Authors: Jessica Sorensen
dangerously.
I glared at him. “Let me go.”
“Now, why would I do a stupid thing like that?” He
stood up, gesturing at the floor around me. “I could
keep you here forever you know—the room is
surrounded by
praesidium.
”
As I glanced around room, I became aware that
trimming the floor were lavender crystal bal s about
the size of marbles. Now I didn’t know what they were,
but I knew they had to be bad.
“What’s praesidium?” I asked, fearing the answer.
He gave a long pause “Wel , I guess since you
asked…
praesidium
is another kind of crystal bal
Foreseers use. Only instead of channeling energy, it
takes it away.”
Oh God. That’s why I couldn’t use my Foreseer
power. The bad situation seemed to be getting
worse.
“What are you going to do with me?” I asked, my
voice cracking.
He grinned deviously. “I think the question is what
am I not going to do with you?”
I tried my best to ignore my quivering nerves. “If you
give me over to Stephan, you know what he’s going to
do to me, right? He’s going to end the world—
everyone wil die.”
“I don’t need you to explain what Stephan is
planning to do. I understand, even more than you do,
what he’s planning to do with you.”
“So you’re just okay with letting him kil everyone,” I
said, hoping he would let some of the details slip out.
“Do you even feel anything at al ?”
“I think the real question is do you feel anything.” He
leaned over me, his eyes nearly glowing. “Which I
think is what this whole thing is about.”
My stomach rol ed. He knew more than I thought he
did. “Why are you doing this? Is there a reason? Or
are you just plain evil?”
“Am I just plain evil?” He sounded mad. “Before you
go opening your mouth and saying things you don’t
understand, maybe you should consider how much
you know about Stephan. Or about his precious son
Alex? You trust him so much, yet he is the son of the
man who has ruined your life and many others as
wel .”
“Did he ruin your life?” The way he said it made me
wonder.
He didn’t say anything, and I thought I struck a
nerve.
“What did he do to you?” I asked, keeping my voice
low and swaying.
He stared at me with a look of intensity and I
thought he was going to tel me, but then that playful
sparkle returned to his eyes, and he backed away
from me with a stupid grin on his face.
“I think I’m going to go take a walk.” He slid his
hands into the pockets of his tan cargo pants. “I’d say
wait here, but I don’t think you’l be going anywhere.”
“Nicholas, please,” I begged, jerking on the chains
again. “You can’t hand me over to Stephan.”
But he already left.
I let out a frustrated scream, tugging on the chains
with every ounce of strength I had in me, disregarding
the pain of the metal cuffs cutting deeply into my skin. I
tried to break free until my wrists were bleeding; until I
was so exhausted that I had no strength left in me.
Until al there was left to do was wait.
What I was waiting for, I didn’t know.
It seemed like hours went by. There were no
windows in the room so I couldn’t tel if it was dark
outside. And where exactly was I? The Kingdom of
Fey or the City of Crystal—where did Nicholas live?
My wrists were sore, my head was throbbing, and I
was scared and tired. I wondered what Alex and
Laylen were doing. What did they do when I didn’t
return to the car? Were they looking for me? Would
they even know where to find me?
I’d just rested back against the wal , giving up al
hope that anyone was ever going to be able to find
me, when the door opened up.
My heart leapt, hoping it was Laylen. Or Alex.
Although, I couldn’t feel any electricity so I doubted
that was the case.
Of course, the only person who came strol ing in
was Nicholas. He was carrying something in his hand,
and he didn’t look happy at al .
He walked over and sat down in front of me. “Tel
me, Gemma, has anyone told you anything about the
fey world?”
“Umm…no?” Was this a trick question?
“Wel ,” he crossed his legs, “we have been around
forever. Most people who know of our existence think
of us a tricksters, which, most of the time, we are. But
we can also be very serious, at least when it comes to
our kind suffering.”
I wasn’t sure where he was going with this, so I just
stared at him vacantly.
“I’m not sure if you’ve heard of him or not, but there
used to be a Keeper who cal ed himself Malefiscus,”
he said.
I swal owed hard. “I might have heard his name
mentioned before.”
“Good, then I don’t have to explain who he is. And I
assume you know what kind of a person he was and
what he did.”
I slowly nodded. “I do.”
“Wel , during his time of chaos, he tortured
everyone, including the Fey. And the Fey leader at
that time, decided he had enough—that too many fey
were dying, so he made a bargain with Malefiscus.
Leave the Fey alone, and we would owe him one
favor. Malefiscus agreed and the promise was bound
with a Blood Promise.”
“A Blood Promise?”
He ignored me, continuing on with his story. “Not
too long after the promise was made, though,
Malefiscus was caught and sentenced.” He paused.
“Everyone thought he died, and who knows, maybe he
did, but his bloodline did not die with him. It carried on
and now resides in a man named Stephan Avery.” He
opened his hand and placed what he was holding
onto the floor between us. A smooth, round stone, with
a circle wrapped by an S painted on it—the
Foreseers mark. “Because his bloodline carried on,
so did the Fey’s promise to grant a favor. Only now
the favor is owed to Stephan. No one knew of this,
though, until he showed up just a few days ago,
demanding his promise in the name of Malefiscus.
