Read Locked Out of Love Online
Authors: Mary K. Norris
The living room was connected to a large, stainless steel kitchen.
“You want anything?” Niella called as she took out two glasses and held them up for Melanie to see over the island.
“Water's fine,” she called back and proceeded to the large entertainment system. The shelves were bare, but on the floor, packed into cardboard boxes, Melanie found what had once decorated them.
Trophies, medals, and pictures were thrown into the boxes, some of the picture frames cracked where the packer hadn't taken care to place them in the box gently.
She took one out and stared at the young, smiling face.
It was Niella. Her oak-brown hair was still short but a few inches longer than it was now, held back with a neon green fabric headband. She held up a first place medal, her other hand holding out her index finger for number 1. She stood in front of a sign that read San Diego State University.
“No way.” Melanie stared at the newspaper articles and magazine clippings hidden beneath the picture frames.
Souveray favored to win next summer Olympics.
Niella Souveray, next Olympic legend?
Melanie squatted and sifted through the articles. There were dozens. Stories of Niella being the next track and field star, her success through high school and college, interviews about her goals and aspirations, and then the articles changed.
Terrible car accident wrecks Olympian's dream.
Souveray crashes under the pressure.
SDSU Track and Field star, Niella Souveray, paralyzed after horrific accident.
Melanie stifled a gasp at the black-and-white image of a car wrapped around a large tree.
The caption beneath the photo read:
Rising Olympic potential Niella Souveray crashes her car while falling asleep at the wheel after what rumors say to be a hard week of training.
Melanie stared at the article, unseeing.
Fell asleep at the wheel?
Her hands tightened around the paper, her heart constricted.
She'd bet her entire life savings that Niella hadn't fallen asleep at the wheel. She'd had a Dream.
“Oh, Niella,” she breathed.
The paper was ripped from her hands. Melanie jumped, falling on her ass. Niella stared down, her hazel eyes hard. “Don't you dare go through my things,” she warned. “And don't you dare feel sorry for me.” She thrust Melanie's water at her, liquid sloshing out the side onto the carpet.
Melanie fumbled for it, afraid if she didn't reach it in time Niella would simply drop it to the floor, not a care in the world.
“I ⦠I didn't mean to pry. I saw it thereâ”
“And thought that because it was out in the open it was available for public viewing? Well, guess what? You thought wrong. Now, because you have no qualms about invading my personal space, let me return the favor.” She leaned over, her chest nearly resting on her knees as she stared down Melanie. “What the hell are you really doing here?”
Melanie's fingers tightened around the glass in her hands. “I'm sorry?”
Hazel eyes narrowed. “Your reason for being here. What is it? And don't lie about it either. I'll find out. I may not be able to control my Dreams, but if I concentrate hard enough on something, I can sway them.”
Melanie started. “You can?” That was news to her. At Niella's look she swallowed her curiosity. “I'm here to help you. Honest! You're like my brother, a Dreamer, and I see in you the same struggle he went through. I thought I could help.”
Niella continued to study her before finally leaning back in her wheelchair. “And how exactly did you help your brother?”
Melanie could read Niella's skepticism in every line of her body. She had only one shot to convince her and she couldn't screw it up. Niella's life might rest in the balance. Tonight was the night, if she wasn't mistaken, and she needed to do everything in her power to keep Niella from leaving.
“It was an accident, really,” she started. “I got scared when Nathan started to have another Dream. He looked as if he were in pain and I panicked. My powers flared. I didn't have much control at the time and I absorbed them. It tore him right out of his Dream and sucked me straight into one.” Niella eyes went large. Shit. She shouldn't have added that last part. She waved her hand. “That doesn't matter though; I was fine. The fact is that my brother was ⦠relieved of his powers. I don't know how long it lasted, but it gave him a break. I can only imagine how much you ache for a break. To have a guaranteed amount of time to call your own, where you don't have to fearâ”
“I'm not afraid of my powers,” Niella snarled.
