Synergy (6 page)

Read Synergy Online

Authors: Jamie Magee

Tags: #General Fiction

BOOK: Synergy
4.21Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Why? Why do I not have to look for it?” I asked Silas.

“Because it’s coming right at you. You can’t stop it. All you have to do is survive it, and it’s my job to make sure you do.”

“Why is it your job?” I asked sarcastically.

“Because I never break a promise,” he said as
he
leaned in and forced his lips against mine.

At that moment, my mind was invaded. Sharp images that would shift and overlap came to me, and I heard myself say ‘Promise’ to him over and over
again. As I saw him nod and pull
me closer, I tried to see when this was, how it was a catalyst for what was happening now, but all I could see was a sky filled with stars, sand on my feet, but no salt in the air.

Silas pulled away and said, “Go home,” then he vanished.

“Well, that was interesting,” Madison said, relaxing into her seat.

“Is that what you call it?” I mumbled.

“He’s not what I thought he would be.”

“What do you mean?”

“I don’t know...with that peaceful emotion you described, I kind of expected him to be the opposite of Draven.”

I angled my eyes at her to judge her words carefully.

“But he’s just like him. O
nly apparently, he’s not alive. Did you leave that part out?”

“I didn’t know that part. I don’t know what he is,” I said under my breath.

“Some kind of warrior.”

I felt a sick feeling absorb my stomach as I imagined Silas doing what I saw him do to those men to
my
Draven. “Would you believe me if I told you that I could do that before? In another life?”

“Would you believe me if I told you I could do it, too?” she said, raising one eyebrow.

“You remember that? Past lives?”

“I don’t know if I remember that or not. I swear
, the more time we spend in The R
ealm, the more it messes with my mind. I remember things all the time, but it could be that I think I do because Britain described me vividly in a past life. Apparently, that’s what I was doing to him long ago, but something stopped me.”

“What do you think that was?”

“The same thing that’s stopping me now, stopping you.”

I took in a deep breath. “Do you love him?”

She was quiet for a moment as her eyes gazed into nothing. “I have empathy for him. He doesn’t want to b
e who he is. He chose to be an E
scort because he doesn’t want to be lost i
n The
R
ealm. Britain wants to overcome who he is, not take control of that place like Bianca.”

“Is that what he told you?”
I asked with disdain.

“Why are you
anti-Team Britain all of a sudden? If anything, you should be cheering him on. I told you, if he figures this out, with what he knows I could help you help Draven fight it, too.”

“I just want to make sure you’re with
the person you want to be with.
Not
with him to help me. You should be with who’s calling your heart.”

“No one is calling my heart. I told you
before;
I will not be anyone’s second choice. What’s going on with Britain and I now is right
for right
now, but I can’t tell you it will be tomorrow. Besides, my love life isn’t what’s causing all the turmoil right now.”

I smirked at the irony in her words and tried once again to just tell her that the boy was real. Not only was he real, he was in the arms of Bianca at that moment.

As I opened my mouth, she spoke. “So what is this about Bianca having our way out? Did you forget to tell me something?”

“I might have had a chance to tell you if you hadn’t decided to chase after some bird.”

“Fine, I was wrong. I admit that -
-
and that’s hard for a Scorpio. Can we move on now? What’s going on?”

I took in her inquisitive eyes, and what they were hiding. Her insecurity. She wasn’t ready to hear this.
“Draven saw something last night: they followed Bianca and watched her take two guys; we think Landen was one of them.”

“Who was the other?”

I hesitated for what seemed like countless minutes. “I think he’s some kind of prince or something, maybe even a king. The world is dark. If she gets control over that...I don’t know what can happen.”

“What do you want to bet Landen is like us, light? Why would she have light and darkness?”

“Collateral damage, I guess. She was after the prince. She took him first.”

“He could have been bait for the other one.”

“I don’t know,” I mumbled.

“If you’re right, I bet that Willow girl is near crazy at this point.”

Nope. She wasn’t ready to hear this.
I put the car in drive. “Let’s go get Monroe, see if she knows anything. Then maybe we can go to Chara and see if Willow’s there, if anyone knows anything
-
- if they’re even missing.”

When Madison didn’t respond, I looked to my side to see her staring forward. Her pupils had expanded; she was seeing, and I had no doubt she was in Chara. I thought about following her, but I couldn’t make myself. I wanted her to see this on her own. I wanted that little boy Preston to show her Esterious, show her that prince. I didn’t want to be around when she finally figured this out.

A second later, her eyes focused. “No one’s home there.”

“You knocked on the door?”

“I looked in the windows. No one’s in sight, not even that little boy. Maybe it’s not them she took.”

“If she did take them, more than likely they’re in that Esterious dimension.”

“Want to see your way there?” Madison asked, tilting her head, daring me to do so in front of her.

I moved my head from side to side as I pulled out on the main road. “Not alone. I told you it was wicked there.”

“It can’t be any more w
icked than what we see in The
R
ealm.”

“You really want to go there? You want to see?” I said shortly.

“No.”

“Then why are you pushing me to show you? Making me feel guilty?”

“Because something’s eating away at you, and I want to help you with it.”

I squinted my eyes, then sighed. “I just don’t want you to hate me when you go there.”

“I could never hate you. You know that. What’s going on?”

I glanced at her. “I just think this isn’t all about me - and when you figure that out, you’re going to be mad.”

“Charlie!” she screamed as she braced her arms in front of her.

I slammed on my brakes before my eyes ever had the chance to look forward. We were almost out of town, near the corner of the last block, and I didn’t see anything, any reason for her to freak out like that.

