Everbound: An Everneath Novel (10 page)

BOOK: Everbound: An Everneath Novel
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An ache on my scalp brought me back to the present. If I wasn’t careful, I’d be bald soon. I sipped my Kona Roast coffee, closing my eyes as I inhaled the scent. Jack and I used to wonder if the Java Hut put some sort of drug in it to make it smell so good. One whiff and you had to have it.

I put my mug down, leaned back on the bench, and waited. The front door squeaked, and Will walked in, a pair of dark sunglasses perched on the bridge of his nose. The glasses couldn’t hide the red beneath his eyes.

“How’d it go with Cole?” he mumbled, sliding into the spot across from me and keeping his glasses in place even though we were inside.

I reached toward his face and tugged on the sunglasses until I could see his bloodshot eyes. He pulled back and pushed them up. “Will,” I said.

“You can’t exactly blame me, considering everything.”

I pressed my lips together, worried that my impulsive dash to the Everneath had caused the relapse. “But … you were doing so well—”

“Stop, Becks. Let’s take inventory of our priorities. First, go to the Underworld and save my brother. Second, don’t die while doing it. Third, start a grassroots campaign to add diversity to the state’s conservative legislature. Fourth, then maybe tackle my excessive drinking.” I frowned, and he leaned forward. “Thank you for caring. But you know we don’t have time for it. Tell me how it went with Cole.”

I took a deep breath, wondering how to describe my conversation with Cole, when really it was very simple. “He says he won’t come with me. And I don’t know what to do.”

At this, Will was quiet. It was hard to read his expression with those sunglasses on. I reached over and gently removed them, and this time he let me.

He folded his arms and rested his elbows on the table. “So there’s no way to do this without Cole.”

I shook my head. “Unless you can find me another Everliving I can charm to the point where he’ll help me save my boyfriend. No, Cole is the only one I ever imagined I had any influence over, and apparently it’s not as strong a pull as I thought.”

“I wouldn’t discount your control over him. He spent six months trying to convince you he loved you. I don’t think it was all a lie.”

“I wouldn’t bet on it. He’s thrown me out twice now.”

The waitress set a mug of coffee in front of Will. “So let’s think about it. What do you have to bargain with? What does he want more than anything else?”

I paused even though I knew without a doubt what he wanted more than anything. Jack had asked me the same thing months ago. Will knew it too. He knew it before he even asked the question. It was as true now as it was before. “Me,” I said. “He wants me to become an Everliving and overthrow the queen. But what am I supposed to do? Promise him I’ll become his queen if we save Jack?”

Will shook his head. “You and Jack can’t keep going back and forth sacrificing yourselves for each other. You know what it would do to him if you saved him at the cost of your own life.”

I looked down at the table, at the ring of liquid my coffee mug had made there. I knew exactly how that would feel. I was feeling it right now. It didn’t solve anything.

Will leaned forward, placing his elbows on the table. “What if we discarded the carrot approach and went with the whip instead?”

“Huh?”

“What if instead of dangling a carrot—you—in front of him to get him to move, we push him from behind. Threaten him somehow.”

“How? He’s hidden the real pick. We’ll never find it. And, come to think of it, we still don’t know if breaking his pick would destroy him. What do we have?”

He looked down sheepishly. “Let’s threaten to take away—permanently—the one thing he wants most.” He raised his eyes. “Despite everything that’s happened, you’re still his best chance for the throne. We don’t have to give him you. We just have to make him think he’s going to lose you for good. We make him think you’re going to the Everneath no matter what. If he believes you might disappear forever … he’ll fold.”

I thought about the night before at the club, how Cole had thrown me out. “I don’t think he’d go just to save me.”

“He did it two days ago.”

“But that was because I didn’t know what I was doing. If I went again, knowing exactly what would happen … I think he’d say good riddance.”

“Becks, how long has he been searching for someone who could survive the Feed?”

I shrugged. “He said thousands of years. But I don’t know how literal that was.”

“And now he’s finally found you. Do you think he’d really let you go? Sit back and watch his one chance for the throne disappear and never come back?” He shook his head. “No way. If we let him think you’re going to the Everneath tonight … with or without him …” He paused. “He’d cave.”

