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Hex Hall by Rachel Hawkins (9)

CHAPTER 8

Thanks to his long-legged stride, I nearly had to jog to catch up with Archer.

By the time I reached him, he was halfway up the stairs.

“Cross!” I called. I just couldn’t bring myself to say “Archer” out loud. I’d have felt like I was in an episode of Masterpiece Theatre: “Archer! Let us fetch a spot of tea, old boy!”

He paused on the stairs and turned to face me. Shockingly, he wasn’t smirking.

“Mercer,” he replied, making me roll my eyes.

“Look, what did you mean by ‘that was new’? I thought you’d seen all that before.”

He came down a couple of steps. “I have,” he answered when he was only two steps above me. “Three years ago, when I was fourteen. My first year here. But it was different then.”

“Different how?”

He shrugged out of his blazer, rolling his shoulders as if the jacket had been heavy. “They still did the Charles Walton thing; that seems to be a favorite. And there was a werewolf getting shot, and maybe one or two faeries on fire. But there weren’t as many images. And they weren’t all at once like that.”

He looked down at me like he was sizing me up. “No hanged witches and warlocks either. I have to say, I’m a little impressed.”

I crossed my arms over my chest and scowled. I didn’t like the way he was looking at me. “Impressed by what?”

“When I saw that show three years ago, I had to run into that little bathroom over there”—he pointed to a small door across the foyer—“and puke my guts out. What we saw tonight was a lot worse, and you don’t even look pale. You’re tougher than I thought.”

I fought the urge to laugh. My face may have looked calm, but my belly still felt like a mosh pit. Briefly amused by the image of my organs wearing eyeliner and ripped jeans, I gave Archer what I hoped was a look of cool nonchalance. “I just don’t believe all that.”

He raised an eyebrow, which made me totally jealous. I’ve never been able to do that. I always just end up raising both of them and looking surprised or scared instead of sardonic.

“Don’t believe all what?”

“All that about humans wanting to kill us in lots of nasty ways.”

“I think history pretty well supports that hypothesis, Mercer. Hell, humans have wiped out thousands of their own kind trying to get to us.”

“Yeah, but that was in the past,” I argued. “Back when they also thought drilling a hole in your head, or draining your blood would cure you of a disease. Humans are a lot more enlightened now.”

“That a fact?” He was smirking again. I wondered if his face hurt if he took too long a break from it.

“Look,” I said. “My mom is human, okay? And she loves Prodigium. She’d never do a thing to hurt one. She even got a—”

“Her daughter’s one.”

“What?”

He heaved a sigh and tossed his jacket over one shoulder, holding it with the tip of his index finger. I thought only male models in GQ did that. “Your mom may be an awesome person, but do you honestly believe she’d feel all warm and fuzzy about witches if she weren’t raising one?”

I wanted to answer yes. I really did. But he had a point. Mom may have become a monster expert for my sake, but hadn’t she run from my dad the minute he’d told her what he really was?

“You’re right,” Archer said, his tone softening a little. “Humans aren’t what they used to be. But all those images were real, Mercer. Humans are always going to be scared of us. They’re always going to be envious of our powers, and suspicious of our motives.”

“Not all of them,” I said, but my voice sounded weak, and I was thinking of Felicia, hysterical and screaming, “It was her! She’s a witch!”

Archer shrugged again. “Maybe not. But you’ve been living with one foot in each world, and you can’t do that anymore. You’re at Hecate now.”

His words hit hard. It had never occurred to me that I was different, that most Prodigium grew up in households with two parents just like them. And some of the kids here had had hardly any interactions with humans once they’d come into their powers. Despite the doubt that was crawling over my skin like bugs, I said, “Yeah, but—”

“Arch!”

Elodie was standing on the landing above us, one hand on her basically nonexistent hip. Normally when this kind of thing happens in movies, the girlfriend is glaring down at the other girl with bright green jealousy, but since Elodie was a goddess, and I was, well, not, she didn’t look even the littlest bit threatened. More bored, actually.

“Be right there, El,” Archer called up to her. She executed that combination eye-roll/hair-flip/hand-wave thing that only beautiful girls irritated with their boyfriends can pull off, and walked up to the third floor. I think she put a little too much swing in her hips as she went, but, hey, matter of opinion.

“‘Arch’?” I asked once she was gone, attempting the raised-eyebrow thing. As usual, it didn’t work, so I probably just looked startled.

“See ya, Mercer,” was all he replied. But as he turned to go, I couldn’t help blurting out, “Do you think they might have a reason sometimes?”

He turned back to me. “Who?”

I glanced around, but the hall was empty.

“Those people. The Alliance and those Irish girls. The Eye,” I answered. “I mean, what we saw was awful, but aren’t there dangerous Prodigium too?”

For a moment we held each other’s gaze. At first I thought he was pissed at me, but then I realized the look in his eyes wasn’t anger. It was more like he was . . . I don’t know . . . studying me or something.

I felt a weird sort of heat travel from my stomach to my cheeks. I don’t know if he noticed it, but he smiled at me, a real smile this time, and I actually felt my breath hitch in my chest. It was the same feeling I’d had in the fourth grade when Suzie Strelzyck dared me to touch the bottom of the pool at the YMCA. I’d done it, but kicking back up to the surface, my chest had felt like it was caught in a trash compactor, and I was light-headed by the time I’d broken through the water.

That’s how I felt now, staring up into Archer Cross’s eyes.

He walked down the two steps between us until he was on the same stair as me. I still had to look up at him, but at least it didn’t make my neck hurt. He leaned in close, and I caught that clean soapy smell.

