The Tattooed Heart

The Tattooed Heart by Michael Grant Read Free Book Online Page B

Book: The Tattooed Heart by Michael Grant Read Free Book Online
Authors: Michael Grant
body. I never looked at that, not in dreams, and only reluctantly in reality.
    But in my dream Messenger did not look at me as I looked at him. Instead he whispered a single word. The crashing waves tore that word from his lips, but I knew in my heart that what he had said was, “Ariadne.”
    Ariadne, not Mara. Nor could it ever be Mara.
    I think I cried in my sleep then, though I remember no dream, for my pillow was damp upon waking.
    â€œIt’s time,” Messenger said, but he was no longer the laughing boy by the ocean. He was back, looming above me, the real Messenger of Fear, grim and relentless.

5
    â€œARE WE GOING AFTER TRENT AND PETE?” I asked.
    â€œYes. But not yet. Later. For now we have a very different matter to address.”
    I was on the point of asking him where we were about to suddenly appear next, but by the time I could form the question, we had already stood in a wrecked, abandoned room.
    It took me a while to establish just where we were. Messenger, of course, did not volunteer to help, preferring I suppose, that I use my own powers ofobservation. I don’t think I’d ever been particularly observant before, but I had changed and grown since becoming what Oriax liked to call “mini-Messenger” and I now paid a great deal more attention to my environment.
    In this case the environment was an abandoned business of some sort. That it was abandoned was evident from the filth, the dust, the cobwebs and spiderwebs, the lack of any light aside from the ghostly greenish-gray of streetlights filtering in through a grimy window and grimier glass door.
    There was a waist-high counter that surely once held a cash register. Behind the counter was a twisted mess of wire racks, a torn cardboard poster for Camel cigarettes. Strewn across the linoleum tile floor of the room were random bits of shelving, an upended round cooler splashed with the Pepsi logo, and a liberal scattering of trash—candy wrappers, empty chips bags, plastic cups, paper hot dog holders, empty water bottles, cigarette butts, and dried feces.
    Against the back wall were empty spaces that would once have held refrigerated cases.
    â€œIt was a convenience store,” I announced proudly,as though I really was playing Watson to Messenger’s Sherlock.
    Messenger was not wildly impressed by my powers of deduction.
    The place stank of human and animal waste, of rotting garbage and dust. The room appeared empty. I heard a slight scratching sound, assumed it was a rat and carefully scanned the floor around me while wondering if there was a weapon at hand should the rat come my way.
    Messenger moved to the back of the room, to the empty rectangles where the cold cases had once dispensed beer and soda and packs of salami and cheese. The glow of streetlights did not reach this far, but to my surprise the space was not entirely dark. There seemed to be a candle within, judging from the buttery light that flickered and at times disappeared entirely.
    The scratching sound came again and something about it contradicted my assumption that it was an animal. It was too slow to be a rat. Too random.
    I leaned into the void and saw the candle first, and the person lying near the candle second. I saw that it was a girl, a girl hard to place age-wise, though Iguessed she might be seventeen or so. She had dark hair that looked as if she had made an effort to gather it all together with a scrunchie, but wisps and entire hanks of hair had escaped. Her face might be pretty. I wasn’t entirely sure, as it was both dirty and marked with too much makeup.
    She was dressed like a bargain basement Oriax, but the net effect spoke not of supernatural allure but rather of vulnerability and despair.
    I don’t know why it took me so long to notice the syringe in the crook of her elbow. Maybe I just didn’t want to see it.
    It lay there, the needle still in the vein. A trickle of blood had started to dry. A leather belt lay

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