True North Read online




  True North

  Also by L. E. Sterling

  True Born

  Table of Contents

  Copyright

  Dedication

  1

  2

  3

  4

  5

  6

  7

  8

  9

  10

  11

  12

  13

  14

  15

  16

  17

  18

  19

  20

  21

  22

  23

  24

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  More from Entangled

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.

  Copyright © 2017 by L. E. Sterling. All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce, distribute, or transmit in any form or by any means. For information regarding subsidiary rights, please contact the Publisher.

  Entangled Publishing, LLC

  2614 South Timberline Road

  Suite 109

  Fort Collins, CO 80525

  Entangled TEEN is an imprint of Entangled Publishing, LLC.

  Visit our website at www.entangledpublishing.com.

  Edited by Liz Pelletier

  Cover design by Michelle Fairbanks

  Interior design by Toni Kerr

  Print ISBN: 9781633755956

  Ebook ISBN: 9781633756007

  Manufactured in the United States of America

  First Edition April 2017

  10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

  For my grandmother, Catherine,

  And in honor of her mother, Emily,

  Who in part inspires this story

  1

  Sometimes flesh and bone are as inexplicable as magic. I was but seven years old when I first realized that the song of blood-to-blood could hold sway over death. Margot was out with our driver that day. I don’t recall the why now, except to say we were always uneasy to be separated, and more so that morning. Jenks was our old-timey driver with the bushy eyebrows. He wore a black cap tilted on an angle over his thinning hair. His suits were always a touch too large. I’d noticed, in a child’s offhand way, that those suits were getting larger. When the Plague bit into him that morning, his foot stuck on the accelerator. He drove wildly through the town, drowning in wave after wave of agony, while Margot clung to the backseat like a burr.

  At home, they tell us, and miles apart, I was hysterical. No one would listen to me. Not the staff, nor our mother or father. Desperate, I ran out of the house and started one of our father’s many cars. I’d go after my twin on my own.

  I thank all the gods in Dominion that it was Shane riding the gate that day, our father’s man who knew us well—knew we were different. By the time Shane had a dragnet stop my sister’s car, poor old Jenks had cut a swath of destruction through the town. He died before they delivered a tear-stained Margot home. Bruised and shaken but miraculously not hurt, my twin looked at me as though she’d seen through the veil.

  They were halted thirty feet from the lake. Just thirty more feet and they’d have been underwater, my sister’s flesh tangled with the deep.

  That was the day I came to know the power of our bond. If we listened closely to our bones, fought hard enough, showed the world we’d not back down, my sister and I could pull each other from the jaws of fate. I learned my lesson that day as my raging grief clawed back the tides of death—that the only thing worse than feeling my twin’s suffering was the fear of not feeling her at all.

  It was a hard and terrible and wonderful lesson, and I learned it well.

  I squat at the roots of the giant tree, sliding into the bark a long, thin pipette to gather a sample. The slim tube fills, and I add it to the sample case, counting off vials along with how many months it’s been. One, two. I imagine this is a new game Margot and I have devised: the game of the missing sister. Three. Four. The air buzzes with the sound of machinery. Startled, I look up, trying to sight the choppers whirling overhead. The sky stays white and blank, though the sound rises and falls. Rain slicks my face and runs down my neck to pool at my collar.

  “It will be dark soon.” Beside me, Doctor Dorian Raines packs away her tools. “We’d better finish up or Storm won’t let us come back here for a month.” One of her springy curls defies the rain and gravity to stand on end. A spade lands at my knee. “Make sure you get a proper sample from under the root this time,” she teases me.

  She has reason to, I reckon. Over the past months, Doc Raines has had to teach me a great deal. The first time we’d come to take samples of the massive, unnatural thing known across Dominion as the “Prayer Tree,” I’d pulled vials of broken asphalt rather than the loamy soil from which the tree sprang.

