and see Shayne. I don’t wonder why he’s here; right now, I don’t care.

“Help me!”

He hears me. I know he does. The winged man shimmers and begins to fade. Chloe’s fading, too. I cross the distance and break their arms apart. The man fights me but lets go with a glance over my shoulder. And then he stands there watching. I manage to get my hands under Chloe’s armpits and drag her from the water. She’s pale and cold, but she’s still breathing. My face is covered in tears, but I don’t take the time to wipe them away as I sink down next to her.

“I can’t.” Shayne says, standing next to the winged man.

I look up, meeting his eyes.

“Can’t what?” I say.

“I can’t help you. She’s supposed to die.”

“No! She’s not. She’s alive.” Chloe has to be alive. I know it. Why did she have to ignore the heat advisory anyway?

He shakes his head and places a hand on her limp chest. “She shouldn’t be.” Under his palm, I see her chest rise and fall, erratic. She’s not breathing enough. And she’s pale. Way too pale.

I stand and punch at him with my fists, but he catches them.

“She can’t die.”

Shayne lets me cry. He doesn’t argue with anything I’m saying. He doesn’t try to explain.

The breath is moving in and out of her body. It’s shallow but still there. And the man with wings has vanished.

“She’s alive,” I say.

Shayne reaches out and wipes my face. His fingers come back covered with dirt that’s mixed with my tears. “She has to die, Piper. It’s the way things are.”

I shake my head and try to stay my tears, try to look fierce. “I won’t let her die.”

Shayne doesn’t speak. He looks to Chloe, pale on the ground, but breathing. I bite my lip to keep from saying anything, trying to piece out why Shayne is even here. Why would he be here anyway?

It’s only after we stand there in our silent deadlock for over a minute that Shayne finally responds. “If you had a choice, would you want her to live?”

It has to be one of the stupidest questions I’ve ever heard. “Of course.”

Shayne looks to the trees and seems to consider something.

“I would always want her to live,” I say again just in case he didn’t hear me the first time.

He turns back my way and nods. “Will you come with me somewhere? Please?”

On the ground, Chloe’s stopped breathing, and I’m about to say something when I notice everything else has stopped too. Not even the water is moving. Every single drop is frozen in time. The fish I saw swimming earlier are still. It’s like the entire world hibernates. I squat down to Chloe.

“She’ll be fine.” He knows what I’m thinking.

“I should get her to a hospital. She could have heat stroke.”

Shayne shakes his head. “I swear, she’ll be fine.”

“How can you possibly know that?”

“She’ll stay just like this until we get back. No one will bother her. I promise.”

“What if she wakes—?”

“Seriously, Piper. Trust me. Just this once.” His voice is layered with frustration, and his eyes plead with me.

I want to trust him. And I want Chloe to live. And if one is tied to the other, I’m willing to take the chance. Somehow Tanni and the winged man of death and Shayne being here now are all linked.

I move into Shayne’s outstretched arms, and he wraps them around me and fills me with hints of a courage that wasn’t there seconds ago.

“It’ll be okay,” he says. “Right?”

Maybe there is still some fear in my eyes. “Right.” Even I hear my voice shake.

“Good.”

We don’t walk like I think we will. Instead, we start sinking into the ground. I clench my fingers into Shayne’s sides because the movement is so sudden.

“It’s okay,” he says again. “Remember?”

I can’t answer because, in the next second, I’m swallowed by the earth. But instead of dirt and grit, I’m in a silvery void of flowing liquid mercury which seeps into my mouth and ears and nose.

I’m going to drown.

I hold my breath, sure the liquid will kill me, and in seconds, my lungs feel like they will collapse. I try to hold out a little longer. Maybe the silver fluid will be over soon. But the seconds pass, and I can’t stand it anymore.

I take a breath.

Instead of gagging me, the liquid fills my lungs, and they expand and contract as if with normal air. And in that moment, I finally believe Shayne. It will be okay.

I shut my eyes and hold tight onto Shayne, and we seem to float in nothingness. Nowhere on Earth. Like a world all its own. Again I breathe in, searching for a taste in the silvery liquid, but it’s like formless ether, liquid and gas and nothing all at the same time. Though we are floating, a current pulls on us, downward and upward, right and left. Pulling us toward our destination. When I feel cool air on my face again, I dare to open my eyes.

We’re in a cavern made of rust-colored rocks. Silver fluid trickles down the walls and pools on the hard- packed dirt floor. Light seems to come from the pools of silver and casts all kinds of weird shadows on the walls and ceiling above. Next to us is an underground river, and it’s so dark, the water looks black. But it’s bubbling, and voices come from it.

The hum of voices is freaking me out, but Shayne hardly glances at the water. He pulls a large gold coin from his pocket and spins it around on his fingers. It flashes in the dim silver light of the cavern, and I see a boat coming across the river toward us.

I haven’t moved, and I realize I’m gripping Shayne’s arms so hard my fingers hurt. So I loosen my grip and grab his hand instead. “Where are we?” Unlike our hot Earth above, there’s a breeze blowing through the cavern that smells of burning sweetness and cools the temperature down way below ninety.

He turns to me as the boat pulls up to the dock. “Haven’t you figured it out by now?”

I have, but I don’t want to say it. And he doesn’t press me. I can’t believe it, because it can’t possibly be true. Because if it is true, does that mean I am dead in place of Chloe?

The boat’s tied up now, and a man jumps out onto the long dock extending into the river and walks toward us. The black water behind him seems to extend forever.

“You have company.”

Shayne nods, and with his lips pressed together, he looks as nervous as I am. “She said she wanted to come.”

The man lifts a thick hairy eyebrow. “Let’s hope so.”

Shayne looks toward me, and I nod. My hand hurts from grabbing his so hard, but I’m not letting go. The water’s still bubbling, and the voices sound more like cries. I swear I see things swimming around out there in the black water. Things with horrible faces and sharp teeth.

Shayne flips the gold coin off his thumb with his finger, and the man catches it.

“Really. You know it’s not necessary.” But the man pockets it anyway.

“I don’t ever want anyone to say I don’t pay my fare,” Shayne says.

The man’s face cracks into a broad smile. “No one would ever say anything of the sort.” His skin looks as thick as leather, and his smile lines are so pronounced, they look sculpted. And his hair’s mostly missing with the exception of a few tufts above his ears and his giant, bushy eyebrows. The smile makes me think if I weren’t around, the man would be tempted to muss up the top of Shayne’s hair or cuff his shoulder or something equally as endearing.

“That’s what you say. But not everyone agrees.” Shayne begins to walk toward the dock, and since I’m holding his hand, I follow, trying to take in my situation without totally freaking myself out.

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