Title: Guardians Inc.: The Cypher
Author: Julian Rosado-Machain
Publisher: Julian Rosado-Machain
Pages: 239
Genre: YA Fantasy Adventure
Format: Paperback, Kindle
Purchase at AMAZONAuthor: Julian Rosado-Machain
Publisher: Julian Rosado-Machain
Pages: 239
Genre: YA Fantasy Adventure
Format: Paperback, Kindle
GUARDIANS
INC.: THE CYPHER is two stories in one. A glimpse into a multinational company
that is in reality the oldest of secret societies, one that spans close to
seven thousand years of existence, weaving in and out of history, guiding and
protecting humanity from creatures and forces that most of us believe are only
mythology and fairy tales.
The other is the story of Thomas Byrne, a young man thrust into secrets he shouldn’t be aware of and dangers he shouldn’t face but, that he ultimately will, for he is a Cypher. The only one who can steer humanity’s future.
The ultimate conspiracy theory is that Magic is real. Kept in check by technology but, every five hundred years the balance can shift and, if it does, technology will fail and those creatures we’ve driven into myth will come back with a vengeance.
To protect the present, Guardians Incorporated needs to know the future, and to unlock the future they need a Cypher.
First Chapter:The other is the story of Thomas Byrne, a young man thrust into secrets he shouldn’t be aware of and dangers he shouldn’t face but, that he ultimately will, for he is a Cypher. The only one who can steer humanity’s future.
The ultimate conspiracy theory is that Magic is real. Kept in check by technology but, every five hundred years the balance can shift and, if it does, technology will fail and those creatures we’ve driven into myth will come back with a vengeance.
To protect the present, Guardians Incorporated needs to know the future, and to unlock the future they need a Cypher.
Vice
Principal Killjoy
Thomas
fiddled with his thumbs waiting for his grandfather to emerge from his meeting
with Vice Principal “Killjoy” Khanna.
He hadn’t come up with that
nickname; it was something he had heard since his first day at Oceanic High
School, in Carlsbad, California. It was whispered along the corridors and
classrooms with dread, like a monster under the bed. If you did something
wrong, Killjoy would get you.
Even the adults knew about her infamy. Morning
drop-offs at school were always a chaotic cutthroat race until Killjoy took
command of the school’s entrance. Holding a metal notepad in one hand and a
large coffee mug in the other, Killjoy gained control of the drop-off zone. As
parents cautiously drove through the parking lot, a mere frown stopped those
who wanted to cut in line. A wave of the metal notepad dissuaded those who
wanted to drive into the teacher’s parking lot. Her system was very simple:
students wouldn’t be admitted to school that day if their parents tried to cut
in line. Simple as that.
Killjoy always wore a long
overcoat over a buttoned knitted sweater, even in the summer. Her haters
compared her to a barrel with legs, but many of the girls were jealous of the
wavy black hair that reached her lower back and her thin manicured hands.
Nobody had seen her eyes — she always wore huge sunglasses that covered half
her face — but it was rumored that her eyes were the blackest black.
She was shorter than the average
sophomore girl, so it was easy for her to walk among students undetected during
recess, and she was silent too, like a tiger stalking prey. Someone had found
out that her shoe size was around 12 or 13, but Killjoy wore rubber-soled shoes
and walked in a short step gait.
In those first two weeks, Thomas
had been startled three times by her sudden appearance. Only the first time had
she acknowledged his presence by nodding her head at him, her chin embedding
itself deeply into her large double chin.
That simple nod was enough for an
introduction.
There was a story about how
Killjoy stopped a speeding SUV by standing in front of it and putting her hand
on the grill of the car. The incident happened before Thomas even entered
school, and he knew it must have been an exaggeration, but the story went that
two days later, the family who was driving the SUV moved from the county.
Or so it was rumored.
Parents avoided her, teachers
respected her, and students were completely terrified of her. In a nutshell,
the school was completely under Killjoy’s iron grip. The principal seemed happy
to be just a figurehead, the school ran like clockwork, and there were no
problems between him and Killjoy since Killjoy was always right.
Everyone told Thomas to avoid
her, but he was now on her radar.
