Forsaken (27 page)

Read Forsaken Online

Authors: Kristen Day

BOOK: Forsaken
6.09Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Just tell me,
” I pinched the bridge of my nose, but my head was already pounding.

“There’s a Legend.  A very old Legend,
” Willow began hesitantly, “Back in the day, the leader of the Nerieds, Thetis, was destined to bear only one son.  That son would be stronger and more gifted then the father.  Neither Zeus nor Poseidon wanted a son that would eventually overpower them, so they forced Thetis to marry a mortal.  They had a baby boy, Achilles, and in an effort to make him immortal, she dipped him in the River Styx by his heel.  Then he was killed in the Trojan War when an arrow pierced his heel, the only unprotected part of his body.  Thetis was so distraught; she vowed never to have another child.  This is where the legend comes in.  Thetis had the ability of foresight just like her father Nereus.  It is said that when she foresaw her own death, she knew she would give birth to a baby girl who would take her place as the leader of the Nerieds.  The girl would grow to be stronger than her father like Achilles, but also stronger than her mother, Thetis.  Her name was destined to be Anastasia.”  

 

Chapter 31

             

              At least that explains the weird looks when I introduced myself at school.  A smile crept across my face and I chuckled with relief.  “Well I can clear everything up real quick.  I chose Anastasia when I came to Lorelei because of a dream I had and I thought it was a pretty name.  The state of Georgia gave me my previous name, Hannah.  I never knew my true name given to me by my parents.  So the chances of me being The Anastasia are pretty slim.  Problem solved.” I left out the part about the woman I saw crying in my dreams who called out to an Anastasia.  I pushed that from my mind.

             
“There’s more,” Willow gave me a harsh look and continued. “When you told us you could breathe underwater, I started to do more research, so we could be sure that you were the one.  I found other things associated with the Legend that I’d never heard before.  Like, Thetis’s daughter would have the same abilities as her mother and more – foresight, an affinity for all sea creatures – which goes along with breathing underwater - and manipulating not just the ocean, but also the shore and wind.” 

             
Phoebe looked at me, hopeful, “So… from what we know so far you definitely have foresight, an affinity for sea turtles and it sounds like sharks?  Have you ‘felt’ any other animals?”

             
“Maybe sea horses…and the dolphins,” I said and shrugged, running my hand over my trace. 

             
“Sea horses?” Carmen said in disbelief, “Okay, so that means the ones we can check off are foresight, an affinity for all sea animals-“

             
“Not necessarily – I mean four isn’t really a good judge of the hundreds of animals and fish out there.” I tried to convince her, but it didn’t work.

             
“Anyway,” She raised an eyebrow at me, “you’ve got foresight, an affinity for all animals, we know you can breathe underwater and manipulate the ocean.  Have you ever tried to manipulate sand or wind?”

             
“Of course not.  Look, you guys are on crack.  This Legend or whatever could just be some story somebody made up.  It doesn’t mean anything.”  Deep down I didn’t really believe what I was saying, but I wanted to think about this on my own.  I didn’t want anyone else dissecting me and telling me who I was.  I got up and went to find Olivia while they kept picking me apart.  I found her outside on the back deck.

             
“What do you want?” She didn’t look up from the magazine she was reading.

             
“I want to apologize,” I said and sat down beside her, “I shouldn’t have yelled at you.”

             
“I’m touched, really, but I’m not taking back the things I said.  I meant every word.” She kept reading.  She was the most stubborn person I’d ever met. 

             
“I’m not taking back what I said either, I’m just saying I shouldn’t have yelled them at you.”

             
“Maybe next time you could try hand signals.” I saw a ghost of a smile on her face.  “I’m really good at those.”  She flipped me off and kept reading.

             
“I’m better at smoke signals, but I know a few hand signals too.  Apparently I need to work on the whole punching one.” This got me a full grin.  She didn’t have a bruise or scratch on her.  I was a miserable fighter.  She set her magazine down and looked at me.

             
“Fine.  You’re forgiven.  Happy now?”

             
“Almost.”

“What else do you want?”  She sighed and turned towards me.

