The Siren's Cry

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The Siren's Cry Page 1

by Jennifer Anne Kogler




  The Siren’s Cry

  Jennifer Anne Kogler

  Dedication

  To the girls of Dod Hall

  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Dedication

  Chapter 1 - The Threat at Pirate’s Cove

  Chapter 2 - The Mystery of Miles Zapo

  Chapter 3 - The Accommodations

  Chapter 4 - The Itinerary

  Chapter 5 - The Experiment in the Exercise Room

  Chapter 6 - Miles, Revisited

  Chapter 7 - The Washington Monument

  Chapter 8 - The Monumental Embarrassment

  Chapter 9 - The House With Oil the Mirrors

  Chapter 10 - The Disappearing Acts

  Chapter 11 - The Return of the Voices

  Chapter 12 - Phoebe’s Letter

  Chapter 13 - The Mall

  Chapter 14 - Air & Space & Admissions

  Chapter 15 - A Familiar Name

  Chapter 16 - Learning to Play

  Chapter 17 - Hard to Say and Harder to Hear

  Chapter 18 - The Prep and the Plan

  Chapter 19 - The Return Visit

  Chapter 20 - Naptime

  Chapter 21 - The Ride Home

  Chapter 22 - Answers

  Chapter 23 - Fern Mcallister’s Day Off

  Chapter 24 - The Essence of Ix Chel

  Chapter 25 - Two Plans

  Chapter 26 - Going For Miles

  Chapter 27 - Meet & Greet

  Chapter 28 - The Imperfect Crime

  Chapter 29 - The Bush Ambush

  Chapter 30 - The Transfer

  Chapter 31 - The Ghost Bandit

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Credits

  Copyright

  About the Publisher

  Chapter 1

  The Threat at Pirate’s Cove

  Haryle Laffar’s gray eyes flashed angrily as he stood on the cliffs above the beach at Pirate’s Cove, surveying the carnage below. Fern McAllister’s unconscious body had washed up onshore, and gentle breakers now rippled peacefully across her lifeless form. Laffar spotted a man huddled and shivering behind a rock partway down the hill and recognized his old friend immediately. When he reached the man, Laffar yanked on his soaked hair, forcing his friend to look up at him.

  “What happened here, Flarge?” he asked accusingly. His swift journey down the stairs had caused some windblown sand to catch in his dark beard. Laffar had been late meeting his brother, Vlad, but he did not expect to find such slaughter and destruction on the beach. A large tidal wave had engulfed all of Vlad’s followers except Flarge. Yet again, Vlad had failed in his mission.

  “The girl,” Flarge stammered. “She did this. . . . Vlad tried to destroy her, but it was she who destroyed him.”

  “What about the stone?” Laffar demanded. “Who has it?”

  “It’s gone,” Flarge said despondently. Laffar watched from their position in the shadows as some of the Rollens who had recently arrived shackled his brother. “What will we do?”

  “We won’t do anything . . . not now,” Laffar insisted, adjusting the bandanna he wore over his shoulder-length hair. He helped Flarge up and hoisted his injured friend’s arm over his shoulder.

  “But what about the plan?” Flarge said as they headed toward the stairs dug into the cliff. “If the girl, Fern McAllister, really is an Unusual . . .”

  “The girl won’t be a problem,” Laffar said, his single silver front tooth gleaming. Haryle Laffar and his friend were nearly at the top of the stairs when they turned and looked back down at the beach. Vlad, shackled and strapped to a board, was being carted off in one direction. Moving in the opposite direction, a man had Fern McAllister’s limp body in his arms, no doubt on his way to deliver her to someone who would nurse her back to health. Haryle Laffar’s gray eyes blazed in the moonlight as he spoke once more.

  “We’ll kill Fern McAllister before she has the chance to do any more harm.”

  Chapter 2

  The Mystery of Miles Zapo

  Fern was sure she was suffocating.

