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  I pulled the phone out and flipped it open. "Hello?"

  "It's me. Just checking in on you." Scott's voice sounded tired and strained.

  "I'm still here and alien-free. How about you? How are finals? I know you were up late last night." I tried to extend the conversation just as I did whenever we passed in the house, like two strangers in the same hotel.

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  "I'm fine," he said shortly. "I have a night class tonight. So I'll call you at 7:00. Make sure your phone is on."

  "Scott–" I started but the phone clicked in my ear and then went dead. "Damnit," I said, loud enough to draw attention from the work crew. I snapped the phone closed and turned away, striding for my car before I lost my temper. It would do no good to go screaming around here, I told myself, hurrying past Jorge's truck. Everyone already thinks you're a lunatic. But Scott just made me so angry...

  Power flooded through me before I recognized the sensation. Equipment, bits of shingle, and floor tiles exploded from the back of Jorge's truck into the air. I screamed and threw my hands up even as I heard shouts of alarm from behind me. Heart thudding in my chest, I made myself lower my arms and pushed back against the power. The tools and debris from Jorge's truck dropped to the ground.

  My knees gave out, and I crouched down, trying to catch my breath. The tender skin on my left arm stung from being stretched so quickly and without warning. Hurried footsteps crunched on the ground behind me, and Jorge, looking shaken and sounding out of breath, knelt beside me.

  "Zara, you okay?"

  I nodded automatically, my mind occupied with calculating the possibilities. I'd been angry before, even more than this, and that had never happened. He helped me to my feet.

  "Did you see what happened?" he asked. I shook my head. It could have been another Observer, but no, I was in control. I dropped that stuff to the ground. That meant only one thing to me: Caelan.

  I pulled free of Jorge's grasp and began searching, some part of me refusing to believe it was possible, and another part unable to dismiss it. My mouth was dry, and my heart was pounding again.

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  "I think maybe you should go home, get some rest." Jorge rubbed his head uneasily as I walked past him, looking around, not sure where to start.

  Somebody else saw them first.

  " ¡Dios Mío! " The shout came up from one of Jorge's crew and we both bolted in that direction.

  And there, across the street from the diner, standing in front of the old movie theater, right next to the alley where Sheriff Brigham had arrested him, was Caelan. He appeared to be alive, whole, and reasonably healthy. I covered my mouth with my hand to stop the cry that hung in my throat. My knees went wobbly again, but this time, Jorge was not there to help. Then, to the right and left of Caelan, Asha, Thane, and Namere came out of the shadows of the movie theater overhang. In the bright light of the afternoon, their eyes glowed silver, making it impossible to miss what they were.

  A burst of rapid Spanish and English erupted behind me. Car doors opened and slammed shut, and tires spewed gravel. Clearly, the publicity surrounding what had happened to me had made the residents of Silver Springs much more capable of identifying Observers than they had been before.

  I kept my eyes on the sight across from me. I was afraid if I blinked they would all disappear, another of those bewildering visions.

  Fortunately, there was no traffic across Main Street because I didn't even look when I crossed. I stopped on the sidewalk a few feet from Caelan and the others, afraid to go any closer. It took me two tries, but I finally forced the words out. "What are you doing here?" I wrapped my arms tight around myself in an effort to stop the trembling, so badly did I want to reach for Caelan, to touch him, to make sure he was real and really here. But it was Asha who answered me. "You are foolish, human, if you think this is over because Nevan is dead." 246

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  I shook my head, forcing myself to concentrate on something other than Caelan. "He wouldn't tell me who she was, the one who freed you. Only that you were created, not born..." I hesitated, then added, "just like me."

  "We could hear him," Namere said softly. "The drugs he put in the air were meant to keep us still, mentally and physically, but not unconscious. We know what he said." The drugs had kept Scott under, but evidently, the effect was not the same on their metabolism, which meant Nevan hadn't known that or he'd lied. Either way, they would have been trapped, awake, but unable to move when that fluid came rushing in over their faces and into their noses. I shuddered.

  "Perhaps he is right. We are nothing more than tools created for his use, and another one simply used us in his stead," Asha said.

  "No," I said.

  "But," Asha continued, "there is only one way to know for certain."

  "Find the mystery female," I said.

  She gave a curt nod. "But even as we search for her, others may still look for us, others like Nevan who may wish us silent or dead."

