Whispering Tower

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by Katie Clark




  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  What People are Saying

  Other books by Katie Clark

  PART ONE

  1

  2

  3

  4

  5

  6

  7

  8

  9

  10

  PART TWO

  11

  12

  13

  14

  15

  16

  17

  PART THREE

  18

  19

  20

  21

  22

  23

  24

  25

  26

  27

  28

  29

  30

  Note to the Reader:

  Thank you…

  You Can Help!

  God Can Help!

  Free Book Offer

  Whispering Tower

  Katie Clark

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales, is entirely coincidental.

  Whispering Tower

  COPYRIGHT 2019 by Katie Clark

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission of the author or Pelican Ventures, LLC except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews.

  eBook editions are licensed for your personal enjoyment only. eBooks may not be re-sold, copied or given to other people. If you would like to share an eBook edition, please purchase an additional copy for each person you share it with.

  Contact Information: [email protected]

  All scripture quotations, unless otherwise indicated, are taken from the Holy Bible, New International Version(R), NIV(R), Copyright 1973, 1978, 1984, 2011 by Biblica, Inc.™ Used by permission of Zondervan. All rights reserved worldwide. www.zondervan.com

  Cover Art by Nicola Martinez

  Watershed Books, a division of Pelican Ventures, LLC

  www.pelicanbookgroup.com PO Box 1738 *Aztec, NM * 87410

  Watershed Books praise and splash logo is a trademark of Pelican Ventures, LLC

  Publishing History

  First Watershed Edition, 2019

  Paperback Edition ISBN 978-1-5223-0200-1

  Electronic Edition ISBN 978-1-5223-0199-8

  Published in the United States of America

  Dedication

  To all my loves, always.

  What People are Saying about Shadowed Eden, book one in the Beguiled Series

  “Shadowed Eden is a unique and intriguing tale that will keep the reader guessing and turning pages to find out the secrets of this mysterious story, and the suspense doesn’t stop until its surprising end! I highly recommend it.” ~ Melanie Dickerson, award-winning YA author of The Merchant’s Daughter

  “A truly original premise, Shadowed Eden, is an exciting supernatural adventure filled with danger, redemption, and a cast of teenage characters that I grew to love. I enjoyed Clark’s story and look forward to seeing what she comes up with next.” ~ Jill Williamson, author of From Darkness Hid and Captives

  Other books by Katie Clark

  Enslaved Series

  Vanquished

  Redeemed

  Deliverance

  Beguiled Series

  Shadowed Eden

  Whispering Tower

  Other Titles

  The Rejected Princess

  Radio-wave Romance

  PART ONE

  II Kings 20:10-11

  “And Hezekiah answered, It is a light thing for the shadow to go down ten degrees: nay, but let the shadow return backward ten degrees. And Isaiah the prophet cried unto the Lord: and He brought the shadow ten degrees backward...”

  1

  Present Day

  Skye

  Skye stared at Big Ben in the distance, watched it tick away the time, taking her life with it. A few blocks from her hotel window, the London Eye Ferris wheel rose toward the sky. Tourists and locals mingled in the streets around it, preparing to start their day. Too bad she wouldn’t be starting hers down at the London Eye, instead of with breakfast in the hotel restaurant.

  “You’re not ready yet?” Mom’s impatient voice came from the door between their plush hotel rooms.

  Skye kept her mouth shut. She hated these trips, but she tried not to take it out on Mom. Most kids at school would kill for a parent who travelled the world and took their teen along, but long hours away from home, while Mom worked eighteen-hour days? Not fun. At least at home, she had the soup kitchen where she volunteered and the people who volunteered with her. The people who had become her friends.

  Here? She was on her own. Dad had offered to let Skye stay with him, and she’d almost said yes.

  Almost.

  “I’ll be ready.” She turned back to the window, her gaze going back to Big Ben.

  “Still working on homework?” Mom moved into the room. She glanced over Skye’s shoulder.

  Skye looked at her laptop screen. She’d been working through a lesson on ancient Mesopotamia from Mr. Kilpatrick’s class. Now, that was something to smile about. The rituals of the ancient peoples fascinated her. She’d gone over the information a few dozen times with her history teacher. He was great about video chatting with her, delving deeper into the customs, languages, and religions used four thousand years ago. He’d even helped her narrow down the best college choices if she planned to pursue archeology. Someone had to help her, since Mom never had the time.

  “I’m about halfway through.” Really, she should have been done hours ago. The time difference between Tennessee and London had jarred her, and she’d been awake forever. Besides, last time she’d slept was on the plane, and she’d had a bad dream she didn’t want to repeat.

  But Mom had mentioned breakfast with her business partner and his son, Philip Matthews, and Skye was hoping Mom would let her skip if she hadn’t finished her school work yet.

  “You’ll have lots of time to finish it later,” Mom said.

  OK, not skipping breakfast.

  “Go get ready,” Mom called over her shoulder as she moved back to her own room.

