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      most persistent vision she kept having was of one of these woman

      waiting for Helen at her house like she lived there.”

      “The woman let herself into Helen’s house with her own key and

      turned on the TV like she’d done it a million times, so at first Cass

      didn’t think there was any danger. Probably a relative Helen never

      mentioned, right?” Hector interjected. “It wasn’t until just a few

      seconds before you walked in the door that she put it all together

      and knew that she had been seeing Helen’s attacker all day long.

      We tried to call you. . . .”

      “But I had my phone shut off,” Lucas finished for him, adding a

      foul curse on the end. “What did the woman waiting at Helen’s

      house look like?” Lucas asked urgently, trying to get a mental image

      of the threat. “Is she that brunette? Or the old woman who attacked

      Kate?”

      “Neither. Cassandra said she was unbelievably beautiful. Like

      Helen,” Jason replied.

      “Not just beautiful like Helen—you’re telling it wrong, dumbass,”

      Hector interrupted. He wove through traffic like a madman,

      blowing through red lights and passing cars illegally. “Cassie said

      this woman looked almost exactly like her. But whoever she is,

      Cass is certain this woman is not on Creon’s side. He doesn’t even

      know he’s being followed, which may or may not be good for us.”

      “Why the hell wasn’t someone guarding the house?” Lucas

      shouted in frustration, too upset to think about what Cassandra’s

      vision meant yet.

      “It’s my fault,” Hector said, and then continued before his little

      brother could argue. “Shut up, Jase, I’m the one who allowed her

      to go off on her own after practice. It was my call, and I made it,

      even though I knew in my gut it was wrong.”

      Lucas wanted to rip Hector’s face off for taking the blame when

      he knew whose fault it really was. He should have checked his

      phone, he should have checked the house, he should have paid

      more attention to Helen’s safety and less attention to her soft

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      hands and warm skin. He scrubbed his hands over his face and

      made himself take a series of deep breaths. He needed to trust

      Hector to get them there, and then he needed to focus and be ready

      for whatever they encountered. If he was going to be at all useful,

      he was going to have to shut up and calm down.

      When they got to Helen’s house, the TV and the lights were off

      and the front door was locked. Lucas flew up to Helen’s bedroom

      window, which he knew she always forgot to latch. He let himself

      in and then went downstairs to open the front door for the others.

      Nothing was taken and nothing was disturbed in the entire house.

      It was as if Helen hadn’t even put up a fight.

      “She must have known the woman and gone with her willingly,”

      Hector said, tossing up his hands. “It’s the only reason this place

      isn’t melting.”

      “Unless whoever kidnapped her is just that good,” Jason added.

      “What are you talking about?” Hector said derisively. “Helen’s a

      full-on monster now with her lightning. I don’t care who this evil

      twin is, no one is that good.”

      “Twin,” Lucas repeated, thinking. “It could be that simple. She’d

      have the same lightning, the same strength, and a lot more

      experience.”

      The brothers looked at him as he got down on his hands and

      knees and examined the floor. He reached under an end table and

      came up with a drained hypodermic needle.

      “That rules out Helen going willingly. Whoever she was, she

      came prepared. And she must have known about the cestus and

      how it works, or she never would have been able to penetrate

      Helen’s skin,” Lucas said, his breath catching only slightly when he

      said her name.

      He handed the needle to Jason and dropped back down to examine

      the floor one last time, in case he missed something. When he

      was satisfied, he stood up and looked through his cousins instead

      of at them, still thinking. Then he went to the windows by the door

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      and looked out at the raging storm. Lucas watched mini mudslides

      slosh down Helen’s driveway and out into the street and knew that

      any path Helen might have left would be long gone.

      “Was there anything else in Cassandra’s vision?” Lucas asked

      hopefully.

      “The last thing she said was that she thought Helen would still be

      safe tomorrow morning,” Jason replied, shaking his head doubtfully.

      “Cass had a brief flash of Helen standing in a window that

      looked like some kind of hotel on Nantucket, but she couldn’t be

      sure.”

      “Maybe Cass has seen something else,” Hector said as optimistically

      as he could. He opened his phone and tried to dial, but a NO

      SIGNAL sign was flashing on his screen. “Check your phones,” he said

      to his brother and cousin. Neither of them could connect a call,

      either.

      Lucas went into Helen’s kitchen and checked her landline for a

      dial tone, but it was dead. As he joined his cousins back in the

      entryway, the power in the house went out. Jason went over to the

      window and looked at the other houses in the area.

      “The whole block is out,” he said. “And massive lightning bolts

      are headed this way. I guess we’re stuck here for a while.”

      “You two stay here in case Helen gets free and makes her way

      back,” Lucas said as he turned for the door.

      “Where the hell do you think you’re going?” Hector demanded,

      grabbing Lucas by the shoulder and trying to turn him around.

