The Forgotten Locket (29 page)

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Authors: Lisa Mangum

Tags: #Romance, #General, #Fantasy, #Fiction, #Time Travel, #Good and Evil

BOOK: The Forgotten Locket
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Domenico looked up from his search, glancing between me and Dante. “But isn’t this the Casella home?” His face turned an embarrassed shade of pink. “I’m sorry. It’s just that you look so much like him”—he gestured to Dante—“I just assumed . . .” He trailed off and studied Dante more closely. His forehead creased in confusion.

 

“Why are you looking for Orlando?” I asked, hoping to distract Domenico’s attention away from Dante. “Has he done something wrong?”

 

“That’s just it. He’s done nothing wrong. I simply wanted to give him a message.” He cleared his throat. “Are you sure you don’t know where he is?”

 

He looked up at me with such hope in his eyes that I felt my resolve crumbling.

 

“I’m his brother,” Dante said carefully. “You can give me the message.”

 

Domenico hesitated, as though wary of trusting us too much.

 

“There are no secrets between my brother and me.” Dante’s voice was low but strong. “I know the truth of his past.”

 

The wariness in Domenico’s eyes retreated. “In that case, when you see Orlando, would you please tell him how sorry I am?”

 

Now I was the one to blink in surprise.

 

“Tell him that what was done to him . . . it was wrong. No one should be made to suffer as he did.” He dove back into his bag and rustled through a few more papers. “I have been looking for him everywhere in order to give him this.” He held up a large envelope in both hands.

 

“What is it?” Dante asked.

 

“He was promised a new identity—among other things—in exchange for his . . . assistance.” The pink blush of embarrassment deepened to the red of shame. “Angelo has refused to fulfill his promise, but I am a man of honor, and if this, in some way, can help Orlando, then it is my duty to help him however I can.” He cleared his throat again and straightened to his full height, even though it meant he only reached my shoulder. “A promise is a promise, and I would like to make amends, though I know it will never be enough.”

 

“You are a good man,” I said. Tears filled my eyes and I reached for Dante’s hand. “We would be honored to give him that message.”

 

Domenico puffed his chest out with the praise and bowed low. “Thank you, my lady.”

 

He handed the envelope to Dante and then turned to leave.

 

“Wait,” I called out. “You won’t . . . I mean, I’d appreciate it if you didn’t tell anyone you saw me here.”

 

Domenico smiled knowingly. “Angelo put me in charge of finding Orlando and the girl who had escaped with him from the courthouse. Now that I have found you”—he bowed once more—“I believe I can safely say that no one else will come looking for you.” He nodded to Dante, then climbed into his carriage and drove away.

 

We both looked down in silence at the envelope in Dante’s hands.

 

I touched the corner edge. “This is what will save Orlando, isn’t it? This will allow him to go somewhere new, become someone new. Until he ultimately becomes Leo in all those years to come.”

 

He nodded. “It’s strange to think that the papers in this envelope will change his life yet again. Part of me wants to keep them a secret—as if, by pretending nothing has happened, we can all stay here, together as a family, instead of being swept apart by the river.” He sighed. “But the other part of me knows that by receiving these papers, Orlando will have the choice of what—and who—he will become. I can’t deny him that choice.”

 

“But you know he’ll be okay,” I said, giving his arm a reassuring squeeze. “Eventually.”

 

After a time, Dante drew me close and pressed a kiss to the top of my head. “I’m so sorry, Abby.”

 

“What for?”

 

“For not fully understanding what you are going through. I might be afraid of losing my brother—my family—but it’s already happened to yours. I should be doing more to help you bring them home.”

 

“You don’t have to apologize, Dante. It’s strange to say it, but we haven’t exactly had time to focus on the problem.”

 

“I should have made time.”

 

I bit my lip, thinking back to the ghostly images I had seen of my family back on the bank. I felt the hard pull of longing. “Could we try now?” I asked.

