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ENTANGLED

Page 3

by Eden, Cynthia; Kreger, Liz; Mayer, Dale; Miles, Michelle; Edie Ramer, Misty Evans,; Estep, Jennifer; Haddock, Nancy; Brighton, Lori; Diener, Michelle; Brennan, Allison


  “Logan, I—”

  “Logan!” another voice called out.

  The Spartan looked over my shoulder. I turned and saw Savannah Warren in the street behind us, hurrying toward Logan. The Spartan stared down at me, something almost like regret flashing in his eyes, before he walked past me toward the other girl. My heart sank like a stone dropping to the bottom of a river, drowning the words that I’d been about to say right along with it.

  Savannah reached Logan’s side and threw her arms around his waist. “Are you okay?”

  Logan hugged her back. “I’m fine. It was just a prowler. Nothing too dangerous.”

  Relief filled the Amazon’s face, and she put her head against Logan’s chest. My stomach clenched, and I looked away from them.

  A few seconds later, Daphne and Carson hurried back down the street, along with Professor Metis, Coach Ajax, and Nickamedes. I’d seen the adults earlier, but I hadn’t really noticed their costumes until now.

  Metis was dressed up like Athena, the Greek goddess of wisdom, since that’s whose Champion Metis was. The professor looked pretty tonight, her long, elegant gown hanging off one shoulder and draping over her body. The silvery color of the fabric brought out the bronze tint of her skin, along with her black hair. Metis’s eyes were a bright green behind her glasses.

  Ajax was clad like an ancient Spartan warrior just like Logan was, his skin, hair and eyes almost the same color as the black leather that covered his body. But the coach wasn’t carrying a sword or any sort of shield. He was so big and burly that he didn’t need to. Ajax looked like the kind of person who could crush diamonds with his bare hands.

  But it was Nickamedes’s costume that made me do a double-take. The librarian was clad in bright purple silk from head to toe, with jangling bells on the ends of his shirt sleeves and shoes. A ridiculous hat with four floppy points on it, all capped with bells, hid his black hair from sight. He looked like a reject from a Renaissance fair, and it took me a moment to realize that he was supposed to be an old-fashioned court jester. The joke was definitely on him tonight with that outfit.

  “Nice costume,” I said in a snarky tone.

  Nickamedes glared at me, his blue eyes frosty in his pale face, but that was nothing unusual. The librarian liked me as little as I did him, despite the fact that I worked for him several hours a week at the Library of Antiquities as sort of an after-school job.

  “At least I bothered to dress for the occasion, Gwendolyn,” Nickamedes snapped. “Unlike you.”

  My eyes narrowed, and I opened my mouth to snap back at him, but Metis held up her hand, playing the role of peacekeeper like she so often did.

  “Tell us what happened,” Metis interrupted. “From the beginning.”

  Daphne told the three of them about the prowler attacking us. Metis, Ajax, and Nickamedes were on the academy’s security council and were responsible for student safety, among other things. Once the adults realized that we were all okay, they told us to leave and that they’d handle disposing of the prowler’s body, as well as making sure that there weren’t any more of the creatures lurking in the shadow-filled alleys.

  Logan looked at me a final time, before he and Savannah turned and walked down the street back toward the main drag.

  “Are you okay, Gwen?” Daphne asked in a soft voice, pink sparks of magic streaming out of her fingertips in sympathy.

  “I’m fine,” I said, pulling my eyes away from the Spartan’s retreating figure and trying to ignore the pulsing ache in my heart. “Let’s go back to the academy. I don’t know about you guys, but I’m all tricked out for the night.”

  o0o

  Daphne, Carson, and I walked back through Cypress Mountain. We stopped at a few shops and picked up some items to replace the ones that we’d lost, but my friends were as tired and exhausted as I was. Fighting for your life against a mythological monster will do that to you. Forty-five minutes later, I said goodnight to Daphne and Carson outside of Styx Hall and headed up to my dorm room.

  I took a shower, put on a pair of soft, flannel, purple plaid pajamas, and got ready for bed. I hung Vic on his usual spot on the wall. The sword let out a yawn, finally waking up from his nap, and opened his one eye.

  “What? We’re back in the bloody room already? How disappointing,” Vic muttered.

  “Why’s that so disappointing?”

  Vic gave me a put-upon look, like the answer should be obvious. “Because we should be out killing more prowlers. And Reapers too. Why, I bet there are dozens of them still lurking around the shops and alleys, just waiting to strike.”

  I shivered, thinking of how the prowler had almost pounced on me, Daphne, and Carson. “I think running into one was more than enough for tonight.”

  “Well, I suppose that killing one prowler isn’t a bad start to the week,” Vic admitted. “But we will definitely have to up our quota in the coming days. Nike gave me to you for a reason, Gwen. And do you know what that reason is? To kill things. Lots of things. The sooner we get started, the better. Because with me by your side, you can’t lose!”

  I rolled my eyes at the sword’s crowing, cocky words. Confidence was something else that Vic had an abundance of, right along with attitude.

