Read The Prophecy of Shadows Online

Authors: Michelle Madow

Tags: #Teen & Young Adult, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy, #Myths & Legends, #Greek & Roman, #Paranormal & Urban, #teen, #elemental, #Magic, #greek mythology, #Romance, #Witch, #demigods, #Young Adult, #Witchcraft, #urban fantasy

The Prophecy of Shadows (11 page)

BOOK: The Prophecy of Shadows
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CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
 

Kate and I walked up to Blake’s house in silence. She’d been quieter than usual since I’d updated her during the car ride about the prophecy and what Blake and I had discussed. She didn’t even mention the cut on my arm that she saw this morning before I healed it. Maybe she was waiting for me to bring it up first. Which I did plan on doing, once the group was together.

Blake’s house was on top of a hill, Tudor style with gray and white bricks. It was bigger than most of the others on the street—including Danielle’s. The wooden double door entrance was huge, the arch overhead reminding me of a palace.

He opened the door soon after we rang the bell. “We’re meeting in my room,” he said, stepping aside to let us in. “Chris and Danielle are already here.”

I walked through the doors and gazed around in awe. The wooden floors and antique furniture made me feel like I’d stepped into an old movie. A golden chandelier hung overhead, so extravagant that it felt like it should have been in an opera house instead of a foyer. Blake led us down the hall and through the kitchen, which looked like something out of a luxury design magazine. But we didn’t get to see much of the house, because he opened a door leading to the basement and motioned us to go ahead.

“Your bedroom’s in the basement?” I asked, glancing down the steps.

“I moved down here at the start of freshman year because it’s more private,” he said simply. “The basement is like my own little house.”

I reached the bottom of the stairs, looked around, and what he’d said immediately made sense. A large open space held a ping-pong table, a foosball table, two pinball machines, and a small kitchen. We followed him further back into a white-carpeted living room area. Chris and Danielle were already there, the two of them on opposite sides of a wraparound sofa that faced a huge television.

Chris leaned back into the couch, his feet resting on the ottoman and his hands clasped behind his head. His gray t-shirt said Montgomery Biscuits in huge font, and the logo was cute—a smiling biscuit with a pad of butter for its tongue. Danielle was decked out in black leather pants and a silk strappy top. She looked ready for a party—not to hang out in a basement.

“Finally you’re here,” she said, studying her nails. “Blake told us about the … thing that Darius showed you.”

“You mean the prophecy?” I pulled the folded piece of paper out of my back pocket and waved it in the air.

She rolled her eyes. “Yeah, that.”

Blake sat down next to her, and she placed her hand in his, a smug smile crossing her face. He didn’t lean into her, but he didn’t back away, either. He also refused to meet my eyes.

“So,” I said, sitting as far away from Blake and Danielle as possible. “What do you all know so far?”

Chris jumped right in. “Blake’s got some crazy fire power, Danielle just told us that she can control water, Kate makes plants grow without meaning to, and you made that glass explode today. And some prophecy talks about the comet making a wall grow thin, five representing each part of the world, and a journey east. I wouldn’t mind a trip to Europe, but it makes no sense.”

“That’s the gist of it,” I said, placing the paper on the coffee table and flattening out the creases.

Chris brought his hand up to his mouth and chewed his thumbnail. “So you all have cool powers, and I have nothing,” he said. “That kind of blows.”

“Maybe you have power over the air,” I suggested. He stared at me blankly, and I continued, “You could try testing it out.”

“And how should I do that?” The sarcasm in his tone surprised me. “Since you’re apparently the expert on all of this, even though you’ve only been here for a little over a week.”

“Chill out.” Blake clenched his jaw and glared at Chris. “We won’t figure anything out if we attack each other.”

My heart leaped at Blake’s defense of me. But when I tried to catch his gaze, he avoided me again, and I quickly deflated. So I looked away from him and focused on Chris. “Let’s see if you have an ability that you didn’t have before,” I suggested. “Try doing something with air control.”

“Air control?” He laughed and pushed his sleeves up to his elbows. “What does that even mean?”

