TIED (A Fire Born Novel) (9 page)

Read TIED (A Fire Born Novel) Online

Authors: Laney McMann

Tags: #Heart, #young adult, #Normal, #illusion, #paranormal romance, #answers, #fiction, #nightmares, #curse, #supernatural, #demons, #truth, #hallucinations, #delusions, #Urban Fantasy, #legend, #destruction

BOOK: TIED (A Fire Born Novel)
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“Thanks. I’ll see you tomorrow.” I trudged up the aisle toward the double doors. The light from the fading sun peeked through the cracks, leading me to the top. I swung open the doors and my eyes watered and stung as the full flood of sunlight hit me like a slap in the face. I stumbled through the silent lobby, reaching blindly for the glass doors leading to the sidewalk.

“Layla?”

I screamed, wheeling in the direction of Max’s voice.

“What’s wrong with you?” He rushed forward, his voice laced in terror, and grabbed my outstretched arm.

“It’s bright as heck in here. I couldn’t see, and you scared me to death! What’re you doing lurking around?” What was he doing hanging around in the deserted lobby anyway?

“I’m not
lurking
anywhere.” He gave me an incredulous look. “I’ve been waiting for you. I got here a little earlier than I’d planned, so I watched the last part of your rehearsal.”

Who could be mad at that sincere face?

“You’re very good, by the way.”

“Oh … thank you.”

“You’re welcome.” He glanced toward the door as though he thought I wanted him to leave.

“I’m sorry about yesterday, too. I don’t know what’s going on with me.” I wasn’t sure what to say. The connection that was so apparent between us wasn’t something I could ignore. It was Max, not some random crush. He mattered.

“Sorry for what?” He held the door open and followed me outside and onto the sidewalk.

“I finally got you back. I don’t want to jeopardize that or mess anything up.” Maybe he had no idea what I was even talking about.

His cheeks flushed. “Of course I know what you’re talking about.” He grinned and glanced away. “You’re not jeopardizing anything.”

“Can you stop doing that please?”

“Doing what?”

“Listening to my thoughts, or whatever.” It was bad enough I couldn’t think clearly on my own. I didn’t need him eavesdropping on my brain and regurgitating it back to me.

“It’s kind of automatic.” He shrugged. “I hear you like you’re talking out loud. I’ll try not to listen.”

“Okay,” I said, playing along. “Why can’t I hear you?”

“You can. You’re just choosing when somehow. You heard me the other night at the restaurant.”

I raised an eyebrow.

“So …” He dragged a hand through his hair. “I thought maybe we could go visit my Grandmother today? If you’re up to it.”

“Your Grandmother?” My brow creased.

“She’s been dying to see you.” He caught my hand in his and swung it back and forth, smiling, like we were kids again.
Coercion.

“Because?”

“She hasn’t seen you since you were little.”

I had no clue how to respond.

“Please. It will be painless, I promise.” The corner of his mouth curved up in a pleading grin as he swung our arms higher.

I laughed, giving in. “Sure.”
How bad could it be?

“Ride with me?” He lifted my dance bag off my shoulder and slipped it over his own, leading us into the emptying parking lot, where his black VW Toureg sat parked beside my beat-up car in the only spot that wasn’t shaded by hovering oak trees. He tossed my bag into the backseat, holding my door open. “I didn’t mean to throw you off before,” he said.

“I know. Sorry I freaked out.”

“You have reason.”

“Yeah, about that …”

“Later.”

We drove down a winding street, in the historic district, canopied in live oaks. Ivy twisted around trellises, and boxwoods lined entryways in manicured perfection around the meticulously maintained homes. Crawling white jasmine and purple wisteria perfumed the air and draped the front porch of Max’s grandmother’s late eighteenth century house.

An elderly woman with white hair sat on the back porch swing overlooking an immense garden of red roses and glossy green ligustrums.

“Hello, Grandmother.” Max’s formal tone had me gazing up at him.

“Ah, my child.” She held out her arms, embraced him and kissed his cheek. “Who is this you have brought to see me?” Her heavy accent tugged at the recesses of my memory. It was one I’d heard from somewhere but couldn’t place.

She peered around him. I waved in an awkward way.

“This is the girl?”

“Hi, Ms. MacLarnon, it’s … nice to see you.” I smiled, unsure what to say someone I didn’t remember.

