A Time to Die (Elemental Rage Book 2) (6 page)

BOOK: A Time to Die (Elemental Rage Book 2)
11.51Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

An image rose in her
mind.  A boat with a tall, hooded figure.  The sea was slate grey, the sky a
thick blanket of white clouds.  A woman watched from the beach.  As if teasing
her, the memory drew the figure in.  It was her mother!  The image receded
again.  Raven drew closer to the Void, urging more information.  Her point of
view suddenly shifted and she was hovering above the woman, seeing the location
as an island with a mansion nestled in a forest surrounded by beach and the
slate grey ocean.

Raven wanted to
get closer, to glean some information about where her Mom was being held.  She
felt a burn on her chest and looked back.  Fire’s violet tether brightened and
pulsed.  A warning.

Grumbling, Raven
pulled herself along the thread, leaving the vision of the island behind.  As
she left the presence of the Void, she realized how deeply into its lair she
had gone.  From her shoulders to her fingertips, Raven felt like a block of ice. 
When she opened her eyes, she was sitting in the back yard with flakes of snow
on her head and arms iced with frost.  Fire licked her hands, dancing along her
skin and fighting off the frost. It was a delicate game they played.

“Thanks,” Raven
said.  She missed Air, although somehow Fire’s presence dulled the ache.

Others know the
island. Those who travel between.
Fire said.

“We need to find a
way there,” Raven said.

Raven brushed the
water off her arms, the cold almost unbearable.  She stood.  Mindy would just
have to live with theVoid-Driven freak for a sister coming into the house,
because Raven needed a hot shower fast.

Teeth chattering,
she pushed her way into the kitchen.

“Where have you
been?” Jade asked.  It wasn’t asked as an accusation.  Jade was curious.

“Promise not to
freak out?” Raven asked. Jade had a penchant for freak-outs.  She seemed to
have inherited all of the responsible genes from both their parents, or maybe
it was because she was the oldest.  Either way, Jade was going to flip when
Raven told her where she’d been.

“I promise,” Jade
said. 

“Traveling with the
Void.  I found Mom.  She’s on an island surrounded by a gray sea under a gray
sky.  Fire helped me get there and back,” Raven felt a little guilty when a
hint of jealousy flickered across Jade’s face.  She would have felt the same if
Jade had been talking to Air…which Jade had before, so they were even.

Raven was relieved
when Jade ignored the part about Fire and asked, “Did you learn anything more? 
Where is she?”

“Fire said that
others know the island.  Those who travel between.  Does that mean anything to
you?” Raven wrapped a blanket around her shoulders.  She hadn’t planned to sit
in the kitchen chatting about Mom until her fingers froze off.

Jade held up a
hand, “Wait there.”

She ran to get her
notebook from their shared room.  Raven said, “Forget this.” And followed Jade
down the hall, “Jade, I’m taking a shower.  We’ll talk when I’m done.”

“What if you
forget something important?  We need to find Mom.”  Flipping the notebook open
to the pages she had been working on earlier, Jade said, “Now repeat what you
said.”

Raven repeated the
same thing.  Again.  While she did, she pulled another pair of sweats and a
hooded sweatshirt out of her drawers, “Mom was on the beach. I think she was
trying to find a way off the island when the Void boat came around.  The Void
is in some way working with the guys who kidnapped her.”

“The Keepers.”
Jade said, although Raven knew it as well.

“Maybe.  We
shouldn’t make too many assumptions about anything.  I’m starting to think that
everyone in the world is after this crazy gift.  I wonder what Time does…”

“I was talking to
Aunt Bertha about it…” Jade started. 

Raven could hear
that librarian voice gearing up.  Jade could talk for hours on a subject she
liked.  Raven’s hair was dripping icy beads of water onto her neck and she was
in no mood to hang around and talk.  She said, “Hold that thought. I’m taking a
shower.  Make notes.  Do what you have to, and we’ll regroup when I’m done.”

As Raven shut the
door to the bathroom, Jade sighed, “I was just going to say that no one really
knows what the gift of Time is for.”

Settling on her
bed to do her math homework, Jade wondered if a person with the gift of time
could speed it up or slow it down.  That kind of thing would be really helpful
to get chores out of the way…or math homework.

 

 

 

Chapter 6

 

~~ Aunt Bertha ~~

 

Aunt Bertha felt
as small as a blade of grass in a field. It was Monday afternoon, as she drove
into town to pick up Mindy and Claire.  Jade hadn’t even told her about the
Void’s attack until dinner on Sunday night. Dinner! 

