Kingdom Come (8 page)

Read Kingdom Come Online

Authors: Michelle Smith

Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Fantasy & Magic, #Supernatural, #Fantasy, #Young Adult

BOOK: Kingdom Come
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“It’s freezing out here,” I said in an attempt to diffuse the tension still lingering.

The corner of his lips turned up into a half-smile.
Finally.
I’d missed seeing that smile. For some reason, as long as Ethan felt okay about things, so did I.

“Well, it’s December in Pennsylvania,” he said. “Kind of comes with the territory.” I bit back a smile of my own, and he spared me a glance for the first time in what felt like ages. “Seriously, though. You okay?”

“I’m starting to think we should copyright that question. It seems to be our go-to.”

He chuckled. “You have a point.”

We arrived back at the campsite, and the doctor showed us where to pile the wood. Danny had finally ventured out of the shack, though judging from his hooded eyelids, he was already half-asleep. I felt his pain. Never would I have imagined that walking would tire me out so much. Of course, we
had
been walking the better part of twelve hours. Danny helped Dr. Fowler get the fire started up while the rest of us plopped down in a circle around them. A tiny flame crackled to life, and it only took a few seconds for it to grow.

“Finally.” Danny dusted off his hands and sat in the dirt between Ethan and Nate. “I was turning into a damn ice pop.”

“Mmm, ice pops,” Haven said. “You know, I haven’t had one of those since I was like, six. My parents banned all the good stuff once my episodes got out of control. Said there were links between junk food and my condition.”

I glanced over just as she rolled her eyes with a small smile, which quickly faded. The fire cast an orange glow on her usually pale face, and though I’d become used to her stoic expression, pain was now etched in her features as she stared at the flames.

After clearing my throat, I ventured to ask, “Episodes?”

“Bipolar,” she said in little more than a whisper, not meeting my eyes. “My moods used to shift faster than you can blink, but they’ve been on the low side for the past few years. You know parents, though—always looking for a magic cure or explanation. First, it was the sugar and dyes in our food. Then, it was the chemicals in the cleaning stuff Mom used.” She scoffed. “Ten years later, they still didn’t seem to understand that maybe, just maybe, it was my brain that was screwed up. The only reason they threw me in Sunrise was because the ER doctor told them I needed professional help.”

“ER doctor?”

She held up an arm and tugged on her sleeve, and I made out the still-fresh scars before she shoved the sleeve back down. She blinked rapidly, as if trying to fight tears, while focusing back on the fire.

Silence fell over the group, and though Ethan scooted closer and wrapped an arm around my waist, I couldn’t stop staring at the girl who was now even more identical to my sister. The night that everything changed flashed through my head, when I woke up to Mom’s screaming after finding Bethany in our bathroom at midnight. A weird sob-like gurgle rose in my throat, and I clapped a hand over my mouth to conceal the noise. I couldn’t cry here. Not right now.

“You okay?” Ethan whispered.

I sniffled and nodded, leaning my head against his shoulder. The fire’s flames danced in front of us, sharp reds and oranges against the night. “My sister has scars just like that.” I inhaled deeply. “Had. She had scars like that.”

He remained silent, but tightened his hold on me. “Mom found her in a pool of blood with Dad’s razor beside her,” I continued. “The night we rushed her to the hospital is the same night my visions became worse. I freaked out right there in the waiting room. She was just so… so
young,
Ethan, and I snapped. I had to be admitted that night, too.”

I squeezed my eyes closed.
No crying.
This wasn’t about me. It wasn’t about my issues, or about my family’s. There were people in the circle who’d had just as hard a life as me, if not worse. And even though my heart ached, everyone else had scarred hearts, too. Instinctively, my fingers traced the empty spot on my wrist. Ethan’s hand closed over my fingers, stroking my wrist with his thumb. When my eyes popped open, he raised a questioning brow. 

“Mom gave me a bracelet the next morning,” I whispered. “She gave one to both of us, as a reminder that no matter how isolated we felt, we were never alone. Not in spirit, anyway. It wasn’t much—just a little black stringy-thing with a cross attached to it. But it meant the world to me because it meant that she finally
got
it. She finally knew just how alone, how trapped, my sister and I both felt in our heads.”

