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Orenda

Page 5

by Silver, Ruth


  Bray knew better than to answer.

  Eilith pushed them into the small, dark room. A wooden table sat in the center and locked cabinets were fastened to the walls. “Keep your grubby paws off my vials if you want to live to see another sunrise. And, if you so much as disobey anyone inside my home, I will execute you both. I expect to have no trouble from either one of you.” Her tone held more than a hint of warning as she flashed a second set of razor sharp teeth. She definitely wasn’t human.

  Bray took a step back toward the cobblestone wall, stumbling over bones, and his hands pressed tightly against the cold material. He struggled to breathe. Why couldn't he wake up? This had to be a bad dream. Nothing seemed real.

  “Did you hear me, boy?” Eilith asked, pushing closer, trapping him. She reached her hand out and slapped his face to the side, pinning it to the wall. She examined his eyes; the hint of fear in his face no longer masked as her nails pierced his jaw and cheek, drawing blood.

  Bray attempted to nod. Eilith’s grip was tight. He’d never felt his heart pound so swiftly in his chest before. She released her grip.

  Eilith shut the door and locked them in the room.

  “Bones?” Bray’s voice trembled as he stared down at the remains littering the floor. “They’re animal, right?”

  “Keep telling yourself that, if it makes it easier.”

  Bray reached up to touch the scratches on his cheek and felt warm red blood on his palm.

  “At least she didn’t leave a scar,” Willow said, matter-of-factly. “The scratches are gone.” She gestured toward his cheek. “I guess she didn’t mean to actually hurt you.”

  “What is she?” Bray turned toward the small mirror attached to the wall. Willow was right; there wasn’t a mark on his face. “How?” Bray asked, examining the blood on his hands. He wiped the crimson onto his pants. “People don’t heal that quickly.”

  “Ordinarily, you’re right. However, Eilith is a sorceress.”

  “Sorceress?”

  “Demon is probably a more appropriate word for what she’s become. Takes some getting used to.” Willow sat down at the table.

  He’d never been in a stone castle before and couldn’t recall any near Cosima, Missouri. “Where am I?” He walked toward the window, understanding now why Eilith chose the sixth floor for them. There was no chance of an escape.

  “Orenda, my world, and the land where I live. Which is unlike anything you're accustomed to,” Willow said.

  “You're really not Lil?” he asked, trying to make sense of what he was seeing. He definitely wasn't waking up.

  Willow sighed. “What do you remember?”

  Bray explained to her what little he understood of how he’d gotten here—everything from Lil’s disappearance to hearing her voice in the forest.

  “It wasn't me in the forest, and I doubt it was your Lil. That must have been a trick of Eilith's to capture you. Eilith is always one step ahead in the manipulation game. If she wanted you here, she has her reasons. Lil went missing?” Willow looked surprised. “I tried to send Rawlie over when I was abducted. It must have worked. Although I had hoped he'd bring Jamie with him and stay far from Eilith.”

  “What would Eilith want with us?” He didn't want Lil, the girl he grew up with, to risk her own life to save his.

  “I can cross to your world and my friend Rawlie has the ability to bring us back. Perhaps Eilith believes you harbor the same ability. She’s devastated much of Orenda. I’m guessing she’s planning on attacking your world next.”

  Bray was still having a difficult time believing what he was hearing. “A few nights ago, Lil mentioned a dream.” He wondered if it could have been real.

  Willow stood and lifted a long bone, dropping it onto the table. Bray watched, but didn't move or offer to help. “That's right. I sent her back. I’d send you back if I could.” She glanced at him sadly. “I don’t have any powers within Eilith's walls. We’d have to get miles beyond her borders, where the forest is rich and lush with life.”

  “So it was all true, the dream, the other reality.” He still couldn't believe it. Eilith had trapped him in Orenda, and there was little he could do to stop her from taking over his world. “We need a plan.”

  Lil jumped at the sound of a soft rap on the door. She stared out the window, wanting to find Bray and return home. Already she was on edge, and being cooped up wasn't helping. “Come in,” she said, not that it mattered. She was at their mercy.