  I’d been tired and distracted and suffering from “too much glitter,” as Margot would say. But all that glitter—the parties, the meetings, the endless social events—was robbing me of sleep. And what dreams I did have were shadowed with what glitter hid. But my life these days isn’t so much about digging for soil samples as digging for answers.

  I’m on a hunt for my sister.

  Four short months ago my world—and Dominion City—had been very different. The glitter had been my everyday, though of a different variety. Coming from one of the most prominent families of Dominion’s Upper Circle, my sister and I were expected to attend social events, to play hostess for the rich and powerful. That had all come to a crashing halt the night of our Reveal. That night, our world had exploded. The Lasters, led by the crazy preacher man, Father Wes, led a revolt on our house.

  So many had died that night, so uselessly. And I had been left alone. I reckon I could have gone with my parents and Margot and the dark Russian aristocrat Leo Resnikov, who held sway over them. I opted to remain behind in Dominion—I’d wanted to stay with the wild-eyed Jared Price and the rest of his tribe. I wanted to get as far away from the corruption of my father and his ilk as I could, trusting that the True Borns and their enigmatic leader, Nolan Storm, would help me get Margot back.

  I gave myself a choice: I could curl up in a ball and let the Plague take me. Or I could have faith in the magic buried deep in our blood and bones.

  I chose to believe.

  Four months on, things haven’t worked out quite as I’d expected. I’d hoped to forge a home here in Dominion City, a place to bring Margot back to. Instead, I reckon I feel as I did all those years ago, when I first thought my twin would be taken from me. Helpless. Lost, as though my body and my world had been ripped in two and the better part of me vanished. The True Borns are helping, or so says Nolan Storm, though there has been no progress to speak of. And I’d trust Jared Price with my life, though he doesn’t make it easy. Ever since that terrible night, Jared has been the perfect merc: cold, professional, distant.

  Still, I’ll not soon forget the moment I decided, when he looked at me and the masks between us fell.

  Stay with me, Lu.

  I shiver at the memory and idly tune in to a rising tide of chatter from around the tree. Childish voices scratch at the air. Something like the song of a bird grabs my attention. It’s unnatural, out of place here. I glance up. From this short distance, you can see the bits of silver and red and white flashing from the tree’s lush canopy. Grown in mere hours from the seeds of a so-called “magic bomb,” the deciduous now dwarves the intersection it’s eaten—a place the Lasters have renamed Heaven Square. It crows over the red-graffitied buildings of Dominion City’s wasteland. And this is where Doc Raines, Nolan Storm’s semiof
ficial clinician scientist, and I, her assistant, dig for answers. Literally.

  The birdcall sounds again, this time from another direction.

  “Oh, bother,” Doc Raines mutters under her breath. She swipes a lock of hair from her eyes with the back of a gloved hand. “Not again.”

  “You think?” I say, trying not to sound too excited.

  Doc Raines picks up the pace of her packing. “What else could it be?”

  The swarmings happen fast. Before you can blink, the kid gangs can arrive en masse and strip you of money, clothes, the gold from your teeth. We’ve protection here, courtesy of Nolan Storm, but that’s of little comfort. A team of thirty or forty could overwhelm us. There’s no shortage of little thieves in Dominion.

  “Hurry, Lucy,” Doc Raines calls impatiently.

  “Just one more sample,” I tell her, crawling deeper under a bough.

  The sounds rise, more like a warning than harmless birdsong. I can sense, rather than see, small bodies maneuvering around the buildings plastered in a mess of graffiti. Everywhere you look, the red tags appear: the same two circles, conjoined in the middle like a pair of crossed eyes. Evolve or die is scribbled beneath the best of them, sometimes even spelled right. The dying part is easy enough to understand in a city like Dominion. Thanks to the Plague, people here are dying by the bucketful. But how can anyone think a place like this can evolve?

  A shout. It’s Derek, one of our guards for today. Then I hear it: a shrill battle cry that raises the hair on the back of my neck. It comes at us from every angle. I push my way closer to the trunk. It would be hard to attack me under the tree, I reason. But the shelter also fulfills another need of mine.