Can’t believe I
slept through the whole thing.
Aunt Bertha couldn’t stop berating herself. 
Eighty years old she might be, but she was no shrinking violet.  And yet…that
was exactly what was happening to her.  She was useless to her girls.  Raven
could have been lost to the Void.  Who knows what would have happened to
Mindy.  The girl seemed well enough with her Element, but getting trapped in
the Earth was no laughing matter.

And where was
Bertha when all of this happened?

Asleep.

The parking lot
was empty except for a blue Ford Escape.  Bertha rolled down her window to let
some fresh air in.  She felt queasy.  She wasn’t on chemo.  Not yet.  Not if
she had anything to say about it.  Those young doctors could get pretty adamant
about things, but Bertha was tired. If she didn’t want to lose her hair or
spend the last months of her life vomiting, she darn well wouldn’t. She was
eighty years old.  That was plenty long to live.

Aunt Bertha was
startled when a pair of men suddenly appeared at her window. Keepers.  She
looked nervously from the men to the school and asked, “What do you want?”

“You are dying.”
They both looked incredibly young, even the fellow with gray in his temples. 
Bertha felt it was an insult to be threatened by children.

Cackling, Bertha
said, “Did you get that out of your crystal ball?”

Leaning on the
window, the man said, “Look, we know you’ve got the gift.  So how about making
this easier on everyone?  Tonight at eight, be at this address.” He slipped a
business card to Bertha through the window.

“What if I don’t?”
Aunt Bertha looked at the address.  It was local.  She supposed she should have
been grateful for small things, but that only meant they had a bunch of Keepers
in the town watching.

“Oh, look, school
is out. We’re going to take the gift one way or another.  We’re not evil. We’re
not looking to destroy or disrupt your family. You have something that belongs
to us and we want it back.”

“How does this
have anything to do with me?” Bertha asked.

“We want a promise
that you will release your gifts to us after death. Then we’ll leave your
family alone,” he said.

Seeing Mindy walk
through the school doors, Bertha said, “Fine. I’ll be there.”

The man stepped
back, waving his friend away. Bertha watched while they walked across the
parking lot and down the street. 

 

“Eight o’clock is
past my bed time,” Bertha grumbled.  Bertha worried that the men were still
watching.  Not that it mattered, not in a small town. The Gray family was no
longer hidden.

Mindy left the
school first, teddy bear in one hand, her eyes down.  At school she always
walked with her head down, focusing on her feet.  She wouldn’t talk to anyone
unless the teachers or aids forced her. 

Aunt Bertha
sighed.  What would they do with Mindy?  She needed a lot more help than one
adult could give.  She used to push open the door for Mindy, but Aunt Bertha
didn’t have the energy to get out of the car.  She rolled the passenger window
down and turned her head, calling to Mindy, “Over here.”

Bertha knew full
well her voice didn’t go that far.  Earth was kind enough to relay the
message.  Mindy didn’t look up, but walked faster toward the car, as if making
eye contact with another being on the school grounds would kill her.  Aunt
Bertha couldn’t blame her, after everything that had happened in her young
life.

Mindy opened the
door and crawled into the car.  A teacher’s aid closed the door for Mindy. 
Bertha said, “What do you say?”

Mindy lifted her
head and stared at Aunt Bertha as if to challenge her.  Aunt Bertha’s eyebrows
lifted, “Only polite children eat dessert.”

“Thank you, Ms.
Harp.” Mindy mumbled, covering her face with her teddy bear.

Aunt Bertha
smiled.  You couldn’t win every battle, but that didn’t mean you gave up. Ms.
Harp waved to Aunt Bertha and with a nod returned to the school. Mindy dropped
the bear to her lap. She didn’t say anything else.  School wore her out.  Often
Mindy rode the whole way home in silence.

Claire ran flying
out of the door to the school, black hair streaming behind her.  Aunt Bertha
checked behind her in alarm, thinking perhaps she was chased.  Claire tore open
the door, jumped in and shut the door with a sharp thud.  “I hate school. Let’s
go.”

Aunt Bertha waited
until Claire and Mindy were buckled in, then she drove off. Jade had
volleyball, and Raven couldn’t ride with Mindy. Bertha would have to fight the
Void soon.  Her back hurt something fierce.  The Void would weaken her.   

