Home / Fantasy / Mortal / CHAPTER TWO

Share

CHAPTER TWO

Author: Bella Lore
last update Last Updated: 2023-03-17 17:43:33

The bridge groans as the horse steps onto it, and just like on the tiny propeller plane, I tense up.

“Did your parents tell you why they sent you here?” Brynn asks.

“Uh… No. My dad said in his will that I should come here.”

Over Brynn’s shoulder, something moves in the woods. The oncoming night combined with the fog makes it hard to see, but there’s a glow and… Are those eyes?

Glowing eyes?

Suddenly, crossing this questionable bridge seems like a great idea considering the alternative. No sleeping in the woods and being mauled by wild animals for me, thank you very much.

“He died?” Brynn’s face crumples. “I’m sorry.”

“Thanks.”

“I don’t know why I’m here.” She wraps her arms around herself. “This place is so not safe.”

“Why do you say that?” The carriage is rocking as we cross the bridge, and one glance down at the frothing water below makes me wish I hadn’t looked.

“It’s what everyone says.” She squeezes her sides tighter. “Anytime I hear anything about Hawthorn it’s about how dangerous it is. Your dad didn’t tell you anything? What about your mom?”

“She died when I was a baby. I don’t remember her.” We’re almost at the end of the drawbridge and my heart slams against my ribcage in anticipation of the unknown. Whatever lies on the other side of this bridge, it for sure won’t be like small-town Wisconsin.

“At least we’re close to other people.” Brynn picks up the pace, talking a mile a minute. “There’s a town only a few miles away, and there’s a lake, too. It’s right next to the sea, and there’s a sandbar between them. It’s approximately fifty feet when the tide is low, and you can go out on it like it’s a regular beach. There’s a certain time of the year where the sandbar is gone and the lake connects with the ocean.”

I nod. She sounds like she copied and pasted a Wikipedia page right into her mouth. Yep, anxiety is definitely the motor running her right now.

Is everything she’s saying true? If these rumors are known, why would my dad send me somewhere so dangerous?

The carriage bumps as it leaves the bridge, and Brynn emits a little yelp that probably has more to do with whatever’s to come next than the surprise jolt. The fog is even thicker here than in the woods, if that’s possible, but the horse seems to know just where to go.

Her hooves smacking cobblestones, she swims through the fog and stops in front of the school. From the bit of the building I can make out, brown vines climb the gray stones and stained glass decorates the windows. I crane my head back to look at the top of the building, but it’s lost in the fog. The number of floors in this school is a mystery.

The horse whinnies, which is more than her driver has given us, and Brynn and I look at each other.

“Well.” Putting on a brave face, I grab my bags. “Let’s do this.”

She looks like she’s about to faint, and I wonder if I should hold her hand, but then she’s getting out of the carriage–albeit on shaky legs. With our bags in tow, we walk up the front steps. Two wooden doors with knockers, like something plucked out of a monastery, meet us.

The horse and carriage clop away, and I have to fight the urge to yell for them to take me. Let me sleep in the stable on a pile of hay, and then tomorrow I’ll walk into town and thumb a ride out of this nightmare.

But I won’t do that. My dad has never asked me to do something without good reason, and even though I don’t understand what this reason is, I’ll still abide by it.

Even though I miss my home–my friends, the tree in the backyard I sat in to read–my dad–so much, it’s like someone is constantly wringing my insides like a wet towel.

“I guess we should… knock?” Brynn nearly chokes on the last word.

Before I can question myself, I reach out, grab the heavy metal knocker with a snake winding its way around the handle, and drop it. The boom shakes my bones.

A wind hits our backs, carrying the chill from the water, and I wrap my arms around myself. Autumn in Maine isn’t any colder than Wisconsin but there’s something about being right next to the water that ices me to the core.

Brynn gasps. “I hear footsteps.”

One of the heavy wooden doors yawns open, and a tall, thin woman appears. With her gray hair pulled into a tight bun and her black sweater, she looks like a librarian. She’s even frowning at us like a librarian who just caught someone eating in the periodicals section.

