The Marked Girl
Page 1
DEDICATION
To my parents, who never once doubted
this dedication page would someday exist.
(At least not out loud.)
CONTENTS
Dedication
The Night that Started Out Normal
The Hole in the Sky
The Artifact
The Labyrinth
The Monster
The Prince’s Tale
The Orphan’s Refuge
The Exiled
The Warriors
The Unavoidable Truths
The Makings of a Plan
The Questing
The Rules of the Universe
The Lonely Inn
The Knights of Valor
The Revelations
The Legend of the Scrolls
The Last Meal
The Storming of the Castle
The Reunion
The Complication
The Enemy at the Gate
The Panic and the Terror
The Lair
The Cavalry
The Madman
The Battle
The Debris
The Road Ahead
The Damage Done
The City’s End
The Hole in the Sky, Part Two
The New World
Acknowledgments
Back Ad
About the Author
Credits
Copyright
About the Publisher
THE NIGHT THAT STARTED OUT NORMAL
Light glinted off the side of the sword as it arced down in one perfect, sweeping motion. The blade slid into the exposed side of the young man who knelt, frozen, on the ground. Immediately, a small patch of deep red bloomed against his shirt, and he collapsed in a broken heap. The black-haired girl who gripped the sword handle grinned wide and pulled her weapon back, flinging it up over her head so it reached for the night sky—
“Cut!”
Liv Phillips sighed and pushed herself up off of the cement, from where she’d been watching the action unfold. Her knees creaked, and she badly needed to crack her neck. She took two steps toward Shannon Mei, the girl with the sword, who was now twirling the weapon around with lazy flicks of her wrist.
“There isn’t enough blood,” Liv said.
The boy on the ground—Jeremy—rolled over and sat up. He pulled up the edge of his T-shirt, examining the dark red stain on the side of his abdomen—and, Liv noticed, giving ample view of the abs he flaunted at every given opportunity. Actors.
“What are you talking about? It’s just as much as last time.”
“No, it’s not,” Liv responded. “The pack must have malfunctioned.” She turned around and looked at her crew, which was less an actual crew and more a single camera-operator-in-training nicknamed Tall Tony (for reasons that remained a mystery to Liv, since he was more skinny than he was tall). Currently, Tall Tony was busy blowing dust out of the camera lens. Or maybe he was pretending to be busy so he didn’t have to make eye contact with Liv.
“Tony, do we have any more blood packs?”
“Uh, that was the last one,” he replied.
“This was my last shirt,” Jeremy said from the ground. “And I think she ripped it with that thing.” Jeremy nodded up to Shannon, who still twirled the prop sword in her hand. Its plastic edges nearly looked like real metal in the weak light. Kind of. If you squinted.
“Oh, I did not,” Shannon said. She used the sword edge to flick strands of her thick, black hair out of her eyes. “See? It’s harmless.”
“Shannon, you didn’t happen to remember to bring any extra T-shirts, did you? Maybe we can do the scene one more time, up until you stab him,” Liv said.
But Shannon shook her head. “I’m an actress first, wardrobe lady second. I can’t remember all the things.”
“You certainly can’t remember your lines,” Jeremy muttered.
“Excuse me?”
Liv heard the obvious warning in Shannon’s voice, but Jeremy had a talent for digging in deeper when anyone with common sense would bail.
“Oh, don’t get all offended. It’s not like you’re a real actress or anything. You’re not even in the film program. Liv only cast you because you’re her friend.”
Shannon’s eyes narrowed. She swung the fake sword around and pointed its tip at Jeremy’s neck. “Jeremy, has anyone ever told you not to piss off a girl with a weapon? It might be plastic, but I could still make it hurt.”
Jeremy swallowed, and his Adam’s apple bobbed against the sword point.
“Okay!” Liv moved to jump between the two. “I think that’s a wrap on tonight.” She gently put a hand on Shannon’s arm, guiding the sword away from Jeremy’s neck.
Tall Tony finally looked up from his camera lens, oblivious. “Did you get what you needed, Liv?”
Liv thought over the last few hours of work they’d put in. She’d shot the climactic fight scene three times, but none of them had felt right.
“No, we’ll have to do it again tomorrow night.”
“I have soccer practice tomorrow night,” Jeremy said.
“And I have a date,” Shannon added. When Liv shot her a meaningful look, Shannon gave her one right back.
“This is important, Shan.”
“Trust me, so is my date.”
Jeremy snorted and turned to Liv. “You know, if you’d just use the available studio space to film this short like everyone else in class, we could work during the day.”
Liv put two fingers up to her temples and rubbed a circle. When she’d first taken on this project as part of her summer film program and asked her fellow classmates—and her best friend, Shannon—to help out, she’d known it would be a difficult endeavor. But she hadn’t known it would be this hard, that every little step would be like trying to walk with fifty-pound weights attached to each foot. The worst part was that Jeremy was right. Setting up her shots in the basement “studio” at her summer program’s office would be much easier, even if the end result wouldn’t be as good.
