at a steeper angle—short in the back and long in the front.
“So you’re stuck in Prentice again, huh?” Maggie tried again to smooth over the awkwardness with conversation, even though it wasn’t helping. “Yeah, me too. And Dan’s next door.”
“Yup.” Dan opened his mouth like he might say something else, then shut it again.
For a moment, we all stared at each other in awkward silence. Then I lifted the bags slightly. “I… better go up.”
“Yeah! Yeah.” Maggie nodded enthusiastically, relief coloring her features. “See you around.”
I gave a stilted nod and started toward the stairs. As I walked down the hall toward my room, a weight settled on my chest.
Not only did I have four enemies at Oak Park, I’d managed to lose just about every friend I’d once had here too.
Chapter 4
When the alarm on my phone chimed at seven a.m., I pressed the button to turn it off immediately. I’d been up since four, just pretending to sleep, trying to convince myself adrenaline wasn’t flooding my veins. I threw off the covers and headed for the shower, enjoying the fresh, non-mildewed scent.
Leah had called the Prentice Hall dorms shitty when she’d shown me around on my first day. But I’d never been able to see it. They were big, and they were clean, and that was a lot more than could be said for the other places I’d lived.
After slipping on my uniform, I blow-dried my hair and straightened it, then applied a little eyeliner, mascara, and blush. I didn’t usually wear much makeup, and I wasn’t quite sure why it felt important to do so today. Maybe it was just because I didn’t want the Princes to know they’d beaten me down—didn’t want them to see any of the past three months on my face. Or maybe I was just stalling, looking for more excuses to linger in my dorm.
But either way, I couldn’t hide out forever. At 7:45, I shouldered my backpack and walked out of Prentice Hall, keeping my back straight and my eyes fixed straight ahead.
As I neared Craydon Hall, I could feel gazes on me again, could hear whispers springing up in my wake, but I ignored them all, focusing on the large doors of the main school building. I stepped quickly up the broad stairs leading to the entrance and marched inside.
Several heads turned to look in my direction, and as if pulled by the wave of motion, Elijah, who stood several yards down the hall, looked toward me too.
His whole body jerked when he saw me, and for a moment, I wondered if word of my return hadn’t actually reached the Princes. Had he not known I was here? But that would be impossible.
Whether he’d known I was coming or not, the sight of me had definitely knocked him off balance, and I felt a little thrill of vindication as something like shame worked its way across his face.
He had frozen in place when he’d seen me, but I’d made a point to keep moving, to not let my feet stick to the floor. So we were only a few feet apart when he murmured, “Talia.”
It was hardly more than a breath, and I wasn’t even sure he knew he’d spoken out loud, but I heard it. Then his hazel gaze flicked to something behind me, and he stiffened.
I did too. I couldn’t help it.
The other three Princes closed ranks around us, and I felt them before I even saw them, as if their presence altered the very air around them.
I kept my shoulders squared, standing taller despite the heavy weight of my backpack, as I turned in a slow circle.
All four of them were here, the other three completing a box that Elijah now formed one side of, with me in the middle.
When my gaze met Mason’s, I stopped. My heart pounded against my ribs in an angry, desperate rhythm as his soft green eyes studied me. It’d been weeks, months, since I’d punched him, but I could still remember the red mark below his eye from where my knuckles had collided with his face. I wanted to put a new one there, wanted to hit him over and over until the fucking mask he wore—the one that looked like a handsome, aristocratic, human young man—cracked, and everyone could see the monster that lived underneath.
But I knew it wouldn’t be enough. I’d probably only get one or two punches in before someone pulled me away, and whatever marks I left