  I nodded. Especially if Agent Brickman decided to follow up on that little hint I'd given him. Then, of course, there were the marvelous DNA test results due back any day now. That might be enough to get the humans–it was still odd to think that way–to figure out that all was not as it appeared and do something to save themselves. If not, I'd have to step in to help, somehow. Though I was pretty sure the Observers, at least the Council, would do everything they could to stop that effort.

  "We are not safe." Namere brushed her white blonde hair away from her eyes in a very human gesture.

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  "So we are proposing a solution of mutual benefit. You are stronger with us and we are stronger with you," Namere said. I shook my head. "I can't go back with you to Wisconsin. I'm rebuilding the diner, and I'm not even allowed to leave town, let alone the state, without notifying about ten people."

  "We will not return there," Asha said, her disgust at my stupidity evident in her tone. "Your government is waiting to seize anyone who enters there."

  "We would stay here, near you," Namere offered. Her words took me aback for a second. "It might not be any safer for you here. There's still a great deal of attention on me and I'm not...accepted here so much any more."

  "But here, we would simply be some of our kind who have chosen to reside in this area, not ones associated with you," Namere pointed out.

  I shook my head. "It doesn't matter. People will jump to the same conclusion. They will be suspicious and hateful toward you even if you've done nothing to them." I knew that from experience.

  "Then it is all the better that we are near," Thane said.

  "I don't know where you're going to stay," I said. "There's some room at my house, but–"

  "We have already procured a residence just outside the boundary of this town. We will contact you as needed." And with that, Asha turned on heel and headed off, all the others following her except Caelan. He had remained silent during those whole exchange, but I'd felt him watching me and now that the others were gone, I could return the favor.

  "You're alive." I nearly choked on the words.

  "It would seem so." The corner of his mouth flipped up in that familiar half smile. Just seeing it tore at my heart. I wiped at tears that I hadn't noticed starting. "How?" He gave a slight shrug. "Our connection ended before the last of my power was gone, leaving me with enough to survive and 248

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  enough to heal, though very slowly. But, clearly," he looked to where Jorge's truck had been, "some form of the connection must still exist."

  Self-preservation. Nevan had been right about their programming. "I...I thought you were dead. Scott said someone else died..." I trailed off. "Slick died, didn't he? I killed him too." My stomach roiled at this latest realization, and I pulled my arms tighter around myself.

  Caelan reached out, but hesitated before touch
ing me.

  "What are you afraid will happen?"

  His eyes flicked to mine, so serious and all silver in the bright daylight. "Everything," he said quietly. "Again." I didn't know what to say. Touch me anyway, and damn the consequences? We'd both nearly died. Don't ever touch me again?

  I knew what it was like to believe we would never again touch, and I thought it might be better to be dead than live with that grief again.

  "What happens now?" I said, not sure what else to say.

  "We wait, Asha plans and you continue to live your life as you would before," he hesitated, then continued, "as if you were a normal human."

  I laughed, but it sounded wobbly and I couldn't seem to stop crying. "Normal? That doesn't exist for me anymore." He touched my cheek with the tip of his finger, stopping a tear in its tracks and wiping it away. I held my breath. Nothing happened, but the sheer release of tension at feeling his touch again.

  I let out a shaky breath. "No mayhem, no death."

  "Not yet."

  I looked away. "You should go, catch up with the others." I tried to keep my voice steady. "It's better if you're not alone. Humans aren't as strong as you, but when we're determined, we can surprise you."

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  "So I have seen," he said. Then with a whisper of a touch against my hair, so light I might have imagined it, he was gone. I didn't turn to watch him leave, afraid I would go after him or he would turn back. But he was alive and here, and that was more than I could have imagined an hour ago. It would have to be enough for now.

  The End

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  Eye of the Beholder

  Book two

  A Zara Mitchell Story

  Coming Soon

  from

  Echelon Press Publishing

  Turn the page for an excerpt

  It all started with that damn website. If Caelan hadn't found it, none of this would have happened.

  Actually, that's probably not true. I was caught between two worlds and living in neither–you can guess how well that was working. It was only a matter of time before everything boiled over. The website just happened to be the last bit of heat needed to send us all over the edge.

  I was at the diner for the grand re-opening party on Sunday night. We'd been out of business for well over six months, and to jump-start demand at the new and improved Silver Spoon, I'd decided to throw a party…with free food. It was amazing what people would forgive for a little cake and punch. Citizens of Silver Springs who would have happily spit on me yesterday were enjoying a second round of appetizers tonight. All hail the healing power of pigs in a blanket.