Thomas shifted in his seat,
swinging his legs back and forth. He stared at Killjoy’s closed door. He
shivered. This was his first visit to
her office, and since he had just transferred from Ohio, the Killjoy legend hadn’t
really sunk in. A boy from his class had called him a “farm boy” in front of a
group of girls, and although he had let that one slip by, he couldn’t ignore
“hick,” “redneck,” and all the other names that followed. He dropped his
backpack and immediately a ring of onlookers gathered.
The other boy, Roger Hill, was
large and strong, with blond hair and blue eyes. He was three inches taller
than Thomas, and his shoulders were many inches wider. Roger was a linebacker
on the school’s football team.
Thomas was the complete opposite – always on
the skinny side, with black hair and brown eyes. But three years in Tae Kwon Do
earned him a red belt and third place in Ohio’s junior open. Of course, nobody
knew that, and Roger found out the hard way.
Thomas didn’t throw the first
punch; he tried to talk first, but when the punches came he made sure to throw
the last kick, and then the next one, and the next one, as Roger’s teammates
jumped in to help their linebacker. Thomas was in a trance – fighting – and
zooming in on one of Roger’s friends when the circle of onlookers opened and
Killjoy entered the arena.
With a wave of her notepad,
Killjoy dissolved the spectators and assessed the situation. Everyone was
silent. Thomas tried to catch his breath.
“You three,” she said in a thick
Hindu accent, “to the principal.” Then she turned to Thomas and pointed with
her coffee mug. “You, follow me.”
Thomas picked up his backpack and
followed the short, plump woman through the school hallways. All the kids
looked at him with pity; some even waved goodbye.
With a little kick, Killjoy
opened her office door and led Thomas inside. She pointed to a chair across
from her desk and waited for him to sit down before plopping in her chair. She
intertwined her fingers and leaned over her desk, staring at Thomas.
Thomas tried to keep his cool and
held her gaze while he counted in silence. He’d never been prone to get into
trouble. He was never singled out for anything other than for his prowess in
Tae Kwon Do in Ohio.
In Fulton, a town of roughly
eleven thousand people, and a high school with a total two hundred students,
everyone was familiar with each other. They’d actually grown up together. His
old principal, Mr. Blair, had been to barbecues at his home many times. When
someone got into trouble, not only did the parents know about it, within hours,
the whole town heard of the news. And, like it or not, your reputation grew up
with you -- screwing up as a kid, you’d be branded a “bad apple,” and your
reputation would follow you forever.
The switch to Carlsbad, a proper
city between San Diego and L.A., and a school with about three thousand
students, had been difficult. It was harsh and disorienting. It seemed that
everyone was trying to be individuals, trying to do something that would set
them apart from each other. Clothing, attitude, friends, sports. It was all
about who was who. Who did what? And,
who was with whom? Thomas had tried to keep a low profile, but once again, his
prowess in Tae Kwon Do had singled him out.
And now he was sitting in front
of Killjoy.
When he had counted to twenty
Mississippi, Killjoy finally spoke.
“Did you throw the first punch?”
“No, I didn’t.”
“Did you entice the fight in any
way?”
“Entice?”
“E-N-T-I-C-E. Entice,” she
spelled. “To bait, to attract. Did you lure Roger to fight with you?”
“No. They started it.”
“They?”
“Roger and his friends.”
“So you know him?”
“He’s in one of my classes.”
“And you don’t like him.”
“I don’t really know him.”
“You wanted to fight him?”
“No.”
“You wanted to show off in front
of the school? Build a little reputation? Show everyone who’s boss.”
“No.”
“No to which question.”
“No to all of them.”
“Show me your hands.”
Thomas paused, and then extended
his knuckles.
“Palms up,” Killjoy said leaning
forward. He opened his hands and turned up his palms.
Killjoy leaned even closer and
lifted her sunglasses. Her eyes weren’t black but light brown, so clear that
they were almost yellowish and perfectly delineated with a dark line. If she
wasn’t wearing the sunglasses all the time, the girls would surely have another
thing to envy. As she stared at his palms, Thomas began to feel a tingling
sensation. He pulled his hands away.
She leaned back in her chair
drawing in a deep breath. “Are you afraid of me?” she asked as she reached for
her coffee, her nails screeching as she ran them across the mug.
“Should I be?” Thomas asked the
way he had answered all of her other questions, immediately, without thinking.