  “Hi.” A girl with long chestnut hair and warm brown eyes poked her head into the room. “I'm Arianna. You must be Lil?” she asked, not waiting for a response as she perched at the edge of the mattress. “You're from the other world.”

  “That’s right,” Lil said, wondering why Arianna was here.

  “Rawlie mentioned you might be a little flustered.”

  “Flustered?” Lil asked. That wasn't the word she would have used to describe what she was feeling. “What I am is frustrated! My best friend was kidnapped., I'm stuck in a world I didn't even know existed a week ago, and I have to fight off a demon sorceress to save him.”

  “You won’t have to do it alone.”

  “If you don't mind.” Lil pushed herself off the bed. “The only help I need is for someone to show me the door. I'm leaving.”

  Arianna's eyes widened. “No, you shouldn't. You can't. I mean, you can if you really want—no one is forcing you to stay—but it isn't safe. Eilith will seek you out as well. She's taken Willow, probably to gain access to your world. Willow will keep your friend safe. Eilith seeks mortals. She lives off our flesh and blood.”

  “I don't believe you.” Lil walked out the bedroom door and down the hallway. “Jamie!” She wasn't about to leave the young boy at the sanctuary. “Get your bags. We're leaving.” Lil walked over to Jamie’s door, opening it.

  “We can't.” Jamie's eyes filled with fear and trepidation. “We'll be killed the minute we leave. Even if we stole Rawlie's car, we wouldn't get far. He's the protector, Lil. He's the only reason we're both not already dead.”

  “Protector?” Lil scoffed at the notion. “Right. Show me the way out, Arianna. We’re not going to be hostages in your home.”

  “Eilith isn't far from here. She'll sense when you've stepped onto her territory,” Arianna said as they descended the stairs. “We can't protect you outside the sanctuary, Lil.”

  Lil was determined. “I’ll be fine.” She was going to rescue Bray and then find a way back to her world. Hopefully upon rescuing Willow, she’d send them home.

  Arianna led her down to the main floor. “Without Rawlie or Hudson, I can only let you leave through the back gardens. I don't have a key to go through the main entrance.”

  “So, you're a hostage too?” Lil asked, surprised.

  “No! Of course not,” Arianna said. “I choose to live here, in peace and safety. Hudson and his family brought me in after the Scourge. They saved me when Eilith destroyed our world. They gave me a home. It's not their fault I don't have the same blood and can't open the entranceway. The guards protect us from letting in Eilith, or her destroyers who pose as us.”

  This was the most Lil had learned without fishing for information. “Tell me more,” Lil said.

  “I'll tell you everything, Lil,” Arianna said, her voice calm and steady. “We need your help. If you leave on your own, you won’t make it far.”

  Lil stood just before the French doors to the garden. She pushed them open and stepped outside into the warm air. It was the view she'd seen from the bedroom. Pink flowering magnolia trees stretched as far as the eye could see. A white iron table sat under two trees, along with matching chairs. They looked old. Lil took a seat, resting her hands on the table. “Let it be my decision.” She didn’t want these people to tell her what she had to do.

  “Eilith has been in power for the past eight years,” Arianna said. “She's wreaked havoc on our world, destroyed homes and families. A few survived and now live in places like our sanctuary, where she can'
t enter without burning.” A dark blue ribbon threaded with a square blue tile nestled against Arianna’s chest. The necklace dangled above her heart, shimmering like diamonds in the pink sun. Lil’s eyes were transfixed momentarily by the pendant, before she blinked twice and looked away.

  “Did Rawlie tell you the story of Pandora’s box?”

  Lil nodded.

  Arianna glanced back at the house before continuing the story. “In our world, we believe the Mystics recovered Pandora's box and stored the contents safely back inside where they belong, buried in concrete and stored in an unnamed tomb. Eilith found and opened the box, yet again. She unleashed a fate far worse the second time. What your world saw as disease and famine, our world had already seen once. The Scourge came with Eilith and it spread through Orenda fast. She was already a powerful sorceress. Perhaps that was how she discovered its location. After she unleashed evil, it infected our world like a disease. It tore apart flesh and sucked the souls right out of the living. It was horrifying to watch. Eilith sought older souls first. Rawlie thinks it's because the older the soul, the more experience and knowledge she gains from it.”

