Authors: Jennifer Quintenz
Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Genre Fiction, #Coming of Age, #Romance, #Paranormal, #Teen & Young Adult
night.
So there was nothing for it but to wait. Only, the waiting was surreal. Everything else in my life
was so achingly, beautifully, pedestrian. Dad insisted we continue going to school, and I can’t say I
minded. Holding onto that last bit of normalcy made the coming battle feel much more like a dream
than a reality.
The one rule that I was forbidden to break was this: I couldn’t tell anyone what was coming. Not
Royal, not Cassie, no one. The Guard believed that knowing the truth would put civilians in more
danger; Lilitu moved through the world silently, their attack was all seduction and manipulation. If we
couldn’t stop the incubus from getting his weapon, or the seal from opening—the end of the world
would start very slowly. Better to let my friends go on, oblivious that the extinction of humanity had
begun. The alternative—telling them the truth—would only paint a target on their backs.
And so each day of school became a bittersweet, living memorial to the lives we might soon be
setting aside. I tried to push the ritual out of my mind. I wanted to immerse myself in every mundane
detail of my life as the days to winter solstice dwindled. Three left. Two left. And then, only one.
Friday, in first period, Cassie gripped my hand tightly as the morning announcements were read.
Fiedler reminded everyone to buy their tickets for the winter musical, opening tomorrow night.
“You’re still coming to dress rehearsal tonight, right?” Cassie asked. She looked as nervous as
Missy did.
I nodded. It seemed like the perfect way to keep my mind off the ritual.
The day went too quickly, slipping away even as I tried to stitch it into my memory. Seth, Lucas,
and I shared a quiet dinner after school, killing time until the dress rehearsal began.
When we returned to campus at six, the sun was just dipping below the horizon in the west.
Inside, the theater was a bustle of energy and nerves. Cassie hovered by the glass doors to the
lobby’s entrance. She lit up when she saw us, and beckoned us inside.
“I’ve saved us some seats,” she said. “Right in the center.”
For a dress rehearsal, the theater was more crowded than I’d expected. We walked down the steps
of one aisle and took our seats. I felt someone glaring at me. I looked around. Amber and Ally scowled
down at me from a few rows behind. Of course they were here; they’d want to support their friend
Missy. I turned my back to them, putting them out of my thoughts. I wasn’t going to let them ruin
tonight.
The lights dimmed, and the music began. I hadn’t expected anything too spectacular, so I was
completely transported by the musical that unfolded. Cassie’s costumes were just one piece of an
inspired production. Missy—I couldn’t believe how well she sang. Lancelot was played by a
sophomore guy I’d never paid much attention to before, but after this performance I was pretty sure
he’d be mobbed by girls for the rest of his career at Coronado Prep. Even the new Mortimer was great.
Lucas took hold of my hand halfway through the first song, and we sat together, watching the
show, sharing the warm energy of that simplest of touches.
When the lights came up for intermission, I turned to Cassie. No part of me had to force
enthusiasm.
“Cassie, it’s—it’s amazing.”
“You think so?” But she was beaming ear to ear. No one in that theater could deny it was a great
show. “It’s all Mr. Hart,” she breathed. “He’s the amazing one.”
My enthusiasm dampened a little, but I shrugged this off. Out of the corner of my eye, I noticed
Amber, sneaking out the back of the theater, dialing her cell. Her eyes snagged on me, and for half a
second I saw the glimmer of something that sent an electric current of alarm through my body.
“Excuse me,” I said. “I’ll be right back.”
Seth and Lucas turned to congratulate Cassie. I slipped out of the theater, looking for Amber in the
lobby. She was nowhere to be seen. I glanced around, then caught a flash of motion through the glass
doors at the entrance to the lobby.
Amber was pacing in front of the theater. I walked out of the building in time to catch the end of
her conversation.
“Right. Just be careful. I owe you one.” Amber hung up her cell with a self-satisfied smirk and
turned back to the theater. When she saw me, she froze.
“What was that?” I asked.
Amber’s smile broadened. She shrugged. “A private conversation.” She walked past me back to
the theater. But before she opened the door she turned. “Oh, you’re going to want to stick around. You
won’t want to miss the after-show.” Amber reached for the handle, but I slapped the palm of my hand
against the glass door, preventing her from pulling it open. “Not this again,” she said. “I thought it was
clear after the last time you tried—unsuccessfully—to threaten me. I don’t negotiate with Lilitu.”
“I’m not going to let you hurt another one of my friends.”
“Yeah, you’re kind of running low, aren’t you?” She turned back to the door, dismissing me with a
flip of her icy blond hair. I grabbed her chin and jerked her face back around until I could look into her
eyes. I was about to demand an answer to my question—when I caught a glimmer of Amber’s
thoughts. It wasn’t like the telepathic conversation I’d had with Karayan—because Amber wasn’t
interested in sharing any of her thoughts with me. She tried to shrink back, but I gripped her tighter.
Amber whimpered.
