Authors: Andrew Ball
it as best she could. She let Eleanor tell her
how to style her hair, and what color to paint
her nails. But she never stopped sewing.
It was a moment of supreme triumph and
frustration when Eleanor started dictating
what she should make next. And so she made
what Eleanor asked to shut her up.
Rachel took a long breath. Her feet had
carried her into the gardens. She sat on a
stone bench in front of a small bed of roses.
The flowers were beautiful, but they had
sharp, wild thorns. They were left natural;
never preened by the gardeners. As Eleanor
was left by Henry.
Over the years, Eleanor had come to
regard Rachel as a friend. Rachel felt that it
was less they were friends and more Eleanor
didn’t have anyone else to order around that
she was also allowed to complain to. But
that was the life of a bodyguard. She’d been
cursed with strong magical potential; they
plucked her from home and set her to work.
And work she did. She worked very
hard at living her own life around the edges
of Eleanor Astor’s field of view. Rachel
didn’t think she was very good at it, but she
had her moments, here and there.
They laughed. They shared stories. They
talked about the men that annoyed them, and
the men that they’d wish would ask them
out—though that was a blank list, in
Eleanor’s case. They even played a few
video games, when Eleanor was in the mood.
There was an estranged camaraderie
there, a bad sort of friendship. But a
friendship all the same. Rachel enjoyed the
good times and tried not to worry about the
not-so-good ones. That was what life was, in
a nutshell.
"Rachel. You’re always out here."
Rachel looked up. Eleanor was walking
toward her from a gap in the hedges. Her
blond hair shone in the sunlight. She was tall.
Statuesque. Regal. Aphrodite come down to
walk amongst mortals.
Rachel sighed. "Hey Elly."
"The car is coming in just a few
minutes." Eleanor looked around. "Getting
one last gasp of the clean air?"
"Yeah. I’ll miss the gardens."
"Northeastern seems to be in a nice
area. A few small parks and greens, about a
mile from the river. Right in downtown
Boston."
"Yep."
"Are you nervous?"
Nervous was the last thing Rachel was
feeling. They were going out into the real
world. A world where magic didn’t exist. A
world where branch families weren’t
subservient to main families. A world where
it didn’t matter if you were the president’s
daughter or her servant. "…I guess."
"Don’t worry. We’ll have the whole
Boston headquarters looking after us, and it’s
not like we’ll be split up much."
Rachel couldn’t stop her sour
expression, so she looked away instead.
Rachel had been shoehorned into the same
class schedule despite having a different
major, and, on top of that, they were sharing
a room. No, she’d be seeing plenty of
Eleanor. "Yeah."
"Feels like nothing since the assembly,
huh?" Eleanor sat down next to her. "It’ll be the longest time we’ve ever been away from
home."
"…for you."
Eleanor blinked, looked at her. "Oh.
Well, I mean, this is pretty much home for
you too, right?"
"Yeah."
"You seem quiet. What’s up?" Eleanor
grinned. "Still upset from the last time we
sparred?"
"I don’t know." Rachel looked up at the
sky. "A change of pace sounds pretty good.
I’m looking forward to it."
"Me too. But…you sure you’re ok?"
Rachel looked up at her friend.
Eleanor’s face was lined with mild concern.
"I’m good, Elly. Just feel like I’ve got a lot
stuck in my head."
Eleanor smiled. "Big trips can do that.
But you’ve got me. So don’t worry so much."
Rachel felt an odd tug between comfort
and some other emotion she had no name for.
"Miss Astor, Miss Ashworth!" One of
the maids was running over from the hole in
the hedges. "The cars are here!"
Rachel gestured ahead. "After you, Miss
Astor."
Eleanor nodded in the way Rachel
imagined royalty would nod. "Why thank
you, Miss Ashworth." She glided across the
grass in her heels. Rachel thumped after her
in her sneakers.
"So, are we going straight to Boston?"
"We’re going by boat to Salem, and then
we’ll drive south from there," Eleanor said.
"Show my face at headquarters, shake hands.
That sort of thing."
Chapter Five
Boston
Daniel, Felix, and their father found
Daniel’s room in the dorm. He inspected the
door. "This is it," Daniel said.
They were at the end of a long, blue-
carpeted hallway. The walls were washed
the same off-white color every other hallway
in the world used. His room had a pale wood
door, maybe pine. The letter and numbers
C101 were hammered on the front in raised
black metal. The door itself was ajar. Daniel
leaned in.
A light was on. The cramped space had
a tall bunk bed set against one wall, but he
couldn’t see the roommate he’d been
emailing. He knocked on the doorframe.
"Anyone home?"
A chair scraped back against tile. A boy
walked up. He was short, thin, almost
scrawny. Brown hair was buzzed close to his
scalp. "Uh, hi. Daniel Fitzgerald?"
Daniel nodded. "And you must be Jack
Killiney." They stood there awkwardly for a
moment. Daniel gestured to the side. "This is
my little brother, Felix. And my dad, James."
Felix stayed half-hidden behind the
doorframe. He had a bit of a shy streak.
James stepped in and shook Jack’s hand.
"Good to meet you."
"Nice to meet you too, Mr. Fitzgerald,"
Jack said. "Do you guys need help moving
stuff in?"
"Sure," James said. "Dan travels pretty light. With you we might make it in one trip."
They walked down the hall of the dorm.
Daniel took it all in a second time. It was
pretty nice—he wouldn’t have chosen that
paint, but the wooden paneling smelled new.
The simple style made it feel bright and
open.
