Part 13 (1/2)

”My sister,” Ash started, but found herself unable 156 to speak Eve's name. ”She . . . I think she controls the weather. Snow, rain . . . lightning.” Ash shuddered. It was all too strange to finally say the things out loud that she'd suspected-no, known-for the last eight months, as if her silence could somehow keep Eve and her memory at bay, away from the Blackwood campus.

”But as for me,” Ash continued, ”unless having a bad temper and forgetting to floss your teeth are supernatural in some way, I'm afraid I'm pretty vanilla.”

Serena's face remained placid. ”I wonder,” she said.

”Do you mind if we take a look? Maybe there's a repressed memory in there somewhere?”

Ash hesitated. The last thing she needed was to relive the movie of Lizzie Jacobs's smoldering body falling to the lawn. But there hadn't been any indication of weird-ness specifically from Ashline on that fateful day, so it seemed safe enough.

”Okay,” Ash said, and the six beachgoers clumped together once more. ”But don't be surprised when you don't find what you're looking for.”

”We'll see,” Serena said with a knowing, ironic half-smile. Her hand darted out with violent certainty and fastened itself around Ashline's wrist.

She plummeted headlong into limbo once again.

ASHLINE WILDE.

This vision is different from the rest. You're there and seeing it through your own eyes, hearing it through 157 your own ears, smelling, tasting, feeling it. But somehow your consciousness drifts over trees and a stone fortress as if you are a fine mist descending from the steamy rain forest.

As you drift down onto the scene, the fortress below you grows in your bird's-eye view. You see the four yellow-fruit-bearing trees, each marking a corner of the square. The top of their wide fronds barely reach over the tall crenellated walls, a mixture of local stones glued together with foreign cement.

Then the humans, three of them, all standing on top of the western wall: White Coat A, White Coat B, and, between them, Man in Suit. White Coat A leans over the parapet to speak to someone beneath them, within in the fortress. White Coat B and Man in Suit cling silently to the wall, warily watching the ground below, as if there were a tiger crouched in the gra.s.s. Or maybe a velociraptor.

Finally you see her below, boxed in by the castle walls. She is small, perhaps five or six, so short that the forest gra.s.ses rise up past her knees. Her shrewd, narrow eyes and clay-colored skin reveal her Polynesian heritage, and her obsidian hair comes almost all the way down to her waist.

She will be beautiful one day.

She is beautiful now.

As White Coat A speaks, the girl looks up blankly with her chocolate eyes. You wonder if she even understands the language. Any language.

158.

”Four fruit trees,” he says, pointing in turn to each corner of the fortress. ”These are your only source of food in the garden. All you have to do for us to release you is eat one of the fruits.”

The little girl c.o.c.ks her head to the side. That's it?

As White Coat A continues, Man in Suit smiles. ”The trees are exactly the same except for one minor detail.

Three of the trees bear fruit that is poisonous. In smell, color, and texture, the fruit is all identical, right down to the tiny little hairs on its skin. But if you choose the wrong one, you will suffer for hours. And then the toxins will kill you.”

A quiet falls over the citadel; even the birds have stopped crowing now.

”Do you understand what you have been asked?”

White Coat A asks the little girl.

She says nothing.

But for the first time, she smiles.

When Ashline came to, she was on her hands and knees in the sand, clutching her stomach.

”Are you okay?” Rolfe knelt down beside her and offered his hand.

She gave the world another few seconds to right itself as the vertigo wore off. ”I'm fine,” she said, taking his hand. ”It's just . . .” She stopped there.

It's just that the girl in the vision wasn't me. It couldn't have been. Ash had never so much as been to summer camp when she was that age, let alone partic.i.p.ated in 159 some sort of jungle-bound experiment. And she and Eve had been inseparable during their early years, so it seemed impossible that the girl could be Eve, either. Yet the resemblance was uncanny.

”What's unbelievable to me,” Ade said, returning Ashline to the conversation at hand, ”is that if there are six of us at a small school like Blackwood, then statistically the world must be crawling with . . . you know.”

Serena shook her head. ”There are others out there, but from what I've gathered, not many.”

”Then how the h.e.l.l did we all end up at Blackwood?”

Ash asked.

Serena stared sheepishly off toward the horizon, as though she could see the waves, but she said nothing.

The realization dawned on all of them simultaneously.

Raja just happened to be the first one to speak.

”You called us here too?” Raja threw up her hands. ”I had just settled in and was starting to enjoy junior year- good grades, winning soccer season, hot boyfriend-and you made me leave all that for this glorified summer camp in Yogi Bear's forest?”

Serena took a step in the direction of Raja's voice. ”I didn't make you do anything. I told you, it only works on the willing.”

”Willing?” Raja shrieked. ”Let's find out if you're willing to take the back of my hand across your face!”

She lunged for Serena, but Ash intercepted her and fastened her talons roughly on to Raja's shoulders. ”Down, tiger,” she said. ”You're about to slap a blind girl.”

160.

Raja took a few deep breaths and then shook herself out of Ash's grip, like a wet dog trying to dry itself. ”Well, she would have deserved it.”

Ash couldn't blame her. She felt her old temper returning at Serena's insistence on maintaining an air of mystery. The frustration of it all was beginning to make her itch as though larvae were crawling beneath her skin.

”Serena, you seem like a real sweet girl and all,” Ash said. ”A little creepy, but nice enough. But so help me G.o.d, if you give me another blank stare and cryptic one-line answer, I will let the tiger out of her cage.” She added for Serena's benefit. ”I'm pointing my finger at Raja now.”

”Thanks,” the little Greek said. ”But I'm blind, not stupid.”

Raja grumbled and took a tentative step toward Serena, who flinched. ”All right, all right,” Serena conceded. ”But you're not going to like it.”

Serena cleared her throat and began. ”When I was thirteen, not long after I lost my sight and only days after I first realized I had this . . . link to others, I was visited by a man named Jack. He must have seen me rocking back and forth in that old chair, on the porch, night after night. The first two times he visited, he just sat with me and listened. And the third time he called, he told me the three most important things that I needed to know about my destiny. He told me that I was a siren. He told me that I had to save the world. And he told me how to do it.”

161.

Rolfe drummed his fingers on his surfboard before he raised his hand. ”Question. You mean siren like the mythological sirens? Aren't you supposed to lure people to their doom, not save them from it?”

Ash gave him a harsh look. ”Let's humor her for the moment and pretend that the a modern-day siren has a different job description.”