Marked
Page 7
Neither of us said anything more. The stairs led to a large hallway lined with doors. I held my breath when Aphrodite stopped before one that was painted a pretty light purple, but instead of knocking, she turned to face me. Her perfect face suddenly looked hateful and cold and definitely not so pretty.
“Okay, here’s the deal, Zoey. You have this weird Mark, so everyone’s talking about you and wondering what the fuck is up with you.” She rolled her eyes and clutched her pearls dramatically, changing her voice so that she sounded really silly and gushing. “Oooh! The new girl has a colored-in Mark! Whatever could that mean? Is she special? Does she have fabulous powers? Oh my—oh my!” She dropped her hand from her throat and narrowed her eyes at me. Her voice went as flat and mean as her gaze. “Here’s what’s what. I’m it here. Things go my way. You want to get along here, then you’d best remember that. If you don’t, you’ll be in for a world of shit.”
Okay, she was starting to piss me off. “Look,” I said, “I just got here. I’m not looking for trouble, and I have no control over what people are saying about my Mark.”
Her eyes narrowed. Ah, crap. Was I going to have to actually fight this girl? I’d never been in a fight in my life! My stomach knotted up and I got ready to duck or run or whatever would not get me beat up.
Then, just as quickly as she’d gone all scary and hateful, her face relaxed into a smile and she turned back into sweet little blonde again. (Not that I was fooled.)
“Good. Just so we understand each other.”
Huh? I understood she’d forgotten to take her meds, but that was all I understood.
Aphrodite didn’t give me time to say anything. With one last, weirdly warm smile, she knocked on the door.
“Come on in!” called a perky voice with an Okie accent.
Aphrodite opened the door.
“Hi y’all! Ohmygosh, come on in.” With a huge grin, my new roomie, also a blonde, rushed up like a little countrified tornado. But the instant she saw Aphrodite, her grin slid from her face and she stopped hurrying toward us.
“I brought your new roommate to you.” There was nothing technically wrong with Aphrodite’s words, but her tone was hateful and she was putting on a terrible, fake Oklahoma accent. “Stevie Rae Johnson, this is Zoey Redbird. Zoey Redbird, this is Stevie Rae Johnson. There, now ain’t we all nice and cozy like three little corns on a cob?”
I glanced at Stevie Rae. She looked like a terrified little rabbit.
“Thanks for showing me up here, Aphrodite.” I talked quickly, moving toward Aphrodite, who automatically stepped back, which put her out in the hall again. “See you around.” I closed the door on her as her look of surprise was just beginning to change to anger. Then I turned to Stevie Rae, who was still pale.
“What’s with her?” I asked.
“She’s . . . she’s . . . ,”
Even though I didn’t know her at all, I could tell that Stevie Rae was struggling with how much she should or shouldn’t say. So I decided to help her. I mean, we were going to be roommates. “She’s a bitch!” I said.
Stevie Rae’s eyes went round, and then she giggled. “She’s not very nice, that’s for sure.”
“She needs pharmaceutical help, that’s for sure,” I added, making her laugh some more.
“I think we’re gonna get along just fine, Zoey Redbird,” she said, still smiling. “Welcome to your new home!” She stepped aside and made a sweeping arm gesture at the little room, like she was ushering me into a palace.
I looked around and blinked. Several times. The first thing I saw was the life-sized Kenny Chesney poster that hung over one of the two beds and the cowboy (cowgirl?) hat that rested on one of the bedside tables—the one that also had the old-fashioned-looking gas lamp with the base shaped like a cowboy boot. Oh, nu uh. Stevie Rae was a total Okie!
Then she shocked me with a big hello hug, reminding me of a cute puppy with her short, curly hair and her smiling round face. “Zoey, I’m so glad you’re feelin’ better! I was so worried when I heard you’d hurt yourself. I’m really glad you’re finally here.”
“Thanks,” I said, still staring around what was now my room, too, feeling totally overwhelmed and weirdly on the edge of tears again.
