Read Whispers in Autumn Online

Authors: Trisha Leigh

Whispers in Autumn (4 page)

I’ve witnessed Wardens in person just four times. I remember them all with clarity; they were the scariest days of my life. I count them quickly. Eight Wardens. I’ve never seen so many in one place before. Never seen more than two, actually, the number sent out to collect the Broken. They flank a large video screen they’ve hung on the fence. Off to one side sits a white plastic table that holds a punch bowl, some blocks of pale pink rock, and several jugs of what looks like water.

The Wardens are the enforcement arm of the Others’ government, but aside from their tan uniforms with shiny black accents, they look the same as the rest of their race; tall, blond, and beautiful to the point of not appearing real. Unlike the Elements, they have no blue pinpoints interrupting their glossy, black gaze. No whites like a human eye, no pupil or iris. Just an endless void. The effect makes them appear sightless, but they’re not.

They shouldn’t be here now. No one is Broken. But no one speaks or questions them, even though I don’t think the Others informed anyone of this alteration. We all simply wait.

Once everyone has entered the park, a Warden clears his throat. “There will be a brief video presentation regarding this change to your monthly Outing, and afterward we invite the Terminal students to join us for a drink celebrating our presence among you in your final year at Cell.”

His beautiful voice pours into my ears like a sweet coating of honey, but the sight of him embeds a throbbing ache behind my eyes. Looking directly at the Others causes a jabbing pain deep in my brain, like needles being slammed through my forehead. Perhaps because our mere human minds can’t process their superior existence.

That is what they would have us believe.

Most of my fellow humans stare at the ground or into the Wilds—no one maintains direct eye contact with the Wardens. My heart spasms and clenches, a sense of foreboding wriggling past my boredom as the screen flickers to life.

Our Cell Administrator slides into his office chair on the screen, even though he should be on the Outing, not at Cell on a Sunday. I focus on holding my head still, refusing to let it whip around to look for him because everyone else remains motionless. And the Wardens aren’t interested in the screen. Their black-hole eyes train on the crowd, watching for…what?

The Administrator’s round belly barely fits behind his desk, and he works to smooth his tie into place. Serenity paints his familiar, fleshy face as he smiles and nods into the camera. “Good morning. As you’ve noticed, the Others have dispatched Wardens to Danbury. Their purpose here is to observe and conduct interviews with the Terminal class, which will begin tomorrow. The sessions will be held one student at a time during chemistry, one block each week until completion. The Others wish for me to convey their appreciation for your cooperation in this matter. Thank you.”

The screen goes black. Sweat dampens the back of my neck, spinning chills down my arms in the clammy morning. They’re going to talk to us alone. Just the Terminals. Why? Since chemistry is my end block, the seventh of my day, I have seven weeks to figure out how I’m going to keep my secrets while alone in a room with a Warden. Or more than one.

After all these years, fooling the kids at school and my fake parents is second nature, but something tells me the Others won’t be affected by my semi-invisibility.

The Wardens march to the table. One stands behind the cut-glass punch bowl, a plastic dipper in his hand. “If you would all gather around, we’ll begin serving you in a moment.”

He doesn’t elaborate on what we’ll be served. My legs don’t want to follow the direction to gather, even though there’s no choice. I can’t refuse, not while my Cellmates shamble obediently closer to the table, forming a loose line. I manage to find a place, nearly bumping into a boy I don’t recognize. His glossy black hair hangs over one almond-shaped eye and he offers a half smile as he motions me in front of him.

He’s a Barbarus, an uncommon thing here in Danbury. We’ve been instructed that even though the Barbarus look different on the outside, inside they’re like the rest of us. They even differ in appearance from one another. Some have funny-shaped eyes, some a kind of light brown skin or noses that seem too big for their faces. Since they don’t teach us about what existed before the Others came, we don’t know about the origin of the Barbarus, but only a handful remain on Earth.

Even though a few attend my Cell in Portland, when I turn to thank him breath catches in my throat. The boy’s complexion appears yellow in the dappled autumn sunlight, and he’s barely taller than I am. The slanted eyes, the jet-black hair, and short stature all align with my knowledge of this particular human variation. But his eyes are wrong. They’re a clear sky blue when they should be dark brown.

It takes a moment to recover, but habit pastes a fake smile on my lips while my brain catches up. “Uh, thanks.”

“You’re welcome.”

I turn around. At the table, two Wardens grab the pinkish lumps and set to crushing them under their hands. The Others prepare food and deliver drinks for us every day, but I’ve never seen the process. Either the substance is soft or the Wardens are strong; perhaps the truth is a little of both. Soon piles of pink dust scatter the white tabletop. A breeze blows some of the particles into the faces of the Terms nearest the table. They giggle, swiping dust off one another’s shoulders and shaking it out of their hair, trading their laughter for violent sneezes after a moment or two.

The majority of the pink substance dissolves in the jugs, coloring the clear water as the Wardens shake them and then begin to pour rations into tiny plastic cups. The first of my Cellmates, a tall girl with a long brown ponytail, accepts the gift and drinks it down in two gulps before rejoining her parents. The next two are boys, one blond and one a redhead like me. The line moves forward slowly, but too fast for my pounding heart. This development scares me, although as with the fear I have of the Others, I can’t put a finger on the reason.

Except that I don’t want to be observed or interviewed or noticed at all. Not by the Others.

I spot Pine Boy—Lucas—four or five people ahead when he turns, scanning the faces of the kids behind him. Our eyes meet, and for a split second I see my fears reflected on his pale face. Then he spins around again, stepping ahead as the line moves.

The novelty of this exercise makes it hard to breathe. Trusting no one, hiding in plain sight, I depend on the familiar ins and outs of the days on Earth. Without them, how will I know how to act Acceptable?

