The Starborn Saga (Books 1, 2, & 3) (44 page)

BOOK: The Starborn Saga (Books 1, 2, & 3)
3.32Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“You on the other hand,” the doctor continued,  “are very sick. We’re keeping a close eye on you, giving you the best medication we can to calm the symptoms.”

“Symptoms of what?” Jessi asked groggily. 

The doctor stood for a moment, mouth open as if searching for the best way to tell her the news. “We’re still trying to figure that one out,” he said.

“Is the baby infected?” Jessi asked.

“No,” the doctor answered. “We checked, she’s not.” 

“Excuse me,” one of the police officers interrupted. 

“Officer, please,” the doctor said. “My patient is in no condition to answer questions.”

“Sorry, doctor,” the officer said officer, his face flushing with anger, “but we have four dead bodies, two of them infected with something serious. We have a gunman on the loose, mangy rats crawling all over town, biting people. We need to find out what happened, and quick.”

The doctor said nothing else, but turned to leave the officers with Jessi. She didn’t mind answering their questions. She told them the whole truth, even the part about bashing Willow’s head into the floor. But as she told it, she started feeling sicker. She wasn’t entirely sure whether it was the virus in her body or if recounting the events that took place tonight just left a bad feeling in her gut.

All she wanted was to sleep. 

When the officers were finished, they promised to be checking in on her from time to time. She would be contacted soon, they told her. 

Jessi slipped in and out of consciousness throughout the night. At various times, she was wakened by small flashlights shining in her eyes. She would hear comments about how much worse she was getting. Her eyes were darkening. Saliva was beginning to drool out of her mouth uncontrollably. 

It continued like this all the next day. For most of the hours she just tried to sleep, but every time she woke, she felt worse. It felt like she had the constant need to wipe her nose. She was hungry and thirsty, but couldn’t keep anything down. Her skin first turned pale then started turning an ashy grey color. 

When the doctor came to visit her late in the evening, she grabbed him by the wrist. 

“Kill me,” she said, just above a whisper. “You’ve got to kill me.”

“I understand you aren’t feeling well,” the doctor said, “but we’re doing everything we can to get you better.”

“You don’t understand,” she said. “I’m dead already. Nothing you can do will stop me from dying.” She swallowed hard. “But you’ve got to end it now or I’ll wake back up. I’m going to try and eat you!”

The doctor placed a hand on her forehead. “You’re hot,” he said. He picked up his clipboard, writing a note. “We’re going to give you something that might help you calm a little.”

“You don’t understand,” Jessi repeated. 

A nurse came by and the doctor grabbed her by the arm. “Fever’s getting to her. She’s delusional. I don’t want you to do anything but be by her side and let me know if her condition changes at any moment, okay?”

“Yes doctor.”

“You hang in there,” he told Jessi. He shook his head as he left the room.

The good doctor was doing
everything he could to help Jessi, but she wasn’t delusional like he thought. She was in a lucid state of mind. She knew that if they let her die from the virus, she would wake up. She would infect somebody else. It was what happened with Willow. It would happen again. 

And what of all the rats that got out? The officer had said something about them being loose, biting people. Were they spreading the virus too? How many more like Jessi would the doctor be taking care of in the coming days?

Jessi grabbed the nurse’s hand. She could tell the woman wanted to recoil, but her bedside manner was better than that. 

“Get my baby out of here,” Jessi told her. “Get Evelyn out of here.”

Jessi lost consciousness just a few seconds after her final words. She fell asleep and didn’t wake again until after her death. The nurse stood by her side until the very end. A few others were scratched and bitten before a security guard finally shot her down. 

The doctor saw many more cases come into the hospital in the coming days. In the coming weeks, he ng weekswas dead and most hospitals were shut down. Someone was good enough to take the babies out of the nursery and try to find their parents though most had been orphaned.  

In the coming months, the country was in a state of emergency. Within the year, the
world
was in a state of emergency. 

Out there hiding away from it all was Professor Jeremiah Adams. He had been bitten and scratched like so many millions. But he wasn’t dead.

All of this happened sixty years ago. 

He is still alive. 

CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE

 

The next morning, I wake to the smell of breakfast cooking in the kitchen. Grandma stands at the stove while Jake sits at the table, eager to talk to me about what he did while I was gone. He tells me about how he helped the builders by moving materials throughout the day, and how one of them gave him a hat. 

