Read Memory's Wake Omnibus: The Complete Illustrated YA Fantasy Series Online
Authors: Selina Fenech
Tags: #Fiction, #Fantasy, #Magic, #Paranormal, #Adventure, #Young Adult
“Give up, Hayes. You are done,” Eloryn said.
Hayes stuttered and drew a scroll from his pocket to read from. Eloryn recognized the intention of the behest and watched as Hayes seemed surprised when the air did not solidify around her.
Desperation filled his words as he turned to his vilest spell. “Guidhe beag lugha ob ciorram greim-bàis eucail spad eug!”
Eloryn’s body did not turn on itself. She did not retaliate. She watched silently and waited as every attempt Hayes made failed him.
“The world will not listen to you, Hayes. I have asked that all your behests be denied.”
Hayes reached to his side again, and Eloryn shook her head at his stubbornness. He grabbed at his walking cane and twisted it apart in his hands, pulling the handle from the length. The zing of metal filled the room.
She barely realized what was happening as the concealed sword swung at her neck.
An inch from her beating veins the blade stopped, blocked by another. Erec held his sword firm, and Roen burst passed him. He grabbed Hayes’s arm and wrenched the thin sword from his hand.
“I may have no Spark of Connection, but I believe we’re now even in that regard.”
With a second strike at the wizard’s chest, Roen knocked him to his knees.
Roen lifted his chin, daring Hayes to keep fighting. Hayes remained on the ground.
Behind them, guards, Councilors, and servants all moved forward to defend Eloryn. Everyone stood with her, and she knew she’d made the right decision.
Eloryn had Erec and men he trusted take Hayes to the dungeons. He shouted curses and blasphemies as he was dragged away.
The room was in turmoil. With their leader gone, and their queen abdicated, the Council were at a loss, arguing amongst themselves. Bedevere’s voice cut through the chaos, trying to get his bewildered companions in order.
Eloryn caught Roen’s hand in hers and dragged him from the room. He followed without a word. The two of them slipped away silently, not missed by the crowd they left behind.
In the quiet hallway, Eloryn stopped and turned to him. She kept his hand tight in hers. He looked at her with the golden eyes she loved.
“I’m sorry, Roen, for not doing everything in my power to be with you sooner. I doubted how you felt, I doubted my place in this kingdom, but I never doubted how I felt for you, and I should have acted on that. I’m sorry I’m so bad at the relationship I have with you, and that I’m not impulsive like Memory. I won’t object if you want to be with her, or leave, or do whatever you need to in order to be happy.”
“El,” Roen’s forehead creased but a smile sat on his lips. “I have tried to love others, but could only love you. I have tried to deny it, and only loved you more. I love you in a way that should make me a poet, but instead leaves me speechless. If you love me but a hundredth of how I love you, then I am happy.”
Eloryn’s hands reached for Roen’s collar, but she couldn’t feel the movement, could feel nothing but tingling nerves. Fingertips brushed his neck and sent a flush of warmth through her as she pulled him down to touch her mouth gently against hers.
She could feel his smile under her lips and kissed him again before letting go.
She blushed triumphantly as he looked down at her, shaking his head like he couldn’t believe what was happening.
“I hope that felt like a little more than one hundredth,” she said.
“Hard to say. I think I may just need to try...” His words became breath, disappearing to nothing as he walked into her, pressing his body against hers. Roen scooped the back of her head into both hands and kissed her cheek and neck.
Eloryn wrapped her hands around his shoulders, and he lifted her off her feet, spinning her in the air.
The knife had warmed to body temperature in her hands. Memory wasn’t sure what she intended to do with it but couldn’t let it go.
Servants gave her worried looks as they saw her walk by, but Memory barely noticed. People always stared at her wherever she went. It came with the hair colors and piercings. They made people judge her on first glance and that was how she liked it. It meant people left her alone. She felt shut off from the world, too busy struggling with herself. She’d already made her decision, but the options kept rattling around like loose change, tempting her. Would taking Eloryn’s life solve her problems? No. Not even in her darkest fantasy. But she had to see her one more time.
