Arrows

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Arrows Page 1

by Melissa Gorzelanczyk




  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  Text copyright © 2016 by Melissa Gorzelanczyk

  Cover photograph copyright © 2016 by Getty Images

  All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Delacorte Press, an imprint of Random House Children’s Books, a division of Penguin Random House LLC, New York.

  Delacorte Press is a registered trademark and the colophon is a trademark of Penguin Random House LLC.

  randomhouseteens.com

  Educators and librarians, for a variety of teaching tools, visit us at RHTeachersLibrarians.com

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Gorzelanczyk, Melissa.

  Arrows / Melissa Gorzelanczyk. — First edition.

  pages cm

  Summary: Dance prodigy Karma Clark’s unrequited love for Danny is unbearable until Aaryn, son of Cupid, tries to fix his mistake and ends up falling in love with the beautiful dancer from Wisconsin who can never love him in return.

  ISBN 978-0-553-51044-7 (hc) — ISBN 978-0-553-51045-4 (glb) — ISBN 978-0-553-51046-1 (ebook)

  [1. Love—Fiction. 2. Dancers—Fiction 3. Gods, Greek—Fiction.] I. Title.

  PZ7.1.G67Ar 2016

  [Fic]—dc23

  2015008992

  eBook ISBN 9780553510461

  Random House Children’s Books supports the First Amendment and celebrates the right to read.

  v4.1

  ep

  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Chapter 1: Aaryn

  Chapter 2: Karma

  Chapter 3: Aaryn

  Chapter 4: Karma

  Chapter 5: Aaryn

  Chapter 6: Karma

  Chapter 7: Aaryn

  Chapter 8: Aaryn

  Chapter 9: Karma

  Chapter 10: Aaryn

  Chapter 11: Karma

  Chapter 12: Aaryn

  Chapter 13: Karma

  Chapter 14: Aaryn

  Chapter 15: Karma

  Chapter 16: Karma

  Chapter 17: Aaryn

  Chapter 18: Karma

  Chapter 19: Aaryn

  Chapter 20: Karma

  Chapter 21: Karma

  Chapter 22: Aaryn

  Chapter 23: Karma

  Chapter 24: Aaryn

  Chapter 25: Aaryn

  Chapter 26: Karma

  Chapter 27: Aaryn

  Chapter 28: Karma

  Chapter 29: Aaryn

  Chapter 30: Karma

  Chapter 31: Aaryn

  Chapter 32: Karma

  Chapter 33: Aaryn

  Chapter 34: Karma

  Acknowledgments

  FOR SHEA,

  whose love empowered me

  We landed at the edge of a high school parking lot, me with two arrows in my pack. Phoebe let go of my hand to scope out the area, appearing indestructible as she lifted her bow.

  “Okay, Aaryn,” she said. We’d just met five minutes earlier, though she was one of the cupids all the students had heard about. She gestured with her chin. “Them.”

  Arcs of golden light swam through the arrow she nocked into her bow, and when she retracted, the fletching made a dent against her cheek. Her kohl-lined eyes focused on a couple standing by the door of the high school, dressed up for their homecoming dance. They had no idea what was coming.

  The girl, a short redhead in stilettos, darted quick glances at her date, who was wiping his palms on his suit pants. Freakishly tall, that guy.

  Phoebe paused. With a snap, a glittery path tore through the air. The arrow disintegrated with a burst of light through the boy’s tie. Phoebe half smiled as her arms relaxed.

  “Well, Son of Eros—have you ever experienced the arrows like this?” she asked.

  “No. Just target practice. Dead arrows.”

  She stood beside me, and for a second I felt awesome, getting one of the prettiest goddesses as my proctor.

  “How cool is it that we ended up together on finals day?” She winked. “You’re just the god I was hoping to get.”

  “Oh, uh, really?”

  “Mm-hmm. Tonight is definitely helping my status.”

  “Glad to hear it.” I cleared my throat, anxious to get on with the test. She seemed cool, though. Maybe she’d want to get to know me once I graduated.

