Fairy Bad Day
Page 26
“We have reason to believe it’s because of the accident you had the previous Saturday.”
“You mean when I hurt my eye at the food court?” Emma stared at them both in an effort to figure out what they are talking about.
“That’s right. We think it’s because a small piece of the Gate of Linaria landed in your eye.”
“You’re joking, right?” she asked, but neither of them laughed.
“I don’t think they’re joking,” Curtis unnecessarily added. “Hence the reason why they dubbed you an über-slayer.”
“All because I got something in my eye?” Emma looked to Principal Kessles for confirmation, and he nodded. “So what does it mean exactly?”
“Truth is that we don’t have a clue, but if we want to understand it better, we’ll just have to monitor you.” Nurse Reynes shifted uncomfortably in her chair. “Assuming, of course, you turn up for your appointments.”
Emma let it all sink in. From fairy slayer to über-slayer all in a week?
“And, Emma . . . ” Principal Kessler coughed, a guilty flush staining his normally tanned face. “I just wanted to say how sorry I am that I didn’t listen to you. I normally pride myself on having an open mind and an open door to all our students. I guess I failed you.”
“I probably didn’t help matters,” Emma conceded in what she hoped was an appropriately über-slayer manner, “since I was pretty focused on trying to get you to change your mind about Induction. There’s probably a lesson in there somewhere.”
“Yes, no doubt, and speaking of Induction, I want to offer you a dragon-slaying spot. We’ve never had two dragon slayers in one year, but I think you’ve shown that this is an exceptional case. I know how much it means to you to follow in your mom’s footsteps.”
“Thank you. But—” Emma paused. “That won’t be necessary.”
“What?” Curtis spluttered.
“What?” Principal Kessler wasn’t far behind.
“I said it won’t be necessary. Curtis is the best dragon slayer. I mean, he was slaying them when he couldn’t even see them. Besides, I think it’s important for me to continue to be a fairy slayer. After all, what if my dad passes his Pure One genes on to my half brother when he’s born? That’s a pretty sucky inheritance—to find out that you have some wonky gateopening blood flowing through your tiny innocent veins. How can I protect him if I’m not a fairy slayer? And you know what? I think my mom would understand if I’m not a dragon slayer, because she was all about looking after our family.”
“But there’s nothing to suggest that the darkhel will ever be able to break through the Gate of Linaria again.” Principal Kessler ran his hand through his gray hair. “You killed it.”
“Yes, but there might be more darkhels. And by the way, I think there should be a lot more disclosure about how to kill them, so if you don’t mind, I’ll be staying a fairy slayer. Not to hunt the likes of Rupert, Trevor, and Gilbert—who between you and me aren’t exactly as bad as they like to pretend—but so that I can keep an eye on things. Especially that gate. It seems like Sir Francis knew what he was talking about after all, and if his tests think I should be a fairy slayer, then who am I to argue?”
“But—” Principal Kessler started to say, but Nurse Reynes coughed and held up her hand.
“There’s nothing about this conversation that can’t wait until later,” she said as she nodded for Principal Kessler to follow her. Then she turned to Curtis and glared at him. “And I don’t want you talking to Emma for too long. Do you understand me?”
“Yes, ma’am.” He nodded and then waited until the two adults were gone before he pushed back the sheets of his bed, awkwardly swung his plastered leg to the floor, and lowered himself into the chair next to Emma. He then used his good hand to pick up hers. The sensation of his touching her made her stomach go gloopy.
“So, are we okay?” she asked in a tentative voice.
“What do you mean?” He wrinkled his nose as he weaved his fingers through hers.
“About me breaking your glasses. I was so worried about you. I kept thinking that you’d have to leave Burtonwood and go back to your dad’s house and it all would’ve been my fault.”
“But if you’d been stuck with fairies, it would’ve been my fault,” he countered, and Emma felt a small smile tug at her lips.
“How about we just call it even?” she suggested.
“You know, for a hot-tempered fairy slayer, you’re pretty cool.” He twisted slightly so he was facing her and suddenly Emma felt her heart start to pound in a way that had nothing to do with her worries over what they’d been through together and everything to do with the fact that Curtis Green was amazing.
