Authors: P.C. Cast,Kristin Cast
I nodded, noting the past tense she used when she mentioned Aphrodite's ability.
“Well, it seems that Aphrodite's behavior has caused Nyx to withdraw her gift. It's something that is highly unusual. Once the Goddess touches someone, she rarely revokes what she has given.” Neferet shrugged sadly. “But who can know the mind of the Great Goddess of Night?”
“It must be awful for Aphrodite,” I said, more thinking aloud than really meaning to comment.
“I appreciate your compassion, but I did not tell you this so that you would pity Aphrodite. Rather, I tell you so that you know to be on your guard. Aphrodite's visions are no longer valid. She might say or do things that are disturbing. As leader of the Dark Daughters, it will be your responsibility to be certain that she does not upset the delicate balance of harmony among the fledglings. Of course we encourage you to work out problems among yourselves. You are much more than human teenagers, and we expect more from you, but feel free to come to me if Aphrodite's behavior becomes too”âshe paused, like she was considering the next word carefullyâ“erratic.”
“I will,” I said, my stomach beginning to hurt again.
“Good! Now, why don't you tell me the plans you've made for your reign as leader of the Dark Daughters.”
I put Aphrodite out of my mind and outlined my new plans for the Prefect Council and the Dark Daughters. Neferet listened attentively and was openly impressed by my research and what she called a “logical reorganization.”
“So, what you want from me is to lead the faculty in voting on the two new Prefects, because I agree with you that you and your four friends have more than proven your worth and are already an excellent working Council.”
“Yes. The Council wants to nominate Erik Night for the first of the two open positions.”
Neferet nodded her head. “Erik is a wise choice. He's popular with the fledglings, and he has an excellent future before him. Who did you have in mind for the last position?”
“Here's where my Council and I disagree. I think we need another upperclassman, and I also think that person should be one who belonged to Aphrodite's inner circle.” Neferet raised her brows in surprise. “Well, including a friend of hers reinforces what I've said all along, that I didn't come into this because I'm power crazy and set out to steal what was Aphrodite's or anything stupid like that. I just wanted to do the right thing. I didn't want to start some kind of silly clique war. If one of her friends is on my Council, then the rest of them might understand that it's not about me getting over on herâit's about something more important than that.”
Neferet considered for what seemed like forever. Finally she said, “You know that even her friends have turned from her.”
“I realized that today in the dining hall.”
“Then what is the point of putting an ex-friend of hers on your Council?”
“I'm not convinced they are ex-friends. People act different in private than they do in public.”
“Again, I agree with you. I already made the announcement to the faculty that Sunday the Dark Daughters and Sons will convene a special Full Moon Ritual and meeting. I would expect that the vast majority of the old members will attendâif for no other reason than curiosity about your powers.”
I gulped and nodded. I was already way too aware that I was the main attraction in a freak show.
“Sunday is the right time for you to tell the Dark Daughters about your new vision for it. Announce that there is one spot left on your Council, and that it must be filled by a sixth former. You and I will look over the applications and decide who is the best fit.”
I frowned. “But I don't want it to just be our choice. I want the faculty to vote, as well as the student body.”
“They will,” she said smoothly. “Then we will decide.”
I wanted to say more, but her green eyes had gone cold; I'm not ashamed to admit that that scared me. So instead of arguing with her (which was totally impossible) I went down a different road (as my grandma would say).
“I also want the Dark Daughters to get involved with a community charity.”
This time Neferet's brows totally disappeared into her hairline.
“You mean community as in the human community?”
“I do.”
“You think they will welcome your help? They shun us. They abhor us. They are afraid of us.”
“Maybe that's because they don't know us,” I said. “Maybe if we acted like part of Tulsa, we'd get treated like part of Tulsa.”
“Have you read about the Greenwood riots in the 1920s? Those African-American humans were part of Tulsa, and Tulsa destroyed them.”
“It's not 1920 anymore,” I said. It was hard to meet her eyes, but I knew, deep inside, that I was doing the right thing. “Neferet, my intuition is telling me this is something I must do.”
