Descendant (27 page)

Read Descendant Online

Authors: Eva Truesdale

(And here you are again. Such a disappointment,) he said.

(I’m beginning to think I should take that as a compliment,) came Kael’s quiet reply.

Valkos tossed his head back with a laugh. Then he lunged.

And call me a coward, but I did shut my eyes then. Tightly. I didn’t want to see what was happening. I did my best to drown out the sounds of what was going on too. That was harder, though; there were so many snarls, and yelps, and whines…and they seemed to be multiplying, too—like I was back at the bottom of that hill , reliving the whole battle all over and over again in my mind. And for a long time I couldn’t seem to make it stop.

There was a sharp, painfull howl. I jumped, but I still didn’t open my eyes. I didn’t want to know who it had been. And all of a sudden I was past exhaustion. My mind began to haze over, and everything started to feel strangely peaceful.

I might’ve completely blanked out if not for a small voice inside my head that didn’t seem to think sleeping was a good idea right now.

I opened my eyes and tried to lift my head, to shake off this sudden sleepiness, but my head seemed to weigh a ton. I let it drop back down to the ground instead. The dirt was so refreshing and cool, after all . A nice distraction from the battle raging around me.

Watching it made me sick. So why were my eyes open? It didn’t make since—I could close them, no big deal. Maybe I’d even drift off to sleep, and if death came, so what? I wouldn’t even know it. I wondered if my dad’s death had been this peaceful. Probably not. I should’ve been thankful, maybe…

(Alex?)

The voice was familiar, and it filled me with warmth. But that warmth just made everything that much more peaceful. I kept my eyes shut tightly.

(Let’s go, Alex.)

I felt a growl rise in my throat. I wanted to sleep, didn’t he understand that?

(Get up!)

(No.)

But even as my mind said the words, my body was moving.

But even as my mind said the words, my body was moving.

My eyes opened. The voice said my name again. And then my legs moved, lifting me to me feet like they were attached to strings being controll ed by an invisible puppeteer. My thoughts were racing, making no sense. I was moving, but how or why I didn’t know. But somehow, my body seemed to know where it was going. Eventual y, I gave up trying to understand and just let my feet carry me away.

 

CHAPTER 20: left

“Alex?”

There was that voice again. And like before, warmth flowed through me. But my eyes still didn’t want to open.

“Where’s Lora?” I heard myself mumble.

“She’s here. She’s fine.”

“…Good.”

Someone’s hand rested against my forehead. Fingertips brushed down and off my cheek, returning a second later with a damp cloth that they laid across my brow. For some reason, the cool relief of the cloth made me sleepy, and before I realized it, I’d drifted off again.

 

***

When I final y opened my eyes, I found myself in a dark, but familiar, room. I didn’t sit up right away. Something moved off to my right. I lifted my head from the pil ow, and saw someone sitting in a chair beside the bed, his head slumped over onto the mattress and resting on his folded arms. He looked terribly uncomfortable.

I started to sit the rest of the way up, but froze as Kael jerked abruptly upright. He stared silently at me for a second before taking a deep breath.

“You’re final y awake,” he said.

I smiled sheepishly. “Yeah…and you too now—sorry about that. I didn’t mean to wake you up.”

He relaxed and leaned forward, shaking his head. “I wasn’t asleep. Just resting my eyes.”

“How long have you been there?” I asked, eying the dark circles underneath his eyes.

He shrugged. “You’ve been asleep for a couple of days.”

“Days?” I repeated. He nodded, and I fell back against my pile of pil ows, bringing a hand up to massage my temples.

“That’s crazy. I…I’m still tired. Exhausted.”

“That’s not surprising. Not after what happened. Shifting’s hard enough on the body as it is. Add the fact that it was technical y your first time, and what you did…” He trailed off, as if he didn’t want to elaborate on just what I’d done. I don’t know that I real y wanted to remember all the details myself.

What was frustrating, though, was that—now that I tried to think about it— I couldn’t real y remember anything.

“Alex?”

I lifted my head a few inches from the pillow and looked toward the door. Vanessa was peering around the corner, and as soon as our eyes met she practical y sprinted across the room to my side.

“You’re awake!”

“Yeah.” I smiled weakly at her as she threw her arms around me.

“How are you feeling, Alex?” Eli’s voice was tired, but he smiled at me as he walked in the room. Beside him walked Will , and they both made their way over to my bedside.

“How’s it going, Al?” Will asked, picking up one of my hands and giving it a little squeeze.

“I’m okay. What about you, though?” I asked. “Are you okay?”

“Never better.”

“And the others? Jack, and Emily?”

“They’re good.”

I closed my eyes for a second and breathed out a deep sigh of relief. I took another deep breath and opened my eyes. “And Lora, what about Lora?” I asked quietly. “She got away too, right?”

