“Not that I’m aware of, no. Is that why we’re down here? Are you going to prod me or poke me or something, to figure out if I have secret powers? Like a chick on an alien spacecraft?”
“And you think I’m the odd one,” she muttered. “No, Scully, we aren’t going to probe you.
We’re just going to talk to the Adepts and see what they have to say about your new tat. No bigs.” She shrugged nonchalantly, then started walking again.
Ten or fifteen minutes later, Scout stopped before a door made up of giant wooden beams, two golden hinges running across it, an arch in the top. A large numeral “3” was elegantly carved into the lintel above the door. And on the door was the same symbol I’d seen in the model room —a circle with aY inside it.
This was Enclave Three, I assumed.
Scout flipped off her flashlight, then held out her hand; I pressed my flashlight into her palm.
She flicked it off and deposited them both back in her messenger bag.
“Okay,” she said, looking over at me. “I suppose I should prep you for this. The other seven Adepts in ET should be here. Katie and Smith are our Varsity Adepts. You remember what that means?”
“They’re the college kids,” I answered. “And Junior Varsity is high school. You just told me on Friday.”
“You’ve brat-packed since then,” she muttered. “Your IQ has probably dropped.”
I gave her a snarky look.
“Anywho,” she said, ignoring the look, “Katie’s a manipulator. Literally and figuratively. You know, in history, when they talk about the Salem witch trials, about how innocent girls and boys were convinced to do all these horrible things because some witch made them?”
I’d readThe Crucible in English last year (probably just like every other sophomore), so I nodded.
“Yeah, well, they probablywere convinced. That stuff wasn’t a myth. Katie’s not a wicked witch or anything, but she’s got the same skills.”
“Well, that’s just downright disturbing,” I said.
“Yeah.” She nodded, then patted my arm. “Sleep well tonight. Anyway, Katie manipulates, and Smith—and, yes, that’s his first name—levitates. He lifts heavy stuff, raises things in the air. As for JV, you know me, Michael and Jason, obvs, and there are three more. Jamie and Jill, those are the twins. Paul’s the one with the curls.”
“You said you were a spellcaster?”
“Binder. Spellbinder.”
“Okay. So what are these guys? Michael and the rest of them. What can they do?”
“Oh, sure, um”—she shifted her feet, her gaze on the ceiling as she itemized—“um, Jamie and Jill have elemental powers. Fire and ice.”
“They have firespell?” I wondered aloud.
“Oh, sorry, no. Jamie can manipulate fire, literally—like a firestarter. Set stuff ablaze, create smoke, general pyromania. She can work with the element without getting burned. Firespell is different—it’s not about fire, really, but about power, at least we think. There aren’t any Adepts with firespell, so we kind of go off what we’ve seen in action. Anywho, you put Jamie, Jill, and me together, and we’re one medieval witch,” she said, with what sounded like a fake laugh.
“Paul is a warrior. A man of battle. Ridiculous moves, like something out of a kung fu movie.
Michael is a reader.”
“What’s a reader?”
“Well, I bind spells, right? I take words of power, charms and I translate them into action, like the house I showed you.”
I nodded.
“Michael reads objects. He can feel them out, determine their history, hear what they’re saying about things that happened, conditions.”
“Well that’s . . . weird. I mean cool, but weird.”
She shrugged. “Unusual, but handy. Architecture speaks to him. Literally.”
“And for all that, you two still aren’t dating.”
She narrowed her gaze. “I’m not sure I should let you two talk to each other anymore. Now, are you done procrastinating? Can we get on with this?”
“I’m not procrastinating,” I said, procrastinating. “What about Jason?” I already suspected, of course, what Jason’s magic was. But he hadn’t exactly confirmed it, and my own suspicions—
that he had some kind of animal-related power—were strange enough that I wasn’t ready to put them out there. On the other hand, how many teenage boys growled when they were attacked?
Okay, when you put it that way, it actually didn’t sound that rare.
Scout dropped her gaze and fiddled with her messenger bag. “Jason’s power isn’t for me to tell.
If he’s ready for that, he’ll tell you.”
“I—I have an idea.”
She went quiet and slowly lifted her gaze to mine. “An idea?”
We looked at each other for a minute, silently, each assessing the other:Do you know what I know? How can I confirm it without giving it away?
“I’ll let you talk to him about that,” she finally said, raising her hand to the door. “Are you readynow ?”
“Are they gonna wig out that you’re bringing me?”
“It’s a good possibility,” she said, then rapped her fist in a rhythmic pattern. Knock. Knock,
knock.Bang . Knock.
“Secret code?” I asked.
“Warning,” she said. “Jamie and Paul are dating. In case we’re early, I don’t want to walk in on that.”
The joke helped ease my nerves, but only a little. As soon as she touched the door handle, my stomach began rolling again.
“Welcome to the jungle,” she said, and opened the door.
The jungle was a big, vaulted room, of a quality I wouldn’t have expected to see in an abandoned railway tunnel far beneath Chicago. It looked like a meeting hall, the walls covered in paintings made up of tiny, mosaic tiles, the ceilings girded with thick, wooden beams. It had the same kind of look as the convent—big scale, careful work, earthy materials. The room was empty of furniture—completely empty except for the seven kids who’d turned to stare at the door when it opened. There were three girls and four guys, including Michael and Jason.
Jason of the deadly blue eyes and currently frigid stare.
The room went completely silent, all fourteen of those eyes on us as we stepped into the room.
Scout squeezed my hand supportively.
Silently, they moved around and formed a semicircle facing us, as if containing a threat. I shuffled a little closer to Scout and surveyed the judges.
Jamie and Jill were the obvious twins, both tallish and lanky, with long auburn hair and blue eyes. Paul was tall, lean, coffee-skinned and very cute, his hair a short mop of tiny, spiral curls.
The guy and girl in the middle, who looked older than the rest of them—early college, maybe—
stepped forward, fury on their faces. I guessed these were Katie and Smith. Katie was cheerleader cute, with a bob of shoulder-length brown hair, green eyes, a long T-shirt, and ballet flats paired with jeans. Smith—shaggy brown hair pasted to his forehead emo-style—wore a dingy, plaid shirt. He was the rebel type, I assumed.
“Green,” he bit out, “you’d better have a damn good reason for calling us in and, more important, for bringing aregular in here.”
Okay, so pasty hair was clearly not impressed with me.
Scout crossed her arms, preparing for battle. “A,” she said, “this is Lily Parker, the girl who took a hit of firespell to save us and wound up in a paper nightgown in the LaSalle Street Clinic because of it. Ring any bells?”
I actually took a hit because I’d tripped, but since the Adepts’ expressions softened after she passed along that little factoid, I kept the truth to myself.