I watched her expression soften. “And I did tell you to follow your intuition, didn't I?”
I nodded.
“What charity will you choose to get involved withâproviding they actually allow you to help them?”
“Oh, I think they'll let us help them. I've decided to contact Street Catsâthe cat rescue charity.”
Neferet threw back her head and laughed.
I was already out of the dining hall and heading to the dorm when I realized that I hadn't said anything to Neferet about the ghosts, but no way did I want to go back upstairs and start that subject. The conversation I'd already had with Neferet had completely exhausted me, and despite the beautiful dining room with its great view and its crystal and linen, I'd been eager to get out of there. I wanted to go back to the dorm and tell Stevie Rae about the whole Loren thing and then do nothing but veg out and watch bad reruns on TV and try to forget (at least for one night) that I had a terrible premonition about Chris's disappearance and that I was A Big Deal now and in charge of the most important student group at the school. Whatever. I just wanted to be me for a while. As I'd told Neferet, Chris was probably safely at home already. And there was plenty of time for everything else. Tomorrow I'd write down an outline of what I was going to say to the Dark Daughters on Sunday. I guess I'd also have to work on a Full Moon Ritual . . . my first real public circle casting and formal ritual. My stomach started to gurgle. I ignored it.
I was halfway to the dorm when I remembered that I also had an essay due Monday for Vamp Soc. Sure, Neferet had excused me from most of the third former work in that class so I could focus on reading ahead in the higher level Soc text, but I'd been trying really hard to be “normal” (Whatever that wasâhelloâI'm a teenager and a fledgling vampyre. How could any of that be normal?), which meant I made sure I turned in papers when the rest of the class did. So I hurriedly backtracked to my homeroom class, where my locker and all of my books were kept. It was also Neferet's room, but I'd just left her having wine with several of the other profs upstairs. For a change I didn't have any worries about overhearing something awful.
As usual, the door was unlocked. Why have locks when you had vamp intuition to scare the bejeezus out of kids instead? The room was dark, but that didn't matter. I'd only been Marked one month, but already I saw just as well with the lights off as with them on. Actually, better. Bright lights hurt my eyesâsunlight was almost unbearable.
I hesitated as I opened my locker, realizing that I hadn't seen the sun in almost a month. I hadn't even thought about it till now. Huh. Weird.
I was considering the bizarreness of my new life when I noticed the piece of paper that had been taped to the inside shelf of my locker. It fluttered in the temporary breeze I'd created by opening the door. My hand lifted to calm it, and I felt a jolt of shock when I realized what it was.
Poetry.
Or, more accurately, a poem. It was short and written in a bold, attractive cursive. I read it and reread it, registering specifically what it was. Haiku.
Ancient Queen awake
A chrysalis not yet formed
Will your wings unfold?
I let my fingers brush the words. I knew who had written it. There was only one logical answer. My heart squeezed as I whispered his name, “Loren . . .”
“I'm serious, Stevie Rae. If I tell you, you have to swear you won't say anything to anyone. And when I say
anyone
I especially mean Damien and the Twins.”
“Dang, Zoey, you can trust me. I said I swear. What do you want me to do, open a vein?”
I didn't say anything.
“Zoey, you really can trust me. Promise.”
I studied my best friend's face. I needed to talk to someoneâsomeone who was not a vamp. I searched inside myself, to the core of what Neferet would call my intuition. It felt right to confide in Stevie Rae. It felt safe.
“Sorry. I know I can trust you. I'm just . . . I don't know.” I shook my head, frustrated by my own confusion. “Okay, weird stuff has happened today.”
“You mean more than the normal weirdness that goes on around here?”
“Yeah. Loren Blake came into the library today while I was there. He was the first person I talked to about the Prefect Council idea and my new ideas for the Dark Daughters.”
“Loren Blake? As in the most gorgeous vamp any of us have ever seen? Ohmygoodness. I better sit down.” Stevie Rae collapsed on her bed.
