Authors: Jessica Sorensen
behind us. But there was nothing.
“Where’s it coming from,” I whispered.
He shook his head, and scooted us over to the side
of the path, where we stepped off of a ledge and
down onto a glistening surface of blue glass that was
as slippery as ice. He took my hand, and we hurried
over to a massive crystal pil ar that coiled down from
the ceiling and connected to the ground. Right as we
tucked ourselves behind the pil ar, I caught a glimpse
of a tal figure walking down the path.
“Someone’s coming,” I whispered to Laylen.
He gave me a nervous glance and then careful y
peeked around the pil ar. “What the…”
“Who is it?” I whispered.
“There’s no one there,” he told me, shaking his
head.
I furrowed my eyebrows and then peeked around
the pil ar. I, however, was met by a pair of golden eyes
that belonged to a very tricky faerie/Foreseer.
I jerked backward, but Nicholas caught me by the
arm and reeled me into him. He moved away from the
pil ar, backing across the slippery glass at a speed I’d
never be able to pul off.
“I knew you’d show up here,” Nicholas breathed in
my ear, stil backing us away from the pil ar—and from
Laylen. “I knew you would come and try to save
him
.”
I fought to get free, but my feet kept slipping out
from under me.
Nicholas whirled me around, wrapped his arms
around me, and pul ed me forceful y against him. “Try
anything funny, and I’l have you out of here before you
can even blink.”
“Nicholas,” Laylen cal ed out as he chased after us.
“Let her go.”
“Come any closer,” Nicholas warned, holding up the
ruby-fil ed crystal bal that apparently he had in his
hand the entire time. “And I’l have her out of her
before you can reach us.”
Laylen slid to a halt, but a look of rage on his face
stayed.
“Wise choice,” Nicholas said, his damp breath
hitting my cheek.
“What do you want?” Laylen asked, his bright blue
eyes targeted on Nicholas.
Nicholas traced a finger down my cheek, sending a
shiver crawling down my spine. “I have what I want
right here.”
Yuck. I was so tired of ending up like this—trapped
against Nicholas.
Laylen got this look on his face, like he was trying
real y hard to figure out how to free me from Nicholas
before he took me away from the City of Crystal. I was
panicking with the thought that Nicholas would end up
winning. And if he did then…Wel , I didn’t even want to
think about the possibilities of what would happen if
he did.
Nicholas strengthened his hold on me, the ruby-
fil ed bal glowing in his hand. He was breathing
deep, his chest rising and fal ing, as he raised the
crystal bal up in the air. There was a blur of colors that
swooshed toward us and then came a loud crack,
fol owed by a soft thump.
I learned something new.
Vampires are fast. And I mean fast.
One second Laylen had been a ways away from us,
and the next second he was right there.
It was amazing.
Another second and he’d knocked Nicholas out.
Yep, actual y knocked him out…I think.
“Is he…alive?” I asked, staring down at Nicholas’s
body sprawled across the icy blue glass.
“Yeah, he’s good—just unconscious.” Laylen bent
down and looped his arms underneath Nicholas’s
arms. “We’l let him sleep it off, and hopeful y we’l be
long gone by the time he wakes up.”
“And what if we’re not?” I asked scooting out of the
way so Laylen could drag Nicholas behind the pil ar.
“Guess we’l have to make sure we hurry.”
“Hurry?” I looked around at the giant cave we were
standing in. “But we stil don’t know where to go.”
Laylen didn’t say anything, only taking my arm to
help me keep my balance as we walked back across
the icy, blue glass. By the time we’d stepped back up
onto the translucent crystal floor, I was extremely
worried. Nicholas could wake up at any moment, and
he probably would be super pissed when he did. And
we stil needed to find Alex.
As I rattled my brain for a solution on how to do this,
besides searching the entire city for him, something
shocked me in the back. At first I thought I’d imagined
it—that my brain was searching for an answer and
had created the shock on its own. But then it
happened again, and I knew.
“Alex is close,” I sputtered out as I felt another
spark, this time in my fingertips.
“What?” Laylen asked, looking confused.
“He’s close…I can feel him.”
Realization slowly rose in his expression. “The
electricity?”
I nodded, and then we were running, fol owing the
path of electricity like an invisible trail of bread
crumbs, which would hopeful y lead us right to Alex.
We kept running and running, going further into the
cave, letting my electric sensors steer us as the
sparks grew hotter and hotter, until they were going so
wild I thought I was going to combust into flames. And
when we reached a pair of silver doors, with the
Foreseers mark on the top of each one, I knew Alex
had to be behind them.
“You think he’s in there?” Laylen asked as I reached
for the doorknob.
I nodded, slowly turning the handle, and pushed
open the door. And what I saw made my stomach
churn. People wrapped in chains that were binding
them to a crystal bal the size of a footbal stadium.
And al those people…wel , they looked dead.
I stood there, my hand stil gripping the doorknob,
my mouth agape. The people looked like corpses;
their skin as pale as a ghost, their eyes sealed shut,
their bodies strapped to the massive crystal bal that
burned brightly like the sun. They were dead. They
were al dead. Alex was dead. I couldn’t breathe.
“Calm down, Gemma.” Laylen’s voice was soothing
“They’re not dead.”
I dropped my hand from the doorknob, unable to
take my eyes off the crystal bal , the people, the
chains. “Are you—are you sure?”
“Yeah, I’m sure. The crystal’s col ecting energy from
them,” he explained. “If they were dead, they wouldn’t
be useful.”
