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Exit Point
Exit Point
Exit Point
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Exit Point

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"I start to open my mouth to yell, and water rushes in. I snap my lips together. I may as well be swimming in ink. I can’t tell which way is up. Kicking my legs and flailing my arms, I launch myself headfirst into something hard. I feel hot blood spreading under my scalp, then nothing more."

Mimi Sepulveda's world revolves around partying with her supposed friends. Her comfortable life never left space for angels, demons, or gods, until one night a clandestine pool party turns deadly. Mimi's life hangs in the balance as she finds herself on a surreal out-of-body mission with a dead girl she's never met. Together, they must correct a tragic mistake which could obliterate the human race in less than a generation. After a glimpse of a terrifying future, she's willing to go to Hell and back to set things right – but will that be enough?

LanguageEnglish
Release dateNov 29, 2014
ISBN9781941502921
Exit Point
Author

Artemis Greenleaf

Artemis Greenleaf has devoured fairy tales, folk tales and ghost stories since before she could read. After watching many ghost hunting television shows, she wondered what the ghosts’ point of view toward ghost hunters might be. Artemis did, in fact, marry an alien and she lives in the suburban wilds of Houston, Texas with her husband, two children and assorted pets. She writes both fiction and non-fiction and her work has appeared in magazines, including Nature Friend and Stories for Children. For more information, please visit artemisgreenleaf.com.

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    Book preview

    Exit Point - Artemis Greenleaf

    Exit Point

    By

    Artemis Greenleaf

    SMASHWORDS EDITION

    PUBLISHED BY:

    Black Mare Books

    Houston, Texas

    www.blackmarebooks.com

    ISBN: 978-1-941502-92-1

    Exit Point

    Copyright © 2014 by Artemis Greenleaf

    This book is also available in print at most online retailers.

    All rights reserved. Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise) without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the above publisher of this book.

    This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to Smashwords.com and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

    This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, brands, media, and incidents are either the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. The author acknowledges the trademarked status and trademark owners of various products referenced in this work of fiction, which have been used without permission. The publication/use of these trademarks is not authorized, associated with, or sponsored by the trademark owners.

    Acknowledgements

    As always, thank you to my wonderful family. This endeavor would not be possible without your love and support. I also appreciate the invaluable editorial and structural help of my critique groups and beta readers. You know who you are, and I couldn’t do this without you. This is my NaNoWriMo book from 2009.

