Uprising (2 page)

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Authors: Jessica Therrien

Tags: #Fantasy, #Young Adult

BOOK: Uprising
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“Glad you like it,” Mac answered with a wide grin. “I made it for you.”

I was confused.

“Why?” I reacted without thinking. Nearly ninety years of avoiding interaction with strangers didn’t exactly make me the best in social situations. I should have just said thank you, but he didn’t seem to take my question personally. Instead he considered it carefully, glancing at William in between thoughts.

“It will protect you,” William spoke for him. He had that desperate look he always got when he wanted me to see things his way, a mix between pleading and insistence.

“We’re in a safe haven,” I reminded him, handing back the weapon. “I don’t think I’ll need it.”

“You will,” Mac added, staring hard at me. “I’ll start training you tomorrow.”

My eyes moved back and forth between them, trying to pick up on what it was they were getting at. I didn’t like where things were going, and I wasn’t sure why they were pushing it on me. Without responding, I headed back for the bedroom.

“Wait.” William sighed. “There’s someone outside for you.”

If it had been anybody else, I may not have picked up on it, but I could read him so easily now, the crease in his brow, the pulse of his cheek muscle as he clenched his teeth— something had happened.

“Who is it?” I asked, trying to get more out of them before I faced what was out there, but they both remained tight lipped, unable to answer.

I listened for a hint of sound, but everything was so quiet here, eerily quiet. I eyed the dart gun and tucked my wet hair behind my ears. Without much of a choice, I walked almost unwillingly toward the front door, looking back at William for strength.

It was still light outside, brighter than I’d expected. Judging by how exhausted I felt, I thought it should be night. I had lost all sense of time. The thick trees blew lightly in the breeze, rattling their dry leaves like nature’s wind chime as I stepped out into the forest.

“Elyse,” a voice called from behind me, and I spun around with a gasp.

“Oracle,” I mumbled with surprise.

She laughed, the corners of her soft eyes wrinkling as she smiled. It made me uneasy the way she looked at me, like she had known me my whole life.

“It’s Florence, actually.”

Her loose linen clothing matched the color of the surrounding trees, like she was a part of the forest, and her hair tied up into an elegant bun had slipped slightly, letting pieces fall against her face. She looked too normal to have such brilliant power.

“Hello,” I managed, my timid voice wary as I waited to hear the reason for her visit.

“Will you walk with me?”

I nodded and began picking my cuticles as I took up beside her, mimicking her slow, graceful steps.

“You’ve had to give up a lot,” she began, her voice low and calm. “I understand how hard it’s been for you.”

She looked over at me as we walked, but I couldn’t look back. I was afraid to meet her eyes. Though they were kind, they’d seen things I knew I wasn’t ready to face.

“It’s not going to get easier, Elyse,” she said, her tone dipping with remorse. “The road ahead will be difficult. Not everyone will survive.”

My eyes reacted on their own, searching for any uncertainty in her expression. There was none.

“I’m here to tell you that you have a choice. You can always decide to take a different path.” She clasped her hands behind her back. “But you won’t. You are good. Selfless. That’s why you are who you are. You will lead them. Not because you have no other choice, but because it is right.”

I wondered how she could be so sure. If she asked me right now if I knew what to do, if I knew what was right, I wouldn’t have an answer. She had such confidence in me, everyone did, but they were wrong.

“Elyse,” she said, stopping abruptly. “The war has started, and they have made the first move.”

Her face was so intense it scared me, her motherly eyes afraid to give me bad news.

“They found Anna and Chloe—” she began.

I stepped away from her. “No,” I said, not wanting to hear the rest.

“Elyse,” she continued. “Kara tried her best, but Christoph took them.”

The words felt heavy, like gravity pulling me down.

“Are they dead?” As I asked the question, my voice shook, and everything started to break into pieces. I couldn’t look at her. I couldn’t breathe.

“No,” she answered, her hand settling on my shoulder, “not yet, but they will be if you don’t go after them.”

