Authors: Jessica Sorensen
fading from her hands. “There, it’s done.” She turned
to Stephan. “Now what do we do.”
“Now you and Marco wil take her to Afton, just like
we talked about,” Stephan said, seeming pleased.
Umm…How could they not be suspicious of him?
“And you’l make sure she stays this way.
Understood?”
Sophia nodded. “Okay, then.”
As they al gathered to leave, I watched Little
Gemma move robotical y as Sophia guided her out of
the room. I did not fol ow because I didn’t want to
fol ow. I wanted to go back and forget this ever
happened. But deep down I knew only one of these
things was possible.
I closed my eyes and wil ed myself to leave this
place. And before I knew it, I was being yanked back.
My eyes shot open and the first thing I saw was a
dark blue ceiling. Then Laylen’s worried faced
appeared above me.
What just…happened?” He spoke slowly as if he
was too terrified to speak.
I started to sit up, but he put his hand on my
shoulder, pinning me down. “Don’t sit up until we
figure out why you passed out.”
“I didn’t pass out,” I told him. “I went into a vision.”
Laylen’s eyes widened just like I knew they would.
“That’s what happens when you go into vision without
a crystal—you just black out.”
I nodded, and then came the voice.
The most annoying voice ever.
“So you went into a vision?” Nicholas asked.
“Without a crystal.”
“Ah, crap.” I didn’t even bother to say it in my head. I
lifted Laylen’s hand off of my shoulder and sat up,
dizzy and getting a total head rush. I blinked a few
times while I waited for the room to stop spinning.
“Did I hit my head?” I asked Laylen. “When I blacked
out?”
Laylen shook his head. “No, I caught you before you
did. You scared the crap out me, though. One minute
you were talking, and then next you were fal ing out of
the chair.”
“Nice,” I muttered.
“Nice for you,” Laylen teased. “But do you know
how difficult it is to catch fal ing dead weight.”
I shook my head and got to my feet.
“So you can go into visions without a crystal bal ?”
Nicholas asked with intrigued.
Nicholas knowing about this was probably not a
good thing. “No, I used a crystal bal ,” I lied.
“No you didn’t—I’d have known if you had,” he said
with a smirk. “But nice try.”
I rol ed my eyes. “Whatever.”
“So,” Nicholas said, marveling at me as though I
was the most fascinating thing he had ever laid eyes
on. “You can go into a vision without the help of a
crystal…fascinating.”
Even though Alex wasn’t here, I could picture him
giving me a twenty minute lecture about my stupid
mistake of letting Nicholas know about my uncommon
Foreseer ability.
“I guess,” I said, acting like it wasn’t a big deal,
when real y it was since a Foreseer traveling into
visions minus the crystal is a very unheard of—if not
completely unheard—thing.
“How long have you known you could do it?”
Nicholas asked with way too much interest.
I shrugged. “Not too long.”
Nicholas’s golden-eyed gaze practical y burned into
me, not in a bad way, but in a good way. Or should I
say a bad/good way, because the guy had already
shown way too much interest in me, and with the way
he was staring at me, I had a feeling that his interest
way going to increase. A lot.
“Do you know how rare that is?” Nicholas awed at
me.
I gave a shrug “I guess. I mean, Alex said there
might be one other guy that could do it.”
Nicholas’s eyes devoured me. “That other guy is
Dyvinius’s younger brother, who’s been a Foreseer
for a real y long time, and comes from a line of many,
many powerful Foreseers. He isn’t some girl who just
got her Foreseer’s mark only a couple of days ago.
Do you know how unlikely it is for anyone to be able to
do that…you would have to be…” He trailed off.
“Have to be what?” I asked, dying to hear what
came at the end of that. What if Nicholas knew
something about my little gift?
“Very powerful,” he finished.
Wel , crap. Powerful I was. Or at least I had a lot of
power flowing around inside me. But Nicholas was
not supposed to know this.
Play it cool, Gemma.
“Yeah, wel , if I am, then
that’s news to me.”
“Real y,” he said, and I could tel he wasn’t buying it.
“Yeah, real y.” Was al I could think of to say.
“So weren’t you supposed to be bringing back that
Ira crystal bal with you?” Laylen interrupted, in an
effort to sidetrack Nicholas.
“Yeah,” Nicholas said, his eyes stil fixed on me as
he patted the pocket of his jeans “I have it.”
“Wel , shouldn’t you get to work, then.” Laylen was
trying real y hard to direct Nicholas’s attention away
from me and my power, but Nicholas wasn’t having
any part of it. “I mean, I’m sure it’s going to take
awhile to train Gemma, or whatever it is you’re
supposed to be doing.”
“Maybe…” The way Nicholas was looking at me
made me want to crawl under the table and hide.
“Maybe not.”
“Regardless of how long it’l take, I think we should
get started now,” I told Nicholas. The sooner the
better, at least for my mom’s sake.
“Fine,” he said. “Let’s get started.”
I was quickly catching on that Nicholas had the
attention span of a child. We sat down on the living
room floor, al Séance-style, sitting cross-legged,
facing one another, a regular, violet ribbon crystal bal
placed between us as he taught me how to become a
“better Foreseer” and control my seeing ability. But it
was going to take forever because he kept asking me
questions. Questions that I wasn’t sure how to answer.
“Why do you need to go to The Underworld?” he
asked, before we’d real y gotten anywhere with my
training.
“Um…” I hesitated, not sure what to do. Lie.