Yes, she was scary, and she ruled the school
with an iron grip, but in all the stories he’d heard, she was portrayed like a
righteous but level-headed person. He really wanted to believe that he would
get a fair interview with her.
Killjoy smirked. “I ask the same
question to every student that sits in that chair. Ninety-nine percent say
‘yes.’ The other one percent, the bold or stupid, depending on how you want to
look at it, say ‘no.’ You are the first to ask if you should be afraid.”
She turned her computer screen
toward him. “This is your student record. Because of your fight I can suspend
you. I can also try to expel you. I can have all the teachers keep tabs on you
and let me know when you do something that’ll bring you back to this chair. I
could recommend counseling, maybe even a psych evaluation. I could go out of my
way and write some college recommendation letters, the kind that hint that
maybe you wouldn’t be the best candidate for that school. I could do all that,
maybe even a little more. And you know what?”
She stood and filled her coffee
mug with a fresh batch from a machine she kept behind her desk. “It wouldn’t
matter. This…” she pointed at the screen, “is your record, but it isn’t you. It
isn’t what you are or what you can become. No matter what I or anyone else does
to help you or bring you down, only you can decide your future. Success or failure
is in your hands. You understand all of this?”
Thomas nodded.
“Good,” she said sitting
down. “Because most people your age
don’t. That said, the answer is no, you shouldn’t be afraid of me, but you will
respect me while you’re in this school. Are we clear?”
“Very clear.”
“Now get out of my chair and I’ll
call your grandfather. You’ll wait outside and study.” She took a sip of coffee
and turned to the computer screen.
Thomas didn’t know if he needed
to apologize, thank her, or ask her what was going to happen next. He stood up and walked toward the door.
He’d imagined a completely
different outcome from the stories he’d heard. He had actually liked his little
chat with Killjoy except, of course, that she was calling in his grandpa.
Now that was a conversation he
began to dread.
“By the way,” Killjoy said, “for
a red belt, you’re twisting your back leg too much on your Dwi sa gi.”
“Excuse me?”
“Your back stance,” Killjoy said
without looking at him. “If Roger had known a little Tae Kwon Do, or any other
martial art, he would have blocked your side kick and you’d have ended up on
the floor. You need to work on your side-raising kick too.”
It was almost word-for-word what
his Master in Ohio had told him to work on before he left for California.
“Thanks,” he said. “I will.” And
she waved him away with the mug.
Thomas sat down outside of her
office to study, but all he could think about was his chat with Killjoy. How did she know that he practiced Tae Kwon
Do, and how could she have guessed that he was a red belt?
It took Thomas’s grandfather four
hours before he arrived. The school was almost empty when Morgan Byrne entered
through the office doors. Thomas felt the full intensity of his grandfather’s
glare, even behind his thick, coke-bottle glasses. As his grandfather walked
toward him, Thomas felt his body shrink. He had seen that glare before. He
closed his notepad and got ready for the lecture that was sure to come. His
grandfather’s limp was more noticeable when he walked at a brisker pace, and the
way he nodded was an even worse sign of things to come.
Morgan Byrne had big hands, and
at seventy-two he was an imposing man. He still had a full head of hair,
although it had gone completely white. The diabetes and mild arthritis had only
begun to dent his stamina, but he still exercised every morning and tried to
get Thomas to exercise with him as much as he could.
“Tom.” His grandfather lifted a
finger from his clenched fist, but before he could say another word, Killjoy
opened the door to her office.
“Mr. Byrne,” she said extending a
hand. “I’m Vice Principal Khanna. Before you take Thomas home I need to speak
with you.”
Morgan shook Killjoy’s hand,
flashed Thomas a final glare, and disappeared into the office.
Thomas’s guts twisted into a
knot, and he locked his hands in between his knees. He involuntarily began to
rock back and forth. A chat session between Killjoy and Grandpa could very well
mean a whole new level of grounding. He
tried to listen to the conversation through the door, but he only heard muffled
voices.
Grandpa raised his voice, then
Killjoy, then Grandpa again, followed by a long stream of words from
Killjoy. Then a long silence, then…
laughter?
Were they really laughing in
there?
The door flung open. His
grandfather walked out of Killjoy’s office with a smile. He turned and waved at
Killjoy. Thomas stopped rocking and drew in a long breath. His grandfather
didn’t seem as angry as he thought.
