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Authors: Addison Moore

BOOK: Expel
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Chapter 2

Unimaginable Sorrow

 

 

In all honesty, I thought the primal scream that ejaculated from my vocal cords had the capability to shatter every glass coffin in the facility. In all honesty, I was trying to wake myself from this horrible nightmare, and I couldn’t even do that to the doppelganger with me, who actually is, physically someplace sleeping.

I fall to my knees and take him in. Logan—my Logan, slumbering in his watery grave. I press my hand against the cool of the glass, feel the sting against my flesh. If only the glass, the keeping solution, were the only barriers that separated Logan and me, but I know the chasm runs deeper, that it’s far more complex than any physical barrier.

So this is why Logan brought me down here, why he swept me away to the future, to pull him out of the Transfer, arrange a resurrection, land him on the planet one more time.

“You have to help him.” Sleeping Skyla kneels beside me, rubs my shoulder as I press my face into my palms and sob for the boy I love. Everything in me aches to have him back, to speak to him as I explode with grief on a cellular level. Such an unending sorrow—and for what? His mortality nothing more than a casualty of Marshall’s quick-handed punishment. And,
God
—what about Gage?

“What happened to Gage?” I snap at the startled version of myself.

“Who’s Gage?” She looks genuinely perplexed.

I jump to my feet and take Logan in. Locked in a wet suit, his body entombed in the thick cobalt liquid.

“The other boy with dark hair. He was lying on the ground.” I take a breath, looking across at myself. It makes me dizzy. My head fills with a strange sensation as though I have the power to knock myself out just by speaking with my twin from another dimension. “I thought you said he was dead?” I rattle her by the shoulders. “But you meant Logan,” I whisper. “Dear God what if Gage is, too?”

She looks around the floor for a body.

“Not here,” I squeeze my eyes shut with frustration, “back in the lot.” A part of me wants to slap her a few good times—set her straight on everything she’ll ever need to know, but Logan was right, I never remember my freaking dreams.

“I didn’t see him.” She cowers as if I were about to unleash a combative strike. “Logan’s gone,” her voice breaks. She leans into him, lays her face into the glass as silent tears roll down her cheek.

“Oh my, God, you love him,” I whisper.

Of course, I love him. I felt such a strong connection with Logan when we first met, and now I know why. All those indescribable yearnings defused my feelings for Gage by default. It makes perfect sense. Logan is a minefield of deception. It’s like he orchestrated our meeting from the beginning. But I could never really blame him when I feel so strongly in return. There are no accidents in my life, no coincidences, no blind love at first sight. Logan has been haunting my dreams, chiseling out neuro pathways into my brain by way of his extraterrestrial beauty long before I set foot on Paragon.

“I’ll always love him,” her fingers strum over the tube creating a haunting rhythm. “I’m going to be with him forever.”

“You’re going to be with Gage,” I correct. No sense in stringing along delusions.

“No, I’m not.” Her eyes spring wide with defiance. “I’m not going to be with this
Gage
person. I’m going to be with Logan. I’m going to be Mrs. Logan Oliver,” she knifes the words through the air to prove her point.

All that attitude—the posturing, the I’ll-cut-you velocity in which she determines her speech, I remind myself a lot of Mia.

“He’s been brainwashing you,” I say lackluster because I know its not true. I know she believes it with all her heart because deep inside I do, too. “You’ll love Gage, not straight away, but he’s amazing.” I wipe the tears off my face, taste the salty brine reserved just for Logan. “Come on,” I take her by the hand and speed us towards the exit.

“So, like, are we stuck here?”

Shit! I hadn’t even considered that horrific scenario.

“I don’t know.” I look around in hopes of spotting an ever-evaporating Logan—even in his partially dissolved state I’d take him, breathe him in, swallow him down just to have him with me. “Marshall?” I listen to my voice echo through the chamber in triplicate, with no answer. “Who’s Logan’s supervising spirit?” I cut into her with an unmerciful stare. She’s my only hope in figuring out who or what that might be, and, unfortunately, I’m pretty sure she’s clueless.

“The invisible one?”

“Yes, the invisible one.” Hope rips through me like a flare. I pause, taking her in with her wild tangle of hair, her slightly sunburned skin, freckled from hours logged at the beach. We had a heat wave one January, an unseasonable roast. I remember that year. Dad drove us to the ocean every night to watch the colorful sunsets. God’s art, he called it. He was right. I saw those bold, red, L.A. night skies behind my lids for years after he died. I clung to those fiery spectacles, those memories of the four of us huddled together in the sand as if they were the last bits of my father I would ever have. Savored them, drank them down like a divine elixir. Until, of course, I figured out how to go back and visit him.

