Misplaced (147 page)

Read Misplaced Online

Authors: SL Hulen

BOOK: Misplaced
7.76Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Don’t let me fall, please…”

“Y
o
u
fel
l
a
lon
g
tim
e
ago
.
An
d
yo
u
almos
t
too
k
m
e
with
you.”

Elias
turned
a
w
ay
from
his
partne
r
’s
pleading
e
y
es.
Mieley
screamed
,
an
d
t
he
n
t
her
e
w
a
s
th
e
b
riefes
t
silenc
e
b
efor
e
t
he
soun
d
o
f
hi
s
bod
y
hi
t
tin
g
th
e
rock
s
re
v
erberate
d
throughou
t
the
cliffs.
Elias
would
come
to
think
of
this
echo
of
death
as
a
w
arning,
and
would
be
haunted
by
it
for
the
rest
of
his
days.
H
e
rushe
d
t
o
V
ictori
a
and
,
pillowin
g
he
r
hea
d
o
n
hi
s
lap
,
kissed
her
forehead
and
took
her
hand
in
his
and
kissed
it;
it
still
felt
w
arm.

“Joaquín
,
ca
n
yo
u
hea
r
me
,
brother?

h
e
sobbed.
“Remember
,
yo
u
al
w
ay
s
referre
d
t
o
go
d
a
s
e
l
jefe
?
How
irre
v
erent
w
e
w
ere…
W
ell,
I
need
you
to
talk
to
him
for
me.
I
kno
w
he

l
l
listen
;
a
bette
r
sou
l
tha
n
yo
u
ne
v
e
r
w
alke
d
thi
s
earth.
T
ell him it’s not her time.

“I ne
v
er meant to get you into this mess,” he told his niece.
Rocking
her
back
and
forth
he
looked
into
the
distance,
into
th
e
sk
y
tha
t
ha
d
gon
e
quie
t
again
,
recallin
g
ho
w
angr
y
he

d
been;
how
unwilling
to
consider
what
she
had
tried
to
tell
him.
“Breathe,
V
ictoria” he implored. “
P
lease, child.”

H
e
remo
v
e
d
hi
s
coa
t
an
d
co
v
ere
d
her
.
A
s
h
e
w
as
contemplatin
g
joinin
g
Miele
y
a
t
th
e
bas
e
o
f
th
e
mountain
,
he
hear
d
a
singl
e
rasp
y
breath
.
Elia
s
though
t
h
e
w
a
s
hallucinating,
but
with
each
barely
discernable
rise
of
her
chest,
a
small
part
o
f
hi
s
crumple
d
hear
t
unfolded
.
“That’
s
m
y
girl,

h
e
blubbered,
strokin
g
he
r
hair
. “Can you see,”
h
e
aske
d
hi
s
long-dead
brother,
“how
much
like
you
she
is?
W
e
need
her
back.
I
need
her back…”

A
s
w
ee
p
o
f
ligh
t
engulfe
d
them
.
V
ictori
a
coughe
d
an
d
sputtered
and
spat
blood
and,
finally,
w
elcomed
a
full
breath
into her lungs.

 

 

Chapte
r
Fifty-three
Vic
t
oria

Mart
a
dampene
d
V
ictoria’
s
lip
s
wit
h
a
w
ashclot
h
an
d squeezed a few drops of
w
ater into her mouth.

Sh
e
hear
d a
man’
s
voice
.
H
e
stoo
d
nea
r
th
e
doo
r
in
semidarkness. “How are you feeling,
hija
?”

“¿
P
apí?

V
ictori
a
pushe
d
th
e
clot
h
fro
m
he
r
lip
s
an
d
trie
d
t
o
si
t
up
.
“I
saw
them
take
you.”
Her
words
w
ere
sluggish,
and
she
didn’t
recognize
the
rough,
torn-sounding
voice
as
her
own.
E
v
en
so,
the accusation
w
as clear.

“It’
s
th
e
pai
n
medication,

Mart
a
tol
d
hi
m
softly
.
“She
doesn’t know what she’s saying.”

“Y
ou killed Celeste.”
Elias
approached
the
bed
with
faltering
steps.
Suddenly,
an
image
flashed
through
V
ictoria’s
mind.
Had
it
been
her
uncle
or
her
father—or
had
they
been
together?
Y
es,
that’s
how
she
remembere
d
it
.
A
gentl
e
voic
e
coaxin
g
he
r
back
,
holdin
g
he
r
hand, lifting her up.