“Willow explained the Legend you were talking about, but it can’t mean I’m that Anastasia.  I chose my name when I came to Lorelei-“ I stopped abruptly as a memory surfaced and something in my mind clicked.  I scratched my head, “I met your mom when I was still going by Hannah.  Why would she have thought I was part of the Legend before I chose the name Anastasia?”

             
“She didn’t care about your name.  Even though she thought it was pretty ironic you chose Anastasia when you got to school.  But what proved it to her was your trace.”  She pointed down at my wrist and raised her eyebrows at me.

             
“But no one knows what my trace means.”

             
“My mom does.”

             
“How would your mom know?”

             
“She was part of Thetis’s personal council,” she said proudly, then looked me up and down and smirked, “She said you’re the spitting image of her.  I find that hard to believe too.”

             
I gave her a look and continued, “Willow also said if I was her daughter, I’d have all of her abilities.  Is that true?”

             
“All her abilities and more.  The Legend says you would be more powerful than her once all of your abilities surface. But, that’s honestly all I know.”

             
“Did she tell you what my trace means?” I asked, hopeful.

             
“Nope, she wouldn’t tell me.  She said there were some things you would have to find out on your own. Whatever that means,” she shrugged.

             
“Have you really been following me around?”

             
“Somebody had to make sure you didn’t do anything stupid,” She rolled her eyes at me.

             
“I always felt like somebody was watching me, but I never saw you…” I narrowed my eyes at her accusingly.  I still didn’t like the fact that she was following me around.

             
“I’m a concealer.  It’s what I do.”  She said nonchalantly.

             
“A what?”

             
“A concealer.  I’m descended from Calypso.  I can match myself to whatever environment I happen to be in at the time.”

             
“Sort of like camouflage?” I guessed.

             
“Exactly like camouflage,” she grinned wickedly at me.  Suddenly she disappeared.  I looked closer and could actually see the outline of her body, but she took on the colors of the seat she was in.  Then she moved and I could really see her.

             
“You’re like a chameleon!” I said, completely fascinated.  She reappeared, narrowed her eyes at me and crossed her arms.

             
“I am not a cold-blooded scaly, slimy lizard.” She hissed at me sounding exactly like a lizard.  And I wouldn’t be surprised if she was cold blooded.  I giggled at my own thoughts, which only made her madder. “What are you laughing at?”

             
“I was wondering if you had a forked tongue.” I smirked at her, still laughing.  The corners of her mouth were twitching and I could tell she was trying not to laugh too.  She stuck her tongue out at me which only made me laugh harder.

             
“Whatever.  You’re just jealous.” She flipped her dark hair and stood up.

             
“You’re right, being a lizard has been a dream of mine for years,” I said sarcastically, trying to make her laugh.  It almost worked.

             
“Keep dreaming blondie, you’ll never be this awesome.” She actually smiled at me this time, “I’m going to bed.”  She started to walk back inside. 

“Wait!” Something had dawned on me.  She turned around, “Did you help get the Siren off of me?  Were you concealing yourself?”

“I jump at any chance to kick a Siren’s ass.” She winked at me and closed the door.

Maybe she was
n’t that bad after all. I looked out over the dark water, thoughtful.  A part of me actually wanted the legend to be true.  And it would also tell me who my parents were and who I was.  I wanted that more than anything.  But if Thetis was really my mother, who was my father?  And why would they abandon me?  The more I thought about it the more I wanted to know for sure.  Either way I would be a little closer to finding out who I was and where I came from.  Carmen was right; I could do almost all of the things Thetis could.  I knew I had foresight and could manipulate the ocean.  I knew I could breathe underwater, but I still wasn’t sure about having an affinity for every single animal in the ocean.  That seemed like a tall order.  And manipulating the wind and the shore?  Seriously? Maybe the next day before we made it to the Isles I could test out some of the theories.  Could I really be destined to be the leader of the Tydes?  And what about Keto?  No wonder the Sirens didn’t like me.  That would also explain Isadora and Priscilla’s aversion to me.  As I felt the weight of the world fall on my shoulders, I walked back inside and decided to get some sleep.

