more than you think.”
That stokes a fire in my chest, and I can’t help but give him a grateful smile. “Thanks, Shade.”
“Don’t mention it,” he says, adding with a cheeky grin, “Seriously. People will think I’m going soft.”
“We don’t want that,” I reply, chuckling as the wolf shifter bumps me with his shoulder.
We lapse back into silence once more, each of us lost in our own thoughts, and continue to make our way through the Boston morning until we arrive at the harbour. Hazel and Xander run to a nearby ATM to get cash and tickets while the rest of us wait anxiously, looking around for any signs of followers, but there are none. It’s all just tourists and businesspeople, and that only puts me more on edge.
“I don’t like this,” I announce, hugging myself.
“What do you mean?” asks Ruby, coming to stand with the rest of us.
“Where are all the Academy people?” I ask, gesturing around at the plaza. “The convention centre was crawling with them. Hell, the whole city was crawling with them. After what happened yesterday, I’d be expecting more. It’s almost like…”
“Like it’s too peaceful,” Hunter says, pressing his lips together. “I know what you mean.”
“Do you think they’re planning something?” I ask, watching as Hazel and Xander turn around, clutching our ferry tickets.
“Do you really even need to ask that question?” Silas asks glumly. “Let’s just hope that whatever it is, we can get the hell out of here before it happens.”
“That does raise a good question, actually,” Hazel says as she comes to a stop and passes out our tickets. “We need to figure out a plan. A more specific plan, I mean.”
We start to make our way over to the docks, and I realise that everyone in the group has their eyes on me, waiting for my call. Guess this leader thing is happening whether I want it to or not, I think grimly. “We can’t go back to the island, that much is obvious,” I say, keeping my voice low as I shuffle up to the attendant and hand him my ticket. “We’ll get eaten alive. The trouble is, they’re going to have people on us back in the U.K. It would be foolish to think that they won’t.”
“So what do we do?” asks Shade.
“We’ll need to find somewhere to lie low,” I reply, running a hand through my hair. “Except I don’t know…” I stop then, my eyes going wide as we mount the gangplank and come to sit on one of the benches on the ferry. It’s almost the top of the hour, and the dock workers are getting ready to shove off. Good. I’ve had enough of this city to last a lifetime. I snap my head around to look at Silas, who’s taken a seat on my other side. “You said you and your family lived in a shifter community, right?”
“Technically, yeah,” the dragon shifter replies. “Although I wouldn’t feel safe going back there, considering what the humans did to my parents. I don’t even know if anyone is still there.”
“But there are others like it, though, right?” I persist. “I mean, that’s what they said about the Boston Academy -- there are shifter neighbourhoods all over the place around here. Maybe we can find one back home… the suburbs, maybe? Or somewhere in the countryside?”
“We’re more likely to find one in one of the big cities,” replies Hunter, crossing his arms. “London, Birmingham, Edinburgh… Where, though, I don’t know. Maybe if I can talk to my dad…”
“No way,” Xander says urgently. “The Academy’s going to be monitoring communications, especially with faculty members. They’ll be on us in no time.”
“You’re right,” says Hunter, sounding crestfallen. “I just… worry about him. And my sister. That’s all.”
Instinctively, I reach out and put a hand on his arm; I feel him relax a little under my touch. I don’t have to say anything, but he shoots me a grateful look. None of us are having an easy go of it right now.
“Well, it sounds like we have a starting point, then,” I say as the ferry begins to move out onto the water. “We’ll just have to hope we can afford same-day flights to the other side of the planet.”
No one has anything to say about that, and as we bob and lurch over the murky blue water, I’m left to concentrate on not getting seasick. Boats have never sat well with me, and the stress I’m under isn’t helping things.