Paradox (Travelers Series Book 2) (22 page)

BOOK: Paradox (Travelers Series Book 2)
10.49Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Jaime felt bad lying to her friend, but her father made it perfectly clear that Cooper not take Etta against her will. It pained her to know her friend could be in danger and couldn’t tell her the truth.

“Yeah, you’re probably right,” Etta finally agree and turned over in her bed, staring back at her own barren side of the wall.

•  •  •

It’d been several days since Jaime had seen Cooper sneaking around. That and Etta hadn’t mentioned him in awhile. She soon began to relax about the whole thing and was grateful her dad’s plan seemed successful. She only hoped now, that she’d done what she’d been sent here to do, she could go back to her own reality.

After her weekly session with the house shrink, which Jaime thought totally unnecessary since she really didn’t belong at Dominion House, she came back to an empty room. Etta hadn’t returned since class, so Jaime figured she was over at Battle Grounds, grabbing a cup of coffee or something. The weather was decent, but a little chilly, so she grabbed her coat and headed over to find Etta.

As she approached the coffee shop, she spotted Etta talking to Cooper.
Damn
, she thought. If she made another scene, Etta would end up getting suspicious. But she promised she would keep her best friend safe. “Etta!” She cried out to her friend.

She watched as Etta and Cooper exchanged glances. She could see Cooper tell Etta something, but she was still too far away from them to overhear. From where she stood, it looked like he wanted her to leave with him. Jaime had to run fast in order to prevent her from going off with him. Only this time, Jaime caught up to them in time.

It was all about this moment, Jaime thought. She raced over to the table where they were seated, gaining speed as she approached them. Etta watched as her best friend ran towards them and glanced back at Cooper.

She then heard Etta say, “I’m sorry, Cooper. I just can’t.”

•  •  •

Look for Book 3 in the Travelers Series, PARADIGM

Summer 2012

Why Dominion?

‘Old Dominion’ was the nickname given to Virginia by King Charles II in the 1600’s and is still used as a nickname today. Many businesses, schools, and organizations still reference the moniker: Old Dominion University, Old Dominion Speedway, Dominion Power, and Kings Dominion amusement park.

Acknowledgments

Once again, I have so many fabulous folks I wish to thank. There wouldn’t be any consistency in my parallel universes without the help of my beta readers: Rachel Della-Loggia, author Martha Bourke, and the dynamic mother-daughter team comprised of author Kate Copeseeley and her mom, Wallene Stoddard. Thank you guys for making sure Etta still kept her kick-butt attitude and ensuring my worlds didn’t collide! To my friend Bryan Taylor, who not only insisted there be twins in my story, but that they be named Chase and Chance. I also owe my mother, Irene Ybarra, a huge thanks, for being the Comma Queen that she is, and for spending the first few weeks of her retirement proofing my work. A huge thanks to my husband, Dave, who cooked, cleaned, and took care of my overall well-being as I wrote Paradox. And last, but certainly not least, a big debt of gratitude goes to my readers. There wouldn’t be a second book without your continued support.

About the Author

Claudia Lefeve was born and raised in the Gulf Coast border town of Brownsville, Texas; a curious place where folks see curanderas in lieu of shrinks, tortillas are served at every meal, and even gringos speak Spanish. She currently resides in Northern Virginia with her husband and two pugs.

For more information about the author, please visit
www.claudialefeve.com
.

Want to know what happens December 21, 2012, the day of the Mayan prophecy? Please continue reading for the following excerpt from
Jaguar Sun
by Martha Bourke, a fabulous friend and one of my favorite indie authors.

An excerpt from

Jaguar Sun

By Martha Bourke

Chapter One

I
was standing by my locker when it happened. I was listening to the twins standing next to me babbling in Spanish. Sadly, I didn’t speak a word. (Hopefully they were discussing how cute I looked in my new Diesels.) I managed to decipher the name Matt from their conversation and suddenly realized they weren’t talking about me, they were talking about my soon-to-be ex-boyfriend! Crap.

“Hey! We have a no-Spanish rule when it’s about guys!” I protested.

“Oh, Maya, it’s no big deal. Damian was just saying how hot he thinks Matt looked in AP English this morning,” Alyssa said. Right on cue, Damian flushed a delicate shade of pink. Seriously, he was the most adorable gay guy on the planet.

“All I’m saying,” I said, “is that if you expect me to take part in the conversation, use a language I can actually understand.”

