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Authors: Jaymin Eve

First World (9 page)

BOOK: First World
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“That would have not ended well for anyone,” she finished, shoving them back into the bag.

“Were you actually worried that Deralick would have a use for your size five pink and purple shoes?” I pursed my lips as she rained glares on me.
Guess she had.

“Let’s go.” Brace paused. “Do you need any help with your packs? It’s quite a walk to town.”

We both shook our heads; this was my second attempt at protecting the stone. And apparently Lucy trusted no one with her clothes.

Shouldering her pack, Lucy had a new distraction as she hopped on the spot. “Tell me the bathroom is close?”

Slight confusion crossed his features, but he answered. “It’s just down the hall.”

We followed him along the plain white hallway. He paused at an intersection;
frosted glass doors were the only break in the endless white. Once again there were no latches, handles, hinges or any indication a door existed. The panel just slid into the wall.

With his right hand, Brace gestured for us to enter.

“Five minutes,” were the last words he said as we stepped inside and the door slid closed.

I moved quickly into the small room. It was stark and clean, with zero character. Large white tiles lined the floor and walls. A glass-walled cube sat in the corner – beside it was the toilet.

Lucy sprinted in that direction, dropping her pack on the ground. My own discomfort growing, I distracted myself by walking to the large mirror running along the wall.

“What.
The. Hell.” I gasped at my reflection.

Half of my hair was still
braided, the other half was teased into curly tendrils all around my head. Damn, I let Brace see me like this? I smirked at my reflection; there goes any chance of him returning my attraction.

Lucy snorted behind me. “I told you. Good luck fixing that.”

Dropping my pack, I scrabbled around until I found my hairbrush. It was tied together with gel paste and toothbrush. Under the mirror rested a small clear bench. A glass bowl perched on top. As I reached into the bowl, cool water flowed from under the glass.

No faucet
. Apparently we were lucky enough to have magic doors and magic water. Shrugging, I plunged my toothbrush in and coated it high with paste. I hated an unclean mouth; I had a slight obsession with minty freshness.

Finishing quickly, I spat before rinsing clean. Then I attempted to tame my red mane. Untangling my braid, I attacked with my brush. It stuck at first stroke. Struggling to free it, I groaned as strands tore free.

A flush sounded. Lucy moved to wash her hands next to me.

I
moaned my frustration at her. “I’d say two days from dreadlocks.”

“Word.”
She again attempted to run her hands through her own snarled curls, which again ended in failure.

“It’s not really fair, Abbs. I have bruises everywhere, and this awesome scrape.” She gestured to the pink graze on her cheek. “But besides messy hair you look
perfect, and too gorgeous as usual.” She glared in mock annoyance. “What’s your secret? Do you have a hidden fountain of hotness?”

I stuck my tongue out at her in the reflection. “You’re insane Lucy.” I would kill for her curves and blond beauty.

She shrugged, but didn’t comment further. It was a circular argument we’d been having for years.

I worked hard and eventually my thick hair caved to the vigorous attack. Braiding the shiny
curls off my face, I smiled. It was stupid, but my braid gave me a sense of normalcy. Lucy grabbed my arm as I moved to the toilet.

“There’s no tissue. You’ll have to use a few from my stash.”

I looked down at the two small pieces she was waving at me.

“Your generosity knows no bounds,” I said drily.

She smiled sweetly. “It’s that or your hand. We’re on rations – I will not be using leaves, thank you very much.”

Shaking my head, I moved to the toilet. It looked ultra high-tech, buttons and gadgets running along the right-hand side. The exact type of thing I would have broken in minutes. Ignoring the buttons, I was going with the hope it worked on the same basic principles as back home.
Finishing quickly, I stood. Without any assistance from me, a loud flush sounded. Well, that was a nice change from the drop pits which had replaced flushable toilets in New York. Not enough running water for that little luxury.

Moving back to the sink, I washed my hands. Lucy was finished, dressed in fresh clothes, her two layers of mascara applied and everything. Grabbing my pack
, I unearthed a new shirt and underwear before dressing quickly. This was one of my favorite black vintage band tees, last year’s birthday present from Lucy.

Shouldering my pack, I followed
her over to the door.

“How do they open? It’s not a sensor. We’re standing right here.” Lucy jumped up and down, waving her hands.

Her bag just about toppled her backwards. She grabbed my arm to rebalance.

“No idea. I can’t figure how anything works on First World.”

Lucy leaned closer. “Oh, and by the way, you totally understated Brace: hot, hot, hotttt.” She drew out the last, fanning herself.

I sighed. “I told you he was gorgeous. It’s a waste; I wouldn’t know what to do with him.”

Lucy opened her mouth.

