Destined for Dreams: Book One (3 page)

BOOK: Destined for Dreams: Book One
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Nine months and two days to be exact.

I laugh. The thought of getting a license is ridiculous. The outside world isn’t safe for people like me. The council created the compound to keep us safe from the Human Preservation Agency. The HPA would do anything to destroy us. My father brought me to the compound because an agent from the HPA murdered my mother. Plus, I’d never choose to leave the compound alone even though I’d love to. I imagine I may be braver when I’m a legal adult. I hope I am.

When we reach the car, Alyssa removes a camouflaged car cover, revealing a silver Corolla. Its paint looks brand new and it’s well taken care of. Even the tires gleam like they’re coated in tire shine.

“Where did you get a car anyway?” I run my fingers along the smooth paint.

“I’ve had it. Your father suggested I hide it if I didn’t want to turn it in as communal property. It’s my most expensive possession.”

I knit my brows. This is the kind of thing best friends tell you about. “You know you can trust me with your secrets.”

Alyssa unlocks the doors. “You’re mad I didn’t tell you.”

I open the door and get in. “A little.”

“I’m sorry. It just never came up. You’ve never wanted to sneak out before. I didn’t think it mattered.”

I sigh. It doesn’t really matter. We don’t talk about a lot of things, especially things from our past, and I get it. I was just taken by surprise. “It doesn’t. I’m overreacting.”

Alyssa smiles and starts the engine. “I’ll make it up to you. I know this great little place in the city to go to. It’s safe. You’ll love it.”

 

3
. A STRANGE FEELING

 

 

 

 

 

 

NADIA

 

My arm hairs rise when we pass a small cemetery. I’ve only ever seen them in movies because the council cremates the bodies that don’t take care of themselves. Any evidence of a creature’s existence can’t be left behind.

I almost ask Alyssa to stop, but bite my tongue because visiting a graveyard is a strange request. I stare out the window at the different shapes and sizes of the headstones and turn away when I meet the eyes of a woman standing at the fence with a bouquet of white lilies. I wonder if my mother is buried somewhere since she was human. It’d be nice to have a place to visit her.

Tears rim my eyes. It’s been too long since I’ve thought about my mother. It’s an unspoken rule between my father and I that we just don’t bring up the past. We can’t change it, so we just have to keep going forward.

“We can stop there on the way back if you like.” Alyssa messes with the dial on the radio until a rock band blasts through the speakers. She turns the volume down a notch and cracks her window to let in fresh air.

I smile gratefully at her, then turn away. “Will there be boys?” I tap my fingers on the arm rest.

Alyssa smiles. “Lots of them.”

My chest tightens from excitement and anxiety. I don’t have any other friends at the compound and I’ve never been on a date either—not that my father would allow me to go on one anyway. Now that I have some freedom, I don’t know how to feel. What if my nightmare inflicting side starts to show? How can anyone like a monster?

“Maybe we should go back,” I say after a minute. I don’t really want to, but meeting new people is scary, especially with how unsafe it is outside the compound. It’s dangerous not knowing people’s intentions and I’ll have to be even more guarded.

Alyssa changes lanes as we drive into the city. “You don’t really want to go back.”

“What if something bad happens?”

“It won’t. I can see things coming, remember?” Alyssa has a point. While her visions aren’t always concrete, they can show her how things play out. She can keep us safe.

I glance out the window. Alyssa slows down because of heavy traffic and then merges into the right lane and turns onto a narrow one way street.

I grip the dashboard, afraid of getting trapped on this street with nowhere to go, but then the street connects to a wide alley that turns into a small, private residential parking structure. A security guard hands Alyssa a permit and she tosses it on the dashboard, and then she maneuvers through the parking structure until we reach the middle level.

I follow Alyssa out of the car and she loops her arm through mine. An elevator is to our left, but Alyssa pulls me past it and to a stairwell in the corner. She pulls the door open and I step in behind her. Our footsteps echo off the concrete walls as we climb up two flights of stairs and through another door that leads into a large lobby.

Plush black couches are positioned around a coffee table that sits on a large red and gold area rug. Modern, black-framed portraits of people I don’t recognize line the walls and on the opposite side is a set of opaque double doors.