I clear my throat. “Hi.”

The woman sniffs. “Welcome to Hawthorn.”

She steps aside, and we haul our luggage into the building. At the side of the foyer, my breath hitches in my chest.

The room is all marble and dark wood, and it’s huge. Easily the size of my whole house in Wisconsin.

Sconces on the walls emit a soft glow, and flames dance in a fireplace that’s so tall I could stand up in it. Oil paintings of stuffy old people line the walls, and a staircase winds up to the second floor. Hallways branch off to the left and the right, muffled voices floating down one of them.

“My name is Madame Aldine. I trust your journey here was without incident.” She folds her hands together in front of her and a golden brooch shines at the base of her throat. “It is imperative that you get sufficient rest tonight as tomorrow you will be facing The Selection.”

I cut my gaze to Brynn, who’s chewing on her bottom lip like it’s for dinner.

“What’s The Selection?” I ask.

Madame Aldine glances at me. “The Selection determines your place at Hawthorn. You will be going through it with the other students who have started late in the semester. We’ve been waiting for the two of you to arrive for it to commence.”

My insides go cold. Wait a second. The Selection determines my place here? My tuition to the school has already been paid. Could they still turn me down?

If that were to happen, where would I go? I have an aunt, but she didn’t even come to my dad’s funeral. I’m not eighteen for another ten months, and by now there are probably strangers moving their boxes into the only home I’ve ever known.

Maybe I could file for emancipation, but that wasn’t my dad’s plan for me. He wanted me here, at Hawthorn.

Madame Aldine turns and walks toward the stairs. “This way to your dorms.”

Brynn and I follow her up the winding staircase with its maroon carpeting and more oil paintings along the wall. Halfway up, a thin, stained glass window peeks out at the river. In the distance, another island pokes out through the fog. Next to the window, some of the stones are pockmarked, like they’ve been shot at.

I touch one of the stones. How old is this building?

“What’s this from?” I ask. “The damage?”

Madame Aldine looks uncomfortable. “Don’t worry about that.”

I share a glance with Brynn, whose eyebrows are knitting together.

Madame Aldine continues, but I linger for a moment, still touching the stone. Did some kind of fight happen here?

“You will receive your class schedule tonight,” Madame Aldine is saying. She and Brynn are already at the second landing, and I have to hustle to catch up with them.

“What about The Selection?” Brynn asks.

“That is at the end of the day.”

So first we go through a whole day of classes, for what purpose?

I could ask this question and more, but something tells me Madame Aldine wouldn’t answer them. She looks annoyed enough at having to greet the new students.

The second floor spreads out into multiple hallways, all of them with the same dark red carpeting. At the far end of one, two boys lean against a wall and laugh. At the sight of Madame Aldine, one of them slinks behind a giant vase. The other one looks me up and down, though, and even though we’re a good fifteen yards apart, his gaze feels like a physical touch.

Heat rises in my cheeks, and I quickly turn away.

“Curfew is at ten p.m. sharp.” Madame Aldine’s pale hand slides along the banister as we climb yet another flight of stairs. “Any student caught out of their dormitory past that time faces serious repercussions.”

“What, like the guillotine?” I grin.

“The Wishing Well is off-limits to all students, as it is crumbling and dangerous,” she says, ignoring my joke. “Stay away from the river as well. Even if you can swim, its currents are unpredictable and powerful.”

She stops on the third floor landing and I nearly bump into her.

“Ms. Davies. Your dorm is down this hallway. The first one on the right.” She gestures at it.

Madame Aldine never even asked us our names, which begs another question: How does she know so much about us–like what we each would look like–when we’ve had to hunt for even the smallest nuggets about this school?

“Winter and I aren’t rooming together?” Brynn rubs the back of her neck.

I offer her an encouraging smile. “I’m sure my room isn’t far from yours.”

To answer, Madame Aldine begins walking again. “This way.”

