Chrysoprase (The Chalcedony Chronicles) (2 page)

BOOK: Chrysoprase (The Chalcedony Chronicles)
13.54Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

When
my love heard there was a way to get away from all of it, we found a site dedicated to the goddess. We prayed together, and she answered by sending me here. My love was left there alone, knowing that we would be protected. When your grandfather found me hidden in his artifacts during a trip overseas, he brought me back, and he lied to get me into the country by claiming me as his child. I had you seven months later, and the rest you know.

I never meant for this to stay a secret
for so long. You would need to know some day, but I was too ashamed. Rather than stay and try to live out a new life with the man I loved, your father, I chose the easy way- to run. I have never regretted the decision to keep you safe, but I regret that you never knew your father. I wish you had known him, and he you. He was a great man, destined for great things. I know everything worked for the best, but I can’t change the past.

I just hope I taught you enough. I know you are a wonderful young lady. I wish I could be around to see you
grow up and get married. I wish I would see my grandchildren. I wish I could stay with you forever, but I can’t. I’m not of your time, and never will be. I have to accept that, and hope that I taught you enough. Never think that I didn’t love you. Never think that your father didn’t love you. And when you find that one man that steals your heart someday, don’t let him get away. Love is worth fighting for.

-
Mom

 

I stared hard at the letter and read it over two more times. I had tried to convince myself that it was all a dream and not real, but deep down I knew it was true.  She was from the past. Seth’s father, the general, was right. My mom was a princess. Now, after reading my mother’s words, I couldn’t deny it any longer. My life just got a lot more complicated, and a lot emptier. I felt bad for my mother then and now. I couldn’t even begin to imagine her life, being sent off to marry a man she didn’t know. I really needed to talk to Seth.

Everything was crashing down around me. Nothing seemed real to me now. My mother was gone. I could travel into the past and future. People here might not actually be from here, and there was no one that would remember my mother beyond my grandfather and me. She would just disappear like Seth did.

It wasn’t fair. The goddess let me meet Seth, and let me go back and get him, but now it seemed like she was making me choose between them. By going to the past to get Seth back I had lost my mother. Would it be the same in reverse now if I went back to get my mother? Would the goddess take Seth? I know neither of them was from my time, but it still wasn’t fair. Why couldn’t they stay here? Seth was here for three years. My mother was here for over nineteen. There was no reason to send her back right at the moment the goddess did. Why couldn’t I have a little bit of time with both my mother and Seth here?

I stood and paced my room. This wasn’t right. The goddess may have good intentions for bringing people together, and maybe she was the reason I was alive at all since my mother and I could have been put to death for her falling in love with my father. I have no clue what happened to the babies of women who were disloyal to their king, but I still felt robbed. I never knew my father, and my mother was now lost to the past. There had to be a solution. I looked up on the dresser as I passed it. The shiny green stone stared back. Was that stone the key? Could I go back and bring my mother back also?

A plan was forming in my head. If I could find out how to get to my mother, could I take her back to the future with me? I had no clue how the time travel thing worked. The last time was more of a fluke than anything. I was just following the thread that bound me to Seth. I didn’t have the same connection with my mother, but there had to be a way. I wasn’t going to give up on her. She traveled to an unknown world to protect me, I would do the same for her.

I walked back over to the new stone in my collection. I rubbed the smooth green rock in my hand as I debated in my head. There had to be a way to get to my mother and save her from the past.

I had two options. First, I could go and ask the man down the hallway how to travel in time. Mr. Sangre was a time gatekeeper after all, but I doubted he would tell me any more than he already had. I’d asked him before how to find Seth, and he didn’t really tell me how to do it. The second option was to ask the goddess, but I was unsure if that was a good idea either. She had just ripped my mother out of my life, and I wasn’t exactly sure I could be civil to her at this point. If she asked me why I wanted to learn, I’d have to lie to her so that she wouldn’t try to stop me.