“It’s kinda scary, isn’t it?” Stevie Rae was watching me with big, serious blue eyes that were filled with sympathetic tears. I nodded, not trusting my voice.
“I know. I cried the whole first night.”
I swallowed back my own tears and asked, “How long have you been here?”
“Three months. And, man, I was glad when they told me I was getting a roommate!”
“You knew I was coming?”
She nodded vigorously. “Oh, yeah! Neferet told me day before yesterday that the Tracker had sensed you and was going to Mark you. I thought you’d be here yesterday, but then I heard that you’d had an accident and been brought to the clinic. What happened?”
I shrugged and said, “I was looking for my grandma and I fell and hit my head.” I wasn’t getting the weird feeling that told me to keep my mouth shut, but I wasn’t sure how much I should say to Stevie Rae yet, and I was relieved when she nodded as though she understood and didn’t ask any more questions about the accident—or mention my weird colored-in Mark.
“Your parents freaked when you got Marked?”
“Totally. Didn’t yours?”
“Actually, my mama was okay with it. She said anything that got me out of Henrietta was a good thing.”
“Henrietta, Oklahoma?” I asked, glad to move to a subject that was not all about me.
“Sadly, yes.”
Stevie Rae flopped down on the bed in front of the Kenny Chesney poster and motioned for me to sit on the one across the room from her. I did, and then felt a little jolt of surprise when I realized that I was sitting on my cool hot-pink and green Ralph Lauren comforter from home. I looked at the little oak end table and blinked. There was my annoying, ugly alarm clock, nerdy glasses for when I’m sick of wearing my contacts, and the picture of Grandma and me from last summer. And in the bookshelves behind the computer on my side of the room I saw my Gossip Girls and Bubbles series books (along with some of my other favorites, including Bram Stoker’s Dracula—which was more than a little ironic), some CDs, my laptop, and—oh my dear sweet lord—my Monsters Inc. figurines. How incredibly embarrassing. My backpack was sitting on the floor next to my bed.
“Your grandma brought your stuff up here. She’s really nice,” Stevie Rae said.
“She’s more than nice. She’s brave as hell to have faced my mom and her stupid husband to get this stuff for me. I can only imagine the overly dramatic scene my mom caused.” I sighed and then shook my head.
“Yeah, I guess I’m lucky. At least my mama was cool about all of this,” Stevie Rae pointed to the outline of the crescent moon on her forehead. “Even if my daddy lost every bit of his mind, me being his only ‘baby girl’ and all.” She shrugged and then giggled. “My three brothers thought it was awesome and wanted to know if I could help them get vampyre chicks.” She rolled her eyes. “Stupid boys.”
“Stupid boys,” I echoed and smiled at her. If she thought boys were stupid she and I would get along fine.
“Mostly now I’m okay with all of this. I mean, the classes are weird but I like them—especially the Tae Kwan Do class. I kinda like to kick butt.” She grinned mischievously, like a little blonde elf. “I like the uniforms, which totally shocked me at first. I mean, would anyone expect to like school uniforms? But we can add stuff to them and make them unique, so they don’t look like typical stuck-up, boring school uniforms. And there are some seriously hot guys here—even if boys are stupid.” Her eyes sparkled. “Mostly I’m just so darn glad to be out of Henrietta that I don’t mind all the other stuff, even if Tulsa is kinda scary because it’s so big.”
“Tulsa isn’t scary,” I said automatically. Unlike too many kids from our suburb of Broken Arrow, I actually knew my way around Tulsa, thanks to what
Grandma liked to call “field-tripping” with her. “You just have to know where to go. There’s a great bead gallery where you can make your own jewelry downtown on Brady Street, and next door to that is Lola’s at the Bowery—she has the best desserts in town. Cherry Street is cool, too. We’re not far from there now. Actually, we’re right by the awesome Philbrook Museum and Utica Square. There’s some excellent shopping there and—”
I suddenly realized what I was saying. Did vampyre kids get to mingle with regular kids? I searched my memory. No. I’d never seen kids with crescent moon outlines hanging around the Philbrook or Utica’s Gap or Banana Republic or Starbucks. I’d never seen them at the movies. Hell! I’d never even seen a vampyre kid before today. So would they keep us locked up here for four years? Feeling a little short of breath and claustrophobic I asked, “Do we ever get out of here?”
