Spring (Evermore Academy #2) - Audrey Grey Page 0,53
more advanced classes.
“The Dark—I mean, King Oberon’s grandmother was a descendant of the Ice Dragon Lord who claimed the northern half of the Winter Court’s territories. Although King Oberon was only a quarter dragon, his magic chose that creature as his shifter form. During the last war, some of the Seelie took out their rage on the dragon clans. It nearly wiped them out.”
“Oh.” Her frown deepens, and I feel a stab of sympathy for her. I remember that same drowning feeling I had last year trying to learn thousands of years of Fae knowledge in a few weeks.
“Don’t worry,” I reassure her. “I doubt that will be on any test this year. I read ahead.”
I’ve been doing that lately, desperate to learn more about the Darken and my own history.
“Translation,” Mack adds, “she’s being a showoff.”
Oh, boy. If Mack’s calling me a showoff . . . I open my mouth to reply, but think better of it when I catch the tense line of her shoulders, her forced smile. My gaze slides to her tray, where she’s portioned out an apple into tiny cubes.
When was the last time I saw her actually eat more than a few bites of something?
My phone buzzes in my pocket, dragging my attention away from my bestie. As soon as I see the initials ILB, my heart leaps into my throat.
What are you wearing to training tonight?
A blush sweeps over my chest as I take in his question. I can practically hear his teasing voice inside my head, thick with amusement.
Shielding my phone from Mack’s curious gaze, I quickly send back a reply.
Baggy joggers and a sweatshirt.
The dots blink forever, and then . . .
Tease. You wouldn’t dare.
I tamp down my stupid grin. We’ve been doing this—whatever this is—ever since the night at his penthouse. Harmless flirting over text. In person, he’s kept to his word. Only touching me during training. Not mentioning the soulbond or pressuring me for anything beyond the light, flirtatious relationship we’ve established.
Which is wonderful because the first gauntlet is in two days.
Two fricking days.
And we still have no clue what my powers are, how they’re activated, or how to stop them.
“Ready to go slay this test?” Mack asks as she gathers her stuff, a strand of her brown hair escaping her ear and falling forward.
“Mackenzie Fairchild, I was born ready,” I declare, loud enough to draw weird stares from the rest of the lunchroom.
Grinning, Mack high fives me. “Damn right you were.”
Everyone’s definitely gawking now, but I don’t care. As long as Mack’s by my side, I can take on the Everwilde.
Last minute, I remember I left my iPad in my locker. Because Whitehall Academy uses all modern technology for lessons, note-taking, and tests, the Spring Court sponsored new iPads for all the students and made online test taking mandatory. Mack said they probably did that just to piss off the Winter Court, whose stance on mortal technology is less favorable.
I grab my iPad, thankful the battery is at seventy-five percent, sling my backpack over my shoulder, and sprint down the corridor toward the lecture hall. My tennis shoes squeak across the marble floor.
When I round the top of the stairs, I spot the closed door. Crap. I still have five minutes before the professor locks the door.
Breathing hard, I wrench the door open and shuffle down the aisle—
Everything goes dark. What the frick? I freeze in confusion. As I take in the black sea of nothingness, cold dread seeps into my veins.
“Hello?” I call, my voice ringing in the absolute silence. As my eyes adjust, I slowly start to pick out shapes from the shadows. Tall, slender shapes.
Trees.
Okay, this is beyond weird. Could it be part of the test? I’ve heard that some professors hold their exams in the field, but wouldn’t they prepare us for that?
“It’s okay,” I whisper, searching the forest for a clue on where to go. “Don’t panic.”
Besides the unnerving quiet, the landscape is gray, lifeless, like a three-dimensional painting of a world that has yet to be colored. Everything is monochromatic and covered in—I swipe my finger across the trunk of a tree—ash?
I find a path. It doesn’t take very long until it hits me. I know this place.
My heart lurches sideways. This isn’t the Everwilde.
Even covered in ash, I recognize the type of trees, honey oak and Texas ash. A familiar path opens up. It zigzags through the forest as it leads to the . . .