple in the trash and headed out to meet my friends and see what, if anything, we could do to find out about the Impossible Engineer artifact.
I used a portal to quickly get home, stepping into my attic bedroom at 312 Mission Way Cape May, New Jersey. The DS Manor rested in a dimension that straddled Cape May and San Francisco so it was always a quick hop to get to either place. Let me tell you that since I really came into my powers it is so much easier getting where I need to go and I love every minute of it.
I stripped off my workout clothes and took a quick shower before rifling through my wardrobe to try and find something to wear. I decided on my combat boots, black stretch pants with a skull motif and a short gray skirt. I threw on one of my t-shirts and a hoodie and started brushing out my hair while I grabbed my bag, slinging it over my shoulder, heading for the door. Before I could grab the knob and portal out of there I heard the doorbell ring.
Damn it, I didn’t want to be late again. Slade got annoyed when I showed up late for our dates. He just didn’t understand that my internal clock ran about five minutes behind at all times. I raced downstairs and swung open the front door.
“I’m so glad I caught you.” Val jumped forward, hugging me tightly, her mass of brown curls suffocating me. I patted her back and eased out of her grip. She was wearing her Cape Beanery—our hangout spot—apron under her jacket. She grabbed my hand and pulled me out onto the porch. “You can walk to work with me.”
“Okay,” I sighed as I pulled the door shut behind me. It’s not that I didn’t want to see Val; she had actually become a very good friend. But by walking I would be late yet again even though we were going to the same place. Val had a way of making time slow down.
“What are you and Slade doing tonight?”
“Movies.” I moved my hands over my pouch, checking to make sure my doorknob was there, a nervous habit I had picked up because I never wanted to find myself without it. “You meeting anyone?”
“Maybe?”
“Who?” I knew, everyone knew, and yet it seemed that the two who should know that there was a relationship going on were clueless.
“Maybe Edgar. I texted him earlier, though I haven’t heard back. I figured he might have plans.” She kicked at pebbles as we walked along and I smiled to myself.
“Maybe he’s with Slade? When those two get talking there’s no stopping them,” I suggested, trying to make her feel better about him not replying.
“That’s true.” She seemed to accept that as a good possibility and sighed as we walked along. The weather was turning nice, summer not far off. Before you knew it the streets of Cape May would be crowded with the usual throng of summer visitors, none ever suspecting that the city was home to the oldest secret groups in the history of mankind.
“Have you talked to Jess lately?” Val asked.
“No. I hadn’t talked to her since last week.” She and Nightshade had been spending a lot of time together and I had barely seen him after the battle. Only twice, once at the Beanery and another time at school with Jess, that time he hadn’t even talked to me.
“Jess and Nightshade were at the Beanery last night.”
I wanted to ask a ton of questions but I bit my tongue. Val did think twice, she plowed ahead... bless her.
“They came in together. Jess was nice as usual, though Nightshade barely said anything. They sat at a corner table for hours. A bunch of other people joined them and they stayed until closing. My boss made me tell them they had to leave.”
“I bet that went over well.” I grinned, thinking of Nightshade being
kicked out of the Beanery.
“They were annoyed and a little rude but they left a big tip. Jess seemed happy.” Val chewed nervously at her lower lip. It was obvious that she wanted to tell me something but was not quite sure how to say it.
“Why’s that?” I asked, though not sure if I wanted to hear it.
“She was hanging on Nightshade most of the night and he seemed to be enjoying the attention.”
I bit the inside of my mouth, not wanting to say anything. I mean, why did I care? If my cousin hooked up with Nightshade; it was her business. He was an infuriating and annoying guy who always had to be right about everything.
My mind drifted to the battle at the Infinity Library. It wasn’t hard to recall; it had been burned in my memory, each time I recalled it, it was as if I was living it all over again. I actually felt the energy surging toward me and the thought that I was about to die felt as real as it had that night. Nightshade had jumped in front of me, taking the full blast of Darker’s assault without thought to his life and it had almost killed him. We had never talked about it or the fact that when I thought he was dying I had kissed him. Thinking about it I could still feel his lips against mine, wet with his own blood.
It had all been in the heat of the moment, I told myself. I didn’t truly care for Nightshade, not like I cared for Slade. I felt bad for Nightshade, having lost his girlfriend to the First Kind. I knew that was the reason he had tried to save me. He had been trying to right a wrong and it had nothing to do with him caring for me. And that’s what I had been repeatedly trying to convince myself of since the moment it had happened.
The bells ringing over the Beanery door as it opened snapped me out of my thoughts. Val had let us quietly finish our walk and I was grateful for that. She smiled, gave my hand a squeeze and hurried off to the backroom.
Our regular table was empty—I wasn’t late after all—so I made my way to it and sat down, gazing out the large bay window at the picturesque street. A row of Victorian homes, or painted ladies as they were often called because of their bright colors, lined the block. The street lamps were already lit for the night, casting a gentle glow and giving an old-fashioned charm to the scene.