After shooting Brynn one more encouraging look, I follow Madame Aldine down the hallway across the landing. A tapestry stretches across a good half of the wall, its vibrant colors telling a story about a battle involving dragons, werewolves, and… I get closer.

A man holds a woman in a gown in one arm, her eyes closed and her hand pressed to her forehead in distress. He leans in close, his teeth razor sharp.

A vampire?

I reach out, an inexplicable urge filling me to touch a part of the tapestry. Right before my fingers touch the fabric, though, Madame Aldine loudly clears her throat.

I drop my hand at my side, guilt shooting through me, and join her at the end of the hall.

One of the lights is burnt out, causing shadows to pool around the door Madame Aldine stands in front of. Apparently I have the good luck of getting the creepiest room in the place.

“Dinner was at five. Since you missed it, it will be delivered to your room. Breakfast is seven a.m., and classes begin at eight.”

She pivots and strides away, not so much as a “goodbye.”

Taking a deep breath, I turn the doorknob to what will be my home for the next eight months. The wood creaks as the door opens, and a room with pale blue walls comes into focus.

The room is perfect symmetry. Two writing desks. Two queen-sized beds with posts and dark blue curtains. A leather trunk with big buckles at the foot of each bed. A pair of French doors in the middle of the room, leading to what I really hope is a nice-sized balcony.

It’s much better than I expected. In fact, it’s nothing like a regular dorm. This place is super luxurious.

The breath I’d been holding whooshes from my lungs, and for the first time in what feels like forever things are really looking up.

“Can I help you?” a girl’s voice snarls.

She steps out from behind the door, her dark eyes flashing and her full lips twisted.

“Uh. I’m sorry.” I take a step back. “Madame Aldine said this is my room. Maybe she got it wrong?”

The girl sighs and flicks some midnight-black hair over her shoulder. It’s silky and impossibly straight, reminding me of the horse that pulled the carriage.

“Seriously?” She directs her question to the ceiling. “I get stuck with the newbie?”

Heat floods my face. “I guess so. Sorry.”

Fifteen minutes in this school, and so far everyone I’ve met is acting like I’m a leper. And they don’t even know me!

“God,” she growls. “It’s like they’re trying to punish me.”

She stomps across the floor, her heavy black boots making the floorboards tremble, grabs a magazine, and collapses on the bed.

Anger bubbles up my chest. I want to lash back, to demand to know who this girl thinks she is. The words are on the tip of my tongue, but I swallow them back down.

My dad wanted me here, at Hawthorn, so the least I can do is try. For him.

“I’m a really good roommate, I swear. I’ll be super quiet.” ” I wheel my suitcase to the bed that must be mine.

Over her magazine, she narrows her eyes at me. “It doesn’t matter.”

That’s it.

I whirl around to face her. “Look. It’s not like I asked to be in here with you, all right? You don’t have to be so freaking rude.”

She smiles. She knows she’s getting me worked up, and she loves it.

My hands shake. Raw energy courses through me, and I wish I had somewhere to put it. I’m furious. Sad. Frustrated. The last few weeks have been hell, and my new roommate’s attitude is the straw that might break the camel’s back.

“You have no idea what’s going on here, do you?” she asks.

The question makes me stiffen–she’s hit a nerve for me. I hate feeling out of my element, like I don’t know what a situation entails.

What does she mean “what’s going on here?”

“And you’re going to be my host and fill me in?”

“When hell freezes over,” she mutters, before returning to her magazine. “By the way, the dressers are full. You can just live out of your suitcase. You won’t be here long anyway.”

Uh-uh. No way.

I open the dresser next to my bed. “Oh, look. This one is empty.”

She scowls at me while I move my clothes into the top three drawers, but I ignore her.

My heart dropping, I sit on the edge of my new bed–well, more like crash onto the edge of it. It’s hard to keep my head up, and if I were alone right now I’d be halfway to a breakdown.

But I’m not alone. I have to be strong. Or at least act like it.

I may not yet know how everything works at this school, but I can already tell it’s the kind of place that chews you up and spits you out.

Unless you’re the one to take the first bite.

