
- 848 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
Flashback
About this book
A New York Times bestselling series
A USA TODAY bestselling series
A California Young Reader Medal–winning series
In this unforgettable seventh book in the Keeper of the Lost Cities series, Sophie must let the past and present blur together, because the deadliest secrets are always the ones that get erased.
Sophie Foster doesn’t know what—or whom—to believe. And in a game with this many players, the worst mistake can be focusing on the wrong threat.
But when the Neverseen prove that Sophie’s far more vulnerable than she ever imagined, she realizes it’s time to change the rules. Her powerful abilities can only protect her so far. To face down ruthless enemies, she must learn to fight.
Unfortunately, battle training can’t help a beloved friend who’s facing a whole different danger—where the only solution involves one of the biggest risks Sophie and her friends have ever taken. And the distraction might be exactly what the villains have been waiting for.
A USA TODAY bestselling series
A California Young Reader Medal–winning series
In this unforgettable seventh book in the Keeper of the Lost Cities series, Sophie must let the past and present blur together, because the deadliest secrets are always the ones that get erased.
Sophie Foster doesn’t know what—or whom—to believe. And in a game with this many players, the worst mistake can be focusing on the wrong threat.
But when the Neverseen prove that Sophie’s far more vulnerable than she ever imagined, she realizes it’s time to change the rules. Her powerful abilities can only protect her so far. To face down ruthless enemies, she must learn to fight.
Unfortunately, battle training can’t help a beloved friend who’s facing a whole different danger—where the only solution involves one of the biggest risks Sophie and her friends have ever taken. And the distraction might be exactly what the villains have been waiting for.
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Yes, you can access Flashback by Shannon Messenger in PDF and/or ePUB format. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
Information
Print ISBN
9781481497442eBook ISBN
9781481497459ONE
SO IS IT STRANGE COMING here and not being the one on trial?ā Keefe asked, checking his expertly styled blond hair in a shiny facet on one of the jeweled walls before he followed Sophie into Tribunal Hall. āBecause Iād be happy to help you break a few laws if youāre feeling left out.ā
āMe too!ā RoāKeefeās bodyguardājumped in. Her pierced nose crinkled as she surveyed the empty auditorium, which was built entirely out of emeralds. āUgh, you guys have really out-sparkled yourselves with this place. Itās basically begging me to smash something.ā
āNo one will be smashing anything,ā SandorāSophieās bodyguardāwarned. āOr causing any other problems!ā
The threat didnāt sound all that terrifying, thanks to Sandorās squeaky voice. But he backed it up by being a seven-foot-tall goblin warriorāand by folding his gray arms across his bare chest and flexing some seriously impressive muscles.
Ro flashed a pointy-toothed smile and patted the rows of daggersāa recent addition to her ogre arsenalāstrapped to her toned thighs. āIād like to see you try to stop us.ā
āBelieve me, Iād enjoy every second,ā Sandor growled, gripping the hilt of his giant black sword. āI still canāt believe the Council is allowing you into these proceedings.ā
Neither could Sophie.
Then again, she hadnāt expected to be invited either.
The Tribunal was supposed to be restricted to members of the Vacker family, since it was only a sentencing hearingāand mostly a formality. Alvar was already being held in the secret prison the Black Swan had designed specifically for him. The Council was simply deciding how many years heād have to stay there.
But Alden had stopped by Havenfield that morning and explained that heād gotten permission for Sophie to attend. And when sheād light leaped to Eternalia, sheād found Keefe and Ro already waiting.
Keefe looked dressier than usual, in a starched white shirt with a fitted black jerkin and an embroidered gray capeāand Sophie was relieved to see it, since sheād decided to show her support with a dusty-rose gown that was much more Bianaās fancy style than hers. Sheād also used the gold-flecked eyeliner Biana had been telling her would bring out the glints in her brown eyesāeven though she hated drawing more attention to their unique-for-an-elf color.
āWhat?ā Sophie asked, wiping under her lashes when she noticed Keefe staring. āDid I smudge it?ā
āNo, Foster. You look⦠perfect.ā
She blushed at the slight catch in his voiceāand then wished she hadnāt when he flashed his trademark smirk.
āDid Alden tell you he wanted you to be here for moral support too?ā she asked, stopping in the center of the hall as she realized she didnāt know which of the hundreds of seats were theirs.
His smile faded. āYeah. He said Fitz was going to need a friend today.ā
āHe said a lot more than that,ā Ro muttered.
āRelax, Foster,ā Keefe said, shooting Ro a glare before he pointed to the crease that had formed between Sophieās eyebrows. āNo need to get all crinkly on me. Nothingās going on. Aldenās just⦠worried about how Fitz is going to handle this.ā
āSo am I,ā Sophie admitted.
Anger was often Fitzās crutch in emotionally fraught situationsāand nothing brought out his fury more than his traitorous older brother.
