When we’d all settled down on our cushions and the children without seats had arranged themselves in a circle around us, Ethan said, “Tell us about your world.”
That was the last thing I wanted to begin with—I was so anxious to get more information about the person who had escaped from the Shadows that I could barely sit still—but it was clear that if we wanted to get information from these people, we were going to have to put down a deposit first. So Rita started telling them about our home world. But soon it became clear from the questions the children asked that for all their casual talk of “other worlds,” they envisioned our Earth—Terra Colonna—as nothing more than an exotic foreign country. Further away than Europe perhaps, but no more alien to their understanding than the town next door. The concept that there might actually be two different versions of the same Earth inhabiting the same space wasn’t even in their lexicon. As for the mysterious Gate … yes, that seemed magical to them, but it was a kind of magic they were used to. There were people with Gifts who could do all sorts of things like that, they informed us.
I was dying to learn more about those Gifts, but it wasn’t our turn to ask questions yet.
Eventually it became clear that what these children really wanted from us wasn’t scientific information as much as simple entertainment. So Rita started telling them adventure stories set in our world, and she kept them enthralled that way for a good hour or two. They probably would have demanded she go on like that forever if she hadn’t started inserting long, boring descriptions. It was a brilliant strategy, and it soon bore fruit. One by one most of the youngest kids either fell asleep or wandered off, until all that remained in the magpie room was a small group of older teens, and the team that first found us.
Then it was our turn.
I wanted to start by asking about Gifts right off, but Devon wanted to know about the Guilds, and he talked louder and faster, so he won. As it turned out, the two things were connected, Gifts being mental powers that came in a number of distinct varieties, while the Guilds were organizations that trained and protected the Gifted, one Guild for each specialization. Since they controlled the most powerful people in this world, they also controlled most of its commerce, either directly or indirectly. Which meant that cities had to keep the Guilds happy if they wanted to prosper. Which meant that politicians needed to keep the Guilds happy, as did businessmen, law enforcement … you get the idea. Basically, if you pissed off the Guilds in this world, you were seriously screwed.
So now the foraging team’s reaction to Devon made sense. If these kids had been concerned that he might belong to a Guild, it was because that would make him an agent of the vast, Gift-driven network of authority that controlled their world—what folks back home called The Man.
Okay. It was starting to make sense now.
Ethan named some of the most powerful Guilds, and sure enough, the Guild of Shadows topped the list, followed by Seers, Weavers, Elementals, and a few scary-sounding ones like Soulriders and Fleshcrafters. Some of the names sounded like they came right out of one of Tommy’s fantasy games, which made me miss my little brother even more. Then Devon described the weird grey aliens we’d seen, and Ethan said that yeah, those were the Greys. People called them that because their actual Guild name was a pain to pronounce. Their Gift was sneaking around, so they did most of the Shadows’ dirty work, and they inbred a lot to keep their Gift in-house.
Because true Gifts were so rare, Ethan told us, the Guilds were constantly on the lookout for children who had the seeds of power inside them. That’s what the Seers were for; they could tell if a child had the potential to become Gifted, and if so, what form his Gift would likely take. Babies in this world were presented to the Seers soon after birth, and if a Gifted one was discovered it was taken from its family and adopted into one of the Guilds.
“Wait,” I interrupted. “Don’t the parents object to that?”
“Not if they’re paid enough,” our former guide muttered. His tone was bitter.
Ethan nodded grimly. “A Gifted baby can bring in enough money to raise a whole family up out of poverty.” And he went on to explain how some poor families would give birth to a slew of kids just to increase their chances of producing a Gifted one to sell. Which was a long shot, those being very rare, so the result was a lot of extra kids wandering around whom no one wanted. Meanwhile, any child born into a Guild family who had no discernible Gift was considered an embarrassment and risked being abandoned… .
I didn’t actually hear what Ethan said next. Because suddenly I grasped who and what our hosts were, and the revelation was so stunning—and so horrifying—that for a moment I couldn’t hear anything at all.
All these children were rejects. Giftless kids who’d been abandoned when they were young, or maybe just so badly abused in the name of parental resentment that they’d run away from home. Some might have been children from lower-class families who’d failed to manifest the one precious commodity that could lift their families out of poverty, so they’d been shoved aside to make room for their parents’ next attempt at profitable reproduction. Others might have been upper-class children who’d proven unworthy of their lineage, and were driven out to spare their relatives shame.
The revelation sickened me so much I didn’t dare look into the eyes of any of them, for fear that they would think the horror in my expression was directed at them. What kind of a world was this, that would do such things to its children?
“Some are sold to the Shadows, to be used for the Gates,” Ethan continued, oblivious to my reaction. “Others are sent to labor farms. A few are sent to other worlds—”
“Hold on,” Devon interrupted. “What do you mean, sent to other worlds?”
“As replacements,” Ethan explained. “When the Shadows steal a Gifted baby from another world, they leave an unGifted one in its place.”
I saw the look on Devon’s face, and I suddenly remembered what he’d told me back at the IHOP, about the DNA orphan in Taiwan. There was stuff that should have been in any human DNA, that wasn’t in his.