“Yeah, but there are all sorts of rules you have to follow.”
“Rules? Like what?”
“Well, you can’t wear any part of the school uniform—” She broke off suddenly. “Shoot! That reminds me. We have to hurry. Dinner is in a few minutes and you need to change.” She jumped up and started to rummage through the closet that was on my side of the room, chattering at me from over her shoulder the whole time. “Neferet had some clothes delivered here last night. Don’t worry about the sizes not being right. Somehow they always know what size we’ll be before they actually see us—it’s kinda freaky how the adult vamps know way more than they should. Anyway, don’t be scared. I was serious before when I said the uniforms aren’t as awful as you’d think they’d be. You really can add your own stuff to them—like me.”
I looked at her. I mean, really looked at her. She was wearing a pair of honest-to-God Roper jeans. You know, the kind those agkids wear that are way too tight and have no back pockets. How anyone could think no back pockets and tightness was cute, I’d honestly never understand. Stevie Rae was totally skinny, and the jeans even made her butt look wide. I knew before I looked at the girl’s feet what she’d be wearing—cowboy boots. I glanced down and sighed. Yep. Brown leather, flat-heeled, pointy-tipped cowboy boots. Tucked into her countrified jeans was a black, long-sleeved cotton blouse that had the expensive look of something you’d find at Saks or Neiman Marcus, versus the cheaper see-through shirts that overpriced Abercrombie tries to make us believe aren’t slutty. When she glanced over at me I saw that she had double-pierced ears with little silver hoops in them. She turned and held out in one hand a black blouse like the one she had on, and a pullover sweater in another, and I decided that even though the country look wasn’t for me she was kinda cute with her mixture of hayseed and chic.
“Here ya go! Just throw these on over your jeans and we’ll be ready.”
The flickering light from the cowboy-boot lamp caught on a streak of silver embroidery that was on the breast of the sweater she was holding out. I got up and took the two shirts, holding the sweater up so I could see the front of it better. The silver embroidery was in the shape of a spiral that glittered around and around in a delicate circle that would rest over my heart.
“It’s our sign,” Stevie Rae said.
“Our sign?”
“Yeah, each class—here they call them third formers, fourth formers, fifth formers, and sixth formers—has their own sign. We’re third formers, so our sign is the silver labyrinth of the Goddess Nyx.”
“What does it mean?” I asked, more to myself than to her as I traced my finger around the sliver circles.
“It stands for our new beginning as we start walking the Path of Night and learn the ways of the Goddess and the possibilities of our new life.”
I looked up at her, surprised that she suddenly sounded so serious. She grinned a little shyly at me and shrugged her shoulders. “It one of the first things you learn in Vampyre Sociology 101. That’s the class Neferet teaches, and it sure beats the heck outta the boring classes I was taking at Henrietta High, home of the fighting hens. Ugh. Fighting hens! What kind of a mascot is that?” She shook her head and rolled her eyes while I laughed. “Anyway, I heard Neferet is your mentor, which is really lucky. She hardly takes on any new kids, and besides being High Priestess, she’s way the coolest teacher here.”
What she didn’t say was that I’m not just lucky, I’m “special” with my weird colored-in Mark. Which reminded me . . .
“Stevie Rae, why haven’t you asked me about my Mark? I mean, I appreciate you not bombarding me with a hundred questions, but all the way up here everyone who saw me stared at my Mark. Aphrodite mentioned it almost the second we were alone. You haven’t even really looked at it. Why?”