āYeah, well, now Iām stuck listening to a bunch of stuffy, know-it-all elves arguing with each other,ā Ro groused as she twisted one of her choppy pigtails, which sheād recently dyed the same vivid pink sheād painted her claws. āIt almost makes me wish I were still bedridden. Seriously, who thought having twelve Councillors was a good idea?ā
Sophie was tempted to point out that the system was much more balanced than having a single power-hungry king. But since Ro was the daughter of the ogresā fear-inspiring leaderāand the elvesā alliance with King Dimitar had become rather shaky after the Neverseen almost killed Ro during their attack on Atlantisāshe decided it was smart to avoid that particular conversation. Especially since the elvin Council was far from perfect.
She turned toward the twelve jeweled thrones that filled a large platform at the front of the glinting green room. Each had been ornamented to reflect the style and taste of the Councillor whose name was displayed along the top: Clarette, Velia, Alina, Terik, Liora, Emery, Oralie, Ramira, Darek, Noland, Zarina, and Bronte.
Sophie knew some of them better than others, and there were a couple sheād even grown to trust. But she would never stop wishing that there was still a simple, sturdy throne for Councillor Kenric.
Kenric had been kind. And funny. And one of Sophieās most loyal supporters.
And heād still be alive if it werenāt for her.
She tried not to let herself think about it, because the guilt might shatter her sanity. But she could still feel the stinging heat of the flamesāstill hear the crunches and crackles and screams as the jeweled tower melted around them. And sheād never forget Fintanās taunt as heād ignited the Everblaze to prevent her from retrieving his memories.
Sophie had only been in Oblivimyre that night because of a direct order from the Council. But if sheād been stronger, faster, smarter than Fintanā¦
āYou okay?ā Keefe asked, flicking a strand of her blond hair to get her attention. āAnd before you answer, remember: Youāre talking to an Empath. Plus, youāve already pulled out two eyelashes since we got here, and I can tell youāre dying to go for a third.ā
She was.
Her eyelashes itched whenever she felt anxious, and tugging on them was such a relief. But she kept trying to break the habit, so she held her hands at her sides and forced herself to meet Keefeās ice blue eyes. āIām fine.ā
When he raised one eyebrow, she added, āIām just frustrated. I wish the Council was holding a Tribunal for Fintan, not Alvar.ā
Keefe leaned slightly closer. āI wouldnāt let the Fitzster hear you say that.ā
āI know. Or Biana.ā
The younger Vacker siblings had been counting down the days to Alvarās sentencingāand Sophie didnāt blame them for wanting everything settled with their older brother.
Butā¦
She glanced over her shoulder, grateful the auditorium was still empty, so she could ask the question sheād been trying not to say.
āDoesnāt this feel like a waste of time?ā
āBecause Alvar canāt remember anything?ā Keefe asked.
Sophie nodded.
Alvar had been a longtime member of the Neverseen, involved in many of their cruelest schemes before Sophie and her friends found him drugged, bleeding, and trapped in a cell in an abandoned hideout. And when heād finally regained consciousness, he couldnāt even remember his own name.
He didnāt seem to be faking, either. Sophie had checked. So had Fitz. And Alden. And Mr. Forkle. And Quinlin. And Councillor Emeryāalong with every other Telepath the Council trusted. None of them could find a single memory in Alvarās head, no matter how deeply they searched. The Black Swan had even brought in Damelāa trained Washerāwhoād told them that Alvarās past had been scrubbed cleaner than heād realized was possible. And Sophie had tried using her unique telepathic abilities to perform a mental healing, but it hadnāt made a difference. Neither had any of the elixirs a team of physicians had given him.
Alvarās mind wasnāt broken or damaged.
It was⦠blank.
Sophie had never felt anything like itāand sheād experienced some pretty bizarre mental landscapes over the last few years. There was no cold, suffocating darkness. No sharp, fragmented images. Just soft, fuzzy gray space.
āI donāt understand why the Council is focusing on someone with amnesia,ā she whispered to Keefe, āwhen they have Fintan in custody and theyāre doing nothing.ā
The former leader of the Neverseen had been captured during the raid on Nightfall. But Fintan had cut a deal with the Council for his cooperation. So he was currently being held in a prison built specifically for him, in exchange for sharing the location of a small supply of the antidote to soporidineāa dangerous sedative the Neverseen had developed for some still-undetermined purpose. Heād also demanded that all Telepaths be kept far away, to ensure that no one could mess with his memories. And while the Council did at least make him agree to help them gain access to his old cacheāa small, marble-size gadget that contained dangerous memories called Forgotten Secretsāeither Fintan was sabotaging the process, or caches were flawed inventions, because weeks had passed and they hadnāt recovered a single piece of information.
āYou think heās planning something,ā Keefe guessed.
āDonāt you?ā
Fintan had already proven that he was the master of long, intricate schemes. Heād destroyed Lumenariaāand freed Vespera from the castleās dungeonāwith a plan that required key members of the Neverseen to allow themselves to be imprisoned. He could be pulling a similar trick againāand Sophie knew she could find out if the Council would just let her meet with him.
