Aaron Hodges was born in 1989 in the small town of Whakatane, New Zealand. He studied for five years at the University of Auckland, completing a Bachelors of Science in Biology and Geography, and a Masters of Environmental Engineering. After working as an environmental consultant for two years, he grew tired of office work and decided to quit his job in 2014 and see the world. One year later, he published his first novel - Stormwielder - while in Guatemala. Since then, he has honed his skills while travelling through parts of SE Asia, India, North and South America, Turkey and Europe, and now has over a dozen works to his name. Today, his adventures continue...

Rebirth by Aaron Hodges

The United States have fallen. A new power has risen in North America, but now a terrifying virus is spreading across the countryside. Once infected, people change, mutating into superhuman creatures known as the Chead. Wherever they walk, death follows. Desperate to defend its citizens, the government launches the Praegressus Project – an experimental program to enhance the human race.

Elizabeth Flores was just a normal girl – until the Chead slaughtered her parents and made her a fugitive. With winter approaching she seeks refuge in the city of Sacramento, but the hunters are waiting. Abducted off the streets, she's spirited away to a facility deep in the Californian mountains. There, Liz wakes in an iron cage – and she's not alone.

CURATOR'S NOTE

In a grim plague-struck future, the United States has splintered into warring factions. The government of the new Western Allied States enforces draconian laws, all with the support of the people. Anyone even remotely suspect of treason is taken away, and their children are experimented on to enhance the human race. One changed survivor fights back in this gripping dystopian tale. – Dean F. Wilson

 

REVIEWS

  • •"Don't start at night, you'll never sleep."

    – Katie Perry Rogers
  • •"Astounding, outstanding and makes the maze runner series in comparison seem like elementary school games."

    – Aviar Savijon
  • •"LOVED this book. Another winner from Aaron Hodges. His fantasy stuff is amazing, and I'm now a huge fan of his scifi. Great character-building, really got to know them well through the multiple POVs. The story was incredibly engaging, I stayed up late to finish it in one go. Not much violence and no sex. Really fantastic storytelling. If you haven't yet checked our this author's work, I highly recommend it. Five stars."

    – Bibliophiler
 

BOOK PREVIEW

Excerpt

Liz shivered as the air conditioner whirred, sending a blast of icy air in her direction. Wrapping her arms around herself, she closed her eyes and waited for it to pass. The scent of chlorine drifted on the air, its chemical reek setting her head to pounding. Her teeth chattered and she shuddered as the whir of fans died away. Groaning, Liz opened her eyes and returned to studying her surroundings.

Ten minutes ago, she had woken in this thirty-foot room, enclosed by the plain, unadorned concrete walls and floor. A door stood on the opposite wall, a small glass panel revealing a bright hallway beyond. It offered the only escape from the little room, but it might as well have been half a world away. Between Liz and the door stood the wire mesh of her little steel cage.

Shaking, she gripped the wire tight in her fingers and placed her head against it. Silently, she searched the vaults of her memories, struggling to find a cause for her current predicament. But she had no memory of how she had come to be there, lying shivering on the concrete floor of a cage.

She cursed as the blast of the air conditioner returned. Her thin clothes were little better than rags, fine in the warm Californian climate, but completely inadequate for the freezing temperatures the central heating system had apparently been set too. To make matters worse, her boots were gone, along with the blade she kept tucked inside them. Without it she felt naked, exposed inside the tiny cage.

At least I'm not alone, she thought wryly, looking through the wire into the cage beside her.

A young man somewhere around her own eighteen years lay there, still dozing on the concrete floor. His clothes were better kept than her own, though there was a bloodstain on one sleeve. From the quality of the shirt he wore, she guessed he was from the city. His short-cropped brown hair and white skin only served to confirm her suspicions.

With a low groan, the boy began to stir. Idly, she wondered what he would make of the nightmare he was about to awake too.

Liz shivered, not from the cold now, but dread. She cast her eyes around the room one last time, desperate for something, anything, that might offer escape. As a child, her parents had often warned her of what happened to those who drew the government's ire. Though they were never reported, disappearances had been common in her village. Adults, children, even entire families were known to simply disappear overnight. Though few were brave enough to voice their suspicions out loud, everyone knew who had taken them.

It seemed that after two years on the run, those same people had finally caught up with Liz.

The clang of the door as it opened tore Liz from her musings. Looking up, she saw two men push their way past the heavy steel door. They wore matching uniforms of black pants and green shirts, along with the gold-and-red embossed badges of bears that marked them as soldiers. Both carried a rifle slung over one shoulder, and moved with the casual ease of professional killers.

Liz straightened as the men's eyes drifted over to her cage, refusing to show her fear. Even so, she had to suppress a shudder as wide grins split their faces. Scowling, she crossed her arms and stared them down.

"Feisty one, ain't she?" the first said in a strong Californian accent. Shaking his head, he moved past the cages to a panel in the wall.

"Looks like the boy's still asleep," the other commented as he joined the first. "Gonna be a nasty wake-up call."

