Neverfall (11 page)

Read Neverfall Online

Authors: Brodi Ashton

Memories of my imprisonment flashed unwillingly inside my head. The darkness. The rats. Devon and his disfigured face.

I hoped the end came quickly for him. I didn’t know if I would ever retrieve the relic he had talked about, but I would never forget him. Everything about that place would be indelibly imprinted on my brain forever.

Now I was home. My true home. And I was still staring at the mountains. I didn’t know if it was because I’d just faced my own death or if it was because Park City was closer to the sky. Closer to heaven, as the humans here liked to say.

No matter the reason, Park City was my home. And Nikki was my future.

We didn’t come home directly after the London fire. Instead, Max thought we should stay mobile just in case any Delphinians had survived and were coming after us.

But no one came. As we traveled around, we started giving impromptu Dead Elvis concerts. Our fans turned it into a game, trying to figure out where we would end up next.

And now I was finally back in Park City. No one knew I was here yet.

“How about instead of staring out the window, you help us clean up?” Max said.

I turned away from my mountains and stared at Max, who had popped his head out of the kitchen.

Since we hadn’t been home, the kitchen was still a mess; and it wasn’t any normal mess that could be cleaned with a little vinegar. We’d been scrubbing the kitchen for three solid days, trying to erase all the evidence of Oliver and Gavin’s pyrotechnic experiments. I’m still not sure about the exact chemical ingredients they ended up combining to burn down the ancient stone complex of the Delphinians, but we just lovingly, and inaccurately, called the concoction napalm.

I heaved myself off the couch and took the sponge that Max held out for me, thanking whatever outside force had given Oliver and Gavin such a passion for pyrotechnics.

I waited until midnight and then I kicked my motorcycle to life and drove the familiar route to Nikki’s house. I probably could’ve driven it with my eyes shut.

As I slipped into her bedroom, the prophecy of the Fate played over and over in my head.

Your last Forfeit will be your beginning … and your end
.

Nikki slept, again only on one side of the bed. I knew now that Jack was with her in her dreams and that her raised hand probably held his. A bridge across worlds. If the Delphinians were right, it was Nikki’s turn to keep Jack alive through her dreams of him.

Your last Forfeit will be your beginning … and your end
.

If the Delphinians were right, it also meant that Nikki was my future. There would be no more searching for another Forfeit like her. I knew now there was no one like her.

Even through their dreams, Nikki couldn’t keep Jack alive forever. And when he was gone, I would still be here. Waiting.

I crouched down beside her bed and lightly touched her forehead. “Don’t worry, Nik. I’ll never let you go. Never.”

Read on for a sneak peek of Book Two in the Everneath
series,
Everbound
!

ONE
AT NIGHT

My bedroom
.

I
see Jack every night. In my dreams.

He’s lying next to me. Parallel worlds—the Surface for me, the Tunnels of the Everneath for him—that overlap at this one spot, and only for a moment. In my bedroom, while I dream.

His hair still curls in perfect waves past his ears. Tonight, the steel post that pierces his eyebrow shines in the dull moonlight through my window. It looks as if I could raise my finger and touch it
.

But I have to remind myself that it doesn’t really shine, because the post is a faint copy of the real object. Just like Jack is
.

He is starting to forget little things. Things he never would have forgotten before
.

“What do we talk about when I’m here?” he asks
.

“All sorts of things,” I say
.

“Like what?”

“You always say you miss me.”

He puts his hand over mine, and it slips right through. He has forgotten he is a ghost to me. Or maybe I am the ghost. “That’s obvious,” he says. “What else?”

“You talk about the time Jules told you I liked you.”

“And?”

My words flow out as the memories wrap around my heart like a blanket. “You talk about your uncle’s cabin. The Christmas Dance. How my hair hides my eyes. How my hand fits in yours. How you love me. How you’ll never leave.”

“And what do you say to me?”

“I say I’m sorry. And I ask you how I’m supposed to do this.” My voice wavers. “How am I supposed to do this, Jack?”

“Do what?”

“Live this borrowed life. Without you. Knowing that you’re there because of me.”

He is quiet. The first rays of sunlight stream in and morning is upon us, always too fast, and I can’t help but stir in my sleep
.

He watches me. He knows I am about to wake up. “How do we say good-bye?”

I try not to let my face show my heartache at that word, or my anger at the Everneath for existing in the first place, or my resentment of Cole for taking me to the Feed just over a year ago. But mostly, I have to hide how angry I am with myself. Jack doesn’t like to see me angry
.

When I speak, I make sure my voice is calm. “We say ‘See you tomorrow.’”

“See you tomorrow, Becks.” He squeezes his eyes shut, as if he can’t stand to watch me disappear
.

I place my hand over his, helplessly grasping at air
.

I am worried about the forgetting. Most nights he is lucid; his thoughts are clear. But then he has bad nights, like this one; and I wonder if he will eventually forget me, and then he won’t visit me in my dreams anymore
.

If that happens, will I be able to keep him alive?

The sun rises, I open my eyes, and Jack is gone. My bed is empty, and I’m left with only my guilt for a companion. I hug my pillow tight and wonder how long I will be able to survive with the crack in my heart
.

Perhaps it will grow large enough to consume me
.

If it does, will I find Jack in the next life?

NOW

The Surface. My bedroom
.

