Read Unbreakable Online

Authors: Kami Garcia

Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Action & Adventure, #General, #Paranormal, #Love & Romance, #Juvenile Fiction / Action & Adventure - General, #Juvenile Fiction / Paranormal, #Juvenile Fiction / Love & Romance

Unbreakable (8 page)

Priest jumped in. “But Andras is trapped between his world and ours. He can’t cross over and possess people, or draft them into his ranks when they die. He has to settle for influencing vengeance spirits and using them to cause violence and suffering.”

“Which creates more vengeance spirits he can control,” Lukas added.

I imagined hundreds of battered souls like the girl in my bedroom lined up in a row, ready for battle.

Priest unscrewed the faceplate on a device that resembled an old transistor radio. “The bigger the surges in paranormal activity, the closer we are to the Marrow. At least, that’s what my granddad used to say.”

He stopped working and stared at his hands. Priest’s grandfather must’ve been the member of the Legion he had replaced. It was easy to forget that I wasn’t the only one who had lost someone.

Lukas noticed Priest’s reaction and messed up the younger boy’s hair. Priest swatted his arm, the beginning of a smile tugging at the corners of his mouth.

“If we find the Marrow, we can take out the spirits Andras controls,” Jared said. “And cut off his power supply.”

“Will that get rid of him?” I asked.

The four of them looked at one another.

Lukas shook his head. “No. But it will make him a lot weaker. Damage control, remember?”

I listened as they strategized, trying to make sense of the surges and the red circles. The warehouse was only an hour from my house in Georgetown, but it felt worlds away.

I needed to talk to someone who wasn’t tracking paranormal activity or searching for a demon’s hideout. “Lukas, can I use your phone again?”

Alara snapped to attention. “She can’t call anyone.”

“Don’t worry.” Lukas raised a hand to reassure her. “She just wants to check in with her friend.”

“Her friend?” Alara gasped. “Are you insane?”

“My number’s blocked. I doubt her friend knows how to trace a call.”

“What if she tells someone where we are?” Alara was talking about me like I wasn’t there.

“I wouldn’t do that,” I said. “But if I don’t call, she’ll try to find me.”

Lukas handed me his cell. “It’s fine. Just be careful what you say.”

I slipped between the sheets suspended from the ceiling and sat down next to the fridge, where Jared had bandaged my hand.

The phone only rang once before Elle picked up. “Hello?”

My whole body seemed to relax when I heard her voice. “It’s me.”

“Where are you? I’m totally freaking out.”

I didn’t know where to begin. Elle had never doubted me before, but demons were a lot to dump on anyone. “I need to tell you something, and it’s going to sound crazy.”

“I’m fine with crazy.”

It was like ripping off a Band-Aid. The only way to do it was fast. “I saw a ghost.”

“You saw your mom?” She didn’t sound surprised.

“No—” I hesitated. “It was the ghost of a dead girl. I saw her in the cemetery one night and then again in my room.”

I waited for her to rattle off a list of the symptoms of depression.

“Is that why you ran away?”

This was the hard part. “The ghost killed my mom, and it tried to kill me. I know it sounds completely insane, but it’s true.”

Please believe me.

I held my breath, waiting for her to say something.

“Is that who trashed your house? The ghost?” It was the same matter-of-fact tone Elle used when she grilled me about the latest social scandal at school. She wanted the details, which meant she believed me.

“You don’t think I’m losing it?”

She sighed dramatically. “I’ve watched
Paranormal Encounters
. I’m not a total idiot. So was it the ghost or what?”

“No, it was… something a little different.”

“Did you dig up a graveyard?” Her voice rose, and I could practically see her yelling at the phone.

“I don’t really understand everything, but the guys I’m with do.”

“Who are these guys, anyway?”

I wasn’t willing to start talking salt rounds and secret societies. I was already pushing it. “They track violent spirits and destroy them.”

“Like the ghostbusters?”

“More like exorcists.”