    Table of Contents

    Chapter 1 • Pool Party

    Chapter 2 •Deb

    Chapter 3 • The Fountain of Sirin

    Chapter 4 • The Fourth City

    Chapter 5 • Bad News

    Chapter 6 • Picnic at the Fountain

    Chapter 7 • The Seventh City

    Chapter 8 • The Gorgon's Pet

    Chapter 9 • The Gate of Tears

    Chapter 10 • The Gate of Truth

    Chapter 11 • Break Up

    Chapter 12 •66.67 Percent

    Chapter 13 • Bad Day at the Mall

    Chapter 14 • The Busgirl

    Chapter 15 • The Last Resort

    Chapter 16 • The Collective

    Chapter 17 • The Very Model

    Chapter 18 • A Work of Art

    Chapter 19 • Time Stream

    Chapter 20 • Scar Tissue

    Chapter 21 • Dream Quest

    Chapter 22 • Bad Penny

    Chapter 23 • Cruel to Be Kind

    Chapter 24 • Home Again

    Chapter 25 • Retail Therapy

    Chapter 26 • Anna

    Chapter 27 • Not So Happy Campers

    Chapter 28 • Sleepover

    Chapter 29 • Hungry Ghost

    Chapter 30 • Gala

    Chapter 31 • Doctor's Orders

    Chapter 32 • Parasite

    Chapter 33 • Flight

    Chapter 34 • The Naiad's Embrace

    Chapter 35 • Wing and a Prayer

    Mythic Personalities

    Dramatis Personae

    Mimi Sepulveda Seventeen year old daughter of opera fans

    Josh Supplier of key to pool area

    Tyler Mimi's peer

    Kevin Sierra's crush

    Sierra Mimi's peer

    Lexie Mimi's peer

    Deborah Soul whose destiny is intertwined with Mimi's

    Brent One of Mimi's companions

    Zariel Agent of Karma

    Laura Samuels Owner of the Rhiannon Foundation

    Anna Dreaming girl

    Master James Agent of Karma

    Lucas Coma patient who has turned evil

    Stan Agent of Karma

    Maya Goddess of illusion

    Hades Master of the Eighth Plane

    Persephone Hades' wife

    Anubis God of the afterlife, Hades' Lieutenant

    Sthenno Gorgon, one of the Eighth Plane guardians

    Euryale Gorgon, Sthenno's sister

    Walter Sepulveda Mimi's father

    Fran Sepulveda Mimi's mother

    Evan Cooper Josh's father

    Tara Berkman Mimi's friend and companion

    Johan Opera camp artistic director

    Jessica Girl at opera camp

    Myles Berkman Tara's uncle

    Janet Ruiz Myle's girlfriend

    Theresa Mitchell The girl who could find world peace

    Jenny Brent's ex-girlfriend

    Chuck Jenny's new boyfriend

    Dr. Meredith Berkman Tara's mother

    Dr. Angelus Silverman Walter Sepulveda's psychiatrist friend

    ACT I

    Chapter 1

    Pool Party

    I moan softly as Tyler's warm lips move down my throat to the little hollow above my collar bone. At least I think it's Tyler. Could be Kevin. It's really dark out here and I've had a lot to drink. He smells nice, anyway.

    Sorry, baby, I say, pushing him off me. But I have to go pee.

    Can't you hold it, Mimi? he whines. I was wrong. It's Josh.

    No. I dodged a bullet there. I'm not desperate. Well, at least not that desperate. Yet.

    I don't know where my shoes are, so I stumble across the rough concrete barefoot. Between the flaccid glow from streetlight in front of the subdivision pool cabana and the misty half-moon, I have enough light to find the bushes. Don't know why I'm bothering. Nobody can really see me anyway.

    I squat in the bushes for a while after I'm done, trying to figure out a way to stay out here with my friends, but avoid Josh. I look at my cell phone to check the time. It's 12:59. We haven't even been here a whole hour yet. Maybe if I tell him I think I might hurl, he'll back off. I decide to go back to the party, such as it is. If I start making a lot of noise, Lexie, Tyler, Sierra and Kevin might come crawling back from wherever they're hiding and I won't be stuck all by myself with Mr. Lame-O.

    The moon ducks behind a cloud. I know no one can see me, at least not well, but I can't help feeling that someone is watching me. It's really creepy. I know it's only my imagination, but I can swear there is a shadow near the beer cooler. Who sees shadows in the dark? Better get going before Loser comes looking for me.

    I'll grab a beer on the way. May as well look like I might be at the puking stage.

    I start to shuffle my feet when I get near where I think the cooler is. It growls across the cement as I crash into it. Probably have a bruise on my shin tomorrow, but I don't feel anything now. Señor Tequila has seen to that.

    I rummage around in the mostly melted ice in the cooler and grab the second to last can in there. The penultimate can, as Mrs. Weismuller would say. Junior English class seems a long time ago and far away. It's June, and the last heavy perfume of the honeysuckle is cloying in the damp night air. The cooler lid thuds into place when I let it go.

    Instead of feeling my way in the dark, instead of paying attention, I am designing my Senior Prom dress in my head. So of course, I trip over the cooler.

    I stumble and topple over, putting out my hands to break my fall. I get a whiff of chlorine, then feel cool silk slide over my skin as the pool gobbles me up. I start to open my mouth to yell, and water rushes in. I snap my lips together. I may as well be swimming in ink. I can't tell which way is up. Kicking my legs and flailing my arms, I launch myself headfirst into something hard. I feel hot blood spreading under my scalp, then nothing more.

    Chapter 2

    Deb

    Oh, give me a break, a female voice whines. Mimi? Mimi's a dog's name.

    Who is that, and where did she come from? I open my eyes and see a pale Goth girl – my age, more or less – sitting cross-legged on a metal bench. She's got a purple barbell through her left eyebrow, a ring in her nose, and maybe ten silver graduated hoops march from her right earlobe up to the top of her ear. Her hair is black with blonde roots and streaks of purple. Like that hasn't been done before.

    There is nothing else around. Just her and the bench. No trees, no light poles, no buildings. It reminds me of that play we had to sit through in American Lit, where the actors came out wearing flesh-colored unitards and there wasn't any scenery or props.

    I've had weirder dreams than this, though.

    Could you at least sit up? the girl says.

    I feel as if I'm floating in space. I can't feel any floor or earth underneath me. I think 'sit' and suddenly I'm sitting there on the not-ground. Oddly enough, I'm dry, and my shoes are back on my feet. What is this place? Who are you?

    Deb. I'm Deb, okay? This place? It's complicated. You can call it the Astral Realm, the Other Side, or Limbo, your choice, okay?

    Am I dead? I don't feel dead. But then again, I don't know what dead feels like.

    Maybe. Maybe not. That depends on you.

