Firstlife (Everlife #1)

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Firstlife (Everlife #1) Page 19

by Gena Showalter


  “No,” I say, moving between them. “Put the weapon away, Sloan. He’s not here to hurt me.”

  He yanks me behind him, safeguarding me from the shank. As if she’d hurt me now. Still. The protective gesture is—freaking—endearing.

  I’m so sick of the word!

  “Enough, you two. Please.” I wait until both nod before leaving them to their own devices and entering the cave.

  There’s someone checking something under the plane.

  “Hello,” I call, a sense of unease sliding over me. I’m not sure why. Kind of reminds me of the fear I experienced when I ran from Killian, and yet I’m not fearful. Just wary.

  Are Messengers from Troika here, attempting to guide me?

  “I thought I heard voices out there.” An unfamiliar man closes the hatch and strides over to greet me. He’s tall with gray hair and craggy skin. “You must be my newest cargo.”

  “Yes.” I extend my hand for one reason and one reason only, and it’s not to be friendly. We shake, and I conclude he’s human rather than a Shell, his skin calloused and warm. He’s also an Unsigned, his hands and wrists free of brands.

  But...my unease only grows stronger. I ignore it, determined to leave this place.

  “Where are we headed?” Killian asks, his voice devoid of emotion.

  “I’ve got enough fuel to take you anywhere you want to go.”

  “Hawaii,” I say, making a split-second decision. I’ll be far from LA—and my parents—but close to water.

  “It’s settled then,” the pilot says. “Go ahead and board and we’ll take off.”

  chapter thirteen

  “Reality exists within the scope of your senses. If you feel it, it’s real.”

  —Myriad

  We’re in the air fifteen short minutes later. The aircraft is small and the flight is bumpy, and I’m laid bare by a certainty I’d rather not face: I’m afraid of heights. Well, afraid of falling.

  The way Clay fell...

  I shudder.

  “Cold?” Killian asks. He’s perched in the seat next to mine, toying with the ends of my hair. “Or frightened?”

  “Screw you,” I mutter. Why can’t I be like Sloan? She’s as happy as a boss in the copilot seat.

  Fear hinders, never helps. Look past it.

  “I can distract you,” he says. “Or we can sit in silence.”

  “I pick silence.”

  “Very well.”

  True to his word, he says nothing for hours. Despite my annoyance, I manage to nap for several more. But, after I wake up, another hour slips by as I shift uncomfortably and visualize the many ways to die in a plane, I finally admit the cold-shoulder treatment is only hurting myself.

  I give up, saying, “Earn your keep. Do something to distract me.”

  His chuckle is warm, not the cold thing I expect. “Dance, monkey, dance?”

  “Good. You understand.”

  “How about we negotiate terms for your covenant?”

  Why not? I’m a little curious and a lot desperate. “All right. Tell me what, exactly, Myriad is willing to offer me.”

  He goes still. “You’re serious?”

  I swallow a snort. “Yes. I’m serious.”

  As if he’s afraid I’ll change my mind, he rushes to say, “Your contract will last your Second-death. We will ensure your Firstlife is filled with fame and riches that far surpass anything your parents ever achieved, and in your Everlife, you’ll be given a place of honor inside the palace, as well as any other home you desire. If you want it, you get it, even if it’s occupied. You will never lack for anything. You will have servants, and you will answer only to our King.”

  “I have no desire for fame and riches.” I’ve already experienced the heavy cost of each. “And I don’t want to steal someone’s home.”

  I think I’ve surprised him again. He regards me quizzically. “Name your desire then. Your wish is my command.”

  No way I’ll tell him about the beach house. I want to buy it with my inheritance and owe no one. “What about a job?”

  “As an Abrogate, you’ll need to train for other positions. Messenger. Laborer. Scout. Leader. The more you know about each, the better Abrogate you’ll be.”

  “But...how do you even know I’m an Abrogate?”

  “For starters, you’re Fused with a General.”

  He drops the news as if I’m supposed to coo with excitement. Thing is, I’m not even slightly startled. I should have guessed this was always about the spirit I’m supposedly Fused with, not me.