“I see the dilemma,” a deep female voice said from somewhere in my room. I could not see her, but I knew that it was the goddess.

“You should see it. You created it,” I replied. I had to bite my tongue from saying more. She had taken my mother from me.

“I have taken nothing from you,” the goddess answered. She didn’t seem at all worried about my growing anger.

“You took her back. There was no reason to take her back right now,” I replied to the empty room. It was easier to not have the goddess there physically. I had the feeling she knew that, too.

“I told you that you cannot change the past without changing the future,” the goddess answered. There was no anger to her voice, or even judgment. She simply stated the fact.

“But I thought you meant big events,” I answered, sitting down and finally halting my pacing around the room. The new green stone was still between my fingers.

“My deal with your mother was to allow her to stay here as long as you were growing up,” the goddess answered. I still could not see her, but got the feeling she was right beside me now. “In my mind, growing up was always going to be the time that you figured out how to time travel.”

“But I’m not grown up. I don’t really know how to time travel, and I still need my mother,” I complained, trying to keep tears at bay. Yes, going off to college, living on my own, having a new exciting life made me feel grown up a bit, but I wasn’t there yet. I still needed my mother.

I felt a breeze caress my back in the windless room. I knew it was the goddess and would have been upset by the comfort she tried to offer, but now my anger was gone and replaced by sadness.

“Mari, you are strong. Life will never be easy for you with the gift you have. No one else remembers it all like you will. You will find no one like you, but know that I believe in you,” the goddess said cryptically.

“Strong or not, I need her back,” I answered stubbornly.

“But this isn’t her time,” the goddess replied. That was true, but it still didn’t make it right.

“What makes it not her time?” I asked. “She spent more time here than in the past. The life she knew was here. How can this not be her time?” I tried to logically fight with the goddess. I did have a valid point.

“I didn’t make the rules, and I cannot change them. One must return to where they are born,” the goddess replied. Her voice was farther away now. She sounded as if she we standing on the other side of the room. “But not all is lost. Mari, you can see your mom any time you wish. That is why I made sure to wait to take her from you. You now have the power to travel to her. I cannot change the past, or her fate, but I made sure you would never have to stay apart from her.”

“But how?” I asked desperately.

“You’ll learn in time. This cannot be rushed. You will learn,” the goddess’ replied as her voice began to fade. I felt that her presence was gone from the room. I was alone again.

The goddess’s words were comforting, but it wasn’t enough. I sat back down on my bed and looked closer at the green stone. The etchings on the back were illegible, as they had been before, but I knew the secret to that now. I wanted to add a drop of blood and see if it would work, but I had to stop myself. I couldn’t run off quite yet. I needed to make a plan. There was no way I could leave her in that time, forced to marry someone she wasn’t in love with. No matter what the goddess said, my mother needed me, and she needed me to save her. I was going to get my mother back, but I’d need some help. I needed someone with a good grasp of what I was walking into. I wasn’t going to be unprepared this time. There was one person I could count on.

I got up and ran back to my grandfather’s study. I needed to talk to Seth right away. He was up in the Twin Cities with his adoptive family, and he didn’t have a cell phone. Only he could use the excuse that he was too old for a cell phone. But I knew that it wouldn’t matter. There was one way to talk to Seth. He was Mr. Sangre’s adopted child, after all, and Mr. Sangre happened to be sitting in my house.

Grandfather was still asleep as I entered, and I moved closer to Mr. Sangre while trying not to wake my grandfather. It was hard to look at my grandfather. He looked like he had aged ten years overnight. The strain of losing my mother was tough on him. Mr. Sangre looked up from his book as I came closer.

“Do you have a phone number that I can reach Seth at?” I asked. Since we had returned to when we had left, Mr. Sangre should have already met the boys on their return weeks ago. Seth didn’t have a cell phone, but I doubted that he lived in a house without a landline phone in it.