Calm down. You won’t be useful if you’re freaking
out
. “Okay, so where’s Alex.”
Laylen stepped cautiously into the room, and I
fol owed. Luckily, there didn’t seem to be anyone
awake hanging around in there, like a Foreseer guard
or something. The coast was al clear. So why did I
stil feel like I was going to throw up?
“Maybe we should split up,” Laylen suggested. “You
head right and I’l take the left?”
I nodded, and he headed off to the left side of the
crystal bal . I headed to the right, searching the
peoples’ faces as I moved around the burning crystal.
It was difficult to feel the electricity in here because
the crystal seemed to be radiating off an intense
amount of electric energy. But if I real y concentrated, I
could feel the difference between the crystal bal ’s
electricity and Alex’s.
With every chained up person I went by, I grew
more nauseous. Yes, Laylen had warned me that what
I would see would be bad, but I never pictured it like
this…so sickening. What made it even worse was
that it wasn’t just the chains that were securing the
people to the enormous crystal bal . There were also
tubes coming out of their skin that extended up to the
crystal bal , like how an IV attaches to its a bag.
If this was how Foreseers col ected their energy, I
wasn’t sure I wanted to be a Foreseer anymore. If you
asked me, Foreseers weren’t much better than Water
Faeries. Whether they were feeding off humans fear,
or their energy, they were stil feeding off of them.
My sickening feeling nearly exploded out of me
when I spotted Alex chained to the crystal bal , tubes
jabbing out of him.
“Laylen!” I yel ed as I ran up to Alex’s lifeless body.
“Over here.”
For a moment I just stood there, staring at Alex, in a
state of shock. But then I snapped out of it and began
pul ing the tubes out of his skin, one by one. They
were smal tubes and didn’t go in very deep, but each
one left a tiny hole that dripped blood. “Laylen!” I
yel ed louder, looking for a way to get the chains off of
Alex. “How the heck do I get these unlocked?”
Alex’s eyes shot open, and I let out a gasp. He
stared at me, his normal y bright green eyes dul ed
over, and I wondered if he even recognized me. He
looked so…weak. I had never seen Alex look so
weak. It was strange.
“Are you okay?” I asked worriedly.
He opened his mouth to speak, but no sound came
out.
“Laylen!” I yel ed, for a third time. Where was he?
Had something happened to him? I started to freak.
“Coming,” I heard him say. And then he was right
next to me. “Hold onto him,” he instructed, grabbing
the chains.
I don’t know why, but I hesitated. Not because I was
afraid to touch Alex or anything. Wel , okay, maybe a
little, but it was also because he looked so breakable.
“Gemma,” Laylen said with urgency, and I quickly
wrapped my arms around Alex, ignoring the fact that
a) he was shirtless and b) his skin, although cold and
clammy, stil spun a fiery amount of electricity that
made my skin smolder.
I held onto Alex as Laylen snapped the chains like
twigs. Alex fel onto me like a hundred and eighty
pound weight, and I almost buckled to the floor. But
thankful y, Laylen caught him before I did.
“Excel ent catching skil s,” Laylen joked, flopping
Alex’s arm over his shoulder, and balancing al of his
weight on him.
“Hey, I never claimed to have them,” I said.
“Besides I’m not a half-vampire, half-Keeper who is
freakishly strong.”
“Would you two stop messing around and get us
out of here before we get caught.” The frail voice
came from Alex. His eyes were stil closed and he
was leaning on Laylen.
“Yeah, let’s get out of here,” I put one hand on
Laylen and one hand on Alex, then shut my eyes,
crossing my fingers I’d be able to get al three of us
out of here, and back to Adessa’s, safely.
“Don’t do anything from in here,” Alex said, his
voice sounded the slightest bit stronger. “There’s too
much power in here…you’l end up hurting yourself.”
I glanced at the crystal bal blazing vibrantly, and at
the people chained to it. “Maybe we should help
them.”
Alex’s eyelids slowly lifted open. “No, we have to
go. You never should have come here.”
I couldn’t seem to take my eyes off of the chained
up people, feeling a ping of guilt building in my gut. I
used their energy every time I touched a crystal bal .
Maybe even when I didn’t. And now I was supposed to
leave and use their energy again.
“Even if you let them go, there’d be no way for you
to get them al out of here,” Alex told me.
I swal owed hard and tore my eyes away from the
people. “Okay, let’s go.”
Fortunately, Laylen was strong enough to hold Alex
up as we headed out of the room and moved back
down the cave, distancing ourselves from the massive
crystal bal . Alex was real y struggling to walk, his feet
practical y dragging across the translucent crystal
floor.
“How far away do we need to go?” I asked Alex as
we headed toward the spot where Laylen and I had
entered the cave.
“Farther than this,” he said, his eyelids fluttering as
he forced them open.
So we went further and, for some stupid reason, it
never dawned on us that we might run into a very
awake Nicholas, until we actual y did. But Nicholas
wasn’t what was sending my pulse racing like a
jackhammer. It was the three Death Walkers standing
next to him, the hood of their black cloaks caped over
their heads; the glow of their yel ow eyes reflecting
across the translucent crystal floor.
“Crap!” I cried, at the same time Laylen screeched
to a halt.
“Okay, time to get us out of here,” Laylen said as
the three Death Walkers and Nicholas hurried toward
us.
I grabbed a hold of Laylen and Alex, closed my
eyes, and pictured Adessa’s living room; the dark
blue wal s, the purple velvet couches, and the black