Tuesday, August 27, 2013

The Rise of Nine - Chapter 23


I come to facedown in wet grass. I lift my head and press my palms onto the ground to get my shoulders
up. I hear Eight groan from somewhere nearby. Ella calls my name, but my head throbs too much for me to
sit up and look for her.
‘Six?’ I whisper into the air. ‘Are you here?’
‘I don’t see her anywhere, Marina,’ Ella says, coming over and sitting down next to me. I lay my cheek
back down on the grass and allow myself to just lie there for a few more minutes. Ella brushes a lock of
hair off my cheek, but I’m numb and don’t feel a thing. Sickness rises in my throat as I hear Eight continue
to groan. Ella seems unaffected. I never want to teleport again.
I look around. My vision keeps doubling, and I struggle to bring it under control. Based on how green
and lush it is, it’s obvious we didn’t land where we intended. ‘This isn’t New Mexico, is it?’
‘Not even close,’ Ella whispers.
I finally feel as if I can move, albeit slowly, and I look up at Ella. Her brown eyes are hard to read in
the darkness, then I register it must be the middle of the night. I look past Ella and into the starry sky. I
flash back to the blue ocean, to Eight turning into a black octopus. Then I remember what Ella said just
before we teleported.
‘Ella. Did I imagine it, or did you say you talked to Six?’ She nods. ‘With your mind, right?’
Ella looks away. ‘I’m sure you think I’m nuts. I keep asking myself if it really happened. Maybe I just
wanted it so badly. . . .’ Ella shakes her head and looks down at me, her face serious. ‘No. I did not
imagine it. I know I spoke to her. She said she was in a desert. That must mean she made it to New
Mexico, right?’
‘Ella, you’re not crazy. I believe you and I think you’re right,’ I say, pressing my fingers against my
pounding temples, willing away the pain and the fuzz that keeps me from thinking clearly. ‘You must be
developing a Legacy. What we need to do now is figure out how it happened that time so we can do it
again. ’
Ella’s eyes widen. ‘Really? You think it’s a Legacy? What’s it called?’ she asks eagerly.
‘Telepathy,’ Eight’s voice comes from behind me.
I roll over, grimacing from the pain, and look up at Eight, who’s standing on a huge stone slab held up
by two even larger gray boulders.
I sit up, roll over onto all fours, and get unsteadily to my feet. Hands on hips, I turn around and realize
this place looks awfully familiar. But it isn’t because I’ve been here before. I know this place from all the
pictures, from textbooks. I look back up at Eight. ‘Are we seriously at –’
‘Stonehenge? Oh, yeah.’
‘Wow,’ I whisper, slowly turning around again to survey the scene. Ella walks over to a stone that must
be twentyfive feet high, her head tipped back as she drags her hand across the surface. I understand the
impulse to reach out and touch it. I mean, it’s Stonehenge. I can’t help but join her. The stones are cold
and smooth, and just touching them makes me feel like I’m three thousand years old. Some are in perfect
shape while others look like they must be mere shards of what they used to be. We all wander around for
a while, seeing up close what most people only ever see in textbooks.
‘Eight? What is telepathy, exactly? Do you know how to use it, and how I can control it?’ Ella asks.
‘Telepathy is the ability to transfer thoughts from one being to another. You’re able to communicate
with someone else’s brain. Go ahead, try it with me.’
Ella circles around and comes to a stop in front of Eight. She closes her eyes. As I watch, all I can think
is how amazing it would be if Ella has developed this Legacy. It would allow us to connect the Garde, no
matter where any of them are, anywhere in the world. After a few seconds, Ella opens her eyes and looks
at Eight. ‘Did you hear me?’
‘I didn’t,’ Eight says, shaking his head sadly. ‘You just need to keep trying. It always takes time to
figure out how to work with our Legacies. Telepathy will be no different.’
Her shoulders sag in disappointment anyway. ‘Your Chests are over there, by the way,’ she says,
pointing.
Eight turns to me, stretching from side to side. ‘I just need a little more time to recover from that last
one. I want to be as strong as possible when we try again for New Mexico, okay?’ He climbs up on a
nearby rock.
‘I don’t know,’ I sigh. ‘I felt so horrible when I came out of that last one. Injuries are one thing –
telepathy makes me feel sick. I don’t know if I can do it again. And what’s to stop us from ending up back
at the bottom of the ocean? Meanwhile, it sounds like Six is in serious trouble, and we’re bouncing
around from place to place. We may never land in New Mexico!’
‘I know, I know,’ Eight says, hopping down from a stone and brushing off the dust from his pants. ‘I
know how frustrating this is. But doing something is better than nothing. And the only thing we can do is
keep trying until we get where we need to go. We three will stick together, we will keep trying and we
will find Six.’ I don’t know where he gets his calm, his conviction.
Ella wanders off behind a grouping of stones as I say, ‘You know, there are other ways of getting from
one place to another. We could just find an airport and fly there from here.’
Eight scratches his chin, deep in thought as he starts to walk. I follow him to the center of the
monument. ‘If Six really is in trouble, an airplane isn’t the solution. It would take us forever to get to her.’
