Virals(44)
It was true. His eyes looked fine. Whatever I saw was gone. Or never existed.
"This is what happens when a jellybelly tries sprinting a mile," teased Shelton.
"I don't see you on the track team, pal."
"Let's get home." Ben moved to the wheel. "It's past two, and we've got school tomorrow."
"Everything's okay, right Tory?" Hi needed reassurance. I'd frightened him badly.
"You bet. We got a fingerprint and didn't get caught. Pretty damn okay, I'd say."
Hi leaned back and closed his eyes. "Weird," he said. "I've never fainted before. And now I feel great."
I tried to block it, but the image came unbidden. Golden irises split by black pupils. Bottomless. Primordial. Reminiscent of a different creature.
Suddenly I felt drained. My mind slurred, seemed to bend, then snapped back into shape. Energy coursed through me.
I struggled to move. Couldn't. Helpless, I slouched against the seatback. My lids sought each other.
Deep within my body, links shattered, fell together, were reborn.
My eyes flew open. Something was different. I could sense it in every fiber of my being. What? A change had occurred. I ran an internal check, trying to understand the alteration. Found nothing.
I felt light. Powerful. The weariness of the day washed away in a flood of visceral strength.
The boat skimmed the placid waters. An almost-full moon floated high overhead. I stared, rapt, entranced by the lunar beauty. Hearing a call I'd never heard before.
I glanced at Hi. He was gazing skyward, as I had, eyes glowing. I understood. He felt the same pull.
Unbidden, a name sprung to my lips.
"Whisper," I said, not knowing why.
"Whisper."
The name hung for a moment, then dissolved in the darkness of the soft summer night.
PART THREE:
INCUBATION
CHAPTER 32
The alarm blasted for ten minutes before I stirred.
Beep! Beep! Beep!
Kit pounded on my door, a reminder that missing school two days straight wasn't an option.
"Up!" I lied.
I lay motionless beneath the covers, still exhausted from the previous night's adventure, plotting schemes to stay in bed. My joints ached. My head weighed a thousand pounds. I hoped I wasn't getting sick.
Thunk. Thunk.
"Tory! Get moving!"
Ugh.
One foot on the carpet. Two. Sluggish, zombielike movements. My eyes refused to stay open. I plodded through my morning routine, then had to sprint to catch the shuttle.
The boys didn't look any better. Ben and Shelton moped, churlish, in no mood for conversation. Hi snored, occasionally slumping on Ben's shoulder until shoved away.
At school, time moved in slow motion. Usually I enjoy my classes, but today I wanted a fast-forward button. I needed to talk to Jason about the fingerprint.
During biology class? No. My request was unusual, and borderline illegal. Not a topic for the group. Plus I had to do some prep work first.
Shelton and Hi met me in the library during lunch. Ben wasn't there when we used the microfilm reader, so he was excused.
"We need our prints as a control," I said.
Snagging an ink pad, I rolled my first finger, pressed it to an index card, and jotted my initials. Shelton and Hi did the same.
"Remind me why we're doing this?" Shelton asked.
"To be sure the mystery print didn't come from one of us," I said. "We don't want to chase ourselves."
"Do you have any idea how to analyze prints?" Hi asked.
"I read up. There are three types--looping, whorling, and arching." Using my hand magnifier, I studied the cards. "You're both loopers. Shelton, your ridges run from the left toward center of the fingertip, then back to the left."
"Mine don't." Hi was squinting over my shoulder at his card.
"Yours still loop, but the ridges go in the opposite direction."
"Long lost brothers?" Hi asked.
Shelton snorted.
"Nope, just commoners," I said. "Two-thirds of the population are loopers."
"I want whorls," Hi said. "They sound cooler."
"Whorlers have a full circle at the center of each print." I lifted my card. "That's me. Less than a third of the population has that type."
"So the last pattern must be pretty rare," Hi said.
"Yep. Less than 5 percent of the population has arches. The center of that print resembles a tiny heap of stacked hills."
"And last night's winner is--?" Shelton voice sounded a drum roll.
I placed the mystery print under the lens.
"An archer!" Hi crowed.
"Which excludes us," I said.
Hi arranged the four cards side by side. "And it's huge! Way too big for any of our fingers."
"A print this perfect has to be recent," I said. "Shelton, you're certain you replaced the reel yourself? You didn't leave it on a cart to be re-shelved?"
"Positive--110 percent sure."
"Then this print was left by our stalker."
I snapped a picture with my phone, then checked my watch. Twenty minutes to the end of the lunch period. Time to find Jason.
Kathy Reichs & Brend's Books
- Hell Followed with Us
- The Lesbiana's Guide to Catholic School
- Loveless (Osemanverse #10)
- I Fell in Love with Hope
- Perfectos mentirosos (Perfectos mentirosos #1)
- The Hollow Crown (Kingfountain #4)
- The Silent Shield (Kingfountain #5)
- Fallen Academy: Year Two (Fallen Academy #2)
- The Forsaken Throne (Kingfountain #6)
- Empire High Betrayal