“How?” I asked, my heart desperate. “How am I supposed to do that?” The fear shook me from the inside, making me frantic and reckless. “If you just tell me how, tell me what to do, I’ll do it. I’ll go now if I need to, if you tell me where they are—”

“Listen,” she said louder than I expected. It grabbed my attention. “This is what they want. They don’t believe you’re dead, and they’re trying to lure you out of hiding. They’re waiting for you, and they want you to come panicked and unprepared. Elyse?” She waited for me to look up. “You must not go until the last night of February.”

“Three months? That’s so long.” I shook my head. “It’s too long. I can’t.”

“If you go before then, you will fail, and they will die. Do you understand?”

I nodded and bit my bottom lip. “But where do I go? How am I supposed to save them? I can’t do it on my own.”

“You can.”

My shaking hands clenched into tight, steady fists. “I need more than that. Give me something to go on,” I pleaded on the verge of anger.

“I can only say so much without altering the future, Elyse.” She leaned forward to kiss my cheek, but I hardly noticed. “I must go before I say more. I won’t see you again after this. Good luck,” she said, before turning to leave. I watched her walk away, too stunned to move.

“Wait,” I called after her. “Where are they?”

“Where you’ll expect them to be,” she yelled without looking back.

“Where is that?” I shouted.

When she didn’t respond I took off after her, running as fast as I could, but I was too late. She disappeared beyond the boundaries of the safe haven, through an invisible wall I knew I wouldn’t be allowed to cross.

I leaned back against a nearby tree, too devastated and angry to move on. It all seemed clear to me as I stood alone in the forest. There was only one path ahead of me. I could choose to walk away, but I wouldn’t. She was right. They were all right. Maybe this
would
be my war.

1.

I DIDN’T KNOW WHERE I WAS. The parking lot was empty, and it was getting dark so I knew I should probably leave. I had a nervous feeling in my stomach. An old white Toyota was parked in the farthest spot, the only car in sight. I figured it must be mine, so I dug in my pockets and found the key.

Inside, a package rested on the seat, a sleek plastic box in a paper sack, and I remembered what I was supposed to do. I had to deliver it. 243 Park Lane. Somehow, I knew how to get there. It wasn’t far, a few blocks from here.

The little house was quiet, no lights on, no cars parked in the driveway. Nobody home. The whole street looked that way, like it had been abandoned. I decided to go in anyway. I didn’t want to wait out here alone.

The white fence creaked as I entered. I took slow, soft steps, not wanting anyone to hear me, and though no one was home, I was afraid. The front door was open, and the crunch of the grassy doormat beneath my feet seemed too loud. Again, the nervousness pulsed quickly under my skin. The house looked empty, but as soon as I entered, I knew it was because they were hiding. They were in the back room, waiting for me to return from where I had been.

I tiptoed quietly as I walked down the hall, not wanting them to know I was home. When I reached the door, I was startled by someone on my right, but it was just my reflection. Something wasn’t right, though. I recognized the face in the gold-framed mirror hanging on the wall, but it wasn’t mine. It was someone I knew, someone I was angry with. Then it hit me—Kara.

I looked down, confused, and realized I had opened the package I had carried with me inside. The contents of the sleek plastic box was in my hand, and my heart jumped when I saw what it was—a gun, heavy and threatening. I wanted to drop it and run, but I had no control over this body. It was Kara’s. It moved forward without my consent, readied the gun without my wanting it to.

As I opened the door to the back room, I saw their faces. Anna and Chloe, scared and shocked. My hand was pointing the gun at them.

“Kara?” Anna pleaded, but I felt my finger tighten around the trigger.

“NO!” I screamed as the shots fired.

***

“Hey, you’re okay,” said a low comforting voice, still tired with sleep. “Come on, wake up. It’s a dream.”

My mind struggled to comprehend. Trying to fight the anguish, my eyes pinched closed clinging to the darkness. What if I opened them and it was real?

“Wake up, Ellie,” William said again. He pulled me closer, his hand warming against the skin of my waist. The heat that grew under his palm was familiar. It told us we were meant for each other, and the sensation lifted me out of the dream. He buried his face into the back of my neck, kissing the skin on my shoulder with gentle lips, and my eyes opened, taking in the room still dark with night.

“Thanks,” I said, recovering. I was drenched in sweat, my lashes wet with tears.

