Authors: Jessica Sorensen
pieces of bone showing through their skin like a
corpse. The sight almost made me gag.
I blinked my eyes a few times, trying to blink us
away, but it didn’t work. “Nicholas
please
,” I begged.
“Take us back.”
Nicholas tapped his finger on his lip, glancing in the
direction of the Death Walkers. “I don’t think so.
Whatever’s scaring you, I think you should face it. It’l
be good practice for when we go to The Underworld.”
I glared at him, my heart thumping in my chest,
which seemed to match the thumping of the Death
Walkers march. The closer they got, the more the fog
twisted around us, spinning in circles, clouding my
vision in a menacing way. Closer, closer, closer they
marched. I held my breath as they went by me, one by
one, glaciating the air with their chil . My breath rose
out in a puff, as my teeth chattered. I held as stil as a
statue, my muscles tensing up when one of the Death
Walker’s shoulders went through mine.
“Gemma,” Nicholas said, oblivious to what was
going on. “What are you doing?”
“Be quiet.” I breathed through my teeth, and then
tried not to freak out when one of the Death Walker’s
glowing eyes landed right on me.
I held my breath until they al had passed and
disappeared around the corner of the street. I didn’t
relax, though. I wouldn’t relax until we got the heck out
of here.
I let out my breath, about to ask if we could go, but I
stopped when I caught sight of someone else
emerging from the building. Stephan. And beside him
was Demetrius. Without even thinking, I jumped
toward Nicholas, bumping my shoulder into his.
He grabbed his shoulder. “What are you—”
“Shhh,” I hissed.
Standing out in the middle of the icy street, I felt
vulnerable with Stephan and Demetrius walking
toward me. Demetrius’s Death-Walker-like cloak
swished behind him, and Stephan, dressed al in
black, held something shiny and silver in his hand…
The Sword of Immortality.
“I wish you wouldn’t carry that around,” Demetrius
said to Stephan. “It makes me nervous.”
“It makes me nervous when I’m not carrying it
around,” Stephan replied. “It’s the one thing that could
end al of this.” He gestured around at the frozen,
desolate street.
“Yes, but who is left to get a hold of it?” Demetrius
asked with a laugh. “The ice kil ed everyone off who
was stil left around.”
“There are a few Keepers around who might try.”
Stephan held up the sword, twisting it in his hand as
he examined it, the jagged blade hitting the light
sharply. “Do you remember when Octavian made this
after the vision was first seen?”
Demetrius laughed. “He was so convinced that if he
created it, I would never be able to pul of what he’d
saw. Too bad for him, he didn’t see you.”
“Wel , that was the doing of my parents.” Stephan
touched the jagged scar on his left cheek. “Thinking if
they cut off the mark, it would change things—change
who I was. But they couldn’t change the blood that
runs through my veins, could they?”
The scar on Stephan cheek was a mark that had
been cut off by his parents? I cringed at the idea, and
then cringed again at the idea of what kind of mark
would make a parent cut their child’s face just to get
rid of it.
Stephan and Demetrius were close to Nicholas and
me now, their footsteps hitting the ice with a dul thud.
“The Mark of Malefiscus is a gift,” Demetrius told
Stephan. “My parents seemed to understand this.”
“Yes, but your parents weren’t Keepers,” Stephan
replied bitterly. “Mine were. And to have a child who
bore the Mark of Malefiscus was a disgrace in their
eyes.”
“Malefiscus’s mark is not a disgrace.” Demetrius
said to Stephan as they walked by us, and I had to
turn so that I could keep my eyes on them. “It’s a gift.
We have been chosen since birth—since before birth
to free him and everyone else who was bound by his
sentencing.”
“And now we have,” Stephan said thoughtful y as he
lightly traced his finger down his scar.
“Yes, and now we have,” Demetrius agreed.
“Gemma,” Nicholas said so abruptly that he scared
the crap out of me and I screamed.
I flung my hand over my mouth, breathing heavily.
And that’s when it happened. Stephan stopped, his
head tilting to the side as he glance over his shoulder.
“Nicholas,” I whispered. “You need to get us out of
here. Right now.”
Nicholas gave me a look, and I could tel
immediately that it was going to be a pain in the butt
to get him to cooperate. “I don’t know about that,” he
said “I think before I do, you should explain to me
what’s got you freaked out.”
I looked at Stephan who seemed to be looking right
at me. Fear pulsated through my body. “I wil , okay,
just as soon as we get back.”
Nicholas dithered, and I wanted to smack him right
across his pretty-boy faerie face. “I don’t know. I kind
of like being out here alone with you.”
“Nicholas,” I shouted. “Get us out of here. Now!”
Glancing over at Stephan, I saw he was walking
toward us, swiftly moving across the ice.
“What are you doing?” Demetrius cal ed out.
Stephan didn’t reply, stil heading at us, as if he knew
we were there. But how could he? It wasn’t how
visions worked.
I grabbed Nicholas by the arm, my eyes pleading.
“There is someone in this vision that I’m pretty sure
can either see or sense that we’re here. And if he can,
then it’s very, very bad.”
I thought he’d argue with me and say that no one in
visions could see the vision seer, but instead, to my
surprise, he grabbed my hand, looking rather anxious.
“Okay, let’s go.”
I casted one last glance at Stephan, who was now
charging at us ful speed with the Sword of Immortality
clutched in his hand. He was so close that I could see
the darkness in his eyes and the roughness of his
scar.
