Read 18 Truths Online

Authors: Jamie Ayres

Tags: #Young Adult, #Romance, #Fantasy

18 Truths (6 page)

“What the heck?” Nate sputtered.

“More like Hell.” Riel didn’t bother to mask his irritation, and I ventured to guess that was normal for him.

I swallowed hard as I glanced from Nate to Riel to Ash.

Ash looked back at me with a smile that wavered.

“I thought flames licking your skin until you’re nothing was Hell.” I turned my gaze back to Nate. “Were there flames in your Hell?”

Nate opened and closed his mouth and shook his head. “No. Much worse.”

“Let’s review lesson number one.” Riel glared at us.

I didn’t think I liked the thought of Riel teaching us any lessons, but I doubted I had a say in the matter.

“I open the perceptions to reality in Hell, just as I do in Limbo.”

“Sounds like a lot of responsibility for one person,” Nate said, grabbing hold of my hand.

Riel gave a slight nod of his head. “For a
person
, it would be impossible. But yes, for me, it’s still a lot of responsibility. You two would do well to remember who you are dealing with.” A smirk slid up one side of his perfect face.

“So where you just took us, that’s our own brand of Hell, if we were sent there?” Unable to look Riel in the eye, I studied my shoes. I only asked out of curious habit because honestly, I already knew the answer, even if I didn’t want to.

“Ding, ding, ding. And it’s all yours should you fail to accept this mission, so your boyfriend better think about that next time he wants to so eloquently state his objections to an assignment I give you.”

Nate dropped my hand and put his arm around my shoulder. “Are you gonna ramble all day, or tell us about the roles we’re playing?”

I looked at Nate for a long beat, admiring his bravery, albeit
stupid
bravery. I just loved him so much; how could anyone not?

“All the details are in the backpack, Mr. Barca,” Ash told him. “As always, this mission is not to be taken lightly. Your souls and the souls you’re trying to save are all at risk. But this one is even more serious. Dr. Judy handpicked the pair of you for her daughter. Be careful out there. The enemy wants Grace’s soul even more than most since she’s the daughter of our head spirit guide.”

My mind flashed to my own Limbo, and my heart sunk. How could I reconcile keeping such a big secret from Grace? Nate and I were both so upset over the ruse. Taking a deep cleansing breath, I told myself there’d be time for panic attacks later. Losing my cool in front of our bosses, especially Riel, wouldn’t be the best idea, and I had a major shortage of those already.

Riel popped his wings out, ready to leave, and I found looking at him difficult again. “Your assignment begins next Monday when the summer session starts. Grace will be recovering in the faux hospital for the next few days anyway. Take the time to study all the information I’ve given you and formulate a plan of action. You’ll also have training sessions Monday through Friday of this week from eight to five. Ruth, the girl who let you into headquarters today, will lead you through those classes as sort of an initiation process. Good luck.”

Riel gave me a hard look. His sharp features startled me with their beauty, even in all his fury. I returned his stare, hiding a thousand insecure feelings behind one wide smile.

want a do-over.”

Dr. Judy crossed her arms over her chest. “There are no do-overs in life once you’re dead. All your friends have that YOLO saying backward. It should be YODO because really, you live every day, but… You Only Die Once.”

I looked at Nate. A grim expression twisted his mouth and I wondered if he was thinking what I thought. Where’s the candid camera? Because this had to be a joke.

Dr. Judy wrung her hands. “So, sorry, but no do-overs. And there are no shortcuts in the after-death purification process. There are things each person must accomplish here before they can move on, and you have. Congratulations.”

I watched Nate’s gaze travel around the room, to the couch against the wall, to the shelves filled with books and puzzles, finally to the chairs we sat in. “But why not just tell us from the start this was all fake? I mean, no one likes to feel duped, you know? Why not just tell us the situation we were in from the first time we met here?”

Dr. Judy smiled at Nate, and Nate stared at her.


Those are the rules of this realm. I don’t make them, but I play by them. My guess is many wouldn’t care about their success if they knew they were dead. Just like you two at the start of this process. Many wouldn’t care about their soul at first and the risk of truly dying as a consequence of not completing their mission. Think back to the beginning—you were both very depressed spirits.”

“Hey? You listening?” Nate’s nudging elbow penetrated my flashback.

“I don’t buy into their philosophy,” I muttered, the memory of Dr. Judy telling us about Limbo dissolving as I found myself back in my spirit guide seminar, my purple pen still poised over my journal to take notes.

“What do you mean?” he whispered, glancing at our instructor, Ruth, who was typing something on her computer in the far corner of the room.

I jerked my head toward the television screen, to the training video we were supposed to be watching: “Telling Your Assignment About Limbo: How To Break The News.”

Today was Memorial Day. I should’ve been relaxing at Grand Haven Beach with my friends. Instead, I was remembering the most pivotal day of my ‘life.’ The day when Dr. Judy finally revealed we were dead. I replayed the events over and over in my mind like a broken record, her words a sad song in my head. We were healed. We could move on to Heaven. I’d finally let Conner go. Only now, sitting here in this room, I felt like I’d gone from healed to freaking out faster than I could even say Limbo.

