Read The Reborn (The Day Eight Series Part 1) Online
Authors: Ray Mazza
Tags: #Technological Fiction
The Reborn
The Day Eight Series Part I
By Ray Mazza
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book, or portions thereof, in any form.
Revision: 1.109
To my wife, Laura, and my wonderful
parents for endlessly nurturing my creativity.
And also to anyone who survives until the brink of the event
described within. May you have the foresight to see it coming
and the serenity to find meaning in its genesis.
Welcome to the First Release of
Day Eight
, Part I
Don’t forget this is only the first part of a
three part novel
. The other books aren’t sequels, they’re the rest of the novel! When you finish this book, you’ll probably want to get the next part.
PS – If you finish this book and thoroughly enjoy it, please recommend it to anyone you know who would also enjoy it. Additional copies can be found on the via this top secret link:
http://www.raymazza.com/novels.html
Dear Reader:
“Some children are born to destitute families and starve their entire lives,” they explained. “Others are born with leukemia or genetic disorders, like cystic fibrosis, and die before they’re your age.”
Ezra simply nodded.
“You, Ezra, are fortunate enough not to have any of these problems. But, like them, you are different; you are challenged. If you are strong, you will be able to accept your uniqueness and grow alongside it. God has a plan for us all, including you, Ezra. Especially you. Will you learn to be strong enough?”
Ezra rubbed her eyes with the palms of her hands, as if making sure she could see the world clearly. When she removed her hands, her sapphire eyes gleamed with a knowing certainty. “I
am
already strong enough,” she asserted.
She was old enough to understand, and to her caretakers’ delight, she had an intelligence unlike any they had witnessed.
By the age of seven, she had a working vocabulary of forty-eight thousand words, nearly double that of a typical college graduate and closing in on Shakespeare’s purported sixty-six thousand. Her favorite word was “ersatz,” although she never used big words around other kids because they made fun of her for it – she would simply pronounce it to herself when alone in a quiet room. She liked the way it sounded, and her name was hidden in its letters.