“Try harnessing the air to create wind, and blow this paper off the table.”

“Seriously?” He widened his eyes, looking at me like I’d lost my mind. “No one can do that. Not even the Elders.”

“The Elders also can’t control fire, water, and plants, or make glasses explode,” Kate said from her spot on the floor. “You should try it. It’s no more far-fetched than what any of us can do.”

“Nicole’s the one who made the glass explode,” he said. “Couldn’t that mean
she’s
air?”

“It could,” I said. “But what I did was … different. I’ll explain soon. First, it’ll help if you try this. Please?”

He sat straighter and planted both feet on the floor. “All right,” he said, leaning forward and rubbing his hands together. “Here goes nothing.” He stared at the paper and narrowed his eyes, his forehead creased in concentration.

For a few seconds, nothing happened. Was I wrong in thinking he could do this? But then a gust of wind blew the paper off the table and across the room. It whirled up to slap the ceiling, and then fluttered to the floor next to the television.

“I did it!” Chris exclaimed, pumping his fist in the air. The paper swirled up again and landed back onto the table. “That was awesome.” He fell back down on the couch and gave Kate a high five. She tucked her hair behind her ears and looked back down at the floor, a small smile on her face.

“Now, we know that you four each have control over a different element,” I said, clasping my hands in my lap and looking at each of them. “It could relate to where the prophecy says, ‘five representing each part of the world.’”

“Each element has a color it correlates to,” Blake broke in. “Nicole and I looked it up online after Darius showed her the prophecy. Earth is green, fire is red, water is blue, and air is yellow.”

Danielle huffed and crossed her arms. “Now we’re basing our ideas off of Google searches.” She rolled her eyes, her upper lip curled. “Great.”

“Do you have any better ideas?” I asked.

“Not ideas, but I do have a question,” she said. “If what you and Blake are saying is correct, then what does that make you? This says there are ‘five representing each part of the world,’ but there are only four elements.”

“There are actually five elements, and I think Nicole is the final one,” Blake spoke up again. “Aether. It also means spirit, or power of life. The prophecy says ‘the Aether will ignite them,’ so ‘them’ must be the four other elements—the elements we can control. Under the comet we felt an electric shock. That could have been when our new powers manifested.”

“So the comet gave us these powers,” Chris said. “And it was ignited by the Aether. Which is you.” He pointed at me, his eyes serious. “But have you been able to use ‘the spirit of life’—whatever that means?”

I looked around at all of them and took a deep breath. It was now or never. “You all saw what happened in homeroom this morning—when the glass broke?” I asked.

Everyone nodded, which I took as a sign to continue. Even Danielle crossed her legs and faced my direction, looking mildly interested in what I had to say.

“A shard of the glass got into my arm,” I said, glancing down at my wrist. “I panicked and took it out, and when I was putting pressure on it to stop the bleeding, I imagined it healing.” I held my hand over the same spot on my arm, remembering how easy it had been to fix. “It worked.”

Danielle uncrossed her legs and placed her hands on her knees. “Let me get this straight,” she said. “You healed a gash on your arm in less than a minute?”

“I don’t know how long it took…”

“It was about ten seconds,” Kate said.

“Okay.” I smiled at her in thanks and turned back to Danielle. “Ten seconds. That could be what ‘the spirit of life’ means—the power to heal.”

Danielle nodded and sat back in the couch. If I didn’t know any better, I might have thought she was impressed. By
me
.

“So we’ve gone over most of the prophecy,” Blake said quickly. “But we haven’t talked about the last line—the one about the Journey and the Shadows. Do any of you have an idea about what it could mean?”

“No clue.” I shrugged and looked around to see if anyone else had an idea. No one spoke up.

“I’m as stumped as the rest of you,” Chris said after a few long seconds. “And I’m also hungry. Why don’t we go to Sophie’s and talk about it there? Maybe a change of scenery will help us think.”

I looked at him and tilted my head. “Who’s Sophie?” I asked.