“What?!”

Madison eyes were wide with fear. “You almost hit her!”

“Who?!” I asked, looking around. There wasn’t anyone near us.

“Pull over,” Madison said, pointing to the side of the road.

I turned the wheel and moved my car to the curb, but Madison was out of the car before I even stopped. I threw the car in park and chased after her as she ran around the corner of the last building on the block. When I reached her, there was no one there but her.

“Have you lost your mind? I didn’t hit anyone. I only glanced away for a second.”

Madison’s hands were running through her long dark hair. “I saw her. She was older. She had on a long black pea coat, silver hair.”

“Nobody’s here. Come on, let’s go,” I said, wanting to go home now - the faster the better. Something wasn’t right about today.

Right as we turned, the woman was there, staring deep into Madison’s green eyes. She was older, and her silver hair was pulled into a neat twist behind her head. On her neck she wore a silver necklace with a pentagram charm. The aroma of sage lingered heavily around her.

“You have been called,” the woman said to Madison.

“Excuse me?” Madison said as her eyes raced over the woman.

“The Goddess of Mother Nature has called for
you. The G
reat Witch has sent me to tell you to come.”

“The goddess? The G
reat W
itch? Lady, are you OK? Did we hit you and not know it?” Madison asked.

The woman stepped forward and reached for
Madison’s hand. “Fear not. No w
itch brings harm. You are called by a great power. You will be protected.” The woman then looked down at Madison’s hand and closed something within it before turning and stepping around the corner.

I rushed after her, but when I reached the corner she was gone. I looked down each side of the street, within each car; she was nowhere to be seen. I ran back to Madison and found her frozen in place. Her eyes were wide as they stared into thin air.

“Madison, what did she give you? Is it hurting you?!” I asked as I unclenched her hand; there, I found a necklace like what the woman was wearing, a pentagram within a circle.

“I-I need paper,” Madison stuttered as she pushed past me. She climbed in the passenger seat of my car and pulled a sketch pad out of her bag. I sighed as I climbed in the driver’s seat. I kept looking all around for that woman, but she was nowhere to be seen.

My attention moved to Madison. Her hand was flying across her pad, and the images were nothing less than alarming.

Chapter Four

 

At first I thought it was a Zodiac wheel, but as she drew and sketched out words in another language, the image grew darker. A Scorpion was in the center of a pentagram, and circles were all around it. When she was done with that image, she began to draw herself, but the image was ragged. Her hair was
tangled;
her eyes were bloodshot and swollen. Around her neck was a medallion; it was
a
sun with a crescent moon within it, and she shadowed in the area around the moon, making it look like black glass.

She turned the page and began to sketch the most elaborate image of an angel I’d ever seen. It wasn’t a good angel, though; it was more like a demon. The face was just as perfect as the men we’d watched die, but there was an anger in its eyes. Its wings expanded across the page with utter detail; she made them look like ash.

My heart began to race as she sketched other images: ours. A light was reaching for Monroe as the rest of us tried to protect her.

She turned the page frantically and sketched another image, an Ankh, and beneat
h it she wrote the world ‘love.’
Then beneath that she drew a body of a faceless girl.  The girl looked dead, and blood was pooling from around her. 

“Madison! Madison, stop!”
I yelled. “You’re acting like you’re possessed – what’s going on? Where are these images coming from?”

“When she touched me, I saw them,” Madison said as she let her pen fall.

“What do they mean? Who is that faceless girl?!”

She ignored me and turned the page back to the first image she’d drawn with the Scorpion. “This is the devil’s trap. I’ve seen it in those books.”

“So what was she saying to trap him? Is that angel him – Monroe’s dad?!”

“I don’t know,” Madison said as her eyes gazed forward into her memory.

“I told you this wasn’t all about me. Do you know what made you so upset in that image? Why were you crying like that?”

“I don’t know,” she said under her breath. “It didn’t feel like it was me.”

“What do you mean?”

“I felt mad, not sad.”

This was so not good.
“Look, that lady was just messing with you. No one besides Austin is coming for us, and if they were, we have Silas. Mother Nature – seriously?”

“I don’t think she was crazy. She was channeling somebody.”

“Channeling?”

“Like what Monroe does. She couldn’t tell me what she knew, so she had to show me...the weather was violent around most of these images...that must be what she meant.”

My phone vibrated on my hip at that moment, causing me to jump. I reached for it with shaky hands to see Kara’s number on the Caller ID. I took in a deep breath and answered as calmly as I could. I didn’t want her to cancel her plans for the weekend; I wanted her to have fun.

“Hey,” I said as I answered.

“Hey. I was about to leave, but I didn’t want to leave Monroe here alone. Do you want me to take her to Nana’s on my way out?” Kara asked.

“No, I’m like ten minutes away.”

“Are you? OK. You sound out of breath,” she said in a concerned tone.

“Just ran longer today.”

“Alright. Well, I’ll leave then. Make sure you tell me or Mom if you guys go anywhere.”

I knew that ‘anywhere’ didn’t mean like to a movie or anything; she meant if I left for good.

“I’ll never be too far to see you, Kara. Promise.”

Other books

Fury by Koren Zailckas
The Waterproof Bible by Andrew Kaufman
Barefoot Pirate by Sherwood Smith
Tragic Magic by Laura Childs
Wicked Ride by Sawyer Bennett
Murder in Misery (Spook Squad) by Broome, Ashley K
Boxcar Children 61 - Growling Bear Mystery by Warner, Gertrude Chandler, Charles Tang
Nowhere to Go by Casey Watson