  “Well, we can talk about all that tomorrow. In the meantime, I need my beauty rest, and so do you. Goodnight, Vic.”

  My words seemed to soothe the bloodthirsty sword, and he nodded his head in agreement.

  “Very well. Until the morrow then.”

  Vic closed his eye and went back to sleep.

  I settled myself on the bed, but instead of crawling under the covers, I unwrapped one of the chocolate ganache-covered brownies that I’d snagged on the way back to the academy. I broke off a piece of the brownie and popped it into my mouth. It wasn’t quite as good as the ones that my Grandma Frost made, but it satisfied my need for a quick sugar fix.

  I could have stayed up longer and eaten the rest of the sweet treats that I’d brought back, but I had classes tomorrow. Despite the Halloween party over in Cypress Mountain, the Powers That Were at the academy still expected the students to get up bright and early in the morning.

  I snuggled down underneath my gray microfleece sheets and turned off the light by my bed, but I couldn’t go to sleep. Instead, I kept replaying the fight with the prowler over and over again in my head. Despite how scared I’d been, Vic was right—things hadn’t turned out too badly. I’d had a fun night with my friends, well, up until the prowler had tried to eat us. Still, I’d survived another encounter with a Nemean prowler when I probably shouldn’t have. That was reason enough to celebrate right there.

  And then there was Logan.

  My eyes drifted over to my desk. When I’d come back to my room, I’d slid the ring that the Spartan had handed me over the small replica statue of Nike that stood on my desk, so that the ring hung around the goddess’s throat like a miniature necklace. Moonlight slipping in through the curtains illuminated the whole room, including the crystal hearts on the ring, making them look silver stars shimmering against the goddess’s skin.

  I thought of how the Spartan had charged into battle without a second’s hesitation, of how he’d stepped in between me and the prowler, determined to keep me safe from the creature no matter what. Sure, Logan had been out with Savannah tonight, but he’d come to my rescue once again when it had really mattered. Somehow, I knew that he always would.

  The Spartan might be with another girl right now, he might have said that we couldn’t be together, but things weren’t over with Logan and me yet. They were just getting started. Somehow, I knew that—I just knew it. Even now, alone in the darkness, the thought gave me hope—so much hope.

  Smiling, I closed my eyes, ready to face tomorrow and whatever new trials I might encounter here at Mythos Academy. The Spartan had been right about something tonight. Whether the new dangers were tricks, treats, or something else, I’d hold my own against them, just the way I had so far. Logan’s face was the last thing
that I remembered seeing before sleep finally claimed me for the night.

  Note from the author:

  Unfortunately, breast cancer is a disease that seems to affect all of us. Everyone seems to know someone who’s had the disease, whether it’s their mother, grandmother, sister, or friend. My grandmother is a breast cancer survivor, and I wanted to write a story for this anthology to honor her strength and spirit, as well as everyone else who’s struggled with or been affected by the disease. Here’s hoping for a cure—the sooner, the better.

  USA Today bestselling author Jennifer Estep writes the Mythos Academy young adult urban fantasy series for Kensington. Books in the series include Touch of Frost and Kiss of Frost. The books focus on Gwen Frost, a 17-year-old Gypsy girl who has the gift of psychometry, or the ability to know an object’s history just by touching it. After a serious freak-out with her magic, Gwen is shipped off to Mythos Academy, a school for the descendants of ancient warriors like Spartans, Valkyries, Amazons, and more.

  Jennifer also writes the Elemental Assassin urban fantasy series for Pocket Books, and she is the author of the Bigtime superhero romance series. Visit www.jenniferestep.com for more information.

  THE FAT CAT

  Edie Ramer

  Chapter One

  July

  Of all the cat houses, in all the towns, in all the world, she walks into mine.

  Tory locked eyes with a fat, black cat and shivered. It wasn’t really misquoting Casablanca at her, was it? She was a witch, not a cat whisperer.

  It had to be in her mind. The cats she knew wouldn’t lower themselves to speak human.

  “I don’t like this place.” Sorcha’s gaze around the cat playroom in the Humane Society was as scornful as if the place was violating the Geneva Convention instead of crammed with carpet-covered climbing thingies and scratching posts, plus strategically placed litter boxes that looked barely used.

  Tory glanced around, too, from one cat to another, twenty or more. All colors, all sizes, all ages. Even the fat, black one who’d been staring at her since she walked into the oversized cat cage.

  Or, as Sorcha called it, their prison.

  “It’s clean,” Max said.

  Sorcha stared at her husband, Tory’s brother, her expression as horrified as if he’d said she needed to stop eating ice cream. “So are hospitals. I don’t like them, either.”

  Tory sniggered. She could always count on her sister-in-law to cheer her up, even after a break-up with her boyfriend.

  She was replacing him with a cat.

  Sorcha had told her she was trading up.

  Her younger brother Ted had said he hoped she had better taste in cats than men.

  “I assure you,” the chubby young woman with earnest eyes and a Volunteer badge said, catching Tory’s attention, “the animals love it here.”

