Authors: Jessica Sorensen
necessary to go speak to Vladislav? I mean, if Alex
knew a way to get to The Underworld, maybe he knew
another way to find out if she was alive. Of course, I’d
had to use what Vladislav had told us about my
mother being the Queen’s slave for Alex to admit he
knew a way. But stil …maybe our little trip could have
been avoided.
Wel , I guess we had real y messed up on that one.
And now Laylen might end up getting hunted down by
a bunch of revengeful vampires.
“Jocelyn’s stil alive…in The Underworld…” Aislin
said. “For al these years?”
Wel , according to
Vladislav
, she is” Alex replied,
shooting Laylen a glare.
“He wasn’t lying,” Laylen assured him, standing up
from his chair. “I could feel that he wasn’t.”
“I already said we’d go try to rescue her,” Alex said
sharply. “I don’t need you to try and convince me.”
“I wasn’t trying to convince you,” Laylen said. “I was
just pointing out the fact that, despite what you
believe, vampires do tel the truth sometimes.”
“That might be true,” Alex replied. “But your little trip
out there also backed up my theory that vampires
can’t control their need to bite.”
“Wel , I can control my need.” Laylen took a
threatening step toward Alex.
“Yeah, but for how long?” Alex asked, taking a step
toward Laylen. “How long do you think you’l be able to
keep it under control before you lose it?”
“Can you two just stop arguing,” I cried out, startling
myself and everyone else in the room. Al their eyes
were on me. “The longer we stand around here
arguing, the longer my mom has to be down there
suffering. And the more time we waste not trying to
figure out what the heck Stephan is trying to do with
me and the star.”
They were al speechless for a minute, which
almost always happens when I make a big speech
like that.
“But how do we get Nicholas here?” Aislin asked,
fidgeting with one of her diamond earrings. “Isn’t
going to the City of Crystal the only way to find him?
And to do that don’t we need another special kind of
crystal bal that is hard to come by. I mean, the only
other alternative I can think of is to go to the Kingdom
of Fey, and see if he’s there. But he doesn’t spend
much time there. At least I don’t think he does.”
“Besides,” Laylen added. “Whether we end up
finding a way to enter the City of Crystal, or if we
decide to go to the Kingdom of Fey, both places are
not very accepting of unwelcomed visitors.”
“Kingdom of Fey?” I asked.
“It’s where the Fey live,” Aislin explained. “And
since Nicholas is part Fey, he goes there sometimes.
But I don’t think he’s very fond of it because…wel ,
because the fey can be…”
“Everything’s a joke to them,” Alex interrupted.
“Which means there’s a lot of running around in
circles. And it doesn’t matter because I’m not
planning on going to either one of those places.” Alex
caught my eye. “Gemma’s going to bring him here.”
“What…” I gaped at him. “
I’m
going to bring him
here? How am I…Oh…” I stopped as it dawned on
me what he was referring to. I was going to use a
good old normal crystal bal , which in turn would al ow
the Foreseers to know that I was using a crystal bal
again, something I’d been forbidden to do until I’d
been trained, and something Alex had promised
Dyvinius I wouldn’t use until I had. So if I used the
power of the crystal, Nicholas would show up here to
col ect on Alex’s promise.
“But if I bring him here that way then you’l have to
—” I started to say.
Alex shook his head at me, trying to get me to stop
talking.
“Have to what?” Aislin asked curiously.
I gave Alex a funny look, wondering why I couldn’t
say anything to Ailsin and Laylen about the promise
he’d made to Dyvinius.
“Then he’l be super annoying, just like he always
is,” Alex said quickly, taking me by the hand, which
threw me completely off guard. “Look, I have to talk to
Gemma for a minute about what’s going to happen
when Nicholas gets here, so excuse us for just a
second.”
Before anyone could respond to this, Alex was
pul ing me toward the door. Laylen and Ailsin
exchanged a perplexed look, which I’m sure matched
the look on my own face.
“What’s wrong with you?” I pul ed my hand from his
grip after we’d made it out of the room. “Why can’t I
say anything about the promise you made to
Dyvinius.”
“Because...” he glanced back at Ailsin and Laylen,
and then shut the door. “Ailsin wil freak out if she finds
out about it.”
“Why? How bad is it?”
“I told you that's for me to worry about.” He backed
away toward the stairs. “We need to get that bite
cleaned up before we bring Nicholas here. The less
he knows about what’s going on, the better.” And with
that, he headed down the stairs.
I sighed, trotting down the stairs after him. “But what
happens when he gets here?” I asked, fol owing Alex
into the kitchen. “Are we just supposed to ask him for
the Ira crystal bal and hope that’l he’l give it to us.”
Alex started opening up the top cupboards that
surrounded the cooking area of the kitchen. “No.
You’re probably going to have to do that.”
“Why would I have to?” I asked, wondering what he
was looking for.
“Because…” he bent down and opened the
cupboard below the sink. “I probably won’t be here.”
“Huh….Why won’t you…Alex what the heck is going
to happen to you when I use the crystal bal .”
He reached inside the cupboard and pul ed out a
first aid kit. “I told you—”
I cut him off. “Just tel me,
please
.”
He looked at me, and I looked back at him, the
electricity coursing al around.
“I’m just going to be gone for a little while,” he final y
said with a shrug. “It’s nothing major.”
“But you’l come back, right?” I asked, suddenly
worried I’d never see him again. Hmm…That was
weird.