Alyssa guides me across the lobby and waves at the camera stationed in the corner of the ceiling. The door clicks and automatically swings open into a narrow hallway with dark wooden floors.

At the end of the corridor, a troll leans against the wall with a built in computer. His short, brown hair is styled to the side and blue-framed glasses sit low on his thin nose as he reads a magazine. The sleeves of his green dress shirt are rolled up to his elbows and his dark-washed jeans are a little too long on his short stature.

He looks up and tucks the magazine under his arm. His brown eyes reflect green in the dim lighting and he offers his hand out to Alyssa. “You’ve brought a friend, doll face,” the troll says, looking me up and down.

She kisses the man’s cheek. “This is Nadia, Cian. I’ve told you about her, remember?”

He studies my face for a moment. “You’re lovelier than I imagined.”

I offer my hand and he takes it. He kisses my knuckles, his lips lingering, and I gently tug my hand away. Trolls can be possessive if you give them the chance.

“It’s nice to meet you.” I step back to put distance between us. “This is my first time away from—”

Alyssa bumps my shoulder. “Home,” she says, finishing my sentence. “Nadia has never been to the city before.”

I was going to say that it was my first time away from the compound in a long time, but I’m glad Alyssa intervened. I almost blew our cover. No one needs to know where we came from. It’d get back to the council one way or another.

Cian raises his eyebrows. “You’re going to enjoy it here. All members are welcome.”

I nod and he opens the door.

Alyssa touches Cian’s arm before leading me into a large, dimly lit club. Without windows to allow in sunlight, the club is the perfect place for me. Music pulses through the air, making it hard to hear anything, and colorful lights dance across the walls. Black leather booths line the perimeter and a few tables are scattered around a small dance floor.

The air is thick with a million scents and a door behind a large bar swings open, revealing a brightly lit kitchen. The room is packed with patrons and it’s hard to tell what everyone is. People laugh and sway to the music, and some talk in small clusters, enjoying their time. No one even turns to stare at me. My ability makes a lot of people at the compound uncomfortable because it doesn’t discriminate. All dreams are the same to me so anyone is susceptible.

Alyssa leans into me. “I see an open booth in the corner,” she says, nearly pressing her lips to my ear.

I trail behind her to get through the throng of people dancing. Alyssa slides in before me and I scoot in on the other side. In the middle of the table is a candle in a blue crystal jar and it reflects a cool light over everything.

A woman in a tight black dress appears at our table. Her short, black hair shines blue in the candlelight. The woman’s amber eyes crinkle at the corners and her nose twitches when she beams a perfectly straight smile before setting two goblets filled with a red elixir on the table.

Alyssa raises her eyebrows. “I hope these are from Lucas, Maddie.”

I shift in my seat and peer around the large room to see if there’s a boy staring in our direction, but I don’t notice anyone. “
The
Lucas?” I ask, smiling at Alyssa.

Maddie rests her elbows on the table. “He’s near the door. Styled brown hair, brooding dark eyes, hot. He’s the one in the blue hoodie and jeans.” Lucas is identical to his dream persona and I blink a few times to hide my surprise. Maddie winks before sauntering away.

I reach out and grab Alyssa’s hand. “I think we should dance.”

Alyssa smirks and slides from the booth. She takes my hand and I laugh when she dances around me as we make our way onto the crowded dance floor. We sway to the upbeat tempo and I giggle when she twirls me around.

I peer toward the door to see if Alyssa’s dream boy is watching and notice a girl, with dark, curly hair and the most dazzling lavender eyes, staring at me. A chill runs up my spine and she turns away when my gaze meets hers.

Alyssa grabs my arm, startling me, and I meet her wide eyes. “We have to leave. Now.”

I don’t hesitate and take Alyssa’s hand. She pushes through the crowd and instead of guiding me to the front entrance, she pulls me behind the bar and toward the kitchen.

“Someone’s coming through the front,” she says. “This is a better way out.”

 

 

HUNTER

 

If I wasn’t trapped in Jacqueline’s head, I’d be terrified to be in this club. I don’t recognize half the supers and it freaks me out. The room is too dark and the music is too loud to even hear someone scream. I almost want to be in the void instead of watching everything through Jacqueline’s eyes, but I’d never tell her that.