  With a satisfied smile, Phoebe placed a second arrow against the silver wire and brought the redhead into her sights. She did this little square-up-and-hesitate thing with her shoulders. The arrow flew and disappeared. Direct hit.

  Things got pretty ridiculous from there. The teens held each other for a long time, the guy bending to her height, smoothing her hair out of the way so they could have an all-out tongue war. And then the reality of it all struck me.

  Love was beginning to unfold out there, actual love. No one else in the world would matter as much to them as they did to each other. Two humans who hadn’t even reached adulthood, who’d barely started to learn about life, and they’d already found their soul mates. In Lakefield, Wisconsin, of all places.

  I scanned the parking lot, which was as dead as the nearby farm field. “Who am I supposed to shoot?”

  “Well.” Phoebe smiled. “I was thinking I should help you find the perfect couple. That’s not my job, just so you know—but I’d love to do a little favor for you. Eros would appreciate that, I’m sure.”

  “I’m going to check out the school.”

  “You can’t open the doors.”

  “No one’s around,” I said.

  “Aaryn. Wait. You know the code.”

  I rocked on my heels, annoyed that she was right. The code about not opening doors was one of many the gods followed. Never draw attention to yourself among humans. A door opening by itself? Humans got creeped out by stuff like that.

  Then another girl’s voice. I swung my quiver around on the leather strap across my chest. Two more teens were there. The girl, a brunette, threw her arms around the redhead—shocker, she’d stopped kissing the tall guy—then leapt to catch up to her date, some idiot wearing a suit coat and baseball cap. A real romantic.

  I slid an arrow from my pack. It glowed brightly, a steady, vibrant orange.

  “Ready to join the ranks?” Phoebe asked. Pride filled her voice. The light from my arrow cast shadows beneath her eyes.

  And my targets? Too easy under that powerful parking lot light. The girl was smiling, acting like her date was the most interesting person in the world, though she seemed like the interesting one: athletic body shown off by an airy pink dress.

  I snorted under my breath as the guy’s voice carried into the darkness. “You’re so sexy, Karma,” he said. Ha. What a name. Humans actually believed in stuff like karma. Mr. Romantic pulled her in, massaging her back as they kissed, his hands creeping lower and lower until they curved over her ass.

  I sighed, then closed one eye. Everything around me blurred except the girl. This was it. My first match. The metal between my fingers glowing, the power to change someone’s life forever. Yes, I was the son of Eros, privileged, but like everyone else at finals, this match was the beginning of my legacy. For a second my chest felt like it was going to explode.

  I let go.

  The arrow melted into the girl’s back, a bull’s-eye shot. The effect was immediate. She gasped when the kiss ended and her hands slid up his neck, slow and slinky. The power of the enchantment had struck. I drew out my last arrow, which had been matched as a pair. The arrows were made that way—made for each other, just like their targets.

/>   “What the hell—” I held the arrow up. It wasn’t glowing.

  Phoebe started as I flicked my thumb on the blunt end. “Wait a minute, is that…?” She snatched the arrow and shook it, like that might help. “A practice arrow? Is this some kind of joke?”

  The guy began to lead his lovesick date into the back of a pickup truck.

  “There’s still time, right?” I said. “Let’s just head back for a replacement arrow. There must be some record of the pair.”

  Our eyes met as we checked the Hive, our social web, accessible to us with a single thought. One thought—a power button—and we controlled a galaxy of information with our minds. The rectangular display inside my mind lit up, ready to search.

  “No way.” The arrow ration house had closed seven minutes ago.

  Phoebe’s hands covered her mouth.

  “How could this happen? I can’t let you go to Blackout, Aaryn, I can’t. This is—”

  “Don’t get crazy. I’m not going to Blackout. Dad wouldn’t let them do that.”

  “This is serious. You can’t pass finals. You really can’t pass. Leaving a human like this, only one of them shot, it’s like—the worst possible failure.” She made a wild hand motion. “This is going to ruin me.”

