Level 2 (Memory Chronicles) (8 page)

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Authors: Lenore Appelhans

BOOK: Level 2 (Memory Chronicles)
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“Fine,” he says, his tone now serious. He shimmers again and materializes back into his normal outfit. “I see you’re still uptight.”

“I’m not uptight,” I protest.

“Yeah, I know. You’re conscientious.” We trade venomous stares. “Is this little powwow done? Can I help you plug in so we can get on with it?” He says it like he’s a babysitter and I’m his bratty charge who has stayed up long after her bedtime.

“Can you tell me one more thing before you do?” I don’t wait for him to answer but press forward. “Why can’t I ever seem to remember much that goes on here? Is it the drugs you were talking about?” I feel unbalanced, unmoored. Must be withdrawal symptoms.

“Good guess. You’ve heard of the Lethe?”

Lethe. It sounds familiar, but I’m not recalling its significance. Not that I’m going to let Julian know that. “The Lethe. Sure. What about it?”

“The guardians use a derivative of the water from the Lethe to hinder people from remembering much. It keeps everyone from getting too attached and from forming plans. And it makes the memory chambers all that more attractive and addictive . . . Hey, are you okay?” His eyes widen in alarm.

My body is shaking convulsively. “Nooooo . . .” My voice is no louder than a whimper.

Without asking like he claimed he would, Julian scoops me up in his arms and transfers me quickly to the chamber. He places my hands into the grooves, and I feel better the instant my finger pads connect. This time he doesn’t force anything on me but retracts his hands politely. I don’t care about Julian anymore, though, because the sensation of being in the chamber is so ambrosial, it crowds out everything else. But I’ve held on to one word. “Lethe.” I languidly pull up my tags and find one mention of “Lethe.” I surge in.

Ward, Felicia. Memory #31725

Tags: Ohio, Neil, School, Mythology, Lethe

Number of Views: 98

Owner Rating: 3 stars

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The bell signaling the start of fifth period echoes through the deserted hallway as I unfold my new schedule
in front of my locker. Late again. But I don’t care. In my whole school career, up until today, I was never late once. Never allowed myself that sort of slipup. Being on time, sitting in the front row, writing copious notes, none of it matters anymore. I have one semester before I graduate, but I’m merely going through the motions. All my dreams, if they really were my dreams at all—of getting into an Ivy League school, of being a diplomat or a politician or secretary of state—are impossibly out of reach now. I still need to put in a minimum of effort to graduate, but my fire to succeed, to exceed expectations, has been irreparably extinguished.

I take a deep breath, slam my locker shut, and drag myself toward Mythology, room 112, Mrs. Keats. The door is still open when I get there, so I slip in and scan the room for an empty seat. I see a familiar face. Neil. He smiles and waves me over, but before I can claim the seat next to him, Mrs. Keats asks for my schedule.

“Ah, Felicia Ward.” She reads my name off the now crumpled sheet of paper. “Nice of you to finally join us. We were expecting you more than a week ago.”

My classmates laugh. I clear my throat and offer a mumbled apology but no explanation. Mrs. Keats dismisses me with a sigh, handing back my schedule. I beeline to the back of the class and sit next to Neil.

“You weren’t at church on Sunday,” Neil says. “We missed you.”

“Grammy wasn’t feeling well. I didn’t want to leave her.”

“Can we get started now?” Mrs. Keats raises her voice to silence the smattering of conversations still in progress. “Thank you.”

I turn my attention away from Neil and do my best to focus on what Mrs. Keats is saying.

“If you did your reading last night like you were supposed to, you know we are going to talk about the underworld today. Now, in Greek mythology the underworld wasn’t hell. It was a place all souls went to when they died.” Mrs. Keats goes on, detailing the various realms of the underworld: the pit of Tartarus, the Elysian Fields, and the rest of the land of the dead, which was ruled by Hades. Occasionally I halfheartedly scrawl a key word into my wire-bound notebook.

Soon she’s waxing poetic about the five rivers of the underworld: the Styx, the Acheron, the Kokytos, the Phlegethon, and the Lethe.

“Who can tell me what the purpose of the Lethe was? Alyssa?”

A pert, pretty girl in the front row answers, and I can tell she’s the type who always raises her hand. Who is always right. I can tell because she’s the girl I used to be. “The Lethe was the river of forgetfulness,” she trills. “Dead souls drank from it to forget the worries of their earthly life. It was ruled by the goddess Lethe, who offered oblivion.”