Suddenly my earthly identity was falling to pieces, and there was nothing stable to hold on to. Was this the world we were originally from, Rita and Devon and I, and all the other “DNA orphans”? Were these our real people? The concept was so insane that I wanted to laugh and cry at the same time. But there was no denying the logic of it. Add this piece to the puzzle of our lives and everything fit together perfectly. That’s why the genetic code of the Taiwanese orphan had been lacking the most basic human elements: he wasn’t human. Neither were we.
“Why?” I whispered, trembling. “Why would they do that? Why not just let people think the stolen babies had been lost, or kidnapped? It’s not like anyone would guess why they were being taken. Why leave your own kids behind on an alien world—?” I couldn’t bring myself to finish the sentence aloud: so they would grow up ignorant of who and what they really were.
A voice from behind me said, “Genetic investment.”
I twisted around to see who was talking. In a dark corner of the room a boy was tucked into the shadows, barely visible. His face was ghost-like in the darkness, his eyes so black they seemed to suck in the lamplight.
“Meaning what?” I demanded.
“Meaning that it helps keep foreign gene pools compatible with ours, so that when Gifted children appear in other spheres we can claim them.”
Rita glared at him. “So it’s like—what?—crop fertilization?”
It seemed to me that one corner of the boy’s mouth twitched slightly, but whether that was a smile or a smirk I couldn’t tell. “That’s the general idea, yes.”
Before I could find the words to respond to that bombshell he stepped back into the shadows, so that I could no longer see his face. I sensed a dark shape moving toward the exit, and an instant later he was gone.
“Seriously?” Rita demanded, turning back to our hosts. “Is that how you all see us? Crops to be harvested?”
&nbs
p; “Isaac’s an aristo,” Kurt said apologetically. “And yeah, that’s how his kind sees our world. Everything in the universe exists for their benefit, human beings included.”
Ethan nodded bitterly. “They claim the ones they want, use the rest for breeding experiments. Not only on other worlds. They breed their own children like livestock sometimes, trying to produce kids with particularly valuable Gifts.”
“So what’s he doing here?” I demanded. “I thought this was a refuge for—” I stopped myself just in time. For rejects, I’d almost said.
“He’s fleeing an arranged marriage,” Ethan explained. “It isn’t the usual reason people come here, but it’s good enough. He’s our age, he’s outcast, he pulls his weight on foraging expeditions … maybe he’s not always as diplomatic as he could be, but who is?” He shot a warning look at Kurt. “He had a formal education, which is more than most of us can claim. It’s useful sometimes. So if you want more detailed information about the Shadows or the Gates, or anything else, you might want to talk to him.”
“Assuming he’ll talk to you,” Kurt muttered. “Not exactly the friendliest guy in town.”
I asked, “Is he the one who escaped from the Shadows?”
Ethan shook his head. “No, that’s the Green Man. We can put out a call for him if you want, but there’s no telling if he’ll answer it. He comes and goes as he pleases.”
“If he hears there are visitors from another world he’ll come,” Kurt said.
“He lives in the forest,” Moth offered. “He can merge into trees, so the Shadows can’t find him.”
“He trades in knowledge,” Ethan said. “So if you want information from him you’ll have to offer something in exchange. He’s already collected stories from a hundred different worlds, so finding something he doesn’t already know won’t be easy. Most of the people who try to bargain with him walk away empty-handed.”
“We’d like to try,” Devon said quietly. “Would you put out the call for us?”
“If you want.” He shrugged. “Just remember, there are no guarantees.”
I twisted around on my cushion, looking after the strange pale boy they called Isaac. He understood the concept of other worlds in a way that the others didn’t. And if what Ethan said about his education was true, he might be able to shed some light on the situation with Tommy. If we could figure out why the Shadows had kidnapped my brother, maybe we’d know how to retrieve him.
I glanced at Devon and Rita. They saw the question in my eyes and nodded.
Quietly, I got to my feet and headed after pale aristo boy, while the group conversation continued on behind me. The exit that he’d taken led to a tunnel with very little light in it, so I had to be especially careful not to walk into anything. It was hard while peering down lightless side passages, and one time I struck my head against a pipe so hard that the noise of it resonated down the length of the tunnel.
When I found him at last, in a little nook leading from one of the main conduits, I almost walked right past him. Apparently he’d heard me following and waited. From up close he looked a little less like a ghost, but only a little. There was a haunted quality to his gaze that made me shiver, and the shadows cast by the small lamp at his feet gave his lean and elegant features an eerie cast. In the full light of day he would have turned heads in any high school. In this light he looked … well, damned creepy.
For a moment we just stared at each other. Then he nodded ever so slightly and said, “I’m Isaac.”
“I’m Jessica,” I responded, with equal formality. “Jesse, to most.”
The dark eyes studied me in silence for a few seconds. It was impossible to read his expression.
“You followed me,” he said at last. “Why?”
I decided to go for the direct approach. “They said you might have information for me.”
Again a moment of silence. “Why does he matter to you?” he said at last.