Elias
stood
at
the
end
of
the
bed.
“Bea
told
me
where
to
find
you,
but
I
w
as
too
late.
The
police
mistook
my
desperation
for
guilt.
Thankfully,
they
didn’t
hold
me
long.”
Her
uncle
saw
the
question
on
her
face.
“Mieley’s
dead.”
There
w
as silence
for
a
moment,
and
then
Elias
began,

V
ictoria,”
coming nearer
so
she could
see
the
gash
on
his
head,
“what
happened to Khara?”

“Gone.”
V
ictoria
slumped
back;
the
edges
of
the
room
w
ere
going black.

He
r
uncl
e
smoothe
d
he
r
hai
r
a
w
a
y
fro
m
he
r
face
.
“Rest
now.

V
ictori
a
smelle
d
th
e
leathe
r
o
f
hi
s
jacket
,
th
e
strong
smells
of
cologne
and
antiseptic.
“I

ll
be
back
to
check
on
you
soon.”

She
drifted
in
and
out
of
consciousness.
A
t
times
she
awoke
to
see
the
ochre
hills
and
purple
sky
of
Egypt
exactly
as
Khara
ha
d
describe
d
them
.
I
t
w
a
s
a
quie
t
worl
d
befor
e
automation
wit
h
ocean
s
o
f
suspende
d
time
,
th
e
w
armt
h
o
f
sand
,
and
endless
skies
bright
with
stars.
She
felt
that
at
any
moment
her
friend would appear.

As
the
days
passed,
her
wounds
healed;
the
aching
of
her
heart remained.

One night, when the nurses’ station
w
as quieter than usual,
V
ictori
a
awok
e
wit
h
a
start
.
Sensin
g
Khara’
s
presence
,
sh
e
closed
her
e
y
es
and
emptied
her
mind
in
hopes
of
finding
her,
bu
t
i
t
w
a
s
n
o
use
.
Sunris
e
woul
d
com
e
soon
.
W
anting t
o
catc
h
th
e
firs
t
glimps
e
o
f
th
e
ne
w
day
,
V
ictori
a
trie
d
t
o
sit u
p,
but
w
as
still
too
w
eak
to
do
anything
other
than
turn
her
head
.
Th
e
nex
t
thin
g
sh
e
knew
,
e
v
erythin
g
w
a
s
dark
.
She
looked
to
the
table on
her
right,
which
had
been
crammed
with
hospita
l
equipment
.
Now
,
e
v
erythin
g
w
a
s
gone
,
an
d
sh
e
w
a
s
in
a
cramped
,
dark
,
silen
t
place
.
An
d
sh
e
w
a
s
no
t
alone
.
I
n
spit
e
of
her surroundings, her heart leapt.

“Khara!”

“Shh, I am right here.”

“Where are
w
e?”

“Underneath the palace.”

“Why?”

“I
vo
w
ed
not
to
seek
v
engeance,”
she
said,
and
then
added,
“but
I
see
no
harm
in
teaching
Menefra
a
lesson.”
She
w
as
as
real
to
V
ictoria
as
the
day
she
first
appeared
at
the
Center
for
Help
.
Ther
e
w
a
s
somethin
g
aki
n
t
o
mirt
h
i
n
he
r
voic
e
a
s
sh
e
li
t
anothe
r
torc
h
an
d
place
d
i
t
i
n
a
rin
g
fastene
d
t
o
th
e
w
all.
Althoug
h
th
e
spac
e
w
a
s
small
,
i
t
offere
d
a
co
t
an
d
se
v
eral
basket
s
tha
t
V
ictori
a
suspecte
d
hel
d
foo
d
an
d
w
ater
.
Khara’s
hair
w
as
loose,
and
she
w
as
dressed
in
a
white
linen
shift
and
leathe
r
sandals
.
Aroun
d
he
r
nec
k
hun
g
th
e
tin
y
gol
d
cross
.
A
fe
w
fee
t
a
w
ay
,
a
glimmerin
g
v
estmen
t
fille
d
th
e
roo
m
wit
h
a
sof
t
glow
.
“Tha
t
i
s
m
y
coronatio
n
cape
.
I
use
d
thes
e
passage
s
to
re
m
o
v
e
it
from
M
enefra

s
quarter
s
.”
She
laughed
and
s
queezed
V
ictoria’s arm.

Other books

The Girl from Baghdad by Michelle Nouri
The Lost Temple by Tom Harper
Crimson by Ben Wise
The Closers by Michael Connelly
The Coveted (The Unearthly) by Thalassa, Laura
Inquest by Gladden, DelSheree
The French Mistress by Susan Holloway Scott