I pressed the index finger of my free hand into the soft skin of her forehead. Images and thoughts
spilled out of her mind. Amber tried to jerk free, but I refused to release her. I saw, through her minds
eye—
Amber standing at her bathroom sink, looking at her reflection. Ripping the front of her shirt open,
scattering buttons across the blue tile floor. Mussing her hair.
Then,
Amber crying in her brother’s arms. She’d told him a story—that Lucas had tried to force
himself on her. That he’d been stalking her, and wouldn’t leave her alone.
Then,
Amber in the living room of her house, with her big brother and three of his friends. Their
faces darkened with anger as she recounted her story again, tearing up in all the right places, until the
boys were whipped into a frenzy of rage.
Then,
the plan taking shape. Amber reluctantly agreeing that something had to be done or who
knows what Lucas might try next. And Amber warning them that Lucas was a good fighter, so they’d
have to find a way to catch him off guard—and get him alone. Ally would lure Lucas into the trap.
Amber would distract Braedyn while it went down. No witnesses. The boys agreed.
I staggered back, releasing Amber. “You’re going to get Lucas killed.”
“They’re not going to—” she started.
“Liar,” I roared. “Get out of my way.”
Amber shrank away from me, sliding out of my way. I grabbed the handle and wrenched the door
open. She glared at me, still stubborn in her conviction. “You could have stopped all of this,” she
whispered.
If I hadn’t been desperate to find Lucas, I don’t think I could have kept myself from clawing her
sanctimonious face off.
He wasn’t in his seat.
Cassie and Seth looked at me strangely when I asked where Lucas was. I realized my voice was
edging into hysteria.
“Um, Ally said something to him and he just left,” Cassie said.
“Where?” I fought the panic rising in my chest. “Where did they go?”
Seth pointed to the side exit, the one that led to the loading dock. “I think they left that way.”
The theater lights started to dim. I pushed my way through the row. When I got to the aisle, I ran
straight for the door, throwing it open and charging into the night.
My eyes adjusted to the darkness almost instantly. I saw Lucas standing at the edge of the parking
lot.
“Lucas!” I shouted. He turned, surprised.
A car sped around the side of the theater. Headlights caught Lucas, edging him in a blinding glare.
Lucas threw up a hand to ward off the light, but the car didn’t slow. It barreled straight for him,
impacting with a sickening thud. Lucas rolled up and over the hood of the car, flying a good 10 feet
into the air before landing on the ground.
“No!” My scream echoed down the loading doc. I raced forward. Before I could reach him, the car
skidded to a stop and Amber’s brother and his three friends jumped out. One of them had a bat. I
pounded forward, choking down a breathless sob of fear.
The boys surrounded Lucas, who rolled to his side, stunned.
“Stay away from Amber,” one of them said.
“What?” Lucas reached a hand up to his head. It came away bloody. “Amber?” He looked
confused.
One of the boys kicked Lucas savagely in the stomach. He jackknifed with a breathless grunt of
pain.
“Stop!” I screamed, reaching the circle of boys. I dropped beside Lucas, shielding him with my
body. “Stop. He didn’t do anything.”
“Stay out of this,” Amber’s brother said. “You don’t know what you’re talking about.”
One of the other guys grabbed my arms, hauling me away from Lucas while the guy with the bat
stepped up. I spun around, breaking out of his grip—but some instinct kept me from attacking.
“
Amber’s a liar,
” I said, using
the call
in a desperate attempt to get through to them. The boy
standing over Lucas lowered his bat, looking down at Lucas as though seeing him for the first time.
“Dude—?” one of the other boys asked, turning to Amber’s brother.
Amber’s brother shook his head, fighting
the call
. “No. He tried to hurt her,” he said. “She
wouldn’t make something like that up.”
“
Lucas is innocent,
” I insisted, willing the power of
the call
to penetrate his mind. It moved
slowly, fighting the love he held for his sister. “
Ask your sister.
”
Amber’s brother fought it with everything he had. But some part of him must have known she was
capable of a lie like this—because after a long moment of struggle, he shook his head. “Yeah. We
should ask her,” he muttered.
They pulled back, retreating to their car.
I knelt back down to examine Lucas. He clutched his stomach, his breathing ragged.
“Lucas?”
“That sucked,” he said. He looked up at me, eyes cloudy with pain. “I have no idea what that was
about.”
“I do,” I said.
Lucas saw my expression. “No—” He shook his head, then winced. “Amber’s a wreck, sure, but
she’s not a psycho.”
“It was her, Lucas.” The absolute conviction in my voice reached him. He nodded, then reached a
hand out toward me. I took it, and helped pull him to a sitting position. A small patch of his hair was
matted with blood.
“We need to get you to a hospital,” I said.
“I’m fine.”
“You got hit by a car.”
“Yeah, I vaguely remember something about that.” Lucas saw my exasperation and sighed. “Okay.
Fine. Whatever you think is best—I just need a minute.”
I fought the instinct to run my hands over his body, checking to make sure he was whole. Instead, I