Memory knew they would all be at the meeting Eloryn had called. The meeting didn’t matter to her, but she was surprised that she had been invited at all, or that they even remembered she existed. She felt like she was already gone and couldn’t understand that others didn’t think the same.
Memory heard giggling and slowed down. At the end of the hall, she saw Eloryn and Roen. They looked utterly happy, wrapped in each other’s arms, kissing again and again.
Memory looked away, squeezing her dry eyes closed, holding the image of them together like a snapshot in her mind.
Hope’s familiar voice whispered from behind her. “If you want Roen, then you can have him once Eloryn is gone. You can have everything you want.”
“No. I want Roen
and
Eloryn. I love them both. I love them and want them to be happy.” Memory turned and headed back the way she’d come. The knife dropped on the floor, tumbling into a dark corner behind an ornamental suit of armor.
Memory didn’t know if Hope still followed her, but she spoke aloud anyway. “I already know the problem that needs to be removed. It’s not them. It’s me.”
“What a fun trick we played.” Mina laughed, making a sound like tinkling chimes. She lay on top of Will in long, lush grass, spotted with wildflowers. The overwhelming fragrance of the blossoms added to the sick feeling in Will’s gut.
She’ll think I went home without her. I have to get back.
Mina had snatched Will away right at the worst moment. He’d been avoiding her, and this was how she punished him. He knew the more he wanted to go back, the less likely it would happen. He tried to seem relaxed, carefree.
Mina rolled over him into the grass, and the blades lit up from within where she touched them, glowing golden, and sprays of petals danced as she giggled. Even now, Will ached at her beauty, that dangerous beauty he wished he could deny, like being lured by poisoned honey.
Will stretched casually and carefully picked his words. “Wouldn’t it be a good trick if you sent me back now? She must think I’m gone. She’ll be surprised if I show up again.”
“No.” Mina flipped onto her stomach and put her elbows under her, lifting her chest up like a sphinx. “You’ll go back when I’m bored of you.”
It had already been all night and most of the day Mina had kept him with her. He wasn’t sure where they were. Somewhere deep in the hunting grounds, but he wasn’t as familiar with this forest as he was with his last home. The small meadow grew dim and shaded, and a pair of deer wandered in, grazing. Mina sprung up onto her knees, reached out a hand, and the deer cantered over to her.
Will shifted in the grass, off his back and into a crouch, eyeing the elegant creatures. Recognizing the look on his face, the form of his body, the deer changed course. He was a predator, and they knew it. They bounded off into the darkened woods.
Mina smacked her hands onto the ground, shrieking. “I wanted to play with them.”
“They’re gone now.” Will shrugged and lay down again. He yawned and closed his eyes. “You could probably catch them if you want. But I’m tired.”
Mina threw handfuls of torn-up grass at him. “Horrible boring boy.”
She floated up into the air, shimmering dust falling from her, and zipped away through the trees.
Will remained still for a few moments more, waiting to make sure she had gone, then pushed up to his feet and started running. He ran west, following the setting sun until he started to see familiar ground, then ran until he reached the palace walls.
Will climbed the vines to Memory’s bedroom. The window was locked, for the first time Will had ever known.
Will knocked hard on the paneled glass, and a figure rushed to open the doors for him.
The red-headed maid stood in front of him, worry all over her features.
“Where is Memory?” Will asked, stepping into the room. It was still a mess from his fight with Dylan.
“Will, I’m so glad you’re here. I don’t know what to do.” Clara handed him an open letter, written on the same cream-colored paper as the one Memory had left for him in the Ivy Room.
Clara rambled, almost hysterical. “She locked herself in her room earlier. I could hear her talking to herself. And now this.”
Will only needed to read the first word.
Goodbye.
“How can we find her?” Will roared.
Clara squeaked, “Maybe her sister, or—”
“Take me. Now.”
A fear Will hadn’t known since he was a boy in the other world gripped him. Back there he’d often worried, often thought it could happen. But he hoped here Memory had found a new life, had escaped her past. Something must have changed.
