Brightest Kind of Darkness
Brightest Kind of Darkness
by
P.T. Michelle
Nara Collins is an average sixteen-year-old, with one exception: every night she dreams the events of the following day. Due to an incident in her past, Nara avoids using her special gift to change fate...until she dreams a future she can't ignore.
After Nara prevents a bombing at Blue Ridge High, her ability to see the future starts to fade, while people at school are suddenly being injured at an unusually high rate.
Grappling with her diminishing powers and the need to prevent another disaster, Nara meets Ethan Harris, a mysterious loner who seems to understand her better than anyone. Ethan and Nara forge an irresistible connection, but as their relationship heats up, so do her questions about his dark past.
Copyright 2011 by P.T. Michelle
All rights reserved. This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook cannot be re-sold or given away to others. No parts of this ebook may be reproduced, scanned or distributed in any manner whatsoever without written permission from the author.
This is a work of fiction. Any references to historical events, real people, or real locales are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, places and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination, and any resemblance to actual events, locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
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Chapter One
For me, being surprised was like wearing my best friend’s favorite shirt, cherished for its borrowed uniqueness. Some people loved potty humor. I loved watching life's surprises happening all around me. It was so rare that I got to experience them myself.
But after last night, I’ve decided I hate surprises.
Before I fell asleep, I’d whispered, “Can I just have one surprising day?” And four short hours later, I was zooming across an empty Walmart parking lot in my car, shoulders knotting with each spin of my wheels. “I should’ve defined ‘surprising’,” I muttered as I squealed to a stop in a parking spot. Grabbing my white-framed sunglasses, I jerked them toward my face, then slowly lowered the shades back to the dash. What was I thinking? The sun wasn’t even up yet.
Could I be wrong? I glanced at my mom’s favorite wool scarf sitting on top of my jacket in the passenger seat. I’d brought it for practical reasons, but I’d also wanted a part of her with me, as if her scarf riding shotgun meant she’d approve of my decision. How would she react if I was wrong and got arrested for reporting a false crime? Would she be shocked? Disappointed? Think I’ve lost my mind? Would she show any emotion? Or would she wait until the end of the day—after her last meeting was over—to check her messages and then come post my bail? It’d almost be worth the risk to find out.
With a heavy sigh, I cocooned myself in a layer of winter clothes. Halfway across the parking lot, sweat began to coat my skin under the thick jacket. The scratchy scarf only made it worse. All I could think about was clawing my irritated neck, but the building’s security cameras hung like gargoyle guardians nesting on the shoulders of a red and blue striped elephant. Tucking my chin into the scarf’s folds, I pulled my knit cap lower. I didn’t care if I looked like an idiot dressed like the boy from A Christmas Story in fifty-degree fall weather. Anonymity was my top priority.
Near the payphone, a blast of frigid air whisked dead leaves along the edge of the building, turning my sweat to chill bumps. Wind whistled and tunneled, pitching low and then high. “No!” brushed past my ear in a harsh, grating whisper, and the top layer of my hair charged, floating above the scarf. I froze and smacked my hair down as I scoured the area for the source. Wind and leaves battled the empty space on both sides of the building. My car sat alone in the dark lot, yet I couldn’t shake the feeling I was being watched…or reminded of the past.
I have no idea how many times I’ve forced myself to stand back and just be a knowing observer. But I couldn’t today. When I stepped toward the building, an invisible weight began to crush my head and shoulders, compressing my spine. I tried to inhale calming breaths, but thick, icy moisture swept into my lungs, stealing my air.
My vision blurred and I stumbled forward, my feet heavy weights dragging across the asphalt. Falling against the building, I pressed my cheek against the cool rough bricks and wheezed. I wasn’t certain things would go right, but there was one truth I knew for sure. “I can’t ignore this,” I whispered harshly.