“That's who I mean.”
“I can't believe you haven't said anything about this until now. You must have been dying.”
“Well, that's not all. He . . . uh . . . touched me. And more than once. Okay, actually I saw him more than once today. Alone. And I think he wrote me a poem.”
“What!”
“Yeah, at first I was sure it was perfectly innocent and I was imagining anything else. In the library we just talked about the ideas I had for the Dark Daughters. I didn't think it meant anything. But, well, he touched my Mark.”
“Which one?” Stevie Rae asked. Her eyes were huge and round and she looked like she was going to explode.
“The one on my face. That time.”
“What do you mean
that time!
”
“Well, after I got done with brushing Persephone I wasn't in any hurry to get back to the dorm. So I went for a walk over by the west wall. Loren was there.”
“Ohmydearsweetlord. What happened?”
“I think we flirted.”
“You think!”
“We were laughing and smiling at each other.”
“Sounds like flirting to me. God, he is so totally gorgeous.”
“Tell me about it. When he smiles at me I can hardly breathe. And get thisâ
he recited a poem to me,
” I said. “It was a haiku a man wrote about looking at his naked lover in the moonlight.”
“You have got to be kidding!” Stevie Rae started fanning herself with her hand. “Get to the touching part.”
I took a deep breath. “It was really confusing. Everything was going really well. Like I said, we were laughing and talking. Then he said he was out there by himself because that's how he gets inspired to write haikuâ”
“Which is insanely romantic!”
I nodded and continued. “I know. Anyway, I told him I hadn't meant to mess up his inspiration and bother him, and he said that more things inspired him than just the night. And he asked me if
I'd
be his inspiration.”
“Holy shit.”
“Exactly what I thought.”
“Naturally you said you'd be happy to inspire him.”
“Naturally,” I said.
“And . . .” Stevie Rae prompted eagerly.
“And he asked to see my Mark. The one on my shoulders and back.”
“He did not.”
“He did.”
“Man, I would have peeled off my shirt faster than you can say Bubba loves trucks!”
I laughed. “Well, I didn't take my shirt off, but I slid my jacket down. Actually, he helped me.”
“Are you telling me Loren Blake, Vampyre Poet Laureate and hottest f-ing male on two feet, helped you off with your jacket like an old-time gentleman?”
“Yeah. Like this.” I demonstrated by pushing my jacket down around my elbows. “And then I don't exactly know what came over me, but all of a sudden I wasn't all nervous and stupid-acting. I took the strap of my tank off for him. Like this.” I pushed my tank strap down, exposing my back and shoulder and a good part of my breast (relieved all over again that I had on my good black bra). “That's when he touched me. Again.”
“Where?”
“He traced the pattern of my Mark on my back and shoulder. He told me that I look like an ancient vampyre queen and recited the poem to me.”
“Holy shit,” Stevie Rae said again.
I plopped down on my bed facing her and sighed, pulling the strap of my tank back up. “Yeah, it was amazing for a little while. I was sure we connected. Really connected. I think he almost kissed me. Actually, I know he wanted to. And then, out of nowhere, he changed. He got all polite and formal and thanked me for showing him my Mark and then he walked away.”
“Well, that's no big surprise.”
“It sure as hell was to me. I mean, one second he was staring into my eyes and sending major signals that he wanted me and the nextânothing.”
“Zoey, you're a student. He's a teacher. This is a vamp school and a whole different world from life at a normal high school, but some things don't change. Students are off-limits to teachers.”
I chewed at my lip. “He's only a part-time, temporary teacher.”
Stevie Rae rolled her eyes. “As if that matters.”
“That's not all that happened. I just found this poem in my locker.” I handed her the piece of paper with the haiku on it.
Stevie Rae sucked air. “Ohmygood
ness
. This is so romantic I could die. How? How did he touch the Mark on your back?”
“Jeesh, how do you think? With his finger. He traced the pattern.” I swear I could still feel the heat of that touch.