  “Lucy!” Derek yells. “Stay where you are!”

  The sounds grow louder, more ominous, chilling the blood in my veins.

  Derek shouts over to Penny, our other guard. If the gangs think they’ve hit an easy mark here, Penny—whom I affectionately call “Mohawk,” though not to her face —will have them thinking twice. I imagine her grinning sharp teeth at the children, scaring them silly just before she laughingly tears one of them limb from limb.

  Doc Raines whispers something urgently at me, but I’m too far out of range to hear. I creep farther into the deep, reaching out my fingers until I touch bark. The kids’ shrill sounds fill the air like a screaming murder of crows. I can’t think, can hardly breathe.

  And suddenly I’m not alone.

  A dirty head pokes out from around the trunk, with a pair of brown eyes that shrewdly size me up from under a shaggy bit of hair. Alone, I think to myself, and wonder if the kid was sent to rob me—or worse. It cocks its head and sidesteps over to me like a curious bird as I riffle through the bag strung over my shoulder.

  I fish out an apple and hand it to the filthy creature, trying to speak loudly enough to be heard over the violent calls. “What’s your name?”

  The kid eyes my hand. “Marta.” Her voice croaks like she hasn’t used it in a while.

  “You with this gang?”

  She nods, sidesteps a bit closer, like a wild animal. Up close you can tell. Not just dirty—this young thing has likely seen far worse than death. Death is easy here in Dominion. Cheap and plentiful. It’s the living that’s hard. And if you’re in a kid gang, swelling with the orphaned castoffs of the Plague, I reckon it’s even harder.

  Quick as lightning, the apple disappears from my hand. The girl munches away at it, crouching against the base of the tree.

  “You stay around here?” I venture.

  The girl doesn’t reply but cocks her head at me as though I’ve asked if she’s from the Upper Circle. I ask, quiet-quiet, “Who runs your pack? Can I talk to them?”

  There’s a method to my madness. The kid gangs go everywhere. They flitter here and there and everywhere. If anyone will know things—for instance, which direction the Fox family may have fled four months ago—it’s the leaders of the kid gangs.

  I’ve made a mistake. I see this immediately. The girl quits her munching. She cocks her head and looks around wildly before bolting around the tree. But by then I’ve clued in that it’s not my question that has her running rabbit.

  I hear it, too.

  Silence.

  And then I understand why.

  “She’s unguarded?” Jared True Born Price snarls. The few songbirds in the trees go silent.

  I peek out from the safety of the tree to catch a glimpse of Doc Raines going head-to-head with the charming but psychopathic loafer who heads my security—the man who makes my heart gallop more wildly than a swarming kid gang.

  “Now hold on just a moment there, big boy.” Doc Raines glares back at him, hands on hips. “We’re not responsible for ordering the damned security details. We’re just going about our work. As we do every day, I might point out.” The doc isn’t afraid of much—not swarmings, anyway. Nor even a murderous True Born who, when provoked, picks his teeth with men’s bones.

  Jared lets out a long hiss of breath. “If you’re attacked, you’re not going to get very much work done, Doc,” he counters reasonably. I watch with too much curiosity, my heart pumping furiously, as the True Born sighs and runs his hands from his neck through his golden curls so they stick up like exclamation points. I reckon my time is short. I may have thirty seconds, maybe less.

  It’s hard to turn away from the sight of him. For a moment I’m transfixed: Jared Price is sinew and gold, a pacing jungle cat with flashing eyes. And like the cat he shares his gen code with, there isn’t a single inch of Jared’s lean frame that isn’t tailored to hunt and kill. I’m mesmerized all the more by his tender side, though—in many ways wilder than his beast—and how his fierce eyes turn soft when he looks at me.

  Still, I won’t likely get this chance again. I need to do this. I get down on my hands and knees and crawl a few feet around the base of the tree. I can’t see Marta any longer, but that doesn’t necessarily mean she’s gone. Reaching into my bag, I toss another apple as far around the trunk as I can manage.