  Each gulp of air she inhaled made her lungs feel as if big handfuls of sand were being dropped down her throat. She gasped, hacking as she rolled over. The flesh on her bare back tingled as it touched the cold concrete floor. She looked up and saw more concrete above—a single flickering orange light crackled directly overhead. Her eyes slowly adjusted as she forced herself to her knees and then teetered to her feet.

  The room was about the size of a classroom. Tattered netting hung from the low ceiling, and a half-dozen rusty steel cages were piled in one corner of the room. Some of the cages, large enough to hold several people, had broken bars. Others had doors hanging from loose hinges or no doors at all. Fern noticed a dark patch in another corner of the dingy concrete room—a doorway, she supposed.

  Scrambling toward the darkened entrance, she panted as she climbed over metal pails and large shovels. Fern had the creepy, spine-tingling feeling that someone was watching her.

  These days, though, Fern McAllister always felt like someone was watching her.

  She scrabbled over a large bundle of dry, cracked bamboo stalks. To her left was a crate with oversize block letters stamped on its side. In the faint light, she could barely make out the words: PROPERTY OF NATIONAL ZOOLOGICAL PARK.

  Fern took a step back, reevaluating. She seemed to be in a basement, surrounded by rusty cages, bamboo stalks, mops, shovels, and pails.

  Where, exactly, was she?

  on the other side of the doorway, Fern heard something shuffle. She dashed toward the doorway. Once she was past the threshold, everything was considerably darker—the only light came from the room Fern had just exited. But even in the semidarkness, what she saw was unmistakable. Huddled in the corner, cowering in the back of a medium-size cage, was a small boy, whimpering. There were half-empty boxes of cereal, a few banana peels, and a large pile of rags in the cage with him. The boy’s shoes were unlaced and only half on his feet. Using his arms, he clenched his knees to his chest and rocked himself back and forth quickly. A giant padlock hung from the door of the cage. It looked like it would take a workbench full of power tools to break it open. Fern cautiously approached the boy, peering through the vertical steel bars of the cage.

  As she got closer, she realized how filthy he was.

  “Hello?” Fern asked timidly.

  The boy did not respond. He stared straight ahead, almost looking through Fern, his eyes unable to focus.

  “Are you okay?” Fern asked, this time louder, as she drew closer. She scanned the room. Except for the boy and the cage, the room was bare with gray walls.

  “Where are we?” She questioned. “How did you get here?”

  The boy was wearing thick Rivers Cuomo glasses. His jet-black hair was the same color as Fern’s. His small frame led Fern to believe he was probably not as tall as she was. She waved her hand in front of his face. The boy didn’t flinch. He seemed to be sleeping with his eyes open.

  Who was this kid? Who had done this to him, putting him here, alone, in a locked cage?

  The strange boy’s eyes began to focus on Fern.

  “It’s—it’s you,” the boy stammered, wincing as he spoke. Moving his thick-rimmed glasses up his face, he rubbed his eyes vigorously. He inched forward in his cage. “You’re her.” He smiled weakly at Fern, revealing a set of brilliant white teeth. A strange sense of déjà vu overcame her, but she couldn’t place him.

  “I’m who?” Fern said. Her eyes traced the walls to the ceiling. There was a single grate above them, which had been pushed halfway open.

  “You made it,” the boy said, his eyes slowly glazing over again. “You survived when you were in the wa
ter. You’re a Tlaloque.”

  “A what?” Fern said, trying not to show the shock on her face. Was this boy talking about her battle with Vlad on the beach? How could he possibly know about that?

  “One of Tlaloc’s helpers,” the boy said, his voice becoming clearer. “Aunt Chan said you’re just like me. And now you’re here to help me . . . aren’t you?” he asked feebly, with innocent hopefulness. Fern’s heart nearly broke as she looked at his handsome face and terror-filled eyes. The boy had clearly been in this place a long time. Judging by the type of lock on his cage, the unknown villain who’d put him here was making sure that he did not escape.

  “What’s your name?” Fern asked, trying to stick to topics she thought the boy could handle. And how in the world am I supposed to help you? she thought.

  “Miles . . . Miles Zapo,” the boy said.

