The Carolina Variant
July 11th, 2023The Carolina Variant
by Brooke L. French
July 11, 2023 Book Blast
Synopsis:
Tess Oliverâs memory is a killer.
When the lead that could save her law practice is destroyed in a suspicious fire, only her recollection of it remains. Tess can relive memories, but her gift comes at a cost. The last time she used it, she nearly died.
This time, she only takes a peek. A single moment spent in her memory of the defendantâs encoded document gives her a brutal migraine and a phone number.
Luke Broussard answers her call from the wreckage of his downed plane. His charter passenger is dead. And a mutated virus seeps from the manâs broken cargo, making Luke an unknowing carrier. When rescuers take Luke to an Atlanta hospital, the virus comes with him.
Tess follows her lead to Lukeâs bedside, where she finds an instant connection. As they try to outrun a psychopath whoâll stop at nothing to retrieve the document, the city falls apart around them. The code hidden in Tessâs mind may be the only thing that can keep the outbreak contained, but using her gift to decipher it could kill her. If the virus â or whoever engineered it â doesnât get to her first.
Praise for The Carolina Variant:
“Filled with compelling characters fighting not only for their lives, but humanity itself, you wonât be able to put it down.”
~ Jeffrey Jay Levin, author of Watching, Volume 1, The Garden Museum Heist
“The Carolina Variant is a taut thriller that terrifies with a too damned frightenedly plausible story about what happens when a deadly virus escapes. Itâs the kind of book that makes you afraid to turn the page, but you will. You definitely will.”
~ Christopher Amato, author of Shadow Investigation and A Letter from Sicily
“What a ride! The Carolina Variant is Blake Crouchâs Upgrade with the pacing of Foxâs 24.”
~ Cam Torrens, author of STABLE
Book Details:
Genre: Thriller, Medical and Conspiracy
Published by: Black Rose Writing
Publication Date: June 2023
Number of Pages: 347
ISBN: 9781685132187 (ISBN10: 1685132189)
Book Links: Amazon | Barnes & Noble | BookShop.org | Goodreads
Read an excerpt:
Prologue:
September 13, 2018
The girl on the video monitor stared up at the ceiling as blood trickled from her eyes and nose. Her only movement an occasional spasm of coughing.
Nothing unexpected, given the progression of the disease.
Dr. Edmund Haley shut off the overhead fluorescent lights and let himself adjust to the dim glow of the screens lining the back wall of the office. Only the girlâs monitor still played a live feed, but it lit the room well enough.
And, either way, darkness suited him fine.
Heâd spent so much time stuck in this tiny godforsaken place, he couldâve found the desk and computer with his eyes closed. Haley dropped into a chair and adjusted his glasses, trying to ignore the sharp tang of antimicrobial soap that clung to his hands. It smelled like life in the hospital. Like the servitude of medical practice.
He hated it as much now as he had before heâd lost his license. But at least this time, heâd be well paid for his efforts. And soon, it would be over. He refocused on the girlâs image. The only question was when.
Light sliced into the room behind him as Margaret bumbled inside. He made no move to acknowledge the nurse, even as she pulled up a chair beside his. As idiotic as she otherwise seemed to be, sheâd know by now not to bother him. He shifted his attention from the video monitor to the computer, where he pulled up the patientâs chart.
Patient: Octavia MILLS, 18 yo, Af-Am, F, #4
Vitals: 5â5â, 110 lb.
updated (9-10) 108.8 lb.
updated (9-11) 106 lb.
updated (9-12) 104.1 lb.
Provider Notes: Click to open
He scrolled to the section for his notes and, after a click of the mouse, entered the details of that dayâs exam. â9-13-18; Liver and kidney function both continue to decline. Discrete purpuric patches expanding from face and trunk now merging. BSA involvement approximately 80%. Note third spacing.â
The third spacing, a condition where the skin separated from the tissue beneath and filled with blood, was something new. Margaretâs report of it had been the primary reason heâd put himself through the nightmare of protective gear and protocol itâd taken to do a physical exam himself. He wasnât going to let it be said that he hadnât been thorough.
Haley glanced back up at the monitor in time to see a bubble of blood form between Octaviaâs lips. The thing grew with each shallow breath. When it reached the size of a small orange, it burst, splattering more droplets of blood onto her face and neck.
Octavia made no move to wipe them away. Heâd given her enough morphine. She would be long past caring. And, more importantly, the extra dosage meant sheâd finally quit staring out at him with that awful, confused look on her face.
