Authors: Jessica Sorensen
the thing with Foreseers is that not a whole lot of
people like us because we can practical y see
anything—good or bad. We can go to places where
most can’t go, like The Underworld. And so when we
do show up in The Underworld unannounced, it pisses
the Queen off. And no one likes being around a
pissed off Queen, especial y a Queen who likes to
torture people so her Water Faeries can feed off of
the fear. So most Foreseers are unwil ing to help
another Foreseer go there.”
I felt like I was being choked. “Are you sure there’s
absolutely no one that wil .”
He shook his head. “Nope. There’s not.”
Okay, now I was pissed. He just tricked me into
believing there was a way just so I would kiss him.
Stupid faerie. “You know what? I think I’l let Alex and
Laylen take over from where they left off before the
kiss.”
“Great,” Alex said, looking a little too happy about
it. He along with Laylen started to corner Nicholas
again.
“Okay, Okay,” Nicholas said, surrendering with his
hands out in front of him “There might be a way…but it
wil take some time.”
“How much time?” Alex asked, stil moving for him.
“A few weeks, maybe a few months,” Nicholas said
with his back up against the wal . “It real y al depends
on Gemma.”
“On me.” I pointed at myself. “Why would it depend
on me?”
“Wel , I think if there were two Foreseers, then we
might have enough power to use an Ira
to go into The
Underworld.”
Alex and I exchanged a look, and then Alex said to
Nicholas, “How sure are you that it’l work.”
“If she trains enough and builds up her power, then
it should work,” Nicholas said looking—for once—like
he was tel ing the truth.
Alex glanced at Laylen and Laylen shrugged. “It’s
your cal .”
Alex looked back at Nicholas. “You’l train her
here
.”
It wasn’t a question.
He nodded. “I’l bring the Ira bal back with me after
I’ve dropped you off at the City of Crystal to make
good on the promise you broke to Dyvinius—
something I can’t get you out of, even if I wanted to.
Which I don’t.”
“Fine,” Alex agreed. “Take me to the City of Crystal
to pay my debt. And while I’m gone, you’l get Gemma
ready to use the
Ira
.”
“Alright,” Nicholas said and slipped from his pocket
the ruby-fil ed crystal bal that would take Alex and him
to the City of Crystal. “Let’s go then.” He balanced the
bal in the palm of his hand and held it out in front of
Alex.
“Just one second before we take off” Alex said to
Nicholas. Then he turned to me, giving me this
strangest look ever.
“What?” I asked, confused.
Stil looking at me weirdly, he leaned in toward me.
I wasn’t sure what he was going to do at first—kiss
me? Yeah, that thought flashed through my head until I
realized that he was heading for my ear not my lips.
“Make sure and be careful around Nicholas.” His
breath was electric against my ear, and I had to try
very hard not to gasp. “Faeries are tricky. He’l twist
things around and try to confuse you if you’re not
careful.”
So you’re a faerie, too,
I thought, but aloud I said,
“Okay, I wil .”
“And whatever you do, don’t take the necklace off,”
Alex added, before stepping away from me. He went
back over to Nicholas, who was waiting impatiently
with the ruby-fil ed crystal bal in his hand. “And
Nicholas,” Alex said, his hand extended toward the
bal , but not touching it yet.
What?” Nicholas’s tone was mildly tolerant.
“I want you to remember one thing,” Alex said, his
voice sharper than I’d ever heard. “Try anything, and I
mean anything like what you just pul ed with Gemma
while I’m gone and you’l have to deal with two very
powerful witches and a vampire who are more than
wil ing to protect her.”
“Whatever,” Nicholas said, but looked a little
worried.
Alex didn’t say anything else. He placed his hand
on the crystal bal , and in a blink-of-a-second later he
was gone.
Why did Alex make me feel this way? Why was
he the only guy who could steal my breath away?
Make my knees weak? Yet, at the same time, drive
me absolutely insane?
After Alex and Nicholas took off to The City of
Crystal, I was left with this horrid feeling of loneliness
in the pit of my stomach; loneliness that always
seemed to show up whenever Alex left me. I felt
cursed by this feeling that tied me to a guy who had
lied, been rude, and tried to control me. But for now, I
guess I was bound to it, until I could figure out what
was causing this electric bond between us.
Something that I was hoping my mother might know
about.
As Laylen and I sat on the purple velvet sofa,
waiting for Nicholas to return, I decided to tel him
what I’d seen in the vision—see if he knew anything
about a vision fil ed with bright light.
But after I’d finished explaining to him what I’d seen,
Laylen looked about as puzzled as I felt.
“I have no idea what that could mean,” Laylen said,
sweeping his blue tipped bangs out of his eyes. “A
bright light—that’s al you saw?”
I nodded. “And then Nicholas showed up and when I
told him what I was seeing, he said my future was
dead.”
Laylen’s face twisted with confusion. “I have no
idea, Gemma. I real y don’t. But…I real y wouldn’t
worry about it too much. I mean, there’s a chance that
Nicholas could have been messing with your head.”
I nodded, but I stil felt uneasy. I tried to think of
something else, but al my brain wanted to do was
think about Alex. Stupid brain. And it wouldn’t stop, it
just kept going and going until…I remembered.
Alex.
Alex and I.