“Yeah, well, for a sight-blind dragon slayer with a broken leg, a burned hand, and a massive bruise around your eye, you’re not so bad yourself.”
“You just wait until I’m fully recovered. There’s no way you’ll be able to resist me,” he assured her, and Emma raised her eyebrows.
“I’m actually having problems resisting you right now,” she teased, but the rest of her words were lost as Curtis leaned up and let his mouth search out hers.
Emma found herself sighing in happiness. The feel of his lips on hers was hot and tender all at once, and as the kiss deepened, she edged her way closer to him, her fingers unconsciously threading through his curls.
“There’s no way I’m paying up on that bet,” a voice said, and Curtis made a growling noise under his breath as Emma reluctantly pulled away to see Loni and Tyler standing at the end of the bed.
“Of course you’re paying up,” Loni informed him. “Just because my wards didn’t keep the darkhel out doesn’t mean they didn’t work. You heard the guys from ops: they said that the theory is sound and that the idea of using a subsonic blaster was—”
“Inspired. Yeah, so you keep telling me, but I’m still not paying up.”
“Yes, you are. And at least the money will be going to a good cause since I’ve seen the most gorgeous bag at the mall and my horoscope said that today I will experience a reversal of fortune. You can’t argue with the stars.”
“I can when they cost me twenty bucks,” Tyler protested as Loni pulled up the chair Nurse Reynes had so recently discarded and settled into it. Next to her Tyler picked up some leftover Jell-O and, after giving it a tentative sniff, started to pile it into his mouth. “What do you guys think about honoring Loni’s inconclusive bet?”
However, instead of answering them, Curtis let out a small cough and pressed his forehead against Emma’s as he lowered his voice.
“Um, do you think they’re going to stay here long?” he asked as his dark eyes caught hers. Emma felt her stomach churn in longing as she returned his gaze, while the rest of the world started to slip away again.
“Probably,” she said softly. “But to be honest, right now I really don’t care.”
Curtis smiled as he once again pulled her toward him and searched out her mouth.
Perfect.
Turn the page for a sneak peek at Amanda Ashby’s
ZOMBIE QUEEN of Newbury High
one
Mia Everett was doomed. It was a fact she had known ever since Rob Ziggerman walked into biology class half an hour earlier. Instead of sitting next to her, as had been his habit for the last month, he’d made a beeline for Samantha Griffin. All of which meant the rumors must be true.
“How can this be happening?” she demanded in a low voice as she turned to Candice, who was carefully inspecting the skin of her elbow by poking it with a pencil.
“I have no idea.” Her friend shook her shoulder-length red hair in disgust as she offered up her arm for inspection. “I’m only seventeen. It hardly seems fair, but it’s definitely leprosy. No doubt about it. See the way the skin is falling away like that? Textbook case.”
“Candice, I’m not talking about you, I’m talking about how my life is about to be ruined.” Mia sunk farther down into her seat as their teacher, Mr. Haves, continu
ed to talk in an animated voice about something bug-related. Normally Mia liked biology, but then again, she normally had Rob Ziggerman in all his blond, beautiful glory sitting next to her, so what was there not to like? “It’s important.”
“And leprosy isn’t?”
Mia gritted her teeth, once again wishing Candice wasn’t such a hypochondriac. This week it was leprosy, the week before it was some weird tapeworm that you could only get from a certain part of the Amazonian rain forest. Which, considering Candice hadn’t even left the state of California, was highly unlikely.
“What?” Candice raised an eyebrow. “Why are you looking at me like that? I’m serious. My arm could fall off by tomorrow.”
“Yes, it could. If in fact you had leprosy. All you’ve got is a bad case of dry skin.” Mia forced herself to keep her voice low. “Now, can we please start focusing on my crisis? Did you find out anything?”
