by Marian Tee
Dyvian quickly lifted his hands up. “It’s the truth. Tell her, Lucian.”
“It is. You’re going somewhere you need to be invisible?”
I tactfully ignored the question, and after taking a gulp of water, I turned back to Dyvian with a frown. “Why does it have to be protein anyway?”
“Building blocks of life ring a bell?”
“Building blocks like concrete and cement?”
Dyvian gave me a pained look. “Seriously, Deli, you know I love you like you’re my long-lost twin sister, but is it really all air up there?”
“Seriously, Dyvian, I love you like the annoying twin brother I’ve never had, but can you just answer my question and accept that my area of expertise has never been science?”
Dyvian chuckled. “At least you don’t make dumb comebacks.”
“Enough fighting, children.” Lucian intruded with his usual dryness just when I was about to give Dyvian another one of those not-dumb comebacks he was so dazzled with. “I won’t ask you two where you’re going and why you need to be invisible but just promise me you’ll take care. Understood?”
Dyvian and I became the recipients of Lucian’s sharp looks—the message of which totally passed us by. I gave him a cheery salute. “Yes, sir!”
Lucian let out a chagrined grunt. “A simple yes would suffice, Deli.”
I was finally done with breakfast, and I pushed it away with a little sigh of victory. Eating was hard work. I turned to Lucian and caught him staring at me. He looked away immediately, of course, but it was too late.
“I’m going out to check on my rocks. You follow when you’re ready, Deli.” Dyvian got up from his chair, utterly oblivious to Lucian’s sudden uneasiness, and left the dining room.
“You can go now,” Lucian reminded me without meeting my eyes. He was finding the ceiling a suddenly fascinating sight.
Oh, my God. Could it be possible? Could someone like Lucian have a crush on me the way I was so crushing on him?
I thought about it.
Well, it wouldn’t hurt to dream, would it?
“Lucian.”
It took him a long time to look at me. The mask of impassiveness had settled back on his face. “Yes?”
I smiled at him and teased, “I’m going to miss you.”
His eyebrow lifted just the tiniest bit.
I wasn’t done. I tiptoed to his side and surprised him with a kiss on his cheek, Lucian’s whole body freezing as my lips touched his skin. “I’m sure you’ll miss me, too,” I told him with a mischievous smile before straightening and skipping out of the room with the silliest smile on my face.
Could he have a crush on me? The idea teased my mind the whole time Dyvian and I flew into town, invisible to human eye. We were moving at remarkable speed, but I was certain he could have gone so much faster if I hadn’t been with him. Beside me, he whispered, “What are you thinking?”
“Nothing.” Talking while flying at the same time wasn’t something I was used to, and I felt myself dropping in unimaginable speed. Horrified, I materialized into view, hissing, “Dyvian.”
Dyvian caught me before I could scream some more. “Concentrate on keeping yourself light,” he commanded and I gave a general smile in his direction since he was still invisible.
His grip on my wrist tightened. “Go back to being invisible. But we’ll fly together for now, just to be safe.”
“Good idea.”
After a while, he squeezed my wrist. “Tell me what you were thinking about, really. I can feel you hiding something.”
I stayed silent, smart enough not to fall for that conversational trap. I studied the huge three-story granite building ahead of us. For a small town like Sanger, its school certainly looked fancy with its huge expanses of tinted ceiling-to-floor windows and a rooftop glasshouse. “That’s it, right? The building to our right?”
“Yup.” Dyvian and I slowly glided down, making sure our feet didn’t cause any ripples as we touched ground.
I dragged him with me toward the glass doors. “Come on,” I urged excitedly, “I want to see how things are inside.” We waited for a tall, sandy-haired guy to open the door and slipped inside with him.
Two-tiered lockers lined the empty entrance hall between doors with nameplates identifying them as several offices of the school’s administration.
I walked back and climbed the stairs on the left side of the hallway. Beside me, Dyvian observed our surroundings in silence. That got me curious. “Where did you go to school?”
Dyvian hesitated then said, “Eton.”
I gasped. “Are you serious? That’s Prince William’s school, right?”
Dyvian shrugged. “It seemed to be the only option back in those days.”
I considered his words with a frown. “The only option? What do you—”
“Check out the classrooms, Deli,” he interrupted heartily as he opened the door to one of the second-floor classrooms with flourish.
There were about thirty seats in the room. On the back wall, there was a huge corkboard with various photos, artwork, and news clippings posted. I took a step closer, my gaze ensnared by a clipping that featured the Sanger Dragons as last year’s first runner-up in the basketball division. Dragons, huh? I smiled a little, appreciating the irony.