Together, they pulled open the panel and retrieved a hose. Thick nylon strings encased the outer layer of the hose, and a large steel nozzle was fitted to its end. Dragging it across the room, they pointed it at the sleeping boy and flipped a lever on the nozzle.

Water gushed from the hose and through the wire of the cage to engulf the unconscious young man. A blood-curdling scream echoed off the walls as he seemed to levitate off the floor, and began to thrash against the torrent of water.

Liz bit back laughter as another scream came, half gurgled by the water. The men with the hose showed no such restraint, and their laughter rang through the room. They ignored the young man's strangled cries, holding the water steady until it seemed he could not help but drown in the torrent.

When they finally shut off the water, the boy collapsed to the floor of his cage, gasping for breath. He shuddered, spitting up water, but the men were already moving towards Liz, and she had no more time to consider his predicament.

She raised her hands as the men stopped in front of her cage. "No need for that, boys. I'm already clean, see?" She did a little turn, her cheeks warming as she sensed their eyes on her again.

The men chuckled, but shook their heads. "Sorry girl, boss's orders."

They pulled the lever before Liz could offer any further argument.

Liz gave a strangled shriek as the ice-cold water drove her back against the wire of the cage. She lifted her hands in front of her face, fighting to hold back the water, but it made little difference against the rush. Gasping, she choked as water flooded her throat, and sank to her knees. An icy hand gripped her chest as she inhaled again, turning her back to protect her face. The power of the water forced her up against the wire, and she gripped it hard with her fingers, struggling to hold herself upright.

When the torrent finally ceased, Liz found herself crouched on the ground with her back to the men. She did not turn as a coughing fit shook her body. An awful cold seeped through her bones as she struggled for breath. Water filled her ears and nose, muffling the words of the men until she shook her head to clear it.

Tightening her hold on the wire, Liz used it to pull herself to her feet. Head down, she gave a final cough and faced the room.

The men were already returning the hose to its panel in the wall. They spoke quietly amongst themselves, but fell silent as the hinges of the door squeaked again. Liz looked up as a group of men and women entered the room. There were five in total, three men and two women, and each wore a white lab coat with black pants. Four of them carried electronic tablets, their heads bent over the little screens, while the fifth approached the guards. They straightened as he drew up in front of them, their grins fading.

"Are our latest subjects ready for processing?" the man asked, his voice cool.

One of the guards nodded. "Yes, Doctor Halt. We've just finished hosing them down."

A smile twitched at Halt's lips. "Very good," he dismissed the men with a flick of his hand and turned to face the cages.

Pursing his thin lips, Halt moved closer, pacing around Liz's cage in a slow circle. His eyes did not leave her as he moved, and eventually she was forced to look away. He moved like a predator, his grey eyes studying her like prey, eyeing up which piece of flesh to taste first. Wrapping her arms around herself, Liz fixed her eyes to the concrete and tried to ignore him.

When Liz looked up again, Halt had moved on to studying the young man in the other cage. But her fellow captive was ignoring him. Instead, he stared at the group of doctors, his brow creased with confusion, as though struggling to recall a distant memory.

"You!" the boy shouted suddenly, slamming his hands against the wire. "You were at my house! What am I doing here? What have you done with my mother?" His last words came out as a shriek.

Halt glanced back at the group of doctors. "Doctor Fallow, would you care to explain why the subject knows your face?"

The woman at the head of the group turned beet red. Biting her lip, she replied. "There were complications during his extraction, Halt," her voice came out soft, but Liz sensed her defiance behind them. "I had to enter before the subject was unconscious, or we risked casualties amongst the extraction team."

Halt eyed her for a moment, apparently weighing up her words before he nodded. "Very well." He turned back to the cages. "No matter. Elizabeth Flores, Christopher Sanders, welcome to the Praegressus Facility."

Cold fingers gripped Liz by the throat, silencing her voice. They knew her last name. That meant they knew who she was, where she came from. The last trickle of hope slipped from her heart. It was no mistake she had found herself here.

Christopher was not so easily quelled. "What am I doing here? You can't hold us like his, I know my rights–"

Halt raised a hand and her neighbour fell silent. Moving across, Halt stood outside Christopher's cage and stared through the wire. "Your mother has been charged with treason."

Colour fled the boy's face, turning his white skin a sickly yellow. He swallowed and opened his mouth, but no words came out. Tears crystallised at the corner of his eyes, but he blinked them back before they could fall.

Biting her tongue, Liz watched the two stare at one another. She was impressed by Christopher's resilience. He might speak with an urban accent, but it seemed he possessed more courage than half the boys she'd once known in her boarding school. If his mother had been convicted of treason, it meant death for her and her immediate family. A pass was given for the elderly, but there was no such exception for children…

Swallowing, Liz eyed the group still lingering behind Halt. If that was the reason Christopher was here, she didn't like her chances. She had always guessed the authorities might come after her and had done her best to avoid detection. With cameras on every street corner, she had been forced to keep to the countryside she knew so well. Even then, she had always known it would only be a matter of time before someone found her.

Even so, she wanted to find out how much they really knew about her.