Related chapters

  • Mortal   CHAPTER THREE

    Please don’t let this be that bad. Standing outside of the classroom door, I open my eyes and gather all of my courage. It’s debatable whether anyone heard my prayer, but at least I tried. Someone bumps my shoulder, and I don’t even need to look to know it’s my roommate. She breezes into the classroom with two girls at her side, malicious giggles wafting behind them. Yep. This is already bad. “Excuse me? Are you coming in?” The teacher, a man with silver and blonde hair, stands in the doorway. “Yes.” My voice cracks. “Sorry.”There’s more laughter from inside the classroom. The teacher smiles. “You must be Winter. I’m Professor Vassily. Welcome to Hawthorn. There’s a seat right there in the middle for you.”“Th–thanks.” I walk to the desk, aware of the twenty or so pairs of eyes on me. As I sit down, I allow myself a quick glance around the classroom. No Brynn. Is she in another classroom somewhere, suffering through the same hell as I am?Professor Vassily assumes h

    Last Updated : 2023-03-17
  • Mortal   CHAPTER FOUR

    The noise in the cafeteria softens as I enter the room, more eyes than I can count turning to drink me in. A boy nudges his friend, and the girl looks me up and down before whispering something behind her hand. Embarrassment floods me, but I tighten my grip on my backpack straps, stand up straight, and walk with what hopefully looks like confidence. The cafeteria is paneled in dark wood, small circular tables placed sporadically around the room, and a serving line at the far end. A quick sweep of the faces reveals Brynn isn’t anywhere to be found. My stomach plummets. Did she leave the school? Get kicked out before The Selection even started?I shake the thought away. Most likely she has a different lunch hour. Trying to ignore the gazes on me, I walk across the room, scouting a potential seat. Gregory isn’t anywhere to be found either, which means I’m out of luck when it comes to company. The serving line is full of the kind of good food not usually seen at a school cafeter

    Last Updated : 2023-03-17
  • Mortal   CHAPTER FIVE

    “Can anyone tell me the moon’s phases?” Professor Towles’s eyes land on me, and I tense up. “Winter?”I gulp. “Um… there’s the full moon and… uh, the crescent?”At the desk next to mine, a girl’s hand shoots up. She was with Gregory at lunch and, like most of the students here, she’s cast me a lot of sidelong looks but hasn’t said anything to me yet. Professor Towles picks up a piece of chalk and nods at the girl. “Yes?”“There’s New Moon, Waxing Crescent, First Quarter, Waxing Gibbous, Full Moon, Waning Gibbous, Last Quarter, and Waning Crescent.”Professor Towles writes them all on the chalkboard, her hand quickly moving across the green. “Very good.”I flip open my notebook and scribble the phases down. If I don’t survive socially at Hawthorn, maybe I can get ahead when it comes to academics. My grades were pretty good back home but it takes more than “good” to impress college admissions.So far, I don’t know half of what’s been mentioned in Astronomy. I might be hanging on

    Last Updated : 2023-03-17
  • Mortal   CHAPTER SIX

    Even though the school is huge, it would be impossible to get lost on the way to The Selection: everyone seems to be headed there. I fall in with the throng of students, the two girls having basically run away from me before I could ask them any more questions. The air crackles with the kind of energy you only get from shoving several hundred teenagers into a space together. I press onto my tiptoes and search for Brynn, but it’s impossible to tell if she’s around. The crowd surges through two giant open doors across from the cafeteria. It’s some kind of gym, with banners hanging from the rafters and bleachers lining the walls. At the far end, a raised dais sits in front of a closed door. In the corner, trophies gleam in a glass cabinet. The whole place is steeped in ceremony. I head for the bleachers, but a touch on my elbow stops me. “Right this way, Winter,” Professor Towles says. I follow her to the other end of the hall, right in front of the dais, where Brynn and four othe