Probably not, since he was going to end up finding
out when he went down to The Underworld with me.
“To get my mother.”
He nodded. “I met her once. Didn’t she disappear
quite a few years ago?”
“Fourteen years ago,” I said absentmindedly, my
hands hovering over the crystal bal .
“And that’s where she ended up?” Nicholas asked
interestedly. “In The Underworld?”
“Yeah…” I stared down at the violet ribbons,
swirling inside the crystal. “That’s where she ended
up.”
“How?”
Crap. “I…a…I don’t know.”
I worried he would ask more questions, but instead
he picked up the Ira that was sitting on the floor to the
side of us, the moss colored glass sparkling
beautiful y when it hit the light.
“Wel , this should get us there,” Nicholas said,
twisting the Ira in his hands. “Just as long as we can
get you to control your Foreseer power a little bit
better, which shouldn’t be too difficult, considering you
can enter visions without a crystal bal .”
I didn’t say anything.
Nicholas tossed the crystal bal in the air like it was
a basebal . “So who’s your father?”
Good Question. “I’m not sure exactly.”
He raised his eyebrows quizzical y. “You’re not
sure? How’s that possible?”
“When your mother refuses to tel anyone before
she gets trapped in The Underworld,” I replied, with a
smal amount of bitterness because I wished she’d
have told someone. I mean, why did it have to be a
secret? Who was he?
“So for al you know,” Nicholas tossed the crystal
bal in the air again, and it spun so quickly that when
the light kissed it, it looked like a mere reflection.
“Your father could have been some powerful
Foreseer.” He caught the crystal bal in his hands and
let out a dramatic breath. “Your father could be
Dyvinius.”
I pul ed a face. “Ewe. Gross. He’s like sixty.”
Nicholas shrugged, his eyes glinting mischievously.
“You never know. Some girls have a thing for older
guys. I mean how much older is Alex than you.”
I glared at him. “First of al , I don’t have a thing for
Alex. And second of al , he’s only two years older than
me. I don’t think that qualifies him as an ‘older guy.’”
“You know your second reason kind of contradicts
your first. If you didn’t like him then why would it matter
whether two years was a lot or not.”
“I don’t like Alex.” I assured him, but my inner
conscious laughed at me.
“Whatever you say.” Nicholas balanced the crystal
bal on the black and white checkerboard floor. “But I
think you’re lying. And I think two years could be a lot if
you think about it.”
“How do you figure?”
“Wel , for starters he’s not even considered a teen
anymore.”
I rol ed my eyes at the sil iness of his reason. “Wel ,
how old are you?”
“The same age as you,” he replied, being evasive.
Faeries are tricky
. “And how old would that be?” I
asked, playing his game.
He smiled slyly as if he knew what I was up to.
“Eighteen, of course.”
Of course. “Can we just get back to you teaching
me, please?”
He stared at me for a moment with a slightly
irritated expression. “Sure, that is unless you want to
try our kiss again.” When I shook my head, he rol ed
the regular crystal bal —my “training bal ,” as he’d
explained to me earlier—toward me. I scooted back a
little, concerned that if it touched me I would instantly
be pul ed in.
“So, until we can get you going into and out of
visions that you’re intentional y trying to go into,
there’s real y no point in us trying to travel into The
Underworld because it’s one of the most difficult
places to get to,” Nicholas explained, final y getting to
the point. “One false move and we could end up in the
bottom of the lake, where we’d either drown or get
taken to The Underworld by the Water Faeries which
means we’d be prisoners there—we have to go in a
specific way or we’re in trouble. Got it?”
I nodded. “So how does it work, exactly? I mean we
enter The Underworld through that bal .” I nodded at
the moss colored
Ira
Crystal Bal . “Then what? I mean
how do we get the Queen to let my mom go? And how
do we get her to let us go? Wouldn’t we just end up
prisoners as wel ?”
Nicholas shook his head. “No. The Queen can’t
keep us there—it’s the law that comes with using the
Ira—part of the reason the Queen hates it so much.
We can show up whenever we want and leave
whenever we please. Of course, no one real y wants
to show up there.”
Law. I remembered Alex mentioning these laws
once—about him having to let Nicholas take me to the
City of Crystal.
I frowned. “This al sounds kind of difficult.”
“It wil be,” he said, not giving me any amount of
comfort. “It’l take a lot of power and control to pul it
off, and I have no idea how you’re going to get the
Queen to let your mother go.”
Whoa, neither did I. Why hadn’t I thought of this
problem before? I guess I would have to talk to Laylen
about it and hope he knew a way. “Okay, so to
practice for this extremely difficult task we’re going to
try and do, we have to do what exactly? Practice
going into visions through a regular crystal bal ? I
thought Dyvinius said going into visions could shift the
world or something like that.”
“If we don’t see the vision correctly, it could,” he
said. “But we’l have to make sure we do.”
This entire thing sounded so risky, and I wondered
if I was being selfish for taking such a risk to save my
mom. It could end up costing the world a lot if I
messed up. But my mom might have answers that
could save the world from whatever Stephan was
planning. So it was kind of a lose-lose situation.
I stared down at the crystal bal , the violet ribbons
twisting and turning in the sparkling water. “So what
do I do first?”
He tapped his fingers on his lips. “First, I think we
should take a break and get something to eat.”
I stared at him, unblinking. “Take a break and get
something to eat? We haven’t even done anything
yet.”
He considered this with an amused look. “Yes, but I
think it’s important that we eat something before we