Total pages in book: 78
Estimated words: 72515 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 363(@200wpm)___ 290(@250wpm)___ 242(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 72515 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 363(@200wpm)___ 290(@250wpm)___ 242(@300wpm)
Romulus shows up, too, and I’m grateful it’s him while his conjoined twin sleeps. He gives Thing a warm hug and, as he pulls back, instructs him, “Stick close to the rivers as you travel southwest. Use the GPS like I showed you.”
“I was there in the old days,” Thing rumbles, his voice so deep. “I remember how to travel by the stars as well. They have not changed. We will not get lost.”
I’m close enough to hear Abaddon lean in and whisper, “And keep an eye on her. I don’t trust her.”
I roll my eyes. Thing just growls in warning and turns away, right into Hannah, who all but throws herself into his many arms. He swings her around a little as they embrace, and I frown harder at the floor while they say their goodbyes.
I know she’s with Abaddon, but it makes my chest tighten a little in frustration that she’s so comfortable touching Thing when he feels like. . . mine. It’s an absurd passing thought. I’m glad when Abaddon finally opens the door, and a blast of freezing wind hits me in the face.
I pull the ski mask down over my face, then trudge into the snow before anyone can say anything else.
I’m ready to leave this place far, far behind.
I’ve got revenge to see to.
Chapter Eleven
THING
For the first hour of our trek, we are both silent. And then the second hour also.
It is strange, being with a quiet human. After getting to know Hannah, I assumed they were all. . . talkative.
This human is not talkative.
At first, I thought I liked it. Walking with her was a little like being alone in the woods. Except, I realized that was foolish because I was constantly aware of her. I walk slowly to make sure she is able to keep up with me. I wonder if she is getting tired because the pace I’m setting is still too fast, and she simply does not complain.
But whether I slow down or go faster, she matches me exactly.
I frown, wondering what she is thinking. So then I try to listen to her breathing and eventually land on a pace that does not seem to have her breathing too heavily.
I know that if I were with Hannah, she would be very vocal about her discomfort, but I have the feeling this one would continue in silence even if her limbs were burning.
At hour three, I decide to do something entirely novel and ask. “Do you need to rest?”
She seems startled that I’m breaking the silence. “Do you want to rest?”
I blink back at her. “I am asking you. You are the human.”
She stiffens. “I’m keeping up just fine.”
“I did not say you weren’t. But what do you want? Do you want to rest?”
She stays silent for a long moment. “I—” But then she breaks off as soon as she begins and is silent again. Finally, she picks back up. “Well, maybe I should stretch some, then we can continue.”
I nod.
She leans over and begins to stretch. Strange positions I haven’t seen humans contort their bodies into before. But then, besides Hannah, I have not been around humans in a very long time. She stands on one leg and grabs the other, bending it behind her in a graceful move.
“Your name,” she says, surprising me by talking. “Why haven’t you changed it?”
I blink, surprised by this question she’s asked. “It is my name, given by my Creator-Father.”
“He sounds like a dick.”
I frown, not following. Sometimes this happens with Hannah when she uses words that mean different things in modern language than before.
“If he wasn’t nice when he gave you a name, you should choose your own name.”
I frown further. “Can you do that?”
She laughs, and I like the sound. “Of course you can. It’s your life. Your name. You can be whatever you want to be. Whoever you want to be.”
Hmm. “I will think about it. I have been Thing for a very long time.”
She nods at that, finally standing up from stretching.
“You have not told me your name.”
Her gaze, always averted, moves towards the forest. We are staying beside the frozen river, the forest off to our right. She is so quiet that if I did not have the excellent hearing I do, I might have missed her next words. “My name’s Ksenia.”
Ksenia. A beautiful name for a beautiful person.
“It is a good name,” I say.
She nods but seems distracted.
“That’s a Slavic name, yes?” I ask, hoping she’ll divulge more about where she is from and how she got here.
But she ignores me and just starts walking again. “Who’s Angel?”
I sputter a little as I start walking again, easily catching up with her short legs. “What do you mean?”
“Your brother kept warning you that I’m a spy for someone named Angel. I want to know who they are.”