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by KSouva Author IconMail Icon
Rated: 13+ · Novel · Drama · #1784690
Tyler and his family are hiding a secret.
LEECH

Chapter1: Fresh Start          




                Maybee is a dull town, I thought as I got out of my father’s jeep and walked up the sidewalk to our new house. It was mid-august, and we had just moved, again. The ninth move in two years. I looked up at the house, an ugly two story yellow thing that very closely resembled a large box, and sighed.

         “Maybe it won’t be so bad” Dad said, clapping me on the back. “Maybe we’ll get to stay here.”

         “Maybe I don’t want to stay here.” I mumbled in a voice so low only my brother, Tommy, could hear me. He chuckled softly in reply.

         Up till now we had lived mostly in large cities; Phoenix, New York, San Francisco, Boston even. We figured it was easier to remain anonymous in a city where nobody knew nor cared about you, then in a small town of less than a thousand people. In a small town gossip flew, in a small town people would notice weird behavior. In a small town new comers were carefully watched. We knew it was going to be hard, but we also knew we had to try something different. My Dad thought that living in such a small place would be an incentive for my brother and me to behave ourselves.

         You see, I was born into a family of gifted people, and when I say ‘gifted’ I don’t mean we’re exceptionally bright or anything like that. We’re more of what you would regard as freaks of nature really. We; my father, brother, and I posses abilities far beyond what any normal human being can do. My father can shoot electricity out of his hands, and my brother can hear even the softest sounds over great distances. He can hear a pin drop from a mile away. Me- well I’m different, even by our standards. I’m what they call a Leech. I wasn’t born with any innate abilities except that I absorb the abilities of those around me. I need only to touch another of my kind, one finger is all it takes, and whatever abilities he has I will have. I don’t steal his powers, I just copy them. Of course that makes me only as strong as the person whose power I’ve copied, but still it’s a useful gift to have.

         So far I have copied three abilities, all of them on accident because I have no idea how my power works. I have my brothers hearing, my father’s lightening, and also I can read minds. We’re not really sure where this one came from. One day when I was about twelve I started hearing voices. I thought they were just people talking so I ignored most of them, eventually I started answering the thoughts of my family and we realized that I’d come into contact with someone somewhere who read minds. I just wish I knew who it was. I’ve never actually met anyone like us, though they have to be out there.

         I trudged up to the house carrying the last box of our stuff. We had spent most of the day unpacking. Lucky we didn’t take much with us. Just the essentials, all the things we needed to make us look normal. We had even rented a small UHAUL for the benefit of our new neighbors. A normal family of three couldn’t fit all their belongings into the back of a Jeep Grand Cherokee. Not likely anyway. I tried to look nonchalant as a group of people walked down the sidewalk past the house. I didn’t need to see them to know they were coming. With Tommy’s ability I could hear them coming six streets over, every step they took sounded like a herd of elephants marching down the street. And I didn’t need to see them to know how many there were. Three separate, distinct voices filled my head; two female and one male. The male sounded much younger, probably the younger brother of one of the girls.

         That must be the new family, one voice said. She sounded a bit stuck up.

         Oooh, the one by the Jeep is cute, female voice number two said. I rolled my eyes. If Tommy could read minds we’d have had to repack right then and there.

         I didn’t get much from the third in the group, the little boy. I saw a few images, an ice cream shop, some crayons, and a tall blonde girl holding his hand and leading him down the street there was a shorter blonde with them too. I vaguely wondered which one thought Tommy was cute.

         The group passed by and Tommy came running up.

         “What’d they think about me?” he asked. I rolled my eyes again. He was impossible. I made a mental note not to bother unpacking to much more.

         “They didn’t like your hair.” His face fell as his hand immediately went to his hair.

         How could they not like the hair? Everyone likes the hair, I shrugged and walked up the porch and into the house.

         The house, I could tell, was old but normal enough. Dark wood paneling made the small hall seem even more cramped than it actually was. Directly across from the door was a steep, narrow staircase that led to the upper floor where our bedrooms were. To my right was the smallish living room with bare and gloomy off-white walls, scuffed and dented from years of abuse. Large windows set into one wall, the one facing the road, let in sunlight and it bounced off the light fixtures in a pleasant way.

         Straight through the living rooms large arched doorway was a dining room made up of the same off-white walls and dark scratched hardwood floors as the rest of the house. To the left of the dining room, or straight through from the front door was the kitchen and mudroom, the only room in the house that had somehow been spared the ugly off-white, the kitchen had been painted an even uglier shade of yellow.

         I set my box down on the stairs and went to the kitchen where Dad was making sandwiches. He handed me a turkey club and a bag of chips and hauled himself up to sit on the counter.

         “Can you toast it?” He took the sandwich and held it in between his hands for a second. When he handed it back it was crispy and brown.

         “Sorry, I think I went a little over bored” he said, eyeing the black spots. I shrugged, I liked it that way. “You know, I don’t think this towns going to be that bad.”

         “It’s so small.” Maybee was home to just under five hundred and thirty people.

         “Like I said back in Boston, I think a small town will be good. It’ll give your brother a reason to act Normal.”

         “Someone’s going to realize what we are.”

         “Tyler, if we’re careful no one will suspect a thing, and even if they do, what’s the worst that can happen?”

