Age:
Late Elementary
Reading Level: 5.0
Chapter One
Anorae opened her eyes, her mind fogged over with sleepiness.
“Lazy one! Foul creature! You deserve to be called everything the Cowards call you!” an angry voice behind her rasped. It was the unmistakable voice of Headmaster Ilianus.
“T-terribly sorry, sir. Won’t happen again,” she muttered.
He continued to stare at her expectantly. Other classmates began to snicker.
Conora, an especially nasty piece of work, whispered, “Way to go, two-legs.”
Some of the meaner students at the Academy mockingly called Anorae “two-legs” because of her interest with the Cowards, who had only two legs.
Anorae felt her face heat up like the hot embers from home, in Amber. Thousands of males worked there, turning fire into power for the country. They sang all day to keep themselves entertained. Females smiled and gathered food for the little ones, who watched in awe.
Overall, most Amber residents were poor and in debt to the wealthy government officials, so they paid back their debt by giving their offspring to the Continuum Academy. There, spiders from ages three to eighteen learned how to keep the past and future separate and put the present in between.
Headmaster Ilianus cleared his throat.
Anorae glanced up at him, startled back into reality. “May...may the silk string you produce never run dry; may you never fall into your own silvery nets,” she said quietly. The standard blessing that she had been taught to say was exactly the opposite of the thoughts that were going through her mind. May you be eaten by the Cowards and buried in pomegranate marmalade. Oh, and may Enoch, my Enoch, arrive sooner than planned and pluck all eight of your legs off.
Smiling to herself at this fantasy, Anorae turned back to her work, uniting the past and future and untangling the threads of time.
Chapter Two
Imani swore loudly as she leapt out of the shower. Shivering from the sudden cold and horror, she grabbed her towel and, hair dripping down her back, skittered out of the bathroom. She needed to get far away from the spider lurking in the corner of the bathtub.
Her father was shaving in front of the mirror in his room.
“Dad,” she said, a tone of urgency in her voice.
“Mmm?” her father murmured.
Imani shivered again. “We have a...situation.”
Only then did her father turn to look at his daughter, dripping on the floor, almost pale with fear.
* * *
Ping...ping...ping...ping…
The fourth-period bell dinged, signaling students that class had begun, as Imani, Annie, and Harley conversed before math class.
“You’re saying it was the size of a quarter?” Harley asked skeptically.
Imani’s eyes widened.
“Yes, it was a gargantuan spider! And if I was any closer, it would have... it would’ve... touched my back.” She shivered, remembering its hairy legs.
Harley bit his lip thoughtfully. “It probably wouldn’t have bitten you, though. Maybe crawled into your hair, then–”
“Stop! I don’t even want to think about it,” Annie said, turning the same shade of green as her eyes. ""Thank goodness your dad killed it.""
Harley had dark red hair that he tied into a tight bun at the top of his head, and he usually wore colorful plaid button-down shirts and slim-fitting black pants. His signature feature was a black gem earring in one ear. He was a misfit at their school. His motto was, “I’m gay, not contagious.”
Annie had chin-length blonde hair and bright green eyes. Freckles dotted her face like stars. Imani was dark-skinned and dark-haired. Her parents were from Kenya, and she inherited her mother’s knotty, can’t-be-tamed African hair.
“Get out your journals, everyone! Today, we’re battling systems!” the teacher called. A collective groan filled the classroom.
Chapter Three
Eight glassy eyes stared up at her. Anorae was standing over Enoch, who was crumpled on the strange, smooth floor of the slippery, rectangular chamber. The “chamber” had curved edges, wet surfaces, and high walls. She thought she’d heard the Cowards refer to it as a bathtub.
Enoch’s embers, the shapes on a spider’s back that usually give off a healthy glow, were dim and flickering. This, of course, was a sign of dying. Spiders may control time as we know it, but they cannot stop death.
“You... you were always my everything, Anorae,” Enoch murmured. Then he gave a labored laugh. “Remember how fascinated you were by the Cowards? How everyone teased you and called you two-legs, but you ignored them? So brave, my Anorae.”
Anorae thought of the Cowards, the tall lumbering one who crushed her Enoch. Look at what my idols have done to my beloved Enoch. It’s all my fault, she thought. I’m the one who wanted him to visit!
“Why? Why do such terrible things happen to such good people?” Anorae wailed, her embers flaring icy blue out of grief. The pain in her chest was worse than any time she had ever been Punished at the Continuum Academy. “What,” she whispered, “what will I tell your mother back in Amber?”
Enoch smiled weakly. “Tell her that she can give my things to the little ones. They...they’ll be fine...without me. Oh, my god, I can feel the...”
Anorae screamed “NO!” as Enoch’s eyes rolled up mid-sentence and his embers flickered, and then died. He fell limp in her arms and his body grew cold, but Anorae didn’t notice. All she could feel was pain.
Not the hot, throbbing pain of a headache. Not the sharp, stabbing pain of fear; not the cold, clammy pain of sickness. It was the deep, heart-rending pain of grief and anger, stronger than all the rest. And this pain could only be relieved by one thing: revenge.