Lethe. I write it down. Underline it. Circle it. Stab at it with my fluorescent orange highlighter.

“And the Phlegethon?” Mrs. Keats asks.

Alyssa again. “The river of fire. Dead souls who swam there boiled with rage.”

“Well, I am pleased to see at least one of you came prepared,” grouses our teacher.

She goes on with her lesson, peppering her lecture of the rites and traditions of the underworld with occasional questions, the majority skillfully answered by Alyssa. But I allow my mind to wander, to daydream about what it would be like to lie down on the banks of the Lethe and drink just enough to make me forget about the past few months. The thought is undeniably appealing.

The bell pierces through my daydream, and students stream out of the classroom in a cacophony of slammed books and displaced desks.

Neil hovers over me. “Which way are you going?” he asks.

I consult my schedule as I stand up. “Physics. Room 163. Mr. Howe.”

“That’s in the science wing, near the auditorium. I can walk you. We have choir practice there today.” He grips his binder tightly as we exit the classroom and enter the mob of fellow students hurrying to their next class. “In the auditorium, I mean. Not the science wing.”

I have to laugh. “I’m sure you could raise all those formaldehyde frogs from the dead with your singing voice. It’d be quite a sight to see.”

Neil ducks his head, blushing. “I’m better at raising spirits than souls,” he jokes.

“Do frogs even have souls?” I look up at him. “Do you find frogs in the underworld taking sips of the Lethe to forget all those times they ate rotten flies or fell off their lily pads?”

“I don’t know, but it seems like a good question to ask Pastor Joe. We could ask him together,” he suggests shyly. “You know, if you’re there next Sunday.”

“We’ll see how Grammy feels. Dad’s looking into getting her a part-time nurse, but it’s so expensive. . . .” I trail off. “She is ninety-one years old, after all. She’s going to have some bad days.”

“Ninety-one! I never realized.”

“Don’t worry. No one ever thinks she’s that old. My dad was a late-in-life miracle.” I look away, pick up my pace as we round a corner. “And I was a late-in-life accident,” I say bitterly, under my breath, my mother’s ultimate rejection slashing at me all over again.

Neil matches me footstep for footstep, but he stays silent, as if allowing me to compose myself. Either he doesn’t know what to say or he’s perceptive enough not to say it. As we walk, he’s greeted by classmates and teachers, and he has a smile for everyone. By the time we reach my physics classroom, the hallway has cleared, leaving only a few stragglers.

I try to put on a cheerful expression to mask my distress. “Thanks for walking with me.”

Neil doesn’t seem to buy my sudden brightness. “Look . . . I know we just met, but if you ever need someone to talk to . . .” His eyes shine with sincerity,
warmth, kindness. All those sentiments I haven’t gotten nearly enough of lately.

I take a deep breath and ask him the question foremost on my mind right now. “Do you think it’s weird to want a little taste of the Lethe? Just enough to go back to a time when things were less complicated?”

“Well, I don’t think it’s
that
weird. I mean, everyone has bad experiences, right? We’ve all done things we wish we hadn’t.” He shifts his weight from one leg to the other. “I don’t think I could go through with it, though. Because, you know . . . even those things—maybe even especially those things—make us who we are.”

The school bell rings. I’m late again. Six for six today. And not only that, I’ve let my new lack of ambition for being on time affect Neil, too. “Uh, sorry for making you late.”

“Hey, no big deal. Choir can’t start without me anyway.” From anyone else that statement might sound cocky, but not from Neil. He even seems slightly embarrassed.

A man who must be Mr. Howe approaches, looking as though he’s eager to close the door and get started. “I better go in,” I say to Neil.

He gives me half a wave and heads off down the hallway.

Mr. Howe takes my schedule and indicates that I should sit down. I do, once again in the back row.

My new physics teacher starts his lecture, but I find it hard to concentrate on elementary particles and instead ponder what Neil has said about not wanting to forget his troubles. He seemed sincere, but then, the couple times
I’ve talked to him, he’s never been less than peaceful and content. It’s hard to imagine he’s ever gone through something terrible. I’m sure if he had, if he truly knew what pain was, he’d want a gulp of the Lethe water.