  “Jeez, don’t panic yet.”

  “I’m not panicking!”

  Perfect. I twisted the end of my bow against the pavement, though I had to admit my pulse had sped up.

  Blackout.

  Where the failed gods go.

  “How could you forget to grab a matching pair?” Her voice was getting shrill.

  “Relax. This isn’t my fault.”

  “You didn’t let your pack out of your sight, right?”

  My bow stopped spinning. I couldn’t tell her I’d been distracted by the Hive or that I’d gone into a private comb to compare proctors with my buddy Chaz. She’d think I was a complete idiot. “I kept my pack right here the whole time,” I lied, tugging the strap.

  The girl was laughing again, her head popping up for a second as Mr. Romantic shook out a quilt and handed her the corner.

  “What am I going to do?” Phoebe said. “If the assembly finds out…No, they can’t, we have to lie. They can’t find out.”

  They were sitting up now, facing each other, him leaning in to nuzzle her ear. Time on Earth seemed to slow. At least the guy appeared to like her.

  “Do you, uh, know anyone? Who went to Blackout?” My voice was low.

  “No. Of course not. Never.”

  Where the failed gods go as humans, their memories wiped.

  The teens were kissing again, and then they flopped out of sight. Thump. One of them bumped the truck bed.

  “This is what we’re going to do.” Phoebe squeezed my arm until it stung, but I didn’t bother pulling away. “No one is going to find out about this. Got it? No one.”

  “Do you think she’ll be okay?” I nodded at the truck.

  “Oh, um, I don’t know, maybe—whatever! Forget about them. I’m going to say you passed. You passed, okay? If the assembly finds out about that arrow, there will be no mercy. It won’t matter whose son you are.”

  I swallowed, though it felt like a knife was picking at my throat. “You’re the boss. Tonight never happened.”

  Phoebe slid her hair behind her ears and took a shaking breath. Her gauge earrings made her face seem fierce. “This is really bad, I’ll admit it, really, really bad, but it’s going to be okay, I promise.”

  “Well, hey—not everyone gets a happy ending.” My parents, for instance.

  “We have to get out of here.” Phoebe grabbed my hand and yanked. Within seconds we had sliced through the atmosphere and returned to Mount Olympus, fog-breath circling our feet. There was white all around us, silver, gold, and stone. The land of the gods. We stood in the enormous corridor in silence, two cupids, though it didn’t feel awesome the way I’d expected. Phoebe’s emerald eyes were still watery, her hands trembling. She swallowed, which sounded more like a gulp.

  “So, um, yeah…happy you passed?”

  The question left a sour feeling in my stomach. That girl down there. Her life had changed, all right. My fist fell slack. “Yeah. Finals. Wow.”

  “You’ll be a good cupid,” she added, almost like an apology for how the night had gone. “Everything will be fine, see? No one even knows we’re back. And you—are you okay?”

  “I’ll be fine.”

  “To think I almost lost you tonight. Oh my God, I shouldn’t even be saying that up here.”

  Her anxiety was getting to me. A tight, suffocating feeling began to clench my chest. I stood tall, tried to get rid of it. I was a cupid, finally, after all those years of working my ass off. And hey—the three-year age gap between Phoebe and me had become irrelevant. Yeah, I was younger, but we were equals now. We’d botched finals together and survived. Maybe chocolate and flowers would help her feel better.

  I offered her my arm, but the tight feeling stuck. “Let’s see if there’s a party.”

  One year later

  I sped home from school with the window all the way down. The rain was more of a drizzle and helped kill that familiar, sleep-deprived floating feeling. A sense of calmness filled me.

  Fall was coming.

  The trees along the road were already fading from green to golden. Summer in Lakefield had lasted too long, and it had been such a hot, hard summer. Maybe I couldn’t escape what had happened in the past year, but change was in the air and it felt amazing.