Melanie jumped.
Damn, she did it again. She needed to stop assuming everyone in Joel's guild thought like she did.
Niella looked away and lowered her voice. “Not anymore. I've accepted my lot. I might not be the most joyful one in the bunch, but I've learned to cope.” She stared at the cardboard boxes that lined the floor. A few heartbeats later she spoke again. “You said you took your brother out of a Dream and fell into one?”
Melanie instinctively reached for the leather band on her wrist, but the water in her hand stopped her. “Yeah.”
Niella's attention turned back to her. “It was of me, wasn't it? That's why you acted the way you did at the hospital.”
Melanie stared into her lap, her throat growing thick with emotion. “Yeah.”
“That's the main reason why you're here, isn't it?”
Melanie felt the tears burn the back of her throat. She nodded.
“Do I even want to know what you saw?”
Melanie bit her lip and shook her head.
A moment of silence.
A resigned sigh. “In this Dream you had, do I accept this help that you volunteered to give? Does it help me?”
Melanie shook her head miserably. “I don't know.” She swallowed past the tears, “I'm trying to change what I saw.”
“Ah,” Niella said, as if she understood, which Melanie guessed she did.
They were quiet for a few seconds more.
“Does Joel know about this Dream?” she asked.
“No. I haven't told anyone. I don't want to worry anyone else. I promised myself I would deal with it and I am.”
Niella let out a heavy breath. “Well, I see Joel's hero complex has rubbed off nicely on you.”
A laugh escaped Melanie. She looked up to see Niella smirking at her and she laughed even more.
“I guess it was bound to happen, all those superhero t-shirts he wears ⦠”
Niella groaned. “Oh God, don't get me started on his horrible fashion sense. It's awful, isn't it?” They laughed. “I can't believe Sydney dated that for three years.”
Melanie's laughter cut off abruptly. “Sydney and Joel ⦠dated?”
Niella expression froze. “Shit. I thought you knew.” She snapped her mouth shut as if attempting to stop any further rambling.
Melanie was only half listening as her mind went back to earlier that day when Sydney had wanted to talk to Joel. Alone.
A flare of jealousy.
She quickly stomped it down. That was impossible. Sydney had Merrick, and even in the short time Melanie had with them she could tell the two were crazy about each other. When they weren't talking to anyone else their eyes were constantly on one another.
But there was the first time she'd met Joel. At the bar, when he'd been drunk and depressed.
Like someone who'd just gotten dumped.
Her stomach twisted. Was Joel still pining over Sydney?
Was she nothing but a rebound? A temporary fling, despite his claims about soul mates?
She had to admit, hanging out with an ex after breaking up with them was strange behavior. Though she supposed belonging to a guild where everyone had powers made for certain exceptions.
But still â¦
“Are they ⦠” She cleared her throat. “Are they still close?”
Niella squirmed in her chair. “Look, Melanie, I'm not really the gossiping kind.” She held up her hands. “Not that there is any gossip to begin with. Any questions you have about Joel and Sydney need to be directed to Joel, not me, but I will tell you this. They're over. And they most definitely aren't as close as they used to be. In fact, Joel has been pretty scarce around the clinic. We're hoping that'll stop soon. After all, he's a part of our guild, probably the most enthusiastic about it too aside from Felix, and we need him.” She took a swallow of her water. “Now, should we get started on whatever treatment you had in mind that's supposedly going to save my life?”
Melanie hesitated. “What makes you think it's supposed to save your life?”
Another smirk. “Life and death would be the only reason someone would want to seek out
my
company.”
“Why?” Melanie asked. “Why do you push them all away? They're a great group of friends that clearly care for you, so why do you act the way you do?”
Niella took another swig of water, looking as if she wished it were something harder. Like vodka. “It's a protection mechanism.”
“Protection against what?”
“Against caring, okay?” She finished her water and wheeled herself into the kitchen. Probably in search of something alcoholic.