Liv had chosen instead to film her night scene outside, in a place she’d always loved. She glanced around at the familiar landmarks—just beyond where Shannon and Jeremy stood was a concrete ledge that dropped ten feet down into the mostly empty LA riverbed. The ground at her feet was cracked, with small shoots of green leaves working their way up from the dirt underneath. To her right was a packed stone wall, covered with graffiti. The wall led to a small, unimpressive cement bridge that arched over the thin river.
At a glance, the place didn’t look like much—aside from slightly resembling the drag race scene setting in Grease. But beyond the bridge was a breathtaking view of downtown Los Angeles, the black outlines of its buildings dark against the night sky of early June. In place of stars, the brightly lit windows of downtown LA shone for miles. Streetlights from the top of the bridge cast orangy reflections over the river water.
The spot where Liv stood was nowhere of significance, really. Tourists didn’t come by on buses; joggers stayed away. But to Liv, the place had always felt important. It felt, somehow, like a secret that was hers alone.
And she’d always wanted to capture it on film. She’d gotten special permission from her student advisor to take the equipment out of the studio, so long as she’d fronted an additional deposit. She just hoped it would be worth it.
Liv squared her shoulders and reached down to pick up the boxy floor light at her feet. “Okay, how about we meet here again on Wednesday night? I’ll bring more shirts.”
Shannon shrugged with one shoulder.
“Fine,” Jeremy said. “But we can’t go too late. Some of us have actual curfews and homes to get back to, you know.”
Liv did her best to ignore the
dig, even though it hit below the belt. It was true she didn’t have someone sitting at home, watching the clock to make sure she walked through the door on time, or at all. It sucked more often than not, but Liv knew better than to let Jeremy see how much his comment bothered her. For one, she knew he didn’t really mean it, and was probably still just pissed that Shannon had gotten the best of him (which, to be fair, happened a lot). And second, getting emotional would make it all the harder to regain some measure of control over the shoot. On set—even if that “set” was just four teenagers playing with fake swords and cameras on a stretch of cracked cement—was typically one of the few places Liv felt like she was able to maintain any control at all. So she resolved to let Jeremy’s comment slide.
Shannon, however, had different priorities. “Mommy got you on a tight leash, Jer-Jer?”
“All right, great night, everyone,” Liv said, raising her voice over any possible retort from Jeremy. She clapped her hands a couple of times, which was something her film professor did at the end of class. “Let’s pack up and get everything in the van. I might have time to get the equipment back by ten—”
“Liv,” Shannon said, her voice suddenly low. “Look.”
Liv followed Shannon’s gaze over to where the bridge met the stone wall lining the river’s edge. Something was moving there. It was like a shadow, but darker somehow. It almost didn’t seem like a distant object, but instead like a black spot on Liv’s vision, the kind she sometimes saw when she stood up too fast. Liv closed her eyes for a moment, and when she opened them, the dark spot was gone.
“Where did they come from?” Shannon asked, her voice nearly a whisper.
That’s when Liv narrowed her eyes and saw the figures standing next to where the spot had just been. Three people, all in a row under the bridge. They wore long, all-white clothing that stood out against the dark gray concrete.
Liv’s heart beat quickly. Next to her, Tall Tony swore.
One of the figures broke from the others and started yelling. He beat his left hand against the concrete wall under the bridge and held his right down by his side. Liv could hardly make out what he was screaming, but it almost sounded like he was yelling “um” over and over again. He kept doing it until one of the others moved to restrain him.
“What’s that in his hand?” Jeremy asked.
Liv peered closer at the one who did, indeed, appear to hold something in his right hand. It was long and thin, and when it moved it reflected the streetlight on the bridge.
“Holy crap, it’s one of our prop swords,” Liv said. “They must have taken it from the van.” She turned to Tall Tony. “Did you lock it up behind you?”
Tall Tony shrugged.
“Well, they can keep it,” Jeremy said. “They look creepy like that, just standing there.”
But Liv took a couple of steps forward, toward the figures. The one with the sword had stopped yelling, and they were now eerily quiet, standing in a huddle under the bridge. She could also tell they were young, not much older than her.
“Liv, what are you doing?” Shannon hissed.
“I can’t just let them take it,” Liv said. “It’s rented out in my name.”
“So?”
“So it took me three weeks of sweeping up coffee grinds to put down that deposit.” She turned back toward the figures.
“Wait,” Shannon said, and ran up to Liv. “If you’re dead set on going over there, take this.” Shannon took the box light from Liv’s hand and placed the prop sword there instead.
“I’m not sure that’s going to help much,” Jeremy said.
“You could always come with me,” Liv shot back.
Jeremy raised his hands in a you’re-on-your-own gesture. Liv rolled her eyes and walked over toward the bridge. When she was about ten feet away from the figures, she stopped.
“Hello? I think . . . I think you might have something of mine.”
From here, Liv could make out the white-clad figures better. They were definitely teenagers, two boys and a girl. The boy who held the sword was tall, with dark hair and light skin. Standing on his left was another boy, thin, his scowling face partially covered by long strips of dirty-blond hair. The girl stood statue still, her long, dark hair falling in straight lines around her shoulders. The skin above her right eyebrow was stained with something that looked like mud. They all wore what looked like old-fashioned, full-length nightclothes, and they were looking around the riverbed area with wide, transfixed eyes.