As the crushing sensation slowly tapered off, I sucked in lungfuls of air, my gaze glued to the building’s sharp edge. Would someone come around the corner and tell me I was wrong? I waited. A minute passed. And then another. I was running out of time. Blowing out a breath, I pushed away from the wall. At least I wouldn’t have to peel off the wad of turquoise gum covering the phone’s coin slot. This call was free.
I picked up the grungy handset and dialed.
“911 Operator. What’s the nature of your emergency?” an older woman’s gravelly voice shot across the line.
God, what if I got it wrong somehow? Palm sweat soaked my gloves. “I—I want to report a potential threat to Blue Ridge High School.”
“Speak up,” the operator pitched higher.
Clearing my throat, I spoke again, my words huskier. “I think someone’s going to bomb Blue Ridge High today. A student who was recently expelled.”
Typing sounded at rapid speed. “Your name?” The woman demanded.
I hung up and ran on shaky legs to my car. I hated that I didn’t know what would happen next.
My car screeched into the school’s back parking lot seven minutes before first bell, the smell of burned rubber my constant perfume. Mom was going to be pissed if she had to get me new tires and brakes in the same year. Sliding on my narrow-framed black and red shades, I surveyed the ordered chaos. Police cars and fire trucks surrounded Blue Ridge High, their lights blinking in a strobed rhythm of red and blue. More students seemed to be leaving than arriving.
Digging my fingers into my backpack strap, I started toward the school with a clueless, but curious expression on my face.
The loner guy from my History and Trig classes headed toward me, hands shoved in his jeans pockets. “What's happening?” I called out.
When he didn’t respond, annoyance kicked in.
I remember the day he’d transferred in a couple weeks ago. It was the end of the day, and Lainey and I were goofing around in the hall with the soccer ball. I’d just passed the ball to Lainey when Sophia jumped in and punted it past me. Not to be outdone by Sophia, I’d gunned for the ball and looked up in time to see I was about to collide with the new guy.
“Look out!” I warned.
Blue eyes, framed with circles of exhaustion, flashed behind longish black bangs. At the last second, he’d jerked sideways and I slid past. Just as I regained my footing and turned around, he’d snagged the ball with lightning speed and sent it back to me, then continued down the hall without a word.
In the brief glance he’d passed my way that day, I’d noticed his hollowed cheeks and the blank “no one cares, why should I give a shit” look. Since then, I’d heard rumors that he’d been kicked out of his last school, so I’d tried to be nice and say “hey” to him in the hall a couple of times, but he’d ignored my attempts, brushing past me as if I hadn’t spoken.
From his first day at school, he’d parked in the back of the classroom and scribbled on a notepad, ignoring everyone. And here he’d done it again. I was just about to yell, “Hey, rude guy,” when I saw ear bud wires dangling in front of him. Had I missed seeing them in the past
too?
As he started to pass me, the wind blew his unbuttoned flannel shirt open, revealing a vintage black Rush t-shirt. Cool. A band with deep lyrics. The dark circles under his eyes had faded somewhat, but his gaze never engaged with anyone’s, like he totally existed in his own world. I moved to tap him on the shoulder, but he jerked out of my reach before I connected. What was his deal? Frowning, I lowered my hand.
“Sorry,” he mumbled. Pulling the ear buds out, he shook his black hair away from his eyes. “What'd you say?”
His deep voice stunned me. Though I wasn’t sure what I expected him to sound like, husky wasn’t it. Maybe grittier to go with his indie look. “What's happening?”
“Bomb threat.”
“Are you serious?”
“Someone called it in.” His blue eyes held mine longer than he’d ever done before.
My shades were dark, but I felt as if he could see right past the lenses. God, I hope my eyes didn’t give me away. Curling my nails into my palms, I tried to keep my expression and voice even. “As in…someone called in a bomb threat?”
He shoved his hands back in his jeans and continued to stare. Was he expecting me to say something else? To confess I already knew the truth? Not in this lifetime.