The cancer was
spreading quickly. Between the upcoming fight with the Void, the interference
of the Keepers, and the cancer eating her body, Aunt Bertha feared that six
months to live was optimistic. It was time to tell the girls. 

 

 

~~ Raven ~~

 

Aunt Bertha was
acting strange when Raven got home.  Mindy was in the kitchen, so Raven
couldn’t fix a sandwich, at least not without her little sister experiencing a
major melt-down. Aunt Bertha kept looking at the clock and asking the girls if
they would be all right alone for a few hours. Raven wondered what she was up
to. 

At six o’clock
Bertha said she had to go somewhere, but wouldn’t say where or why or for how
long.  Jade was taking an after-volleyball nap, which meant she didn’t notice
anything.  Even though technically Jade now shared the room with Mindy, they
hadn’t moved all of their stuff yet. Raven shook Jade awake.

“What?” Jade
sounded cranky.

Raven hissed,
“Shhh.  There’s something wrong with Aunt Bertha. She said she’s leaving in an
hour. I don’t have Air to spy on her.  I need your help.”

“What can I do?”
Jade rolled over and covered her head with the blankets.

Raven poked her in
the back, “Hey. Come on.  I need your help.  I’ll show you.  Don’t you want to
know where Aunt Bertha is going? What if she disappears like Mom?”

“Fine,” Jade
grumbled.  She looked at the clock, “It’s only six-thirty. If she’s leaving in
an hour, wake me up then.”

“Seriously, Jade. 
You’re going to spend a third of your life asleep. You can spare an hour. Now,
hush. I don’t want her to think we’re watching,” Raven jumped on the bed next
to Jade, purposely invading her personal space.  Jade hated it when other
people got on her bed.

“Get off or I’m
not helping,”

Raven rolled off
the bed. “What a Crankster. Fine, go back to sleep. I’ll wake you when it’s
time for dinner.”

Jade punched her
pillow, “You could have let me sleep longer and told me after she left.”

“Yeah, could
have.” Raven said with a grin and sauntered out.  She went to her own room
across the hall.  Strange, she wouldn’t have thought she would miss sharing a
room with Jade, and yet she did.

Aunt Bertha left
around seven-thirty, almost before they’d even finished eating.  Dinner was a
fun new thing now that Mindy refused to go anywhere near Raven.  Aunt Bertha
demanded that they all eat at the table, which meant that Mindy waited until
Raven was already seated at the furthest point of the table before she would
sit down.  Mindy wolfed her food down and without asking, moved as far away
from Raven as she could.  It was unnerving.  

An hour later,
Raven and Jade were sitting in Raven’s room. Claire was happy to have the
television mostly to herself in the living room.  She only complained a little
when Raven asked her to give them privacy in the bedroom.  She didn’t want to mess
up the new living arrangements, so Claire smiled and left them alone.

As Jade shut the
door, she whispered, “That was nothing short of a miracle.”

Raven grinned,
“She’s much happier now.  We should have thought of this months ago.”

“Yeah, probably,”
Jade said, “So what do we do?”

Raven realized
that she was about to reveal one of her most powerful tricks.  Jade would
forever be on alert whenever one of Raven’s little feathered buddies flew in.  Raven
couldn’t talk to Air anymore, and she really wanted to know what Aunt Bertha
was up to.  She said, “First you have to promise utter and total secrecy from
everyone.  Boyfriends, siblings, great aunts, parents, best friends…did I leave
anyone out?”

“Fine. I won’t
tell anyone. I’m not sure why you think I would tell,” Jade was definitely
offended. 

Raven said, “Okay.
I’m holding you to this. Ask Air to show you the birds.”

Jade asked Air.  Raven
wished she could see what Jade was seeing.  She couldn’t even speak to Air
without the Element disappearing completely.  Raven had to work through Jade
tonight. Jade was shaking her head from side to side, “I keep seeing things
from different birds.  How do you keep track of where you are?”

Raven said, “Practice.
Do you see Aunt Bertha’s car?”

Having an object
to focus on helped immensely. Jade projected a mental image of the car to Air,
“Whoa. That’s so strange.  I’m flying over her car now.  She’s heading toward
town.”

“Just stay with
that bird until Aunt Bertha stops the car,” Raven said.

Jade was surprised
that a bird would actually listen to an Element or an Elemental and even more
surprised at the understanding. And that was just a bird!  Imagine what an
elephant could do. It certainly changed her opinion of animals.

