Authors: Jessica Sorensen
and white checkerboard floor.
“Gemma,” Laylen voice was ful of fear. “Please
hurry.”
I opened my eyes and saw that the Death Walkers
were close. The air was slowly descending to a frosty
chil , dotting my skin with goose bumps. I squeezed
my eyes shut.
Concentrate
.
But nothing happened.
Focus
.
Stil nothing.
Fog laced the air as the temperature continued to
plunge. I was in ful panic mode, trying to force us to
leave this awful place. But I just couldn’t do it.
“Gemma.” Alex’s soft voice made me open my
eyes.
His eyes were locked on mine; some of the
brightness had returned to them. “Don’t focus on
them. In fact, pretend they’re not even there.”
I gave him an are-you-crazy look. Pretend that three
ice-death machines weren’t running straight at us.
Alex slid his arm off Laylen and placed a hand on
each side of my face, so I couldn’t turn my head.
“Pretend they’re not there.”
As I stared into his eyes; my heart rate began to
slow, and my nervousness and fear floated away. I felt
a delicate spark, and then I felt myself being yanked.
I thought I’d done it. I thought I’d managed to get us
out of there unharmed, but a set of sub-zero fingers
seized hold of my arm, thrusting a crackle of cold
through my body. I screamed, suspended somewhere
between being in the City of Crystal and traveling
back to Adessa’s. My limbs acted as a tug-a-war
rope, the Death Walker pul ing me one way, and my
Foreseer ability trying to pul me the other. I wasn’t
even sure if I was stil holding onto Laylen and Alex—
my body was too numb from the cold to feel anything.
I let out another scream as the Death Walker jerked
me toward it, and I could see its glowing-yel ow eyes
only inches away from me.
“No!” I yel ed. “No!” It was not going to end up this
way. I would get us out of here. I forced myself to
breath...relax…focus. I tried to ignore the monster that
had a hold of me and mental y pictured Adessa’s
living room. There was a loud
snap
, and then a burst
of images flipped through my mind…the Wyoming
mountains…Adessa’s…desert…snow…lake.
And then…nothing.
The next thing I knew I was laying face first on the
ground, my body sore from head-to-toe. I wondered if
that
snap
I’d heard was my bones breaking from the
Death Walker’s death-grip pul . But as I pushed
myself up, al my limbs seemed to be intact. The only
thing wrong with me was that my arm was tinged a
purplish-blue from where the Death Walker had
grabbed me.
I knew right away I wasn’t in the City of Crystal. It
was too warm for Death Walkers to be nearby. So
that was good, I guess. But I couldn’t see my
surroundings. Everything was al hazy, just like back
when I first started going into visions and the peoples’
faces would be blurred over. But this wasn’t faces; it
was everything. I had no clue where I was.
Somewhere bright…and by the greenish shade the
haze held, I wondered if I could be outside. I could
also make out the faintest orange glow up above me
that had to belong to the sun.
But why couldn’t I see anything? And where were
Alex and Laylen?
I shook my head and blinked my eyes, as if that
might help. But it didn’t.
“Hel o,” I shouted, starting to move through the
haziness, feeling a little bit dizzy and queasy. “Alex!
Laylen!”
Nothing.
“Dammit,” I cursed. What was happening to me?
First I’d gotten stuck in a vision, and now I was, what?
Stuck in between one?
I kept walking, trying to stay calm, but it was hard to
do because I couldn’t tel where I was. In fact,
everything was so out of whack, including my senses,
that for al I knew I could have been flying.
I cal ed out a few more times, but each time I got no
response.
“Okay,” I told myself, “calm down and focus.” I took
a deep breath and tried to focus on my surroundings. I
let me eyes relax and tried not to think of anything
else. Gradual y, bit by bit, things started to shift into
focus…the trees around me…the sky above me…the
lake below me.
The lake!
A spilt second later I was submerged in the cold
water. I kicked and paddled, trying to tear my way
back to the surface, but not knowing how to swim was
making it difficult. Water was seeping into my mouth.
My oxygen was diminishing.
I was going to drown.
And then something remarkable occurred. I felt
someone fold their arms around me and before I
knew it I was breaking through the surface of the
water. The sunlight, trees, and sky had never looked
so lovely in my entire life. Along with Laylen’s bright
blue eyes, which were watching me, as he kept us
both afloat.
“One of these days,” he said breathlessly. “I’m
going to have to teach you how to swim.”
I didn’t say anything because I was too busy
hacking my guts out.
Laylen swam us to shore, and we both col apsed
onto the muddy grass, where we laid on our backs
and stared up at the bright blue sky, the sunlight
stinging at my eyes. After I finished catching my
breath, I rol ed over and looked at the Keepers grey
stone castle soaring off in the distance. My gaze
wandered over to Laylen, lying there on the ground,
his damp hair glistening in the sunlight, beads of
water glittering on his pale skin. If it wouldn’t have
been for him, I might be dead right now—he’d saved
me from drowning.
“Where’s Alex?” I asked him. “Did he make it here
with us?”
“Yeah, he made it.” Laylen squinted against the
sunlight with his arm flopped across his forehead. “I
left him back there,” he pointed behind us, “when I
saw you drowning in the lake. He’s stil a little weak.”
He gave a short pause. “Gemma, what happened
back there? Why did we end up here…were you
thinking about taking us to The Underworld?”