I thought about it. “But I don’t have his hair or his fingernail or anything.”

“He doesn’t know that. Weren’t you in his dressing room?”

“Yes.”

“Would it be so crazy to tell him you grabbed a hair there?”

We both leaned back and thought for a few minutes. The ceiling fans circled above, providing just enough breeze to keep us from sweating. Soft ukulele music played in the background.

And we were contemplating a bluff against an Everliving.

“He flat-out told me he’d never save me again.”

“Let’s see if he was serious.”

I leaned toward Will, taking in his bloodshot eyes. “How are you thinking so clearly?”

His lips twitched. “I’m not. But I thought about it last night. Before I started drinking.”

“Okay,” I said.

“Okay what?”

“Okay, I’ll do it.”

He frowned, as if my finally agreeing to the plan made him question what we were doing. But he didn’t say anything other than “Okay.”

Lunchtime brought a steady stream of people, definitely locals who were particular about their coffee. Will and I sat in the same booth all morning, talking it out.

We decided a phone call to Cole would be the best way to start the ball rolling.

“How much time are you going to give him?” Will asked.

I thought about my dream last night. My eyes met his. “Six hours.”

“What?!”

“You said tonight. I’ll give him six hours.” I looked at my phone. “Till tonight at seven o’clock.”

“I was using it as an example. That doesn’t give you very much time.”

“Time for what?”

He looked at me as if I wasn’t getting something obvious. “Time to figure out what you’re gonna tell your family. Time to … prepare … everything …”

“Jack’s slipping away. I don’t have time for preparations. I can feel it. I did the math. One day on the Surface equals six months in the Everneath.”

“That was during the Feed. You said time went slower in the Feed.”

“Still … if I wait another day, it will be months for him. Or weeks at least. And he won’t make it. What if one more Surface day kills him?” My voice began to waver. I couldn’t look Will in the eyes, so I stared hard out the window.

Will’s hand closed around mine. Another tear slipped down my cheek; and without acknowledging it, Will used his thumb to wipe it away.

“It has to be tonight,” I said. “Time goes really fast in the Everneath. If all goes well, I can be back before my dad even notices I’m gone.”

Will squeezed my hand. “Six hours, Becks. We’ll give him six hours. I’ll take care of the rest.”

I nodded and grabbed a napkin, sniffing.

He waited in silence for a few moments, typing and retyping Cole’s phone number into his cell phone, watching for signs that I had composed myself.

Finally, he pressed in the last number and said, “Ready?”

I nodded. He handed the phone to me.

After two rings, Cole picked up. “Hello?”

“Cole, it’s Nikki.”

Pause.

“Nik,” he said.

“…”

“…”

I looked to Will for strength. “Listen, because I’m only going to say this once. I’m going to the Everneath. I’m leaving at seven o’clock.”

“I doubt that very much, Nik.” Cole chuckled.

I ignored him. “I’ll be at the Shop-n-Go at seven. And then I’m gone.”

He scoffed through the receiver. “And how do you plan on getting there?”

“I have your hair.”

Cole’s end of the conversation went quiet. I met Will’s gaze, and he nodded in encouragement.

“Three strands to be exact,” I said, staring at my hand as if the hairs were actually there.

“How did you—”

“Why do you think I went to your dressing room last night?” I steadied my voice. “The entire band sheds in there. It wasn’t hard at all.”

He was quiet again. “If you’re so sure, why bother telling me?”

I looked at Will, who waved his hand in a circular motion to keep going. “I’m giving you one more chance to come with me. You know what my odds are without you.” I took a deep breath. “So that’s it. You have six hours, or I’m gone from your life for good.”

“Nik—” His voice was strained, but I snapped the phone shut before I could hear what he was going to say and handed it back to Will. “Do you think he bought it?” he said.

I nodded. “Without a doubt. But I still don’t know if he’ll come.”

I left Will at the Java Hut and went home to get ready, even though I had no idea what
getting ready
would entail. What do you pack for the Underworld?

When I walked into the house, my dad was sitting in his study, door open.

“Nikki! Come in here, please.” He didn’t sound happy, but I couldn’t think of anything I’d done lately that would make him feel that way.

