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Resurrected: Resurrected Series, #1
Resurrected: Resurrected Series, #1
Resurrected: Resurrected Series, #1
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Resurrected: Resurrected Series, #1

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Awakened from death. Herself but no longer alone in her own body. Two lives merged into one.

A mistake. An aberration. A miracle.

And a company that wants her dead for existing.


When Dietrich’s fiancée, Lottie, is killed in a car accident, he descends into his own personal Hell. But then he runs into her in a café two years later. Claiming she isn’t really Lottie but only possesses some of her memories, the young woman offers him an unbelievable story then disappears.

Using his position as a CIA agent to track her down, Dietrich quickly discovers Lottie remembers far more about her past life than she’d originally let on. But his attempt to learn more about the planet she comes from or the woman she is now is disrupted by a group of men from the company that transports people from their home planet to Earth when they find out about her resurrection and attempt to murder her. 

Because for Lottie, something went wrong, and her existence threatens their entire business on Earth. And Dietrich’s ultimate second chance with the only woman he’s ever loved will be threatened as well.

In the first book of The Resurrected Trilogy, a sci-fi thriller romance series, Dietrich will rediscover a love that not even death could erase. But he’ll also discover just how far this company is willing to go to protect their secrets.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherS. M. Schmitz
Release dateOct 19, 2016
ISBN9781536544169
Resurrected: Resurrected Series, #1

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    Resurrected - S. M. Schmitz

    Prologue

    It should have been raining the day that I died. Rain would have given me an explanation for what happened. It would have given me something tangible to hate besides the man I couldn’t fight, even if it is completely pointless to try to fight the rain. But it hadn’t been raining that day. It had been sunny.

    Clear.

    Beautiful, even.

    It wasn’t too hot yet for Houston, but it was only April and a rare spring cold front had moved drier air into the city so even the humidity was bearable.

    I found myself repeatedly distracted by that impossibly blue sky and kept looking out the window of my office, thinking Lottie would inevitably make some comparison of it to my eyes later, which just made me want to go home so I could see her, even at the risk of listening to her eye analogies. I am almost positive she only did shit like that because she knew I suffered from a complete lack of romanticism and I never knew how to respond, even after all these years.

    I couldn’t focus on work anyway, so I tossed my iPad onto my desk and tried to think of some equally nonsensical analogy for hazel eyes, which was a lot harder because not many things in nature that people want to be compared to are light brown with green flecks scattered throughout. Somehow, I didn’t think she would want to hear that her eyes sparkled like damp Spanish moss.

    I had just crossed through my Spanish moss idea when my boss, a middle-aged man with thinning hair and wire framed glasses that magnified his dark eyes, which most definitely reminded me of the gray-brown mud of South Texas, quietly opened my door and stepped into my office, shutting the door just as quietly behind him. I knew that expression on his face. Gaunt, serious.

    Grave.

    I had seen that look before. Someone was dead.

    I immediately started going through a mental checklist of who was in the field. I stood up and waited for him to tell me who it was.

    Daniel?

    I motioned toward a chair because he hadn’t moved since walking through my door. Daniel glanced at the chair but didn’t budge. He just stood by the closed door, staring somewhere between the empty chair and me.

    Eric, my best friend – ok, my only friend – was in the building. I knew he was safe. But the longer Daniel stood there without speaking, the more I wanted to leap across my desk and beat the words out of him. What the hell did he think he was doing anyway? I tried speaking again, in case I snapped and really did beat the shit out of him.

    Daniel, I’m not your therapist. Talk or get out. I’m busy.

    He finally looked up at me. And that’s when I saw the tears he had been trying to keep from falling trapped behind those thick lashes and pooling around those muddy brown eyes.

    Dietrich, he said, choking on my name.

    God.

    What could have happened to make my asshole of a boss cry in front of me – the same guy who once told me with a smug smirk that the job he was sending me out on was probably going to get me killed but I was German, so he didn’t mind taking the risk? I didn’t bother pointing out that I had moved to the U.S. when I was fourteen and was an American citizen because he already knew that. Just like he knew I was one of the best damn agents on his team and he resented me for that because I hadn’t been born here and spoke with an accent he didn’t like.

    He cleared his throat and wiped sloppily at his eyes.

    Dietrich, he started again, this time speaking so softly I had to sit down. Nobody ever delivered news that wouldn’t completely destroy you in that tone of voice. Your cellphone. Why don’t you have it on?

    I shook my head. I couldn’t even make sense of his question.

    I’m sure it is. It’s… I glanced around my office and remembered tossing it in my gym bag that morning. Oh. It’s probably in my locker.