    Last Updated : 2023-03-17
  • Mortal   CHAPTER SEVEN

    I stand there, in shock, watching the gymnasium empty out, feeling numb. How could I have not been selected? What were they all selected for, anyway?Coming here was a mistake. Even if it's what my dad wanted for me. Obviously, I don't fit in here."Did you hear me?"I turn to see Alice standing there, waiting for something."Sorry, no." My mouth is dry, and the words come out coated in dust. No one but Alice is paying attention to me, and yet it feels like a million eyes are on me. I want to dig a hole and crawl into it."I said, let's go," Alice says. "Standing there like that will only make it worse."I find myself following this girl I don't even know as she leads me out of the room, past the groups of students chatting and welcoming their tiers' new members, and confidently down a new corridor."I see it as a badge of honor," Alice says. "Who'd want to be chosen by those creeps anyway?""Don't we need to be in a tier?" I squeak.Alice doesn't seem to hear. "Let me at leas

    Last Updated : 2023-03-17
  • Mortal   CHAPTER EIGHT

    "Where are we going?" I try again, as Alice walks briskly across the brown, frosted lawn."The bonfire," she says.The bonfire. It must be the same one Gregory invited me to.My stomach drops at the thought. Earlier, going to a bonfire seemed the perfect idea. I needed to get friendly with the in-crowd at Hawthorn if I stood any chance at surviving here.Now I wonder if that whole goal is pointless. I wasn't selected for a tier. Doesn't that make me some kind of outcast? A pariah?I study Alice as we walk. Despite also not being selected, she doesn't seem worried about walking into the lion's den."Are there other students who weren't selected?" I ask."Not that I know of. No one who's here now."Wonderful. So that makes us even weirder.We walk around the side of the main building, the bitter cold striking my cheeks. The fog has thinned some, and students walk across the grass, all headed in the same direction.The woods."Is this allowed?" I croak. "For us to leave school

    Last Updated : 2023-03-17
  • Mortal   CHAPTER NINE

    "Come on. This way." Alec extends his hand, but I hesitate."I'm afraid." I press my fingers to my chest, torn between following him deeper into the woods and turning around.His smile is gentle, his hazel eyes brighter than the sky. "What are you afraid of?""Everything," I whisper."It's okay to be afraid," he says. "And it's okay to be a little nervous."I swallow against the lump in my throat. The wind dances through the trees and tickles my skin. With the sun filtering through the leaves, the woods are starting to look tempting, the sort of place I can disappear into.And wouldn't that be nice? To slip away and forget all of my worries?Alec steps closer, and my breath hitches in my chest. "Let me kiss you.""I..." I can't speak. Can hardly breathe.He cups my face, his thumb tracing little circles over my cheek. "It's just a kiss.""It's not just a kiss." I frown and look down at our feet.The warmth of his hand sizzles against my skin. "It's a kiss I've wanted to give

    Last Updated : 2023-03-17
  • Mortal   CHAPTER TEN

    I kick and thrash, but it's no use. My back hits the ground, my head smacking painfully against the wood. Hands are all over me, holding my arms and legs tight. A girl laughs, and in the sliver of moonlight coming through the window I see Heather.She's not alone. There are half a dozen other girls with her, easy."Let me go!" I shout.They laugh again, and Heather leans over me. "We caught you," she says."What are you doing?" I gasp. I jerk again, but it does nothing."Don't even bother fighting. You won't get away from us." Heather giggles.One of the girls dances around in glee, the moonlight glinting off her star-shaped necklace. “Like it?” she asks, touching the necklace.My heart slams against my rib cage. "What are you going to do?" I ask.The girls don't answer. Instead, they lift me off the floor and yank me toward the door.With a grunt, I kick, but it's no use. They're stronger than I am."Let me go," I scream, trying to twist my arms free. "Help!"The girls on

