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She smiled, and suddenly reminded me of the creature in Alien, that totally freaky old movie with Sigourney Weaver and the really scary alien that ate people. “Excellent. Why don’t you read aloud the last paragraph on that page?”

Glad that I had an excuse to duck my face, I looked down at my book, found the paragraph, and read:

Fledglings should note that cloaking can be very taxing to their strength. It takes great powers of concentration to call and hold night for any protracted period of time. It is also important to understand that cloaking has its limitations. Some are as follows:

It is a draining practice and can cause excessive weariness.

Cloaking can only work with organic things, which is why it is easier to remain cloaked if one is skyclad (or naked).

To attempt cloaking items like cars or motorcycles or even bicycles is an exercise in futility.

As with all of our abilities, cloaking exacts a price. For some that price will be mild fatigue and a headache. For others it can be much worse.

I came to the end of the page and glanced up at her.

“That will be quite enough, Zoey. So, tell me, what did you just learn?” Her eyes bored into mine.

Well, actually, I’d just learned that my friends and I wouldn’t be escaping from the House of Night using the Hummer unless we somehow got permission to leave campus. I didn’t say that, though. Instead, I tried to look studious and said, “That cars and houses and such can’t be cloaked from humans.”

“Or vampyres,” she added in a firm voice that the uninformed (or the body-snatched) might think was concerned and teacherly. “Don’t ever forget other vampyres will see through the cloaking of inorganic materials, too.”

“I’ll remember,” I said solemnly. And I would.

CHAPTER 26

I had fencing class before lunch and couldn’t have been happier. Okay, well, that’s an overstatement. I could have been happier if my friends and I were about a bazillion miles away from the House of Night, Neferet, and Kalona. Since that didn’t seem very possible, especially after Vamp Soc and Neferet’s freaky anti-cloaking lecture, I settled for being happy that Dragon agreed I looked too tired to do more than sit and watch class.

Actually I wasn’t feeling bad at all, and when I fished my mirror out of my purse to put on the lip gloss I was relieved I hadn’t lost, I didn’t think I looked that bad, either. So Dragon’s allowing me to sit out of class, coupled with the fact that his cat had been one of those that had shown up in my room like a furry clue, had me keeping a close eye on our fencing professor.

At first glance Dragon appears to be another of my grandma’s conundrums. First of all, he’s short. Second, he’s cute. Really cute. As in the guy you’d pick to be a stay-at-home dad who baked cookies and could even hem his daughter’s skirt in an emergency. In a world where male vampyres were warriors and protectors, a short, cute guy wouldn’t normally get much attention. But his whole persona changed when he picked up his sword, or, as he’d correct me, his foil. Then he turned lethal. His features hardened. He didn’t grow taller, that would just be silly (as well as impossible), but he didn't need to be taller. He was literally so fast that his foil seemed to glide and glow with a power all its own.

I watched Dragon drill the class in fencing exercises. The fledglings didn’t seem so podlike in fencing class. But that was probably because it dealt with physical activity, not mental stuff. I paid closer attention and noticed that, even though the class was completing the physical motions, there was no easy banter or harmless teasing going on. Everyone was on task, which was weird as hell. I mean, let’s face it. Keeping a gym filled with teenagers who had sharp things in their hands totally on task is nearly impossible.

I was frowning at a group of guys who would normally have been getting at least a couple of reprimands from Dragon, along with reminders to pay attention and not act like idiots (at the House of Night professors can call kids idiots when they act like idiots because the idiot children can’t run home to their mommies and cry about it; hence there is a lot less idiot behavior at the House of Night than at most public schools), when Dragon stepped between me and my line of vision. I blinked and refocused on him.

Slowly and distinctly he winked at me before turning back to the class.

About then his huge Maine Coon padded up to sit beside me and lick one of his monstrous paws.

“Hey there, Shadowfax.” I scratched his head and felt more hopeful than I had since the Raven Mocker had almost killed me.

Even though school had turned into a nightmare and danger was all around us, lunch felt like an oasis of familiarity. I loaded up on my personal favorite, spaghetti and brown pop, and joined Damien and the Twins at our booth.

“Well, what did you guys find out?” I whispered between big bites of pasta with marinara and cheese.

“You look way better,” Damien said, his voice definitely not a whisper.

“I feel better,” I said, giving him a WTF look.

“I’m thinking we really need to go over the new vocab for the lit test next week,” Damien said loudly, opening his ever-ready notebook and taking out a number two pencil.

The Twins groaned. I frowned at him. Had he gone pod on us?

“Yeah, just because stuff is changing around here, it doesn’t mean you can let your grades slide,” he said.

“Damien, you are a pain in the ass,” Shaunee said.

“Worse. You are a damn pain in the ass with your stupid vocab shit, and I—”

Damien slid the notebook around so that we could read what he’d written below the list of vocab words.

R.M. @ all the windows. Their hearing is excellent.

The Twins and I shared a quick glance, then I sighed and said, “Fine, Damien. Whatever. We’ll study the stupid vocab with you. But I agree with the Twins that you’re a pain.”

“All right. Let’s start with ‘loquacious.’” He pointed his pencil at the word.

Shaunee shrugged. “Isn’t that something out of Star Trek?”

“Sounds right to me,” Erin said.

Damien gave them a look of disgust I knew he didn’t have to act to put on. “No, simpletons, this is what it means.” He wrote: Dragon is on our side. “So, Erin, why don’t you try the next word, ‘voluptuous’?”

“Oooh, I know what that one means,” Shaunee said, grabbing Damien’s pencil before he could pass it to Erin. Beside ‘voluptuous’ she quickly wrote: me! Then, farther down on the page, she scrawled: Anastasia is 2.

“You know I consider using texting shorthand gauche,” Damien said.

“Don’t care,” Shaunee said.

“Even if we knew what ‘gauche’ meant,” Erin said.

“I’ll take the next word,” I said. Ignoring the next vocab word, I wrote: We gotta get out of here tonight, but can’t use the Hummer. Can’t cloak it. I paused, chewing my lip, and then added, Got to be careful. N knows we’re going to try to leave. “I guess I don’t know what that next one means after all. Can you help me out, Damien?”

“No problem.” Damien wrote: We need to get out of here fast. Before they can stop us.

“Okay, hang on. I’ll try the next word. Just let me think about it for a sec.” We all ate silently while I thought, but not about the vocab word “ubiquitous” (seriously, I could have thought about that forever and not figured out what it meant).

We needed to get off campus, under my cloaking, as soon as possible. But Neferet was expecting us to try to bolt; she’d made that clear. This meant she’d be listening in to our lunchroom conversations, not just via the Raven Mockers but inside Damien’s and the Twins’ minds the second she was physically close enough to them to make her psychic eavesdropping work. Again, I thought how relieved I was that no one but Stevie Rae and I knew I’d really be running to the Benedictine Abbey instead of the depot tunnels. Thanks to my note-passing skills and—