“I wouldn’t say that kind of thing around here if I were you, Mercer,” he whispered. I could feel his breath warm against my cheek, and although I wouldn’t swear to it, I think my eyes may have fluttered.

But just a little.

As I watched him lope up the stairs, I gritted my teeth and repeated a mantra in my head:

I will not have a crush on Archer Cross, I will not have a crush on Archer Cross, I will not . . .

When I got back to my room, Jenna was sitting cross-legged on her bed, reading a book.

I heaved a sigh and leaned against the door, pushing it shut with a loud click.

“What’s wrong? The Moving Picture Show get to you?” Jenna asked without looking up.

“No. I mean, yeah, of course. That stuff was messed up.”

“Mm-hmm,” Jenna agreed. “Anything else?”

“I have a crush on Archer Cross.”

Jenna laughed. “How original of you.”

I flopped down on my bed. “Why?” I moaned into my pillow. I rolled over and stared at the ceiling. “Okay, so he’s cute. Big deal. Lots of guys are cute.”

Clearly my whining about a boy I liked was interfering with Jenna’s reading, because she uncrossed her legs and came to perch on the edge of her desk. “Archer’s not cute,” she amended. “Puppies are cute. Babies are cute. I’m cute. Archer Cross is smokin’ hot. And I’m not even into guys.”

Okay, so Jenna was not going to be much assistance in squashing the crush. “He’s a jerk,” I pointed out. “Remember the whole werewolf thing this morning?”

“Yeah,” Jenna said drily. “Saving you from a were-wolf. What a tool.”

I groaned. “You’re not helping.”

“Sorry.”

We sat in silence for a moment, me looking at a suspicious mildew stain on the ceiling, Jenna leaning back on her elbows, drumming her feet against the desk drawers. Outside, I could hear howling. It was a full moon, so the shifters got free run of the grounds. I wondered if Taylor was out there.

“Ooh!” Jenna said suddenly, sitting up so fast she knocked over her cup of pens. “He has a total bitch for a girlfriend!”

“Yes!” I said, sitting up and pointing at her. “Thank you! Evil girlfriend who already hates me, no less. And any guy who willingly spends time with Elodie is not a guy worth liking.”

“Too true,” Jenna said with an emphatic nod.

Feeling better, I rolled onto my stomach to grab a book from beside the bed. “It’s weird, though,” Jenna said.

“What is?”

“Archer and Elodie. She was after him all last year, but he never wanted anything to do with her. Like, ever. Then he came back from wherever he was, and bam! Suddenly they’re a couple. It’s weird.”

“Not that weird,” I countered. “I mean, she’s incredibly beautiful. Maybe hormones finally got the best of him.”

“Maybe,” Jenna said, resting her chin in her hand. “But still. Archer is smart and funny in addition to being hot. Elodie is stupid and dull.”

“And hot,” I added. “And even smart boys are dumb when it comes to hot girls.”

“True,” Jenna agreed.

I was about to bring up the subject of Holly again when Casnoff’s voice drifted through the room, almost like she was on a PA system. I guessed it was some sort of voice amplification spell.

“Ladies and gentlemen, in light of tomorrow’s busy schedule, you are expected to retire early tonight. Lights out in ten minutes.”

I glanced at my watch. “It’s eight o’clock,” I said incredulously. “She wants us to go to bed at eight o’clock?”

Sighing, Jenna went to her closet and pulled out her pajamas. “Welcome to life at Hecate, Sophie.”

There was a mad rush for the bathroom to brush teeth, but it was all shifters and witches. I guess faeries have naturally clean teeth. Once I made it back from that, I only had three minutes left to put on my pajamas and dive into bed. At 8:10 exactly, the lights blinked out.

My mind was whirling, and I didn’t know how I was ever going to get to sleep. “Is it weird for you,” I asked Jenna, “going to bed at night? I mean, aren’t vampires supposed to sleep during the day?”

“Yeah,” she replied. “But as long as I’m here, I have to follow Hecate’s schedule. It’s gonna be a bitch once I get to leave.”

I didn’t ask Jenna when she would get to leave. Everybody else was released from Hecate at eighteen, but the rest of us aged like humans. Jenna would always be fifteen.

I settled into my bed and tried to think sleepy thoughts. It seemed like I had just closed my eyes when I heard the door creak open.

Panicked, I sat up, heart pounding. The clock by my bed said it was a few minutes after midnight.

A dark figure slid into the room.

I gasped. “Relax,” Jenna muttered from her bed. “It’s probably just one of the ghosts. They do that sometimes.”

Then there was the soft snick of a match being lit, and a small pool of light illuminated the figure.

Elodie.

She was wearing purple silk pajamas, a black candle cradled in her hands. Two other candles blazed to life, and I saw Chaston and Anna, also pajama-clad, standing behind Elodie.

“Sophia Mercer,” Elodie intoned, “we have come to induct you into our sisterhood. Say the five words to begin the ritual.”

I blinked at her. “Are you freaking kidding me?”

Anna gave an exasperated sigh. “No, the five words are ‘I accept your offer, sisters.’”

I brushed my hair out of my face and said, “I told you earlier, I’m not sure if I want to join your coven. I’m not saying any words to begin any ritual.”

“Saying the five words doesn’t mean you automatically join,” Chaston said, stepping forward. “It just means that the ritual of acceptance can start. You can back out any time.”

“Oh, just go with them,” Jenna said. I could see her in the candlelight, sitting up in her bed, her dark eyes wary. “They’re not going to leave you alone until you hear them out.”

Elodie’s mouth tightened, but she didn’t say anything.

“Fine,” I said, pushing off my covers and standing up. “I . . . I accept your offer, sisters.”

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