Nobody said anything. Kael was the only one who didn’t look away, so my pleading, needy eyes locked onto his. He swallowed and tilted his head forward in what didn’t quite look like a nod, but his lips formed the word ‘yes’. The weight on my chest lifted a little. It didn’t go far though—because although the word made it to his lips, that was where it stayed.

I needed to hear it out loud.

“Yes?” I answered for him.

He swallowed again. “Yeah. She did,” he said quietly. “We managed to drive Valkos away, and we got Lora here safely.”

I wanted to let out the breath I was holding, but I couldn’t.

Something was wrong. Kael’s face wasn’t as difficult to read as normal—in fact, the anguish on it was painfully obvious.

“So then what is it? Why do you all look so…so…” I could barely choke the words out. I leaned back against the headboard, rubbing folds of the blanket through my trembling fingers.

“Your sister is gone, Alex.” Eli’s words were like a bucket of ice water being dumped over me, leaving me drenched and shaking.

“Gone?” I repeated, drawing the blanket up around my self.

“Gone?” I repeated, drawing the blanket up around my self.

“Wha-what do you mean…? She can’t be gone. She was gone before, but I went…I saw her…if she got back here then why…I don’t understand…”

“She left.”

The word was unexpected, and for a long time I was silent, confused. Then I relaxed my grip on the blanket and let it fall off my shoulders as I sat up to meet Eli’s gaze.

“Left? When? Where did she go?” I asked.

“Sometime last night. Your sister’s health has been a concern to us since she arrived—though she seemed to be recovering well enough. Anyway, the doctor we sent for was sitting up with her last night, and when Vanessa went to check on him this morning…” He trailed off and looked to Vanessa, whose face had suddenly gone even paler than usual.

“It was a pretty gruesome sight,” she said in a tiny voice.

“The doctor…he’s doing better now but it was…not good.”

I stared at her for a minute, trying to make sense of what she was saying.

“And Lora was gone?” I said.

Vanessa nodded.

“But who…how could someone have taken her from here?”

“Alex…she wasn’t taken.”

“What? Then the doctor…the doctor must’ve…”

“The doctor tried to stop her,” Kael said. “And he ended up with a bloody nose because of it.”

I shook my head angrily at him. “No. No—that can’t be right.

Lora would never hurt anybody. She can’t have…”

“Your sister has been under a lot of stress,” Eli said.

“Perhaps too much.”

“Have you looked for her at all ?” I asked, not real y looking at Eli.

He started to answer anyway. “Of course we—”

“Home,” I interrupted, sitting up and sliding out from under the covers. My feet were on the floor in instant later, my eyes focused on the door. But what started as a sprint across the room to it ended with me stumbling and Kael catching me just before I hit the floor. I rested my head against his chest while I waited for the room to stop spinning.

“I bet she went home,” I said. “I bet she went to see Mom.”

Out of the corner of my eye I saw Eli shake his head. “We have already—”

“We can go see,” Kael said, cutting him off. “Come on.

We’ll take my car.”

 

***

I don’t remember how I got there, but ten minutes later I was in the passenger seat of Kael’s Jeep, and we were making our way down the mountain. The dirt track we were on barely passed for a road. I was leaning my forehead against the window, and every now and then a particularly nasty bump or hole in the road would shake the car and send my head crashing against the glass. But it was okay, because I was more or less oblivious to pain at this point.

“I’m sorry,” Kael said after about ten minutes of silence.

“For what?” I said, not lifting my head away from the window.

“For what happened with your sister. For what I did.”

“For what happened with your sister. For what I did.”

“You did what you had to do,” I said quietly. His words confused me, and I didn’t want to try and make sense of them right now. Actual y, I wasn’t up for discussing anything right now. And for a second I thought Kael was going to drop it. But after a few minutes he spoke again. “You know for the past seven years no one’s known the truth about me.

I’ve had to lie—constantly—and I’m tired of it. I want someone to know the truth. I need you to.”

After the past week, you would think nothing could’ve surprised me by now. But this new, suddenly vulnerable Kael was quite possibly the strangest thing I’d seen yet. I didn’t know what to say, what to do. I was glad when he kept talking a few seconds later.

“It was true, you know,” he said. “What Sera said to my father. I’d planned on kill ing you. And if I could’ve made myself do it…”

I looked at him then, shaking my head. “Why are you telling me this?”

“Because you deserve to know,” he said, gripping the steering wheel tightly and staring straight ahead. “And I’m tired of all the uncertainty between us.”

I moved away from the window and settled back against my seat with a sigh. “You were going to kill me. And Sera was going to help you do it, I guess?” If he insisted on talking, I was at least going to get some answers.