  But despite the obvious success of the party, I couldn't enjoy it. Just because people showed up for free food didn't mean they'd come back when they had to pay. And unbeknownst to my brother Scott, I'd used our last bit of money to pay for the spread tonight. So while I dashed to and from the kitchen, dodging the carefully timed elbow or sudden appearance of a size 11 foot in my path–evidently free food didn't make them that happy–my brain was pre-occupied with more mundane things. Like, how was I going to keep Scott from finding out that we were more than a month late on the house mortgage? How could I hire people when I had no money? And my personal favorite, exactly how much did it cost to declare personal bankruptcy? It actually costs money to declare that you have no money–did you know that?

  All of this was perhaps why I missed the signal. I was bussing

  a table in the far corner of the diner–my least favorite task. When I reached for the last coffee cup, it slipped away from my fingers. So caught up in my own thoughts and worries, I didn't even pause before trying to grab it again. After all, wet hands, slick ceramic surface–no mystery there.

  Then the cup shot away from my grasp in a zig zag pattern across the table, accelerating until it hurled itself past me, leaping over the edge and smashing into the ground with a much louder than normal crash. My heart jumped into my throat. The party stopped for a second, everyone looking around for the source of the sudden noise.

  I waved it off, plastering on a fake smile. "No problem. Just a little clumsy."

  From across the room, I heard Sheriff Brigham's familiar snicker. "Probably thought it was one of them alien-possessed cups."

  Oh, yes, the trauma of my life was one never-ending source of amusement for Brigham. Always glad to help. Though, this time, he might have been closer to the truth than he ever dreamed. My new powers tended to be a little out of control at times, but more often than not, they did what I wanted, just in excess. So, if I wanted the cup to be in my hand, it would have flung itself at me full-force, not run away. That meant someone else was here and, more likely than not, having a laugh at my expense. And now was so not the time.

  As I set the gray plastic tub of dirty dishes on table and bent down to pick up the shattered ceramic pieces, I caught sight of Mrs. Sutton's pale face and wide-eyed stare.

  "Did you see…that cup…it moved like it had a mind of its own. I never…" She raised a hand to the silk scarf at her throat, clearly unsettled by the whole unpleasant matter. I rolled my eyes. Of course, this little incident would have to happen in front of the biggest gossip in town. Mrs. Sutton owned

  the women's boutique next door. She must have come from a rich family because otherwise I didn't see how she could stay in business in a town where sales on cowboy hats and coveralls at the feed store determined the new look for the season. During the slow hours for her store, pretty much from nine to five every day, Mrs. Sutton liked to pass the time with her nose pressed against the front window of her shop and the phone imbedded in her ear. I shrugged, pretending nonchalance. "Oh, you know, the table was wet and there was probably an air bubble trapped under the cup." Except the table was clearly bone-dry and the cup had been right-side up at the time. Oh, well.

  Mrs. Sutton looked less than convinced, and who could blame her?

  "Excuse me," I muttered. Standing up, I grabbed the tub of dirties and headed for the kitchen, cursing Namere under my breath. It had to be her. She'd probably flipped the locks on the back door in the kitchen to let herself in–being an alien-human hybrid with limited telekinesis did come in handy sometimes…

  About the Author:

 

  The daughter of a Lutheran minister and a teacher, Stacey never found any shortage of books in her house or people to read to her (though her mother swears she still has most of Little House on the Prairie memorized from reading it aloud so often). Stacey created her first story before she could even write, dictating it to her mother, who jotted it down on a paper bag.

  Her father introduced her to science fiction with Star Wars and seven episodes of the original Star Trek series on tapes that she watched over and over again. Always being the new kid in school helped, too. Stacey entertained herself by making up stories, mostly about being a princess from another planet hidden among the humans for her own safety. Even now, she still wonders about that!

  Stacey graduated from Valparaiso University in 1997 with an English degree. She loves writing stories, and she is grateful to God every time she is given the opportunity to do so.

  She currently lives in the Chicago suburbs with her husband, Greg, and two retired racing greyhounds, Snostorm and Joezooka. Visit her website at www.staceyklemstein.com to email her or to learn more about The Silver Spoon and her other works.

 

 

 


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