He didnât care. Not really. Except that it had been distracting, and he needed to focus. Needed to understand why was she still alive. What had he missed? Perhaps another round of blood work wouldâ
The blare of an alarm sounded over the video feed and, more faintly, from the hall. Three more followed.
Octaviaâs body spasmed, convulsing again and again as she vomited up a grainy black-red mix of blood and tissue. The progression was as repulsive as it was now familiar. The vomit mixed with the brighter red flowing from her eyes and nose as the virus moved into its final stage. Blood, still unable to clot, flowed until it covered her face and chest. Until the bedsheets were saturated and no longer white.
Octaviaâs muscles tensed, seizing all at once before releasing. Her body too gruesome to look peaceful, even as she finally came to rest.
Neither he nor Margaret moved from their chairs.
The alarms echoed unanswered down the empty hall. Haley clicked off the monitor and most of the noise with it. âThatâs better.â
God knew it had taken long enough. He turned back to the computer, closed Octaviaâs chart, and opened another document saved to the desktop as âSubject Outcomes.â He scrolled down, missing Octaviaâs name the first time, then tapped the cursor back up until he found it. Sheâd been number four of twenty-five subjects, and hers was the last empty field in the column marked TPOI for Total Period of Infection. From the time she had been exposed, it had taken four days for the disease to take its course. At least a full day longer than any other subject.
âAbout fucking time.â He spoke under his breath as he typed the final entry in with one finger. He still didnât know why the girl had survived so long, but it was no matter. By any measure, his work there had been an overwhelming success. Haley pulled off his glasses and tapped them against Margaretâs shoulder. âGet me a copy of the subject files, including all of the relevant video footage.â
Margaret flinched away from him. âYes, doctor.â She pulled a thumb drive from a desk drawer and plugged it into the video system. The system â which had been his idea â had not only allowed them to observe the patients from a safe distance but also recorded the progress of the disease in each subject.
Having such an accurate, time-stamped record of their experiments would be invaluable to his employer. As he had been. Haley cleaned the lenses of his glasses with the edge of his lab coat. Knowing what was coming, it didnât hurt to have insurance. Which was why he had contingency plans stashed in safe deposit boxes across the city. It was a point he would be sure to make when he and his employer spoke.
No matter what, he wouldnât end up like the others.
He pointed to Margaret as she collected the files. âOnce youâre done, wipe the system clean.â
She looked at him, her eyes a question. What happens now?
He didnât bother responding. Some part of her had to know already.
Stupid.
The kind of people who would hire her to do what sheâd done werenât the type to assume money would be enough to keep her quiet. She was a loose end who â unlike him â had no continuing value. Not that what happened to her mattered. And if she hadnât been smart enough to see that going in⊠Well, sheâd as much as made her bed, hadnât she?
He put a layer of steel in his voice. âDo it.â
Margaretâs gaze flicked away. She pressed a few buttons on the keyboard and waited for the computer to comply, removed the thumb drive, and dropped it into his waiting hand.
He turned the small device over in his palm. Amazing that so many lives could be held in such a small device. But then, these lives werenât the kind anyone cared about. Nobodies and throw-aways. The kind of people who would volunteer for a drug trial for pennies and not be missed when they didnât come back. Heâd done the world a service, really.
Haley slipped the thumb drive into a padded envelope, scrawled the address he had memorized at the outset of the project on the front, checked twice to make sure heâd stuck on enough postage, then slid the envelope into his briefcase.
âTake care of that, wonât you?â He tilted his head toward the hallway leading to the patient rooms, where the girlâs body lay waiting.
Margaret didnât look up from the computer. âOf course, sir. Same as with the others.â
Haley tucked the briefcase under his arm, whistling as he left the facility for the last time. With his part done, the rest could finally could begin.
***
Excerpt from The Carolina Variant by Brooke L. French. Copyright 2023 by Brooke L. French. Reproduced with permission from Brooke L. French. All rights reserved.
Author Bio:
Brooke L. French is a recovering lawyer turned author. Her debut novel, Inhuman Acts, came out in 2022, and her second thriller, The Carolina Variant, came out on June, 22 2023. Brooke lives between Atlanta and Carmel, California with her husband and sons.
Catch Up With Brooke L. French:
BrookeLFrench.com
Goodreads
BookBub – @brookelfrench
Instagram – @brookelewisfrench
Facebook – @brooke.l.french
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