TAKE ME TOMORROW
Shannon A. Thompson
This is a work of fiction.
Names, characters, places and incidents either are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
ISBN-10: 1940820219
ISBN-13: 978-1-940820-21-7
Copyright 2014 Shannon A. Thompson
Published by AEC Stellar Publishing, Inc.
Dedication
To my father – for every chat over coffee, the words will never cease.
Acknowledgements
My dedication says it all. “Take Me Tomorrow” was inspired by a single chat my father and I had over coffee. Many years have passed since that unforeseen afternoon, and my father supported me through every single one. Even though his psychic abilities couldn’t predict my future, he always believed in my publishing dream. For that reason, I want to thank him.
A lot of research was done for this novel, including hours of hunching over texts that morphed the story in a direction I never expected it to go, but my loyal team at AEC Stellar Publishing, Inc. always believed in it. For that, I want to thank Raymond Vogel, Heather Hebert, and Ky Grabowski. Special thanks goes out to Clarissa Yeo for designing the cover of my dreams, even before I saw it.
To all of my readers at ShannonAThompson.com and beyond, thank you. I love and appreciate every moment you’ve shared with me - today and into tomorrow.
~SAT
Table of Contents
Don’t Come Back
You Took Tomo
That Sounds Dangerous
You’re Telling Me Everything
Run If Anything Happens
You Have to Jump First
I Know You’re Trouble
Call the Police
Ask What You Want
Stay Home
It’s Too Late
Going to Die
You’ve Been Expecting Me
Who Are You
If You Can Risk Me
It Was a Lie
He Was Watching Me
Perfectly Still. Calm. Deadly.
Stop This Now
I Told You to Run
No One Was Silent
An Explosion
I’ll Kill You
I Was Dead
Ignore the Blood
The Broken Pieces
A Dim Halo
Goodbye
The Code
His Surrender
Who She Really Is
Ready to Escape
Shoot Them
Over the Edge
Tomorrow
Don’t Come Back
“Argos!”
I yelled at my elkhound-husky mix as I sprinted across the familiar ground. Dangling thorns tore at my clothes − a pair of grass-stained jeans and a worn gray sweater. The August heat made it too hot to wear fall clothes, but the durable cloth received most of the forest’s abuse as I dashed through the trees.
My dad’s land − the small patch of woods behind our house − was my home. Among the acres hid a long river, patches of old trees, remnants of a hiking trail, and a creek bed that curled throughout the land. I was in charge of checking on the land when my dad was out of the Topeka Region, which was more often than not, and I had learned where everything was when I was a child.
Spring was the best season − when everything smelled of moss, alive and wet. But it was August. The muggy air sucked all the life out of the plants, leaving them dry, disheveled, and dead. Today, the forest smelled of burnt grass and dried mud. Among the pivots, the creek bed, and the broken logs, I followed the trail, and my dependable dog ran in front of me. He explored the ground as if it were new every time.
Argos’ coarse, black coat bobbed through the oak trees, encouraging our twilight run. As the sun lowered in the sky, the forest swayed, barely cooling the summer air, and I relaxed, trying to breathe easier.
“Come on, boy,” I shouted, throwing a steel blade into a tree.
The trunk's bark split as Argos’ woof echoed around me. He barked every time I hit my target, and I laughed as I pulled a heavier blade out before continuing my sprint.
Slash. Stab. Shoot.
My father’s three ways to use a knife repeated like a mantra as I assessed which tree to practice my aim on next.
Release the blade horizontally when you throw it.
The rotting wood split on impact, and I leapt up, cheering for Argos to congratulate me with a bark, but he didn’t. He was silent, and I dug my heels into the ground.
Holding my breath, wind rushed through the shriveled leaves, and my heart thundered with the sudden gust of oxygen. The low growl of my dog was louder than any bark he expelled, and I reached up to grab my knife. Argos continued to growl as I slinked forward through the weeds, clutching the grip and listening.
Plants scratched at my heated face, but my entire body remained still. From the brush, I watched as Argos lowered to the ground, his fur rising, his canines bared. His keen brown eyes locked on his prey, a tall boy with broad shoulders and frayed, blond hair that hung in his eyes. The plain black t-shirt he wore made his skin look tanner than it actually was, and the right sleeve was ripped into pieces. He could’ve been living in the forest for days, but he didn’t seem bothered by his disheveled appearance. He seemed comfortable with it, like the forest had grown into him, and he definitely wasn’t afraid to attack my dog in order to survive.
“Down!” I shouted, hurdling out of the trees, and my dog’s paws dug into the dirt.
Thunder rolled across the clouds as the boy’s eyes locked onto mine. His chapped lips parted as if he was going to speak, but Argos barked, and the boy stepped back. Even then, his gaze remained locked on me. His irises were as green as the forest.
“Heel,” I commanded, and Argos walked to my side before sitting down.
The boy’s eyebrows rose, a light dancing in his eyes. “Oh, good. The demon has an owner.”
His voice was rough, as if he hadn’t spoken in days, and a smudge of dirt coated the side of his face where he had wiped sweat away. Even though his tone was sarcastically carefree, his stare was intense, shadowed by the setting sun. I recognized the stillness in his expression. It was a predatory look, the expression of an animal preparing an attack.