“Fine.” Candice let out an exaggerated sigh and reluctantly pulled her sleeve down. “So this is what I heard. When Samantha broke up with Trent three weeks ago, she assumed that the guys would be lining up to ask her out. Unfortunately, she forgot to take into account that while she might have a hot body from doing all that cheerleading, she still has a major personality flaw—aka, she’s a total witch. Anyway, with the senior prom only four days away and still no invitation, she’s decided to focus on Rob.”
“She doesn’t have a prom date and so now she wants mine?” Mia wailed as she felt her stomach churn in a way it hadn’t done since she had first heard that Buffy was going to be canceled.
“Looks like it,” Candice agreed in a whisper as Mr. Haves turned off the lights and started to fiddle with his laptop until a picture of a cockroach flashed up on the whiteboard.
“But that’s so unfair. Why would he take me out on six perfect dates”—well, okay, five actually, because going to watch him practice football probably didn’t count as a date in the technical sense of the word—“and then ask me to the prom, if he was going to run off with Samantha Griffin the minute she looked his way and tossed her hair? I mean, he said I was cute and that he liked the fact I wasn’t high-maintenance. He said it was refreshing.”
“He also said that Indiana was the capital of India in geography the other day,” Candice pointed out.
“Okay, so he’s not exactly a brainiac,” Mia conceded. “But unlike most of the other jocks around here, he doesn’t think he’s God’s gift to the world, either. He’s just a regular guy who is sweet and kind—”
“And has abs that would make David Beckham weep,” Candice added, and Mia found herself nodding. Yup. There was no denying that Rob Ziggerman was gorgeous. With a capital GORGEOUS. None of which was helping with the problem at hand.
“So where does this leave me?” Mia stared unhappily at the back of Rob’s head. His blond hair was styled in a sculptured mess that she longed to run her fingers through (not that she would, of course, because despite being sweet and kind, he did have a thing about his hair). Sitting as close as she could get, Samantha was leaning all over him, leaving no doubt about what her intentions were.
“With a spare prom dress?” Candice guessed before shooting her an apologetic grimace. “Look, you’ve lived across the street from Samantha for the last ten years, so you know as well as I do that what Samantha wants, Samantha gets. Just accept it and be happy you dated a football player for a few weeks.”
“Well, she’s not going to get her own way this time. No way.” Mia gave a firm shake of her head. “We just need to think of a plan. Ooh, maybe if I start using makeup and do my nails, I can beat Samantha at her own game.”
“That’s your plan?” Candice peered at her from under her mascara-free eyelashes as if to remind Mia that their makeup kits didn’t consist of much more than Clearasil and lip gloss. Then Mia glanced back to where Samantha was now laughing at something Rob had said, and she felt her resolve strengthen.
“It’s not such a dumb idea,” Mia defended. “I mean, it’s a slight problem that I don’t have a PhD in eyeliner application, but how hard can it be? Besides, I could always ask Grace to help.”
“You hate your sister,” Candice reminded her. “And more to the point, Grace hates you. Plus, she’s friends with Samantha. It’s that whole cheerleading-club thing. She would never go along with it.”
“True,” Mia reluctantly agreed as she realized no good could come from telling her fifteen-year-old, pom-pom-wielding, vacuous-Barbie-doll sister about this. “But I’ve got to do something or I’ll be the laughingstock of the school. I mean, how can I go to the prom if Rob dumps me?”
“Oh yes, how embarrassing to not have a prom date. We wouldn’t want that,” Candice bristled, and Mia found herself wincing in guilt. They’d made a pact to go to the senior prom together to prove they didn’t need guys to have fun. Though in all fairness, they’d made this decision based purely on the fact that with Candice’s ongoing medical obsession and Mia’s encyclopedic knowledge of anything Buffy- and Angel-related, neither of them had any expectations of being asked in the first place. Let alone by a guy like Rob Ziggerman.
“Candice, I didn’t mean that.” Mia shot her friend an apologetic look. “It’s just, if he hadn’t asked me, then no one would’ve cared less if I did or didn’t have a date. But now... ”
“But now, instead of everyone just thinking you’re that weird girl who once tried to get the school to have a Joss Whedon day, they’ll think you’re the girl Rob dumped,” Candice finished, and Mia let out a groan.