“Nicholas…” I said as Stephan reached out for me.
I opened my mouth to scream and then everything
went black.
“Holy…crap!” I was standing back in Adessa’s
living room, but the fear of what had just happened stil
lingered in my body, and had me gasping for air.
“Who was it?” Nicholas asked quickly and with very
little patience. “Who was in the vision?”He stil had
hold of my hand and I tried to pul it out of his grip, but
he tightened, refusing to let go. “Gemma.” His tone
was a warning as he put a hand on each of my
shoulders and looked me directly in the eyes. “Tel me
who it was that could sense our presence. It’s
important.”
“Why?” I asked. “Why would anyone be able to
sense we were there?”
“Because…” He paused, eyeing me over.
“Because it means the vision has already been seen
or told to the person who is in the vision.”
For some reason this did not surprise me. I knew
Stephan had been told visions of the future and the
world at its end. It was what had started the whole star
thing. A simple vision of the end of the world and how
one star’s energy could save it. Although, that
particular story was probably not accurate, but at one
point I thought it was.
“So…How does that make it so they can sense
me?”
“Because they’ve been told by another Foreseer
that a Foreseer wil be present at that moment. It
wasn’t like he could see you or anything, just that he
could sense you were there.”
“So is it bad?” I asked, my shoulders sliding out
from under his hands as I took a step back. “That he
knew I was there.”
Nicholas shook his head in puzzlement. “What is it
with you…There must be something extraordinary
about you.” He shook his head again, watching me
with intense eyes. “First you can go into visions
without a crystal bal and now you’re going into other
peoples visions…It’s amazing.”
I tried to play cool. “It’s not that amazing.”
“Yes, it is.”
I searched my mind for a way to move off this
subject since my being “extraordinary” or whatever
had to do with the star, which I was supposed to be
keeping a secret from Nicholas.
“I’ve got to go ask Laylen something,” I announced
and started for the doorway.
He caught me by the arm and the smel of lilacs and
rain blasted my nostrils “You didn’t tel me who it
was?”
“Who what was?” I played dumb.
“The person who could sense you in the vision?”
“I…um, don’t know who he was. He was just some
guy” Man, sometimes I could be a real mastermind at
lying.
Not.
Nicholas gave me a doubting look. “You don’t know
who he was?”
I shook my head, and then tugged my arm away
from him. “I have to talk to Laylen,” I said, then bolted
out of the room.
Nicholas didn’t fol ow me, which I thought was
kind of weird. I mean, I had left suspiciously, but for
some reason he stayed in the living room. This was a
good thing, though, because I needed to talk to Laylen
about what had happened. And not just about
Stephan sensing me. No, I was more interested in the
mark Demetrius and Stephan were talking about. And
the name…Malefiscus…I think that’s what they had
said.
I found Laylen alone in his bedroom, lying on the
bed, reading a book. He had his head down; his eyes
glued to the pages.
“Hey,” I said, sounding breathless because I had
run al the way up the stairs.
He looked up from his book. “Hey, what’s….” His
bright blue eyes went huge when he caught sight of
me. “What happened? You look upset.”
I nodded. “Something bad happened when we went
into a vision. And Nicholas is getting suspicious that
there might be something wrong with me?”
“You think he knows about the star’s power?”
Laylen said, setting his book down, and then climbing
off of the bed.
I shook my head. “I don’t think he knows what
exactly it is, just that there’s something…different
about me.” I almost choked on the word “different.”
“Okay, wel , as long as he doesn’t know exactly
what it is, then I think we’re okay.” Laylen paused.
“Although, I’m not real y sure it’s so great that he
knows about your special Foreseer thing.”
I nodded in agreement, but then shook my head,
remembering I had bigger problems to discuss then
Nicholas. “There’s something else I need to tel you
about. It’s what I just saw in the vision.”
Laylen walked over and stood in front of me. “Which
is what?”
I shivered as I remembered the sight of what the
Death Walkers cold had done to a once bright and
sunshine-fil ed city. “The end of the world.”
It got so quiet, I swear, I could hear our hearts
beating. Or at least mine, anyway. I wasn’t sure if
Laylen had a beating heart or not.
“The end of the world,” Laylen said, aghast.
“Covered in ice,” I added with another shiver.
His blue eyes went wider than they already were.
“Then the portal opens up.”
I nervously glanced out into the hal , and then shut
the door. “At least from what I saw, it does”
Laylen went over and sank down on the bed. “So
that’s it then. The portal opens and the world ends.”
I sat down on the bed beside him. “I guess…unless
we change it…somehow.”
“How, though?” Laylen’s eyes were stil wide,
staring off into nothingness. “How are we supposed to
stop something that’s already been seen? It’s not
supposed to work that way.”
“It’s not?” I questioned. “Because I’ve been told for
the last few days that my whole life has been centered
on trying to do just that.”
“Yeah, but are we even sure about that anymore. I
mean, no one knows for sure why Stephan real y
wants the stars power? Or maybe,” Laylen turned to
me, “he doesn’t want it at al . Maybe he’s trying to get
rid of it.”
I tapped my fingers on my knee, thinking. “If he
didn’t want it, though, wouldn’t he of just kil ed me or
something to get rid of it, instead of sending me away
to live with Marco and Sophia? Why keep me alive?
And put al that effort into keeping me unemotional?
What’d be the point?”