At first, when Nate and I learned the truth and met Ash and Riel and got our cool new book bags, everything seemed almost fun. But not now. Not after forty-eight hours of trying to process the indescribable truth that we were dead. Indescribable—what an apt word. There truly weren’t any words in the English language that I could use to describe the wonder and awe of everything that’d happened to me. No matter how great of a writer I was, there were just no words.

Mostly, I thought of Conner today. I thought my eighteen things taught me how to detach and let him go, but now I felt this need to find him in the Underworld. A need so strong I could barely stay in my seat. In many different ways, I felt like I was in worse shape now than I was after my ‘suicide.’ I cringed, just thinking of the stupid word. Being in that place where I could look at myself with love and forgiveness wasn’t possible anymore. How could I ever face myself in the mirror again, knowing the wreckage I left behind on Earth?

Truthfully, the suffering I experienced from the news of my death felt so deep, I didn’t think I’d ever heal from these fresh wounds. All of the life lessons my eighteen things list taught me seemed totally pointless.

My gaze wandered to the clock on the wall; only a half hour left and our first day of training would be over.

Sighing, I tried to focus on the words coming from the screen, instructing me on my responsibility to tell my assignment the truth about what happened to them once they were healed. I squeezed Nate’s hand beside me, glad I didn’t have to do this alone. I doubted if I could go through with our plan. Maybe he had what it took to be a spirit guide, but not me. But I also didn’t see any way out of this.

Nate slipped an arm around me and smiled. Smiling back, I reminded myself to maintain my composure despite dealing with my own emotions. There were a lot of people depending on me now—Nate, Dr. Judy, Grace, Riel and Ash, and maybe even Conner.

The video instructed us to deliver the news to our assignment as straightforwardly and succinctly as possible when the time came—no technical mumbo jumbo. We had to be prepared for their reaction. There could be screaming, yelling, and crying. They might throw themselves on the floor. They might try to flee the area in denial. They might physically grab us and demand to know how this was all happening.

Wondering why I hadn’t thought to do all those things when Dr. Judy delivered the news, I realized none of it mattered. Very quickly, I was realizing there were no words of comfort that could make them feel better, that nothing I would say could really help. Sure, I could apologize and answer all their questions. But even with the experience of being in their shoes at one time, I felt a sense of helplessness, knowing no matter how much training I received, it’d never be enough to deal with these things, over and over again for all of eternity.

In life, you learned from experiences. What did we learn from death? I thought back to the life list Dr. Judy had me write this past year. Turning the page in my journal, I made a T-chart. On one side I wrote “List” and the other I labeled “Lesson.” I tried to narrow down what each ‘thing’ taught me. Fire walking/Becoming fearless. Trying out for the cheerleading squad/Taking chances. Getting a record deal for the Cantankerous Monkey Squad/Following dreams. Doing whatever the Magic 8 Ball said for a day/Having adventures. Start telling people what I really think/Being true to myself. Starting a blog/Finding my passion. Letting go of guilt/forgiving myself.

Tearing out the page, I balled it up and shot the paper into the trash. Unfortunately, the past year was a lie, total crap. The truth was we don’t control anything, so why even try?

The video droned on, listing bullet points from today’s session. Reminding us that every ‘assignment’ was different, that things may happen very quickly and we may need to make decisions very fast, or they could move at a snail’s pace, but the important thing was to establish a rapport with the assignment right away. They don’t know us from a hole in the wall; they don’t know their soul is at stake.
Yeah, and to make matters worse, we have
to tell them everything will be okay, only to tell them a year later that they’re dead and their loved ones are grieving! But hey, all of that is okay, because
you
get to move on.

I felt like puking. I needed time and space to process my feelings. I wanted to go back to that moment two days ago so I could run up and down the hallways, just to let out all my frustrations. But now I had to respect Nate’s needs and be a model student, because those were the only two things left that I knew how to do. Even doing that would be hard, but if I shut off my heart; if I went back to autopilot and stuck to the script in this video when working with Grace, then maybe I would be all right, given a little time.
Fake it till I make it
.

But how could I ignore that feeling of guilt that was back in the pit of my stomach, weighing me down? How could I forget about Conner, knowing I could possibly get to him now, knowing there was a chance I could locate him in the Underworld? How could I help Grace when I didn’t even know what
my
next step should be? The training video hadn’t covered these things. I was just supposed to be strong, stoic, and move on.

And I was so sick of hearing those words: move on. I remembered the encouragement whispered by my friends: It’s not your fault you waited too long to administer CPR to Conner. You did everything you could to save him.

Other books

The Gentleman Outlaw and Me-Eli by Mary Downing Hahn
The Sails of Tau Ceti by Michael McCollum
The Moon and Sixpence by W Somerset Maugham
The Ghost of Ernie P. by Betty Ren Wright
Crimen En Directo by Camilla Läckberg
AdamsObsession by Sabrina York
Equilibrium by Imogen Rose
World's Edge by Ryan Kirk
Echoes of the Past by Susanne Matthews


readsbookonline.com Copyright 2016 - 2024