“Sophie’s Diner.” He laughed. “Open 24 hours, got the best food around.”

My stomach growled with the thought. “I haven’t been there yet,” I told him. “And food does sound amazing right now.”

“Then we definitely have to go.” He stood up and headed towards the stairs before anyone could disagree, and we piled into our cars to head to Sophie’s Diner, which Chris swore had the best burgers in the state of Massachusetts.

CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
 

The delicious smell of greasy food filled my nose the second I walked inside Sophie’s Diner, making my mouth water. The sea foam green booths looked welcoming, and the mini-jukeboxes on the walls gave the place a fun fifties vibe. Even though I hadn’t tried the food yet, I already loved it here.

“Table for five?” the hostess asked, grabbing menus from the stack on the stand.

“A booth would be great,” Blake said smoothly.

We followed her to a booth in the corner, which wrapped around in a semi-circle, and got ourselves situated. The menu had tons of options, but I ultimately went with a burger, since Chris said they were the best.

The waitress brought our drinks out first. The hot chocolate smelled amazing, and I took a sip without bothering to test how hot it was. It scorched my tongue, and I gasped and chugged some water, hoping I hadn’t temporarily destroyed my taste buds.

Without asking if I minded, Danielle reached across the table and wrapped her hand around my steaming mug. I almost yanked it out of her grip, but stopped when I saw how intensely she was staring at it.

Finally, she pulled her hand back and looked at me. “Try it now,” she said simply.

I hesitated. Hopefully she hadn’t poisoned my drink with gray energy. However, doubting she would do that with everyone watching, I lifted the mug and took a sip, preparing to burn my tongue for a second time.

The hot chocolate was the perfect temperature.

“How did you do that?” I asked, placing it back down.

“My element is water,” she said. “Obviously there’s water in hot chocolate, so I gathered blue energy and thought about the drink cooling off. I guess it worked.”

“Cool!” Chris placed both palms on the table, his eyes lighting up. “Can you boil my water?”

“Not unless you want me to melt the plastic.” Danielle laughed, looking at him like he was a few brain cells short. “Although I might be able to do this.” She reached forward and wrapped her hand around his cup, the same intense expression in her eyes that she’d had when cooling my hot chocolate.

The ice cubes in Chris’s water melted in seconds.

“Wow.” Chris’s mouth dropped open. “Impressive.”

“But not exceptionally useful,” she said, dropping her arm back to her side. “I’m going to figure out some more things I can do with it later.”

It was tempting to say something along the lines of “besides making water fountains explode in peoples faces,” but I held back. There was no need to start an unnecessary argument now.

“Good plan,” I said instead, taking another sip of hot chocolate.

“So, why are Journey and Shadows capitalized in the prophecy?” Chris asked after we got our food.

“I’ve been thinking about that,” Kate said. “In standard English, only proper nouns are capitalized. So the capitalized words could represent names or locations.”

“Thanks for the grammar lesson,” Danielle said, grabbing a packet of fake sugar and dumping it into her coffee.

I ignored her and re-focused on the prophecy. “So we have to go on a Journey down a path to … the Shadows.” I paused to take a bite of my burger, and to think. What could that
mean
? It still didn’t make any sense.

We sat in silence, eating our food and trying to come up with ideas. Everyone else seemed to be drawing a blank, too.

“Sophie!” Chris yelled, waving his arms in the air and zapping me out of my thoughts. “Hey.”

A large woman with a huge, toothy smile walked towards us. She looked about my grandmother’s age, with wrinkly skin and a few brown spots on her face. Her gray hair was pulled into a tight bun at the nape of her neck, and she wore a long blue dress that made her look like she’d stepped right out of an old village.

“Chris,” she greeted him. “It’s good to see you again. It’s been … two days?”

“I can’t resist the burgers,” he said with a laugh. “Plus Nicole just moved here, and we all know that eating at Sophie’s is a must in Kinsley.”

“Nicole.” Sophie looked at me and smiled. “Victory of the people.”

BOOK: The Prophecy of Shadows
10.77Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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