I cross my arms on the desk in front of me and lay my head down. In the dark cocoon of my arms, I close my eyes. But the familiar flashes of my bed drenched in blood force me to sit up again. My stomach rumbles, and I raise my hand for a hall pass. Mr. Howe grouches, but I don’t care. I rush to the restroom and make it just in time to throw up today’s lunch of ham sandwich and blueberry muffin into the toilet.

I hear a whapping
noise and look up with a start. I’m no longer in the girl’s restroom, puking out my guts. I am in the memory chamber, and Julian has a pair of drumsticks he’s beating on the overhang above me.

When he sees my eyes have opened, he tosses the drumsticks and they disappear into thin air. “Great! You’re up. You look refreshed. Time to get moving.”

I slide out of the chamber and examine the sleeve of my shift. It’s clean and pressed, without the merest hint of my recent bout of tears. Damn, these chambers are better than a dry cleaning service. “I’m ready.”

Julian gives me a once-over and then does his tapping trick at the wall to make the door open. I’m going to have to get him to teach me that. He peers into the corridor and then motions for me to follow him.

Our journey is almost identical to the one we took
before. Same monotonous scenery of hive after hive. Same wall of silence between us. The only difference is that now we have to keep ducking into alcoves to avoid the scanner drones, which come two or three at a time.

Finally I falter, and Julian scouts out the nearest hive while I work at staying upright. “That one is full.” He checks out several more, shaking his head each time he emerges. “They’re all full. We’ll have to do this the hard way.”

He pounds out his secret code on one of the hives to make the door open and leads me inside. A quick scan reveals that all the chambers are indeed full, and the figures inside are much larger than what I am used to seeing.

Julian chooses one nearest the door at ground level and shakes the shoulders of its occupant. “We’ll need this chamber for a while, sir,” he says in a commanding but pleasant voice.

A man scuttles out, startled. I gasp when I see him. Could it be?

But no, the man is not my father, though he does bear a rather striking resemblance to him.

“What are you up to, mate?” The man sways to and fro as if inebriated.

“This.” Julian raises his fist and punches him in the face.

CHAPTER 7

THE MAN THUDS TO THE FLOOR,
out cold. Julian drags him to the other side of the hive, depositing him there in distaste.

When I get over my shock and find my voice, I yell at Julian. “What did you do that for?”

“Now he can’t refuse you his chamber,” Julian says, crossing his arms over his chest.

“But how can hitting him cause him to lose consciousness? I thought that couldn’t happen here.”

Julian shrugs. “He believed it could happen. You needed a place to plug in. So plug in.”

I shake my head weakly in disgust and crawl into the now vacated chamber while I still have the energy to do so
without Julian’s assistance. Seeing the man makes me yearn to see my dad again. I fiddle with the man’s settings until I can load my own, and on a whim decide to revisit the last trip I took with Dad. I flex my fingers, and then I’m in.

Ward, Felicia. Memory #31272

Tags: Turkey, Dad, Scary storm, Musical goats

Number of Views: 3,024

Owner Rating: 4.5 stars

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The ancient Peugeot we’ve hired chugs and bumps up the winding road at such a slow speed that I want to scream. We’ve been in the car for hours, and there’s nothing for me to do other than check periodically if my cell phone has reception (it never does), stare out at the scraggly trees, and think about all the fun I could be having if only Dad had trusted me to stay alone over fall break.

In the front seat Dad talks to our driver and translator, a squat man with a tendency to grunt and grin a mouthful of gold. They converse in a mishmash of broken Turkish and English, and any attempt I make to decipher what they’re saying over the roar of the motor results in a headache. I zone out and absently doodle Julian’s name in the dusty glass of the windowpane and cross it out again until my finger is caked with grime.

“Are we almost there?” It may be the fortieth time I’ve asked since we left Istanbul this morning at the crack of
dawn. We have stopped several times to stretch our legs and gas up the car, most recently an hour ago in the outskirts of Ordu, but I’m itching to finally be free of this metal cage on wheels.

Dad turns his head and winks at me. “Azrak says to be patient. A fine assortment of goat cheeses awaits us in the next village.”

I groan. It is Dad’s preoccupation with goats, specifically a musically inclined herd here somewhere in the wilds of the North Turkish coast, that ruined my plans to alternately avoid Autumn so I could sneak around with Julian, and to spend time with Autumn to reassure her that nothing is going on. Because Mother was sent to Montenegro for two weeks to help them sort out their passport office, Dad insisted I come with him on his research trip. Or as I like to refer to it, his wild goat chase.

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