Read The Soul Seekers: Horizon Online
Authors: Alyson Noel
The Richters have found a way to harness the power of their ancestry and the countless acts of evil they’ve wrought.
In other words: We are greatly outmatched.
Though it may prove worse still. They may have found a way to turn the entire town against us.
I look among my friends and say, “And let’s not forget the tourmalines they included in the New Year’s Eve swag bags. I’m sure it’s just a matter of time until they
come into play. There’s no way the Richters would ever waste such a valuable resource.”
“But why do you think they waited so long to exploit them?” Lita looks at me. “I mean, nothing out of the ordinary has happened for months.”
“That’s the million-dollar question,” Xotichl says, fiddling with the glasses she’s still not used to wearing. “Though try as I might, I can’t get a read on
the energy.”
Despite the heat, I’m left chilled by her words. She’s been saying things like that so often, I wonder if she has any idea just how frequently she’s come to repeat herself
where her failing abilities are concerned. Then again, I’m probably overreacting. Maybe she’s so excited by the novelty of seeing, it’s distracted her from her more mystical
gifts.
I return my attention to my friends. “Okay, so the bottom line is, from this moment on, until we come up with an actual plan, we need to be on high alert for signs of anything out of the
ordinary.”
“And, I have to go buy a new party dress,” Lita says. “Which definitely calls for a trip to Albuquerque since it’s not like I’ll find anything in this
fashion-challenged town. Xotichl—you in?”
Xotichl nods eagerly, as Auden says, “I don’t know about you, but that sounds like a wrap. Anyone up for pizza?”
“I was thinking maybe we could hang in the Lowerworld instead,” Lita says. “It’s gotta be cooler there, than here.”
“Maybe so, but last I checked, there was no pizza to be had in those parts.”
“True . . .” Lita purses her lips, trying to decide which holds greater appeal.
“Was there pizza in the Upperworld?” Xotichl looks at Axel, but Axel just laughs and shakes his head.
“Poor baby.” Lita leans in, ruffles his hair. “You’ve got a lot of catching up to do. Which means we shouldn’t waste a single pizza-ordering opportunity.” She
pulls her phone from her pocket and scrolls through her speed-dial list as Auden grabs his keys.
“You’ll need to pick up some drinks too.” I head into the kitchen and peer into the fridge, if only to confirm that other than a nearly empty tub of cream cheese and a package
of week-old bagels, it truly is empty. “I’m way overdue on food shopping.”
“No worries, we’re on it.” Lita grabs her purse with one hand and Axel with the other. “We’ll take supermarket duty. Xotichl and Auden, you’re responsible for
fetching the pizza, and Daire and Dace . . .” She looks over her shoulder and centers her gaze on mine. “Whatever’s brewing between you, get it settled before we return. This may
prove to be our last fun Friday night for a while. So I’d rather not waste it on relationship drama.”
“Since when did Lita get so insightful?” I tip onto my toes and reach into an overhead cupboard. Glancing over my shoulder, waiting for Dace to react, but he
remains frustratingly silent. “Hello? Anyone home?” I drop onto my heels and unload an armful of glasses onto the counter. Poking his shoulder, I say, “Dace. Hey. You in
there?”
He squints. Shakes his head. Requiring a handful of seconds to travel from his private world of faraway thoughts to the tiny kitchen in Enchantment, New Mexico, where we both stand.
“Sorry. Guess I’m a little preoccupied.” He swipes a hand through his hair, pushes his bangs from his eyes.
“A little?” I quirk a brow, make a face. But when he fails to react, I say, “Anything you want to talk about?”
He meets my question with a conflicted look.
“Did something happen at work?”
He rubs a hand over his chin, purposely avoiding my gaze. “Didn’t make it to work today. Spent the day with Leftfoot instead.”
He returns his focus to me, but the move comes too late. His words were clearly veiled, and I can’t even fathom what sort of secret he’s so determined to keep.
I study his face, relieved to find my image reflected in his eyes. Last time he acted like this, that wasn’t the case. “Why would spending the day with Leftfoot leave you like
this?”
“Like what?”
“Cold. Distant. Remote. Geographically close, but emotionally unavailable.”
He looks at me as though he’s just woken from a very long sleep.
“God, I’m so sorry. Is that what I’ve done?”
I bite my lip and nod.
“C’mere.” He reaches for me, clasping me at the waist as he pulls me into his arms. “I’m not trying to push you away, really.” But when his mouth tips at the
side, I’m not sure I believe him. Dace’s inability to lie without giving himself away is just one of the many things I love about him.
“Dace—what’s going on? What happened today?”
He shakes his head, returns his focus to me as though willing himself to try harder. The fact that he has to
will
such a thing only deepens my concern. What happened to my
love-trumps-evil
optimist from this morning?
“It’s been a long day. A long and tiring day. You know how Leftfoot is . . .”
His breezy attitude clashes with the fine lines forming around his eyes, the grim downward tilt of his lips. Unwilling to partake in his charade, I move to untangle myself from his arms. To my
surprise, he lets me.
I move about the kitchen, busying myself with gathering the correct amount of plates, napkins, and drinking glasses. Loading it all onto a tray I carry into the den where we’ll gorge on
pizza and watch loads of movies where Lita will grill me about which actors I knew (and which actors I kissed) back in my former life as a Hollywood makeup artist’s jet-setting daughter. The
usual plan when we don’t head for the Lowerworld.
I place the tray on the table, start to arrange all the settings, when I realize I forgot to include the red-pepper flakes Xotichl loves, and turn so quickly I smack into Dace.