But all of her requests for a visit had been denied. And when sheād asked the Black Swanās Collective for help, theyād told her the Council wasnāt giving them access either.
āWhy is Fintan still calling the shots?ā she murmured. āHe already gave us the antidote.ā
āI donāt know.ā Keefe seemed to debate with himself before he added, āBut heās never going to cooperate. So do you really want to do another memory break on him? After what happened with Aldenāand Kenricā¦ā
Sophie stared at her hands, tracing her finger along one of the thumb rings peeking through her lacy gloves. The engraved bands had been a gift from Fitz, to identify the two of them as Cognatesāand the rare telepathic connection made them far more powerful together than theyād been the last time theyād taken on Fintan. Sheād also manifested as an Enhancer, which meant she could boost Fitzās mental strength with a single touch of her fingertips. So she had no doubt that they would get past Fintanās blocking and find whatever he was hiding.
But⦠memory breaks were horrible, brutal thingsāeven when they were necessary.
āI donāt see any other choice,ā she admitted. āEven if heās not part of some bigger scheme, Fintan has to at least know what Vesperaās planning.ā
āBut he wonāt know what my momās up to,ā Keefe reminded her. āAnd sheās the one running things now.ā
Sophie wasnāt entirely convinced that was true.
Lady Gisela had seized control of the Neverseen when sheād tried to destroy Atlantis. But Vespera only allied with her because Keefeās mom trapped her in a force field and threatened to leave her there until the Council arrived to arrest her. And Vespera didnāt seem like the type whoād cooperate for longāespecially since sheād insisted that she and Lady Gisela had opposite visions.
Then again, Keefeās mom had already clawed her way back to power once, so she must be taking precautions to make sure no one could overthrow her again.
āWe have too many villains,ā Sophie said through a sigh.
Keefe snorted. āYouāre not wrong.ā
She wasnāt even counting the other members of the Neverseen. Or the ogres whoād defected from King Dimitar. Or the dwarves whoād disappeared months ago, presumably to join the rebellion. Orā
āHey,ā Keefe said, fanning the air the way he always did when her emotions started to spiral. āWeāve got this, okay? I know it doesnāt feel like itāā
āIt doesnāt,ā Sophie agreed.
Theyād been trying to come up with a plan for weeks and still had nothing. And whenever the Neverseen kept them stumped like that, people got hurt.
Sophie had even risked using Keefeās old Imparter, which his mom had rigged with a secret way to contact her. But Lady Gisela was either ignoring them, or sheād severed the connection. And the Black Swan had confiscated the gadget in case anyone could use it to monitor them.
Keefe grinned. āYouāre so adorable when you worry. Iāve told you that, right?ā
Sophie gave him her best glare, and his smile only widened.
He stepped closer, reaching for her hands. āLetās just get through today, okay? Then no one will be distracted by Alvar anymore, and weāll be able to focus.ā
āYeah. I guess.ā
āHmm.ā He traced his thumb over the sliver of skin between her glove and the edge of her beaded sleeve. āThereās something youāre not saying right now. I can feel it.ā
There was.
The other question sheād been trying not to ask, because she was pretty sure she knew what her friends would say.
āCome on, Foster. Itās me. You know you can trust me. And you already know all of my worst secrets, soā¦ā
It was the sinc...
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Dedication
- Preface
- Chapter One
- Chapter Two
- Chapter Three
- Chapter Four
- Chapter Five
- Chapter Six
- Chapter Seven
- Chapter Eight
- Chapter Nine
- Chapter Ten
- Chapter Eleven
- Chapter Twelve
- Chapter Thirteen
- Chapter Fourteen
- Chapter Fifteen
- Chapter Sixteen
- Chapter Seventeen
- Chapter Eighteen
- Chapter Nineteen
- Chapter Twenty
- Chapter Twenty-One
- Chapter Twenty-Two
- Chapter Twenty-Three
- Chapter Twenty-Four
- Chapter Twenty-Five
- Chapter Twenty-Six
- Chapter Twenty-Seven
- Chapter Twenty-Eight
- Chapter Twenty-Nine
- Chapter Thirty
- Chapter Thirty-One
- Chapter Thirty-Two
- Chapter Thirty-Three
- Chapter Thirty-Four
- Chapter Thirty-Five
- Chapter Thirty-Six
- Chapter Thirty-Seven
- Chapter Thirty-Eight
- Chapter Thirty-Nine
- Chapter Forty
- Chapter Forty-One
- Chapter Forty-Two
- Chapter Forty-Three
- Chapter Forty-Four
- Chapter Forty-Five
- Chapter Forty-Six
- Chapter Forty-Seven
- Chapter Forty-Eight
- Chapter Forty-Nine
- Chapter Fifty
- Chapter Fifty-One
- Chapter Fifty-Two
- Acknowledgments
- āLegacyā Teaser
- About the Author
- Copyright