“What do you suppose they’re looking for in Danbury? And why just the Term class?”

The Barbarus boy’s voice slithers over my shoulder in a whisper. I shrug, dying to talk with someone but unwilling to display any hesitation while the Wardens scrutinize the moving line. The boy’s questions border on suspicious, and tangle with the similar emotion in my gut. It’s weird to hear an innate distrust of the Others in a voice not my own.

Trust no one
.

That definitely includes a strange Barbarus who appears the same morning as the Wardens.

The sight of the first nosebleed pulls my attention from the new boy. The second, third, and fourth jerk my stomach into knots. It’s not as though I’ve never seen one before. People take ill. There are Healers and nosebleeds aren’t serious.

But all of the Terms with blood dripping from their noses have already swallowed their offerings.

The affected kids wipe absently at the red flow and don’t seem to be in pain, a kind of bemused expression on their faces as they await further instruction.

A gurgle rises in my throat, a desire to point out the problem, but not a single person utters a word. Not the kids’ parents, not their friends. But the Wardens notice, and less than five minutes later two more of them arrive in a rider. The Others mode of transportation glints black from front to rear, hovering three feet off the grass on four spinning disks, whirring quietly.

The newest Wardens guide the bleeding Terms through the open rider doors, slamming them shut with distinct finality.

No one says a word then either.

Parents wait for their Terms to finish partaking, talking contentedly among themselves. Little children bend and pick at blades of grass, tossing them at one another or braiding them into wreaths.
The kids in the rider are going to a Healer
, I tell myself. They’re not being taken away. They’re not Broken.

I swallow once, then again, but the fear climbing up my throat refuses to dissipate. The line plods forward, and as we move, more anomalies make it impossible to breathe without gulping air.

The girl who had been at the front of the line, the one with the brown ponytail, rubs itchy eyes until her hands come away bloody.

A thin crimson ribbon trails from the redheaded boy’s lips after he coughs.

They both disappear into the rider.

The Wardens behind the table ignore their growing collection of bloody Terms, passing out cup after cup of pink liquid. My Cellmates still don’t pause before draining their celebratory gift, and as I creep closer to having to do the same, it comforts me that the rest of the Terms appear unaffected.

I realize then that the kids in the rider are the ones who breathed in the pink dust as it blew into their faces.

The Barbarus boy says nothing further, leaving me to believe I imagined the disquiet in his voice moments before. Sweat trickles down my back as Lucas drinks and joins his parents at the entrance of the park. His face no longer reflects worry, but remains ashen. Uneasiness claws at my lungs, shredding them as though there’s no oxygen in this entire world. What the Barbarus said about the Others dispatching the Wardens to observe our class in particular, rings in my ears like a warning. If they’re looking for something, and the interviews are designed to help them find it, perhaps the pink drink is also a test. Are the kids in the rider failing or passing?

They’re failing. As much as I want to believe they’ll be okay, it’s hard. I’ve never known a single person who got into a rider to return. Ever.

It’s my turn. The Wardens, apparently tired of this entire process, hand me my cup and pass out the remaining doses to the Barbarus and three girls behind him all at once.

“That will be all. You may return to your homes.”

None of the Wardens leave, continuing to watch, perhaps in case any more of us start gushing blood onto our tracksuits.

“Bottoms up.” The Barbarus boy tips his pink concoction past his lips and tosses the cup into a waste receptacle.

He waits, watching me with as much interest as the Wardens, and it’s obvious I’m not getting out of this new ritual. Mr. and Mrs. Morgan appear, stepping to my side with warm smiles.

“Oh, Thea dear, do drink that. It was so kind of the Others to think of you at the outset of your last year.” Mrs. Morgan pats my arm, nudging my hand toward my face.

It’s now or never. Even hesitating as long as I have could be a warning to the Wardens that I don’t trust them as blindly as everyone else. The Barbarus stares with a grin that glints in his eyes. Mr. Morgan’s stomach growls, and I know he’s anxious for brunch. From the corner of my eye, I watch Lucas and his parents hurry out of the park.

The liquid tastes like water despite its pinkness, but it’s warm instead of cool like I expect. I toss the cup and smile at my fake parents. “Let’s go home. I’m hungry.” I turn to say goodbye to the Barbarus, but he’s already moving away. I crane my neck, looking for his parents, but don’t see them.

The Morgans and I trek back through town alongside the rest of Danbury, chatting with the neighbors while Mrs. Morgan coos over their baby boy. I feel lucky to have escaped injury and detection this morning, but then, as we turn onto the Morgans’ street, I start to sweat. It’s residual panic, I think at first, but then the heat trapped inside me bulges uncomfortably. It rises up and out with an uncontrollable strength. It’s escaped my restraint on many occasions, but never with this kind of force. Never so powerful it makes me feel explosive, as though it’s trying to melt me from the inside.

As soon as we enter the house, I mumble that I’ve got to use the wasteroom and make a beeline for the mirror. My cheeks are flushed bright red. Sweat drizzles from the hair around my forehead. I breathe in through my nose and blow out through my mouth as my limbs shake so badly it knocks me to the floor. The white tiles burn my knees as if they are blocks of ice.

The heat has to go somewhere. My body can’t hold it.

Instinct propels me across the floor to the toilet. I submerge my hands in the water and stop pushing the power back down inside me.

I don’t feel better until every last drop of water has boiled away.

 

 

CHAPTER 5.

 

 

The next morning—the day of the Gathering—yawns as bright as the day before, the temperature holding steady for early fall in Connecticut. I couldn’t be more pleased about the nice weather, and I say a quick wish for my next travel to take me back to the spring. Winter is coming, otherwise known as the bane of my existence.

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