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out to me.

      But she doesn’t take me to the cafeteria. She stops at a vending machine and buys a package of M&M’s and we go to a dim, quiet room with a big cross at the front. It looks like a church, but it seems weird to have a church in the hospital. I guess everyone else thinks it’s weird too, because the room is empty.

      Maybe that’s why Sierra brought me here.

      “Charlotte,” Sierra says, “you had a vision about this, didn’t you?”

      My bottom lip quivers, and tears overflow when I nod.

      “And you tried to stop it.”

      I nod again, even though the way she said it wasn’t really a question. It’s bad to see the visions at all. Sierra’s been teaching me how to fight them off since I was three.

      But it’s hard.

      And sometimes it hurts. This one hurt a lot.

      “I tried to save you,” I whisper, but I can barely get the words out through my tears. My chin drops to my chest and I feel her pull me onto her lap, where the curled ends of her pretty, blondish-red hair tickle my face.

      “I’m going to come live with you,” she says, and I’m so surprised my tears stop with a loud sniff. “Your mom will need a lot of help, and … I’m going to keep an eye on you for a while,” she says, and it sounds like a bad thing.

      She lifts my face and rubs my wet cheeks with her thumbs. “Your mom is going to wake up,” she says, her voice very serious. “And when she does, you cannot tell her what happened. You can’t tell her anything.”

      “But you said—”

      “I know. I hoped that someday we could. But this accident has changed things. We can’t ever tell her now.”

      “Why not?” I ask.

      “Because … because she might be angry. With both of us,” Sierra says after a long silence, and my chest hurts at the thought of Mommy being mad at me.

      “Charlotte, I’m afraid the time has come for you to act much more grown up than you are. It’s going to be difficult, but you have to work very, very hard at following the rules from now on. Do you understand?”

      I nod, even though I really don’t.

      Sierra glances at the door that leads into the little church place. “Tell me the rules,” she says.

      “You know the rules,” I say, rubbing my eyes with my fists.

      “Tell me again,” she says, and her voice is very soft and gentle now.

      I stare at her, not sure why I have to do this here, but I start to recite anyway. “Never reveal that you are an Oracle to anyone except another Oracle.”

      “Good. Two?”

      “Fight your visions with all your strength. Never surrender. Never give up. Don’t close your eyes.”

      “Three?”

      “Never, under any circumstances, change the future.” Sierra nods and a single tear shines on her cheek.

      Then I understand.

      I did this. Daddy is dead because I didn’t follow the rules. I bury my face in my aunt’s shirt and start to sob.

       missing-image

      What I wouldn’t give to live somewhere without snow. Not that there’s any snow actually sticking on the ground yet. Just dead grass and bitterly cold winds. Ugly cold.

      Until I open the front door to the high school and am blasted with a mixture of heat, moisture, and noise. The hall is swarming with bodies and music and cell phones chirping, but I put my head down and wander through it like a winding maze.

      The space in front of my locker is crowded with people and for a moment I indulge the fantasy that they’re waiting to talk to me. But I know better. Robert Jones is one of the most popular guys in school and his locker is on my right—thus the majority of the crowd.

      On my left is Michelle.

      We used to be friends. Now we have this wary sort of acquaintanceship. Michelle glances in my direction and even though I see her catch sight of me—that slight widening of her eyes—she gestures to the two girls with her and they walk off together toward the cafeteria.

       Whatever.

      I bodily shove some big guy talking to Robert out of my way so I can get into my locker.

      Unfortunately as I touch the scratched metal surface, I feel a tickling at the edge of my brain.

      A vision.

      Fan-freaking-tabulous. Just what I need before school even starts.

      Now it’s a race to get my locker open so I can crouch down and lean against it and look like I’m doing something. Something else.

      I spin to the last number and yank up on the locker handle. It doesn’t budge.

      Damn it! I start to try the combo again, but it’s too late. I’m going to have to sit on the floor. My legs bend, almost too easily, and I drop hard to my knees. I lean my forehead against the cool metal and breathe slowly, trying not to draw attention to myself.

      The visions themselves aren’t that big a deal; they’re usually over in less than a minute. But I hate getting them in public because in those seconds I’m blind to the world. If no one speaks to me I’m fine—no one notices, the vision eventually dissipates, the world starts turning again, and life continues.

      But if anyone tries to get my attention it’s a little hard to miss the fact that I’m completely unresponsive. After that, I suffer mockery for days. Or I used to. It’s a little better now that I’m in high school. People already know I’m a freak and just ignore me. The trade-off is, of course, that everybody knows I’m a freak.

      Can’t think about that now. I suck in air slowly, like I’m breathing through a straw, and stare straight ahead. I visualize grabbing a black curtain and pulling it over my inner eye—my “third eye,” as Sierra always calls it—to block out the vision. Mental visuals seem to help.

      I’ll be affected by the foretelling no matter what, but if I black out my mind, fill it with darkness, then I won’t see it.

      And if I can’t see, I won’t be tempted to do anything about it.

      As an added bonus, when I fight it, the vision generally passes more quickly. Which, when I’m at school, is the number one goal.

      Sierra spent years trying different methods to help me block out my visions: a big, black paintbrush; turning off an imaginary switch; even covering my third eye with imaginary hands. The black curtain works best for me.

      But no one can see what I’m doing on the inside; they only see the outside. And on the outside I’m some girl, kneeling on the dirty floor, my head against my locker, completely still with my eyes wide open.

      I can’t close them. Closing your eyes is a gesture of surrender.

      I cling to the words I used to resent:

       Never surrender.

       Never give up.

       Don’t close your eyes.

      I say them over and over, focusing on the words instead of the force of the vision fighting to get into my head.

      An incoming vision feels like a huge hand squeezing your skull, trying to dig its fingers into your brain. You have to push back as hard

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