I interrupted before I could hear her
sure-to-be suggestive ideas. “Remember, virgin here, almost eighteen and never been kissed.” I wiggled my eyebrows. “Unlike Lucy – who makes out with the extremely good-looking Josh, the delivery dude – for shoes.”

Her mouth dropped. But before she could respond, the door slid open.

Brace was standing exactly where we’d left him. His lilting accent filled the small bathroom.

“Let’s go.” His eyes lingered for a moment.

My face warmed as he turned away.

Lucy, already past my teasing, nudged me and whispered, “You’re staring at him the way I stare at my vintage
Manolo Blahniks.”

I shook it off. I was stronger than this attraction. I’d seen Lucy actually drool when she stared at her shoes. Reaching up, I stealthy wiped at my mouth. Thank the gods: drool-free.

We lagged behind. Even I struggled with his long-legged pace.

Finally we caught up to him.

He stood outside a half-size door and gestured for us to step inside. It was a laundry – not the room I expected to be staging an escape from.

Brace faced us, his white teeth flashing. “Well, Abb
y – and Lucy – since we’re friends now, I’m about to trust you with a protected childhood secret.”

He moved to the back wall and with little effort shifted a large white machine to the side. Bending
over, he flicked a latch and lifted a trap door.

“This is an old laundry chute; it drops out into the forest.” He smiled cheekily. “I used this to sneak out when I was young. The only problem was figuring out how to get back inside.”

Judging by the grin, Brace was a terror of a child.

I peered into the wide space of the chute-opening. “How long since you’ve used it?”

He laughed quietly, a sparkle lighting his deep brown eyes. “Quite a few years. My father pretty much lets me come and go as I please now.”

Lucy pushed me aside to carry out her own inspection. “It’s still safe, right? What if it’s rusted away in places?” Her voice echoed down the length.

Brace shook his head, his confusion noticeable. “Rusted? It’s made from Destruck, and isn’t even through a third of its thousand-year guarantee – it’s safe.”

Lucy snorted. “
A thousand years ... I guess that’s good enough for me.”

Brace squinted at her; he
didn’t understand the source of her sarcasm. With a half-smile, he turned away.

“I’ll go through first and see you at the bottom.” He pulled himself into the opening, long legs hanging down. “Don’t worry about the alarm and fields; I’ll disable them.” Then he pushed off and
was gone.

“You’re next, Luce.” I pushed her
toward the chute. “I’ll be right behind, so get out of the way.”

Lucy took a deep breath and climbed in. Then she was gone.

My turn and I was a little claustrophobic.

I reminded myself: it was this or prison.

Moving closer, I shut my eyes tightly. No way could I get in with my eyes open. Hands out in front, I felt for the opening. Misjudging the distance, I found myself tumbling forward before plunging headfirst down the chute, my heavy pack powering me even faster. I screamed the entire way. Bracing myself, I managed to force a hand over the top of my head as the slide tapered off and I plunged out. Tumbling a few times, I ended up face down, my pack thrown to the side.

I stayed like that for a moment of reflection – and to determine what was broken – something sure felt broken. My pride, I think.

Strong hands gripped my arms and pulled me up effortlessly.

“Are you okay?” Brace asked
, his eyes wrinkled in concern and amusement.

Lucy, on the other hand, had collapsed in laughter. “That was hands down the funniest thing I’ve ever seen,” she managed to gasp out.

Brace set me back on my feet before handing me my pack. His lips twitched, but he saved himself an ass-handing by changing the subject.

“Since we are trying to avoid the guard, I suggest we move from here.”

I scraped Lucy up off the ground as she continued to let out snorts of laughter.

“Stop replaying it or I will kill you and hide the body somewhere in the forest.” I gestured to the masses of greenery around us. “No one will find you.”

The laughter subsided for a moment, before she lost it again. I shook my head. Brace was already moving along the path, so, dragging Lucy with me, I hauled it to catch up.

Chapter 7

 

 

We walked in silence for a while. Except for the occasional chuckle from Lucy that made it clear – I was never living that entrance down.

Even with my
bumpy start, I was relieved to be free. And back in nature. This area of the forest was different: less dense and more traveled.

And w
hilst we had a little more information, there were still so many questions.

Why was
Grandier’s nickname First World? I couldn’t help but wonder. Was this an old world, much older than Earth?

Lucy broke the silence.

“What are those hugely round trees everywhere?” She pointed to the bulbous tree trunks surrounding us.

She was a little breathless, her shorter legs struggling with our pace.

Brace flicked his eyes toward to the tree-line. “The
sycaim
tree?” He shrugged. “Don’t tell me there are no ‘thud trees’ where you’re from?”

I wondered what he would think if he knew that, before yesterday, I’d seen about five trees, and not one was healthy or green.

We shook our heads.

He gave me a half-smile, before he answered drily, “They’re First World’s native trees.”

Whoops.

He stopped suddenly and I almost collided with his bulk, but managed to avoid him at the last moment.