He stops for a minute and turns to face me. ‘Besides, I see us finding her.’ I look at him quizzically, but he
just grins and shrugs. What does he mean?
‘Eight. Did you have a vision? What else did you see? Who else did you see?’
He shrugs. ‘I can’t really tell you more than that. I just see it; or, I feel it. I think it’s a Legacy I haven’t
figured out yet. The only way I can describe it is that it feels like a sixth sense.’
‘Is that how you knew we were coming to India?’ I ask.
‘Yeah,’ he says. ‘I don’t have any control over it. These flashes, images, just come to me.’
We continue to walk through the group of massive stones and find Ella off by herself, sitting against a
rock. When we approach, she looks up and says, ‘I keep trying to talk to Six again, but nothing happens.
Maybe it never did happen.’
I kneel beside her and put my arm around her shoulders. ‘Legacies take time, Ella. I know when mine
appeared for the first time, it was usually when I was upset or in danger. They come at a time when they
are of the most use, when they might save us. My Legacy that allows me to breathe under water came as I
almost drowned. Also, the teleporting may have affected you, so maybe it will take a while to work
again.’ I give her shoulders a squeeze.
‘It’s true. The first time I teleported,’ Eight says, ‘my CĂȘpan was about to get run over by a taxi. I just
appeared next to him, like that.’ He snaps his fingers. ‘It’s the only reason I was able to pull him out of the
way.’
‘I miss Crayton so much, right now,’ Ella says. ‘He always helped me with this stuff. What if I’m never
any help to the Garde? Sometimes, I wish I was never chosen by the Elders.’ Her voice trails off and she
slumps down, looking absolutely dejected.
‘Ella.’ Eight takes a step forward. ‘Ella. Look at me. You can’t think that way. We are so happy you’re
here. We need you. If you weren’t here, we would be looking for you. You are exactly where you should
be. Right, Marina?’
‘Ella, do you remember what we used to say, back in the orphanage? We are a team. That means
something important. We take care of each other.’ As I’m talking, I realize that my aversion to teleporting
is selfish. The only hope we have of finding the others is by getting to New Mexico. The safest, fastest
way to get there is by teleporting, even if it means landing in the wrong place a few more times. I will not
allow my fear to endanger anyone. When one of us is weak, the rest of us need to be that much stronger.
I give her shoulder another squeeze. ‘We will get to New Mexico, find Six, and we will continue to fight.’
Ella nods but remains quiet.
We all wander off, lost in our thoughts. I know I need some time to clear my head, to be as strong
mentally as I feel physically, before we move on. This place is so peaceful, and it’s so quiet, that it’s the
perfect setting in which to think. An hour or so later, I walk into the center of the circle to see Eight
leaning down and picking a stone up before dropping it.
‘Eight! What do you think you’re doing?’ I yell, alarmed. ‘Do you remember where we are? This is a
sacred, historic, ancient place! You can’t just kick rocks around! Put them back where they were!’
Before he even has a chance to return the stones, I use my telekinesis to do it myself. Stonehenge may
not be my history, but it is someone’s, and that deserves more respect than Eight is showing right now. I
want to leave this place exactly as we found it.
Eight looks up at me, surprised by my anger. ‘I’m looking for the Loralite stone. I know it’s half buried
around here, under one of these stones, and we have to find it if we’re going to go anywhere,’ Eight says.
‘Well, just make sure you put them back exactly where you found them when you’re done looking,’ I
grumble. ‘Stonehenge is one of the most famous places on Earth. Let’s not ruin it.’ I am tired of leaving
destruction behind.
Eight makes a big show of peeking delicately under a rock and returning it gently to its place. ‘I would
just like to say that Stonehenge is only here in the first place because of the Loric. Reynolds said we built
it as a cemetery for those who died fighting on Earth.’
‘Really? This is a graveyard?’ Ella asks, walking up behind me and looking around curiously.
‘It was,’ Eight says, patting a large boulder. ‘For thousands of years, at least. And then humans started
poking around, doing all that research they love so much. There is nothing like a quest to understand
everything, even if there is nothing to know. Whatever. I will honor the placement of the rocks.’ He
continues to move as if tiptoeing through a bed of tulips.
‘Let me help.’ I walk carefully among the stones, helping Eight look for the Loralite, floating several
rocks inches above the ground before setting them back down exactly as they had been. As I move on to
another group of stones I hear shouts in the distance. I lean around a stone to see two men in uniforms
running towards the monument, flashlight beams bouncing in the darkness. Ella and I duck down behind
the biggest, closest rock formation.
‘Shoot,’ I whisper. ‘Everybody hide.’
We can see the beams from their flashlights scan the ground, and whenever one gets close to us, we
shift our position around another stone just in time.
‘I know I heard something out here. Kids’ voices,’ the smaller of the two guards says.
‘Okay. Well, where are they?’ the other guard asks, looking around. There is a distinct note of disbelief
in his voice.
Both men are silent for a moment. I peek around the stone to see the larger guard looking around,
annoyed by the lack of evidence of intruders. Then something catches his eye, but I can’t see what it is.