  “And Willow? Jamie?” Lil asked.

  “Willow's job when the Scourge happened was to protect your world—to keep Eilith and the evil she unleashed from seeking entrance through the gate. Willow's destiny was to stop Eilith. That's why Eilith’s gone after her and will go after you,” Arianna said. “I don't think it's random.”

  “What does she want with Willow?”

  “If she's still alive,” Arianna said. “I can't say. She doesn't take hostages—she kills.”

  “But she took Willow, and I saw that she took Bray.”

  Arianna watched as the door swung open and Rawlie stepped outside, approaching the two girls at the table. “It doesn't make sense unless she's planning something,” Arianna said.

  “Which is what?” Lil asked.

  “Arianna,” Rawlie interrupted their discussion. “Get inside. It’s time to get Lil suited up and prepared for tomorrow.”

  Lil raised an eyebrow and glanced at Arianna. “Prepared how?” If she was going up against a demon sorceress, she was screwed.

  Rawlie leaned down, his face just inches from Lil's. “Yes. We're going to get you prepared to fight Eilith and save your boyfriend. We’re running out of daylight.”

  Rawlie pushed away from the table and headed inside the sanctuary.

  “Come on,” Arianna sighed. “He's right. We need to prepare, and the only way to do that is to give you the sword and get you in gear.”

  “Sword?” Lil repeated, standing up from the iron table. She followed Arianna inside the mansion.

  “Of course, you didn't think we'd throw you at the mercy of an insanely powerful sorceress without a weapon?” Arianna asked, shocked. “What do you take us for, monsters? We're not like Eilith. We don't enjoy watching slayings, human or otherwise.”

  Lil stood in the training arena, staring up at the tall ceiling with horizontal wooden beams holding the building in place. Her gaze moved back down to the gray-cushioned floor. It was strange to walk on, like memory foam from back home.

  Lil dressed in protective gear that looked like ordinary clothing. She zipped the dark brown jacket tight to her chest. It looked of leather but felt heftier. She wouldn't get used to wearing it overnight. The black pants were less skin-tight than the jacket, but still rather close-fitted. Closer than most of the jeans Lil wore. She slipped on matching brown sneakers coated in the same material as the jacket.

  “Why am I wearing this?” Lil asked, watching as Arianna and Rawlie came out of a closet, carrying a sword like none she'd ever seen. It took the two of them to carry it to Lil. The sword was thick and delicately carved, and the handle was braided, the design originating just beyond the base of the sword. A series of intricate holes and designs separated the handle from the steel of the blade; the holes were just big enough for Lil's small hands to grasp the sword horizontally for close combat.

  “This is heavy,” Rawlie said, showing it to Lil. “Your blood is different though, and you should be able to carry it easier—we think.” He handed the sword to Lil.

  She reached for the handle and hesitated before she lifted it into the air. It was lighter than she had imagined. She’d expected it to be heavier since it had taken two of them to carry it. With ease, she whipped it through the air, slicing back and forth. Arianna and Rawlie took a quick step back to keep from getting hit.

  “It worked,” Arianna gasped.

  “What do you mean?” Lil reached around with the sword, sliding her hands into the small space, and practiced another slice through the air.

  “Not being of this world, it makes you stronger,” Arianna said. “If Eilith has any inkling, she'll want you dead. Bray too.”

  “Can’t Bray defend himself if he’s stronger?” Lil asked.

  Rawlie frowned. “It only works with certain elements. The sword, for example. Of course, when you return home, your powers will be muted. Like it never happened.”

  “What about the design on my fingernail?” Did it mean an inkling of power remained back home?

  Arianna gave Rawlie a confused glance.

  The door swung open and a boy a few years older, with short sandy brown hair, stepped into the room. His skin was pale and he had honey-brown eyes as well as delicate pink lips that frowned with his brow in concentration. “What's she doing here?” he spat, setting eyes on Lil.

  “Calm down, Hudson.” Arianna held up a hand.

  Lil lifted the sword, prepared to fight him if she had to defend herself. She wasn't letting anyone come between her and Bray.