  Skye stayed put, her gaze going back to that clock. Big Ben, telling time for a hundred and fifty years. If only those fancy clock hands could wind backward. Back to a week ago, when Mom had announced the London trip. Back to just before she’d told Dad, and he’d invited her to stay with him and his new wife, Gloria. She’d asked Mom, and Mom had freaked. Yeah, she definitely would stop herself from asking that question. Besides, Dad had only invited her out of pity. His eyes had been anything but welcoming.

  She winced at the painful memory and quickly turned back to her laptop. After saving her work and shutting down the computer, she moved to the bathroom for a shower. Thick, plush carpet softened every footstep, and floor to ceiling windows lined an entire wall of her room.

  Three different shower heads blasted steamy water against the fancy tiles, and Skye took a deep breath. She would make it through this breakfast. Make it through this trip. As always.

  She’d already contacted All Nations Church, for whom she’d done benevolence work on past London trips. Keeping busy was the best way to keep her mind off of things like Mom yanking her around, and Dad patronizing her. And staying on the same hotel floor as Philip Matthews—for an entire summer.

  The hot water was good at burning away the bad feelings, allowing her body to relax and her mind to wander. Steam swirl
ed through the bathroom, and Skye took another deep, cleansing breath. Everything would be fine.

  The billowing steam fogged up the mirror. It reminded her of something.

  Billowing sand?

  She frowned. The dream. She had been somewhere dry and dusty. Alone?

  No, not alone, but she couldn’t remember who had come.

  Mrs. Garrison, one of the women who frequented the soup kitchen where she helped out back home, would call Skye’s dream déjà vu. Skye always smiled along with Mrs. Garrison’s crazy beliefs, but she didn’t go for stuff like déjà vu. Seeing into the future…or past? A little too hard to believe. No, the dream was probably her subconscious working through the stuff she was learning in history.

  Whatever it meant, it gave her nothing but bad feelings. Loneliness. Abandonment. Fear.

  Yeah. Bad feelings.

  She hurried through her blazing shower then dried her hair and threw on the least wrinkly outfit she could find. Looking in the mirror, she held in her sigh. Mom wouldn’t like the outfit—she always complained at Skye’s lack of interest in fashion—but Skye’s black leggings and long black tunic were pretty, in her opinion. Her soft, blonde hair fell in waves just below her shoulders, which Mom also hated.

  Skye couldn’t help it that she never quite met Mom’s expectations.

  She gritted her teeth as she grabbed her camera bag and headed to Mom’s side of the suite. They’d come to London lots of times for Mom’s business trips, but this one was different. Instead of a week-long trip of meetings and schmoozing, Mom and Philip’s dad were overseeing the building of Earth Corp’s newest skyscraper—Vague du Futur: the wave of the future. They would be in London for the last three weeks of school and for the entire summer.

  Mom’s job being on the fritz also made the trip different. Mom was being edged out by someone, and she suspected it was Phil Matthews, whom she’d been working with for ages.

  As much as Skye hated being taken advantage of, she felt sorry for Mom. In spite of all of Mom’s faults, Skye loved her, which was the only reason she’d finally agreed to come along on this torturous trip.

  “I’m ready.” Skye winced at the snap in her voice.

  Mom bent over her suitcase, digging through it. “Great.” She stood up, holding a small bag like a prize. “Almost done.” She rushed to the bathroom, and Skye got an eyeful of Mom’s outfit. Navy business suit, complete with white blouse, pearls, and nude heels.

  Yeah, Mom wouldn’t like Skye’s outfit, even if she didn’t mention it.

  Skye flopped onto the edge of the enormous bed. These suites were nicer than others they’d stayed at lately. This “wave of the future” building must be pulling in a big payday. Most of the time, the exuberance of the job came in the form of fancy gifts from Mom’s clients. Once, it was a purse from Paris. Skye had looked it up online, and it had been worth thousands. Mom had given the purse to her, and she’d pawned it to buy groceries for Mrs. Garrison. Another time, it’d been an old copper bracelet. It’d looked cool, as if it’d come from an ancient dig site. Skye had kept that one for a while, but the next time Mrs. Garrison ran out of food, Skye had hocked the bracelet, too.

  But this place? Way more expensive than a designer purse. Mom’s side of the suite was as fancy as Skye’s. Confusing art pieces lined the walls, swirling in messy waves. A fountain trickled water in one corner, and one side table held a large glass tube filled with colored sand art.

  Skye studied the art. The swirly paintings on the walls and the sand art all looked as if it’d been created by a five-year-old. It didn’t make any sense to her.

  Mom rushed from the bathroom a few minutes later, and they headed to the elevator together. Skye pulled out her camera and snapped a few pictures of the ornate elevator buttons. Mom quirked an eyebrow but didn’t say anything, going back to the e-mails on her phone instead.

  Skye hadn’t looked at her phone once since leaving the states. Mostly because she knew no one would be e-mailing or texting her. Eighty-year-old ladies like Mrs. Garrison didn’t use the latest technology.

  The elevator dinged, and Mom led them to the hotel’s restaurant.

  Skye held her stomach, hating the way it twisted. She’d managed to ignore her impending doom all morning, but breakfast with Philip Matthews? How could Mom do that to her?