    My stomach was ice. There was a pounding in my temples that made my head feel like a bomb was about to detonate in there. I couldn’t breathe. My cellphone. My personal cellphone. There was only one person this could be about now.

    Not just one person. The person. The only person this man, once a pathetic abandoned, loveless child, had ever loved.

    My world. My life.

    Lottie.

    It was a question. At least I meant it as a question. I don’t know how it came out. I couldn’t hear my own voice anymore. I was dying. It had started then, even though I didn’t know it at the time. Daniel was talking. What was he saying? He was speaking words, English words, words I should understand, but none of them made any sense.

    My office suddenly seemed both terrifyingly small and overwhelmingly enormous at the same time, both boundless and constrictive, and the names for everything around me vanished. How can I just get him to shut up, just get him to stop saying these words? Can I even walk? How do I walk? And what is he saying? Listen, Dietrich. It’s English. You speak English. Listen.

    …the car… red light… Jamie… driving… so fast… on Kirby… Dietrich?… listening?… Lottie… dead…

    Lottie.

    My world. My life.

    That pounding. It wouldn’t stop. I slowly opened my eyes and realized it wasn’t in my head anymore. Someone was knocking on my door. I knew that knock. Not many people ever knocked on my door, so of course I knew it was Eric. I wanted to ignore him but how could I? He had gone to the hospital morgue with me to identify her body. He had gone to the funeral home with me to pick out a casket. He had talked for me when I had no voice as the funeral home director asked about open caskets and rosaries – and what the hell did that even mean?

    Lottie was Catholic but I had never thought to ask my twenty-five-year-old fiancée if she would ever want people to pray the rosary at her funeral – and why did people even do that? – and if she wanted a mass. Her mother was there, as numb and useless as I was, so Eric had taken charge.

    I don’t even know what kind of funeral my best friend arranged for my dead fiancée. It didn’t matter. I saw her body in the hospital. Lifeless. Cold and broken with deep purple splotches under the paper white skin. I guess, then, that’s when I knew I had actually died. Her chest didn’t move, didn’t allow her lungs to fill with air – so how could I breathe? Her heart didn’t beat, didn’t push blood through her bruised and shattered body. Whatever heart of my own I had discovered the day I met her vanished when her heart stopped beating. My body moved and reacted. But I was dead.

    Eric was still knocking. He knew I was inside. I had to be. We were burying my fiancée today.

    I pushed the blankets off of me and sat up slowly. My head was pounding viciously. Apparently, several days of not sleeping will create one hell of a hangover. The clock told me it was almost 8:00 a.m. Her funeral was at 1:00. And Eric kept rapping at my door. I was pretty sure he would knock the damn thing down soon if I didn’t open it.

    Goddamn, it, Eric, I’m coming. Stop making so much noise.

    I glanced through the peephole, more habit than concern, because honestly, ISIS could have been outside my door at that moment and I wouldn’t have cared. He was holding two garment bags. Our suits. I had a vision of a very different day – the day we were supposed to have – of Eric standing outside my door with those two garment bags, one for me, and one for him as the best man at my wedding.

    I pulled the door open and let him in without saying anything. Without Lottie, I didn’t know how not to be an asshole again.

    Did you get any sleep? he asked.

    I glanced over at him. His usually carefully styled short brown hair was messy and unbrushed. He hadn’t shaved and he had dark circles under his eyes. He looked like shit. God, I probably did look half-dead.

    I sighed. I was too tired to be a smartass about it.

    A little.

    It’s raining, it may not stop...

    He had wanted to say something else but whatever it was, he stumbled, pressed his lips together, and tossed the bags on my couch.

    Now the fucking rain comes.

    Oh.

    What else could I say? Half the time, I couldn’t even remember to speak in English anymore. I sat down on the end of the couch that wasn’t covered in freshly pressed suits and rubbed my eyes and forehead. God, my head hurt… but it was a welcome pain. This physical pain I understood. It was a distraction from the complete hollowness that had swallowed me for the past three days.

    I had tried to stay with her as much as I could. The visitation, the rosary – which I still didn’t understand but her relatives from Louisiana had all come with beaded necklaces in hand, chanting repetitive prayers and I waited for something revelatory to happen, some sort of spiritual awakening, but mostly I just watched with the same detached sense of curiosity I always had when Lottie talked about her Catholic upbringing.

    And then, as people started filing out, wanting to shake my hand, or God forbid, hug me, as they made their way back to their hotel rooms or homes, her mom, Eric, and I had moved back up front, alone with her at last. We sat in silence, except for the aching, strangling cries of a heartbroken mother and Eric’s mysterious occasional sighs and crossing himself. I had known Eric almost as long as I had known Lottie and never knew he was Catholic, too.