  His brown eyes locked on Lil's. “Calm down?” he asked. He couldn't take his gaze from her, no matter how hard he tried. “You think bringing this girl to Orenda is going to save Willow? Do you see the way she holds the sword?” He laughed and reached out to snatch it from her, only to find Lil whirling it back and forth through the air. “Careful, or you'll poke your own eye out,” he said.

  “It's why we're here, to train her,” Rawlie said. “We're not throwing her into battle with Eilith without at least basic training.”

  “Yes, a day or two of training and the eternal suit. Do you think that's going to save either her or Willow?” Hudson asked with disgust. He glanced again at Lil.

  So this was his concern. Not the girl standing in front of him, but the fact that she might cause more harm than good. “Willow isn't the only one missing!” Lil shouted at Hudson. “Eilith took my friend Bray, too. I'm not leaving.” Fuming, she stood her ground, sword in hand.

  Rawlie walked over and stood between Hudson and Lil, holding his arms up to keep them apart. “That's enough! I need you both with your heads attached. Get yourselves in check. Hudson, if you're going to help, I need you to teach Lil the proper way to wield the sword. Otherwise, find Jamie and bring him here to train.”

  Hudson rolled his eyes. “I'm not an errand boy. Send Arianna to find Jamie.”

  “Fine, I'll go,” Arianna said.

  “Good enough for me.” Hudson grinned. “Now you want a lesson or two in using that sword, Lil?” he mocked, taunting her.

  The smile sent a chill through Lil, making her stomach flop. “I, uh, I'm sure I can figure it out on my own.” She wasn't confident in learning anything from Hudson, though if he knew anything, it had to be about fighting. He didn't seem to get along with anyone.

  “No, you can't. Let me help you,” Hudson said.

  Rawlie stepped out of the training arena, leaving Lil alone with the deranged psychopath. She tried not to show fear. With a resigned sigh, she handed Hudson the sword. “Fine.”

  It was heavy and Hudson struggled to hold it, but not before first stabbing her once in the chest, causing her to hit the ground with a thud. “First mistake. Not being prepared. Now, get up!” he demanded at once. “Don't be a baby. Eilith would have slit you open and gutted you by now.”

  “You just stabbed me.” Lil gasped for air
and moved her right hand over and across her chest. There was no mark, no cut, just a slight sizzle as the material stitched itself. The jacket saved her life.

  “Get up!” Hudson rolled his eyes and pointed the sword tip at the ground. His other hand helped Lil to her feet. He steadied the sword, to keep it from falling. “Eilith isn't going to wait for you. As soon as she discovers what you're wearing is a protection shield, she'll cut off your head. Use the eternal suit as a last resort.” It was a warning.

  “Okay, got it.” Lil reached for the sword. “Can I try it now?”

  “Knock yourself out.” Hudson smiled, watching as she lifted the blade with ease. His smile faltered as she used two hands to wield the sword through the air, whipping and whizzing it by him as he jumped, ducked, and even shifted sideways to keep her from killing him. “Careful. There's only one eternal suit.”

  Responsibilities

  Chapter 4

  “Do you think Lil is okay?” Bray asked.

  Willow used a pestle to crush the bone into a powder. Bray was not any help, standing there watching. Willow wondered if he was incapable of help, or if he just refused to work.

  “We’re lucky she’s not forcing us to clean up dead bodies. I think you should grab a bone and help me out.”

  Bray shot her a look and stalked to the opposite end of the table. He bent down, lifting the smallest bone he could find. “I need a pestle.”

  “Help yourself.” Willow pointed behind her at the assortment of various sized pestles on the counter. Evidently, Eilith crushed a lot of bones, herbs, whatever you could make into a potion.

  “Please tell me you're coming up with a plan to escape. I don’t want to become that guy.” Bray gestured to the skeleton on the table in front of them.

  “We just have to get downstairs without getting caught.”

  “Not easy considering she locked us in this place. We should be burying the dead, not smashing their bones.” Bray paused, the color draining from his face. “How is it even possible? How is any of this real?”

  “It's as real as you and I are,” Willow said. “I have to admit, you've handled the whole doppelganger aspect pretty well.”

 

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