         “Angry mob.” I grunted between mouthfuls

         “This isn’t medieval times. No one’s going to chase us down with torches and pitchforks. Besides you’d know if they were thinking about doing it and you and Tommy both would hear them coming.” I shrugged again. Dad jumped down off the counter and came to face me, one hand resting on my shoulder. “Give this place a chance Ty. Go to school tomorrow, meet new people, but be careful” I knew what he meant by careful. Even though I’d had my Dad’s ability for a while now I still hadn’t quite got the hang of it. It had taken Dad the better part of his life to perfect his power, and that was with the natural instincts he already had about how to use it. As a Leech I copy abilities, not the instructions that come with them.

         I can’t touch anyone. Every time I do I let off a little zap of static electricity. It’s not enough to hurt anyone; but still, you’d notice if every time you touched me you got shocked. It brings to much attention to us.

         “So what do you say Ty?”

         “I’ll give it a chance, but if I don’t like it your homeschooling me.”

         He smiled in return “Go upstairs and help your brother with the last of those boxes.”







         It was still dark the next morning while Tommy and I were walking to school.

         Did those girls yesterday mention school at all?

         “No” I mumbled in a tone so low my lips barely moved and there was no way anyone but Tommy could have heard me.

         What if they don’t go to the same school as us?

         “This town’s too small to have more than one school Tommy. Besides we’d be better off if they didn’t, two less people to try and fool.”

         Yea. He thought in a non-committal way, it was a tone that almost always meant trouble

         Tommy left me before we got up to the front doors of the school. I walked into the old building and immediately felt dizzy from the double bombardment of noise and thoughts. Sometimes I thought Tommy was lucky. He never got overwhelmed in public situations. Me on the other hand…It happened more often than I would like to admit. I took a second to get used to the sudden change. I let the thoughts filter into the background until they became a low hum of barely audible noise. As for the shouting (or at least it sounded like shouting to me) there wasn’t much I could do about that. After I had adjusted I started picking through the thoughts of those around me. Looking for anyone with information on where the office was.

         Oh, it’s that new kid Britney was talking about. She said they were good looking… one voice said. I quickly pushed that one aside and concentrated on another.

         Dude looks lost. Ha, I would hate to be him, another voice said. I guessed that voice belonged to the dark haired boy wearing a backwards hat and aviators who was staring at me from across the hall.

         That must be the other Roberts boy. I should see if he needs help. This was the type of thought I was looking for. I tried to guess which of the small crowd surrounding me this voice belonged to. My best guess was a short blonde girl standing not five feet away.

         “Excuse me?” I said as I made my way over to her. She turned towards me and I noticed immediately how pretty she was. She had icy blue eyes set in a graceful fair skinned face; fair and flawless, right down to the light dusting of freckles across her nose. And her hair was so pale blonde it was almost white, though when it caught the light if you looked really closely you could see hundreds and hundreds of single metallic red strands randomly placed throughout in a way that could only be natural.

         I walked the short distance between us; she looked up at me expectantly.

         “Hi, um- today’s my first day and I was hoping you could point me in the direction of the office.”

         I knew the second she spoke that I had got the wrong girl. That I hadn’t matched thought with person even remotely accurately. The voice in my head had been deeper, borderline masculine in comparison. Looking back I’m not even sure why I would have matched that voice to this girl in the first place. After hearing the girls soft wind chime voice, to think of her with a deep tone seems an injustice.

         She smiled warmly at my question.

         “I was just heading there myself. I’ll walk you.” She didn’t say much on our way to the office. I took the opportunity to study her further. I noticed the way in which she dressed: warm colors; blue jeans, a brown shirt, and faded red converse sneakers. She seemed to dress in a way that would make her fit in. She blended perfectly with the kids around her. Her shoes were the only thing that stood out.

         When she did talk it was to ask simple non-committal questions about myself. Where had I lived before here? How was I finding this small town? What was my brother’s name? Of course she already had heard all about Tommy.

         I wondered vaguely what she thought about us, so I started sifting through the low hum of background voices, searching out the voice of the girl walking beside me.

         Is that the new kid walking with Claire? One voice said. I imagined it belonged to the brunette who was standing at her locker eyeing us curiously.

         Way to go Claire! Another female voice said.

         Where were this girl’s thoughts? She was standing right next to me, I had already heard her voice, and it should have been easy for me to pick her out of the crowd. She had such a distinctive voice.

         “Here’s the office.” She trilled before disappearing behind the large door. I did not go in. Instead I stood outside sifting through my own thoughts while still trying, in vain, to find hers.

         “Hello Claire, how can I help you?” I heard through the door.

         “Oh, I just need my locker combination.” it sounded like an excuse. There was the sound of typing, and then of paper being printed off.

         “Here you go, honey. Have a good day!” Obviously the staff liked Claire.

         “Thank-you Mrs. Fellner.” Claire came bouncing out the office a moment later holding the folded piece of paper in her hand.

         “Aren’t you going in?”

         “Oh, yea.” I mumbled, as I shuffled through the door.



         I came out twenty minutes later, class schedule and locker combination in hand, half expecting Claire to be there waiting for me. I shouldn’t have kept my hopes up. I had the hardest time concentrating all day. All I could think of was Claire and the mystery that surrounded her. Why couldn’t I hear her thoughts? What made her so special? When you can read minds there’s not often a lot that can make you curious about a person. But Claire made me curious. Dangerously curious.



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