“They’ve been around First World since the beginning.” Reaching down, he gathered a few loose stones.

Without any warning, he flung them into the trunk of the closest tree. As they connected, a loud thud echoed. Nearby, birds screeched before evacuating the treetops. I stared for a moment,
fascinated by the huge animals as they flew out of sight. They were so bright, two blue and yellow, and one dark pink.

Brace distracted me by throwing another set of stones. He
seemed to enjoy the noise.

I smiled at him. “They’re hollow?”

He nodded. “When I was young, Father carved me a tree house in the hollow of a large trunk. They’ll still continue to grow, even after that.”

As we started along the path again, I
realized I was enjoying having Brace as our guide, and my instincts urged me to confess our secret. We needed someone on our side; we needed answers. I continued to observe him as he led us through the forest.

For a big guy, Brace moved almost silently – his strength was clear – and my traitorous heart already trusted him. I shook my head.

You don’t know him, Abby,
I reminded myself for the tenth time that day.

“So,
Deralick mentioned yesterday that things have been pretty rough around here lately.” Lucy had her innocent face on. She was digging for information.

Brace nodded as he continued ploughing through. “The last twenty years have seen changes I never expected from First World. Of course, after a hundred-year peace during the rule of Emperor Christian and Empress
Elisnarra, it’s been extra hard to adjust.” He paused to move a large branch off the path.

I
took that moment’s pause to contemplate how anyone ruled for a hundred years.

When
we could move along the path again, he continued. “Now, with the Emperor’s illness, it won’t be long before responsibility falls to Lucas and, at this stage, he’s not ready.”

Quarn
hadn’t been kidding when he said these worlds were parallel. “It’s been chaos back home since ... well, our lifetime,” I added to the conversation.

Brace grimaced. “Darkness continues to spread throughout the land. It started at the black mountains.” His face was grim. “The pure energies are
being leeched away.”

Lucy looked at me in confusion. She wasn’t the only one
baffled. I understood about a third of his words. But I knew the black mountains from my dream.

“Pure energies?”
I had to ask.

“The energy of our land.
The energy of our people. Those with active gifts have found a huge depletion in their abilities.” He glanced toward me, holding my gaze. “Have you noticed the change? Or has it always been this way for you?”

“We’re seventeen
– ” I started.

Lucy interrupted.
“Almost eighteen.”

I eyed her.
“Yes, Lucy ... almost eighteen.” I let the sentence trail off; we were getting a little close to revealing our secret.

A thoughtful frown crossed his features. “
Well, I’m ... around twenty-two ... and I vaguely remember when things were better. But I’ll say you’ve never known the best of First World. Do either of you have a specialty?”

Around twenty-two.
Who spoke like that?

I
focused on his questions and, thinking quickly, replied, “Well, we aren’t really into ‘categorizing’ ourselves. What’re your specialties?”

I’d go with the same h
alf-truths and diversion tactics he was using.

He laughed. “Quite the individuals, aren’t you? There are many bra
nches, but I do have a few favorites. Animal Affinity: they’re usually out in nature with their animal guides. A little scary when riled – you don’t want to take on the animal kingdom.”

I exchanged wide-eyed glances with Lucy
as he continued.

“Nature Spirit
: plants bloom in their presence. Moonlighters: walk only at night to use the energy of the moon.” He shook his head. “They’re quite the strange ones.” He looked around. “What else? The Flecho: love anything manmade. They’re generally the inventors of our gadgets. Felens: read the emotional resonance of any place ... its history ... memories ... past emotions. And speaking of that, Emoters: manipulate all forms of emotion, best to be avoided.”

I shook my head for
a moment. Information overload. I wasn’t going to remember any of this. But I’d love some paper. The nerd inside me wanted to jot all of this information down.

Brace continued. “Another
group to avoid are the Mesmerizers. Hypnosis is their skill, depending on the strength of an individual’s mind and shield.” His voice lowered. “You should always be wary of the gifted. Power corrupts.”

I
speculated whether everyone on First World was ‘gifted’ in some way, or only a select few.

“Word.”
Lucy nodded at Brace, her head bobbing vigorously. In typical Lucy fashion, she was just going with the flow, no qualms about people with powers. “Our entire city was corrupted, and there isn’t anything special about them.”

“Well, I’m glad you escaped.” There was intensity behind his words.

I liked that.

“So what’s your gift, Brace?” I was
curious, there was no way he wasn’t packing something serious. I could feel ripples of electricity every time I was close.

And again I
copped the full force of his eyes. Silky strands of his thick hair fell across his forehead.

“I have an affinity with energy. It’s not a
n interesting or common gift.” He shrugged as if to say, ‘no big deal’.

Yeah, right.