“Don’t know,” he finally said with a shrug. “I just heard the principal say school’s cancelled and others talking about a bomb.”
Exhaling a pent-up breath, I forced a calm tone. “Thanks.”
When he walked away, I called after him, “I’m Nara. What’s your—” but he’d already put his ear buds back in as he headed toward an old black Mustang in need of a paint job.
“Off!” he barked at a black bird sitting on the car’s roof, then shook his fist as it took flight.
Guess it left a present. As I snickered, a blonde girl from my Spanish class passed me. “Hey, school’s canceled,” I told her. “Some kind of a bomb threat.”
“A bomb?” Her eyes widened. “Thanks for letting me know.”
While she hurried back toward her car, I tried to recall her name. Sarah? No Shannon? Something like that. I could name every girl on my soccer team, but outside of that realm, I wasn’t the best at remembering names.
“Nara,” someone called out when I opened my car door.
Sitting in the long line of cars exiting the school, my friend Lainey leaned out her window, her auburn hair swirling in the wind. She held up her cell phone and a couple seconds later my cell beeped with a text. I’ll call you later.
I waved, then climbed into my car, welcoming the lingering heat to chase away the chill in the air.
As I set my sunglasses on the rubber mat on my dash, I glanced in the rearview mirror. The guy was still standing beside his Mustang. He's not looking at you. But when I pulled out of the parking lot and his attention followed my direction, I glanced away from the mirror, worry echoing in my mind. He knows I'm the one who called.
Setting my backpack on our coffee table, I grabbed the remote and clicked on the TV. Our school was the “breaking” news and a blonde reporter held a mic in front of our principal.
“Principal Wallum, can you give us an update?”
Mr. Wallum pushed his thick, black-rimmed glasses up on his bulbous nose and squinted at the bright camera light. “A bomb tip was called in at five this morning—”
“So it wasn’t a bomb threat then. Someone tipped the police off?”
My cell phone started ringing Dokken’s Alone Again, and I turned the TV down, then quickly dug through my backpack.
Emailing and texting were my mom’s main form of communication, so hearing the ring tone instead of a text message ping was surprising. Mom cared about my grades and which colleges I was thinking of applying to. Otherwise she depended on me to keep myself together, because...I always had. She had no idea I had my own way of coping. No one did. (Well, except Gran Corda, my seventy-eight-year-old semi-lucid grand aunt, who sequesters herself in a retirement home and has this to say about her name: “Corda’s short for Cordial. I—I mean Cordelia. Or maybe it’s Corduroy. Wait, it’s….well, hell’s bells…I can’t remember.” I’d confided in Gran the year my dreams first started, thinking, “There, I’ve told someone. She’ll forget the moment I walk out the door.” Oddly, that was one thing she never forgot.)
Pushing my cell phone to my ear, I glanced at the TV. “Hey, Mom.”
“Inara, I just heard the news. Where are you?”
The shakiness in her voice startled me. Mom was always in control.
“Inara?”
“I’m fine. They sent us home before school even started.”
“I’m glad you’re safe.” She exhaled, then cleared her throat before her tone went back to the steady one I was used to. “They said on the news that a student might’ve planted the bomb.”
My eyes darted back to the screen, where Mr. Wallum was nervously adjusting his bowtie. He always looked like he’d stepped right out of a dusty old library book. “Seriously? I haven’t had a chance to listen to the news.”
“They found an explosive rigged to detonate inside one of the school lockers. Thank God it was caught before school started.”
I winced. The thought that a student could’ve been blown to bits made my stomach queasy. Not to mention all the other people who might’ve gotten hurt. My instincts had been right. “Yeah. Me too.” I turned off the TV and tension released between my shoulders.
“Well, I’m due in another meeting,” Mom started to say when my phone beeped.
“That's Lainey calling. See you later.” Clicking over, I switched ears as I flopped onto our tartan-patterned couch that desperately needed to be updated to something from this decade. “Hey.”