The headline read
THE DEADS POP UP IN AUSTIN
.

I rolled my eyes. That made it sound like the beginning of a zombie apocalypse and not what it really was, which was a surprise concert given by the Dead Elvises in Austin, Texas.

A couple of months ago, a reporter from
Rolling Stone
magazine dubbed them the “next Grateful Deads.” Ever since, the nickname the Deads had stuck. I wanted to punch that reporter.

But lately, I kind of wanted to punch everybody.

I printed the article, cut out the headline, and took it over to my desk. Probably most people would have kept things like this on their computer, but when it came to my search for Cole—and the rest of the Dead Elvises—I liked the tangible clues. The map I could spread out. The headlines I could fold and refold.

If it kept my hands busy, it kept my brain busy; and if it kept my brain busy, it was almost possible to keep the memories of my latest dreams of Jack tucked away.

Almost.

Who was I kidding? Most mornings it felt as if I had to glue the pieces of myself back together just to start the day. Because what Jack had done for me—when he jumped into the Tunnels and took my place in hell—it had fractured my soul.

I stole a glance at the shelf above my desk, where several pictures of Jack and me rested alongside a crumpled note with the words
Ever Yours
scrawled in Jack’s messy boy handwriting. The ghost of his presence was everywhere—in the deck of cards set out on the desk, the quilt on my bed, the book he’d lent me years ago—but it was especially strong on this shelf. I didn’t know how many times I’d tried to put the pictures away, in a drawer or under my bed, out of sight. But I couldn’t.

I went to reach for one in the corner that showed half of my face and all of Jack’s. It was one of those self-taken shots. Jack had turned the camera around on us at the top of the Alpine Slide, but all you could see was our faces and the blur of evergreens in the background.

The memory squeezed me like a vise around my heart, and just as my fingers touched the frame I yanked my hand back, sending the picture flying off the shelf. The glass in the frame shattered on the wood floor. The sound it made was more than glass shattering. It was the sound of old wounds reopening, and it echoed from deep inside of me. I put my hands over my head and squeezed. Sometimes it was the only way to keep the pieces inside from falling out.

It was thoughts like this that made me realize no amount of visualization exercises from Dr. Hill—my Dad-mandated therapist—could help me.

I heard the sound of footsteps in the hallway, and I held my breath. Maybe my father had heard the glass break. I kept waiting for a knock on the door, but it never came. Running my fingers through my hair, I tried to straighten up my desk and focus on the map. I couldn’t let my dad see how broken I was. Not just the kind of broken warranted by the sudden disappearance of the boy I loved. The kind of broken where I knew I was the only one to blame.

My dad had been through enough.

The top middle drawer of my desk was large and flat, perfect for the map of the United States. I uncapped my red pen and put a shaky little red dot over Austin, then added the clipping to the pile of headlines next to the map.

DEAD ELVISES SAY “THANK YOU” TO CHICAGO FANS WITH SURPRISE CONCERT

DEAD ELVISES GIVE IMPROMPTU FREE CONCERT IN NYC

NEXT STOP ON THE MYSTERY TOUR: THE DEADS IN DURHAM

LOOKING FOR THE DEADS: A VLOG

I was looking for the Deads too, but not because I was a fan. Cole Stockton, their lead guitarist, had disappeared on me three weeks ago without a trace, taking away my only chance to get to the Everneath.

My only chance to find Jack.

I closed my eyes.

Stay with me, Becks. Dream of me. I am
ever yours.

Two months ago Jack said those words to me. They were the last words he spoke before the Tunnels of the Everneath sucked him away. The words haunted me, and I knew I wouldn’t be able to live any kind of life until he was back with me. The problem was, how to get him back.

Not just anybody can go to the Everneath. In all the research I’d done over the past two months, I’d never come across a human who’d made it to the Everneath without the help of an Everliving. No one who’d made it there—and back—alone.

So it all came down to Cole. He and his band were the only Everlivings I knew.

Cole had visited me once, about a month after that horrible night. He’d stood in the yard outside my house, his swagger gone. He wanted me to become immortal like him.

I have ninety-nine years until I have to Feed again,
he’d said.
What makes you think I’d ever give up?

He’d seemed so smug. I’d placed my hand on his chest.

If you feel
anything,
please leave me alone,
I’d said.

I didn’t think he would, but he did. He’d disappeared. My only connection to the Everneath was gone. Now I regretted asking him to leave me alone.

I wrote the date next to Austin, Texas.
6/1
.

Running my finger eastward, I read the previous tour stops: Houston, 5/29; New Orleans, 5/27; Tampa, 5/24.

The Dead Elvises were heading west. For a little while, I had tried to guess which city they’d end up in next, pack up my car, and take off. But my dad could only take the sudden disappearances of his daughter so many times, and I was already in enough therapy now.

Besides, the spontaneous trips never helped my search, because I always guessed wrong. It was a pointless quest. As much as I thought I knew Cole, I was bad at anticipating his moves.

I ran my finger west of Austin, toward the possible cities for their next surprise stop. Fort Worth? Albuquerque? Phoenix? I bent the path northward until my finger rested on my hometown. Could I allow myself to hope that the Dead Elvises would return to Park City? That I would finally get my chance to grab a strand of Cole’s hair and go to the Everneath?

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