Authors: Jessica Sorensen
“Gemma,” she said, not looking happy, but
horrified. “What are you two doing down here.” Her
voice was sharp and it made me cower back. “You
shouldn’t be down here.”
“We came here to save you.” My voice wobbled.
“Wel , you shouldn’t have,” she said sternly. “How
did you even get down here?”
“With an…Ira.”
Her eyes didn’t widen in surprise. In fact, she acted
as if she predicted me to say that. “Wel you have to
leave now.”
Easier said than done. “We would, but…my
Foreseer power isn’t working at the moment.”
She shook her head. “I was hoping that would skip
you.”
What the heck was she talking about? “Huh?”
She started to say something else, but a loud cry,
like an angry cat, screeched from somewhere.
“We have to go.” She rubbed her forehead. “But
how am I supposed to get you out of here?”
“We need to get to water,” Alex told her as he
entered the room. “There’s supposed to be a place
somewhere down here that wil take us up through the
lake. A water route, maybe? Do you know where it
is?”
“We can’t go anywhere.” She frowned. “The Fey wil
make us suffer if we try.”
“The Water Faeries are out for the moment,” Alex
told her in a gentle voice. “So they can’t make you
suffer. But we have to hurry before they wake up.”
She stared at us in confusion, and then suddenly
her eyes lit up. “Oh my God, I completely forgot about
that.” She brushed past Alex and I and ran out into the
tunnel.
Alex and I gave each other a look, and then we
chased after her.
“Mom,” I yel ed. “Where are you going?”
She kept running down the tunnel, her bare feet
thumping against the dirt floor. Another cat-like
screech rang out from somewhere, and Alex and I
sped up our pace and caught up with my mother.
“You forget things sometimes!” she shouted at us
as we ran. “Being down here, it messes with your
mind and sometimes you just forget.”
Forget what? Where the exit was? “But do you
remember where it is now?” I asked.
She nodded, and a burst of adrenaline soared
through me. We ran deeper into the darkness,
weaving and turning through the tunnel. I crossed my
fingers that my mom real y knew where she was
going. The cries and screams seemed to be fil ing the
air more and more, and I worried that the Water
Faeries were waking up. My mother seemed
unbothered by the screams. She just kept running,
and didn’t stop until we entered into the cave with the
rocked-shaped throne that twisted up to the quartz
ceiling.
My mom sprinted over to the throne and circled
around it as she stared up at the ceiling. “When I first
came here, I was told that if you climbed up the back
of the throne it would take you to a place where you
could escape. The problem was, I never had a chance
to get away. And after awhile, I just sort of forgot about
trying.” She stepped up onto the throne and climbed
up the back of it. The twisting shape was like a slide,
which made it hard to climb. But, even though it was
tricky, she managed to make it al the way up with only
a few slips, and then she disappeared through a smal
hole in the ceiling.
I looked at Alex, stunned.
“Alright,” he said, hopping up onto the throne. “Let’s
go.” He reached up and pul ed himself onto the back
of the throne. I fol owed him, but I moved less
graceful y than he did. I even managed to scrape my
knee of the rock more than once. But final y, I was
pul ing myself up into the hole where my mom had
disappeared.
It was dark up there, but there was a faint light
streaming from someplace. A narrow tunnel stretched
out on each side. The floor was muddy and water ran
from the ceiling in sporadic bursts that had already
soaked into my clothes and hair.
“Which way do we go now?” Alex asked my mom.
She glanced to the left, and then to the right. “I think
this way,” she said and stumbled off to the right.
Alex and I ran after her. She seemed sort of dizzy,
weaving from side to side as we sprinted down the
tunnel. The further we went, the brighter the light
became, until final y we were blinded by it.
A second later we stepped out onto a rocky ledge,
and my heart stopped. At the edge of the ledge was a
drop off. The height alone was astonishing, but the
waterfal spewing over the side of the drop off was
what sent my pulse racing the most. Wel that, and the
pool of water with a severe looking undercurrent that
the waterfal poured down into.
Never did it occur to me, during our talk of our water
escape that I would have to dive off a ledge into water
that was probably going to suck me under. Oh and
let’s not forget to mention the most important part. I
couldn’t swim.
“So, what are we supposed to do?” I asked, my
eyes locked on the waterfal . “Just jump. Because I’m
not sure if I can make it.”
“Yeah…” he stared down at the water and then
back at me. “I think—”
A shriek blared down the tunnel and I could now
see them—the Water Faeries. They were stil a ways
away, gliding down the shadowy tunnel like ghosts.
“Crap,” Alex said, grabbing my hand. “Jocelyn, we
need to—”
Before he could finish, my mother, who had been
standing on the ledge, suddenly jumped.
I gasped and ran for the ledge. “Mom!” I couldn’t
see her, only the violent water whirling. “Mom…” I
whispered.
“Gemma.” Alex’s voices yanked me back to him.
“Grab on to me.”
“What?” I shook my head. “No.”
Alex looked my straight in the eyes. “Wrap your
arms around my neck and hang on.”
I wasn’t sure I could do this—jump into the midst of
raging water, when I couldn’t swim.
“I don’t think…” I glanced at the Water Faeries, who
were so close now I could see the bareness in their
eyes. I took a deep breath, summoning every ounce
of strength I had in me, and wrapped my arms around
Alex’s neck, linking my fingers together tightly.