My memories were flashing back to me. Not al of
them, but some. Alex and I picking flowers in a field;
watching other Keepers practice sword fighting;
playing, having fun, smiling.
“Gemma what’s wrong?” Laylen’s voice was only a
glitch in my head.
My voice was soft, barely audible. “I can remember
some stuff…about my childhood…about Alex and I
being friends.”
“You remember? Like actual y remember?”
I nodded. “They’re real memories. And I can feel
how I felt when I was there.”
“Hurry, try to remember other things too,” Laylen
said encouragingly. “See if you can remember what
happened before they took your emotions away—if
anything was said that might tel us what Stephan is
real y planning to do with the star.”
“Okay.” I closed my eyes, concentrating on my
thoughts that were floating back to me. The feelings
I’d felt during them, the prickle making the connection.
But no memories contained Stephan. Just Alex. Alex
and I. Alex…
My eyes shot open, and for a moment, I just
stood there, unable to react because…wel , because
it had happened again. I’d made myself go into a
vision. God, what did I look like to Laylen? Was I just
sitting there with my eyes closed? Or had I fel out of
the chair and onto the floor?
I shook my head. This was getting out of hand. If I
didn’t figure out how to control this power of mine, one
day I was going to slip into a vision at the worse time
possible. Like say when I was driving or something.
I shook my head. That was a scary thought.
Deciding I should focus on the vision, I pushed that
thought aside. I was standing in a forest thick with
trees, where I caught a glimpse of the tip of a grey
stone castle peaking through spaces between the
trees. I knew I had to be the forest that surrounded the
lake—the lake that was the entrance to The
Underworld.
It was bright outside, the sky a clear blue. As I
started to move through the trees, heading for the
castle, I wondered what I was supposed to see.
Perhaps something with Stephan? Although, I sure
hoped it wasn’t the vision of my mother being forced
into The Underworld. I had seen that more times than I
ever wanted to.
But as a cool breeze swept through my hair and
kissed at my cheeks, the impulse to head to the
castle drifted away, and I found myself suddenly
heading in the opposite direction, deeper into the
forest.
I walked for what seemed like forever, my legs
practical y moving on their own, maneuvering me
effortlessly passed bushes, trees, and tipped over
tree trunks. I swear it was like I knew where I was
going without real y knowing. If that made any sense.
As I’d just started to wonder just how far my legs
were planning to take me, I came to a stop in front of
a steep hil . I stared up at it skeptical y, taking in its
loose dirt and the steep incline. How the heck was I
supposed to climb up it?
But I wasn’t supposed to climb up it. That’s what my
thoughts were tel ing me. So instead, I moved to the
side, walking at the bottom of the hil , searching for…
wel , I wasn’t sure. But I hoped I’d know when I saw it.
After awhile, I began to get frustrated at the fact that
this vision seemed pointless. I mean why hadn’t I seen
anyone? And why did it feel like I had to put together a
puzzle in order to understand the meaning of the
vision? This had never happened before—usual y I
just watched the vision. So why was it different now?
Before I could conjure up an answer for these
questions, I spotted something. A bush, budding with
violet flowers at the foot of the hil . Violet flowers…
hmm, it was ringing a bel .
I walked up to the bush and picked one of the violet
flowers. The smel was intoxicating and caused my
memories to spin in my head, little images of the
countless times that I’d picked these flowers when I
was a child. It also brought up a memory of this bush
and that there was something behind it.
Yes, behind it.
I squatted down and examined behind the bush,
letting my fingers dig through the damp soil as I
inched my way up the steep side of the hil and around
to the back of the bush.
My jaw dropped. A smal hole had been dug into
the hil . It was hidden by the violet bush so wel that I
wouldn’t have seen it if I hadn’t been looking for it. I
grabbed a hold of the branches of the bush, the thorns
cutting at the palms of my hands as I hoisted myself
up to where I could see down into the dark hole. There
was a ladder that lead to…wel I couldn’t tel —I could
only see a dirt floor. But there was a light on, glowing
faintly from somewhere inside.
I took a deep breath and lowered my feet down to
the top step of the ladder. Another deep breath and I
started to climb down, my hands sweating against the
cool metal. When my feet reached the floor, I
immediately spun around. I wasn’t going to lie, but I
half expected a Death Walker to pop out and grab
me. But no. What was there was probably more
surprising than finding a Death Walker.
I was standing in a hol owed out room, the floors
and wal s made of dirt. There was an old wooden
table pressed up against the back wal where a
candle burned, the orange glow of the flame lighting
up the tiny dirt room. Next to the table was a blue
metal trunk, and right in front of trunk was me. Wel ,
the younger me anyway, sitting on the dirt floor. Smal ,
and around four years old, my violet eyes giving away
that it was indeed me. Sitting across from me was a
little boy with dark brown hair and bright green eyes.
Alex. I knew that now—my memories were able to
make the connection.
“So what do you thinks going to happen?” Little
Gemma asked. “After they take me away?”
Little Alex shook his head. “I don’t know…”
“Do you think we’l ever see each other again?”
Little Gemma asked, her violet eyes wide with fear.
He nodded. “I promise we wil , no matter what they
say.”
She looked terrified, tears bubbling up at the corner
of her eyes, and I could actual y feel her fear, worry,
and sadness inside me, as if we’d connected. “Do