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“Of course.” Of course Brandon would think like that. He’s such a nice person. And look what I’d just tried to do to him. He didn’t need seduction and manipulation. He needed patience and understanding and to handle things in his own, gentlemanly way. I could give him that. “I’m sorry,” I said again. “I don’t know what came over me. I’ve just been so stressed recently.”

“Applications?” he asked, sounding back on firmer footing.

“And other stuff.” I laid my head on his shoulder. “I know we don’t talk about it, and that’s fine. I can’t even get into it now. You’ll just think it’s silly.”

“What?”

I laughed in self-recrimination. “It’s just…society nonsense.” I’m being targeted by Dragon’s Head as payback for the latest round of a fifty-year-old feud sounded way too silly to speak aloud.

At the door, we held each other for a long time, breathing as one, doing everything that a kissing couple would do that didn’t actually involve mouths. It was hotter than a lot of the sex I’d had. Then he left, and I floated back to my desk, relieved that we’d finally worked things out between us.

And then I didn’t hear from him for days.

***

After the first day, I sent Brandon an e-mail, and then another two days later. In between, I left two messages on his answering machine. No response. There was no way the ball could be construed as being in my court.

When it came, his volley took an interesting form. On Wednesday, as I was working, a tiny IM window popped up on my screen.

B_Weared: Tell me about the “society nonsense.”

AmyHaskeclass="underline" Hey! Where have u been?

B_Weared: What’s been happening to u?

Way to answer a question with another question. And happening to me? What was that about? He had no way of knowing I was being stalked.

AmyHaskeclass="underline" Can’t really talk about it, of course.

B_Weared: Does it have to do with the time in the dining hall? That guy who spilled the drinks on u?

AmyHaskeclass="underline" Yes.

After that, he typed nothing for a good long while. And then:

B_Weared: I gotta go.

I typed a response, but it was too late, and bold red lettering told me Brandon had signed off. How odd was that? Three days of nothing and then random questions about my society feud? I skipped dinner, waiting by the computer for him to sign back on, but he didn’t. Nor did he call, e-mail, or drop by my suite.

The following day, I went to class like a good little student. I did all my homework by myself, worked on my last few applications—and did a load of laundry, to boot. February was ending, and I could no longer afford to pretend this semester was going to last forever. When the sun set, I bundled up, as interested in protecting myself from the weather as I was in disguising myself from any roving Dragon’s Head members, and plunged into the night.

Hale met me at the door of the tomb, before I could meet the other knights in the Firefly Room for dinner. “Miss,” he said. “A note arrived for you this afternoon.”

“Just for me?”

“From the caretaker of Dragon’s Head.” He must have noticed my quizzical look, for he went on. “I suspect it is an offer of parley.”

“But why to me? Why not to the whole club?” And why would they want to strike a deal? They were totally getting the better of me and they couldn’t need some crummy statue they’d been keeping in their storage room that badly.

“Couldn’t say, miss. But I suggest you let the Secretary know about it.”

I tore into the letter, which had been sealed with a dollop of golden wax pressed with a reptilian face.

To the Thief Amy Haskel, so-called Knight of Persephone:

We issue an Offer of Parley. Meet with our Representative, alone, at Midnight in the Center Courtyard of the Library, and there endeavor to come to an Agreement over our Differences. In keeping with the long-standing Association between our Societies, no Harm shall come to you there.

If you do not come, it will not end.

If you bring a Companion, our Offer becomes Void and they shall share your Fate.

I shot a glance at the entrance to the Firefly Room, where I could just glimpse the other knights poring over the latest scandal sheets for news of Gehry. But who could care about one disgraced politico with all the drama going on in my life? I had a boy who couldn’t seem to get back to me and a society that was dying to get back at me. Kurt Gehry was the least of my problems.

“Bugaboo!” Thorndike exclaimed, spotting me through the doorway. “Check this out!”

I shook my head. “No, check this out.” I waved the letter at her, but she’d already refocused her attention on the computer screen. From across the room, all I could hear was snippets of the newscast that had my fellow knights so enthralled.

“For the past four years…Could be considered the new ‘Nannygate’…Always a proponent of tough immigration laws…Though a federal crime…Claims the employees were hired through an agency that handled all financial transactions and paperwork…”

I drew closer and saw a montage of images of Kurt Gehry and the President walking across the White House lawn, a shot of a suburban home, its yard covered in news trucks and federal agents, the latter of which led two women and a man down the path. The footage gave way to a live shot of Gehry, in a coat and carrying a briefcase, pointedly ignoring the cameras and microphones being shoved in his face.

“Well, I guess we know why he resigned,” Soze said. “You can’t be a federal employee and break federal immigration laws.”

Juno shook her head, and her curls bounced on her shoulders. “Let’s not get out the tar and feathers just yet. Could be, the employment agency’s to blame.”

Bond cast her a skeptical look. “Easy enough to determine that, don’t you think? Ring up the employment agency. ‘Hello, agency, can you provide the correct documentation for your staff? Thanks ever so.’ No. If the agency is still an issue, it’s because the Gehry camp is spinning it that way.”

“Soze—” I started, but then was promptly shushed as Gehry turned to answer a reporter.

“My wife and children are currently visiting family abroad,” he said, then spun on his heel and strode rather quickly inside the nearest building.

“Poor kids,” Lucky said. “I don’t feel bad for him, but those children…”

“Hey, Soze…” I tried again, but he was glued to the monitor as the talking heads started doing their thing.

“This is really big news, guys,” Thorndike went on. “Gehry could end up in jail.”

“Josh!” I cried. He turned to me at last.

“Two dollars, Bugaboo,” Angel said.

“I need to talk to you. Now.”

Soze followed me into the library, and I was pleased to see that Angel and Lucky could manage to tear themselves away from the news for five minutes as well. I showed them all the note.

“Well, this is good news,” Angel said.

Lucky snorted. “You can’t actually be considering this. After everything they’ve done to you, you want to go over there alone?”

“Well, that’s what I was wondering,” I said. “Does it have to be, like, alone alone? I mean, couldn’t you guys just come and lurk in the shadows or something?”

“It’s the shadow-lurkers I’m worried about,” Lucky said. “I’m sure Dragon’s Head has this place scoped out. How naïve do you really want to be about this? Considering everything they’ve done already?”

Angel studied the letter. “I don’t know. There is a degree of honor between societies. If they say they want to parley, maybe they mean it.”

“But why with Bugaboo alone?” Soze said. “Why don’t they want to parley with all of us?” He glanced back into the Firefly Room. “Is there any way we can talk about this later?”