Read Believe: The Complete Channie Series Online

Authors: Charlotte Abel

Tags: #Romance, #Paranormal, #Teen & Young Adult, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy, #Witches & Wizards, #Paranormal & Urban

Believe: The Complete Channie Series (171 page)

A
deep ache in Jonathan’s thighs, glutes and lower back woke him the next morning. “Damn horses.” 

The smell of fried eggs lured him out of bed. Gabriel was already gone, his bed made. Jonathan’s chat with Reuben hadn’t amounted to much other than a warning to obey every order, without hesitation or question, or suffer the consequences. Sort of like being in the army.

Jonathan got dressed then made his bed. It wasn’t exactly according to army standards, but it looked as good as Gabriel’s. His stomach growled, but his bladder insisted he make a quick detour down the hall before heading to the kitchen.

River stood in front of the stove, scowling at the sizzling, popping eggs in the skillet. “Ouch!” She flinched and jerked her hand back. “I hate cooking!”

Jonathan moved to her side and held out his hand. “Do you want some help with that?”

She gave him a sideways glance and snorted. “Men don’t cook.”

“Sure they do.” He bumped her hip with his and took the spatula out of her hand. “No wonder the eggs are popping, they’re drowning in grease.”

“Well, how else am I going to keep them from sticking?”

Jonathan tried to slip the spatula under an egg, but the blade didn’t have any give. He’d never thought about spatula design, but there was a huge difference between this one and the teflon coated utensils in his kitchen back home. He ended up breaking every one of the yolks but River didn’t complain. She carried the platter to the aspen log table and nodded at a chair. “Have a seat.”

“Aren’t you going to join me?” There were five eggs on the plate. No toast, no bacon, no orange juice, no milk—just eggs.

“I ate an hour ago.” River smirked at him. “We all did.”

“Why didn’t someone come wake me up?”

River sat down across from him, put an elbow on the table and rested her chin in her hand. “Eli wanted to, but I told him to leave you alone.”

“Eli? What’s he doing here?”

“He’s supposed to help out until the quarantine’s over and Reuben’s ranch hands can come back.”

“Great.” Jonathan shoveled a fork full of eggs into his mouth. They burned his tongue, but it was worth it.

“Just stay out of his way.”

“Where’s he sleeping?”

“At his mother’s cabin.” River rolled her eyes. “It’s only about a fifteen minute ride, but you should have heard him whining about how cold it was. I have no idea how he managed to become an enforcer.”

“Gabriel mentioned that Eli was politically connected. Maybe someone pulled some strings to get him in.”

The front door swung open and banged against the side of the house. A dark-haired, rosy-cheeked little boy ran inside.

“Hey!” River stood up and pointed at his feet. “Boots off.”

The kid hopped on one foot then the other, but made no move to remove his boots. “Is that him?”

“We won’t have any servants until the quarantine’s over.” River knelt in front of him and untied his boots. “I’m not mopping this floor.”

The kid stepped on the heel of one boot and pulled his foot out then kicked off the other one, sending it flying.

“Paul!” River grabbed his arms.

He ducked his chin but kept his gaze locked on River’s. It reminded Jonathan of how a dog acts when scolded.

River didn’t let go of him until he lowered his gaze to the floor.

As soon as he was free, Paul darted around River and ran straight to Jonathan. He skidded to a stop then put his hands on his hips and narrowed his eyes as he examined Jonathan from head to toe. “So, that’s what an outsider looks like.”

“Oh shit!” Jonathan scooted away from the table, backing away from Paul. “I’m still under quarantine.”

“We all are.” Reuben came in and shut the door behind him. “But don’t worry about it. You aren’t infected. Shula is just using the quarantine to manipulate everyone.”

Jonathan heaved a sigh of relief but kept his distance. “What about River’s fever? She’s healthy now, but she was really sick for about twelve hours.”

Reuben smiled. “River’s not contagious.”

Paul folded his arms across his chest. “River’s recruit said a bad word.”

“I heard.”

Jonathan’s heartbeat doubled.

“Are you going to whip him?”

Reuben leveled his gaze at Jonathan. “Not this time.”

Holy shit! Jonathan needed to clean up his language. He’d managed to keep from swearing around Mom and Dad even after he’d developed the habit around his friends; but army life had pretty much destroyed that filter. It’d be easier to just quit swearing all together than to stay on guard around Reuben.

River grabbed Jonathan’s shoulders and gave him a gentle push towards the hall. “Go get your parka, boots and gloves. I need to teach you how to do your chores.”

Paul followed River and Jonathan outside and ran circles around them like a hyper-active golden retriever.

River pointed at a pile of wood behind the house. “You already know how to chop wood, so that’s one of your chores.”

“How often?”

“Just be sure the wood box is full every night before you come in for supper. We only use wood for cooking so it shouldn’t be too hard.”

“Gabriel told me about the geothermal heating system Reuben engineered. I’m really impressed.”

“Reuben grew up inside Sanctuary Mountain, so he understands how these things work.” River didn’t cringe, gasp or slap her hand over her mouth.

“Is it okay to tell me about Sanctuary Mountain now?”

She tilted her head to the side and looked up for a moment then leveled her gaze at Jonathan. “There are two separate societies that make up New Eden. The people that live inside Sanctuary Mountain are pampered. They have access to medicine and doctors that are brought in from the outside world.”

“Wait a minute.” Jonathan grabbed River’s forearm and turned her to face him. “What do you mean ‘brought in’ from the outside world? Do these doctors come willingly?”