“I don’t know who it is,” she pants, struggling to keep up with me. “Logan says it’s not important for me to know. He says it just helps us get places, like a car.”

I give a wry smile. Sounds like Logan’s analogy.

I wonder if sleeping Skyla knows
she
in fact was the transportation station, not the supervising spirit. The only thing the supervising spirit was capable of was launching them into the abysmal future with the apparent inability to bring us back—very not funny Logan.

“How are we going to get out of here?” Her face grows haggard with worry.


You
are going to wake up,” I pick up my pace and speed out into the elongated corridors of the Transfer. “And I’m going to find Ezrina.”

 

***

 
 

 
Sleeping Skyla bobs along, continues to pepper me with annoying questions about the future, all of which I artfully avoid as I bolt down the expansive corridors of the Transfer, shouting, Ezrina and Marshall, in turn, like some demented vocal exercise.

“Who are these people? Will they save Logan?”

“One of them killed Logan,” I want to add, and the other will almost kill you, but don’t.

A rush of adrenaline surges through me just thinking of how violently Logan and Gage were mowed down, by of all things, the Mustang. And what about Gage? I stop abruptly, clamp my hand over my mouth paralyzed by the thought of poor sweet Gage lying in a casket.

A murky figure materializes down the hall. I recognize that permanent mischievous grin, those cuttingly handsome features that could rescue him from almost any situation, this, of course, being the exception.

“There’s the devil,” I say, racing towards Marshall. I know for a fact he said recompense was due to Logan, that the one who pierced his side with the spirit sword was due for a severe method of payback. Of course he’s capable of killing Logan. He had me kill Kate by decapitating her with my ski. Conveniently, of course, everything looks like a freaking accident—an unfortunate act, seemingly doled out by someone else.

Just as I’m about to knock into him full force, an errant thought floats through my mind as I envision another possibility—Chloe driving the Mustang, white gloves cradling the steering wheel, escaping on her knees into the forest like the coward she is.

I don’t let the bout of insanity interfere with the pressing need to strangle Marshall. Even if Chloe did run them over, Marshall had his hand in it. I’d bet my life on the fact he orchestrated the entire event—applauded as it all went down.

I give a forceful shove into his chest and send him flying back a good ten feet, staggering to regain his balance.

“Do you see this?” He addresses the old me from over my shoulder. “You, my Love, will pursue me with a desolate passion that can only be satisfied with a kiss from these lips.” He strides over and caresses her cheek.

Her face ignites in a silent plea for him to extend his touch—rife with disappointment when he releases.

“Don’t you have school tomorrow?” I ask her, annoyed. “Do me a favor, wake up and take a deep lungful of that L.A. smog. You don’t belong here.” I give her a hard look hoping she’ll evaporate back into her dreams.

“Skyla,” Marshall reprimands. “There is a guest in our midst, and yet you treat her with such disrespect.” He shakes his head, mockingly.

“You did this!” I push him hard. “You killed Logan!” It comes out childish, intermingled with tears.

“Do refrain from battery. I disdain being assaulted as much as I do having a minor organ slivered with a blade.”

“So you’re threatening me now?” I stab him in the chest with my finger. “I don’t need you, Marshall. You are nothing but a murderer, a lowlife who kills people and laughs over their grave because you are incapable of giving a damn!”

“Watch your language,” he seethes. “I am not in the mood,” he gives a sharp look. “Ask the question burgeoning on your tongue. Let’s move this conversation into the past along with the Pretty Oliver and his desire to procure you for himself.”

A startled laugh rattles through my chest. “Why? So you can threaten me? So you can tell me you’ll bring Logan back under one circumstance? Let me guess, the magic porthole to that resurrection miracle lies directly in my pants.” I turn to the bewildered version of myself. “That’s right, memorize his face. He steals your freedom,” I roar. “He pins you against the wall and laughs when you need him most.”

“Skyla,” Marshall’s voice spikes with shock.

“It’s true,” I yell into him. “I hate you for using me to kill Kate, and I hate you for killing Logan!”

“And Jock Strap? Dare you inquire about his fate?”

“Gage,” I breathe his name in less than a whisper.

“What if I told you I’ve done away with them both? Spared you the trouble of having to choose, whittled down your options to one.”

