Once Daphne and Vic quit arguing, the three of us spent the next hour lounging around and talking. Well, the Valkyrie did most of the talking, telling me about how she and the other kids at the Winter Carnival had heard the explosion and then seen the avalanche rush down the mountain toward me. Since the carnival had been set up back on the plateau, everyone there had been well out of the path of the roaring snow.
“Everyone was seriously freaked out,” Daphne said. “Including Logan.”
My heart skipped a beat, even though I kept my face calm. “Really? I find that hard to believe.”
“Oh yeah,” the Valkyrie said. “He totally wanted to go with Ajax and start looking for you. Carson and I did too, but Metis and the other profs wouldn’t let us. They kept everyone at the carnival until the snow had settled. But Logan, man, I thought he was actually going to punch Nickamedes at one point. The two of them were screaming at each other, and Kenzie and Oliver had to grab hold of Logan to keep him from going after the librarian.”
I laughed. “Now that I would have liked to have seen. Yeah, maybe Logan was worried about me. I mean, we are friends, in a weird sort of way. But it doesn’t matter, because I saw him hanging out with Savannah down in the lobby a few minutes ago, just like always. So nothing’s changed. Besides, I ran into Preston downstairs. We’re going to have lunch tomorrow, and I’m going to forget all about Logan—at least for the rest of the weekend.”
Daphne opened her mouth, but her phone started vibrating on the nightstand. She bent over to see who was texting her. She hit a few buttons, and a guilty look filled her pretty face.
“So, that was Carson and ... there’s this party tonight,” Daphne said, not quite looking at me.
“And let me guess. I can’t go because it’s out in the alpine village somewhere and I’m not supposed to leave the hotel, right?”
Daphne winced and nodded.
“Go,” I said. “Have fun with your boyfriend. I’m going to stay right here with Vic, read my comic books, and eat junk food for the rest of the night.”
“Are you sure?” Daphne asked, biting her glossy lip. “I don’t mind staying here with you and just hanging out... .”
“Go,” I repeated in a firm voice. “Go to the party, get drunk, and totally make out with Carson. I’ll be fine. I promise. Believe me, after what happened today, I have zero desire to party tonight.”
It took some more prodding on my part, but eventually, Daphne brushed out her hair, put on some more lip gloss, and left to go hook up with Carson. As soon as the door locked behind her, I walked over to my gray duffel bag and pulled out a pen and notebook. Then I settled myself on the bed, with Vic propped up on a pillow beside me.
“What are you doing?” the sword asked. “Because that doesn’t look like a comic book to me.”
“Nothing much,” I said. “Just trying to figure out who wants me dead.”
Chapter 17
For a moment, Vic peered at me with his one eye, then his slash of a mouth curved back into a full-on smile. I almost thought he would have nodded in approval if he could actually, you know, move his half of a head.
“
Finally,
Gypsy,” he chirped in his English accent. “I was wondering how long you were going to let something like that slide. It’s a major breach of etiquette you know, not striking back at your enemies in a timely fashion.”
Etiquette? What kind of etiquette was there in someone trying to murder me? Sometimes I just didn’t understand Vic at all. I shook my head.
“It’s not that I’ve been
letting it slide
exactly,” I said. “It’s just that I don’t have much to go on. I couldn’t see who was driving the car that tried to hit me, and I didn’t get the license plate. The same thing happened in the library. I didn’t see who fired the arrow, and I didn’t get much of a vibe on the hole it left behind in the bookshelf. And yeah, I touched the Fenrir wolf, but not long enough to really get a major whammy off it or see who its master is. Mostly, the wolf was still thinking about the avalanche, just like I was.”
“So what are you going to do?” Vic asked.
I shrugged. “I thought I’d make a list of everyone who might have a grudge against me and go from there. It always works on TV.”
Vic rolled his eye. “Why are you playing bloody detective again instead of just going out there and using me to get some answers? Put me up against someone’s throat, and I’ll make him start talking real quick.”
I arched an eyebrow and gave the sword a look.
“What?” he growled. “It’d be much more fun than listening to you and the Valkyrie natter on about what some other bloody girl was
wearing
.”
“Shut up, Vic,” I said. “I need to think.”
The sword let out a loud harrumph and snapped his eye shut, his mouth turning down into a pout. And people thought teenagers were moody. Please. We had nothing on ancient, bloodthirsty, talking swords.
Vic kept his eye shut, enjoying his snit, so I sat there on the bed and started making my list. It took me about five seconds. What can I say? It was a short list with only one name on it: Jasmine Ashton’s family. Okay, okay, so it wasn’t really a
name,
but the Ashtons were the only ones with any reason to kill me. At least, that I knew of.