Her bedsprings groaned, the way they did whenever she fell back onto her bed. “Please tell me you aren’t possessed.”

I almost laughed. “I’m not. But the spirits are dangerous, and I need these guys to help me get rid of them.”

“How many guys are we talking about?” She perked up.

“Three, but one of them is only fifteen.” I could see the wheels spinning in her mind. “There’s another girl here, too.”

“When are you coming back?”

My throat tightened. “I don’t know. But you can’t tell anyone you talked to me. Okay?”

She didn’t respond.

“Elle!”

“You know I won’t say anything.” She pretended to sound offended.

Alara peeked through the sheets.

“Elle, I have to go.”

“Be careful,” she pleaded.

“I will.” I hung up and held the phone to my chest, wondering how long it would be until I saw her again.

When I came back, the four of them were packing it in for the night. I handed Lukas his phone and straightened the stacks of newspapers. I didn’t want to look completely useless.

Jared tipped his chin toward a mattress in the corner. “You can take my bed. I like the couch.”

“No, it’s okay—”

“I like the couch,” he repeated more firmly.

I was too tired to argue—and too cold. The warehouse was freezing, and I still didn’t have a jacket. I rubbed my hands over my arms.

Priest noticed and tossed me a hoodie from his shelf. “You’ll need it. This place is a meat locker.”

As I slid my arms into the sleeves and lay down on the bed, I relaxed for what felt like the first time in days—until I noticed Jared coming back.

Maybe he’d changed his mind about letting me have his bed.

I started to get up when he pointed at the pillows. “Mind if I take one?”

“Sure—I mean no.”

He held up his hands, and his T-shirt slid up, exposing a few inches of skin above the waistband of his jeans. My cheeks grew warm and I tossed him the pillow, hoping he
wouldn’t notice. He stood there for a moment as if he wanted to say something, but then he walked away.

It was a sharp contrast to the crooked smile Lukas gave me as he flopped down on the mattress across from mine. His fingers flew over the controls of a video game. He noticed me watching him. “It’s Tetris.”

“He plays it all the time.” Alara walked by and rolled her eyes, twisting her hair into a loose knot.

Lukas didn’t look up from the screen. “It requires hard-core spatial skills and pattern recognition.”

“I’m sure it does,” she said sarcastically.

Priest laughed and closed his eyes, still wearing his headphones, as Jared stretched out on the couch. It seemed like he was on the opposite side of a boundary no one could cross.

I wondered what had happened to Jared—who had hurt him. But his walls were even higher than mine.

Alara switched off the lights. I listened to the muffled music from Priest’s headphones and the pinging sound of Tetris, wishing I could turn off my thoughts as easily.

I was lying on a mattress in a warehouse with four people I barely knew—four people who seemed to know more about my life than I did. Was it possible they knew more about my mom, too?

My eyes burned and I felt the tears building, but I didn’t want to let myself cry. If I started, I might not be able to stop.

The music and video game sounds finally faded, blanketing the room in silence. I slipped through the sheets and tiptoed to the other side of the warehouse where the gun racks and shelves of ammo were silhouetted in the darkness. Evidence of how unprepared I was for everything that was happening to me.

I was safe now, but I couldn’t stay here forever.

Tears slid down my neck before I realized they were falling.

I sat on the floor next to Priest’s worktable and buried my face in my knees. I cried quietly, choking back sobs until my throat was raw.

“Kennedy?” Someone whispered my name.

I covered my face with my hands.

“Want to talk about it?” It was Lukas or Jared, but his voice was so quiet I couldn’t tell which one. I shook my head, tears running through the spaces between my fingers.

He sat down next to me, and I could smell the salt and copper on his skin.

“I know this is hard. I lost it when my dad died, and I didn’t know how we were gonna do this without him.” He spoke slowly, his voice gentle and soothing. I realized it was Lukas, sharing something painful to make me feel better.

“I wish I could take it back.” He hesitated. “I mean, change things.”