“Did you hear the news? About the bomb?” Lainey sounded breathless.
“Yeah, I just saw—”
“Ohmygoditwasinthelockerrightnexttomine! My dad said they’re investigating a couple of suspects. Both are people from school. Can you believe it? I want to kiss whoever called in that tip. I could be in a billion pieces right now!”
Smirking, I blew her a silent kiss. Lainey had been my best friend since she walked up to me on the first day of middle school and announced, “Hi, I’m Lainey O’Neal and we’re going to be besties, I just know it.” That’s what I loved about Lainey. If she wanted something, she marched in and made it happen. Rejection/failure didn’t compute. Not only had she given me my nickname, Nara, but she’d always been a great source of information. When it came to the latest news, she knew the scoop, since her father was a Central Virginia police officer.
“That was a close call,” I agreed.
“No freakin’ joke. Dad said that anyone within fifteen feet of that locker could’ve been killed or seriously injured.”
“Good news all the way around then. Since school’s out, I guess that means practice is cancelled too,” I said.
“Nope. Miranda just called. Coach talked to Principal Wallum about practice. Even though the fall soccer program isn’t ‘officially’ part of the school, Mr. Wallum loves that we’re undefeated, so he said we could use one of the back fields furthest from the main building while the police conducted their investigation.”
Miranda always conveniently forgot to pass on team news to me. As team captain, she hated that I sometimes ignored her “orders” at practice. I didn’t like the sway she seemed to have over my teammates (they were the hive-mind to her queen bee). But right now I didn’t have time to be annoyed. I hadn’t really thought through what having a “surprising day” would be like. I’d just liked the idea of it. I curled my fingers tight around the cell.
The bomb incident in my dream had woken me before I could see how my day would turn out. Once the disaster was averted, I’d planned to ride out the remaining few hours in the predictable confines of my home, where the biggest surprises were when Mom would be home and what we’d have for dinner. That would’ve been a novelty. But now I was going to have to play soccer? Be calm. It’s just practice. Not a game with more
on the line. You’ll be back to your old self tomorrow.
“You there, Nara? My dad says it’s safe to practice.”
“Yeah, I’m here.” Silently freaking out.
“The football team will be practicing in the back fields, too,” she sing-songed.
Lainey liked to tease me about Jared Polenski. I’d been crushing on the blond quarterback since last year. Well, me and every other girl in school. “Just because I watch him practice doesn’t mean he’s even aware I exist.”
“He’s seen us there checking the team out, and I heard him say you’re tall.”
Five eight isn’t that tall. “Great, he thinks I’m an Amazon.”
“Actually, he said you’re tall for a soccer player. Just pointing out that he knows you’re that star goalie, who never lets a ball get past—oh, that’s Sophia calling. Gotta go. See you at four.”
Star goalie, who never lets a ball get past.
If Lainey only knew the truth.
Chapter Two
You know that feeling of déjà vu people talk about? I live it. Every. Single. Day. I’ve dreamed my entire next day since I was seven, so it just became a part of me, like the small scar on my forehead, the dimple on my left cheek and my wide smile.
It’s not like I can predict the future or try to win the lottery. That’s not how my dreams work. I only dream about things I will personally experience in my life…well, a day before they actually happen. That’s it. I just get one day ahead. Which sometimes makes life pretty routine and predictable, but there’s also an upside. Imagine knowing you’re going to have a bad hair day, or that you’ll burn the toast for the eighty-zillionth time, or that Mount Everest will appear on the tip of your nose a half hour after lunch. That’s when a ponytail, cereal and Benzoyl Peroxide come in handy.
Knowing what’s coming can be reassuring somehow. Not to mention, it sure helps with exams, dealing with friend stuff, and definitely playing soccer goalie. Who wouldn’t want to know which direction the ball would be kicked before it left the player’s foot?