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“Wear jeans,” he said. “And no heels! Comfortable stuff that you don’t mind getting dirty.”

“This is sounding less and less like a date.” Cassie scrunched up her nose. “The sacrifices I make for love.”

“Anyway, you just focus on that, and let’s let Skye worry about the upcoming battle, okay?”

“Speaking of battles . . .” I toyed with the end of my side braid. “I have some news, and I don’t want to tell you—in fact, I almost didn’t, but I figured, you know, better safe than sorry, and I don’t want to keep things from you guys anymore.” I took a breath.

They all looked at me expectantly.

“I found a way to see into Astaroth’s mind,” I said. Judging from their facial expressions, that might not have been the best opener. “I could see what he is planning. I was wearing this long flowy dress that Aunt Jo gave me, and there were twinkle lights—”

Cassie’s eyes lit up.

“—and the hem of my gown was sweeping against the floor of the gym.”

Cassie’s expression turned from excited to skeptical.

“And I heard him say something. The battle will not end until one side has claimed you—or killed you.

“Oh my god,” Cassie whispered, grabbing Dan’s bicep.

I paused and steadied myself. Talking about it out loud was making me anxious. Not just because it had been super freaky in Astaroth’s mind—but because I didn’t want anyone else to hear. “It’s prom,” I said. “The battle, the collision of Chaos and Order—it’s going to happen on prom night.”

I almost ducked, afraid Cassie was going to throw something at my head in rage. I closed my eyes. “I’m so sorry, guys. Please don’t kill the messenger!”

But nothing hit me in the head. I opened my eyes.

“I was scarily spot-on with that prom theme,” Cassie said darkly. “Maybe I can see the future, too.”

“You saw into Astaroth’s mind?” Raven looked stunned. “What . . . what was that like?”

“Um,” I said. “It’s pretty high in the running for creepiest place I’ve ever been.”

The bell rang.

“Come over tonight,” I said. “After the big date. We can talk more then.”

The group began to scatter, and I grabbed Raven to see if she’d meet me after school to work on a few things. When I turned back around, the hall was empty. I had to slip into class late, making apologetic eyes at the teacher. Six months ago, before all this started, I never would have dreamed of being late for class. Now it was like a regular occurrence. But I was determined to ace my finals. I had changed over the course of the year, but let’s face it, not that much.

After school, Raven came with me up to the roof, and I tried to make myself have a vision of James Harrison. I wasn’t having any luck, and it was starting to scare me. I’d been trying to focus on the name James and picture the face of the man from the vision I’d had of the three Rogues. But so far, I kept coming up empty-handed.

“This sucks,” I said. The afternoon sun was fading into a pinkish-gold dusk. “Why is it so hard? The visions are supposed to help me, not frustrate me.”

“I hate to point out the obvious,” said Raven, absently admiring the silver sheen of her wings in a window. “But what if you’re looking for the wrong person?”

“What? Who should I be looking for?”

“I just mean,” said Raven, “that maybe James Harrison isn’t who you think he is. You have the clues, they’re just not piecing together.”

I exhaled loudly in exasperation. Raven shot me a pointed look.

“I’m calling it a day,” I said. “I have hours of studying I still have to do, and then everyone is coming over. It is going to be a long night.”

“What did I tell you? Stop worrying about finals. The fate of the universe, Skye.” She pointed at me. “That’s all I’m saying.”

“Well, thank you for taking some of the pressure off. But college is something I’ve dreamed about since I was a little kid. And if there’s any chance—even the smallest, slightest chance—that we can make it out of this and keep on living? I want to be able to live my dream.” My voice cracked on the word dream, and I turned away so I didn’t have to see the look on Raven’s face. “I have to have something to believe in. Something I can control.”

“I know this sounds unlikely,” Raven said quietly. “But I know what you mean.”

We walked down the fire staircase back to the main level of the school building. “Oh, man,” I said. “Go ahead to my car. I forgot my umbrella in my locker.”

“Your umbrella?” Raven balked. “It’s a near-perfect day outside. Why on earth did you bring an umbrella?”

I shrugged. “Earth told me to. I know she’s just a kid, but I don’t know. She’s freakishly right about a lot of things.”

“Well, hurry up, then.” Raven smirked at me. “If I’m out there without an umbrella, I don’t want to get caught in the rain.”

“I’ll be five seconds. Promise.” I wasn’t aching to spend lots of alone time in the school after hours, either. Not with all the Guardians and Rebels. I grabbed the travel-size umbrella from my locker and sprinted out toward the parking lot. When I rounded the corner by the front steps of the school, I ran into something hard.

Not something. Someone.

It knocked the wind out of me and I fell backward. A pair of aviator sunglasses clattered to the sidewalk next to me, and in their reflective lenses, I could see the face of the person standing above me.

I looked up at him, my heart pounding.

“Give those back,” Gideon said coldly, shielding his eyes with his hands as if the last rays of the sun were so bright they hurt. I grabbed the sunglasses and kept them out of reach.

“No,” I said, thinking on my feet and not entirely sure what I was doing. “Look at me!”

“Give them back, Skye,” he growled. The darkness inside Gideon rolled off him like smoke. “I’m not kidding around.” At one time, Gideon and I had been friends. I had felt comfortable with him immediately, from the first moment Asher introduced us. His overall appearance made it hard not to like him—wild, dark curly hair, wire-rimmed glasses that made him look approachably brainy. Cassie even thought he was cute. As I stood there, holding his sunglasses out of reach, I couldn’t help but be reminded that he’d agreed to teach me how to fight the Order’s mental manipulation. Even though it was painful for him. Even though it brought the darkness rushing back.

I knew that feeling of emptiness now, the feeling that mental manipulation could cause. I knew that what he did for me wasn’t easy. He’d done it because he cared about me. Because he was my friend.

And now we stood in the school parking lot, face-to-face, as enemies.

“You don’t have to be like this, Gideon,” I said. “It isn’t you.”

“And what do you know about me, really?” he asked, still keeping his eyes averted. “I’ve lived for thousands more years than you. My loyalties, my allegiances, my blood—you don’t even know how deep they run. The sacrifices I’ve made,” he said, “for love. For free will. You can’t think I’d let those all be for nothing. I won’t stop fighting until the Order has collapsed.”

In a swift motion, Gideon reached out and swiped the glasses from my hand. And when he did, our eyes met, just for a second.

But that was all I needed.

The last time I’d looked into his eyes, they’d glowed as if they were burning. Now, as the light of day faded around us, they swirled with clouds the color of wet asphalt. As we locked eyes, I could have sworn I saw a crack of lightning behind his pupils, and a cold, hard rain begin to fall.