Since my list idea wasn’t working, I decided to go back to the beginning and see if I could remember anything strange or weird, anything out of place, anything out of the ordinary. But really, there was nothing. It had just been a regular week at Mythos Academy until someone had tried to kill me.
Well, sure, I was here at the Winter Carnival at a super-fancy resort, and I was having lunch tomorrow with a cute guy. Both of those were out of the ordinary, but not in a bad way. I needed to think harder, needed to go back to the day this had all started. Wednesday. Three days ago. What had happened then? Maybe I’d done something to set off the Reaper, or maybe I’d pissed off someone else entirely. I closed my eyes and concentrated.
Okay, let’s see. After weapons training with Logan, Kenzie, and Oliver in the gym, I’d gone to my classes that morning, even scoring an A+ on my English lit paper. We’d had to write about the influence of myth on superheroes and modern culture, a topic that I’d totally nailed, since I was such a comic book and fantasy geek. I’d had lunch with Daphne and Carson in the dining hall, then after my afternoon classes, I’d snuck off campus to go see Grandma Frost. After I’d visited my grandma, I’d ridden the bus back to the academy and had worked my usual shift at the Library of Antiquities.
There was nothing there. Nothing special, nothing unusual, nothing out of the ordinary. Well, besides the SUV almost mowing me down and the arrow almost splitting my skull open. I hadn’t even touched anything unusual that day or gotten any real vibes with my psychometry magic, except for the fuzzy flash I’d seen of Oliver’s crush when I’d picked up his notebook that morning in the gym.
My eyes snapped open. Oliver’s notebook. Of course. How could I have been so stupid? Oliver had totally freaked when I’d picked up his notebook, and he’d realized I was getting a flash off it. I’d thought it was just because he didn’t want me to know who he was crushing on and all the teasing that would go along with that.
But what if maybe—just
maybe
—he had something else to hide. Like the fact that he was really a Reaper of Chaos. I’d felt Oliver’s emotions when I’d touched his notebook. He’d been everything from bored to angry to lusting after his crush. He could have totally had some psycho-killer vibes or evil plans hidden in there, too. I just hadn’t held on to the notebook long enough to get the lowdown on them.
The more I thought about it, the more it made sense. It would also explain why Oliver had sat down next to me on the bus ride over to the resort and all the dirty looks he’d been shooting my way in the meantime. The Spartan had been fishing yesterday morning on the bus, trying to figure out exactly what I’d seen when I’d touched his notebook and who I might have told about it.
Except now it seemed like he wasn’t going to take a chance that I hadn’t seen anything since, you know, he’d tried to kill me four times already. Oliver definitely wanted me to keep quiet about whatever was in that notebook. What else could be in there that was worth killing for if it wasn’t information that he was a Reaper or some stupid plan he’d cooked up to serve Loki?
I had to get my hands on that notebook. That was the only way I was going to figure out what Oliver was up to—and why he felt that he needed to kill me to cover it up.
Now, all I had to do was figure out how to swipe the notebook from him—and not get murdered in the meantime.
The next morning, Daphne, Carson, and I grabbed some toasted cranberry-orange bagels, wild blueberry muffins, cream cheese Danish, and cherry-pomegranate juice from one of the hotel restaurants, then seated ourselves on a sofa in front of the massive stone fireplace in the lobby. The flames cracked and popped like fireworks, while the heat from the mini-explosions warmed the whole area. The sweet smell of cedar woodchips tickled my nose.
I gobbled down the chewy bagels, scrumptious muffins, and tart juice in record time, eager to get on with my plans for the day. Daphne and Carson just picked at their food, though. The Valkyrie hadn’t stumbled back to our room until almost one o’clock this morning, and both she and Carson had a decidedly sick, green tinge to their faces. It must have been one intense party for them both to still be this hungover.
Daphne stuffed the remains of her half-eaten bagel back into the paper bag it had come in and put it on the table at her right elbow. “If I eat one more bite of that, I’m going to be sick.”
“Me, too,” Carson mumbled, staring down into his cup of juice. “Why did I drink so much last night?”
“It must have tasted really, really good, considering how wasted the two of you still look,” I said in a sarcastic tone.
“Please, Gwen,” the band geek whispered. “Don’t talk so loud. My head is killing me.”
Daphne and Carson both shot me looks that were equal parts annoyance and misery. Yeah, I was totally laughing at them, but they would have been doing the same to me if I’d been the one with the raging hangover.
“I think I should go back to my room, fall onto the bed, and hope I don’t die before lunchtime,” Carson mumbled again.
“Me, too,” Daphne muttered.
“You can’t do that,” I said, my voice sharpening.
Daphne had on oversize sunglasses to block the light in the lobby, and she squinted over the tops of them at me. “Why not?”