He propped himself up on his elbow, leaning over to kiss my cheek, and his golden hair fell forward tickling my jaw. “Which one was it?” he asked.

My chest still ached with worry. “The one with the gun, and in the end I’m Kara.”

He collapsed back onto the bed and pulled me into his chest. “That’s the worst one.”

I stared at the pitch-black window, as if it alone was keeping out the dreams. At any moment I was sure it would shatter, letting all my worry in to suffocate me.

It had been a few weeks since I had heard the news about Anna and Chloe being captured, but the nightmares kept on. I still hadn’t forgiven myself, and I didn’t know if I ever would. There was no guarantee I could save them, and if they died it would destroy me. If I hadn’t tried to cure Anna, if I had just let them be, at least Chloe would still have had a chance. In the end, it was really their sacrifice that fulfilled the prophecy and began the war, not mine. They were the ones suffering, Christoph’s prisoners to torture at his leisure and discard at his will. My heart hurt when I thought of it.

“Since we’re all awake now,” I heard Mac grumble from the living room couch where he slept. “Might as well get in some target practice.”

“Mac, it’s four o’clock in the morning,” William protested. “I don’t care if it’s a quarter to a kick in your ass. Get up, you two.”

I rolled my eyes and grabbed my dart gun off the dresser. “All right. All right.” I nudged William, whose face was still buried in the pillow.

“Maybe if I play dead he’ll let me sleep in,” he said with a muffled voice.

I laughed. “Either that or he’ll pull you out by your toes.”

It was still dark when William and I stepped outside. “Four o’clock in the morning is as good a time as any to train. Battle can occur anytime, anywhere, and with anyone. I want you prepared for every scenario,” Mac said as we walked between the trees.

I didn’t mind. I liked the cool early morning, when the sun was still asleep. It always felt like I had stumbled upon the world’s secret, when the earth came alive thinking nobody was watching.

I had only just started to get used to the dart gun, the feel of the grass reed finger-grip as I steadied the weapon, the amount of force needed to propel the dart a long distance, the way the holster strap fit around my thigh.

I had been reluctant at first, unsure it would be worth the effort, but Mac was a good teacher, and he explained much more than how to use the gun.

“The thing is, Elyse,” he’d said, “it’s a war. That means if you don’t come for them, they’ll come for you. And when they do, if you don’t have a way to protect yourself, then we’re all outta luck.”

I didn’t see myself as a violent person, but what he said made sense. I had an ability at my disposal, one that could save my life and save others, but only if I learned how to use it. On one side, my blood was a deadly toxin, and on the other, its cure. But it was useless as a defense unless I had a way to transport it to my enemies. The darts would serve that purpose.

“Now that you’ve got the basics down—” he started, but I cut him off.

“I wouldn’t say that.” I felt like I hardly knew what I was doing, like I was lucky I didn’t suck the dart down my throat every time.

There was a lot more involved than I had expected, so much to think about before I made a move. How much force did I need behind my breath, did I consider the balance of my feet and steady the grip of my hands, what was the weight of the dart I was using, had I taken notice of the direction of the wind, was I close enough to my target to shoot? So many factors played a part. The heavier the dart, the shorter it would go, but only the heavier ones stayed on course. The lighter darts went farther, but they tended to curve in the direction of the wind.

“Well, I think we need to take it to the next level. You need to feel comfortable with how your blood works with the darts, on more than just animals, and eventually we’ll need to practice using enough to ensure the kill.”

The kill. My hands felt shaky at the thought of it. Would it ever come to that? I had to consider the idea that it was very possible. The force we were up against, The Council, was capable of unspeakable things. Anna and Chloe were seeing that first hand.

I tried to feel empowered by my anger, to remember that I was fighting for my friends and that we were all fighting for a cause much greater, but I couldn’t deny the fear. If I were ever forced to kill, I’d have to find the will somewhere down in the darkest part of my soul. Maybe I could do it, for them.

“I don’t know, Mac,” I said, shying away from the thought. “I need a lot more training before I’m ready for that.”

“No you don’t,” he said as though it were a simple fact. “What do you have in your bag?”

I pulled out the largest dart in the satchel on my hip. “Aside from the standard? A few hollows.”

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