    What's that supposed to mean? I ask. I'm already getting tired of this. If this is a dream, it's pretty lame.

    Deb sighs and looks up to the not-sky. Like, everybody goes down to the Earth Realm with some job they're supposed to do, okay? Maybe it's one big thing, or a bunch of little things, or maybe one little thing – doesn't matter. The point is, there's always a reason. And you know what? There's something you and I have to do together. Only I died before it happened. Until it happens, we're both stuck.

    Yeah. Why would I do anything with you? I don't hang with freaks.

    Deb smiles and runs her tongue over her teeth. We get into a fight. In the food court at the mall. I get to kick your ass.

    And this is important how? I'm so not believing her.

    Okay, there's like this woman having lunch there. She sees the fight and then gets the idea to start the Rhiannon Foundation. For troubled girls. One of the chicks who gets a scholarship from the foundation goes on to become president and she figures out a way to stop World War III from starting up in, you know, like the Middle East area.

    You know, that's sad and all, but it doesn't affect me. I don't live there, I say.

    If Theresa Mitchell doesn't become president, the person who does will start a nuclear war, Deb says.

    Why does it matter to her? She's dead. I decide to humor her.

    So you're telling me that if you and I don't get into a fight at the food court at Silverton Mall, the whole world will be destroyed? And you expect me to believe that?

    Deb shrugs. If you, like, want to get out of Limbo, you have to help me contact the foundation lady. But you're not going anywhere until it happens. Live or die. Your choice.

    I close my eyes, and I feel I'm sinking. When I open them again, the nothingness has started to fade, like a curtain being pulled back at the theater. It looks the same as any bus stop on any city corner. A three story building rises behind the bus shelter. A street light erupts out of the sidewalk next to the bus stop sign. Oddly enough, this one isn't covered in stickers. It isn't exactly light or dark, just a grey twilight. I look more closely at the buildings. They're made out of stucco or adobe, and all are various shades of yellow, tan and gold.

    A man wearing a striped knit scarf walks by. I swear one end of the scarf rises up and peers at me. When I look again, it's just a scarf, bouncing as the man walks along.

    I wonder if it's about to rain. The only thing I can smell is water.

    Deb stands up. Her black extra-strappy cargo pants hang low on her hips. She's got a skull and crossbones dangling from her belly button. I'm afraid to know what else this girl has pierced. So, you coming or what? she asks.

    My brain tells me not to go with this nutjob. She looks like a freak and she's spouting completely insane stuff. Nothing good ever happens when you hang out with crazy people. But there is some part of me that believes her. Don't see that I have much to lose if I'm wrong, because this is probably all just a weird dream, anyway. But if what she says is true, and I don't help, I could be trapped here forever. With her. I get up from where I'm sitting, which is now the edge of the curb in front of the bus shelter. I dust off my butt. Yeah, I guess. Not like there's anything else to do around here.

    Not that you know of, anyway, Deb smirks.

    I can't think of anything easier than getting into a fight with her. Now, how do we get to the mall so I can hurry up and get back to my normal life?

    Chapter 3

    The Fountain of Sirin

    So is there a bus? How do we get there? I just want to get this over with and wake up.

    Bus? Nope. Not where we're going.

    Thought you said we were going to the mall. Now what?

    And who do you think is going to see us there? Nobody. We have to do something different, okay? Deb starts walking down the sidewalk.

    A tattoo of a scary fairy stares at me from just above the top of Deb's pants. Her wings are black and cobwebby, and her dress is purple and skimpy. Maybe it's just the way Deb's walking, but the fairy's wings appear to be fluttering. Weird. I don't even feel drunk anymore.

    So where are we going? I ask, looking up at the back of her head instead of that creepy tramp stamp. Did she have that before she died, or was it something she got here?

    Sitnalta. That's where we'll meet our, guess you could call it, case worker. Okay?

    Case worker? You're kidding, right?

    Deb keeps walking. Case worker is close enough. It's –

    I know. Complicated, I snap at her. I wish she'd stop talking to me like she thinks I'm stupid.

    Just up ahead, a guy is painting a mural on the side of a building. I stop to watch. The picture has a fierce looking unicorn roaming through the remains of a burned out city. Light gleams off the pointy metallic horn. A saber toothed cat lurks in one of the ruined buildings. Strange vines twine around sign posts and up street lights.

    That's, uh, different, I say to the artist.

    He turns to look at me. His brown hair is almost long enough to brush his shoulders and he has big, brown eyes. He seems very familiar to me, but I can't place where I might have seen him. He isn't from my school and he doesn't live in the neighborhood.

    You're new here, aren't you? he asks.