  “Nice to meet you,” Fern said, trying to sound cheerful for both their sakes. She stuck her arm through two of the bars but couldn’t reach Miles in the back of the cage. She withdrew her hand. Was Fern here because she was supposed to help this Miles Zapo? Or had someone drawn her here because they wanted her in a cage as well? Fern’s stomach somersaulted.

  “Where are we?”

  For Fern, appearing all of a sudden in strange places was not surprising anymore. Ever since she’d discovered that she could teleport—move from one place to another instantaneously—she’d found herself in a whole variety of places, some of them more pleasant than others; some intentional, some not. When Fern had blacked out and wound up on the top of Splash Mountain at Disneyland, with a news crew filming her from a helicopter, she began trying to control her strange power. This dingy place, though, was far more frightening than an amusement park ride, no matter how precarious her mountainside perch had been.

  “Who put you in that cage? How long have you been here?” Fern asked when Miles didn’t answer her last question. This time, she tried to speak slowly so he would understand.

  “He took me from my house,” Miles said, his eyes growing wider. “The tall man with the gray eyes and the silver tooth.”

  “Took you? From where?” Fern grew more insistent, hearing the panic creep into her own voice as she pictured the type of person who would lock Miles in a cage.

  “Mound, Minnesota,” Miles replied. “Where I live. As soon as he took me, they came and made me feel that horrible pain.” Miles began to tremble, his body shaking back and forth.

  “So you were kidnapped by a group—“

  Faint footsteps from above silenced Fern. The noise was directly overhead. Fern’s body tensed with alarm. She pressed her lips together as she and Miles stared at each other, listening intently. The clamor grew louder until it no longer sounded like footsteps but dozens of hands slapping on the ceiling at once, coming from all different directions.

  “What’s that?” Fern asked, her eyes widening.

  “They’re coming back! They’ll trap you here too! We’ve got to get out!” Miles gasped, looking up toward the open grate and cowering in the back of his cage. He began pushing himself between two poles in the back of the metal cage’s frame. Fern grabbed the two bars on either side of the cage door, hoping to rattle them hard enough to shake the rusty door free of its hinges, but her hands went right through the steel bars as if they weren’t there at all. She tried slamming her hand against one of the bars with the same result. It was as if she were a ghost. The rumpus above Miles and Fern grew louder and louder still. Fern again attempted to shake the cage, but it was as if she had no body mass at all.

  She was tempted to bolt . . . though she hated the thought of leaving Miles zapo to fend for himself. Still, one look at how frightened he was at the thought that they were coming back convinced her that if she wanted to stay alive and unharmed, she should run as fast as she could away from this place.

  Fern eyed the escape route straight overhead, through the grate in the ceiling. She felt woozy and petrified all at once and dropped to her knees. colorful spots formed under her eyelids. She blinked rapidly, trying to combat the cloud she felt enveloping her brain. She made eye contact with Miles and recoiled at the panic in his eyes. Everything went white. Then black. Then there was nothing.

  Chapter 3

  The Accommodations

  “Ahhhhhh!” Fern yelled at the top of her lungs.

  Something had a grip on Fern’s shoulder and was shaking it firmly. Fern opened her eyes, breathless as she held her hands up and tried to grip Miles Zapo’s metal cage again.

  But there was nothing there.

  “What in the world’s wrong with you?” Fern’s twin brother, Sam McAllister, said, staring at Fern as if she’d gone completely nuts.

  Fern looked around, utterly confused. The dingy basement had been replaced with the bright interior of an airplane. Lindsey Lin, her best friend, was on her left, sitting in an aisle seat. Sam, still staring at her, was on her right, sitting by the window.

  “At this time, please return all tray tables and seat backs to their locked and upright position,” a female voice blared over the loudspeaker.

  Half the main cabin was filled with students from St. Gregory’s Episcopal School. Though none of the students were wearing their school uniforms, it was easy to recognize the dozens of seventh and eighth graders and weary chaperones among the other passengers.

  Everyone stared at Fern. Visions of her Splash Mountain escapade flashed through her mind. She wondered how loud her scream had been. A flight attendant was rushing to row thirty-six, where Lindsey, Sam, and Fern were sitting. The crew member glared at Fern with a skeptically arched eyebrow.