Her eyebrows squeezed together, and she rose and ambled forward with hesitant steps, most of her weight leaning on her left side. I was afraid she’d tip over, fall off the porch and into the garden.

“Come closer my child. My vision is not what it used to be.”

I advanced a little.

She held out her hands and cradled my face with a cool and gentle touch. A quick nod, and a knowing smile spread across her elderly wrinkled face, as she patted me on the hand.

“Yes … I see. You
are
Lorelei’s child, Teine.” She nodded again. “Many years have passed, since I last saw you. I was afraid I may not recognize you.”

“You know my mother?” Skepticism leached into my thoughts.

“Of course, child.” She waved her hand and turned, limping back toward the porch swing. “How else would I know you?”

“You called me Teine,” I said, trying to catch her averted gaze.

“That is your name, child. Everyone knows that.”

Who’s everyone?
Very few people knew my mom called me Teine, and it wasn’t my
name.
I glanced at Max, confused, but only found his natural smile.

Ms. MacLarnon dropped down on the porch swing again and turned to Max. “As I told you, one day, you would meet again. Time is of no matter; age of no consequence. Twin souls must link to their counterpart in the end. Sometimes sooner than later. It is your destiny.” She spoke as if her words were common knowledge.

“Sorry?” I said.
What is she talking about?

Ms. MacLarnon leaned back. “There have been other souls over time. None have been the ones of legend, of course, but none have been quite … right either.” Her eyes twinkled.

An undeniable sense of majesty surrounded her presence—as if she possessed an all-knowing sort of energy.

I shifted my weight. “I’m sorry, Ms. MacLarnon. I don’t follow you.”

She tilted her head, seeming agitated or maybe confused; I wasn’t sure which. Rounding on Max, she said, “She does not know yet?” Her abrupt change of tone seemed entirely out of character.

Max stared down at the ground. “No, I haven’t told her.”

Ms. MacLarnon laid a hand on her chest and patted the space on the swing next to her. “Come, my child. Sit.” She motioned to me; I did as she asked.

Max leaned against one of the porch’s columns. “Grandmother …”

“Mackenzie MacLarnon, what have you told her?”

Who?

“I haven’t told her anything.”

“I’m sorry to interrupt again, but what did you call Max?”

“MacKenzie, of course,” she said, her tone, snappy and not at all warm and welcoming.

I gave him a questioning glance.

Color rose in his cheeks. “Max is a nick name. It was easier than MacKenzie when I was young, and less embarrassing.”

“You never told me that.” I frowned.

“Like I said—embarrassing.”

Ms. MacLarnon made a throat-clearing sound.

I turned back to her. “I’m sorry. You were saying?”

“MacKenzie, I understand your concerns, but the time has passed for caution. Your choice has been made. Therefore, she must be told.”

“But, Grandmother—”

“My boy—you do her no favors by keeping this from her. Do not forget who she is.” She faced me again, and Max exhaled. “My dear, this may very well be too much information for you, however, you need to know your history. It is of utter importance.”

“I don’t understand.”

“You will. It is not my place to give you the information you will need—not at this time, but you will learn of your path. Your mother has answers for you; do not be afraid to ask her for your truth.” She smiled and patted my hand. “I am glad to have seen you today. You have made my grandson very happy. I thank you for that.”

“Oh … all right.” I stood up, too confused to say much else. “It was … good to see you, too.”

I turned to Max. He raised his eyebrows.

“Teine …” Ms. MacLarnon reached for my hand, holding it her own. “Stay close to MacKenzie—for your safety.” My chest tightened, her words ricocheting around in my head as I glanced down at her gleaming green eyes. “Gone are the days the name Layla will protect you. A choice has been made. Keep your eyes open.” She squeezed my hand and let go.

Blood drained from my face. My legs went weak.

“We’ll see you soon.” Max leaned in to give his Grandmother a hug, seeming oblivious to my state of shock.

She whispered, “An dtuigeann tú?”

I repeated her words in my head.
Do you understand?

Max glanced at me, his mouth hanging open, before saying, “Tuigim.”

Again, the words repeated in my head.
I understand.

“Ready?” He held his hand out to me.

With wobbling legs, and a churning mind, I nodded.

“Mackenzie, child.”

He stopped and spun back.

“Dhá riamh fhadaigh tine, ach las sé idir iad.”

Two never kindled a fire, but it lit between them.