“It started out as a partnership. I don’t think she was ever in it for the same reasons as me but…yeah. She agreed to help me.”

“And that day at the lake? She attacked me on your orders?”

He shook his head. “I saved you that day. That wasn’t an act. By then Sera had lost her patience with me, and was back to working on Valkos’ orders—and I almost didn’t realize it until it was too late. You weren’t supposed to be bitten. I didn’t want that to happen, I didn’t want you to be dragged into all this—that’s why I tried to talk you into taking the antidote.”

“But I wouldn’t listen…” I said quietly, staring at my hands.

Kael nodded. “Sera got a little carried away, but she real y was out to infect you. I guess by that point Valkos knew that if he showed you the truth about your past, about what real y happened with your father, then you’d eventual y come after him yourself.

“And I would’ve,” I said. I felt incredibly disgusted with myself all of a sudden. “I would’ve played right into his plans…” Kael didn’t say anything to that, so after a minute of silent self-loathing I continued. “But how did he know so much about me? How did he know what I would do?”

“I was a different person a couple of years ago.”

“What?”

“When this all started, I didn’t know how it was going to end up. Al I knew was that I couldn’t risk blowing my cover until I figured out what I was going to do. I had to keep relaying him information about you, about the operation I was supposedly undergoing to further his cause. Some of what I told him was true. I told him about possible strategies I’d come up with—none of which I planned to carry out.”

My fingers dug into the leather upholstery. “But he got it from you then?” I had to fight to keep my voice level. “You gave him everything he needed to hurt me?”

“Alex, I—”

“What about Lora? Did you tell him how close we were?

Was taking her one of the genius plans you gave him?”

Was taking her one of the genius plans you gave him?”

He gave me a sharp look. “Of course not. And I never meant to hurt you, either.”

I almost laughed. “You were planning on kill ing me.”

“Only so I could stop another war. I don’t know how to make you understand…if you were alive during the last war, then maybe you would. I didn’t want to kill you, but getting rid of the descendant seemed like the only way to stop my father.

I just felt like it was the lesser of two evils.”

I stared at him as he spoke, but he never took his eyes off the road. “Why didn’t you?” I asked quietly.

“I’m not sure. Al I know is that from the first day I saw you I've been fighting this. One part of me kept telling me kill ing you was the only way, and that the answer was obvious: it was one person's life over the hundreds of thousands that might be lost in another war. But the other part of me knew I could never hurt you. Not then, and not now.”

We rode in silence for a long time after that. I wanted to stay mad at Kael, but I found that I couldn’t. What he’d done was terrible. Misguided. But I was beginning to think everyone was misguided. I know I was. I didn’t know what I was doing any more, much less why I was doing it. And I sure as hel didn’t know what I was supposed to do now.

“Lora’s not at the house, is she?” The question came out of nowhere. I didn’t look at Kael as I spoke. I just started into the rearview mirror and watched the mountains in the distance get small er and small er.

“That’s the first place we looked,” he said quietly. “There was no sign she’d even been there.”

A week ago I might have insisted we go look again. I would’ve wanted to see it for myself, to make sure they hadn’t missed anything. And I would probably still do that eventual y. But there was somewhere else I wanted to go first.

Ten minutes later Kael pulled up to the gate. He cut the engine as I stepped into the brilliant sunlight. The weather had fallen back into its old habit of mocking me with its warm rays of sunshine, obviously oblivious—or indifferent—to everything that was happening to me. This was the first time I’d been here since the funeral, and it took me a little while to navigate my way through the rows of headstones.

After about five minutes, though, I final y found it.

Dad’s grave was simple, just a smooth, square slab of granite with only his name on it. He would’ve like it that way —he never cared for complications. I guess that’s why he never told me the truth about who we were.

“If only you knew how complicated things were now,” I said quietly, kneeling down beside the stone.

It was weird—and a little creepy—but strangely comforting there beside his grave. After a few minutes Kael came and sat down beside me. I laid my head against his shoulder, and we sat silently for ten minutes, twenty minutes—I don’t know. Time seemed kind of irrelevant now. I could’ve sat there forever. I would’ve, too, if a ray of sunlight hadn’t broken through the trees just then, shining down on my dad’s grave and reflecting off something lying beside the headstone.

“What is that?” Kael asked.

I leaned forward and pushed aside the blades of grass that had been hiding it. I lifted it by the chain and placed the pendant of it in my hand. It burned a little, and the familiar humming filled my ears as I drew it close to me.

“Alex?” Kael said uncertainly.

I looked down at the diamond. Its silver backing was starting to cause a tear-drop shaped blister to form on my hand, but I ignored the pain and closed my fingers tightly over it.

over it.

“She was here,” I said. “Lora’s been here.”

End of Book One of The Shift Chronicles

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