But, Thomas’s relief was short-lived as
Grandpa’s smile slowly turned into a grimace.
“To the car, Tom,” his
grandfather snapped. Not another word was spoken until they reached the parking
lot.
“I tried to talk it out first,”
Thomas began when they reached the car.
“Inside.” Morgan opened the door
and closed it very gently. The car was his most prized possession: a black 1959
Chevrolet Impala that had been in and out of his garage only a couple of times
since he’d bought it.
Thomas had heard all the car
stories more than once. It was his grandfather’s pride and joy, his first car,
bought with the labor of his teenage years and his first check from the
Marines. The car that wooed his grandmother; the car his dad first learned to
drive; the car Thomas’s parents used on their first date.
The car had been as special for
his parents as it was for Grandpa and, had they not disappeared, it would
already be theirs.
“I was furious with you, Tom.”
Morgan buckled his seatbelt. “You got into a fight two weeks after I finally
became your legal guardian. Really? Don’t you remember how difficult it was? All
the hurdles and hoops? What would those people at the board say if they knew
about this fight?”
“I tried to talk first, Gramps,
I’m sorry.”
“Well,” his grandfather pursed
his lips and turned on the ignition. “You should be. Let’s go.”
As they drove away, Thomas saw
Killjoy leaving the school and, for a second, he thought she smiled at him.
“So,” Thomas asked once they
pulled out from the school driveway. “We’re good? You’re not mad?”
“Oh no, I said I was furious.”
Grandpa turned on the radio to one of his sixties stations. Bob Dylan was
asking once again how it felt to be a rolling stone. Grandpa immediately joined
in with the rhythm, tapping on the wheel with his hand.
“Until Miss Khanna told me that you beat up
three kids today and…” he slapped the wheel and mouthed the words of the last
chorus.
“And?” Thomas asked. He swallowed a lump in his throat.
“And I told her that three
against one wasn’t my idea of a fair fight, especially since they are older
than you. Aren’t they?”
“Well, yeah. But just by a year.
They’re juniors.”
“Do you go beating up freshmen?”
“No.”
“Well, there you go. You didn’t
start the fight, did you?”
Thomas lifted up his hands. “No,
I swear I didn’t.”
“But you did finish it and I
can’t get mad at you because you defended yourself. I told Miss Khanna that
only cowards gang up on someone and that I expected the parents of those kids
to give us a call to apologize.”
“Really?” Thomas was sure that if
Killjoy called the parents of Roger and company, his social life at school was
over before it even got started. “And what did she say?”
“That you’re suspended for a week
without it going on your permanent record. To keep appearances.” Grandpa turned
the radio dial; The Rolling Stones were
playing Sympathy for the devil.
“Those boys belong to the school’s football team, one is the running
back. He had a big game this weekend that he’s not going to play, and if they
lose and she doesn’t punish you somehow, well, I’m sure you know just how
popular you would have become. Nice going champ. Good way to make friends.”
“But is she calling their parents
or not?” It was great that Killjoy wouldn’t put the fight on his record, but
she could still destroy his social life with that call.
“Of course she will.” Grandpa
parked inside of their garage. “But, to tell their parents that they beat you
up, and that they have extra duties at the school for a month.” He looked at
Thomas and winked. “She also has her Killjoy reputation to keep, you know?”
About the Author
Julian Rosado-Machain has
enjoyed pizza in three continents, worked in graphic design, armored vehicles,
built computers, handcrafted alebrijes and swears that he has seen at least one
ghost.
He lives in San Diego , California .
And enjoys the sun with his wife, three children and cat.
His latest book is the YA
fantasy adventure, Guardians
Inc.: The Cypher.
For More Information
- Visit Julian Rosado-Machain’s website.
- Connect with Julian on Facebook and Goodreads.
- More books
by Julian Rosado-Machain.
- Contact the author here.
My review;
Guardians INC: The Cypher and Guardians: INC: Thundersworld by Julian Rosado- Machain
These are 2 books in this series. Book I and Book 2. This is a great young adult fantasy series. The story lines will keep you interested . This is a great strong novel and has good characters. I loved the world that the author created! I can not wait to read the next in the series. I give these books a 4/5. I was given these books for the purpose of a review and all opinions are my own.
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