Evermore Academy Spring - Audrey Grey Page 0,12

the blonde thief was evaporated the moment I got home and discovered the wheelbarrow on the front porch. Cal personally delivered everything I stole to our house, plus a few extras.

For a block-headed idiot, his sense of irony is razor-sharp.

“Summer, you know the Miller boy would never trade in . . . well, whatever those are.” She waves a hand at the neverapples, piled high in an old bucket near the sink.

“Right,” I scoff. “Cal and his family have no problem stealing the pallets of aid sent from the other side and then selling them on the black market, but handling goods from Everwilde are way beyond their moral code.”

More like, they have to keep up appearances. The Fae have grown popular in the big cities outside the borderlands. And why not? They have the money, magic, and influence to hire huge PR firms and throw lavish benefits for us: the humans caught in a no-man’s land they swear is still tainted by magic.

While we’re unable to leave this little slice of hell on earth, the Fae have influenced their way into every echelon of society on the other side. But here, where we see their evil up close and feel the sting of their crimes, they’re reviled.

“So, did Cal say anything when he delivered all this?” I ask, trying to sound nonchalant.

Aunt Zinnia tugs at the fuzzy strings of her robe. “Only that you would know how to repay him.”

The thought turns my stomach. Owing Cal is nearly as bad as being bound to the Evermore. At least once I’m there, I’ll be out of Cal’s reach.

Cal Miller has had a crush on me since ninth grade. He’s a walking, muscled-up cliché. The high school quarterback, prom king, and eldest son to the wealthiest family in town, he’s had everything in life handed to him.

Everything but me.

I had no idea he liked me. Not until he shoved his tongue down my throat after gym class.

I wasn’t the first girl he’s swapped spit with, but I was the first one who turned him down. That’s before I understood that guys like Cal Miller don’t get rejected.

At least, not by “orphan girls named Summer Solstice, who shop at goodwill and whose boobs aren’t even that big.”

His words, not mine. He said them right before pushing me against my locker and trying to touch said boobs.

So I informed him of the other rule. The one that states don’t-effing-touch-me-without permission. A well-timed knee to his man onions followed up by a right hook to his thick jaw made that clear.

Or should have. But some guys have rocks where their brain’s supposed to go, and his obsession has only gotten stronger.

No more Cal, I think as I lug one of the blue gallon water jugs over to the pantry. Silver linings, Summer. Focus on the silver linings.

The kids gather around the bar countertop, helping prep the influx of goods. Cal and his guards must have gotten lucky hunting because there’s fresh meat, too, although I don’t dare ask what kind.

Between that, the stolen goods, and the neverapples, we’re looking at three full meals a day for weeks.

“So,” Aunt Zinnia persists. “Are you going to tell me where they came from, Summer Solstice, or should we wait for Vi to come make a ruckus?”

“Near the Shimmer,” I admit, averting my gaze.

Not a lie; I just don’t specify which side.

Aunt Zinnia snaps her head up. “Darling, what have I said about going near that place? What if there are darklings roaming the woods? Or, worse. Faeries?”

“The sightings are overblown,” I assure her. “No one has seen a darkling or a Fae around here in months.”

No one but me. But he was on the other side, so it still counts.

The others are watching me, especially Jane. Her hazel eyes narrow, but she just keeps rolling the bright red strips of meat into the seasoning. Too smart for her own good, that one. At one point, Chatty Cat pads over to where she works, watches her for a moment, then tries to snag one of the strips of meat.

Jane hisses at him—hisses, for Fae’s sake—sending Chatty Cat to skulk in the corner.

Yep, they’re going to get along gloriously.

Aunt Violet comes bursting in the front door, the hem of her lilac-printed duster she wears over her jeans and camisole nipping at her cowgirl boots.

Compared to her sister, she’s tall and lean, all angles and ropy muscle, her face worn from years beneath an unforgiving sun. She wears her gray

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