I don’t know what I was getting all worked up about. It’s not like I didn’t experience this a hundred times a day. At El Desierto, my pointless high school in the New Mexico—yep, you guessed it—
desert
, you either hung with the Hispanics and spoke Spanish or you had white friends. Sadly, being a Hispanic with a freakish inability to speak Spanish did not help my already nonexistent status.

“I just think that maybe you should make more of an effort. It’s not like you’re not Hispanic,” Damian said.

“Yeah, well, my
Hispanicness
ditched me when my loser-mom did,” I reminded him.

We all shared knowing looks as I paused to think about my loser-mom, who’d abandoned me and my dad, and my friends tried to think of what to say. (I mean, what kind of mother takes off on you when you’re four? And goes to Las Vegas? I’m sorry, but could that be more cheesy? Cheesi
er
? Whatever.)

Alyssa giggled. “’Hispanicness?’ Is that even a word?”

“Yes and no. It’s not in the dictionary; however, it is used in daily conversation, which, as I’m sure you know, is often how a word is added to the dictionary anyway,” Damian explained.

Lyssa crossed her eyes. “Seriously, Maya, you should just have your grandma help you.”

I knew that they both had the sweetest intentions, as always. But I spent so little time with Grandma, I wasn’t about to waste it working on my foreign language skills. No. Way.

That’s when I saw it. A dark shadow was moving along the wall. It paused at the end of our row of lockers, crouching there as if it were hunting something. Hunting me? A chill ran down my back. I started shaking uncontrollably. That was when the nausea hit.

“Uh, you guys, I gotta make a run to the ladies’—girly issues. I’ll meet you in English!” I tore down the hallway and nearly knocked over Ashley Daniels, a member of the famed (and ho-ish) EDHS cheerleaders.

“Freak!” She yelled as her minions scrambled to pick up her books.

I hooked around the corner and into the girls’ bathroom. Thankfully, I was alone. For a moment, I just leaned against the wall, trying to catch my breath and get a handle on my stomach. What the hell was that thing? I walked over to the mirror and looked at my reflection. The dark, sad eyes of my grandmother’s people stared back at me. I looked at my long dark hair, olive skin, and high cheekbones. Locals often mistook me for some kind of American Indian. But I was from a different tribe. I was Mayan. It was Grandma’s idea to call me Maya.

The girl in the mirror now looked like a stranger. I was sweaty, pasty, and I had dark circles under my eyes from lack of sleep. Had I just imagined it? How could a shadow just move all by itself like that? And it looked like some kind of animal.
Okay
, I told myself,
there is no way there is some large animal roaming the halls of the school.
But I had seen it, hadn’t I? What was happening to me? I splashed some water on my face and attempted to pat it dry with a paper towel. (Why do school paper towels feel like you’re using an actual piece of paper to dry your face? Seriously, should I be able to take one back to class with me and use it to take notes on? I’m just sayin’.) I peeked out the door. The hallway was empty.
Crap, crap, crap.
I was late for English.

I couldn’t focus at all during morning classes. I replayed what had happened that morning over and over in my head. I kept expecting the shadow to appear again at any minute. By the time we all met at the cafeteria for lunch, I was a nervous wreck. As the twins and I sat down at our usual table, I was met by two very annoying sets of eyes.

“What?” I asked, opening a can of diet Coke (aka, my elixir of life).

“You look like crap, that’s what,” Lyssa said.

“What, are you scouting for
Vogue
? I just haven’t been sleeping well lately,” I said, as I checked out some moron walking by our table with his jeans hanging below his butt. (Speaking of fashion, should anyone really accessorize with underwear? I mean, besides like, Madonna?)

“Are you still having those weird animal dreams?” Damian asked.

All the time.
“Yeah, sometimes,” I said. I carefully omitted that as of two hours ago, they were hunting me during waking hours as well.

“Is it the same animal every time?”

One thing about Damian, he was nothing if not persistent. And smart as hell. Absolutely nothing got by the kid. But I was not in the mood. I looked straight at my best friend’s beautiful almost-black eyes, and said, “Give it a rest, will ya?”

“Are you losing your damn mind? The boy is just trying to help,” Lyssa said, tucking one side of her brown, blond-streaked bob behind one ear. She was a very petite girl, just barely five feet tall, much shorter than me at five foot eight. I’d be surprised if she weighed a hundred pounds. But, man, she had enough attitude for someone twice her size!