Melanie heard the fridge open and the sound of liquid pouring into a glass. Niella came back moments later, glass full of a cream-colored water.
“Is that white wine?”
Niella knocked it back. “I have boxed in the fridge, and before you judge, it does in a pinch and that's all that matters.”
“Fair enough. Are you going to elaborate on what you said earlier anytime soon?”
Niella glared at her and finished the glass of wine. “Out of everyone, I would have thought you'd figure it out fastest. Guess I overestimated you.”
Melanie locked her jaw to keep from snapping. Niella was just falling back into her defensive mode. She decided to do as her mother always did: cross her arms and wait.
Their staring contest lasted about two minutes before Niella sighed and stared into the bottom of her glass. “It won't hurt as much when I Dream something terrible happening to one of them if I don't care.”
Melanie wanted to reach out but knew this was the wrong person to do it with. Instead she sipped her water, letting the words tumble around in her head for a bit.
“It's normal to worry about seeing something you don't want to. Lord knows Nathan was terrified, but I'm sure nothing horrible will happen to them.”
Niella laughed humorlessly. “You don't know the guild. They search for trouble, have been for the last eight months or so now. We're stuck. They won't stop and there's nothing I can do. It'd be different if I was out there helping them break into buildings and rescue others, but I can't.” She punched her own thigh. Melanie winced at the sound. “I'm left at home like a spouse with a husband in the forces, waiting for that one phone call, only it won't be a phone call, it'll be a Dream and I'll have no way of stopping it. There's only so much you can do to change the future. I think some events were just meant to happen.”
Her gaze bore into Melanie's. The image of Niella getting hit by the vehicle flashed through her mind, over and over.
She squeezed her eyes shut.
No. She could change that future. Niella would never be hit if she didn't flee from her house, and if Melanie stopped her from fleeing, it would stop her death.
She reached for her powers, felt the familiar tingle in the back of her neck and held out her hand to Niella. “There is only so much one can do to change the future. So let's start changing it. And if you could promise never to leave your house after dark for the next week, just as a precaution, that'd be great.”
Niella's lip twitched.
She stared at Melanie's open palm for a long time. Indecision, fear, hopeâit all swirled in her hazel eyes. After a few heartbeats she tentatively reached out and grasped Melanie's hand.
“What the hell is he doing here?” Felix jerked his chin at Joel.
Syd stepped between them and put a hand on Felix's black thermal-covered chest. “I invited him.”
Felix's blue-green eyes widened. He opened his mouth then closed it. He shook his head at Syd, finally returning his attention to Joel. “Where's Melanie?”
“With Niella.”
This caused quite a few of his guild members to stare at him.
“With Niella?” Cali asked.
Joel clenched his fists. “Yes, with Niella. I asked her to keep an eye on Melanie.” His stare bore into Felix's, daring him to say a word. Felix was still full of shit, but that didn't mean he'd risk the guild.
Something in Felix's eyes changed and he gave an imperceptible nod.
Felix launched into their plan of attack. The building was still being occupied, according to Merrick. Despite the guild's first attack, this new group wasn't worried enough to flee. They were either exceedingly cocky or dumb as fuck.
Joel really hoped for the latter.
Felix, Cali, and Sydney would head in through the front while Joel, Merrick, and Luke took the back. Everyone was to keep in contact by the walkie-talkie app they'd all downloaded onto their phones. If anything suspicious happened, they were to alert one another immediately.
Felix was through the front door before Joel and his group even reached the back. Damn Eraser abilities. Joel didn't have the luxury of waving his hand and making the door lock disappear; instead, he had to wait for Merrick to jimmy it.
“We're in,” Luke radioed to the others.
“Copy that, Skywalker,” Felix responded. “Alarm has been disabled.”
The three of them crept quietly through the darkened hallway. That was another thing that sucked about being split up: if they were with Cali, they wouldn't have to worry about making a sound. But, unfortunately, they weren't all together so Joel had to tiptoe through the hallway, checking each of the door locks as quietly as possible.