Prologue

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“She shouldn’t be there,” a tall, blonde haired woman scowled at the people in front of her. “She does not belong there and neither do those two,” she hissed pointing at the screen beside her. It showed three teenagers, one a guy and the other two girls, sitting at a table eating lunch. There were other people around them but they were blurred out and apparently unimportant.

   One person sitting in the front looked up at the blonde haired lady with his gold eyes. He was tall as well with brown hair and gold lips. “Saule, you were away and we did not know they were supposed to go there.”

   “I was away for two thousand years and I left specific instructions,” she growled. “And these were the three people I left very specific instructions for. So how come you screwed up?”

   A girl walked into the room her hair curled, long and black and her eyes pitch black, as if unseeing. “Because sister they are idiots,” she soothed Saule by placing a small hand on her sister’s shoulder. The people in front squirmed and looked at the floor in shame.

   “Thank you for making that clear Raganna,” Saule said looking at her sister, who removed her hand gently. “I knew that, but I didn’t think they’d be so careless. After all in this time, or any other one I didn’t specify, they will be the end of the world, no matter what they do,” she said sternly and they shrunk back.

   “They are still you and are not used to being left alone to run the planet,” Raganna said and looked at one of the. She pointed a finger and he slowly rose from his spot going to her.

   “Yes ma’am?” he asked nervously his wild purple hair sticking to his sweaty head.

   “Why did you let this happen?” she questioned, smiling evilly.

   “We did not know they could destroy the world,” he muttered, his eyelids opening and closing vertically over his pure blue eyes.

   “The warning?” Saule questioned walking over to him, her tallness making him cower.

   “There wasn’t one,” he said nervously.

   Saule looked curiously at him. “There wasn’t a warning?”

   “Or a date,” he looked up, catching her eye and nervously looking back down.

   “Than I will have to fix the problem,” Saule said turning to leave the room.

   “What about their punishment?” her sister questioned.

   Saule turned back around and blinked her long brown eyelashes. “If this world ends, they will suffer. But at the moment they may live… in fear.”

   Raganna smiled knowing Saule well. She nodded and pushed the purple haired guy off the stage, before following her sister out of the room.

   The group of people that sat before them were still cowering when Saule began her descent to the world below. There was a lot of work to be done.

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