I took a ragged breath, and he touched my back gently.

“Hey, will you look at me?”

I shook my head. I couldn’t stop crying, and I didn’t want him to see me falling apart.

“I get it,” he whispered, so close I could feel his breath on my neck. “I don’t think I would’ve made it without Luke.”

I froze.

Lukas wasn’t the one with his hand on my back.

It was Jared, the boy who barely spoke, the one who seemed so distant.

I don’t know how long we stayed that way. Eventually, I ran out of tears, and Jared took my hand and led me through the warehouse. I climbed in his bed, and he retreated to the couch without a word. But I could still smell the salt on his skin.

11. OPHTHALMIC SHIFT

W
hen I woke up, Lukas, Jared, and Alara were hunched over the map again. After an hour of skimming articles for unusual weather patterns and bizarre accounts of unexplained events, I’d learned a few things about surges and paranormal activity. My mind had also taken hundreds of mental snapshots—from neglected houses and morbid crime scenes to used car ads—each one sorted and cataloged automatically.

On Marrow overload, I offered to be Priest’s assistant for a while. He was determined to design the Big Bad of vengeance spirit hunting weapons to take down whatever Andras had waiting for them.

“Hold this.” Priest handed me his blowtorch.

“I don’t think—”

“It’s totally safe. Unless you turn it on.”

Like I know how to do that?

“We need some serious firepower.” Priest scanned his journal for old designs he could tweak.

Alara stalked in wearing loose cargos and a fitted tank that showed off her muscular arms. She grabbed a box of Pop-Tarts off Priest’s shelf and threw me a perfunctory glance from under her mascaraed lashes before disappearing again.

“Alara seems nice,” I said once she was out of earshot.

“Ah… are we talking about the same person?”

I laughed. “What’s her specialty? Aside from intimidation?”

“Wards. Her grandmother was a voodoo priestess or something. I forget what they’re called. But Alara’s pretty badass.”

Badass and gorgeous. Great.

Priest gestured at the journal and headed for the fridge. “Keep looking.”

Turning the pages carefully, something caught my eye—a tiny symbol hidden in one of the designs. I’d seen it before.

Priest came back carrying two sodas.

“What’s this?” I pointed at the sketch.

He glanced at the page. “Some kind of ocular device.”

“Why does it have Andras’ seal on it?”

“What are you talking about?” He leaned over, and I
pointed at the symbol. Priest dropped the cans, and soda exploded all over the floor.

Lukas stuck his head between the sheets. “What are you two doing?”

Priest gazed at the page, transfixed. “Get everyone in here. Now.”

They crowded around the worktable to see the diagram—a mechanical cylinder with the words
Ophthalmic Shift
printed in tight script at the top.

“Is it one of your grandfather’s inventions?” Jared leaned over my shoulder and examined the drawing. I remembered the way his hand had felt on my back as I cried, and the way he had smelled—the same way he smelled now. I edged forward, trying to put some space between us.

Priest shook his head. “That’s not my granddad’s handwriting, and this sketch is really old.”

A piece of clear glass was cut into one end like a window. Five looping symbols were etched around the outside. There were four other components—silver disks, each embedded with a different shade of glass: blue, red, yellow, and green. According to the diagram, the disks slid into the middle of the cylinder like trays.

Alara twisted her eyebrow ring. “What is it?”

“An ocular device,” Priest said.

“In English?” Jared leaned closer.

Priest tapped the top of the cylinder on the page. “You look through here and each piece of colored glass inside allows you to see a different layer of the infrared spectrum—things you can’t see with the naked eye. The way a black light picks up the color white and amplifies it.”

“Are you saying it’s a decryption device?” Lukas asked.

How did he make that jump?

Priest nodded. “A pretty sophisticated one, considering it’s completely mechanical. If you used the right type of ink, you could write on almost anything and no one would be able to see it without these disks. If someone knew what they were doing, they could actually design a written code that required all five pieces to decipher.”

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