Aunt Bertha drove
straight through town to a turn-off near the cemetery.  She drove up a winding
forest road and took a right into the driveway of a moderately sized house.  The
bird fluttered down to the lawn, watching Aunt Bertha step out of the car. 
There were at least six cars parked in a grassy field behind the house.

Air whispered,
My
turn.

Jade’s perspective
suddenly changed.  Aunt Bertha was ushered into the house by none other than
Harold.  Jade groaned.

“What?” Raven
asked.  She hated having to watch while her sister talked to her Element, not
that Air belonged to her…she just felt that way sometimes.

“Harold is there,”
Jade said, shushing her sister so that she could hear what was going down.

Aunt Bertha
followed Harold through the kitchen and to a set of basement stairs.  Jade
joked aloud for Raven’s benefit, “Don’t go into the basement, Aunt Bertha.” 

“Classic serial
killer move,” Raven added. “I wonder what she’s up to…”

Air certainly was
not built for spying.  The bird’s eyes were so much better than Air.  Everything
in the room was blurry and the faces impossible to make out. Jade squeezed her
eyes shut and put her hands on her head.

“What’s going on?
Are you okay?” Raven touched her sister’s hand.

Jade didn’t look
up.  She said, “I think I’m going to barf. How do you handle all this swirling
about?”

Raven sank down
onto the bed beside her sister.  They were sitting on Claire’s bed.  She had a
fleece blanket on top with the picture of a wolf howling at the moon.  Raven
rather liked it. Putting her arm around Jade’s shoulder, she said, “Head
between your knees.  Don’t lose your connection to Air.  Think of the voices. 
Don’t try to see anything. Focus.”

Jade focused.

“…started.”  Jade
heard the words and realized it was Harold doing the speaking, “Bertha, if you
give us your oath of passage, we will leave the girls alone.”

Still closing her
eyes with her head down, Jade said, “She’s giving an oath of some sort so that
we’ll be safe.”

Raven had done
enough spying through Air to know that Jade needed to pay attention. She just
made a small noise, enough so that Jade knew Raven had heard.

Bertha said, “And
my niece?”

“Once you’ve
passed and I’ve verified receipt of the gift of Time, we will release Amy,”
Harold said, full of himself.  Jade wanted to punch him.

“I may live to one
hundred. Let her go now.” Bertha said.

“Sorry, we’re not
bargaining for your niece. We’re bargaining for her daughters, and their
continued freedom,” Harold sounded so self-satisfied that Jade wanted to hit
him. He acted like he was playing a game that he had already won and was just
waiting for the finale.

“Tell me what to
do,” Bertha said.

“Stand in the
circle.”

Jade accidentally
connected her vision to Air for a moment and received a blurred sea of faces. 
One seemed particularly clear.  A man with silver hair and slate grey eyes who
watched the ceremony with concern.  Jade realized that Bertha was leaning on
his arm as he walked her to the center of the circle.  The world tilted again. She
felt her gorge rise and closed her eyes.

While Bertha got
into position, Jade asked Raven, “Have you ever seen a guy with silver hair and
grey eyes around town?”

Raven shrugged,
“It’s a retirement community.  There are hundreds of people here with silver
hair.”

Bertha was in
position to give whatever oath was required. She stubbornly said, “Your oath
first.”

Harold grumbled,
but when Bertha refused to back down, he said, “As Master of Death and Holder
of the Universe’s Death Gate Keys, I promise that Bertha Skye’s nieces, Jade,
Raven, Claire, and Mindy Gray will be left to live their lives in peace by every
person here and anyone who has taken a Keeper oath.” 

While Jade
listened, Bertha said, “I, Bertha Skye, daughter of the Universe and Keeper of
the Secrets therein, do give this oath of my own free will.”

Jade repeated the
words for Raven.

“Free will.  Hah,
that’s a laugh,” Raven lay back on the bed.  She felt strangely betrayed. 
Bertha was giving up her gifts to some unknown group of men who threatened the
family. First of all, there was no free will involved there.  Anything taken by
threat of force, was stolen, not given.  Second of all, she hadn’t even
bothered to talk to anyone before giving up her gifts.

BOOK: A Time to Die (Elemental Rage Book 2)
11.51Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

My Life as a Book by Janet Tashjian
Gangbuster by Peter Bleksley
Football Hero (2008) by Green, Tim
The Dream Catcher by Marie Laval
The Scared Stiff by Donald E Westlake
Girl In The Woods by Rose, Aileen
The Ex-Mrs. Hedgefund by Jill Kargman