“As in the one standing before me?” A fire brews in me. He killed Logan, and he killed Gage. Holy freaking shit. Marshall is a madman. I’ve been duped and now they’re both dead.

I close my eyes as the building sways beneath my feet. The world gyrates in time with my pulsating anger.

I hawk back a generous reserve of phlegm and cover Marshall’s face with the bubbling brew.

He recoils, lets out a series of gurgling groans as he wipes himself clean with the back of his arm.

“Enough,” he barks. “You have sealed your fate, Ms. Messenger. Mark my words, you will rue this day, lament it in tears. You will come to me on your knees sobbing, begging for forgiveness. But I will tell you now and I will tell you then, you are on your own, Skyla. What becomes of this mess is upon your shoulders.” He spins on his heels and strides down the hall at a decent clip. He lets out a powerful roar before disappearing into a ball of fire.

A spear of terror barrels through me. I have a feeling I’ve just opened a Pandora’s box of nightmares and I’m about to witness every vile thing fly into my life.

All unholy hell is about to unleash, and I’m sure Marshall will be quite surprised to see that I’m going to do my best to lob it all in his direction.

Although, I have the very distinct feeling it’ll come back to me twice as hard.

It always does.
  

Chapter 3

Appeal

 

 

“You really pissed him off good.” This younger, simpler version of myself bounces on her feet like it’s a good thing.

“Yeah, well, I don’t need you reminding me.” I blow out a breath. “Ezrina?”

“Who’s this Ezrina chick?” she asks, examining a fistful of her long spiral curls for split ends.

“She hacks off your arm in a couple of years. She’s not that bad, though,” I shrug before unleashing another powerhouse blood curdling cry that rattles the Transfer like a skeleton.

“You scared the crap out of me!” The old me seizes in panic and begins to evaporate.

“No, wait, don’t leave!” I try grabbing a hold of her, but my fingers flex right through. I don’t care if she is annoying. I’d rather be here with my annoying self than suffer through the Transfer alone. Besides, it’s not like she was going to remember any of this psychotic dream in the morning.

She evaporates completely, leaving a wall of crushing silence in her wake.

I wish it were a dream, but I know better. This disaster is concretely embedded in my life and the departed life of my dear friend Logan—I can’t even stomach the thought of Gage not being here.

A wild shag of flaming hair appears before me so close I can smell the scent of something burning, a foul odor layered just beneath the smoke.

“Ezrina!” I grip her by the shoulders. A jolt sizzles through me, alive and vibrant, like the shock from an electric fence. It knocks me backwards a good couple feet, and I hold myself from the horror of her touch. Good grief, not only did the Justice Alliance disfigure her beauty, they turned her into a livewire, literally. And all because of the love she had for her people. At least that’s Nevermore’s version. My mother, the judge, might have a very different tale to tell.

“Ezrina, you have to help me. Logan, he’s in the tube—I need him back. I…I love him.” Maybe if I paint us as star-crossed lovers, maybe then she’ll sympathize and give him back to me, untouched, unharmed by Marshall and his assault with a deadly weapon. Besides, I do love Logan. Here, in this cavernous den of insanity, it seems safe to confess that to myself.

Her lips pull into a line, comely as a blood let. Her eyes light up like fire.

“I need him,” I pant. I can see she’s beginning to cave, considering if only for a moment to do this very unlikely deed for me. “I’ll do anything to have him back. I’ll work for you. I’ll hack through dozens of bodies, prep a thousand corpses for those watery graves,” then an idea comes. “I’ll reunite you with Nev.”

Her entire person flickers with hope before she sags into her hellbent fury and growls into me.

She stalks off down the hall in the direction of the body farm without so much as a response.

“I beg of you,” I get down on my knees and waddle forward in an effort to keep pace. “I’ll sacrifice anything. Name your price. I swear I’ll do it. I have to have him. I can’t live without Logan.” I mean every word as it wails from my lungs.

“Anything,” she purrs, pausing just shy of the colossal room housing a bevy of Count corpses. “Live in my body, carry out my punishment,” it speeds out of her an unearthly echo like she’s rehearsed it, dreamed it a thousand times.

Crap. That is so not what I meant by anything.

When I teased Gage a few weeks back about falling in love with Ezrina, never in a million years did I even remotely think it would be a possibility.

“You are fallacy’s child,” she turns on her heels, disappearing into the blue room.

I jump to my feet and rush to her side. I’ve already given Marshall the big F.U. I can’t lose Ezrina.