We sit in a booth near the entrance with our back to the dark red painted wall. It gives me a view of the entire club. I watch through Jacqueline’s eyes as a pretty girl struts on to the dance floor. Her pale blond hair absorbs the colors shining around her and she sways her hips to the beat of the music.

Jacqueline doesn’t take her eyes off the girl. A flash of light from the kitchen shines over the girl and I notice her indigo eyes shift to a much paler blue, like the color drains from them. Her pale pink lips pout when she doesn’t smile and I can’t stop myself from wanting to talk to her. But, that’s impossible considering the Jacqueline situation and because she’s a super. For all I know, she could be a man-eater.

“Are you sure it won’t be any trouble?” Jacqueline asks.

A man I recognize as a leshy—a tree spirit embodied in human form—sits across from us. His thick, gray hair is tied with a tree branch and he hasn’t done a good job at hiding his bark-like skin. Only half of one of his arms looks like human flesh instead of the bark-like texture of his true form. While you’d think a tree spirit would be friendly, leshies are not, and after a few fatal incidents at the lab, the board made sure we all knew about these monsters.

“I can get you in right away if everything checks out. A member from the Creature Council will meet us here to fill out the paperwork.”

“What is that girl?”
I ask, despite Jacqueline’s directions to stay quiet.

“Not now,” she thinks.

Jacqueline glances where the girl was dancing. Disappointment washes over me as I watch her run into the kitchen with a red-haired girl. It’s a strange feeling. I know better than to be attracted to a super, but I can’t stop myself. I hope she’ll come back and I can talk Jacqueline into talking to her, but I doubt it. It’s not like she’ll ever know I exist. I’m nobody inside Jacqueline’s body. I’ll probably never be somebody again.

 

 

NADIA

 

My heart races as I run after Alyssa. I’m starting to feel sluggish since I’m still recuperating from my hunger strike and exerting myself isn’t helping much. She thrusts her arm out near the exit and stops me in my tracks.

I clutch the wall and gasp. “What did you see?”

“A council member entering the club. If we get caught here, we’ll lose all privileges for a year,” she says.

I frown. I hate how the council runs things. They have pretty harsh punishments for stupid little things. They’re even harder on younger people. I’m guessing so we learn from the start to respect their authority, which I have no choice because my father works for the council. I’m stuck. I can’t really avoid punishment for breaking the rules, no matter how lame I think they are.

“You saw us getting caught?”

“That’s why we’re standing in the kitchen. I played the different scenarios in my head, and if we try to leave now, we’ll get caught in the parking garage. If we stay in the club, we’ll get caught there.”

“But we don’t get caught in the kitchen?”

She shakes her head. “Don’t worry. I know what I’m doing.”

It’s easy for her to say since she’s the one who predicts the future. I, on the other hand, can see a hundred things going wrong because the future is never set in stone and a single decision can mess it all up in a second.

“I hope so.” For being stuck in the kitchen, waiting for Alyssa to tell me what to do, I’m not as worried as I thought I’d be. I’m still pumped up from the music and dancing.

Alyssa laughs. “Me too.”

I grin and she taps her fingers on the door. Her eyes glass over and she loses focus for a second before pulling herself together. She sighs and plops down on the floor, tucking her feet under her.

“What are you doing?”

She sighs. “It’s going to be a while.”

 

 

HUNTER

 

Jacqueline stares at her hands, delicately folded in her lap, before shifting her head up to look into the eyes of a bearded man. He looks two hundred years old with deep wrinkles that cut through his suntanned face. His thick and scraggly eyebrows shade his beady brown eyes and his big, round nose is as wide as his narrow mouth that is covered by a graying mustache.

“I’ve heard the council can provide shelter and safety. I’m just so tired of being on the run. It wasn’t so bad when my brother was alive, but the agents—” Jacqueline pauses and waves her hand in front of her face. She takes a deep breath. “The HPA agents killed him. A reaper just ripped his soul from his body right in front of my eyes.” Her voice cracks and I sigh loudly.

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