As he held my gaze, Ethan slid his hand down my wrist until his fingers linked through mine. If I thought my heart raced while running from a tornado, it was nothing compared to now. Forget the campfire, just his touch set every inch of my skin ablaze. There was so much concern in his eyes, but there was something else—something I couldn’t quite place.

“Where is it now?”

“Hmm?” I asked, blinking rapidly.

The corner of his lips turned up into a sad smile. “The bracelet.”

“Couldn’t bring it,” I said. “Center rules, ya know?”

He was so close—
so close
—that I could feel his breath against my lips. Never had I screamed at someone to kiss me, but I was getting to the point of making an exception. That’s when his face faded away, taking with it the crackling of the fire and the voices surrounding us.

The heat radiated from the flames, making me jump back in terror.

“No,” I whispered.
Not now.
Ethan’s face came back into view for a split second, his eyes wide with confusion. I tried to focus on those eyes. Maybe they could keep me grounded. Maybe they could keep me in reality.

No luck.

The brilliant glow of orange grew by the second until it consumed the entire forest, and all I could do was gaze in shocked wonder. It was a strange sort of beautiful. And then, it came right toward me.

I opened my mouth to scream, but no sound came. I struggled to run, but my feet were planted firmly in the dirt. I’d been here before. I’d survived this before. So why couldn’t I survive it now?

I was brought back to the present by the sound of my own screams.

My breaths came in heavy pants as Ethan’s face slowly came into focus once again. Moments ago, his expression was one of concern. Now, it was one of panic.

“Again?” he asked.

I tried to answer, but no words came; only a sob broke free. I hunched over to hide my face, partly because of shame, partly because I just couldn’t take the stares anymore. I was tired of being the freak.
Poor, crazy Kerrigan.

Hands squeezed my shoulders from behind. “Come on, girl,” Danny said from behind me. “Let’s go get you set up with a blanket.”

I attempted to stand, but my knees buckled the second I put weight on them. Danny caught me under my arms, thankfully keeping me on my feet. The visions had never been this strong before. I’d never felt this weak, this helpless, afterward. I had no idea what that was supposed to mean, and frankly, it scared the crap out of me.

Once I was somewhat balanced, Danny guided me away from the group and toward the shack. Unable to stop myself, I cast one final glance over my shoulder, and immediately wished I hadn’t. I’d never forget the look on Ethan’s face: fear. He was scared of me.

I couldn’t blame him. I was scared of me, too.

Chapter 8

 

Throughout my life, I’d spent days at a time in the hospital. It was just as Haven said—parents are always trying to find some kind of magic cure. I was used to being treated like a freak of nature. But as I lay in the fetal position on the cold, wooden floor of that tiny shack, I felt crazier than I ever had in my life.

“I really am a freak,” I whispered when Danny placed a thin blanket on top of me.

The floor creaked as he walked around my body, which was now trembling from the cold, and he sat on the floor in front of me. He looked fuzzy, as my vision was blurred with both fatigue and unshed tears, but there was no missing the empathy on his face.

“We’re all freaks,” Danny said. He reached out and pulled the blanket further up my shoulder, until the top rested at my neck. It didn’t provide much warmth, but at that point, every little bit helped ease the chill. “Talk to me, girl. What’s goin’ on in that head of yours?”

Nothing
, I wanted to say, because that’s how it felt. My brain was exhausted from this crap. Why was I such a mental case? Why couldn’t I just be like other teenagers my age? Why did it have to be me?

I licked my lips, momentarily soothing the chapped skin there. “Sometimes, I feel normal,” I began, blinking away the tears. “At least, what I think normal should be. And then things like this happen. I have another vision, or a nightmare, and I spaz out.”

“Normal is so overrated,” he said. “Nobody should try to be normal—it’s like, this unattainable goal. Just be you. You seem like a cool chick. We all think so.”

My eyes tried to flutter closed, but I fought the urge to fall asleep on the spot. “Yeah?” I asked through a yawn. “You must not have high standards. And Nate doesn’t seem too sold on me.”

“Nate isn’t sold on any of this,” he said with a glance to the doorway. “Nate’s here because he didn’t want to risk dying in that cellar. There’s no loyalty there.”

As much as I hated to admit it, he was probably right. I yawned again and shifted in an attempt to get comfortable, which was a joke. Danny shivered, and I felt like a jerk for hogging the blanket, thin as it was. I propped up on my elbow and looked around the room.

“Why don’t you grab another blanket?” I asked.