  “Was I yelling out loud?” Fern whispered to Sam.

  “Uh, yeah. At the top of your lungs, for like the last ten seconds,” Sam whispered back.

  “Oh,” Fern said.

  The flight attendant paused for a moment to ensure that Fern was no longer disturbing the main cabin’s tranquility. She cleared her throat, wagged her finger at the row, and made the shush signal. Then she moved on.

  Everything came flooding back to Fern all at once. She was on her spring break school trip to Washington, DC.

  Five days of activities were planned, including a trip to Arlington National Cemetery, the East Wing tour of the White House, a tour of the Capitol conducted by someone from the office of San Juan Capistrano’s representative in the House, and dozens of other scheduled events. The trip used to be an eighth-grade-only annual event, but Headmaster Mooney realized several years ago that it was less work for him to make the journey every other year and open it up to all seventh- and eighth-grade students. Decisions like this, in fact, had led Mrs. McAllister to identify the headmaster’s leadership style as “lazy.”

  This year, half the seventh and eighth graders had signed up for the trip, including, unfortunately, Fern’s three least favorite people at St. Gregory’s: Lee Phillips, Blythe conrad, and Headmaster Mooney.

  But the one person Fern was unable to get out of her mind was not on the plane at all. Fern was certain that Miles zapo was somewhere far less comfortable and far less safe. The plane was now over northern Virginia, beginning the descent into Dulles International Airport. The excitement level of the students rose as those with window seats glimpsed the Washington Monument and the snaking Potomac River below.

  Fern couldn’t erase the image of the terrorized boy with big-framed glasses from her mind. Who exactly was Miles zapo?

  “Bad dream?” Sam asked, turning away from the views of Washington.

  “Yeah,” Fern muttered.

  Ever since Fern’s dramatic showdown a month before with the powerful otherworldly Vlad, she’d been having some very strange and vivid dreams. Her dream about Miles was the fourth of its kind.

  In the first dream, Fern was at a picnic near a body of water. The water was clear and dark blue, and everyone was speaking a language she couldn’t decipher. A girl her age with dark skin and hair seemed oddly familiar, much as Miles had. Fern felt like she was there—but w
hen she tried to stick a toe in the refreshing, cool water, she awakened.

  A week later, Fern had a second dream. She was fairly certain she was in England, standing in the corner of a kitchen looking out at the grounds of a sprawling manor. A tall, lanky boy named Lancaster was being scolded by his British-accented, ruddy-cheeked mother. She was accusing her son of spying on the girls’ locker room at school. Fern woke up before she learned more.

  The third dream took her to a small, cramped living room above a restaurant in the middle of a bustling city somewhere in Asia. A family of eight gathered around a table, laughing, smoking, and eating strange food Fern had never seen before. She watched silently as a girl, about her age, looked up in her direction, raised both eyebrows, but said nothing. Fern waved at her, and the girl cocked her head to the side. No one seemed to see Fern in the room. It was as if she were invisible to the people she was watching. After her third dream, Fern began to wonder if the vivid dreams meant she was entering the next stage of her transmutation into a full-fledged otherworldly. She fervently hoped that fangs would not be next.

  This most recent dream, though, was different. Miles Zapo seemed so real. She was sure that it was more than a dream. Fern had spoken to Miles and he’d responded. He was in desperate trouble, he’d asked for her help, and she’d been unable to provide it.

  Though Fern couldn’t explain why, she felt an undeniable urge to do everything in her power to rescue Miles. But where was he? Somewhere in Minnesota? The crate had a zoological park logo on it. Maybe it was from a zoo in Minnesota—and maybe she could teleport there once she came up with a plan to save Miles.

  Fern glanced over at her brother, who was bracing himself for the landing. Sam had hated flying ever since he was a little boy. He pretended that he didn’t mind the takeoffs and landings, but when they were about to land, Fern saw him close his eyes and grip the armrests so hard his knuckles turned white.

 

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