    I wasn’t going to leave her, but around 4:00 a.m., Lottie’s mother finally asked us if we could give her a few hours with her daughter alone. And how could we say no? Before leaving, I leaned over her, kissed her forehead – so cold and smooth, like marble – and gently touched the ring on her left hand: that hand, delicate with a few perfectly placed freckles that formed a Bermuda triangle across the back.

    Three freckles, that’s it. Nothing else inside that triangle, like any spot that had tried to emerge from the sun’s daily assault on her pale white skin just vanished inside those three. Her right hand sported scattered freckles, light and hardly visible unless she spent too much time in the sun, but they had covered all of her visible skin with so much makeup, I couldn’t see those tiny freckles I knew were there.

    I knew every spot, every mark, every freckle, and scar on her body. With an eidetic memory, I would have remembered anyway, but this was her body. I didn’t just remember, I knew her scent, her voice, the way her skin felt under my fingers, the way her body reacted and moved closer to me when I touched her. I knew the way she tasted, exactly how she felt when I was inside of her, the way she moved against me. No other woman would ever take her place. I also knew that the day I met her. Eight years later, looking down at this small body, her thin frame with wavy brown hair draped over her shoulders and falling loosely over her chest, I was even more certain now that no woman could take her place.

    Eric had sat down in the armchair next to the sofa and rested his head in his hands. I doubt he had slept at all. I called Cathy for you.

    Cathy was Lottie’s mother.

    Shit.

    Never even had the chance to be a real son-in-law, and I was still a terrible one.

    She wants us to go to the hotel and bring her clothes and makeup to the funeral home. She won’t leave, Eric said.

    I nodded and my head protested. We should go then.

    Getting dressed for the love of your life’s funeral is probably as close as anyone can get to having an out of body experience. I had to pick out a dress shirt and a tie, but I don’t remember doing either of those things. As I slipped my feet into my newly polished black dress shoes, I caught a quick reflection of myself in the mirror. My stomach lurched from a memory of Lottie teasing me about being a poster-child for good Aryan breeding. Somebody had brushed my light blonde hair. Apparently, I had shaved. Those dark under-eye circles didn’t seem quite as bad as I had imagined but against my pale, north German complexion, they looked like perfect purple semicircles.

    And somehow, I was dressed. Thirty minutes had passed and I was standing in our – in my – bedroom, getting ready to bury the only part of my life that had ever made it worth living.

    Eric was waiting in the living room. He had shaved and combed his hair but still looked like shit. I probably still did, too. After all, doesn’t having one’s heart torn apart kind of mean your days of not looking like shit are over?

    I felt like I should say something to him. Some kind of thank you. Some, Hey, not only do I literally trust you with my life – which is really saying something, because most of our colleagues are a bunch of incompetent jackasses – but you are obviously a hell of a lot more capable than I am of doing… the kind of stuff best friends should do but we both know I’d fail miserably at. I don’t think Hallmark makes a card for that.

    Instead, I croaked out, Eric…

    God, I am the most asocial asshole on the planet.

    But Eric knew me well enough to know that, and he knew I would have no clue what to say to him.

    I loved her, too, Dietrich. She was my friend. And you were different around her. Hardly anyone at work ever got to see that, except maybe Daniel. They joke about you being a cold, indifferent asshole, but they never got to see the way you were when you and Lottie were together. How… normal you really are.

    Was.

    I didn’t mean to say it so quickly. I may not like people in general, but I know how to read between the lines; he was trying to tell me he was worried he was going to lose his best friend, too. And after all he had done for me, I didn’t have the decency not to shatter that hope until after this goddamn day was over.

    The rain had finally stopped by the time we were gathered at the cemetery. I watched in detached numbness as the priest said a few more prayers, handed a small silver crucifix to Cathy, and tried to offer words of comfort… something about Heaven, maybe. Probably. I mean, he’s a priest and it was a funeral. I’m sure he mentioned Heaven somewhere in there.

    But words just floated past me. My eyes were fixed on the cerulean casket in front of me. Eric later told me he had picked that one out because she would have chosen it for the color – it was the color of my eyes. At the time, I only saw it as blue. A smooth, blue rectangle with silver bars running along the sides for the pallbearers.

    She was in there. As soon as we left, they would lower her into the ground and cover her with dirt. I had the crazy idea that if I just stayed under the avocado green canopy, I could keep her out of the ground forever. I could stay with her forever.