  “Marta,” I call softly. “Marta, I’m Lucy. Come back in two days, right? I’ll bring you more food. Look for me.” I hold up two fingers, though I doubt the dirty little thing can see them. “Two days. I’ll have more eats.”

  As far as bribes go, this one is supposed to be a sure thing. Food is guaranteed to make you friends in Dominion—or get you killed. It’s in scarce enough supply that for some, it trumps Plague Cure. No sense living through the wasting disease if you’re just going to starve to death. Granted, I wouldn’t know much about starving—aside from staring at it in the gaunt planes of the girl’s cheeks.

  “Oh, Lu-cy. Come out, come out, wherever you are. I’m not going to bite,” Jared purrs.

  I snort in disbelief but decide to come out anyway, knowing with every cell in my body that Jared Price is scenting the air, fixing on me like a bloodhound—though panther is more like it.

  Backing out from the shadow of the tree, I hit something as hard as tree bark. I glance up. A blond man with the face of an angel looms over me. His bulging arms cross over one of a never-ending supply of stupid T-shirts. This one has a cartoon moose drawn across it. I notice a vague resemblance to my so-called guardian, Nolan Storm. My hands rest on his long bare toes that he’s shoved into some fragile-looking leather sandals. There’s a rip in the left knee of his trousers, and where the threads pull apart, I spy a freckle I’ve never seen before.

  “Find something interesting down there?” Jared’s eyebrow cocks up under a shag of blond curls. I hate it when he mocks me.

  “Yeah.” I hold up the small vial of dirt and asphalt like a shield. “You really need a new pair of pants.”

  He bends low over me, taking the dirt. So close I can smell the cinnamon scent of his breath. “I thought we had an understanding, Princess. You know the drill. Does this look like a good neighborhood to go prancing around in alone, making yourself a target for these idiot kids? Have you forgotten about all those nice preacherfolk who want to
skin you alive?”

  I huff indignantly. “I was not prancing.”

  I blink and look around. In the short time I’ve been under the prayer tree, Heaven Square has emptied out. The air has turned still, the swarming kids gone to ground. Even the handful of Lasters who usually hang around day and night, praying to all the Gods of Dominion to be saved from the Plague, have disappeared. I doubt it’s because they realized only Splicers can be saved—Upper Circlers with money enough to visit the Splicer Clinics, where they can have new DNA sewn in to replace the bad. Maybe one day the Lasters will pray to the True Borns, instead. They say True Born DNA jumped back in time, reasserting the genetic traits of our evolutionary ancestors. Some wear gills, other feathers. Some, like Jared, are a breed apart and able to wear their animal selves. They can’t get sick—no True Born has ever caught the Plague as far as I am aware. But in Dominion the True Borns are feared and loathed. People would just as soon believe that as their DNA returned to our primordial roots, the True Borns became not gods, but monsters.

  I peer up and extend to Jared a hand almost as filthy as the Laster kid’s. His nostrils flare in annoyance, but he takes it and hauls me to my feet, none too gently.

  “You scare everybody away again, True Born? What happened to Torch?”

  Ignoring my taunts and question about Derek, who prefers the name “Torch,” Jared wrinkles his nose and drops my hand as quickly as he can. “Rolling in the dirt again, Princess?”

  “I save that for when I’m with you,” I throw back teasingly. But my merc is clearly not in a teasing mood. Derek stands off to the side with Doc Raines, looking upset. “Tore a strip off him, did you?”

  “Not yet I haven’t. Merely grazed him.”

  “Go easy.”

  “Now wait just a minute there, Princess.”

  “Save it,” I say, waving my dirty fingers in Jared’s face. “Security is your thing, not mine. I’m not stupid enough to argue with you.”

  “No, but you’re stupid enough to hang around Heaven Square without a proper security detail at your back.” His words drip with condescension. Behind Jared, Torch blanches.