 

~Ӂ~

 

The next day brought abundant sunshine and clear blue skies.  We expected to make it to the Fortunate Isle by late afternoon. We had obviously been followed by one Siren, so it was entirely possible that there were more where she came from.  We hadn’t seen any other visitors since.  I had a feeling it had everything to do with the three great white sharks trailing the yacht.  They kept a reasonable distance, but they were always there.  Not having Finn here, three sharks the size of school buses was just as good. 

We gathered on the third level
to eat lunch and to dissect Nicolet’s poem for the hundredth time.  We were trying to come up with a good plan, but we weren’t getting very far.  Willow read the third stanza out loud one more time.

 

hidden amongst the mangroves

beyond the blue lagoon

stands the house of thetis

seen only by those deemed true

 

“So
is Kira at Thetis’s house?” Phoebe’s brow furrowed in thought as she picked at the rest of her ham sandwich.


That’s what we’re hoping, but I think we should just get on the island first and then go off of Stasia’s vision,” Willow suggested.  She had way too much faith in me.

“But I don
’t know exactly where I went into the woods.  The beach is just one big circle; we could be wandering around for hours.  Plus we don’t know for sure that she’ll be where she was in my vision by the time we get there.”  I didn’t want to depend too much on my vision.  There were too many unknowns.  Willow nodded and read the last stanza, which was making me the most uneasy. 

 

she whispers to the creatures

and answers to the blue

the heart of the Isle rejoices

its soul to be renewed.

 

             
“It’s definitely talking about Stasia,” Olivia said absently as she set up the cruise control from her seat at the controls.  Her assumption was exactly why I didn’t like the last stanza.  I just wanted to save Kira, not renew an entire island’s soul.

             
“I honestly think we should just concentrate on getting admittance to the island.  Once we figure that out we can regroup and go from there.” I tried to convince them as much as myself.

             
“I don’t know if playing it by ear is really the best idea.”  Carmen scrunched her nose.  And I understood her opinion; I just didn’t think we had much of a choice.

             
“Stasia’s right,” I silently thanked Willow; always the voice of reason, “we don’t have enough information to make any hard fast plans once we’re on the island.  We could sit around all day coming up with a million scenarios that may or may not happen.  The best thing to do is jump in with both feet and hit the ground running.”  Everyone reluctantly nodded their heads in agreement.  None of us felt completely comfortable with what we were about to embark upon, but Kira was depending on us and I wasn’t going to let her down.  I stood up.

             
“So….” I shrugged my shoulders innocently and smiled shyly, “I was thinking about going outside to figure out if I’m the direct descendent of the most powerful Sea Goddess to ever live.  Anybody wanna come?” 

             
“Yes!” They all cheered and gave me warm smiles.  Phoebe was so excited; she almost knocked over the coffee table trying to stand up.  They followed me downstairs to the back deck, while Captain Olivia manned the controls.

             
I had to find out if I could manipulate sand and wind, but being nowhere near a shore, sand would have to wait.  I had no idea how to manipulate wind, but I was going to give it a try. With the yacht moving at full speed, there was only one area on the deck that wasn’t windy.   

             
“See if you can make the wind blow around Phoebe,” Carmen suggested.

             
“Why do I have to be the guinea pig?” Phoebe whined.

             
“Do I really have to answer that?” Carmen smirked at her. 

             
“Nobody has to be the guinea pig,” I stood at the corner of the deck, where an extension from the body of the yacht stretched out, shielding me from the wind, “I’ll just see if I can make the wind blow around my body first.”  I briefly took inventory of myself.  My hair wasn’t blowing around, nor was my clothes.  Taking a wild guess, I closed my eyes and put my hands up.  I tried to channel my emotions like Finn had taught me in the ocean.  I calmed myself and imagined the air compressing and swirling around me.  After a couple of minutes, I didn’t feel a thing, so I hesitantly peeked out one eye.  No wind.  Not even a slight breeze around me. 

Other books

Loving the Band by Emily Baker
With the Old Breed by E.B. Sledge
Los intrusos de Gor by John Norman
The Helsinki Pact by Alex Cugia
The Brush Off by Laura Bradley
The Opposite House by Helen Oyeyemi
Evil Friendship by Packer, Vin