But he didn’t want just any member of the Fey to
honor this promise. He wanted the faerie who
possessed the gift of Foreseeing—he wanted me. Or
more specifical y he wanted me to track down a very
pretty, but very tortured girl with beautiful violet eyes
and a fiery personality.”
If he hadn’t mentioned the eye color, I wouldn’t have
known he was talking about me because none of the
other parts of his description seemed fitting.
“This was after I met you,” he continued. “After I’d
taken you to Dyvinius.”
“What does he want you to do to me?” I was afraid
to know the answer, especial y because I was in a
very vulnerable situation right now, being chained to a
wal and al .
“A few things,” he said. “But in the end, it al comes
down to one thing—I am supposed to bring you to
him.”
I swal owed hard. “Are you going to?”
“At first I wasn’t sure. I know what Stephan is
planning to do—that was made clear from the
beginning.” He pressed his lips together, considering
something. “But in the end, I real y don’t have a
choice. I am bound to a promise I cannot break.”
“Are you sure you can’t break it?” I asked,
practical y pleading. “Because there might be a wa—”
“No, there is no other way.” He talked over me. “If I
don’t turn you over, then my people wil suffer.”
“But if you do turn me over, the whole world wil
suffer,” I told him. “I’ve seen it.”
He gave me a mocking look. “Are you sure about
that?”
“Yes,” I said confidently.
“And how can you be sure. How can you be sure of
anything?”
“I…” He had a point. How could I be sure of
anything?
He scooted the stone closer to me and I scooted
back.
“What is that?” I asked, pointing a shaking finger at
the stone.
“Something that’s going to temporarily take your
Foreseer power away.”
“What!” I cried, scooting back from the stone even
more. “How?”
“Don’t worry,” his voice purred. “It won’t hurt. And
it’s only temporary. For the moment, Stephan needs
you free of your powers, but eventual y you’l get them
back.”
“Please don’t,” I begged. “You can’t give me to
him.”
“I already said I don’t have a choice.” He looked
livid as he rol ed up the sleeve of his black shirt.
Across his arm was a mark. Not the Foreseers mark,
but a different one—a red symbol traced by a black
triangle.
“What is that?” I whispered, although I think deep
down I already knew.
“The Mark of Malefiscus.” Nicholas practical y
growled. “I am forever branded with the mark of evil.
And between the Blood Promise and the mark of evil,
I have to hand you over.”
“How did you—how did you get it?” I asked, trying
not to shake from head-to-toe. “Are you related to
Stephan?”
He shook his head. “No. Like Malefiscus, Stephan
is capable of making marks, not just on himself but on
other people.”
My breath caught again. If Stephan could put the
mark on people…What if he’d put the mark on Alex? I
wasn’t sure if I believed that or not. Yes, Alex had
done some questionable things, but now…I don’t
know…he went to the City of Crystal for me.
Nicholas picked up the stone and held it in front of
my face, just out of my reach. “Until we meet again,”
he said.
“No!” I screamed as the stone began to hum. It did
not glow, though, or create smoke. It just hummed.
Louder and louder, until the humming clawed at my
ear drums.
I threw my hands over my ears. “Nicholas!” I yel ed.
“Please don’t do this. “
“It’s not my choice,” Nicholas shouted over the
humming. Then, suddenly, his eyes were rol ing back
in his head. He let out a deafening scream that rang
loudly through the room. The stone fel from his hands
and hit the floor with a clank. The next thing I knew he
was lying on the floor. He wasn’t dead—I could see
his chest rising and fal ing with each breath—but
definitely unconscious.
I stared at him, bewildered. What happened? Had
the stone backfired its power on him? Then I felt a
warmth against my neck. I reached up, and slipped
my locket out from underneath my tank top.
“Oh my God.” My necklace. My beautiful, amazing,
wonderful necklace. The stone’s magic must have
taken Nicholas’s Foreseer power away from him,
instead of from me.
I tucked the locket back under my shirt and
immediately started searching for a way to escape. I
didn’t know how long Nicholas was going to be out so
I needed to hurry. What I needed was the key to the
cuffs.
I inched my way over to Nicholas, as far as the
chains would al ow me to go, which was close enough
that I could reach Nicholas’s foot. I grabbed hold of his
shoe and started dragging him toward me. My word,
faeries were heavy. It was like trying to pul a bag of
bricks. But I managed and almost started jumping up
and down when I found the key tucked away in the
pocket of his pants.
“Yes,” I cried, unlocking the cuffs and then letting out
a breath of freedom. I ran for the door, unsure of how
far I would have to go to be able to use my Foreseer
powers to get me out of here. But then a sudden
thought raced through my mind that made me pause
just outside the door. The Ira bal . What if it was
here?”
I glanced back at Nicholas, sleeping away. How
much time did I have? I wasn’t sure, but I had to try
and find it. I raced back into the room, ran over to the
table and threw open al the drawers. Each one was
vacant.
Other than the table, this room was empty, so I ran
out of it and into the next room, where I began ripping
everything apart. I dumped out drawers, threw the
cushions off the sofas, tossed books off the shelves,
but I stil couldn’t find it.
Frustrated, I kicked a smal garbage can that just
happened to me in my legs reach. It tipped over and
something round and moss colored rol ed out of it and
across the floor. The Ira.
I swiped it up and stuffed it into the pocket of my
shorts, which was a tricky thing to do since the thing