    Deb giggles. Somewhere nearby, a horse whinnies. I look around, but there's no horse to be found. Nothing but a painted unicorn.

    I look at the painter again. Yeah. What of it? I say.

    You just look a little lost, is all. His eyes are kind, and I suddenly feel like a jerk.

    Deb and I, I nod my head towards her, are going to Sit-something or other.

    Sitnalta? the painter asks.

    Mimi, come here. Deb scowls at me.

    What? I ask when I get close to her.

    Not everybody here is what you think they are. You might want to keep your big fat mouth shut, okay? Deb hisses at me.

    Don't talk to me like that, you freaky little cow, I snarl back.

    You know, I was thinking of going there, just to see what it's like, Artistboy says. How 'bout if I tag along?

    How 'bout if you don't? Deb gives him a sarcastic smile.

    I don't really care one way or the other – I just want to piss Deb off. That would be so cool if you came with. What did you say your name was?

    Brent, he says.

    Mimi, you don't know anything about this dude, okay? Didn't the 'rents ever give you the Stranger Danger talk? It goes double for here.

    My dad is the General Director of the opera and my mom works in the office there. The only talks they ever gave me were about operas. That's where they are tonight. At the opera. Opening night of the new production of Carmen. And of course, they wouldn't want me hanging around to spoil it for them. Although, personally, I'm not sure which is worse – this crazy dream about being dead, or being at the opera.

    Oh, come on. Don't be such a buzz kill. Besides, he knows where we're going, now, anyway, I say.

    Fine, whatever. We don't have all day. I hope we don't regret this, okay? Deb stands a little way from us, her arms crossed over her chest.

    Let's go, then, Brent says.

    We start walking, following Deb. After a while, the city changes to suburbs and the suburbs change to countryside. Big trees, possibly redwoods, shade many of the houses, and an occasional pine cone the size of my head lies on the road. As we leave the city in the distance, I look back at it – it almost looks like it's made of gold from where I'm standing.

    There are a lot of animals – birds and squirrels and cows and horses and so on. Sometimes, though, I catch glimpses of something I don't quite recognize. Something almost familiar, but not. These things, whatever they are, don't stay still long enough for me to get a good look at them. It's almost seems they know I'm trying to see them and they don't want me to. That's alright. Brent's not too hard to look at, so I'll focus on him. He's got to be better than Deb, anyway.

    The lane slopes gradually uphill. We see clumps of people on the road here and there, but they mostly ignore us. A few smile or wave. Once, I thought one of the men had an eye in the middle of his forehead. Must have been a trick of the light, because when I looked again, it was gone. I'll be glad to get out of this crazy place. It's almost like the time I stayed awake for forty-eight hours. By hour forty, I was seeing all kinds of weird stuff. Kaya and I had a contest to see who could stay up the longest. I think she cheated, but I still won. I wish she hadn't moved away.

    Ahead of us is a meadow filled with wildflowers. At the far end, a fountain shoots water into the air and then it falls into a pool. Beyond that, foothills sprout up, then give way to blue-grey mountains. In this meadow, though, there doesn't seem to be any grass, just flowers. I try to smell them, but that only makes me cough – they all smell like chlorine. I have this mad, crazy desire to just run through them to the fountain.

    So I do.

    I put my arms out, airplane-style, and run, leaving Deb and Brent behind. I suppose they'll catch up sooner or later. In no time, I'm all the way up the hill and at the fountain. I should be puffing and panting, but it seems I don't have to breathe at all.

    The fountain is bigger than I thought, and made of some kind of stone. We have granite countertops, and it's definitely not granite. Maybe marble? It's very pale pink, almost white. There are some vines and flowers, but mostly birds, carved into the outside. Some fat koi fish swim in the water. Bright yellow water lilies float on big leaves at the edges of the pool, just out of the fountain's spray.

    Ahem.

    I look up. A woman is standing about a third of the way around the fountain from me. She has pale sage green skin and pointed ears. And wings. Big aqua and purple butterfly wings. I feel my mouth fall open as I stare at her. She walks toward me, her gauzy dress impossibly sparkling in the half-light.

    Do you know where you are? she asks me.

    Limbo?

    Limbo. That word is not known to me, she says, shaking her head. This is the Fountain of Sirin. It is not for you.

    What? Why not? I ask, too stunned to be angry.

    You are yet among the living. You do not belong to this place. She points to my middle, and I can see a glowing silver cord that runs around behind me and stretches off down the hill. I hadn't noticed it before – has it been there this whole time? As I turn to follow it, I almost bump into Deb and Brent.

    Who are you talking to? Deb asks.

    Her! I turn to look at the fairy, but she is gone. "You had to

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