I stood in the doorway. “What’s up, Dad?”

He looked at his watch. “Did you forget something today?”

I racked my brain. It was Wednesday, wasn’t it? About one thirty. Come to think of it, my dad shouldn’t have been home. And then it hit me.

“Crap. Dr. Hill.”

“Yes. She called to see if you were okay, because you didn’t show up for your appointment. So I rushed home from the office to find you missing.”

I sighed. “I’m sorry. I met a friend this morning, and I totally lost track of time.”

“And didn’t keep your phone with you?”

I drew in a breath and rummaged through my bag. My phone was at the bottom, completely dead. I had been gone until late last night and then had left early this morning without plugging it in.

“Sorry. Battery’s dead.” I waved the phone in front of him so he knew I was telling the truth.

My dad put his elbows on his desk and pressed his fingertips together. “I rescheduled your appointment for tomorrow. Same time.”

Tomorrow. I was hopefully leaving with Cole
tonight
.

“I’m not sure that’s going to work—”

I stopped short when I saw his face. It fell. Crumbled. Within the space of a moment, he’d gone from strong mayor to weak, tired old man. “Nikki,” he said softly. “Please.” He was not demanding. He was pleading. “I can’t lose you again. Do you know what it did to me last time? To lose your mother … and then to lose you? Can you possibly fathom?”

I stared down at his desk, my eyes burning.

“I know I’ve made mistakes,” he said, “but I can’t go through it again. I can’t.”

I had no words. No expressions of comfort. No promises I could make in good conscience. For a moment I doubted my current course. How could I leave him again? How could I put him through it all again?

But Surface time was slow. I could be back before he knew it.

Unless I failed.

Was there a right answer? Yeah, right. There hadn’t been a right answer since I went to the Everneath in the first place.

I walked around his desk, put my arms around him, and kissed the top of his head. And then I made another promise I wasn’t sure I could keep.

“I know it’s been difficult. And I know it’s not over yet. But I promise you we’ll get through it.”

He didn’t answer. He only nodded.

I went to my room. And waited.

ELEVEN
NOW

The Surface. The Shop-n-Go
.

A
t six fifty-five I walked through the doorway of the Shop-n-Go, my heart drumming in my chest. I gave a quick wave to Ezra at the counter.

“Don’t bother calling him,” I said. “He already knows I’m here.”

Yes, Cole knew I was here, but would he come now? I walked to the back, squeezing past the other two customers in the place. The kind of customers who never seemed to see what was really going on here. I sat on the floor. Ezra had changed out the snacks. Powdered doughnuts now lined the bottom shelf where the chocolate-covered raisins used to be.

Involuntarily, I thought of that day a few months ago when Jack had confronted me inside the Shop-n-Go.

“You don’t like raisins,”
Jack had said.

“They’re not so bad now,”
I’d lied.

“But I don’t change, Jack,” I whispered now. “I won’t change.”

A knock at the window broke me from the memory. Will was on the other side, gesturing to the back of the store to let me know he’d be waiting.

I smiled and nodded, then checked my watch. Six fifty-nine.

No sign of Cole.

I took out the blond hair I had in my pocket. Will had to steal it from the new bartender at Mulligan’s on Main Street. There was a shocking lack of blond people in my life, except for Jules, and I couldn’t very well nonchalantly ask her for a strand of her hair. Bartender Jimmy let Will get away with a lot more than the previous owner did, but I think even he was a little surprised about the hair thing.

I checked my phone. Time was up. But there was still no sign of Cole. My heart was no longer drumming. It now felt as if it were lodged in my throat. I shook my head. Maybe I was stupid to think I meant anything to him. Maybe he’d finally had enough, and the possibility that he’d found his queen was no longer worth it.

I still brought the strand to my mouth, trying not to think about the fact that I was about to eat the hair of a bartender named Jimmy. Will and I had already planned to go through with the eating of the hair in case Cole was watching from somewhere else.

If Cole caught me in this bluff, I’d probably be blowing my last chance to get him to come with me. Then again, I’d already run out of chances.

The hair was light and roughly Cole’s length. It could’ve been his hair. I wondered for a moment, if I really had a strand of his hair, would I go through with it again?

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