Brace smiled, but not with his eyes, just his lips. “I’m curious, though. I haven’t been able to get a read on either of you. Do you choose not to communicate telepathically?”

Lucy’s mouth fell open; in that moment she
probably swallowed ten bugs.

“Shut.
The. Door. Seriously? Telepathy?” She laughed.

Shaking his head
, he opened his mouth to retaliate – I opted for the distraction.

“So what’s with the dark mountains?” Their oiliness was weighing on my thoughts.
I couldn’t ignore them any longer.

His confusion was replaced by d
isgust – enhancing his dark beauty.

“They were an amazing natural wonder.
First Worlders traveled from all over to ski, mountain-climb and camp throughout their wilderness. But something happened many years ago; their energy changed.” He shrugged. “I have no idea what’s going on; there are thousands of miles of tunnels underneath. If it was me, and I have suggested this to the Guardians before, it’s the perfect place to build and house an army.”

He said this without hesitation or doubt.
I shivered thinking of the dead plants; an army of zombies maybe.

“Where are they located?” I was going to make sure we avoided that area.

He looked back the way we had just walked. “They are not too far from the royal castle, actually. Less than a day’s walk and only four hours’ drive.”

I sighed in relief; we were heading in the
opposite direction.

The landscape was changing as we walked. The forest had thinned.

“So, tell me ... Is Lucas single?” Lucy winked at me as she pranced along.

It didn’t even look as if the
heat was bothering her anymore.

I sighed. If she had been closer, I would have kicked her.

Brace simply laughed. “Lucas is my closest friend. But I wouldn’t send him on a date with my worst friend. Being next in line for the royal throne, he’s been completely pandered to.”

I
chuckled. What a picture those words painted. “We’re reading you ... Lucas is a spoilt brat.”

He shook his head. “It’s not exactly his fault. He was raised to believe he’d end up with his chosen Empress. But it’s nev
er happened. So now he likes to ... be indulged.”

“How is Lucas expected to rule all of First World?” I took a shot in the dark.

The corners of Brace’s lips lifted slightly. “I’m not sure anyone is expecting him to rule at all
. We’re all kind of hoping Emperor Quest hangs on for many more years.” He ran a free hand through his hair. “Fortunately six of the seven lands have a competent Mayoral Head. No way could Lucas keep control of two billion inhabitants alone.”

Mirth danced in his breathtaking eyes
. Apparently the very thought was amusing to him.


You said you’re from the north, right?” he questioned us.

A quick glance
toward Lucy told me she couldn’t remember what we’d said either.


Uh, sure, sounds right.” I bobbed my head a couple of times.

His jaw t
ightened. “Yeah, well I think Mayor Johansson might be the one we need to keep an eye on. Lucky for us, even as a stand-in for his father, Lucas is mostly a figurehead and he can’t make any decisions without majority vote of the council. They’re actually meeting at the moment.”

A loud rustling in the bushland to our right distracted me
from my next question. I stopped and craned my head higher. This section of the forest was almost barren, with lots of dead twigs and leaves. I shifted my pack, trying to ease the ache in my shoulders.

An echoing roar shattered the air around us.

Lucy pretty much dived into my arms. “What was that, Abby? Abbs. Seriously, did you see it? Is it a bear ... lion ... bigfoot?” Her panicky questions were rapid.

Brace stepped
closer and took Lucy’s pack from her back. “Keep moving. It could be any of the native animals. I’ve got your back.” He ushered us forward, bringing up the rear.

We set off at a dead run.
I always thought I was fast, but now I know – Lucy is faster.


Angelisian is not far.’ Brace’s voice came from behind me. “But we need to get out of the forest now. It’s a
burber
.” His breath came in rasps as we sprinted.

My pack felt like a feather, shoulder aches gone
.

“What’s a
burber
?” Lucy gulped, her tiny legs flying.

Brace
’s voice came in gasps. “Let’s hope you don’t find out.”

The thundering grew louder.

I was losing momentum. Despite the adrenalin, the stress of the last few days was catching up to me. Brace kept pushing our pace. He was close behind me; I could smell his clean masculine scent.

I looked back
, my curiosity demanding to know what was following us.

A large creature was barrelling along about twenty feet behind. It
was huge, looking a bit like a bear crossed with a moose – with massive antlers. I focused again on the path.

My foot caught under a branch and I went sprawling along the dusty
trail, just missing a few exposed tree branches. The impact sent shockwaves through my body; I couldn’t breathe.

“Lucy, keep running. Wait at the end of the path. I’ll help Abby,” Brace yelled over my head.

She hesitated, as I knew she would.

“Go, Lucy!” His tone brooked no argument.

“Save her or I’ll kill you!” Lucy screamed as her footsteps pounded away.

“Abby, are you okay?”
He crouched down next to me.

I couldn’t answer. My chest burned as I gasped for air.

BOOK: First World
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