      “Don’t,” Lucas warned quietly. They stared at each other until

      Hector finally backed down and removed his hand from Lucas’s

      shoulder.

      “Just stay out of the sky,” he cautioned. “You’re no good to her

      dead.”

      Lucas strode off into the dark storm without responding. He was

      frustrated with not being able to fly and trying to think of where to

      start. If he could get airborne he could see around, get his bearings

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      and look for anything suspicious, but the storm had him completely

      grounded. It suddenly occurred to him that if he had just

      drugged a girl who was known on sight by most of the locals of a

      tiny island, he would want to get off that island as soon as possible,

      and if Lucas was grounded, all air travel was almost certainly canceled

      as well. The only way to get Helen off island would be by

      boat, and even that was a long shot. Going out on the water would

      be suicide.

      He ran to the dock, where he learned that the last ferry had left

      over an hour earlier and that the coast guard had officially suspended

      all travel in and out of the marina and airport while the storm

      lasted. New England was going to get pummeled with a good oldfashioned

      nor’easter that night, and the impassable weather would

      probably last into the next day. Lucas relaxed a little when he

      heard that. He’d left Helen less than an hour earlier, after the last

      ferry had already departed, so the chances were high that she was

      still on isl
    and. Hopefully, she was in a hotel, and relatively safe.

      He wasted a few more hours wandering in and out of every motel

      and bed-and-breakfast near the ferry, asking if two women had

      checked in that evening. Unfortunately, although there were a lot

      of people stranded on the island and filling up the hotels due to the

      storm, there were none that fit Helen’s description. Lucas knew it

      was futile. No Scion would be stupid enough to walk into a hotel

      with an unconscious girl slung over her shoulder and ask for a

      room. Whoever had taken Helen may have broken in someplace, or

      even bribed someone at the desk, but either way, Lucas knew they

      weren’t going to announce themselves. He was chasing his own

      tail, but still, he couldn’t give up. He checked back at home, found

      out what Cassandra had seen in her next vision while he’d been

      gone, and then ran back into the storm before his father could even

      start to argue.

      The wind was so strong it was tearing down trees and taking

      apart the stoic Nantucket architecture. Even Lucas, as strong as he

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      was, had to switch over into his supermassive state to stay

      anchored to the ground as bits and pieces of people’s houses

      tumbled down the streets around him. His bare face was getting

      lashed by the swirling debris in the air, and the sideways rain was

      clawing at his eyes. All night he wandered around outside every

      hotel, inn, and bed-and-breakfast he could think of, looking in the

      windows with eyes that could see in even the dimmest of light,

      hoping for a glimpse of Helen.

      He knew he wouldn’t get it. Cassandra had told him that Helen

      would be standing in a hotel window the next morning, but he still

      couldn’t make himself stop. He wouldn’t stop, because if by some

      miracle he did find her, take her out of that hotel, and bring her

      back to her family, he could prove Cassandra wrong. All he needed

      was to beat Fate once and he would know that he was the master of

      himself—not just a prewritten story that gets reread every now and

      again to amuse the cosmos—but a truly blank slate that he would

      be allowed to fill with whatever future he decided to write for himself.

      If he could just find Helen that night and bring her home, then

      he knew that someday they would beat Fate, and that they could be

      together.

      He walked all night.

      Helen’s head was pounding and there was a sour, chalky taste in

      the back of her mouth, like she had chewed an aspirin and didn’t

      rinse afterward. Her eyes felt swollen and puffy, and the skin on

      her face felt clammy and hot, but she didn’t feel as dehydrated as

      she usually did when she visited the dry lands. This was different.

      She’d been drugged, she suddenly remembered, by a woman. A

      woman that looked just like her, but older.

      “Take a sip,” said a voice as Helen felt a straw being pressed to

      her lips. Her eyes flipped open and she saw the woman again, leaning

      over her and holding a glass of water.

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      “Who are you?” Helen asked, her voice crackling. She jerked her

      mouth away from the suspicious glass of liquid and felt her arms

      strain against bonds. She was tied to a bed. Still unbearably weak

      from whatever drug she had been given, Helen knew it would be a

      while before she was strong enough to break free. She looked

      around frantically. She was in a hotel room that was lit by candles.

      It was still night, and she could hear wind and rain battering the

      window behind the closed curtain.

      “Look at me, Helen! Who do you think I am?” the woman asked

      so forcefully it momentarily stopped Helen from panicking. “Here,

      I know you’ll need proof. I would.”

      The woman took out an envelope full of pictures. They were pictures

      of herself, when she was in her late teens. In one picture she

      was holding a tiny baby. In another she was sitting and talking to a

      young Mrs. Aoki while two baby girls, one blonde, one blackhaired,

      played together on the floor. In yet another she was kissing

      Jerry over her swollen, pregnant belly.