 

Dante didn’t say anything; he simply folded the envelope into his pocket and, with a grin, flickered me to the bank.

 

I knew the river had been struggling and unstable, but I was surprised to see how much worse it had gotten even during the short time since I’d last been to the bank.

 

“Oh, no,” I gasped. “This is terrible.”

 

It was actually worse than that. The river had continued to unspool, fraying and thinning until it looked less like the winding Mississippi and more like the flooded Nile delta. It had been transformed into a swamp, complete with pockets of flickering lights and tide pools filled with sluggish images.

 

Dante surveyed the river in both directions, his mouth a grim line. “I’m sorry, Abby. Trying to save your family now might be the worst thing we could do.”

 

My heart sank, but I knew he was right. As much as I wanted my family back, I didn’t want to do the wrong thing at the wrong time and have them suffer even more for my mistake.

 

“Is there
anything
we can do?” I asked.

 

He was silent for a moment, pacing along the edge of the bank. “It seems to be weakest here and here,” he said, pointing out two of the very thinnest spots where patches of silver threads lumped together in a sluggish knot. “But the river seems to be cleaner upstream, which is odd.”

 

I walked along next to Dante for a measureless moment of time until we came to the point where the river slowed to a trickle, as though the flow had been blocked by a boulder midstream. “So what happened here?” I asked.

 

“The door happened.” Dante crouched down to get a closer look at the river. “Before here, the river is fine—see, it’s clean and protected all the way back—but after here, the river has suffered from our interference.”

 

I knelt next to Dante. “So when I go to see you in the dungeon, this is the point in the timeline that I’ll be saving.” It felt a little strange to be so close to such an important moment and yet still so far away. “And once I do, do you think the river will be stable enough that we can save my family?”

 

Dante nodded. “This is the hinge. The point where everything changes.”

 

We watched the ebb and flow of the river for a moment. “What happens if you don’t go through the door?” I asked curiously. “I know that you seeing me at the door is important and is what will close the loop and protect the river, but after that happens, will you still have to go through the door?”

 

“Yes, I will.”

 

“Why?”

 

“Think of it as a lock and a key. Seeing you at the door is the key to saving me. My going through the door is what will lock the river into place. Together, we will be able to finally restore the river to its full strength and protect it from any further interference. It will take both of us.” Dante shrugged. “If you don’t go to the dungeon, or if I don’t go through the door, then none of this will matter. The river will be destroyed beyond anything Zo could hope to do to it.”

 

The thought sent a chill through me. As much as I didn’t want Dante to have to suffer the pain of going through the time machine, I knew he was willing to do it if it meant that, in the end, the river could be saved. I had made the same choice when I had decided to come through a time machine of my own. I had chosen to accept the good and the bad. I just hoped the good would be so much better that it could outweigh the bad.

 

“So, here, on the other side of the river, there is a version of you, already in prison, already waiting for me—you just don’t know it yet.”

 

He nodded again, but slower, sadder.

 

I took his hand. “I wish there were something I could do to help. A way to tell the other you that you’ll be okay, to give you some hope.”

 


You
are my hope,” he said. “You always have been; you always will be.”

 

A flash of light appeared a little ways down along the bank. I looked up, wondering if it was the ghost of my family again, but the horizon line was empty. Instead, I saw a thread of the river peel off from the main flow. A quiet rumble rocked through the bank. The flat sky turned gray overhead.

 

Dante frowned and rose to his feet in one smooth movement. “Stay here.”

 

I folded my legs beneath me, propping myself up with one arm. I watched as Dante walked away, his long stride purposeful and powerful.

 

A flicker in the river caught my eye and I glanced down. I wasn’t expecting to see anything—the river was so muddled here where the boulder of the door blocked the flow of time—but, to my surprise, the image of a face surfaced, clear and sharp.

 

Dante’s face.

 

I bit down on my lip, swiveling back to my knees so I could lean closer to the river.