    Last Updated : 2023-03-17

Latest chapter

  • Mortal   CHAPTER TWENTY SEVEN

    The dull, throbbing pain in my shoulder makes itself known as I run through campus, dodging trees and ducking around buildings. I tell myself it’s nothing, that I just need to find a safe place to rest. Deep down, though, I suspect something else is going on. My power has limits, and I’ve just extended myself. My breath comes out in pants, and my feet pound the soft earth. The Hunters are somewhere on the little island, but for now I’ve lost them. They have no idea where I am, and they’re moving slowly. The battle was more than enough to wear them out, and with their fresh injuries they’re having trouble moving as quickly and efficiently as they normally would. Slowing down and giving them a run for their money isn’t an option. I’m drained, the bangs and bumps from all the scuffles over the last twelve hours wearing me down. I need to find somewhere safe to hide. I need to find a place to rest.My mind races, trying to find the safest option. But I don’t know Hawthorn that wel

  • Mortal   CHAPTER TWENTY SIX

    I run as fast as I can, wishing I could be as swift as Brynn. Has she made it off campus?Is she even alive?The courage she displayed back in the courtyard blew me away. If something has happened to her…I shake the thought away. I can’t worry about her or anyone else right now. I need to focus on the task at hand. If Alec is right about this coin, then it’s exactly what we need. It’s the missing piece that can help us drive the Silver Hunters back. Assuming we even figure out how to work the thing. Ducking low, I weave through the brush. The sky is gray, the birds singing their morning songs. Smoke comes from the main building, flames licking through one of the windows, and my heart nearly stops. They’re burning the school. I haven’t been exactly partial to the place, but seeing it be destroyed reminds me that it’s my only home. The people in my life–the good and the bad ones–all live here. Fury bubbles up my chest. I want to run into the main building and take on

  • Mortal   CHAPTER TWENTY FIVE

    “No!” I scream. The flames around me are burning my skin, but I don’t care. “No!”There’s nothing I can do. I can’t escape from this. I can’t help Alec. Do nothing, a tiny voice whispers to me. Close your eyes. And so I do.I close my eyes and picture the flames rippling away from my body. I picture the grass springing up where it’s been burnt away. I picture the dirt underneath the grass, and the rocks underneath the trees.I feel the fire recede, its oppressive heat disappearing.I open my eyes, and the fire is completely gone.But how did I do that?There’s no time to wonder. The Hunter who hurt Alec turns to me and raises his sword. His eyes are cold and cruel. I raise my hand, and my dad’s bracelet glows white hot against my wrist.Ripping the bracelet off, I throw it, and, almost as if it were sentient and with a mission, it wraps around the Hunter’s hand. He yanks at it and curses, but it holds.The Hunter stumbles, and then he’s on the ground, his sword lying out of

  • Mortal   CHAPTER TWENTY FOUR

    We run through the woods as fast as I can manage. I’m definitely slowing Alec down with my aching ribs and pounding head, but he doesn’t argue. As we get closer, the noises become louder. Screams. Shouts. An explosion. My heart climbs into my throat, and I try not to think about what we’re about to find. “Wait.” At the edge of the trees, Alec throws a hand over my chest and we grind to a halt. My breath catches, and I peer over his shoulder. There’s a hole blown into one of Hawthorn’s front walls. At the entrance to the bridge, the air shimmers green and purple. “They broke the boundary,” he whispers. My mouth is dry. “That’s…”“It’s a magical boundary.” He shakes his head. “It’s so strong, though. This doesn’t make sense. “He turns to me. “You need to get out of here. Hide.”“No.” I grab his wrist. “Absolutely not.”A muscle in his jaw flexes. “That wasn’t a question, Winter. You’re beat up right now, and you don’t know how to use your abilities well enough to–”“I

  • Mortal   CHAPTER TWENTY THREE

    “You good?” Alec asks. Butterflies flit through my stomach. This dude just carried me up a tree. Told me he’s a vampire. And now he’s about to do who-knows-what with me. Maybe drop me and kill me. And yet here I am, still crushing on him. I’d thought last night was the nail in the coffin, but apparently my feelings for Alec won’t go down that easily. I shift on his back, heat building through me. “Yeah.”“Good. Hang on.”As if I would ever let go. Suddenly, he leaps into the air. A scream rips from my throat, and I tighten my hold around his shoulders. He’s crazy! We’re falling!…Wait. No, we’re not. Alec lands deftly on the next tree, its branches bending under our weight. He basically skips from one branch to the next, then jumps again, landing on the next tree. My jaw drops, my stomach bouncing with every jump. How is he doing this?He picks up speed, and it’s like riding a horse through the forest–except in a tree. Oh, and that horse is a person.Laughter burst