      “Beth,” Helen whispered, her eyes darting over the pictures that

      she had spent a hefty portion of her childhood searching for.

      “My real name is Daphne. Daphne Atreus. I guess it would be too

      much to ask for you to call me ‘Mom’, huh?” Daphne said with a

      wry smile.

      Helen gestured to her bound wrists. “You guessed right,” she

      replied, starting to get angry. “You want to tell me why you

      knocked me out and tied me up?”

      “Because we are out of time, and if I were you I would hate me so

      much I wouldn’t even give me a second to explain,” Daphne replied

      with a loving look on her face. “Unless I had been knocked out and

      tied down first.”

      Helen glared at her, furious and still groggy from the drug. “What

      do you want from me?”

      Daphne’s face and body began to shift, not just changed in mood,

      but in shape. One moment Helen was looking at an older version of

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      herself, and the next moment she was looking at a woman in her

      sixties with salt-and-pepper hair. Before Helen could even gasp,

      the dowdy woman disappeared and was replaced by a brunette in

      her late thirties. Then that woman disappeared and Helen was

      looking at her mother again. She held up Helen’s heart-shaped

      necklace in one hand and touched her own identical necklace with

      the other.

      “There are a lot of things I need to tell you about who you are and

      where you come from. Things that are going to hurt you,” Daphne

      said in a direct, almost brutal way. “But I don’t have any choice.

      Creon is on this island right now, and he is coming for you.”

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      UNCORRECTED E-PROOF—NOT FOR SALE

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      .....................................................................

      Chapter Sixteen

      At around eight o’clock in the morning, Lucas finally accepted

      the fact that he had run out of time. The sun was

      up. It was the next day, and Helen was probably already

      standing in a hotel window somewhere, in fulfillment of

      Cassandra’s prophecy. He knew his best bet would be to

      give up, go home, and wait for his little sister to see something else,

      even if it half killed him to admit that. He hadn’t beaten Fate.

      Again.

      Lucas saw the Pig still parked out in front of his house, and had

      to sneak in. It looked like Jerry, Kate, and Claire had all been

      forced to spend the night to wait out the storm, and that meant

      Jerry and Kate still didn’t know that Helen was missing. As far as

      they knew, Helen was safe at home and stranded there with all

      three Delos boys on the other side of the island. Lucas knew that lie

      wouldn’t hold up much longer, but he decided someone else was

      going to have to think up a new cover story to tell Jerry. He

      couldn’t control his emotions about Helen long enough to convince

      anyone she was still safe, let alone her father.

      Lucas flew in through his window and paced around his r
    oom for

      another hour. He was vaguely aware of the fact that he should eat

      or rest or dry off, but the only thought he could keep in his head

      was the thought of Helen. Cass would know it if she was injured,

      wouldn’t she?

      The houseguests woke and went downstairs. Lucas heard Claire’s

      phone buzzing with text alerts, and knew that the phones were

      back on. He listened from his room while Jerry and Kate tried to

      call Helen. When she didn’t answer either her cell or the phone at

      the Hamilton household, they got worried and decided to go back

      home to see if she was there. The roads were a mess, but even

      though that would slow them down, Lucas knew he only had a few

      more hours tops to find Helen before her dad realized she was

      missing and called the police. As soon as Jerry and Kate departed,

      Lucas met Hector and Jason on the stairs as all three of them came

      out from hiding in their rooms at the same time.

      “Bro, put a clean shirt on, at least!” Hector admonished as soon

      as he saw Lucas.

      “Leave it,” Lucas mumbled, shaking his head and trying to pass

      his cousins, but Jason stepped in front of him.

      “Don’t you think your mom is worried enough as it is? Go clean

      up before you come downstairs,” Jason said quietly.

      It was a guilt trip, pure and simple, but Jason was still right. Lucas

      nodded and pulled his shirt off over his head on his way to the

      bathroom. He washed, dressed, and met the rest of his family

      down in the kitchen. Even so, everyone stared at him when he

      walked in the room, and his mother looked like she had seen a

      ghost. Lucas checked his edges and realized that he was blurring

      himself. His mom always got upset when he did that because she

      knew that meant that he was upset. He made a conscious effort to

      let the light do what it wanted, and sat down in a corner, his eyes

      on Cassandra. Then the sound of bickering made him realize that

      Claire was there.

      “What are you still doing here?” Jason was saying in a dismayed

      voice. “Why didn’t you go back with them?”

      “I’m not going anywhere until we find Lennie,” Claire huffed

      back at him.

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      “We?” Jason sputtered, but Claire held up an imperious hand

      and fished her vibrating phone out of her back pocket.

      “Guys?” Claire said, looking at the incoming number. “It’s

      Helen.”

      “Let me talk to her,” Lucas demanded as he jumped up out of his

     


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