Because if she and Carson were in the hotel all day, then I wouldn’t be able to go through with my plan to snatch Oliver’s notebook and see exactly what secrets it contained. Despite being hungover, my friends would insist on helping me—or worse, telling Professor Metis about my suspicions. That was something I didn’t want to do without concrete proof, or at least knowing that I’d seen Oliver’s true intentions for myself using my Gypsy gift. Of course, I couldn’t exactly tell the two of them that, though.
Besides, I’d already gotten myself into enough trouble by not telling the profs about the Reaper and Fenrir wolf. And yeah, maybe part of me still wanted to take care of this myself, but I also didn’t want to drag my friends down with me—or put them in danger if my suspicions turned out to be correct.
“Because we’re leaving tonight to go back to the academy, and you haven’t hit half the slopes you wanted to, much less gone tubing,” I said. “Besides, the fresh air and sunshine will do you good. Once you get out there, you won’t even remember how much you had to drink last night.”
Carson groaned. “Believe me, I’ll remember.”
It took some not-so-subtle nudging on my part, but Daphne and Carson finally headed out to go skiing. Of course, the slopes directly above the hotel were still off limits because of the avalanche, but there were some runs on the far side of the mountain that hadn’t been affected and were open to students. The three of us agreed to hook up after lunch. Hopefully, I could introduce them to Preston then. In the meantime, though, I had work to do—and a Reaper to catch.
As soon as Daphne and Carson were out the door, I went over to the registration desk on the far side of the lobby. There were a couple of clerks working, and I headed toward a college-age girl. She looked up as I approached and smiled at me.
“How can I help you this morning?” she asked in a bright, friendly tone.
“Uh, this is really, really embarrassing,” I said, not quite looking at the clerk and shuffling on my feet. “But I, uh, left my phone in somebody else’s room last night. After one of the parties. You know what I mean?”
Understanding flashed in her eyes.
“Anyway, I know the guy’s name, but I can’t remember his room number. I had a little more to drink than I should have, and some of last night is a little ... blurry.” I let out a nervous giggle, like I was a total ditz. “I was wondering if you could tell me what room he’s in.”
“I’m not supposed to give out information about other guests at the hotel,” the clerk said in a neutral tone. “Especially not to students.”
I winced. “I know, believe me, I know. But my parents just bought me that phone last week, and they will
kill
me if I lose another one. It was like super-, super-expensive. It’s not my fault I dropped the last two in the sink. People totally need to quit texting me while I’m in the bathroom touching up my makeup. I only have two hands.”
She shook her head. “Look, I’m really sorry about your phone, but I can’t help you.”
I bit back a growl. I needed to know what room Oliver was in, and I couldn’t exactly go up to the Spartan and ask him. I opened my mouth to plead with the clerk some more when a voice spoke up behind me.
“Actually, Valerie, it’s my phone that got lost. Gwen was nice enough to come over here and ask about it for me.”
Morgan McDougall stepped up beside me, looking gorgeous in a form-fitting, mint green snowsuit. I eyed the other girl, wondering what she was doing—and why she was trying to help me.
The clerk’s face creased into a smile. “Oh, hi, Morgan. I haven’t seen you around much this weekend.”
The Valkyrie shrugged. “I’ve been busy—like usual. Lots of fresh blood at the New York academy this year, if you know what I mean.”
She winked at the clerk, and both of them dissolved into a fit of giggles. I just stood there, feeling awkward and stupid.
“Anyway,” Morgan said, pulling a hundred-dollar bill out of the pocket of her snowsuit and sliding it across the counter. The motion made green sparks of magic shoot off the Valkyrie’s fingertips. “Do you think you can help me out? Because Gwen’s right. My parents will kill me if I lose another phone this year.”
The clerk took the money as smoothly as the Valkyrie had offered it and gave her another smile. “What’s his name?”
Morgan raised her eyebrows and looked at me. “Yes, what
was
his name, Gwen? I can’t remember.”
“Oliver,” I said. “Oliver Hector.”
Morgan’s eyebrows shot up a little higher on her face, and she gave me a really weird look, but she didn’t say anything. The clerk, Valerie, hit a few buttons on her computer and told us that Oliver was in room 822. Morgan thanked her, and the two of us strolled away from the registration desk. I waited until we were halfway across the lobby, right next to the statue of Skadi, before I turned and looked at her.
“Why did you do that?” I asked.
Morgan shrugged. “There are some advantages to being the school slut.”
For a moment the Valkyrie stared at me, a strange light flaring in her hazel eyes, almost like she wanted to say something to me, wanted to talk to me about something. I wondered if it was about what had happened the night Jasmine had almost sacrificed her in the Library of Antiquities.
But then Morgan clamped her lips shut. She stalked off across the lobby and headed outside—alone.