I moved to the first chair in the leftmost row, the one nearest the windows. I peered out and the sight of the school’s football field greeted me like a long-lost friend. There were about a dozen guys in uniform practicing right next to a group of cheerleaders doing pyramids. Gazing at them made me remember my old life.
I used to be a cheerleader in the private school I had attended back at home. I had even been offered the position of cheer captain, but I had declined, knowing that I didn’t really have the streak of ruthlessness required for the job. I remembered my friends, the fun times we had. I remembered my sister, I remembered the way my parents used to watch me perform, and a wave of miserable homesickness engulfed me. I turned away abruptly, as if with it, I could also turn my back on the memories.
I glanced at Dyvian and said with determined enthusiasm, “Tell me more about the time you spent in school. Did you and Lucian go to school together?”
“Lucian never went to school.”
I almost collapsed in shock. “B-but he’s so nerdy.” How could someone as smart as Lucian never go to school? I mean, even if he had a super high IQ, nerdy guys—including those who were as gorgeous as Lucian—tended to be stupid enough to still want to go to school.
Dyvian grinned. “He just didn’t want to.”
“Well, tell me about your time in school then. Were you the guy every girl wanted to date?” It wasn’t hard imagining Dyvian in that role. “And did you break everyone’s hearts?”
“Eton’s an exclusive school for guys.”
“But you at least got to talk to Prince Wills once, right?” Boys could be so dense. They went to the same school with royalty. The least they could do was take advantage of it by rubbing elbows!
“Eton has thousands of students enrolled but, yeah, I think I managed to walk past him in the library,” Dyvian deadpanned.
“Funny.” I planted my hands on my hips and gave him a suspicious look. “Why are you so secretive about your school life, Dyv? I’ve been asking you over and over—”
“I’m not,” Dyvian protested. “I just don’t have anything interesting to share, okay?” He changed the subject, saying, “Seen enough?”
I made a face at his evasiveness but nodded. “I think so. I can always explore more once classes start.”
We left the school, and in a few minutes, we were airborne again. “Are you sure Lucian will be able to get me enrolled in time? I mean, classes are going to start next week and—”
“Relax. If Lucian says it’s okay, then it is.”
“But what about the legal stuff? Like, who’s going to serve as my guardian and why is it I’m living—”
“Didn’t Lucian tell you?”
 
; “No, he didn’t. Whatever he didn’t tell me, I mean.”
“Lucian’s applied as your guardian.” Dyvian seemed to hesitate before saying, “I mean, he’s of age already, you know?”
“I guess.” But I didn’t really like the idea of Lucian being my guardian. It made him seem like my older brother when I wanted him to be, well—I shook my head even though he couldn’t see me. “And the reason that I’m living with two single guys?” My eyes narrowed. “Wait a minute—you are single, right?”
“I am.”
“And Lucian?”
Dyvian smirked. “Who cares if he is or he isn’t?”
Drat. I walked straight into that one. I lifted my chin. “Just curious.” Oh, God, what if he, like, married really young?
“Chill, Deli. He’s absolutely single, and you can go after him without a guilty conscience.”
I refused to show the amazing sense of relief I was feeling. “I’m not going after anybody,” I denied with as much dignity as I could muster.
“Is that so?”
“Yes, it’s so.”
“Even if I tell you that Lucian also explained your presence in our home by identifying you as his online-turned-real-time girlfriend from Australia and that you came here as an exchange student to be with him?”
“He what?” I shrieked and immediately lost control. Dyvian shouted my name as I fell down with horrendous speed.
“Dyvian,” I screamed, shock and fear paralyzing my limbs.
When I opened my eyes, I was in the Chevaliers’ garden, cradled in Lucian’s arms, and Dyvian was breathing hard in front me, his face white.
“How could you have fainted?” Dyvian’s tone was pained.
I’m in Lucian’s arms. I could feel his heart beating fast against his hard chest. Underneath me, his arms were strong and gentle at the same time. I’m in Lucian’s arms. Lucian tensed against me, and realizing that I was probably too heavy for him, I struggled to get up. A wave of dizziness hit me at my sudden movement.
Lucian’s arms tightened. “Later.” His voice was unusually rough.
“H-how—”
“You fainted. I caught you just in time and brought you home.” Dyvian lifted a hand to his hair and I was surprised to see it shaking a little.
I looked up at Lucian, whose face was white in anxiety. “Did I seriously scare you two that much?”
“You lost your balance a hundred feet off the ground, Deli, and you fainted.” Dyvian shook his head. “How could you react—it’s like fainting just because an ant bit you!”
Now, I began to feel silly and ashamed. “I guess I’m just not used to, well, flying.”
“It’s good you understand that because from now on, I’m banning you from flying till you’ve had proper lessons,” Lucian informed me.