The air is warm, unnaturally thick. It’s downright tropical in here with its sky blue reflection. It reminds me of Gage and the beautiful way I feel when he looks at me with those eyes kissed by God.

 
“Don’t placate me with stale promises, Skyla,” she gravels. “You can never give me the freedom I truly desire.”

“Freedom?” It rattles out of me. “I’ll give you freedom, I swear it.”

“Swear?” She picks up a clipboard and looks it over with a mild amusement on my part.

“My mother—she can do this. She’s on the Justice Alliance and the Decision Council and who the hell knows what other committees she’s affiliated with,” I spasm into her. “I’m going to win the faction war, and I’ll preside over the councils. I’ll veto every lousy decision while it’s still a gleam in their uninformed eyes. And, believe me when I say, I’m going to right all of the fucking wrongs.” My father’s memory flashes through me like a hot, searing wind.

She studies me with great intensity before getting back to the frazzled hieroglyphics scrawled out on the chart in front of her.

“You have no power,” she says it low, just above a whisper. “Desire without authority is futile.”

“You can’t just leave him in there to rot,” I slap my hand over the clipboard. I will destroy every psychotic effort she’s undertaken in the name of science if she doesn’t comply.

“It’s entirely up to the Counts. He’s one of their own, of which you are not.”

“No, they won’t rescue him. Please, I need him now, today, whatever the hell day that is. I beg of you, Ezrina,” I collapse at her feet. “Do this for me. I will give you what you desire. I promise.” It departs from me desolate as a last desperate plea.

“A promise means an entirely different thing to those of us who are no longer human.”

“I am so aware,” I nod feverishly. “It’s a covenant,” I’m quick to relay Marshall’s words. “I’ll be entering into a covenant with you. Name your price.” A lone tear jerks down the side of my face.

Her bloodshot eyes look up at the oppressive expanse of the ceiling. Ezrina has been trapped in the Transfer for hundreds of years. I know what she’s about to ask, she’d be insane not to.

“Your mother,” she gives a long blink as though just uttering those words disturbed her. “Arrange another hearing,” she spears me with her disdain. “I want Heathcliff present.”

“Heathcliff? Is he the guy with the eye patch?” Oh, wait, that was Rothello. Um, one of Marshall’s lookalikes? “Oh!” It comes to me. “Nevermore?” I take in a breath. “Heathcliff,” I touch my lips when I say it. “He’ll be there.” I nod. “You’ll get your meeting with Nev—Heathcliff by your side.”

“Supreme,” she wrings her hands together as though this were a maniacal maneuver on her behalf. She speeds me over to the tank that holds beautiful Logan’s body. It takes my breath away just being near him.

“It’s going to be OK,” I say it directly to him as though he could hear. “And, Ezrina?” I stand back and watch as she twists a nozzle at the base of the tube and the liquid begins to mysteriously drain.

“Speak.” She doesn’t look up while waiting for the fluid to fully dissipate.

“If, by the off chance, I can’t get my mother to agree to another trial,” I start.

“We swap bodies,” she says it matter of fact, tips the glass tube on its side and slips Logan out onto a gurney before wheeling him towards the next room.

“I never agreed to that,” I pant, keeping pace.

“Then your lover doesn’t live, does he, Skyla?” She stops midflight, pins me with all of her evil, awaiting my approval.

My lover. I bathe in the words as though they were true, as though they could be and I wanted them to be in every single way.

I cut her a look, cold as a corpse in the mortuary.

“He lives, Ezrina. I’ll move heaven and earth to get you that trial.”

Her lips curl into an unnatural smile. She gazes down at Logan, his skin tinted grayish blue, his lips black with death.

“The honor is yours,” she instructs.

“Kiss him?” This is fast becoming a warped fairytale.

“Breathe, Skyla. Give breath to the one you love.”

I graze his face with my fingertips, cold and slippery, lips like rubber.

“Logan.” I lean over, place my mouth gently over his, pinch off his nose and dive in with a lungful of all my love.

I’ve just made a deal with Ezrina, and I have no idea if I can keep it. But all that matters is that I have Logan back. He’ll be with me again if only for a while.

I give another hard push into his lungs before I’m enraptured with his touch and give way to a desperate kiss.

I need him to win the faction war—hell, I need Logan for far more personal reasons. I hope he appreciates his newfound lease on life. The price may have cost me everything.

I think I may have just sold my soul to Ezrina.

I’m pretty sure I did—but I’m damn sure Logan was worth it.

 

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