  Tory could see why. The place was cleaner and even smelled better than the apartment Tory had shared with three other girls when she lived in New York, her eyes on Broadway, her heart back home in Wisconsin.

  “Don’t you have kittens?” she asked. “That’s what I’m looking for.”

  “There are advantages to adopting an older cat.” The volunteer scooped up a thin, tiger-striped cat, its eyes widening, its paws windmilling, a loud “Mreowwww” spilling out of its mouth.

  The woman set it down quickly. “Perhaps not this one, though if you—”

  “I really want a younger cat.” Tory squared her shoulders. If she hadn’t let a man who looked as if he’d walked off the cover of a woman’s romance novel change her mind, she certainly wasn’t going to let this volunteer do it.

  As if she’d stop being a witch just because Phil decided making it her career was weird.

  She’d thought of putting a bad luck spell on him, but she was a good witch, not a bad one. As Sorcha would say, his punishment was living without her.

  A movement drew her eyes downward. The black cat moved closer, next to the volunteer’s tennis shoes, still staring at Tory. No one else. Just her.

  “Almost everyone wants younger cats.” The volunteer sighed, her expression as woeful as a Bassett hound’s, then turned to the door.

  Sorcha was first behind her, her body language eager to leave, Max at her side, his hand on her back. Supporting her, there for her.

  Tory stepped behind them, a tiny ache in her chest because she wanted what they had.

  Take me.

  Tory started. That voice inside her mind again. This was crazy. Nuts. It couldn’t really be the cat. Though it sounded oddly catlike and unmistakably male.

  Take me.

  Tory’s breath caught. She looked behind her and down, straight at the black cat. It stepped up to her, its back swayed but walking gracefully despite its age and bulk. Close up, Tory saw its fur was mangy in spots.

  The cat raised its head, staring into her eyes. Take me. Feed me. Love me.

  “Miss,” the volunteer said, her voice lilted, her face lighting up, “are you interested in Samson?”

  “No, no.” Tory snapped around and hurried to catch up to the others. Her heart thudded. She was imagining things. She must be.

  Even witches didn’t hear animals talk. That only happened in Disney movies.

  The volunteer sighed. “I suppose it’s too much to hope for. Not at his age and, um, bulk. His owner died and he’s been with us for two weeks…” Her mouth curved down as she opened the door for them to step outside. “It’s hard when they’re that old. Oh well.”

  A shiver crawled up Tory’s spine and onto her nape, but she followed Sorcha and Max out of the room and across the wide hall. This room was long and lined with double rows of cages, each containing one or two kittens.

  Sorcha made the same soft sound she used when her twin three-year-old boys slept, the only times they resembled anything close to angelic. The volunteer’s lips curved into a smile. Hard to be sad in a room filled with cute triangle faces and big green eyes.

  Tory walked slowly down the row of cages, gazing at each kitten, forcing herself to be selective. She wanted a friendly cat. It had been nearly four years since her brother’s cat disappeared, but she still missed her. When she watched her favorite soap opera, Belle used to sit on her lap and meow a demand to be petted. Tory hoped she’d found a good home.

  In the seventh cage, a young ginger cat rubbed her body against the crisscrossed cage wire, purring.

  “Is this a girl?” Tory asked. She’d heard males were more likely to spray, and she didn’t want to deal with that. Besides, except for occasional visits from her two brothers, right now her condo was a No Penis Zone.

  “It’s a girl.” The woman stepped in front of her, reaching for the latch.

  Max pulled one of Tory’s curls. “A redhead like you.”

  “Hers is like a lion’s.” Tory patted her hair and repeated what a waiter said yesterday at lunch. “Mine is like a sunrise.”

  He rolled his eyes, but the volunteer was handing her the kitten, making it easy to ignore him. Tory held the little bundle of fun against her chest, right over her heart, rubbing the soft fur behind the ears with the tips of her fingers. The kitten purred, her small body reverberating.

  “Aw, what a cutie.” It would be easy to fall in love with this kitten.

  Take me! The voice shouted into her head from across the hall.

  Tory’s muscles tensed but she continued to rub the kitten’s ear, a soothing hum in her throat.

  Me!

  Her teeth clenched. This was getting old. She looked at the door, a scream welling up in her head. No!

  The kitten jerked, making a sound like a squeaky door, its legs scrabbling. Pinpricks from her nails pricked Tory’s skin through her sweatshirt.

  “You’re squeezing the kitten.” The volunteer wrenched the kitten out of Tory’s arms.

  Tory stood with her empty hands still in the air. “I didn’t squeeze her. I would never hurt a kitten.” What was she supposed to say? That she’d shouted silently and the kitten fre
aked?

  They’re going to kill me. I heard them.

  Tory glanced behind her, her fingers curling into her palms. If she didn’t answer the voice, it would go away.

  They think no one will take me. I’m old and I eat too much.

  I can’t take you. Tory gave in. I—

  A yowl stopped Tory’s mental voice. It turned into words. If you don’t take me, I’ll die. I don’t want to die. I want to live.

 

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