I raised my knife, and the blade flashed. “What are you doing here?”
His mossy eyes focused on my weapon. “Don’t you think the dog is a big enough weapon?”
“He’s trained to attack.”
His chin lifted. “Are you, too?”
I tensed. He wasn’t afraid of my knife, dog, or me. The muggy air was suffocating, and my curly hair scratched against the nape of my neck.
“Who are you?” I demanded an answer, holding my ground with Argos at my feet.
The stranger simply stared, his lips pressed together in a thin, white line. We remained frozen, neither of us willing to move first, except for Argos. My dog walked forward, growling. The boy bent his knees as if to prepare for a fight.
“Heel, Argos,” I repeated, keeping my eyes on the stranger. If he wouldn’t look away, I wouldn’t either.
A thin, red scrap curled down his bicep to his forearm where his shirt ripped. He kept one hand on the strap of his backpack while his other hand pressed a piece of paper into his palm. A black watch wrapped around his wrist, and when I looked back to his face, his eyes grew shadows beneath them. He couldn’t have been much older than me, but he looked at me as if I were a naïve child.
He waited a moment before he spoke, “So, you like the Odyssey, then?” he referred to my dog’s name.
I ignored him.
He shrugged at my focus and g
estured to my knife, “Do you even know how to use that?”
“Get out of here,” I threatened, thinking of all the times my father had cautioned me about the woods. Tomo addicts would collect in our acres after curfew. I was only supposed to check the woods during the day, and this was my karma for checking them at dusk. “I’ll call the police.”
“I don’t think you’ll call the police.” His laugh mimicked Argos’ quiet growl. “Or don’t you know those are illegal?”
My eyes flickered to my knife for only a moment. Throwing knives were illegal. I knew that. He knew that. Everyone knew that. Any kind of weaponry was illegal. The State deemed them too dangerous for the general population after the tomo massacre. My father had never listened. Using his governmental status to protect us from randomized searches, he welded knives in our basement and taught me how to fight with them properly.
The boy’s arrogance infuriated me. “Get off of my property.”
His eyes studied my face quickly, quietly, and undoubtedly efficiently, yet his expression was blank. “This is your property?” he asked. “You’re sure?”
I nodded, and he looked to his side, dropping all eye contact. My toes pressed into the ground, and my calves burned. A predator never turned their back on their prey, yet he did effortlessly. My father taught me to always face someone with a weapon, but here he was – shifting away as if I didn’t exist.
His eyes glanced at the black face of his watch as he ran a finger over the screen to clean the dirt off. When he looked up, he studied his surroundings instead of me. When his jaw locked, Argos barked, and the boy leapt back, so startled that I was sure he had forgotten we were standing right in front of him. He even dropped his paper.
When he leaned forward to grab it, Argos leapt toward him, snarling. Rage flashed behind the boy’s glare. Before he could do anything, I snatched up the slip of paper and shoved it deep into my pocket.
The boy straightened up, and his rage averted toward my pocket rather than my knife. Apparently, taking his piece of paper was more of a weapon than my knife was.
I didn’t say a word. The boy, on the other hand, opened his mouth to speak, only to have a car horn interrupt him.
Argos’ ears perked up as a red car drove into my driveway and stopped somewhere near the edge of the forest − only six acres away. The intruder leaned up as if his height allowed him to see over the trees. When he rocked on the back of his feet, he spoke, “Someone’s here.”
I kept my blade up. “I don’t care.”
He smirked. “You sure?”
“Sophia!” my name ripped through the trees as the sky continued to darken. Lightning shattered across the clouds. “Sophia! Argos!” I recognized my friend’s voice immediately. Miles was here.
The stranger grinned, flashing his teeth. “Sophia?”
I glared back. “I can stop Argos, but I can’t stop Miles.”
His head tipped to the side, and his blond hair sheltered his eyes. “Miles,” he repeated the name like a simple statement.
Miles yelled again, “Where are you?”
“Over here,” I screamed backward, keeping my eyes locked on the boy as I dropped my voice. “Get out of here, and don’t come back,” I ordered.
Instead of taking the moment to run, the boy glanced down at my pocket where I kept his paper. I tensed, waiting for an attack.
“Am I near the park?” His quiet tone was rushed. “That’s where I meant to go." His shoulders slumped in defeat. “Really.”
My heart lurched at his sudden change in demeanor, but I managed a nod toward the north. The forest opened up to the only park Topeka still had. “Don’t come back,” I whispered.
The boy’s expression softened. “Thank you,” he said before disappearing into the forest as quickly as he had appeared. The place where he once stood was empty, and it somehow seemed wrong, like a hundred-year-old tree had been cut down and removed without so much as an explanation.
The trees brushed against themselves, but I wasn’t sure if I was listening to the boy run or Miles as he got closer. It only took a minute for Miles to burst through the bushes. Argos' tag wagged at my friend, but Miles ignored my loyal pet.
My usually goofy friend was a mess. His mop of brown curls sprung into his widened eyes, and he wheezed from the run. His alarmed expression ruined any lasting comfort I maintained.