  “Again I ask how you know—beyond any doubt.”

  A slight pause. “We...don’t. We can only guess, but all our Generals were wiped out at once, and their Second-death coincided with your birth.”

  “Yeah, well, I’m sure my birth coincides with a lot of Second-deaths.”

  “Yes, but your spirit glowed through your skin. That only happens when a soul is Fused with one of the more powerful positions.”

  “Or, as Troikans believe, the soul is a Conduit.” At least, I’m guessing.

  He gives a formal nod.

  “Abrogates are Generals, and Generals are decisive, right? They make battle plans. They lead the masses. They aren’t torn about a major decision. Like me.”

  “You don’t know what Generals are. You’ve never spoken to one.” He pauses. “Would you like to? I can arrange a meeting.”

  Again curiosity gets the better of me. “Yes. All right. But only if you answer one more question for me.”

  “Anything.”

  I lick my lip, a small tremor moving through me. “Do you like me, or am I just a job to you?”

  He grapples for a response, finally settling on, “The two aren’t mutually exclusive.”

  No, they aren’t. “Do. You. Like. Me?”

  “I...do,” he says and scowls, as if the admission is painful. Maybe it is. Friends have the power to hurt you in ways enemies never can.

  He curses suddenly and throws a glance over his shoulder to the seat in back. “Enough! Leave us.”

  My eyes go wide. “Someone’s here?”

  He faces me again, his expression stony. “No.”

  Word games. “Who was here?”

  “One of my Flankers.” He flicks his tongue over an incisor. “Before you ask, Flankers are a subdivision of Laborer. They follow me to chronicle my exploits.”

  One, I’d had no idea he had a tail. And two, someone actually chronicles his exploits? Like he’s what, a knight of the days of old with a troubadour?

  I laugh at him—I can’t help it—and soon, he’s laughing with me.

  When we hit a particularly nasty bump, I gasp. He winds an arm around my shoulders and I let him, offering no protest. I even lean against him of my own volition, resting my head in the hollow of his neck, where the scent of peat smoke and heather soothes me.

  “Why don’t you take another nap?” he says. “I like listening to your one-sided conversations.”

  He’s heard my sleep talking? Great! “What have I said?”

  “Ten’s tears fall...”

  “No. Ten tears fall. The number ten.”

  “No. You clearly said Ten’s tears. Your name.”

  I did? “Yeah, well, you leak liquid glitter when you’re injured.”

  “Glitter? How dare you. My manliness is offended.”

  “Your manliness will survive.”

  He caresses my shoulder, almost as if he’s petting me. “A spirit doesn’t function like a body. While we have muscle and bone, we’re sustained only by Lifeblood, and when we lose it, we hemorrhage power.”

  I try not to react to his touch...yeah, I try. “So, when you lose all your Lifeblood...”

  “We experience Second-death.”

  “So you can die, even inside the Shell.”

  “Yes. I’ve lost many friends that way.”

  The news...isn’t welcome. What happens afterward? Fusion, or the Rest?

  Another air pocket causes us to lurch, a
nd I go cold inside.

  He attempts another distraction. “You should drop Sloan. She’ll always put her wants above your needs.”

  “Someone else’s actions will never decide my own.” A facet of my free choice. One I embrace wholeheartedly.

  The blue light flashes on his wrists, and he curses.

  “A message?” I ask.

  “Yes.”

  “You aren’t going to respond?”

  “No. It’s from Madame.”

  “Madame...what?”

  “Madame Arse Pain.” His teeth are clenched, his tone filled with disgust. “She’s my Leader.”

  “Don’t like working for a woman, huh?”

  “Don’t like her, period.”

  “What’d she do—”

  “Oh, no. I’m not airing my dirty past with her. You still have to deal with her.”

  Ah. Madame Bennett.

  The light flashes a second time, and he slaps his wrist. “She wants another progress report.”

  Another. Just how many of our interactions has he shared with her? “Full disclosure. I’m walking away from you when we land.”

  “Me? What’d I do?”

  “What you know, Myriad knows and what Myriad knows, my parents know.”

  “Your parents haven’t been told of your escape...yet.”