Alex put his arms around my waist and pushed me
so far into him I swear the electricity was going to
weld us together. “Close your eyes,” he said, and I
did, but not before I caught a glimpse of the Water
Faeries about to emerge from the tunnel.
Another loud shriek, and then we dove.
The water tore at me at me from every angle,
cold and rough, violently trying to steal my oxygen. I
tried to hold onto Alex, but the water was making my
hands slip loose. Alex was kicking, trying to break us
free from the undertow. But we just kept getting pul ed
in al different directions.
Eventual y, the water started to settle, and our
bodies became less tangled. He swam us upward,
and final y we broke through. I gasped for air, and so
did Alex. He opened his mouth to say something, but I
was tugged downward by a set of bony fingers that
had snatched hold of my ankle. My hands slipped
from around Alex’s neck, and I was submerged by the
dark water again. I tried to kick the Water Faerie off of
me, but al it did was tighten it’s grip.
And then Alex had my arm. I knew it was him
because of the buzzing. He was pul ing on me, but the
Water Faerie was too. My body felt like it was going
to tear apart. Then, Alex was beside me, underneath
the water. Our bodies tangled together, along with the
Water Faeries. There was a lot of tugging and
spinning, and then suddenly I was no longer being
pul ed down, but whooshing upward and bursting out
of the water.
Alex swam faster than I ever thought was humanly
possible. Especial y while hauling me along with him.
And before I knew it, we were lying on the shore, out
of breath and panting loudly.
“Are you okay?” Alex asked, out of breath.
I coughed up some of the water I swal owed. “Yeah,
I…Wait. Where’s my mom?”
In the snap-of-a-finger, we were both on our feet
and searching. But I couldn’t see her anywhere; the
only thing in sight was the grey stone castle, the tal -
treed forest, and the haunting…Water Faerie fil ed
lake.
“Oh my word,” I breathed.
Alex fol owed my gaze and his jaw nearly hit the
ground.
Across the dark water, the Water Faeries floated.
The sight would have been al uring—they looked like
bal erinas dancing. But knowing what they real y were,
and what they could do, the sight only made a chil
slither down my back.
“They can’t come up here?” I asked. “Right?”
He nodded, but his bright green eyes were stil
locked on the water. “I’ve never seen so many of them
up here before, especial y when no one has
summoned them.”
As I watched the Water Faeries swim around, a
thought abruptly smacked me in the head. “Wait.
What if my mom’s stil in there?” And then I was
running toward the lake, my brain too irrational to
process the consequences if I stepped in.
Luckily Alex grabbed me, and pul ed me back.
“Are you freaking crazy!” he exclaimed, shaking me
by the shoulders, with a look of what could only be
described as terrified. “You can’t go in there.”
It took my brain a second to grasp the severity of
the situation I had just about gotten myself into. “I’m
sorry, but what if she’s in there?”
His harsh expression slipped to a semi-
sympathetic one. “If she is, then there’s nothing we
can do about it.”
“We can go back,” I said, my tone razor sharp. “We
have to save her.”
He shook his head. “There’s no way we’re going
back there after what happened. Now that they know
something’s different about you, they’re going to be al
over you if you even step foot in their world again.”
“So what.” I was trying with al my might to wiggle
my arm free from his grasp. “I don’t care. How do
expect me to just let her stay down there after I saw
how horrible of a place it is.” I could feel the tears
stinging at my eyes. “Let me go!”
“No,” he told me, just standing there, holding on to
my arm, my yanking not even fazing him the slightest
bit.
“Let me go,” I growled.
He shook his head, tightening his grip. “You’re not
thinking clearly right now.”
I stared him down with a determined look. “You
have to let me go. You don’t need to protect me
anymore now that the star’s power is probably not
going to save the world.”
He stared at me with this strangest look. “I think you
—”
Then we heard it. An earsplitting bang that rocketed
through air.
“What the heck was that?” I asked, glancing around
at the trees.
Alex looked over at the castle, and then at the
ground. I fol owed his gaze and saw what he was
looking at. Footprints, printed across the mud, leading
toward the castle.
We took off, tromping through the muddy grass,
and running up the hil , until we reached the door to
the castle. Alex seemed a little uneasy as he turned
the doorknob and creaked the door open. The stale
air immediately surrounded us.
“Does anyone live here?” I whispered as we
stepped inside.
He shook his head and dropped his hand from the
doorknob.
It looked as if no one had been inside the castle for
ages. The banister that guided the stairs had a thick
layer of dust on it and cobwebs ornamented the
ceiling like a haunted house on Hal oween.
Alex went to the bottom of the stairs and glanced
up. Another bang shattered the air and his gaze
darted down the hal , where the noise had come from.
“What if it’s not my mom?” I whispered.
He held up a finger and then crept down the hal . I
stayed behind him, keeping my footsteps light. There
was another loud noise that sounding like glass being
shattered, and then I saw her.
She was in the room where my soul had been
detached; the room with the stone fireplace and tiled
floor. She was standing in the midst of a pile of
broken glass, her bare feet, I’m sure, getting cut by
the sharp edges.
“Mom,” I said softly as I stepped cautiously into the
room.