  Yeah, she and Philip used to be friends, but that was about a million years ago. Before Dad left, and before Philip started acting weird around her. Before he ditched her in ninth grade for a whole new set of friends and started hanging out with the kids who called her “cloudy” Skye.

  “We’re meeting the Matthews’ party,” Mom told the host.

  He smiled and checked his book. Even this early, he wore a full tuxedo.

  Skye glanced at her own clothes again. Maybe she was underdressed.

  “You are the first to arrive,” he said, smile still in place. “Follow me.”

  Philip wasn’t here yet? Skye breathed out a relieved sigh. That was good. Maybe he’d have more success at getting out of the breakfast than she had—because there was no way he was not trying to get out of it. She may not have hung out with him for three years, but she still knew him.

  The Philip Matthews she remembered went after what he wanted, and she doubted he wanted to eat breakfast with her.

  2

  Philip

  Philip yawned as he flipped channels with the TV remote. The time change between America and Great Britain was catching up to him, but he would beat it. The luxurious hotel suite helped. A lot.

  The beds were enormous, with thick white comforters and a million pillows. Philip could practically get lost in the bed alone. That was exactly why he was still there, wearing his sweat pants and a t-shirt.

  The change of pace was precisely what he needed after the school year he’d been having. His latest breakup had been a disaster. Mari had called him on all his mess-ups—right in front of two dozen other students. At first, he’d blown it off, but her words kept buzzing through his head.

  He knew why. She was right. He’d become a jerk.

  The sound of running water came from the bathroom as Dad showered, and Philip took a deep breath. This would be the perfect summer vacation, giving him the opportunity to work out all his issues. Perfect, sans the school work he had to do online, of course.

  Dad had insisted he keep up. Why would any guy need to know about ancient Middle Eastern religious rituals? Doing school work only reminded him of school and the constant pressure that he had an image to protect. That any girl agreed to go out with him at this point was a miracle.

  Glancing around the posh hotel room, he retracted his thought. He knew the reason the girls kept coming. Money, plain and simple. He lived in the biggest house in the area, drove an awesome car. He had the promise of a new one when they returned home, but only if he “behaved.” Whatever that meant. Of course, girls flocked to him, at least girls like Mari, who were after popularity and fun. He shouldn’t have treated her so badly, though. Mari was nice, underneath all her makeup.

  The water stopped, and a moment later, Dad stepped from the bathroom. He was already dressed in khakis and a polo shirt, but water dripped from his hair. “Ready to start your first day in Europe?”

  “I plan to stay in bed all day, order room service, and stop by the pool later this afternoon.”

  “Don’t think so, sport.” Dad nudged the bottom of Philip’s foot. “Up and at ’em. We’re meeting Mrs. Guthrie and her daughter for breakfast.”

  Breakfast with Skye? “I think I’ll pass, Dad.”

  Dad’s eyebrows shot up. “Really? Because I thought you actually wanted that new car.” He shrugged and turned away. “No problem. Suit yourself.”

  Philip bounded from the bed and grabbed the jeans he’d tossed over the side of an arm chair. “I’m coming, but you’re playing dirty.”

  Dad grinned at him. “You can play however you want when you’re the parent.”

  “Keep that in mind when I put y
ou in the old folks’ home.”

  Dad’s deep, rumbling laughter made a strange tightening in Philip’s chest. When was the last time they’d talked and laughed together? Maybe this trip would be good in more ways than one.

  Besides, once Dad left for work, Philip could return to bed. He had months to explore the city. No hurry.

  He and Dad finished getting ready and headed to the elevator to ride down to the hotel restaurant. Even the elevator was lush with a thick, fancy carpet. The dark mahogany panels and crystal-like buttons added to the exquisite feel. He could definitely get used to this place. It was the first time he’d come on a business trip with Dad. Usually, he talked Dad into leaving him home for the short trips, but since this one was longer—and in Europe—Philip had convinced Dad he needed to come. It would be educational, and all that.

  Dad hadn’t cared one way or the other.

  The elevator stopped with an expensive-sounding ding, and Philip remembered who they were meeting. Keeping his shoulders straight, he strolled from the elevator and toward the restaurant with confidence, or at least as confident as he could pull off. He hadn’t eaten with Skye in a few years, not since Skye’s Dad left. Back then, the idea of helping her through that—when he wasn’t over his own mom leaving—was too much. She was the first girl he’d left in a lurch, but not the last.

  The thought left a sour taste in his mouth.

  They rounded the corner, and Skye and Mrs. Guthrie sat at a table near a sunny window. A small plant decorated the middle of the table, and fresh buds were just peeking out from their green shells.

  Philip kept his shoulders straight, but his stomach tightened. Just as he’d treated his girlfriends, he’d been a jerk to Skye. He hoped she didn’t spit in his expensive spritzer water when he wasn’t looking.

  “Morning, Catherine,” Dad said. He was always so calm, not as if he planned to con her out of all the accolades for their current job. Philip had heard him on the phone before they’d left the states, which was one of the reasons he’d decided he didn’t want to be like Dad after all.

 

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