Night Star
Page 26
“Since the sixties.” He shrugs.
“Okay, right, and so, I’m sure that during all this time you’ve looked around a good bit, did your fair share of exploring, especially back in the beginning.”
He nods.
“And during those times, you said you’d never seen anything like this, right?”
He nods and sighs, though he’s also quick to add, “But then again, Summerland is a very big place. It’s quite possibly infinite for all I know. It’s not like I’ve ever come across any kinds of walls or borders, so it’s quite possible it’s been here all along and I missed it.”
I look away, trying to act as though I’m more than willing to drop it if he is, but I’m not the least bit convinced.
I can’t help feeling there’s something here that’s either caused by me or that I’m meant to see, or both. I mean, that’s what got me here in the first place. I simply asked the Summerland what it wanted me to know about it and it landed me here. But what I don’t know is why.
Is it somehow connected to all of those souls that, because of me, have ended up in the Shadowland?
Are they somehow making it grow?
Like adding fertilizer to a batch of weeds?
And if so, does that mean it will continue to encroach and maybe even take over the rest of Summerland?
“Ever,” Damen says. “We can explore if you want, but there’s really not much to see, is there? It seems like it’s just more and more of the same, doesn’t it?”
I gaze all around, reluctant to give up so easily, and yet not really knowing what I’m looking for, or even how to go about proving my theory. So I start to turn away. Start to move toward him again when I hear it.
The song.
Drifting from behind me, as though carried by a long and distant breeze, but still there’s no mistaking it.
No mistaking the voice—the words—the eerily haunting tune.
And I know without looking it’s her.
Turning to find her pointing finger, her crooked, gnarled hand, raised high as she sings:
From the mud it shall rise
Lifting upward toward vast dreamy skies
Just as you-you-you shall rise too…
Only this time, she continues, adding more lines she definitely didn’t sing the last time we were here:
From the deep and dark depths
It struggles toward the light
Desiring only one thing
The truth!
The truth of its being
But will you let it?
Will you let it rise and blossom and grow?
Or will you damn it to the depths?
Will you banish its worn and weary soul?
And just when I’m thinking it’s over, she does the weirdest thing.
She holds her hands up before her, cupping them as though anticipating some kind of offering, as Misa and Marco suddenly step out from behind her and stand on either side.
The two of them flanking her, gazing intently upon me, as the old woman closes her eyes in deep concentration as though trying to manifest something spectacular.
But all she gets for her efforts is a spray of gray ash that emanates from the center of her palms and falls gently to her feet.
And when she lifts her gaze to meet mine, her face appears stricken, as her eyes stare accusingly.
Damen grasps my arm and quickly pulls me away. Away from her. Away from them. Desperate to escape this creepy scene.
Both of us clueless as to who she is, where she came from, or what the song could possibly mean.
Both of us having no idea what her connection to Misa and Marco might be.
Only one thing is clear—the song is a warning.
The words intended for me to heed.
To hear.
She continues to sing, her voice soft, melodic, her words chasing behind us as we run back to our horse.
Back to the place of magick and manifesting and everything good.
Back to the relative safety of the earth plane, where we land side by side on a stark empty beach.
Our hands loosely clasped as we lie back on the sand and fight to catch our breath. Trying to make sense of the words, the disturbing scene we just witnessed.
Gazing up at a black, moonless sky bearing not one single star.
My night star is gone.
And for a moment, I’m overcome by this horrible, foreboding feeling that it’ll never return.
But then Damen whispers my name, his voice piercing the silence, piercing my thoughts.
And when I turn on my side to face him, seeing the way his face looms before me, his gaze filled with such reverence, so loving and kind—my mind floods with relief.
My night star is no longer here because I’m no longer in need of it.
The two of us shine in its place.
“That song is for me,” I tell him, voicing the words I know in my heart to be true. “Haven’s death, losing the shirt…” I pause and take a deep breath, feeling the assuring warmth of his finger as it gently traces my cheek. “It’s all part of my karma. And now, apparently, there’s something more I’m meant to do.”
Damen starts to speak, eager to comfort, to refute it, to erase the concern from my face.
But I’m quick to stop him, bringing my finger to his lips.
I’ve no need for those words.
Whatever the old woman sings about, I’m ready to face it.
Only later, not now.
“We’ll deal with it,” I say, my words at his cheek as I pull Damen to me. “Together, we’ll deal with everything. But for now…” My lips meet his, lingering as I savor the soft, sweet, almost feel of them. “For now let’s just be grateful for this.”
Destiny is within reach…
Don’t miss the final book in the Immortals series
Everlasting
Coming Summer 2011
Also by Alyson Noël
Radiance
Dark Flame
Shadowland
Blue Moon
Evermore
Cruel Summer
Saving Zoë
Kiss & Blog
Laguna Cove
Fly Me to the Moon
Art Geeks and Prom Queens
Faking 19
acknowledgments
Once again, big, sparkly, major thanks are owed to the St. Martin’s team: Matthew Shear, Rose Hilliard, Anne Marie Tallberg, Brittany Kleinfelter, Katy Hershberger, Angela Goddard, and everyone else who contributes so much!
Also, huge thanks to the Brandt & Hochman team: Gail Hochman, Bill Contardi, & Marianne Merola, for all that you do!
And, to my foreign publishers—thank you for all your hard work on the Immortals’ behalf!
I’m also incredibly grateful for the love and support of my family and friends (you know who you are!), with a special shout out to Jim & Stacia—those once a month dinners provide the perfect diversion!
And, as always, much gratitude goes to Sandy, because I really, truly couldn’t do it without him!
But, most of all, I want to thank my readers—you guys are THE ABSOLUTE BEST!
This is a work of fiction. All of the characters, organizations, and events portrayed in this novel are either products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.
NIGHT STAR. Copyright © 2010 by Alyson Noël, L.L.C. All rights reserved. For information, address St. Martin’s Press, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10010.
www.stmartins.com
ISBN: 978-0-312-59098-7
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