Scavenger of Souls

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Authors: Joshua David Bellin

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For David Mayer

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

Everyone says writing your second book is harder than writing your first, and everyone is right. Without the people I'm about to name, I don't think I could have done it.

Four women top the list. My agent, Liza Fleissig of Liza Royce Agency, continues to astonish me with her energy, passion, and commitment to me and my books. My editor, Karen Wojtyla, is not only a great editor but a great teacher: she sees the potential in what I write, and she makes me work hard to realize it. Assistant editor Annie Nybo is able to sum up in very few words exactly what needs to be fixed in a manuscript. And my wife, Christine Saitz, has listened to me ramble for several years about Skaldi and a guy named Querry, yet she still supports what I do. If you're wondering why I gravitate toward strong women in my writing—well, wonder no longer.

This book wouldn't be anywhere near as beautiful as it is if not for the dedicated and creative people who helped prepare it for publication, including copy editor Brian D. Luster and cover designers Sonia Chaghatzbanian and Irene Metaxatos. Thanks for making my words just right and for bringing the visions in my head to life.

The writing life would be much more confusing if not for the wonderful friends I've made. These include the members
of the Fall Fourteeners—Austin Aslan, Kristine Carlson Asselin, Kate Boorman, Jaye Robin Brown, S. L. Duncan, Amy Finnegan, Joy N. Hensley, Kendall Kulper, Kristen Lippert-Martin, Shallee Macarthur, Lisa Maxwell, Kat Ross, and Sarah J. Schmitt—and the incredibly supportive community of writers with whom I share Pittsburgh as my home: Sally Alexander, Laura Lee Anderson, Linda M. Au, Jonathan Auxier, Caroline Carlson, Joe Coluccio, Nick Courage, Carrie Ann DiRisio, Erin Frankel, Joy Givens, Larry Ivkovich, Stephanie Keyes, Leah Pileggi, Thomas Sweterlitsch, Diane Turnshek, and many more. I also want to give a shout-out to the members of the KidLit Authors Club (especially Dianne Salerni) and to the many agency siblings who have supported me along the way: Kaye Baillie, Jenny Bardsley, Kerry O'Malley Cerra, Darlene Beck Jacobson, and (again) Sarah J. Schmitt. Thanks to all for being part of my extended writers' family.

The local chapter of the Society of Children's Book Writers and Illustrators, headed by Marcy Canterna, Kate Dopirak, and Nora Thompson, has put me in touch with some great people and opportunities, as have the librarians and teachers (too many to name) in area schools. I also need to mention five local bookstores that have supported me, both by hosting events and by displaying my work on their shelves: Mystery Lovers Bookshop, Classic Lines Bookstore, the Penguin Bookshop, and the Barnes & Noble stores in the Waterfront and Settlers Ridge. Thanks for embracing a local writer!

Jen Rees was the first to read the manuscript and give it the thumbs-up.
Two close writer-friends, Tom Isbell and Kat Ross, read the book at a later point and provided me with valuable feedback. My thanks to them not only for taking on this task but for their own novels, from which I've learned much.

I'm fortunate to have parents who filled my bookshelves and my mind when I was just getting started. Thanks, Mom and Dad. I'm also fortunate to have children who love my stories and understand my need to write them. Thanks, Lilly and Jonah.

This book is dedicated to my first high school English teacher, who was also the first teacher to suggest that I might make a career of writing. Sadly, he is no longer alive, and so I can't show him how much his words and example influenced me. But this book is for him. Every published writer has such a teacher. Every aspiring writer needs one.

And finally: my readers. I can't name you here (I'm sorry, but the acknowledgments would be too long!), but I can't thank you enough for your reviews, your questions, your emails, your drawings, your everything. You're why I keep writing. Drop me a line and let me know how you like this one.

PART ONE
NORTH
1

Aleka looked out over the
land and frowned.

She stood at the crest of a low hill, squinting in the sunlight, the lines deepening around her mouth. I tried to read her expression, but as usual I failed.

This was Aleka, after all. Her close-cropped, graying blond hair framed a face she could turn into a mask at a moment's notice. I'd been studying that face for the better part of a week, and I still had no idea what was going on behind her deep gray eyes.

Aleka. My mother. And as much a mystery to me as my own past.

After a long minute she spoke the name of her second-in-command. “Soon.”

Soon, a big guy with what might have been called a potbelly in a different time, came up beside her.

Aleka surveyed the unforgiving landscape, the lazy glint
of river the only sign of movement in the waste. “How long?”

“A week. Maybe two if we're extra careful.” He searched her face, but he must have come up empty too. “Why?”

She didn't answer. The others had edged closer, listening. Any conversation that hinted at our dwindling supply of canned goods got their attention.

But after another long look over the barren land, she turned and strode back down the hill, refusing to meet any of our eyes. Everyone watched her go in silence, until she disappeared behind a clump of rock that stood at the base of the hill.

“Well, that was enlightening,” Wali said.