  That’s something, at least. “Why the reprieve?”

  “Prynne has only informed parents of the deceased, and I requested Myriad keep quiet about you. Your parents...annoy me. Your mother is hiding something, and your father is an adulterous prick.”

  Shock and horror nearly choke me. “He’s cheating on my mom?”

  Killian goes still. “You didn’t know?”

  I shake my head as the plane hits another nasty air pocket, the nose dipping. My internal organs shrivel and for a moment, my mind spins round and round on a carnival ride.

  He tightens his grip on my shoulders. “Turbulence is natural, lass. We aren’t going to crash.”

  “Don’t use the C-word!”

  His chuckle is as beautiful as the rest of him. “I think everyone in the realms heard you. But don’t worry. I’m the big strong manly man and I’ll keep my weak little girl safe.”

  “Jerk,” I mutter, but I begin to relax against him. I won’t think about my dad’s infidelity and the mental hatchet job it must be doing on my mom.

  Killian leans down, his mouth hovering over my ear. I think he’s going to kiss the lobe but he whispers, “Do us both a favor and sign with Myriad.”

  My heart hammers as I lift my head. “Killian—”

  Our gazes connect, the air between us heating, crackling. He presses his forehead against mine and cups my nape, his thumb stroking up, into my hair and down, under the collar of my shirt.

  “I don’t just want you,” he says. “I want you.”

  “I don’t understand the difference,” I tell him honestly. Even still, his admission makes me tingle.

  “The first I can easily walk away from. The second...you make me feel—you make me feel.”

  The words aren’t pretty, but they’re ragged. His tone isn’t sweet, but raw.

  I’m nearly undone. Is he being for real? Or is this just another con to win me over?

  The plane jiggles again, but at first, I don’t really care. Not anymore. When it continues, growing increasingly more violent, I freaking care. I freaking care a lot. The bin above us pops open and my backpack spills out as the nose of plane dips at a more acute angle. If not for our seat belts, we would have pitched forward.

  This isn’t normal.

  I’m nearing full-blown panic when the pilot steps from the cockpit, a bag slung over his shoulders. He moves swiftly, avoiding our gazes.

  Killian releases me, saying to the man, “What are you doing?”

  The pilot wrenches open the side door and I’m blasted by a cold punch of wind and a hard kick of shock. My hair slaps at my cheeks as he—

  Jumps!

  “Help! Help! Killian, Ten. He hit me!” Sloan’s screaming voice cuts through the brutal bellow of the airstream. “He’s gone!”

  Yes. He’s gone. He, our only means of landing. The shock collides with panic, and my brain nearly shuts down. I focus on Killian. “What should we do?”

  “Stay here.” He jerks at his seat belt, his expression grim. “And sign with Myriad. Verbalize your agreement to the terms I presented. Don’t risk your Everlife, Ten. Please. If I can’t land the plane...” He shakes his head, as if he’s unwilling to consider the possibility. “Please,” he repeats.

  I remind myself I’m no longer a damsel in distress. I can think this through. What I can’t do? Base my decision on fear. Because, while I might be free to make my choice right now, I’ll never be free from the consequences of that choice. And I think I’d rather wind up in Many Ends than in Troika, warring with Killian, or in Myriad, warring with Archer and Clay.

  “D-do you know how to fly a plane?” I shout over the squall.

  He remains grim-faced. “As a Laborer, I’ve trained for all kinds of situations.”

  I’ll take that as a no.

  His buckle finally gives, but the plane has taken another dip and dive. He bangs into the wall that divides front from back. A wall he grips, pulling himself around the edge; a Herculean task considering the gale-force wind.

  He disappears from sight and a few seconds later, Sloan peeks out from behind the wall. Foolish girl! She’s going to be sucked out!

  I lean over and stretch out my arms. “Grab the hooks on the bracelets!”

  As soon as she has a firm hold, I tug while she kicks at the wall. Midair, her body begins to edge toward the opened door. I yank with all my might, using a reservoir of strength I didn’t know I possessed.

  She plows into Killian’s vacant seat. Shaking, she buckles up. She’s pale, her cheeks stained with dried tears.