  At home I was greeted by the sound of Nell screaming from my mother’s arms. My sweet baby’s fists pummeled the air to the beat of her cry until all the weight I’d shed on the ride home pressed down on my chest, reminding me. Fall couldn’t change that.

  “Sorry I’m late. Mrs. Smith let me stay after for extra credit.”

  “Did you know Danny bailed on babysitting again?” Leah said the second I walked in. She sat at the table, her arms crossed. “It’s one night a week. One night, which isn’t that hard, if you ask me. You should yell at him. If he was my boyfriend, I’d definitely yell at him.”

  “No wonder you’re single.”

  “Whatever. He’s a bad dad.”

  “At least he’s in the same state as Nell.”

  “Girls,” Mom said, her voice firm.

  I shot my younger sister a look but kept my mouth shut for Mom’s sake. She hated when we fought about Dad. And Danny? Leah didn’t realize how busy he was. She placed our own father on a pedestal while beating Danny up over every little thing. I’m not sure if she just missed Dad, or was stupid, or what.

  “Come here, baby.” I shrugged out of my backpack and brought Nell to my shoulder, relaxing at how warm and snuggly she felt. At three months old, she was average for weight but already in the top percentile for height. Maybe a future dancer. Her gasps tickled my cheek.

  “I’m going to feed her,” I said.

  “I just fed her fifteen minutes ago.” Mom’s lips pressed together. Was that the same flyaway ponytail she’d scraped up at five a.m.? Our days started early, thanks to my before-school dance class, but maybe she needed a break. She definitely needed a shower.

  “Shhh, shhh, shhh. What’s the matter, baby? Shhh, shhh, shhh.” I flicked my gaze to the flowery clock above the fireplace. We lived in a decidedly female house full of pinks and purples and flowers and lace. That’s what happens when your dad ditches you and moves across the country. You build up a fortress of girly things so no man ever hurts you again. (Mom’s thinking, not mine.)

  “I hate to ask, but can one of you watch her?” I did hate to ask. I hated it because they were going to think the worst of Danny, and then me, thinking I should probably just stay home with my baby for the night. Homework? That would have to wait. I promised myself I wouldn’t fall asleep until it was done.

  Mom was giving me the Look.

  You’re the one who got yourself pregnant and I’ve already raised two babies of my own and I’m not impressed with y
our choice in men, either.

  That look.

  “I have plans tonight,” Mom said. “If Danny had given us more notice, maybe we could have worked something out.”

  “Can you rock her or something?” Leah called. “I can’t even think.” Her homework was spread across the table, where it had probably been since three o’clock. I couldn’t remember the last time I’d had the luxury of an hour to casually tinker with my homework, messaging friends the whole time and telling other people what to do. I slammed my bedroom door.

  Ugh! The ripping sound as I pulled Nell’s fist out of my hair, and the sting of the whole day, amplified in that moment, made my vision blur and shift. I swallowed.

  Lifted my chin.

  I would not cry. Not now.

  I sat on my unmade bed and called Danny. Talking to him always made me feel better on days like this. Days when everyday life, silly things, really, felt overwhelming. I listened to the familiar sound of his voice mail in one ear, Nell’s cry in the other. He was probably busy with homework.

  Or not, whispered a niggling voice in my head. I silenced it by looking at Nell, our baby. Our masterpiece. Her pink cheeks, her hair that curled at the ends, those adorable fat legs.

  Danny and I were solid. We’d survived the one thing that killed most relationships at our age. Even being teen parents, our love was real. I’d known that since the first night we kissed.

  The door popped open.

  “Knock, please,” I said, but my sister skidded inside, hands on her hips. She was all drama—thrift store designer clothes, dark hair styled like she’d had a professional team on the job, mouth set in a confident twist. In a family of brown-eyed girls, hers were the darkest. The thick eyeliner and sage shadow? More drama, which matched her current mood perfectly. My eyes were lucky to get a few swipes of mascara, since I didn’t have time for makeup anymore.

 

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