There were sixteen of us, the last survivors of Survival Colony 9. Five grown-ups counting Aleka, Soon, our camp healer Tyris, our craftswoman Nekane, and the old woman whose name no one knew, a wraith with wild white hair and a threadbare shift the same drab gray-brown as our uniforms. For the past week we'd been carrying her on a homemade stretcher, while she gripped her late husband's collection container, a scuffed, bottle-green jar overflowing with scraps of his hair and fingernails. She was amazingly heavy for a woman who'd dwindled to skin and bones.

The rest of us were teens and younger. Wali, with his shaggy hair and bronzed muscles, the oldest at seventeen. Nessa, the only teenage girl left in our colony since the death of Wali's girlfriend, Korah. Then there was Adem, a tall skinny awkward guy who communicated mostly with gulps
and blushes. And the little ones, seven of them total, from ragged five-year-old Keely to knowing Zataias at age ten, with straggly-haired Bea in the middle.

And that left only me. Querry Genn. Fifteen years old last week, and thanks to an accident seven months ago, with no memory of the first fourteen.

Only my mother held the secret to who I was. But she wasn't talking.

She hadn't said a word to me the whole week. That entire time, we'd been creeping across a desert landscape of stripped stone and yawning crevices, the scars our ancestors had cut into the face of the land. For six of those seven days we'd been carrying the old woman. Aleka had driven us at a pace unusual even for her, with only short rests at the brutal height of day and long marches deep into the night. What she was hurrying for was another thing she wouldn't talk to me about.

When we'd left our camp by the river, the old woman had babbled on about mountains somewhere to the north, licking her lips while she talked as if she could taste the fresh air. She'd described green grass as high as our knees, wind rippling across it so it seemed to shimmer like something she called satin. She'd told us about yellow flowers and purple ones, trickling water so clear you could see brightly colored fish darting among the submerged stones. Clouds, she said, blanketed the mountain peaks, cool and white and soft, unlike the oppressive brown clouds that smothered the
sun but almost never rained in the world we knew. At first I refused to believe her, told myself that half of what she said had to be exaggerated or misremembered or just plain crazy. But like everyone else, I'd fallen in love with the picture she painted. None of the rest of us had seen mountains, not even Tyris, who'd been two or three years old when the wars started. After a lifetime in the desert, the prospect of mountains rearing up out of nowhere, white and purple and capped with gold from the sun, was irresistible.

By now, though, it seemed even the old woman had forgotten where we were headed. She'd lapsed into silence, except when she stroked her collection jar, mumbling to it. She slept most of the time, sometimes beating her hands against her chest and mouthing words no one could make out. But even when her eyes opened, her glassy expression showed no awareness of anyone or anything around her.

We set her stretcher down in the best shade we could find and stood there, waiting for Aleka to return. Nessa held the old woman's gnarled hand and sang softly, something the old woman had sung to her when Nessa was a kid. I tried to organize a game with the little ones, but they just flopped in the dirt, limbs flung everywhere in postures of dramatic protest. I'd learned the hard way that you couldn't get all seven of them to do anything at once, but occasionally, if you got one of them doing something that looked interesting enough, the others couldn't stand to be left out.

Today, though, it wasn't going to happen. A fossil hunt usually got them going, but this time even Keely wouldn't bite when I told him an old, rotting buffalo skull was a
T. rex
.

“I don't want to play that game, Querry,” he managed weakly, before putting his head down and closing his eyes. “It's boring.”

Without warning, Aleka stalked back to the group. To my complete surprise, she took my arm and pulled me away from the others. I stumbled to keep up with her long strides. When we reached the rock where she'd hidden herself before, she stopped, so suddenly she just about spun me around.

“Querry,” she said. “We need to talk.”

“We've needed to talk all week,” I said under my breath.

She heard me. She always did. “That will have to wait. This is priority.”

“Something else always is, isn't it?”

We faced off for a moment.

“I'm asking you to be patient,” she said. “And to believe I'm working on this.”

“Fine.” I wished for once I could meet her on even ground, but she had a good six inches on me, not to mention at least thirty years. “Let me know when you've got it all worked out.”

If I thought I'd get a reaction from that, I was wrong. Her face went into lockdown, and I was pretty sure the conversation was over. But then she asked, “What is it you want, Querry?”

“Answers,” I said. “The truth.” “Answers aren't always true,” she said. “And the truth isn't always the answer you want.”

“Whatever that means.”

She glared at me, but kept her voice in check.

“It means what it means,” she said. “For one, it means that Soon's estimate is wildly optimistic. I've checked our stores, and we have only a few days of food left. If we're even stingier than usual. Which is a risk, since there's nothing out here to supplement our supplies.”

“Why would Soon . . .”

She ignored me. “And it means the old woman is failing. Earlier today she asked me if she could talk to Laman.”

“You're kidding.”

“I wish I were.”

I stared at her, not knowing what to say. Laman Genn had led Survival Colony 9 for twenty-five years. But like so many of his followers, he'd died a little over a week ago, just before we set out on our journey.

Died. Been killed. I tried not to think about it, but I remembered the nest, the bloody wound in his side, the creature that had torn him open.

The Skaldi.

The ones we'd been fleeing all our lives. Monsters with the ability to consume and mimic human hosts. It was hard to believe anyone could forget them. Even though we'd destroyed their nest, I kept expecting them to reappear, like
a second nightmare that catches you when you think you're awake and drags you back under.

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