  • Mortal   CHAPTER TWENTY TWO

    I snuggle deeper under the blankets, the waves rocking the little boat. Side to side, I go. It's calming, like being a baby in a cradle.Did my mother ever rock me in a cradle like this? I can't remember. I was so little when she died, I don't even recall her face. All I have of her are a few photos.Suddenly, a blast of cold air hits my cheeks, and I shiver. I try to pull the blankets tighter around myself, to keep out the icy chill. It does no good. There's a storm heading my way.I see it gathering on the horizon, dark clouds rolling and converging. It’s the kind of storm that destroys everything in its path. Relentless. Unforgiving. I climb to my feet, searching for a way off this little rowboat. All around me, though, there’s only water. Deep, dark water that could swallow me up at a moment’s notice. Panic floods my heart, and I grip the edges of the boat. I need to get out of here. The rocking intensifies, and the panic claws its way up my chest. I’m screaming, screaming

  • Mortal   CHAPTER TWENTY ONE

    Heather steps into the alley, a gleeful grin on her face. A few of her friends follow closely behind, but two of them hang back.Smart girls, those two. They're probably afraid of what I might do.And they should be.Whatever this power is that's coursing through me, I can't trust or control it. If anyone wants to save themselves, they should run for the hills."Why did you do that?" I hiss between tight teeth. "You framed Alice."Heather cocks an eyebrow. "Are you sure about that?"I falter. No, I'm not sure. I'm just holding onto one bit of hope, desperately wanting to believe that I'm wrong and Alice hasn't turned on me."What do you want?" I say."Isn't it obvious?" Heather laughs. "I want you to go down. I want you to be the loser of Hawthorn. I want you to be the biggest joke in school."She smirks and takes another step closer. Her friends follow. I stare at them, my fists clenched at my sides."Come on, Winter." Heather lets out a low chuckle. "Are you going to let

  • Mortal   CHAPTER TWENTY

    "Have you been into town yet?" Gregory asks as we walk along the road with small cottages and impressive mini-mansions."No. So we're allowed to leave campus on the weekends?" I shove my hands deeper into my coat pockets."So long as we're back by seven."Seven. During the winter, it's dark then."What about the woods?" I hate the way my voice shakes."Don't worry about the woods." He bumps his shoulder against mine. "I'll protect you from anything out there."As hard as this day has been, I smile. It's genuine, too.I don't really believe Gregory, but at least he seems to mean it. At least he cares.But what about the warnings about the woods?"Would anything..." I clear my throat. "You know, come out of the woods and attack us after dark?"He shakes his head. "No way. The things in there stay in there. This road is just as safe as school."I nod, feeling a little better. Lighter, too. The air is cool and crisp. Leaves crunch underfoot and huff out the occasional smell of d

  • Mortal   CHAPTER NINETEEN

    Sitting in last period, I can’t stop thinking about Alec..He skipped the class that we share today, and since I didn't see him at lunch or in study hall it's a good bet to assume he doesn't want to be found.Am I really that disappointing to him?More than anything else, I hate that I care so much.Sighing, I try to focus on writing down the weekend's homework. Alec and I never had potential. It doesn't matter how I feel about him or what happened in that dream.Maybe Alice and Gregory are right and Alec is someone who just needs to be avoided.I roll my head from shoulder to shoulder, trying to loosen up my stiff muscles. There's a bit of time before I meet Gregory, so I plan on heading to the library and researching Silver Hunters and supernaturals. Right as the bell rings, my phone vibrates in my pocket.Unknown number: Meet me at the bridge at 5:30.I frown and text back. Who is this?It's Alec.My insides start to go warm and fuzzy, but I quickly shut that down.Me: So

DMCA.com Protection Status