Max nodded and glanced at me. Squeezing my hand, he led me off the porch. “You okay?” he asked after we climbed into the car.

I paused, trying to find my words. “What’s going on?” I stared him straight in the face, forcing my hands to stop trembling. “What are you keeping from me?”

He groaned. “Lay … it’s not that simple. I wish it was. Right now, I need you to keep trusting me. Can you do that?”

My eyes narrowed, questions reeling through my head in a stream of disarray.

He held my stare with steady unfaltering eyes. “Please.”

I swallowed hard and wrenched my gaze from his.

“So, do you have plans tonight?” He started the engine and pulled away from the big, old house.

“No, it’s Monday …” I focused on the passing oak trees.

He nudged my knee in a playful way. “So?”

I sighed and tilted my head toward him. “So, don’t you go to school, or something?” I shifted my weight, crossing my legs.

“Graduated early.” He smirked, tapping his finger to his temple.

“How’d you manage that?”

“Lots of extra classes online. I was home schooled mostly. It’s always been easy for me.”

“Must be nice.”

“Dancing’s easy for you. We all have our strengths.”

After a few minutes of silence, he pulled up next to my car in the theatre lot and put the car in park.

“So does your silence mean you don’t want to hang out later?”

“I didn’t say that.” I stared out the window, mad at myself for agreeing. My desire to be near him overrode my need to argue for more information.

“Good.”

Shifting from his car to mine, I found mine would barely start. I was afraid I’d have to push it to get home.

Max stood hunched over the hood, laughing. “We’ve gotta get rid of this thing.”

“We?”

“Well … look at it.”

“You try explaining it to my mom.”

“Touché.” He gave me a crooked smile.

Concerned the disaster wouldn’t make it home, Max followed me, waving as I coasted down my driveway.
Humiliating.

9

The doorbell rang, and my glass dropped into the kitchen sink. Unsure why I was so nervous, I trekked to the front door and peeked through the spyglass.

Max’s face loomed, his face larger than normal through the glass. I chuckled and opened the door.

“I’m early,” he said, hands shoved in his jeans pockets.

“I’ll just be a second. Want to sit?” I motioned toward the couch.

“Will your mom be back soon?” He glanced over his shoulder toward the empty driveway, but didn’t cross the threshold into the house.

I frowned. “What did she do to make you so afraid of her?”

“I’m not
afraid
of her exactly.”

“Okay … Not sure how to respond, so … you can either stand or sit.” I walked toward the stairs, and he ambled in, his head turning back and forth as if taking in the room. I shook my head and went upstairs.

Although I’d overheard them talking in the hospital, and the harshness in my mother’s tone, I couldn’t imagine why Max would be afraid of her. Then again, I couldn’t imagine why she’d lied to me about him either. Whatever her reasons for disliking him or telling him to keep his distance from me, she would need to contend with them, and ultimately, I would as well.

My curiosity drifted from my mother the second I’d met Ms. MacLarnon, and curiosity had turned to alarm. I’d hoped my earlier shower would clear some of the swirling questions still ringing in my head. I even blew my hair dry, hoping the heat would singe some clarification into my brain. It hadn’t. Ms. MacLarnon knew me—a fact that rattled me in a way I couldn’t figure out.

As I came down the stairs, I found Max pacing the living room. “Wow.”

“What?” I glanced down at myself, my hands, my clothes. Everything seemed in order for once.

“You look … your hair is all …” Color rose in his cheeks, and he grinned. “It’s exactly like I remember.”

“Clean?” I teased, nudging his shoulder.

He opened the front door and froze, gripping the knob, his knuckles turning white.

My mother glared at him from the front stoop. “You!” She advanced on him.

Max lifted his hands and backed up. “Lorelei.”

“What are you doing near my daughter?” With hissed words, she proceeded into the house with a snakelike fluidity, her voice laced with a deep accent. The same accent Ms. MacLarnon used, but I had never heard come out of my mother.

“Mom!”

“This does not concern you, Teine.”

“Lorelei, don’t overreact. She’s safe. I’d never allow anything to harm Layla, you know that.”

She continued toward him as he backed up more.

“You should not be here. I have given you the opportunity to do right by her. You failed. I cannot allow this to carry on.”

Max stopped, planting his feet. “I haven’t failed. You’re failing by keeping the truth from her. She has no idea who she is!”

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