  Eyes haunted, she asks, “Do you think we’re going to die? Say no, and I’ll believe you. You never lie.”

  I meet her gaze and remain silent.

  She covers her mouth with an unsteady hand. “We should pick a realm, either realm. Many Ends...”

  “Yes,” I tell her. “Choose.” Not knowing what else to do but remembering Archer’s final words to Clay, I whisper, “Archer. I’m asking you for help. Please.”

  There’s no bright light, and he doesn’t magically appear.

  Sloan must have read my lips. A tremor rocks her against me. “Where is he? Ten, where is he?”

  Her panic is kindling for my own, but I manage to tamp it down. “We don’t have to see him to know he’s here.” I’ve learned the hard way.

  “What if he’s only allowed to help Troikans?”

  “We’re potentials. We qualify.” We must.

  “I want to see him. I need to see him.”

  I...don’t, I realize, shocked. I trust him. Despite everything—or maybe because of everything—I know he’s doing everything within his power to save us. The real question is—will it be enough?

  The plane continues to plummet. My pulse points race harder and faster, as if I’ve been injected with a thousand vials of baiser de la mort.

  I glance out the window and see no sign of clouds—only land. Green. Lush. Pretty. We are going to crash. There’ll be no stopping it. Any moment now...

  “Brace for impact,” I tell Sloan.

  “Ten.” Tears cascade down her cheeks.

  “Have you chosen?”

  Long locks of her pale hair slap her cheeks as she shakes her head.

  Some people say your entire life flashes inside your head just before the end. Mine doesn’t. I don’t have an amazing epiphany with all the answers. I know only that I’m not ready to die, and that I won’t—I can’t—allow courage to fail me. Today I fight to live and live to fight.

  I won’t die.

  I tuck Sloan against me and wrap myself around her and notice—

  No. Dang him, no!

  Killian struggles to return to us. The
blue flecks in his eyes are completely overshadowed by the darkness of his pupils.

  “Leave,” I shout. “Leave now.” I won’t let him die inside his Shell. “Go. Go!”

  He doesn’t, using his leeway the same way Archer did.

  “Sign with Myriad. Please.” He throws himself over us—

  Boom!

  I’m pitched back and forward almost simultaneously, the force so powerful I’m surprised I’m not snapped in two. Metal grinds and crunches, the sounds an assault to my ears. Fire dances through the belly of the plane as both engines explode. My adrenaline is so high, I shouldn’t feel a lick of heat or the bite of the belt or the slam of my body into the seat in front of me as the plane compacts, but the pain...it consumes me in an instant, swallows me—

  I open my mouth to scream for help, but end up swallowing a mouthful of water. Water? We crashed into an ocean?

  Crazy thought: Now I can surf.

  I laugh hysterically as dizziness sweeps over me. Darkness is fast on its heels—

  * * *

  I come to with a realization that I’m floating...no, I’m dropping, down, down...thud.

  Lying on my back, I crack open my eyes and discover I’m in the middle of a moon-drenched jungle, gnarled trees and thick foliage all around me. The only light comes from thousands of lightning bugs, many of which are buzzing around me.

  Ouch! Several land on my arm, burning me. Not lightning bugs, after all. I think they are...living embers? I wave my hands to shoo them away and find blisters in their place.

  The air is dry, white-hot, and sweat is pouring from me. Screams, so many screams, waft on the breeze. They are pain-filled, agonized, a story as certain as numbers—this is suffering in its purest form. Snakes, their forked tongues hissing at me, slither along branches that are stretching, stretching in my direction. Some kind of monkey-like creatures are highlighted by the ember-bugs and they are staring at me from between leaves that look like they have razor-sharp teeth.

  Where am I? This doesn’t look like anyplace I’ve ever been.

  “Sloan?” I call her name as I scramble to my feet. “Killian? Archer?”

  There’s no response.

  The monkeys jump to the ground a few yards away from me, and I realize they aren’t monkeys, after all. They have the bottom half of a giant spider—which is a nightmare all its own. Eight legs, each hairy and lined with sharp ivory horns.

 

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