He shrugged and nodded toward the opposite side of the room. “Haven needed one more than I did.” I glanced over and, sure enough, Haven was curled into a tiny ball in the far corner. I hadn’t even noticed her slip into the shack. “I gave the other one to Ethan and the doc, since they’re on lookout duty. Nate wanted nothing to do with it. He’d rather freeze to death than admit he needs help.”

“Well . . . here.” I lifted the edge of my blanket. “Lie down. There’s no need for you to freeze, too.”

He eyed me for a minute before taking me up on the offer. Facing me, he rested on his side, only an inch or so away. It felt strange, considering I hardly knew him, but there really was no need to waste the blanket when he was obviously freezing. We weren’t exactly dressed for the elements.

He tossed an arm around my waist, making my cheeks flush. There was nothing romantic there—at all—but I couldn’t help it. He was a guy whose body was
right
against mine.

“You know,” he said, “Ethan would probably try and slaughter me in my sleep if he saw me right now.”

That
woke me up. “Huh?”

Danny snorted. “Kidding. Mostly. You haven’t noticed?”

“Noticed what?”

“Pretty, he’s been staring at you like a lovesick puppy since you rolled into the cellar yesterday. I think it was love at first sight for that kid. That’s why I’m not trying to get in your pants right now. He’s a good buddy—has been since I got to that center.”

My mouth dropped open, but I was speechless. I’d felt something between us, that was for sure, but actually hearing it from someone else . . . it was weird.

“Huh,” I finally said. “Shame I’m nuts then.”

Danny shrugged and yawned loudly. “He’s got his shit, too. Maybe the two of you can be nuts together. If we’re still alive tomorrow, that is.”

“You’re not a glass half-full kind of guy, are you?”

He smirked. “I’m a ‘reality sucks, but we’re alive so I’ll deal with it as it comes’ kind of guy.”

“That’s a mouthful.” I smiled. “But you have a point.”

“Of course I do. Now go to sleep, crazy girl.”

Any other time, someone calling me crazy would have felt like an insult. But from Danny, it almost sounded like a term of endearment.
Who would have thought?

“What should I do?” I murmured, closing my eyes while sleep started to overtake me. “About the Ethan thing?”

Danny shifted closer to me, for which I was grateful; his body provided more heat than that flimsy blanket. “Give him some time.” His voice was groggy with sleep, too. “You’ve got to learn how to deal with guys like him.”

“Like what?”

“Guys who are used to getting pushed to the side. Used to being ignored. You have to draw him out of his shell. That’s why he’s staying out by the fire. He saw me bring you in here, maybe even peeked in to see how we are now, and now he feels like a kicked puppy since I’m the one keeping you warm. And even though he’s upset, he won’t say a word. Because this is how his life has always worked. He’s always taken the backseat.”

“So why didn’t he bring me in here himself?”

“You looked kind of freaky in the middle of your vision-thing,” he admitted. “He was probably scared shitless for you, and
couldn’t
move.” At least he was honest.

My heart sank for Ethan. I remembered his explanation as to why he was sent to Sunrise—his parents pretty much sucked. Being used was basically his life story. Did he think that’s what I was doing, too? Just using him?

“Why’re you telling me all this?” I asked.

“I told you, K. The kid’s crazy about you.”

 

~*o*~

 

I woke with a start to the unmistakable sound of crying. I cringed as my eyes opened because my body hurt like hell. There was no other way to describe it. All my muscles were sore and stiff, and the cold had settled into my bones. I felt like a freakin’ mannequin. I thought back to a time of fluffy pillows, central heating, and thick, warm blankets. How could that have only been a few days ago?

After a lot of effort, I managed to sit upright. Danny was snoring on the floor beside me, and after searching the tiny room, I realized the crying was coming from Haven. Her eyes were closed, so I had no idea if she was dreaming or what.

Groaning, I pushed myself to my feet and barely resisted the urge to start crying myself. It hurt. Dear God, it hurt. With her eyes still closed, Haven let out a wail.
Poor girl.
I tiptoed over to her, wincing each time the wood creaked beneath my weight. Crouching down beside her, I gave her shoulder the gentlest of shakes in an attempt to wake her. I knew the terror of nightmares—if I could help her at all, then I’d do what I could. Seconds later, her cries lessened to soft whimpers, then finally, silence. Maybe her mind could rest for now, at least.

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