    Suddenly, I felt Eric gently pulling on my arm. He was standing. We were alone, except for the priest and the cemetery crew, waiting a respectful distance away from us, but waiting for us to leave so they could finish their jobs and go home. Probably to their own wives or fiancées or girlfriends. Maybe their kids, too. Lottie had always wanted kids. She made sure I knew that before the first time we slept together... just in case. We were seventeen.

    I looked up at Eric, bewildered. The sun was much lower in the sky than I expected it to be. How much time had passed? How long had they been waiting for me?

    The priest moved into the seat beside me.

    Damn it.

    He was going to try to save my Hell-bound, atheistic soul and I was finally going to lose it. I was pretty sure Eric wouldn’t approve of me killing a priest, considering I’d just learned he was Catholic and all.

    Dietrich, the priest’s voice was soft but not in the same, I’m-about-to-fuck-up-your-world kind of way that Daniel’s soft tone of voice was.

    He knew my name. I couldn’t recall his – I hadn’t paid attention to most of the service. I’m sure it started with Father.

    You’re both so young. I honestly can’t even imagine the pain of this kind of loss. I have the names of some grief counselors if you’d ever like to talk to someone.

    It took me a minute to understand he wasn’t talking religion to me. I saw him for the first time – I mean really saw him. I took in his short, round body and equally round face, his receding hairline and eyes so dark they were almost black. But what was that behind those dark eyes? Compassion? Sadness? Kindness?

    Great. Now I was going to have to give up mocking priests.

    I shook my head.

    Thank you. We’ll go.

    I stood and reached out to touch her casket one last time; the sun had warmed it so that it felt more like an incubator rather than a tomb. I couldn’t stay with her forever. It was time for me to go.

    I glanced up, where the rain clouds had mostly drifted eastward and the brilliant blue Texas sky broke through the gray. The rain was moving on to Louisiana. And my afterlife had just begun.

    Chapter 1

    Two Years Later

    D ietrich , I swear to God, Eric warned, if you make me go into that room and I see any detached body parts or skin suits, I’m kicking your ass.

    I crossed my arms and scowled back at him. "You would try to kick my ass, I countered. And you made me round those guys up in Cairo. It’s only fair."

    That house in Cairo didn’t smell like this, Eric mumbled.

    I shrugged, but honestly, I completely agreed with him. We’d been arguing about which one of us should go into this bedroom for almost fifteen minutes. We knew the only people who had lived here were already dead or in our custody, but something wasn’t right here. And neither of us wanted to find out what was so wrong.

    It’s probably not as bad as you’re imagining, I lied. And besides. You’ve been doing this longer than me. You’ve already seen the worst of humanity. What’s a little more trauma?

    Eric flipped me off then scowled at the closed door again.

    I’ll make you an offer, he said. "If I go in there, you go to the sports bar with me tonight to catch the LSU game instead of watching it at your apartment. And no moping."

    I don’t mope, I muttered.

    "You always mope," Eric argued.

    I sighed and gestured toward the closed door. "Fine. I won’t even mention her. But only if you don’t mention what you find in there."

    Eric threw his hands in the air and sighed back at me. I have to! You have to sign off on the report with me, dumbass!

    I smiled at him then headed toward the front door. I’ll skip this part.

    He was still cursing at me as I closed the door behind me.

    I sank into the passenger seat of the car we were using as we finished the investigation of a possible terrorist cell in a suburb of Houston. I rubbed my eyes and yawned. We’d be finished in plenty of time to catch the LSU baseball game, but as always, I didn’t want to go out. And as always, Eric already knew that.

    He’d stopped letting me stay holed up in my apartment over a year and a half ago.

    Not much had changed there since Lottie died. I couldn’t bring myself to getting rid of any of her things. Right after the funeral, I had let her mother go through it to find the vestiges of her childhood. Boxes of awards and certificates and graduation gowns went back to Louisiana with a few yearbooks and some of Lottie’s favorite movies. But mostly, there was nothing in my apartment that could give Cathy Theriot her daughter back, and she had left Houston begging me to still come for Easter. I had promised her I would. Cathy had lost her husband a few years before and Lottie was an only child. If she wanted me to drive to Alexandria for every single holiday, I would.

    But about a year after Lottie died, Cathy remarried, and our phone calls became fewer and farther between. I was just the man who was still in love with her daughter’s ghost. She kept telling me I would eventually move on, too. I knew that I never would.

    Eric never brought it up. He knew me well enough to know I couldn’t move on, that some wounds never healed. And he knew I was only alive because of him.

    And so, for two years, I had kept everything as it was. Her clothes still hung on her side of the closet; her shoes still lined the floor; her books were everywhere around me; her music was still on my iPod. I wouldn’t delete her from my life.

    She

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