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Ice Country(47)

By:David Estes


“Scram, Icy,” another voice says, this one warm but full of pressure. The Marked guy. Gotta be.

“’S okay,” Skye says. “He ain’t causin’ no problems, are you, Icy?”

I almost laugh at how they continue to refer to me as Icy. To me that means they think I’m attractive, but from their tone I know they mean it in an entirely different way. And not a friendly one. “Dazz,” I say.

“What?” she says.

“My name. It’s Dazz.”

“Okay, Icy Dazz. Whaddya got to say fer yerself?” Skye says. I snort, unable to stop the laugh from escaping me.

“You laughin’ at me?” Skye says.

“Sorry, nay. It’s just…ah, never mind.” I repeat my question from before.

Skye laughs, and it sends a beautiful tremor up my spine. “I mighta been causin’ more trouble than they could handle,” she says.

“You searin’ nearly killed one of the guards,” her sister says across my cell.

She closes her eyes and laughs again. “Siena’s right,” she says. “I mighta done just that.”

“So they left you in the cell?” I ask.

“I’m here, ain’t I?” I’m racking up some sort of a record for freeze-brained questions.

“Where’d they take the others?” I ask, moving on quickly.

“How the scorch should I know?” she says. “I been sittin’ here havin’ the most unfortunate conversation with you.”

My face is becoming an unending pile of red blush.

“They took us to see the king,” Siena says.

“King Goff?” I say.

“Is there more’n one King?” Siena says. “Anyway, he’s more like King Goof if you ask me. Here we are, leaders of the new fire country Tri-Tribes, and he’s got us locked up tighter’n a hand up a tug’s blazeshooter.” Like her sister, Siena seems to have a way with words, although she has none of the grit in her voice that I admire so much about Skye.

Thankfully, Buff chimes in, because I’ve only got more stupid questions. “What happened in fire country?” he asks. “And what’s this new Tri-Tribes you’re talking about.”

“You ask too many questions,” the warm voice of the Marked guy says.

“It’s okay, Feve,” the song-like voice of the long-haired woman says. “Anyone we can tell our story to could help us.” Although there’s nothing special in her words, they seem to command attention, obedience, like she’s used to people listening to what she has to say.

“Please,” I say. “We’ve got as big a problem with Goff as anyone. Just tell us what happened.”

“My father happened,” Skye says.





Chapter Eighteen





“It wasn’t entirely his fault,” Siena says.

“He didn’t help matters though,” Skye says.

“No, he didn’t,” says a fourth voice, one I haven’t heard yet. The muscly, athletic-looking guy. I wonder what group he’s affiliated with. “The Glassies attacked us,” the guy explains.

“Who’d they attack?” I ask.

“The Heaters.” So the other guy’s a Heater. I’m still trying to figure out how everything fits together. “They’ve attacked us three times. The third time was just at the start of the summer. Siena and Skye’s father…Roan…he was a bit of tyrant.”

“A bit?” Skye says. “I still got scars from where he used his snapper on me. Siena too.”

Sounds like a real good guy. “At least he was going out and getting the Cure for you,” I point out.

“Ha!” Skye scoffs. “Whaddya you know about the Cure?”

Something in her tone tells me to tread carefully. “I, uh, I know we delivered it to Roan’s men all the time.”

“You don’t know what he did with it?” the Heater guy says.

“We assumed he passed it out to the village,” Buff says, even though we weren’t really sure of that at all.

“He didn’t.” Siena again. “He kept it for himself and maybe a few of his baggard friends. There wasn’t enough to go ’round, and no one knew ’bout it anyway.”

I don’t know what to say. Not only did Roan not share the Cure with the Heaters, but he kept it from his own children? It’s not what I expected. “So back to the Glassies,” I say. “They attacked the Heaters, but where do the rest of you fit in?”

“Me and Sie are Wildes,” Skye says. “We ran away from home to join them. Wilde, well, she’s the leader.”

“Sorry, who’s Wilde?” Buff asks.