going to get Heath." To her credit, Shaunee hesitated for only a second or two, then said, "Okay. What can we do?"
"Just be together, manifest your elements, and think about me." I was getting really good at sounding calm even when I thought my head might explode. "Zoey, be careful."
"I will. Don't worry." Yeah, I'd worry enough for both of us. "Erik isn't going to like this."
"I know. Tell him ... tell him ... that I'll, uh, talk to him when I get back." I had not a clue about what else to say. "Okay, I'll tell him."
"Thanks, Shaunee. I'll see ya," I said and closed the phone. Then I faced Aphrodite. "What are those creatures?"
"I don't know."
"But you saw them in your vision?"
"Today was the second vision I had about them, though. The first time I saw the other two guys being killed by them." Aphrodite brushed a thick strand of blond hair from her face. Instantly I was pissed. "And you didn't say anything about it because they're just human teenagers and not worth your time to save?" Aphrodite's eyes blazed with anger. "I told Neferet. I told her everything--about the human kids--about those things--every thing. That's when she started saying my visions were false." I knew she was telling the truth, just as surely as I had begun to know that there was something dark about Neferet. "Sorry," I said shortly. "I didn't know."
"Whatever," she said. "You need to get out of here or your boyfriend is going to die."
"Ex-boyfriend," I said. "Again I say whatever. Here, I'll give you a leg up." I let her hoist me into the saddle. "Take this with you." Aphrodite handed me a thick, plaid horse blanket. Before I could protest she said, "It's not for you. He'll need it." I wrapped the blanket around me, taking comfort in its earthy, horsey smell. I followed as Aphrodite went to the rear doors of the stable and slid them apart. Frigid air and snow swirled in little mini-tornadoes into the barn, making me shiver, although it was more from nerves and apprehension than from the cold. "Stevie Rae's one of them," Aphrodite said. I looked down at her, but she was staring out into the night. "I know," I said. "She's not who she used to be."
"I know," I repeated, even though saying the words aloud hurt my heart. "Thanks for this, Aphrodite." She did look up at me then and her expression was flat and un readable. "Don't start acting like we're friends or anything," she said. "Wouldn't think of it," I said. "I mean, we're not friends."
"Nope, definitely not." I was pretty sure I saw her trying not to smile. "As long as we have that straight," Aphrodite said. "Oh," she added. "Remember to pull silence and darkness around yourself so humans will have a hard time seeing you on the way there. You don't have time to be stopped."
"Will do. Thanks for reminding me," I said. "Okay, well, good luck," Aphrodite said. I gripped the reins, took a deep breath, and then squeezed my thighs together, clucking at Persephone to go.
I entered a world that was weirdly made of white darkness. Whiteout was definitely the right description of it. The snow had changed from big, friendly flakes to sharp little razorlike pieces of snow-ice. The wind was steady, making the snow slant sideways. I pulled the blanket over my head so that I was partially protected from the snow and leaned forward, kicking Persephone into a quick trot. Hurry! My mind was yelling at me. Heath needs you! I cut across the parking lot and rear part of the school grounds. The few cars still at school were covered with snow, and the flick ering gaslights that shined crazily off of their backs made them look like June bugs on a screen door. I pressed the inside button for the gate to open. It tried to swing wide, but a snowdrift caught it and Persephone and I had barely enough room to squeeze through. I turned her to the right and stood for a moment under the cover of the oaks that framed the school grounds. "We're silent ... ghosts ... no one can see us. No one can hear us." I murmured against the whining wind, and was shocked when the area around me stilled. With a sudden thought I contin ued. "Wind, be calm near me. Fire, warm my way. Water, still the snow in my path.