“Yeah, I know,” I said. Jeez, I was a crappy friend. The Vasquez twins had been my best friends since the third grade, and here I was being a huge grump. Of course I had plenty to be grumpy about, but they didn’t know that. And I wasn’t so sure about talking to them about it. I mean, what would I say?
Hey, guys, guess what? A shadow thingy is after me and I’m scared shitless.
They would probably decide I was certifiable, immediately dial 911, and have me carted away. Sounds about right. One thing was sure; I was going to have to talk to someone about this or I really would lose my damn mind.

“Hello, earth to Maya.” Damian waved his hand in front of my face.

“Sorry, Damian,” I said.

“It’s okay, honey. We just don’t know what’s going on with you.”

They both looked concerned, and that made me more upset than I already was. I decided right then that, after last bell, I was driving to my Grandma Rosa’s. It was quite a hike. She lived in a cabin about an hour outside of town where she could work on her photography. Grandma’s beautiful nature photography was very well known. She said that living close to nature inspired her. She wanted to let people see the earth through the eyes of the Mayan people so that they would honor it. Go, Grandma!

As last bell rang, I stopped by my locker to pick up my things and noticed I had three new text messages. They were all from Matt. He wanted to know what our status was. Seriously, I felt like telling him that we had no status as long as he insisted on behaving like an ass. We’d been together “officially” for six months, but we’d been interested in each other long before that. And the truth was, I was still into him. He was Matt Caldwell—a six foot one sexy senior with light brown hair, beautiful brown eyes, a tanned, athletic body, and above average intelligence. Who wouldn’t be into him?

And we did have a lot in common. We both lived with single parents. But since he made the varsity football team, he was changing. We used to spend lots of quiet time alone. (Not for
that
. You know, for cuddling and whatnot.) Sadly, since he made varsity, we hadn’t spent any time alone. All he wanted to do when he wasn’t playing football was party. I mean, I
was
proud of him. He worked incredibly hard to make the team. And he had goals, like an athletic scholarship. I just wasn’t so sure I was cut out to be the star quarterback’s girlfriend. It just wasn’t what I’d signed up for. He was also a year older than me, so I wasn’t actually sure what we were doing, anyway. He was already eighteen and would graduate in the spring, leaving me deserted at El Desierto. (Ha! Deserted at “Deserted” High.)

I glanced at my watch. If I left right away, I could make it to Grandma’s and back before my dad got home. It wasn’t that he didn’t like Grandma personally. I think he appreciated that she was a positive female influence. But all the Mayan traditions reminded him of my loser-mom and how she’d skipped town. But that was like a gazillion years ago. Sometimes I just wished that he could move on.

I headed for my Wrangler that my dad bought secondhand for my sixteenth birthday. It was perfect for New Mexico weather and I couldn’t wait to get on the highway and ride to Grandma’s with the top down. I was particularly careful to avoid the far side of the school parking lot where I could run into the twins or Matt. I didn’t have time for socializing. If I was going to pull this off, I was going to have to make very good time.

Thankfully, when I arrived at Grandma’s, she was home. I was afraid she would be out scouting for shots somewhere. Grandma wasn’t just Mayan, she was a Mayan Elder, so I was pretty sure she’d be able to help me. At least, I hoped so. I opened the door to her cabin and walked in.

“Grandma,” I called as I put my bag down and headed toward the kitchen. The cabin always smelled of
copal
, the sweet-smelling incense that wafted through the little house. The scent of it immediately brought me back to my childhood and gave me a sense of peace.

“Oh, Maya, I’m in the darkroom. Go ahead and put the tea kettle on. I won’t be long. Some of your favorite cookies are on top of the fridge.”

Grandma’s amaranth-cinnamon cookies are seriously yummy. She grows her own amaranth, just like the Mayan people did back in the day. She uses it in lots of stuff, but my favorites are her cookies. (Oh, and toasted amaranth! It’s just like popcorn, but better.)

BOOK: Paradox (Travelers Series Book 2)
10.49Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Expect the Sunrise by Warren, Susan May
Shame and the Captives by Thomas Keneally
Tender Rebel by Johanna Lindsey
A Daring Proposition by Jennifer Greene
Poppy Shakespeare by Clare Allan
A Big Fat Crisis by Cohen, Deborah
Line of Fire by Jo Davis