Shades of Treason
(An Anomaly Novel, #1)
By Sandy Williams
About the book:
Ash would have given her life to save her teammates.
Instead, they gave their lives to save hers.
Lieutenant Ramie Ashdyn is an anomaly, a person whose genetic makeup makes her stronger and smarter than the average human. She’s pledged her life to protect the Coalition, an alliance of thirteen planetary systems, but when a top secret operation turns bloody, she’s charged with treason and the brutal executions of her teammates.
The Coalition needs the information Ash’s team stole on their last mission, so they send in Commander Rhys “Rest in Peace” Rykus to get it. He’s the man who’s responsible for turning Ash into an elite soldier... and he’s a man who isn’t, never was, and never will be in love with the woman he trained. Or so he tells himself.
Ash wants nothing more than to clear her name and be the woman her former instructor wants her to be, but the enemy who killed her teammates did more than frame her for treason and murder: they telepathically silenced her mind, preventing her from saying anything that might point to the truth about what happened.
Now Ash is trapped and set to be executed, the truth dying with her. Unless she can prove her innocence. But taking that path could destroy the Coalition she’s sworn to preserve and protect...
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Excerpt
Rykus’s
boots stopped inches from her face. He stood there looming like a
behemoth-class warship bearing down on a two-seater small-craft. He’d always
had a talent for making his anomalies feel insignificant. Ash half expected him
to shove her head into the dirt again. Instead, his gaze and the weight of his
last command pressed her down as effectively as a sub-atmo fighter in a steep
climb.
“Why
didn’t you escape when you had the chance?” His hands closed around her wrists,
maneuvering them together over her head.
“Mind
being a bit more gentle, Rip?”
He looped
and twisted the cord around her swollen and bruised skin, probably in a
Caruthian lock-knot, which would be damn hard to break out of. The more she
pulled against it, the tighter it would become.
He yanked
her into a sitting position. The forest spun. She stared at Rykus’s chest until
the world settled.
“Answer my
question, Ashdyn.”
“Ashdyn?”
She laughed. “Don’t get all formal on me, Rip.”
Her gaze
rose from his chest to his eyes, and she cut off her laugh. His expression was
as dark and cold as space, but there was a hint of heat in his gaze, of
galaxies that couldn’t be seen with the naked eye. Rykus had a gravitational
pull as strong as any sun, and she couldn’t resist being pulled in by his flames.
“I should
have escaped,” she said. “I made a mistake.” A huge mistake.
“Wrong
answer.” He jerked her to her feet.
“What do
you want me to say? Sir.”
“The
truth.”
“That is
the truth.”
Rykus
still had himself under control but she didn’t. She was tired, frustrated, and
pissed off at herself, at Rykus, at the whole Coalition. She’d bled for them
all. She’d given up her free will to become a Caruth-trained anomaly, all so
she could protect it. And they believed she was working against it now. Working
with the Sariceans.
“Why did
you stay?” Rykus demanded again.
She pulled
her arm free from his grasp. “I fucking stayed because of you. Sir. Because of
the goddamn loyalty training.”
Invading
her space, he forced her to take a step back. “That training didn’t keep you
from turning against the Coalition. It didn’t keep you from shooting your
teammates and the Obsidian’s crew.”
Anger
creased his face now. It creased Ash’s entire universe.
“Tell me
how many people I killed,” she demanded. “Tell me!”
He opened
his mouth to fling a number in her face, but caught himself. The skin around
his eyes tightened then relaxed. In a voice much quieter than she’d just used,
he said, “Brookins. My XO. You shot him on your way off the Obsidian.”
It took
her a moment to figure out who he was talking about. She’d shot a total of four
people during her escape. Only one of them was likely a fatal wound—the anomaly
who’d very nearly prevented her escape.
“Well,”
Ash said, feeling some of her independence, some of her brazenness return. “If
your XO is dead, he wasn’t a very good anomaly.”
Her
fail-safe stared, unmoving, as the wind picked up, carrying the scent of smoke
and burning vegetation through the air. Her mental clock clicked to five, six
seconds before the rage melted from Rykus’s shoulders. Slowly, he shook his
head.
“Sometimes,
Ash… Sometimes I wish I’d never met you.”
Ash let a
smile spread across her face. “That implies you’re sometimes happy you met me.”
About The Author
Sandy Williams has lived and breathed books all her life. When she was a teen, she was always the first to finish her class assignments so that she could read as much as possible before the bell rang. Her grades didn't suffer (much), and she was able to enroll in Texas A&M University. She didn't sneak in novels there, but her college lecture notes are filled with snippets of stories. After she graduated, she decided to turn those snippets into novels.
Sandy writes books with high-octane action adventure infused with a strong romantic element. She is best known for The Shadow Reader novels, an urban fantasy romance series about a human who can both see and track the fae. When she’s not reading or corralling her twin boys, she enjoys playing EuroGames like Dominion, 7 Wonders, and Agricola.
You can find Sandy at
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This sounds like a promising first in series. Thanks for the introduction and excerpt.
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