Mr. Sangre looked startled by the question.

“I can give you the number to call Ty. He stayed back at their house on the lake for the holiday,” Mr. Sangre said.

I looked at him. That was weird. Why would I call Ty instead of Seth?

“But I’m sorry to be the one to tell you this, Mari. You won’t be able to reach Seth by phone. He didn’t come back with Ty.”

My world crashed down. I didn’t just lose my mother in my trip to the past; I had lost my boyfriend, too.

 

 

 

 

 

Chapter 2

Pieces of My Past

 

I looked at
the clock. It was already eight p.m. Sometime during my crying I had fallen asleep. I glanced at my phone. It was ringing again. That must have been why I woke up. I didn’t rush to answer it, since it wouldn’t be who I wanted to hear from anyways. A ringing phone made no difference now since Seth wasn’t here in my time. Who else would be calling me? It didn’t matter. Unless it was Ty calling. No one else would remember Seth, and I didn’t want to deal with that again. My heart broke the last time they were all forgotten; I didn’t think I could handle it again. I should talk to Ty and see what was going on, but I just wasn’t ready. I didn’t take the number from Mr. Sangre. Instead, he’d left it on my desk next to my phone at some point.

Tears built behind my eyes as I thought about everything. Sleep had been easier. I didn’t think when I was sleeping. The world I didn’t want to deal with could just fade away. How could the goddess take both Seth and my mother? It wasn’t fair. She didn’t even let me have one of them. How was I supposed to go on without both of them in my life?

The phone kept ringing, and I was tempted to not even pick it up. But it could be Ty. Maybe Ty would have answers about how to help me. I really needed a friend right about now. Ty could help, maybe.

I picked up my phone and didn’t even look to see who was calling. I was on autopilot as I just pushed the on button.

“Hello,” I answered.

“Mari,” my best friend from high school, Amy, squealed into the phone. “I have been calling you for days.” She was practically shouting now. “I’m so in need of seeing you.”

“Hi, Amy,” I replied, trying to fake some cheerfulness.

“Just hi?” Amy responded. “Not even a ‘how’re you doing?’ Or ‘how many hot guys have you dated in the past two months while we were forced to live states away from each other?’”

I had to smile a little. It was Amy, after all. There was no getting her down. She saw the rainbow behind every storm. Her cheerfulness was always contagious, even when I was sad.

“Hi, Amy. What’s your ‘hot guy’ record up to now?” I replied, knowing that was exactly what she wanted to talk about.

“I found three new ones in the first week. You really should have stayed here in Chicago with me. I was missing my partner. I mean,
come on
! It was
you
that the guys were chasing after. Your red hair always made you stand out. You would have pulled in twice as many, and then I’d have had so many more to pick from,” Amy babbled on. “What was so important in that frozen state that you could only text me and never call me back? I missed you, chicka.”

“I missed you, too,” I replied. I cringed a little. I had been a bit neglectful of my Chicago friends.

In truth, I
had
missed her. We’d been inseparable in high school. But once I went off to college in Minnesota, things were just different. I couldn’t relate to the life Amy was living back here in Chicago. She was going to clubs, and hitting the same old places we hung out in while we were in high school. I doubt she even made any new close friends. She was a big city girl in every way possible, and I was in a small town that was lucky to have two fast food joints in it. I knew what she would say if I called. It was what she told me every week of the summer before I left. Why the heck did I want to go off to some little liberal arts college in the middle of nowhere? What was wrong with me?

“Well that’s great. Then you’ll be up for going over to the Jones place later,” Amy babbled on.

Other books

ModelLove by S.J. Frost
Horse Talk by Bonnie Bryant
Doom Weapon by Ed Gorman
Into The Fire by Manda Scott
Raw Deal (Bite Back) by Mark Henwick
Games People Play by Louise Voss
Retribution by Jeanne C. Stein
Seasons by Katrina Alba