“For the last time, what is going on with you?” I cry, frustrated to find him pulling away just when I need him the most.
“Daire—when was the last time you checked the prophecy?” His eyes glitter so strangely a chill slips over my skin.
I pause. Struggle to remember. Finally admitting it’s been a while. “Maybe a month—quite possibly more.” I shrug. “Why? Why is this relevant? What have you
learned?”
Without a word, he grasps my hand in his and leads me out of the den, through the kitchen, and up the ramp to the office where the Codex is kept.
When the worst is confirmed, when we’ve exhausted the subject between us, all we can do is sit quietly and wait for our friends to return.
Bodies stiff, thoughts mired deep in our own private hell, when a blare of chatter and laughter bursts through the door, only to halt a few seconds later when our friends find us sitting silent
and stricken with the Codex propped open before us.
Lita’s the first to react. Centering it before her, she reads the words that are branded on my brain no matter how much I’ve tried to deny them.
When air sears and water fades
When tempest winds ravage fire-scorched plains
When Shadow eclipses Sun—the Seer shall fall
Causing three worlds to descend into darkness eternal
“Okay, so what we have here is another quatrain.” Lita shrugs, pushes away from the book as though it’s not to be taken seriously. Try as she might to appear
unaffected, her spooked expression betrays her. Yet, it doesn’t stop her from adding, “We averted the last prophecy, so why should this one be any different?” Her gaze searches
Axel’s, seeking reassurance.
“The last prophecy was thwarted in part because of me.” Axel’s expression turns guarded as his eyes glow dark violet. “I broke one of my most sacred vows. I interfered in
that which is considered strictly forbidden.”
A solemn hush descends on the room as everyone takes a moment to consider his words. But I’m focused on the words he failed to speak.
He’s one of us now.
His celestial pass, along with his celestial powers, have been revoked.
Which means there’s no one left to guide me.
No one left to step in and save us.
And, from what I’ve seen, no one should so much as attempt to spare me.
The Codex mimics the exact same story I read in the bones.
The glorious feather-crowned beast that dwells deep inside, is morphing into something else entirely.
Something wicked and foul.
Something capable of dark, malevolent deeds.
Everything I professed to believe just twelve hours ago has been flipped upside down.
Turns out, I’m not the man I thought I was destined to be.
Rather than a creature of light, the savior I imagined—I’m well on my way to becoming the very worst enemy mankind has yet seen.
When Shadow eclipses Sun—the Seer shall fall
It’s the takeaway line that says it all.
Somewhere within me stirs the darkness men fear. And it’s that very darkness that will eclipse the light of the world and cause Daire to fall.
The girl I’ve sworn to protect—the girl I’d give my very life for—I’m now destined to destroy.
The countdown has started.
It’s just a matter of time before my darkness is unleashed on the world.
Funny, how the last time I saw Cade he was unable to shift, yet now I’m destined to transform into something so heinous it’ll make his two-headed, snake-tongued beast resemble the
punch line to a really bad joke.
Is it possible the beast that once lived inside him has found a new home in me?
One where it could flourish and grow and turn my light against me—against all of us?
“So what do we do now?” Auden asks. Those six simple words heralding the moment I’ve tried hard to avoid.
Hoped I could delay just a few minutes more.
It’s the reason I’ve been acting so sketchy and distant. I know exactly what comes next and I can’t bear to face it.
It may be inevitable, unavoidable, but it’s shredding my insides—pulverizing my heart. And worse, it’s turned me into the worst kind of liar.
Just this morning I swore to Daire that I would always be with her, would never leave her, that we’d get through this together—and now I’m about to break every vow.
Daire deserves better.
Better than me.
Turns out, we’re fated, she was right all along.
Only instead of being fated to love her—to forge a life together—I’m fated to kill her.
And yet, while a part of me still manages to thrive, I owe it to Daire to pull myself together and handle this better. From the moment I arrived I’ve been shutting her out. Immersed in the
inner turmoil of trying to figure out the best way to say goodbye to the one person I can’t imagine ever living without.
Instead of being up front, finding the right words to tell her myself, I let the prophecy do the job for me, state what I couldn’t. A cowardly act I need to redeem.
I take a moment to gather my courage, my thoughts, then I rise to my feet and address my friends first. “Just to be clear, the Shadow the prophecy speaks of is me. I witnessed the same
prediction in a bone-reading ritual earlier today. Despite my normal appearance, it won’t be much longer before the beast completely takes over. And from what I’ve seen, there will be
no way to stop it, much less control it. So, for your safety and well-being, I’m leaving now and I won’t be returning.”
Lita gasps, clasps a hand to her mouth.
As Xotichl seeks comfort in Auden.
Only Axel nods his consent. Only Axel truly understands.
While Daire looks a lot like she did when she came to me in the dreams—a beautiful girl trusting me to do the right thing.
I try to say more—want to say more—but the words just won’t come. So like the condemned man I am, I lumber for the front door, aware of Daire racing behind.
I reach for the handle, step onto the stoop. Wanting so badly to pull her into my arms, press my lips to hers, though no longer sure if I should. “When you first discovered I’d
stolen a piece of Cade’s darkness, you wondered if it wasn’t a mistake—that maybe the darkness within was part of my fate. Looks like you were right.” My gaze roams over her
beautiful features now blunted with pain. “I wish things were different. I wish I’d never—” Before I can finish, she presses a finger to my lips, halting the words.