I was down on the ground before I even had a chance to make sense of what was going on. The side of my head was bleeding. Someone had punched me. One of the survivors was sitting on my back as I struggled to lift my head to see what was going on.
Our new friend stepped towards Josephine. She didn't make a noise, her face remaining emotionless. It was as if something snapped into place within her, like a shield or force field. If she was feeling scared you couldn't tell. The only sign of any emotion at all was her breathing. Her chest rose quickly up and down.
"Let's see what's under the pretty wrapping paper," the leader said, stepping even closer to Josephine. He grabbed her by the pocket of her hoodie and pulled her close to him. He reached up and forcefully yanked down the zipper. Still Josephine didn't protest. I continued to struggle to get up, but the man on top of me only laughed and pushed me back down. For every second that Josephine sat there still and quiet, I thrashed around more violently and cursed louder. The leader of the group grabbed underneath the shoulders of her jacket and pulled it off like a magician would when revealing his great trick.
I stopped thrashing about. Under the hoodie, Josephine was wearing a tight-fitting, sleeveless tank top sporting the Shepherd High emblem, no doubt part of her track uniform. I couldn't stop myself from looking. The girl had a body. Her arms were slightly defined, the arms of an athlete but not in a scary way. She also had a great pair of boobs. Yes, I noticed. I only looked for a second because I knew she didn't wanted me to look at her.
"It's been so long since we've had a girl," the man said, slithering closer to Josephine. He reached out his palm, running it down the side of her face until he reached her neck. He wrapped his hand around her neck. Josephine still didn't react.
"Don't touch her," I yelled out. Maybe we weren't friends, but she was all I had in this world. I wasn't going to sit back and let anything happen to her.
"I wonder if you're the dark one?" he asked her, choosing to ignore me entirely. "I hope you're the dark one. I've only ever had me a light girl before. They say it's bad luck to mess with you shifters, but I figure we already have had our share of bad luck."
"I remember the light one. I remember the light one. I remember the light one," the third man began to chant.
"She didn't even fight back. Fighting back is what lets a man know he's alive. You know what I mean. Don't you kid?" he said finally turning to me.
This caused the men to begin to laugh. "Hell doesn't want me, kid. Neither did God. If God wanted me I'd be dead like the rest of them. At least that's how I look at it. You're the hell and you're the heaven. We're just what's left."
I had no idea what he was talking about, but the longer I kept him talking the more time I had to think of a way of getting out of this. Why couldn't I shift at will?
"What did you mean about a conductor?" I asked, trying to stay focused even though the blood that was seeping out of my head wound was beginning to run into my mouth.
"You had your chance to get your questions. I said give me the girl, and I would give you the answers. Sorry."
"Let's make a new deal," I replied. I just needed more time. I could think of a way to get us out of this. I had to think of a way. I was still pretty sure that whatever happened to us in this present would follow us to our normal present.
And maybe there were things worse than death. These weren't civilized men. I didn't know if I could buy all his heaven and hell talk, but I did wonder how they survived. Was it purely because of their predator sensibilities-some eff-ed-up version of Darwin's theory? Or had they been allowed to survive, chosen by the same people or thing that allowed us to be shifters?
"No deal. But I do want to play a game. Can't say we get much in terms of entertainment around here anymore," the leader replied, pushing Josephine next to me on the ground. Her eyes met mine and I saw fear for the first time since the men had showed up. I wanted to find her hoodie and enclose her in it. I wanted to protect her.
"Here's how it will work," the man continued as he circled around us. His friend still held me down, and while Josephine was free to move, I knew she wouldn't leave me. "I will give you a five minute head start. You hear me? Five minutes. After that, game on. But you should know that we love to play rough. We don't care if you're shifters. As far as we're concerned, why save the world when they didn't want us around in the first place?"
The man holding me down must have received some signal from the leader because he let me up. I scrambled to my feet and held out my hand for Josephine, but she didn't take it. She pulled herself to her feet and looked at me. I looked back.
"Well, what are you waiting for? Five minutes started thirty seconds ago."
About the Author
Tiffany Truitt received her MA in literature from Old Dominion University. Her debut Chosen Ones, first in the Lost Souls trilogy, is a searing look at what it means to be other and how we define humanity, as well as a celebration of the dangerously wonderful feeling of falling in love.
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