Jeremy was right, Liv thought. They did look creepy as hell.
“If you just give me the sword back, no harm, no foul—”
The boy with the sword stepped forward. “Are you the leader here?”
His accent was strange, and one Liv didn’t recognize. Close to British, but just different enough to sound . . . off. The boy stared at her, and Liv could see now that his eyes were a clear, light blue.
“Um . . . I’m the director.”
The boy’s eyebrows furrowed, and he looked first to the girl on his right, then to the boy on his left. They both shook their heads faintly.
“We’re shooting a movie over there,” Liv said, gesturing vaguely toward where Shannon and the others stood. “It’s just a student film thing. It’s about these alien samurais . . .”
The teens just stared at her.
“It sounds weirder than it is, honestly.”
“Where are we?” the boy with the sword interrupted.
“The LA River,” Liv responded. There was no reaction. “Near Dodger Stadium? Are you . . . lost?”
“Who is in charge of this realm?”
“Um . . .” Liv wanted to look behind her and call to Shannon for help, but she also didn’t want to turn her back on this stranger. When he moved his arm, the sword he held shone in the light. The glint was odd, almost too bright. . . .
“I think the girl is simple,” the dark-haired girl said in a low voice. The boy with the sword cocked his head slightly, as if considering this possibility.
“Well, I’m definitely not deaf,” Liv responded. She was growing less creeped out and more annoyed by these weirdo thieves with every second. “Look, I can help you if you’re lost, but you’re going to have to give me my stuff back first.”
Liv nodded to the sword in the boy’s hand. He looked down and, if anything, his confused expression only deepened.
“This does not belong to you.”
“Well, technically no,” Liv said. “It belongs to the AFI Summer Film Program. But I had to give them a two-hundred-dollar deposit for it, so . . .”
This time it was the scowling boy who responded. “She seems to speak our language, and yet her words are nonsense.”
Liv shifted on her feet. “Yeah . . . it’s getting pretty late, and I’m not really in the mood to get pranked or robbed or whatever. I mean, two hundred bucks may not be a lot to some people, but to me—”
Liv was cut off abruptly when the earth started moving underneath her feet. It started with a low rumble, but quickly picked up to a shaking sensation. What little water was left in the LA River began to slosh around, and behind her, Liv could hear Shannon’s yelp of surprise.
The boy with the sword looked up at Liv, panic spread wide across his features.
“What is happening?”
“It’s just an earthquake,” Liv responded. She put her arms out to steady herself. “And it seems like a small one—”
At that, the earth seemed to lurch sharply to the right, and Liv was knocked off her feet. Her elbows hit the concrete, hard. The boy with the sword fell also, landing on top of her. He quickly rolled away, and the ground continued to shake.
Liv looked up and could see the bridge above them moving back and forth against the night sky, as though it were being shaken by a giant, unseen hand. Her heart jumped.
“Get out from under the bridge!” Liv yelled. She started to crab-walk down the concrete, back toward Shannon and the crew, who were lying flat against the ground with their h
ands up over their necks. Liv watched as the cable that connected to the floor light snaked its way past Jeremy’s foot and fell over the side of the riverbank, taking the whole light with it.
“No!”
Liv pulled herself over the cracked concrete by her hands, belatedly realizing she must have dropped the prop sword. She turned around to see the strangers following her and staying low to the ground. Thankfully, they seemed to have cleared the bridge.
When the earth finally stopped moving, Liv let out a breath she hadn’t even realized she’d been holding. As a Los Angeles native, she’d been through her share of earthquakes. But this had been bigger than most of the little rumbles she was used to. She looked up at the bridge, once again a sturdy, unmoving cement structure.
“Are you guys okay?” Liv asked the strangers, who were starting to get to their feet. “I wouldn’t do that yet—” she started, but just as the second boy was dusting off his white pants, the earth started to move once again. Softer this time, but still with enough force to keep Liv low to the ground.
The blond boy—once again scowling—turned to his companions. “I told you! I told you we should not have come to this hell. We are all going to die!”
He took off running in the other direction, his feet slapping against the concrete as he struggled to stay upright through the shaking.
“No!” Liv screamed after him. “Wait till the aftershock stops!”
But he was running too fast and too hard to hear. The blue-eyed boy and the girl exchanged a glance and took off running after him, not even sparing a look back to Liv. The blue-eyed boy scooped up the sword that he must have dropped when he’d fallen to the ground. Liv no longer cared enough to yell out after him. Now that the light had fallen into the river, her deposit was long gone anyway.
After a few moments, the aftershock subsided. Liv pulled herself up to a sitting position and looked back to Shannon and the others.
“Are you okay?” Shannon yelled out across the thirty feet of cement that separated them.
“Yep! You?”
“We’re fine,” Shannon replied. “But I think Jeremy wet himself!”
“She lies!” Jeremy screamed back, voice breaking.