Clara led Will at a run through the palace. Will didn’t care what he wore or the looks he got. He only cared about reaching Memory in time.
They found both Eloryn and Roen together, smiling despite the turmoil of wizards and messengers rushing about them. Will didn’t understand what was happening. The castle seemed to be in chaos.
“We have to help Memory,” Will said.
“Where is she?” Eloryn asked, her expression of joy slipping away to concern.
“We hoped you could find her,” Clara said. “She may be planning to do something awful.”
“She has no one with her? No guards or servants?” Eloryn asked.
Roen shook his head. “You know what she’s like. She’ll be alone.”
Clara nodded and began to cry. “She only has me, and I wasn’t there for her. It’s my fault. I shouldn’t have left her like that. The things she was saying, things she was doing. I’m so worried.”
“It wasn’t just your responsibility. If she’s in danger, it’s all our faults,” Roen said.
Will’s breath grew rough, each exhalation a growl. “We have to hurry.”
They started moving, and a handful of guards that had their eyes on Eloryn followed. Will stopped. “Just us. It has to just be us, no one else.”
Eloryn gave the guards a signal. One in particular nodded.
The guards remained where they were and Will, Clara, Eloryn, and Roen ran to find Memory.
What am I doing?
Memory felt more broken than ever. Regaining her memories had made things worse, not better. She hurt in a way that she didn’t know how things could ever be better again.
She found solitude in Thayl’s old quarters. The whole wing was still closed up, and she could wander freely without anyone staring at her. Only Hope was with her, ever by her side, as Memory wound her way around the tower stairs, up and up.
Memory paused along the way, drifting through the piles of junk in storage in the tower. She ran her hands over the stack of mattresses and their moth-eaten covers. A rolled tapestry on the floor showed burn marks. Paintings with cracked frames were stacked haphazardly. Splintered pieces of the round table had been piled in a corner.
This is the place for broken things.
She didn’t belong in Avall with Eloryn and Roen. Maybe they thought so at first, but as the jigsaw of their lives came together, it became clear that Memory was a spare, broken piece that didn’t fit. No one really knew her. No one accepted her for who she really was. Not even herself. Now she remembered her past, she knew she’d always been trying to be something she wasn’t, someone different, running from herself.
Memory wondered whether Thayl felt like this as he made his way up this same tower, that there was no place in the puzzle for them.
Memory stood at the balcony and looked down.
Hope pulled her away by the arm. “What do you think you’re doing? I’ve told you how to solve your problems. Why won’t you believe me and just get it done?”
Memory looked out the window into the distance. “My own screwed-up brain is telling me to kill my sister. I don’t deserve to live.”
Hope shook her. “I’m not your brain. I’m real.”
“Prove it.”
“I knew things that you didn’t. I knew you killed that guy before I showed it to you.”
Memory snatched her arm from Hope’s grasp. “Yeah, thanks for that.”
“I just wanted to prove what you were capable of doing.”
“And now I know.” Memory headed again toward the edge.
Hope grabbed her roughly, dragging her back into the room and slamming the balcony doors closed behind her. “I’m sorry if your memories weren’t all puppy dogs and picnics, but you have to snap out of it, we have things to do.”
Memory faced Hope. She snarled and the room shook.
Hope smiled uneasily. “I thought you’d gotten yourself under control?”
“I have.” The tower shook, and Hope was knocked to the floor.
Hope looked at Memory with genuine fear in her eyes. “I know it’s a lot to ask, to kill your own sister, but it will work, I promise. If you want I can do it for you. Let me do it for you, and you can owe me a favor in return. Just give me the all clear.”
Memory turned her back. “Shut up, Hope. Whatever you’ve got to say, whatever experience you think you’re calling on for this advice you’re giving me, it’s all in me again now too. There’s nothing anymore you can offer me. You’ve given me everything I needed to end up here.”
Memory pulled the balcony doors open again, a soft breeze rushing in past her. The last sliver of orange sun kissed the horizon. She watched until it dropped from sight then stepped up onto the balustrade, balancing on the thin marble edge. “Later, Hope.”