I’m worried. What could he have found? ‘Bill? Come over here and look at this. Where do you think these
came from?’
‘Huh. Don’t know. They sure weren’t there earlier,’ the other says.
I nearly jump out of my skin when Eight materializes next to me. ‘They found our Chests,’ he whispers.
‘I’ll just toss the guards into the pasture, okay? We need to find the Loralite, so we can get the hell out of
here, and that’s not going to happen until those guys leave. And I am not letting them leave with our
Chests.’ His voice is grim.
I’m about to say no when my brain begins to buzz. After a brief echo of static I hear Ella’s voice in my
head: I can distract them while you find the Loralite. I look over at her in shock, eyes wide.
Ella squeezes my hand and whispers, ‘I can distract them –’
‘I already heard you,’ I interrupt. ‘Ella, I heard you in my head!’
She smiles widely. ‘I thought it worked this time. Wow! I did it!’ she whispers excitedly.
‘Hey, you two, keep it down,’ Eight whispers. ‘Do we have a plan?’
‘I have an idea,’ Ella responds. Shrinking herself into a six year-old, she runs wide, out past the outer
circle of the stones, then walks back towards the men. She puts on her best little girl voice as she calls
out, ‘Daddy? Where are you?’
‘Hello?’ One of the guards calls back. ‘Who’s out there?’
Eight teleports away while I watch Ella. She is standing still, shielding her eyes from their flashlights.
She’s quite the actress. She sounds legitimately lost and worried. ‘I’m looking for my daddy. Have you
seen him?’
‘What in the world are you doing out here, little girl? Where are your parents? Do you know what time
it is?’
As they approach her, Ella starts to sob, stopping the men in their tracks. ‘Now, now, just calm down,
no need for tears,’ the larger one says in a soothing tone.
Ella turns up the waterworks and says, louder now, ‘Don’t touch me!’
‘Hey, hey, nobody’s touching you,’ the other says in alarm. They are looking at each other, both
confused and at a loss as to what to do with her.
‘Psst, Marina,’ Eight whispers. He’s behind me with a Chest under each arm. ‘We have to find the
Loralite. Now! She can’t hold their attention forever!’
We run into the center of Stonehenge. Eight and I start checking under every rock we can find, as
quickly as we can. There are only a few left to check when we hear the men coming back towards us, Ella
in tow, still sniffling.
‘Okay, I think it’s time for another distraction,’ Eight says, disappearing again. He reappears by the
outer circle of stones, plants his hands on an upright slab, and pushes hard. All I can do is watch in
horror, frozen to the spot. The huge stone wobbles and then slowly tips backwards, then the horizontal
slab on top falls too, and that’s when Eight starts yelling, ‘Help! Help! The stones are falling over!
Stonehenge is falling down!’ I will kill him. I clench my fists at my side, which is when I realize I still
have a small rock in my hand. I lean down and carefully, pointlessly, return it to its spot.
The guards break into a sprint towards Eight’s voice, and when their flashlights catch the falling stones,
they scream in panic. The smaller guard runs to get in between two vertical stones, but it’s too late. They
connect and collectively tip to the right. The horizontal slab that was over them lands on the ground with a
thud. My mouth falls open as the stones tip, one by one, going over like dominos.
‘Code Black! Code Black!’ the large guard screams into his walkie-talkie, then tosses it to the ground.
He wraps his arms around one of the massive vertical stones remaining upright, trying with all his might
to stop it from going over with the others. But it’s pointless. The massive stones keep falling.
Eight appears back by me and tips over two small stones, and suddenly a faint blue glow lights up his
legs. ‘I found it! Over here!’ he whispers excitedly. I’m relieved to hear he’s found the Loralite, but I’m
too focused on the demolition of Stonehenge to be excited. I can’t believe he did this. I’m furious. Ella
runs past me as I dart under one of the few slabs still in place and use my telekinesis to slow down the
boulders in motion.
The larger guard slams his back against a stone that’s next in line to tip, and the other guard joins him. I
wrap my mind around their stone and hold it steady. When it’s hit with another falling boulder, I don’t let
it tip. The guards slide away from the stone and fall to the grass, shocked by their sudden show of
strength. Next I reverse the domino effect so the fallen boulders push each other back up, and I stabilize
them in their original positions. Then, using what little strength I have left, I slowly lift the horizontal
slabs off the ground and set them back on top of the boulders.
The guards watch all this, mouths agape, too stunned to respond to the crackling, concerned voices
squawking from their walkie-talkies.
‘Marina,’ Ella whispers. ‘Hey. Marina, we need to go. Now. Come on.’
I walk backwards towards the center of the monument, relieved and able to leave, now that I’ve
managed to put everything back together.
I stalk over to Eight and yank my Chest from him. Still furious and unable to look at him, I grab hold of
his hand. Ella carries Eight’s Chest while clinging to his other hand. We stand, joined together, over the
blue Loralite. The last thing I hear before the darkness comes is the larger guard – defeated and ready to
be done with this particular adventure – responding into his retrieved walkie-talkie, ‘False alarm.’

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