They passed through a common room
that connected several wings of the dorm. A
big couch was set in front of a TV on one
side. New students and their families were
flitting about, exploring or lugging boxes
around. They walked out the door of the
lobby to the abutting parking lot and popped
the trunk of the sedan.
Jack seemed a bit nervous, but he was
nice enough. Felix was assigned a desk
lamp; everyone else loaded up with heavier
luggage. James had been a bit optimistic—
they’d have to make one last trip.
James and Felix stayed in the room to
unpack his things while Daniel and Jack
went back out to the car to get the last of it.
"You’re from Ohio, right?" Jack asked.
"Yep. Aplington. About an hour south of
Cleveland. And you’re from around here?"
"More or less," Jack said. "Albany’s
only two hours away. You must have had a
drive."
"A drive is one way of putting it, yeah.
My little brother was tons of fun stuck in a
car for ten hours."
"I’m an only child. So I wouldn’t know,
I guess."
Daniel gave him a look. "You don’t
wanna know."
Jack laughed. Daniel smiled. He
wouldn’t know what to do if his roommate
didn’t have a sense of humor, but it seemed
that wouldn’t be a problem. Jack pushed the
door open. "You’re Criminology, right?
That’s pretty hardcore."
"You’re English?"
"Yeah."
"I’m taking Introduction to American
Authors Tuesday and Thursday."
"Cool," Jack said. "We’ll probably be
in that one together."
They reached the car. Daniel beeped it
open and took the liberty of putting a few
boxes in Jack’s arms. The last one had his
new suit of armor. He didn’t want anyone
else handling that. Just in case.
Daniel backed up, propped the box on
his knee, and used his other hand to shut the
trunk. Jack tapped his shoulder. "Yo. Check
that out."
Daniel looked over. A limousine was
pulling up through the parking lot, followed
by a small moving van. The sleek car parked
just a few yards away from them. Men in
black suits jumped out of the front
compartments. Some of them joined the
drivers of the truck in sliding the ramp out.
Furniture soon followed. "Damn," Daniel
said. "Someone’s got cash."
"That, or they’re compensating for
something." Jack grinned at him. "You know
what they say about big limos."
Daniel snorted as one of the men hoisted
a leather swivel chair that looked like it
might double as a massage machine. "I guess
the desk chairs weren’t good enough. But I
can’t blame them. First impressions, right?"
One of the suits opened the limo’s back
door. One of the prettiest girls Daniel had
ever seen stepped out from inside. She was
tall, busty, and had white-gold hair that
would have made an angel envious.
The way she had it done up in a bun
reminded him of his mother.
For a moment, it was like he could see a
silhouette cast over her body, standing the
same way, looking into the distance. He
wasn’t sure what he felt, then.
She turned toward them. Jack averted
his gaze. Daniel couldn’t—he was locked in
place.
Whatever comparison his mind had been
making between her and his mother was
frozen halfway out the starting gates. Her
face was cold in its beauty, but it was made
out of purified apathy.
He had the odd image of mud-flavored
ice cream. Just like chocolate, right up until
you tasted it.
They kept staring at each other. Clearly
she was used to others looking away.
Challenge accepted
. Daniel unabashedly
looked her up and down until she jerked her
nose up and marched away. Several of the
men kept a perimeter around her. He noticed
they had radios coiled around their ears.
And then the second girl got out from the
car. She was shorter, and next to the other
girl, she could only be called cute at best.
But she was curvy as hell in all the right
spots. Long red hair was brushed back
behind a demure green dress. She saw
Daniel and Jack, took them in a moment, then
stepped after the duchess.
"Daaam," Daniel said. "Did you see the tits on that redhead?"
"I think you were saying something
about first impressions," Jack said. They
both laughed. "So, which one you going for?"
"Just sightseeing," Daniel said. "I’ve got more important shit to do."
"Yeah, sure."
Daniel threw his tiny friend a lopsided
grin. "You have no idea."
"Are you telling me you wouldn’t go out
with one of them?"
"Well. I didn’t say that."
"That’s what I thought."
They kept the banter going on their way
back. They were both using the humor to get
comfortable with each other, and they both
knew it, and they knew the other knew it. But
somehow that made it better, not worse.
They were both in the same boat, sink or
swim—a new school, a blank slate.
The babble of the common room had
descended to lowered murmurs in the wake
of the royal entourage. They delivered their
cargo. After a few minutes of pleasantries,
Daniel walked his dad and Felix back to the
car.
Daniel gave Felix a big bear hug. "Good
grades or I’ll fly back and kick your ass."
"I’ll miss you."
Daniel messed his hair. "Me too. I’ll
visit after I get used to everything, ok?"
Felix nodded and hopped in the shotgun
seat. Daniel gave his dad a one-armed half
hug. They hadn’t had much practice lately,
and it was all Daniel was willing to
concede. "Take care of him," Daniel said.
"I will. Have fun. Be good." James
patted him once on the back, hopped in the
car, and drove away. Felix waved wildly
from the window. Daniel waved back. And
then they were gone, turning behind the
tottering buildings of downtown Boston.
Daniel was a little worried considering
the state of the world, but he’d promised
Felix video. He’d already confirmed that he
could see Vorid through electronic devices
like cameras and monitors. Keeping an eye
on them would be simple—if a spawn
latched on to them, he could run back and
take care of it. On top of that, he’d pinned
down the extractor schedule for his
hometown—one a month, like clockwork.
He’d run back and protect Aplington on the
important nights.
In the meantime, Daniel had bigger fish
to fry. On the drive into Boston, he’d sensed
spawn everywhere he looked. If they were