He paused, considering what I’d asked him.
“Eventual y, yeah.”
As Alex patched the bite on my neck, his words
lingered in my head.
Eventually
. Eventual y, he’d be
back, but when? Did he even know?
I was sitting on the kitchen table, with my feet up on
one of the chairs, as Alex stood in front of me, patting
my neck with a cotton bal .
“What exactly do you mean by eventual y?” I asked
him, flinching from the pain. “’Just how long are you
talking about? And why wil you be gone? Can’t you
just break the promise?” I mean he was good at
breaking promises to me, so why not to Dyvinius.
He gave me a funny look. “You know, you ask more
questions than anyone I’ve ever known.”
I rol ed my eyes. “Wel , if you’d just tel me things,
then I wouldn’t have to ask the questions.”
He shook his head, trying not to smile. “Wel , I’m not
sure when I’l be back—there’s no time frame for what
I’l be doing. And I won’t break the promise because I
can’t. It’s binding because I made it in the City of
Crystal. It’s how things work—promises are
unbreakable when made there.”
“Wel , can you at least tel me what you have to do
while you’re be there?” I asked as he pul ed out a
square piece of gauze.
“It’s better if I didn’t.” He peeled off the wrapper
from the gauze. “Trust me, you’re better off not
knowing.”
It was bad—I could tel . “Wel , if it’s that bad then
why are you doing it?”
He took the rol of tape out, looking very
uncomfortable. “Because…as of right now it’s the only
way I can think of to get some answers.” He ripped
two pieces of tape off and tossed the rol back into the
first aid kit. “And also because…” He struggled with
his words as he taped the gauze to my neck.
“Because I’m hoping if I do, then maybe you’l start…
trusting me more. And perhaps…” He closed the first
aid kit, picked it up, and headed back toward the
cupboard where he’d gotten it from. “You’l forgive
me.”
He said it so quietly I wasn’t sure if he’d actual y
said it. Before I could get around to asking him to
please repeat himself, Laylen entered the kitchen.
“So I’m assuming you need a normal Foreseers
crystal bal to get this Ira crystal bal ,” he said to Alex
as he slid onto the table beside me.
Alex shut the cupboard and nodded. “Yeah, does
Adessa have one?”
Laylen nodded, and we fol owed him out of the
room to go get one. I couldn’t help but look at Alex,
thinking about what I thought he said—that I’d forgive
him. The more I thought about it, though, the more I
was convinced I’d misunderstood him.
After we got a regular old vision-seeing kind of
crystal bal from Adessa, we went into the now
cleaned up living room. Evidently, Adessa had used
magic to clean and mend up Laylen’s and Alex’s
mess. The shelves were back up on the dark blue
wal s, the knickknacks standing on them. The
apothecary table was no longer broken and the black
candles were topping it once again. And the crack in
the wal had miraculously been fixed.
It was real y early in the morning, and Adessa had
decided she needed to do some inventory in her
store. Alex had suggested to Aislin that she should go
help Adessa. I think he did it so that Aislin would be
distracted from the fact that when Nicholas showed
up, he would be taken away to the City of Crystal. I
couldn’t believe he wasn’t going to tel her, but there
was no use trying to argue with him. Whatever the
promise was, he wanted to keep it a secret from her.
While we had been getting things set up, Alex had
informed me that he stil wasn’t sure if this was going
to work. Al he knew was that Foreseers did have a Ira
crystal bal , which al owed them to travel to and from
places that people normal y couldn’t travel to—like
say for instance The Underworld—but he wasn’t sure
how it would work exactly. Al we could hope for is that
we’d be able to get Nicholas to tel us. For some
reason, I had a feeling that this was going to be tricky.
Faeries were tricky after al , so getting information
from one seemed liked it would be tricky.
The violet ribbons swirled and danced inside the
crystal bal , which was balanced in its stand on top of
the apothecary table in front of us. Laylen sat on the
one side of me, while Alex sat on the other side of
me. I’d put myself in the middle of them intentional y,
figuring it’d be best to separate them, just in case they
decided to get mad at one another again.
I felt a little afraid looking down at the glinting crystal
bal . I worried where I would end up when I went in,
and if I would even be able to get myself out. But we
were al taking risks here, and I guess this was mine.
Al I could do was cross my fingers, and hope that I
would return to Adessa’s and find a more than
cooperative Nicholas awaiting to tel me in detail what
needed to be done to get my mother out of that
horrendous place known as The Underworld.
But I had a feeling it wasn’t going to be nearly that
easy.
“Okay, so now what?” Laylen asked. “Gemma’s just
supposed to go into a vision and faerie boy wil show
up here and hand over this Ira crystal bal and then,
BAM, we’l just be able to travel to The Underworld
without having to get dragged down through the lake
by a Water Faerie?”
“Something like that,” Alex mumbled quietly as he
stared at the crystal bal . He looked at me. “Whenever
you’re ready, go ahead.”
I eyed the crystal bal warily. “Okay….” Wel , here
goes nothing. I reached for the crystal bal , but Alex
caught my hand before my fingers grazed the glass.
“You need to make sure you go somewhere safe,”
he insisted, holding onto my hand. “Just think of
something simple that might have happened in your
past. You have to be careful you don’t alter anything.
Or get yourself stuck…You do remember how
Nicholas got you out of the vision, when you went in
with him, right?”
“Yeah,” I nodded. “He just blinked and we were out.”