“I’ve really screwed up, haven’t I?”
“No, you haven’t,” Candice finally relented. “Your only sin was being so refreshingly adorable that Rob couldn’t resist you.”
“Thanks.” Mia shot her friend an appreciative glance and sighed. “Now if only I could figure out how to make it happen all over again.”
“Got it,” Candice suddenly whispered. “Since Rob seems incapable of taking his eyes off Samantha’s disgustingly low-cut top, we have to assume that boobs are his fatal flaw. So what about getting a push-up bra to help distract him? We could cut the next few classes and go to the mall.”
“But the senior assembly is this afternoon.” Mia looked at her friend in surprise. “That’s when the football team will be getting their awards. Rob will be there.”
“Yes, and if you don’t act soon, you’ll get to see Samantha and her thirty-six-Ds bouncing up to congratulate him afterward,” Candice said in a matter-of-fact way.
“You’re right.” Mia glanced down at her own less-than-impressive chest. “A push-up bra it is, and maybe we could also—”
“Maybe you could both pay attention?” someone suggested in a mild voice, and Mia looked up to where Mr. Haves had suddenly appeared by her side. “So, Mia, would you like to tell us what happens next?”
Mia hoped no one had heard her push-up-bra plan as she looked up at his encouraging smile. Normally, when teachers did that it was because they were evil passive-aggressive maniacs who liked to see students squirm, but Mr. Haves just genuinely seemed to like helping kids learn. Which as a rule was a good thing, just not today. She peered over to the whiteboard, where there was an amplified photo of a cockroach. Gross.
“Well?” Mr. Haves continued. “What do you think is going to happen to our friend, Periplaneta americana next?”
“Um. . . it’s going to fly away?” she guessed, and then wished she hadn’t as the sound of Samantha Griffin’s unmistakable snicker sounded out. Which was more than a little annoying since Samantha wasn’t exactly an A-plus sort of student.
“Not quite. Can anyone else tell me?” Mr. Haves looked hopefully around the class, but when no one raised a hand, he glanced in the direction of his favorite student, Chase Miller—aka the new boy. Well, he’d been at Newbury High for about six months now, but for some reason Mia had never really talked to him. Apparently he was from Boston or somewhere like that. He was tall with short light brown hair and green eyes that were set above a pair of
razor-sharp cheekbones. He also tended to keep to himself.
“The jewel wasp is going to put venom into the cockroach’s brain so it can control its mind and body, making it a brainless minion.”
Okay, and now she remembered why she never talked to him, because he was weird. After all, who in their right mind would know stuff like that?
“Excellent. Well done, Chase.” Mr. Haves clapped as he walked back to the front of the room and brought up the next photograph. “The jewel wasp will lay its eggs on the cockroach. After the eggs hatch, the larvae will feed on the roach. Then the larvae use the roach’s abdomen as the perfect living-dead incubator until the newly hatched wasps can feed on—”
Much to Mia’s relief, the rest of his words were drowned out as the bell rang, quickly followed by the sound of scraping chairs that echoed around the room.
“Can you wait for me? I won’t be long.” Mia turned to where Candice was busy studying something on her cell phone.
“Sure.” Her friend gave a vague wave of her hand without looking up and so Mia piled her books into her bag and took a moment to pat her shoulder-length brown hair into place before hurrying toward Rob. However, just before she got there, Mr. Haves appeared in front of her.
“Mia, could I have a quick word, please?”
“Oh.” She gulped as she watched Rob stride out, engrossed in something Samantha was saying, the faint smell of his cologne catching in her nose as he went. Mia realized this probably wasn’t the time or the place. “Uh, I guess so.”
“Actually, I’ll meet you outside.” Candice waved her phone in the air. “I’ve got to make an important call. When it comes to leprosy, you’ve got to move quickly.”
“Did she just say ‘leprosy’?” Mr. Haves lifted a surprised eyebrow as he beckoned Mia to follow him to the front of the classroom.
Thanks, Candice.