I try to stay attentive as he talks, but I can’t think about anything except for my dream last night. 

Willow, Jessi, Jeremiah…Evelyn? Was she the baby from the dream? The greyskins took over about sixty years ago. Evelyn
is
about sixty years old. The thought baffles me. And to think that somehow, Jeremiah is still alive and well. He had been bitten. How is he still alive? On top of that, he would have to be at least a hundred years old now, but he doesn’t look anywhere close to that age. 

Jake and Grandma ask me how things went on my trip. I leave out most of the details, but tell them that I will have a busy day checking on Christopher and Sadie, as well as helping Aaron prepare the equipment if he needs me. Also, Connor and the others should be on their way with the satellite dish. 

“It’s going to keep the greyskins away?” Jake asks.

“Well, it will help us see them coming,” I answer. “Give us enough time to prepare for them. Maybe even stop them before they get here.”

“Or redirect them,” Grandma says, taking the safer route. 

“True,” I say. 

I thank Grandma for the breakfast and let her know that I’ll be around the village if they need anything. She assures me that they were going to be busy helping put up the wall. Everyone in the village has been pitching in, doing everything they can to get the wall ready as soon as possible. 

When I walk out of the house, I’m startled and glad to see Evelyn outside sitting on a stump, waiting for me. Her hands are folded neatly in her lap and she smiles at me as though I was a sight for sore eyes. It’s weird. 

“I suppose you had another restless night?” she asks. 

“Was that your intention?” I say, coming within a couple of feet of her. 

“I simply wanted you to see these things for yourself. I thought telling you about it wouldn’t be the same.”

“I’m sure it wouldn’t be.”

“Tell me about Connor and the others,” she says. 

“They are on their way here. They made it through safely.”

“That’s good to hear. I was disturbed by what you saw them go through.”

My mind is still stuck on the dream. “Evelyn, was that you in my dreams?”

“Who?”

“The baby. Jessi’s baby.”

“Yes,” she says. “It was.”

I nod my head having already known the truth. It seems that every time I learn something new about the past, I feel like there is so much more to learn. 

“How is Jeremiah still alive?” I ask. 

She takes a deep breath and exhales slowly. “That’s a question that has a very complicated answer, I’m sure. I don’t know how the science works exactly, but I think it has to do with him getting bitten by the greyskin. That man had been a Starborn. His gift of long life still flowed within him. I feel like it transferred to Jeremiah when he was bitten.”

“That’s pretty lucky if you ask me,” I say.

“For Jeremiah it is a blessing and a curse,” she answers back. “A blessing because he can live essentially forever. A curse because he has to live with the desires of a greyskin.”

I stiffen at her words. “What are you saying?”

“I’m saying that Jeremiah is a greyskin.”

“But that’s impossible,” I say. “He can think, he can make decisions. He has wants and desires.”

“Oh I didn’t mean he was fully a greyskin,” she says. “He just bears the burden of rot and a desire to eat flesh.”

The statement makes my insides go cold. That explains his appearance when I met with him in Screven then. He had been covered from head to toe in clothing, hardly exposing any of his skin. The smell of perfumes and colognes had nearly made me gag. Had he simply been covering up the smell of rot and decay?

“After sixty years, how has he not deteriorated?” I ask, but Evelyn says nothing to this question. Her face turns sour and she just shakes her head.

“I’ve come to talk to you about your friend that you brought to Springhill,” she says. 

“Who, Christopher?” I ask. 

“And his sister,” she says. 

“What about them?”

“They can’t stay here.”

I squint my eyes at Evelyn. I don’t really know where she thinks she has the authority to tell me what to do. I may have joined the Starborns against Jeremiah, but I didn’t sign up to take orders from her. 

“I suppose you’re going to tell me why?”

“If Jeremiah learns that we have a healer, he will bring everything he’s got.”

“What are you talking about?”

“Jeremiah has spent most of his life searching for Starborns. When he found long life, he had found the Holy Grail. But it came with a price. Since that day he’s been searching for the power of a healer. He needs a healer to cure him of the disease.”

This is all too crazy. “Could Christopher even heal that?”