My jaw fell open. “Banned?”
“Yes. Banned. And no arguments.”
I studied the grimness in his face and decided that I might have a better chance of arguing with him when he wasn’t so—emotional. “Okay.”
Lucian’s eyes flashed. “And I won’t change my mind.”
I didn’t dignify that with an answer. “I think you can put me down now.”
Lucian didn’t say a word, but he slowly lowered me to the ground.
I swayed a bit, but I waved them away when they immediately moved to support me. “I can do this.”
Lucian crossed his arms against his chest. “Delilah?”
“Yeah?” I took one careful step forward and was satisfied when no dizziness assaulted my head.
“What made you lose your balance?”
I blinked several times, surprised at the question. And then his words hit me and I started to smile. I turned to Dyvian. He was whistling and he was looking up at the darkening sky like his life depended on finding the Big Dipper.
“You.”
Lucian stiffened. “Excuse me?”
My grin widened all the more. “Dyvian told me that you introduced me as your girlfriend.” I batted my lashes at him. “Honestly, Lucian, you could have told me first, don’t you think?”
A dull color spread throughout Lucian’s beautifully shaped cheekbones. “I beg your pardon.” His tone was so coldly polite that he could have dubbed for Prince Charles on television with no one the wiser. “The question had taken me by surprise during the school interview and it was the first thing that occurred to me.”
I looked at him under my lashes. “Really, now?”
“Yes.” His tone got even colder, “really.” But his cheeks were still stained with color. “I also gave them all the necessary documents to prove that your parents had given me legal guardianship.”
“You know, you could have just said she was our cousin or something,” Dyvian suggested.
Lucian opened and closed his mouth.
Dyvian and I turned to each other and we immediately burst into laughter.
“I think your brother likes me,” I confided in him.
“For God’s sake.”
Ignoring Lucian’s outburst, Dyvian nodded and confirmed, “I think so, too.”
The door slammed shut. Lucian walking out on us was fast becoming a familiar routine. I turned back to face Dyvian.
He smiled. “You like him, don’t you?”
“I didn’t plan to, and I didn’t want to, but yeah, I think I do.” Maybe I’d regret admitting this to myself, much less to someone else, but right now, after the latest fright I had, acknowledging my feelings for Lucian was gloriously liberating.
“But it’s just a crush. I mean, I like him, but I’m not in love with him or anything.” I hope.
“You will be.”
I wrinkled my nose at how confident Dyvian sounded. “Will he?”
“Fall in love with you?”
I nodded.
Dyvian sighed. “I’m not sure, but if there’s someone who could make him fall in love, it’s definitely you.”
I beamed. “Aww. You mean that?”
Dyvian returned my smile and said pleasantly, “Nope. I was just kidding.” And then laughing, he strolled back to the house.
Stupid Chevalier brothers.
Chapter Five
I wasn’t what you’d call an overachiever. I had simple goals in life and that didn’t change when I turned Evren. For my first day of school, I only wanted to make new friends, have someone say I was pretty, and have a chance on the cheerleading squad. Surely, that wasn’t so hard to achieve?
“You’re going to be okay.” Dyvian shook my shoulders a little too hard, his voice a little too jovial.
I gave him a worried look. “I know I am but are you?” It was the first day of school and Dyvian was in a strange mood, waking up early to eat breakfast with Lucian and me, and now he was acting like a dad about to give his daughter away.
He grimaced. Even with his sleep-tousled hair and sweat pants, Dyvian still managed to look better than most guys I knew. “I’m not actually sure. I just don’t think you’re ready to join humans yet.”
Here we go again.
“News flash, Dyvian. I was human less than a month ago, remember? So, I don’t see any reason why I won’t be able to fit in just because I’m different inside.”
I walked toward the framed mirror hanging on the wall near the doorway. I gazed critically at my reflection, making sure that my hair was all right. I’d chosen to wear a please-everyone outfit—pink Balmain top to get a nod from the fashionistas, jeans for the no-nonsense dean’s list peeps, and de Pinto black bracelets for the rockers. As the new girl in school, I didn’t want to box myself in on my first day.
Dyvian followed with a sigh. “Just take care. I’ll be in invisible form and—”
My eyes narrowed. “No. Swear to me you won’t be like this invisible nanny, guarding my every move.” Didn’t he realize how weird that would make me feel? And didn’t he understand how different I already was from the rest? I wasn’t just the new girl in school. I was also the new girl in town living with two guys I’d known for
less than a month, and I had a dragon for a soul. Didn’t that simply scream weird?
Dyvian’s normally carefree expression was still nowhere to be found. “Honestly, Dyvian, I’m a big girl now.” Lucian walked in from the kitchen and I sought his support. “Right, Lucian?”