I blinked. “Sorry, what?”
“Your brother. You crossed into another world to save him. That was very brave of you, but it was also very foolish. Why do it?”
I didn’t know quite what to say. “He’s family.”
“Which means what to you?” he pressed.
“Same thing it means to everyone, I’d expect.” But as soon as those words left my lips I knew I’d made a mistake. This was a boy who’d run away from home because his family wanted to breed him like a prize farm animal. I had no way to know how much he still loved them—or didn’t—or what had led him to that terrible decision. “I’m sorry.”
He didn’t look upset. He didn’t look anything. His face could have been carved from marble for all the emotion it revealed. “How did you get through the Gate?” he asked.
I felt a twinge of frustration. It had made sense that in the group interview we’d had to answer endless questions before being given any information, but now that was over. The game was getting old. “We took the place of some bodies on tables. The Shadows wheeled us across.”
This time there was emotion visible: A flicker of surprise. “Clever. Though I imagine when the Shadows decide who to blame for that, there’ll be hell to pay.”
Damn. I hadn’t thought about what would happen to whoever had been in charge of security that night. Probably the grey guy. Damn.
“It bothers you?” he pressed.
“Shouldn’t it?” I snapped.
He shrugged. “The security of a Gate isn’t something to take lightly. Imagine all the terrible things that might happen if the wrong person came through one of them. Or the wrong thing.”
Suddenly I was tired of providing amusement and getting nothing in return. “Listen, you want to ask me questions? Then you answer some of mine, okay? One for one.”
He stared at me for a long moment, but I’d been through enough staring contests with Tommy to know how to hold my own. No one could do a better eerie stare than I could.
Finally he nodded. “Okay.”
I exhaled sharply. “Then yes, it bothers me. It bothers me a lot.”
“Why?”
“That’s a second question,” I pointed out.
I thought I saw a spark of humor in those dark eyes. It made him seem a bit more human. “Very well. Go ahead.”
“What are the Shadows?” I asked.
A black eyebrow arched upward in surprise. “That’s a rather big question, isn’t it?”
“I don’t recall a size limit.”
I thought I saw a smile flicker briefly across his lips. “Their Gift allows them to see the pathways between the worlds. Their sacrifice allows them to travel them safely.”
“What kind of sacrifice—”
He smiled slightly as he held up a finger, reminding me of our bargain.
Despite myself I smiled.
“Why did they take your brother?” he asked.
“I was hoping you could help answer that.”
He shrugged. “I have no special insight into Shadow business. The things I’m telling you can be found in any high school textbook.”
“Not in ours,” I said. “Our textbooks are full of things like electricity, polymer chemistry, rocket science …”
I thought I saw a flicker of recognition in his eyes. Were the aristos familiar with our technology? It stood to reason they would be, if tourists from this world were constantly crossing over to visit mine. But then why hadn’t anyone done the obvious, like, oh, bringing back a flashlight from Walmart? Or better yet, a high school science textbook? The more I learned about this world, the less sense it made.
“If your brother was a changeling,” he said thoughtfully, “and it turned out he was Gifted after all, that might have drawn their interest. It happens sometimes.”
“He isn’t the changeling—” I began. Then suddenly I realized I’d been tricked into giving him more information than I’d intended. Screw you, I thought, I’m counting that as a question. “How does the Gate work?”
I thought he might try to evade t
he question, but he didn’t. “There are places where the barrier between worlds is naturally weak, and things from one sphere can leak into another. Mostly it’s insubstantial stuff, dreams and the like. Few people even notice it. But sometimes it’s possible for physical matter to cross over, and even living creatures. The Gate doesn’t create such a phenomenon, it just stabilizes it. Otherwise things might not line up quite right, and you could lose time during the crossing, arrive at your destination a hundred years later than when you left. Or wind up in the wrong sphere altogether. It’s a pretty unstable system. Sometimes things go wrong even when the proper precautions are taken.”
“Like fairy abductions,” I mused aloud, and when he looked curious I explained, “There are legends in my homeworld of people who travel to a magical land for a short time, but when they return home they find that decades have passed in their absence.” And the fairies leave changelings behind, I remembered suddenly. That was where the concept came from in the first place. Fairy children exchanged for humans in the cradle, left behind for the human mothers to raise as their own. They looked like the real kids in every way, and their mothers rarely caught on to the switch, but they didn’t belong in our world, and they never really fit in.
Like us.
“You understand now, don’t you?” His words were soft in the darkness “Shadows of alien realities are glimpsed through invisible portals. Dreams bleed over from one world to the next. Tourists with magical Gifts show up in places where those Gifts don’t exist, doing things that the natives think are impossible. So the natives make up stories to explain it. They anchor their religion in places where the visions are strongest, they train their seers to listen for the echo of other worlds, they weave fictions to try to make sense of the unexplainable …” He paused. “We are the legends of your world, Jessica.”
I wrapped my arms around myself, but they had no power to banish the chill that had suddenly invaded my soul. I looked away from him but couldn’t banish unwanted images from my mind.