“No,” I said, a little offended he’d think that. “I was
trying to take us back to Adessa’s, but the Death
Walker grabbed hold of my arm,” I raised my arm up
to show him the faint bluish-purple fingerprints that stil
marked my skin. “I kept trying to get us away, but then
there was this
snap
…and I don’t know, a bunch of
different images started flashing through my mind.
Then the next thing I knew I was here, but everything
was al blurry, and I couldn’t see I was on the lake until
it was too late.”
“You were lucky no one had just recently dumped
any summoning ash in there,” Laylen said, glancing at
the lake.
“Summoning ash?” I asked. “What is that?”
“In order for the Water Faeries to come up to the
surface, summoning ash has to be put into the water
first,” he explained.
I nodded as I remembered how I’d seen Stephan
dumping some black ash into the lake before my
mom was dragged away to The Underworld.
“Wait a minute,” I said. “How can you see any of
this? I thought only the vision seer was supposed to
be able to see the surroundings?”
“I have no idea,” Laylen said. “Al I can think of is
that maybe we’re not in a vision, like when we
traveled into the City of Crystal only we just traveled to
somewhere else.”
Strange
. “So why do you think I screwed up getting
us back to Adessa’s?” I asked, picking at the grass.
“Do you think it was because of the Death Walker?”
Before he could answer a shadow cast over us.
Alex stood unsteadily in front of us. “That and
probably because you’ve been using your Foreseer
power too much.”
I squinted up at him, standing there, the sunlight
gleaming behind him. There were shadows under his
eyes, and he stil didn’t have a shirt on. Rounding his
left rib cage was a circle traced by a set of fiery-gold
flames—the Keepers mark.
So that’s where it was.
“I haven’t been using it that much,” I lied, trying hard
not to stare at his shirtless chest. “I think it might have
had something to do with the Death Walker getting a
hold of me…which why were they even there? And
with Nicholas?”
Alex shook his head and sank down on the muddy
grass. “Your guess is as good as mine. I honestly
have no clue what the heck is going on,” he gestured
around us, “with any of this.”
“Wel , it might have something do to with the fact
that Nicholas was tricking us when he said he could
get me into The Underworld.” I sat up and shielded my
eyes from the sun with my hand. “He never even
intended to help me get to The Underworld. In fact,
according to him, he can’t even go there.”
Alex cocked an eyebrow at me. “What do you
mean?”
I sighed and began explaining what had been going
on for the last week while he was trapped in the City
of Crystal, strapped to that awful crystal bal .
One good thing about Alex is that he’s a
somewhat calm person…wel , at least when it comes
to stressful situations. With me…hmm…not so much.
Things that would freak out a normal person barely
upset him. And as I told him about the visions I’d been
going into, he stayed fairly calm. The only thing that
got a rise out of him was when I told him about his
father and the mark—the Mark of Malefiscus.
However, it wasn’t the rise I was expecting. I assumed
he’d get pissed off and insist that there was no way
that his father could have such a mark, but he didn’t.
Instead, he stared out at the water, looking lost. He
was quiet for so long that I began to worry he was
going into a catatonic state.
I gave Laylen a what-should-I-do look.
He shrugged, like he had no idea.
“Alex,” I said, keeping my voice low. “Are you
okay?”
He didn’t answer.
I tried again. “Alex?”
“So this blue sparkling thing you said I was giving to
the Queen,” he said suddenly. “Do you know what
shape it was?”
“Al I could see was that it sparkled,” I told him.
“Then Nicholas pul ed me away and made me take us
back to Adessa’s.”
Alex popped his knuckles, his jaw set tight. “Okay,
wel we need to find out what this blue shiny thing is
before we even try to head down to The Underworld.”
“And we need to get the Ira,” I added.
The waves of the lake rol ed up and back as we sat
on the shore trying to figure out what to do.
“What would the Queen want that’s blue and
sparkly,” I thought aloud.
Unexpectedly, Alex jumped to his feet, a little too
quickly, and he tipped forward. Laylen leapt up and
caught him before he dove head first into the water.
Alex swayed a little before regaining his balance, and
Laylen let him go. It was weird, because before Alex
had left, the two had been fighting.
“I think I might know what it is,” Alex said, gazing
over at the forest.
“You do?” I perked up and got to my feet.
“Yeah, and it’s not too far from us.” He nodded over
at the trees. “It’s over there.”
I looked over at the tal green trees that encircled
the lake. “It’s in the forest?”
He nodded, stumbling as he took a step forward.
“Okay…” I was starting to grow concerned over
Alex’s balancing problem. “Are you sure you’re
okay?”
“Don’t worry about me,” he said, his tone sharp. “I’l
be fine.”
Wel , if he was going to be rude about it, then fine. I
wouldn’t worry about it. Okay, fine, technical y that
wasn’t true.
“Wel , what is this thing?” I asked him as I wiped the
mud off of the back of my legs. “And why do you think
it’s in the trees?”
“It’s something that holds sentimental value to the
Queen.” He staggered off toward the forest like he
was under the influence.
Laylen and I both exchanged a questioning look,
and then we jogged after Alex.
“I stil don’t understand why something that’s
important to the Queen would be out in a forest,” I said
breathlessly to Alex.
“But yet it is,” he said, and sped up. Apparently,
he’d gotten over his weakened state.