Evelyn shrugs. “It doesn’t matter. If Jeremiah thinks he can, he’ll try to get him. He’ll do anything to get him. That’s why he wanted to use you to recruit more Starborns. It had nothing to do with making you indestructible guards for the colonies. It had nothing to do with helping the colonies at all. He wanted to make you and Aaron recruitment tools so, hopefully, a healer would emerge. Then he would swoop down and snatch him.” She sighs. “So he could live forever.”

All of this death…all of this destruction because of one man’s desire to be immortal.

“We can’t just send them away, Evelyn. They have nowhere to go.”

“And they’ll have nowhere to stay if they are discovered.”

“We’ll keep them a secret.”

“You can’t keep something like this a secret,” Evelyn said. “A Starborn with this kind of ability needs to be alone. He can’t stay in a t stay place like this. He will never get peace and quiet. Everybody would expect him to take on their sicknesses or injuries. Can you imagine taking everyone’s pain all the time?”

“Let him make the decision,” I say. 

“Make sure he knows what he is facing,” she answers back. “If Jeremiah finds out about him, he won’t be stopped.” She stands from the stump and turns her back to me, but stops for a moment. “Your dreams are not over. There is more for you to see.” 

I watch her walk away slowly. I don’t necessarily want there to be any more dreams. I feel like I’ve learned too much already. But it’s not just something I’d be willing to give up. The more I have these dreams, the more I’m able to understand my enemy. The more I can be prepared.

I decide to walk to the front entrance of the village and can’t help but notice how much work has been done in so little time.

“Spectacular, isn’t it?” a voice sounds from behind me. 

Turning, I see Austin walking slowly toward me. I can’t help but smile at the old man. 

“The elders must have really motivated the villagers to get to work,” I say. 

“Actually, it was your grandma,” he replies with a grin. “She’s very proud of you.”

I snort at this. “Proud of what? All I’ve done is cause trouble for everyone.”

“Trouble? Do you not remember what state we were in before you left?”

“Is it that much different now?”

“Sickness is still a threat. Always. Food is often scarce, but we’ve never had a wall like this one. Never had the chance to make one. The villagers’ morale is high too. It’s good to have people to look up to. To have hope.” He takes a step closer to me. “Despair always ends in death, but hope inspires life. Hope is our greatest ally. Hope will get us through to the end.”

“And what’s the end?” I ask. “If we destroy the colony system and take down oppressors like Jeremiah, what is the end?”

Austin lets out a short chuckle. “For Springhill, the end never had anything to do with Jeremiah. I know you are far removed from the Mora that left here only a couple of weeks ago, but if you remember, Jeremiah used to be our hope.”

“Thought the elders didn’t want me to go.”

“We didn’t. But that was for your own safety. When you left, it actually gave us hope. You should have seen the joy on the villager’s faces when the Screven guards arrived. They came with walls and food. They even tended to our sick.”

I can’t imagine the look that I’m giving Austin right now. If my face shows anything that I feel inside, it’s horror and shock. Not that the Screven guards actually did this to them, but that I have taken all of that away from Springhill. I have come in here to kill and retake it for myself. 

“Don’t worry,” Austin says, reading my expression. “It was good for a few days, but that doesn’t change the fact that they came in and took away our rights. They instantly took your brother and grandma hostage once they found out who they were. We could see that it was a bad situation. But at the same time, we were being helped. Do you understand what I’m saying?”

I shake my head. 

“I’m saying that because of you, Screven gave us a wall, medicine, and enough food to last a long time. Food that we can store up for a while to save for even harder times. Now that we all know about Jeremiah’s intentions, we are happy to have the Starborns leading us. All of you have given us a brighter hope than we could have asked for.”

Austin’s words mean more to me than he realizes. Or maybe he doe maybe hs realize it and that’s why he came to me. 

Other books

Silent Killer by Beverly Barton
Elixir by Galdi, Ted
City of a Thousand Dolls by Forster, Miriam
Counterpointe by Warner, Ann
The Grifters by Jim Thompson
Darcy's Diary by Grange, Amanda
Cave of Terror by Amber Dawn Bell
Alone by Richard E. Byrd
Blood and Rain by Glenn Rolfe
The Waiting Game by Sheila Bugler