 

The river offered up more of the image—just flashes, glimpses—but it was enough. I saw close quarters, black bricks, and thick bars blocking any escape. I didn’t know if my thinking of him had summoned him, but I knew I was seeing the Dante who was in prison. The one I was destined to save.

 

Physically, he looked almost exactly like the Dante I knew. But the fear in his eyes made him seem younger and more vulnerable. He wore a dirty shirt, ragged at the cuffs and hem. He pressed his back up against the wall, tucking his bare feet as close to his body as he could. A steady drip of water leaked from the ceiling, the puddle next to him glistening like oil in the dim light. It looked like he was in the third cell from the end of the hall.

 

I could see him shivering from the cold.

 

I knew he had strength, but it was still raw and unformed. He hadn’t been tried or tested yet, but I knew that it was coming. And that it would be harder than he’d ever imagined.

 

I glanced down the bank, but the other Dante was on his knees, studying a different section of the river.

 

Returning my gaze to the Dante in prison, I thought about how we were a team, the key to each other’s survival. I knew I had to do something to help him. How could I not?

 

But the bigger question was,
could
I help at all? He was in the river; I was on the bank. I tapped my lips with my finger, thinking.

 

I remembered how I had once sent a message ringing through the void of the bank, challenging Zo after he had left my doll’s head in a gold box for me—his sick idea of a gift. Surely, if I could send a message into the bank from the river, I could send a message into the river from the bank.

 

But what could I say? What message of hope could help strengthen Dante? What would give him the courage he needed to face the unknown? What would save him?

 

And then I knew.

 

I slowed my breathing, naturally falling into that meditative state where my thoughts sharpened and the counting came easy. The ever-present chimes of time warbled in my ears, whispering encouragement and direction. I fixed the image of Dante in my mind, concentrating on the exact moment I wanted to reach. I felt the familiar pressure of the bank building, heard the river chuffing like a lion’s roar, but I continued to breathe, to count, to focus.

 

And when I felt the edges thin to the point of invisibility, I sent my message into the river with as much force as I could manage.

 

Feel the fear till the count of ten, then count once more to be brave again.
I took a deep breath.
The counting will save you, Dante. Remember to count.

 

The image of Dante swirled away into the river, and maybe it was my imagination, but I thought that the spot where he had been seemed a little clearer, a little smoother, than before. It was the best I could hope for.

 

Chapter 22

 

What are you doing?” Zo said.

 

My thoughts broke like glass and I whipped around, startled. I scrambled back, struggling to find my feet, but Zo’s hand flashed out and gripped my wrist, holding me in place.

 

The drop of darkness in my mind quivered at his touch and all my words vanished in my throat.

 

His hand twitched on my arm; his skin was burning hot with the heat of fever, of sickness.

 

“Are you trying to change things?” he continued conversationally as he crouched next to me on his haunches. “All by yourself?” He looked down at the river where Dante’s face had been a moment ago, but his eyes were slightly unfocused. “I was in the cell next to Dante, did you know that? All that muttering and counting and pacing. It about drove me crazy.”

 

I looked over my shoulder, searching for Dante. Where was he?

 

Dante was following the broken thread of the river as it wove its way downstream. He was too far away to hear us, too far away to see what was happening.

 

“Or were you trying to help
him?
” Zo nodded downriver at Dante’s retreating form. “Because I don’t think that’s very fair.”

 

My voice returned, rusty and hoarse. “Since when have you ever played fair?”

 

“Now, Abby, that hurts. Dante broke my guitar; I broke his locket. That is the definition of fair.” He opened his mouth to laugh, but all that emerged was a dry gasp that ended in a cough. “And even though we are both wounded—both dying—you have helped only
him.
So now who is playing favorites?” Zo leaned in as though we were sharing a secret, a smile on his dry and cracked lips. “Is it because he’s a better kisser?”

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