Something was wrong. Seriously wrong.
“What’s going on?” I asked, my heart already pounding, the rain beginning to fall around us in thick droplets.
“It’s Broden.” He shoved a recognizable silver-faced watch into my hands. “He’s in the hospital.”
You Took Tomo
“If we get caught − if you get caught − I had nothing to do with this,” Lyn said, her gaze shifting from the rearview mirror to her steering wheel. Her cropped, black hair, sleek, dark skin, and a pair of deep, brown eyes made her look bold and unafraid.
The first time I had ever seen her was the day she moved into my father’s house. She wore a purple sweater over her small baby bump. When she rolled the sleeves up, she revealed an array of tattoos. Birds, buildings, and vines circled over her arms, but the top of a bridge poked out of her collar.
They reminded me of Albany, the region my father and I had transferred from when I was seven. I had fleeting memories of my mother, the woman who stayed behind, but Lyn gifted me with her silver necklace the day we met.
“I know your mother,” she spoke like my counselor did, too soft, too delicate. As a motherless thirteen-year-old, I didn’t appreciate it. I was too angry. But the jewelry changed everything.
I grasped the necklace, and my cheeks burned. “I like your sweater,” I stated.
I was positive Lyn would continue chatting, but she ended it after she told me that her favorite color was purple. Now, three years later, her purple scrubs replaced her sweater, and her three-year-old boy slept in the backseat. Her son’s name was Falo.
“We won’t get caught,” I promised as rain splattered against the windshield.
My father’s black Jeep may have been government issued, but the night-pass sticker had yet to be applied. Even though Lyn was over eighteen, we could get pulled over because we were out after the ten o’clock curfew. The police had the right the check any vehicle, and Lyn didn’t have the legal right to transport a minor around. We were already breaking the law, and we hadn’t even arrived at the hospital.
Miles didn’t come with us for that very reason. He worked under my father as an intern for the Traveler’s Bureau, and he couldn’t risk his job. He returned home after delivering the news.
Broden had gotten into another fight with a boy, and Broden had lost. He was beaten up, but Miles left him at the hospital before he could be questioned. Why Miles thought he would be interrogated was beyond me, but he didn't like the police. No one did. Miles was barely able to recall the brawl, yet his words thundered inside of me as hard as the rain that pounded the roof of the Jeep.
I told myself I wouldn’t dwell on it, not until I saw Broden myself. Even so, I couldn’t let go of his silver watch for a second. I wouldn’t tell Lyn − my practical sister − what I was thinking. If I said anything, I would expose my entire day, including my run-in with the boy. Lyn could tell my father any or all of it, and I didn’t know if I wanted him to know anything. He might take my responsibility of scouring the acres away from me, and that was the only freedom I had.
I clutched the passenger door for support as Lyn sped down the road. Topeka’s clock tower loomed over us, the sharp hands pointing past curfew, but we continued to drive in silence. Lyn already had a plan in place in case we were pulled over. She always had a plan. Hopefully, the night patrol would accept the excuse.
Lyn rounded the last corner before the hospital and cursed at the sight of a police car. When it turned on its red and blue lights, my hand shot up to my mother’s heart-shaped necklace.
“Don’t talk,” Lyn ordered, pulling her long sleeves to her wr
ists so they covered her tattoos. Only Albany residents had tattoos, and Albany was notorious for being chaotic. Most citizens avoided the topic, and it was easy to when most denizens lived and died in whatever region they were born in. Lyn was an exception. She gained her Topeka citizenship through my father, but she wasn’t about to peak the officer’s suspicions by showing off her ink.
She pulled the Jeep over, and the vehicle rumbled beneath us. In a minute, the cop’s flashlight jumped in the rearview mirror as he stalked up to Lyn’s window. She had already unrolled it.
“Hello, officer,” she spoke as the bright light flashed in our eyes. It remained there, only allowing his silhouette to be visible. The officer was checking our eyes for reflecting irises. Everyone called it “cat-eyes.” It was a side effect caused by consuming tomo, the forbidden drug.
I squinted as he spoke, “How are we doing tonight?” His voice was harsh, and he lowered his flashlight.
“Trying to avoid the rain,” Lyn responded as she leaned forward to grab her wallet off of the console. “I’m a night-nurse,” she explained. “We received this Jeep last week, so I haven’t gotten my night pass yet,” she apologized, “but I should soon.”
The officer took her wallet, flipped it open, read the information, and looked up with a curious glance. His eyes were black. “And who’s this?” he asked, questioning my young age without hesitation. At this time, I was supposed to be sleeping in bed.
“Sophia Gray,” Lyn answered. “Her father is Dwayne Gray, cooperate manager in transportation communication for the State. He works for Wheston Phelps himself.” Lyn smiled as if she were proud of the fact that my father worked for our country’s dictator. I wanted to cringe. “I have guardian rights over her while he’s out of the region.”
“Is he traveling, then?” the man asked, and Lyn nodded. “Where is he?”
“I’m never told,” Lyn responded truthfully, “but his info is on the back of my card, and my son, Falo, is asleep in the backseat.”
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