“Some of them.” River ducked her head, turning it sideways, away from Jonathan. She took a quick gulp of air then continued, talking faster. “The surface dwellers live simpler lives. We aren’t allowed to use anything we can’t manufacture ourselves.”

“Is that why you had me leave all my sh…uh…stuff back at that shack.”

“Yes.”

“Were you already plotting to keep me from leaving?”

River’s eyes widened as her cheeks flamed red.

Busted
.

“It was just a precaution. One that proved necessary. If Eli had found your bright red underwear, he never would have believed that I was recruiting you.”

Jonathan regretted sidetracking the discussion. He needed to learn more about how New Eden worked if he wanted to escape it. “So, the people that don’t live on the surface…”

“The heirs of Sanctuary?”

“Where do they live?”

“Inside Sanctuary Mountain.”

Jonathan wanted to ask her where Sanctuary was, but he needed to keep things conversational. She’d clam up if she realized he was interrogating her. “That can’t be much fun. How many people do have they have crammed inside the mountain?”

“About four hundred. It doesn’t sound like fun to me either, but the people that live there think it’s a great privilege. They look down their noses at the rest of us. Eli is an heir of Sanctuary.”

“Really? What’s he doing out here with us? Slumming it?”

“He’s an enforcer. By law, half of all enforcers serving on the surface have to be heirs of Sanctuary. Eli got stuck with surface duty this winter.”

“Are these heirs of Sanctuary the people that make all the rules?”

River nodded. “They’d never survive without us. We provide all their food. They provide all the laws.”

“Why do you guys put up with their tyranny? Do they out number you or have superior weapons?”

“Both.” River shot him a warning glance then tilted her head towards Paul. “Everyone else is going to be finished with morning chores before we even begin.”

In addition to chopping wood, Jonathan was responsible for taking care of Hot Sauce, cleaning out his stall, making sure he had plenty of water and hay, and exercising him for two hours every day. He was also supposed to help Paul clean the chicken coop and gather eggs twice a day. River left them to go do her own chores. Jonathan didn’t blame her. The smell of chicken shit made him gag but Paul promised him he’d get used to it. When they were done, Jonathan squatted down and told Paul to climb on. It was a bit of a hike back to the house and he was starving again.

“River mentioned something about servants earlier. Don’t they usually do the gross stuff?”

“Servants only work in the house.” Paul clung to Jonathan’s back like a monkey. “River’s not very good at women’s work, so Pa bought a couple of servants after Momma died.”

Jonathan arched his eyebrows. “You mean hired, right? Your dad pays the servants to work for him. Doesn’t he?”

“Pa feeds them and let’s them sleep in the bunk house. Why should he pay them?”

“Holy shit.”

Paul slapped his hand over Jonathan’s mouth. “Pa’ll wash your mouth out with soap and if that don’t work, he’ll tan your hide with his belt.”

Jonathan lifted his chin, freeing his mouth from Paul’s dirty fingers. He probably should wash his mouth out with soap to keep from getting salmonella. “I’ll keep that in mind. Swearing is a bad habit. It’s hard to stop once you start, so don’t ever start.”

“Pa says only ignorant sons a bitches use swear words.”

Jonathan’s shoulders shook as he tried to keep from laughing.

Paul
went down for a nap after lunch. Jonathan, River and Gabriel went for an hour long ride—which was all Jonathan’s butt could handle after the marathon ride from the quarantine cabin to the ranch. When they returned, they found Eli in the stable, mucking out Red’s stall. It was the first time Jonathan had seen him doing any sort of manual labor. He deserved a medal for resisting the urge to point that out.

The short horseback ride meant they had several hours of free time before supper. “What do you guys do around here for fun?”

“Once chores are done, we can do whatever we want—as long as it’s legal.” Gabriel wiped the tines of the pitchfork he’d been using with a wad of straw. “Do you wanna wrestle?”

Jonathan grinned at him. “You didn’t get enough yesterday?”

“Nope. Meet me in the hay barn when you’re done with stable chores.”

Eli stepped out of Red’s stall. “I want the first round. If he’s still standing when I’m done, you can go a round with him.”

River marched over to Eli and poked his chest with her finger. “Gabriel and I both heard you make the challenge. You can’t punish Jonathan after he beats the living daylights out of you.”

Eli knocked her hand away from his chest. “He’s not going to beat me.”

The hay barn wasn’t the safest place to spar—the frozen ground was hard as concrete and half a dozen antique farm implements hung from hooks on each wall. But according to Gabriel, that’s where everyone gathered for entertainment. Everything from good-natured wrestling matches to full-on fistfights to dances took place in the hay barn. Until Shula lifted quarantine, entertainment was going to be hard to come by.

River grabbed Jonathan’s elbow and pulled him closer. “Take your time grooming Saucy. I’m going to go find Reuben so he can witness the challenge. I don’t trust Eli.”

“All right. I’ll meet you in the hay barn in about ten minutes.”

When Jonathan opened the door, River, Gabriel and Paul were sitting in the loft. Eli was leaning against a wall with his arms folded across his chest.

“Where’s Reuben?”

River shook her head. “I couldn’t find him.”

Eli shrugged off his coat, vest and shirt then cracked his knuckles. “What’s the matter, outsider? Afraid to face me?”

Jonathan ignored Eli and looked up at River. “You’re my sponsor. What should I do?”

River’s legs hung over the edge of the loft. She swung them back and forth then put her elbows on her knees and leaned forward. “Gabriel, Paul and I are witnesses.” She glared at Eli. “State the challenge again, releasing Jonathan from any fault should this match cause you harm.”

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