Then she did finally look at my forehead before she shrugged and met my eyes again. “You’re my roommate. I figured you’d tell me what was up with it when you were ready. One thing growing up in a small town like Henrietta taught me is that it’s best to mind your own business if you want someone to stay your friend. Well, we’re gonna be rooming together for four years . . .” She paused and in the gap between words sat the big, ugly unsaid truth that we’d be roommates for four years only if both of us survived the Change. Stevie Rae swallowed hard and finished in a rush, “I guess what I’m trying to say is that I want us to be friends.”
I smiled at her. She looked so young and hopeful—so nice and normal and not at all what I imagined a vampyre kid would be. I felt a little stirring of hope. Maybe I could find a way to fit in here. “I want to be friends, too.”
“Yea for that!” I swear she looked like a wriggly puppy again. “But come on! Hurry—we don’t want to be late.”
She gave me a shove toward a door that sat between the two closets before she hurried over to a makeup mirror on her computer desk and started brushing at her short hair. I ducked inside to find a tiny bathroom, and quickly pulled off my BA Tigers T-shirt and put on the cotton blouse and over it the silk knit sweater that was a deep, pretty shade of purple with little black plaid lines going through it. I was just getting ready to go back into the room to grab my backpack so I could try to fix my face and hair with the makeup and stuff I’d brought, when I glanced in the mirror over the sink. My face was still white, but it had lost the scary, unhealthy paleness it had earlier. My hair looked insane, all wild and uncombed, and I could faintly see the slim line of dark stitches just above my left temple. But it was the sapphire-colored Mark that caught my eyes. While I stared at it, entranced by its exotic beauty, the bathroom light caught the silver labyrinth embroidered over my heart. I decided that the two symbols somehow matched, even though they were different shapes . . . different colors . . .
But did I match them? And did I match this strange new world?
I squeezed my eyes shut tightly and hoped desperately that whatever we were eating for dinner (oh, please let there not be any blood-drinking involved) wouldn’t disagree with my already screwed-up, nervous stomach.
“Oh, no . . .” I whispered to myself, “it would be just my luck to get a raging case of diarrhea.”
CHAPTER NINE
Okay, the cafeteria was cool—oops, I mean “dining hall,” as the silver plaque outside the entrance proclaimed. It was nothing at all like SIHS’s freezing cold monstrous cafeteria where the acoustics were so bad that even though I sat right next to Kayla I couldn’t hear what she was babbling at me half the time. This room was warm and friendly. The walls were made of the same weird mixture of jutting bricks and black rock as the exterior of the building and the room was filled with heavy wooden picnic tables that had matching benches with padded seats and backs. Each table sat about six kids and radiated out from a large, unoccupied table situated at the center of the room that was practically overflowing with fruit and cheese and meat, and a crystal goblet that was filled with something that looked suspiciously like red wine. (Huh? Wine at school? What?) The ceiling was low and the rear wall was made up of windows with a glass door in the center. Heavy burgundy velvet drapes were pulled open so that I could see outside to a beautiful little courtya
rd with stone benches, winding paths, and ornamental bushes and flowers. In the middle of the courtyard was a marble fountain with water spouting from the top of something that looked an awful lot like a pineapple. It was very pretty, especially lit up by the moonlight and the occasional antique gaslight.
Most of the tables were already filled with eating, talking kids who glanced up with obvious curiosity when Stevie Rae and I entered the room. I took a deep breath and held my head high. Might as well give them a clear view of the Mark they all seemed so obsessed with. Stevie Rae led me to the side of the room that had the typical cafeteria servers handing out food from behind buffet-style glass thingies.
“What’s the table in the middle of the room for?” I asked as we walked.
“It’s the symbolic offering to the Goddess Nyx. There’s always a place set at that table for her. It seems kinda weird at first, but pretty soon it won’t seem so weird and it’ll feel right to you.”
Actually, it didn’t seem that weird to me. In a way, it made sense. The Goddess was so alive here. Her Mark was everywhere. Her statue stood proudly in front of her Temple. I was also starting to notice all over the school little pictures and figurines that represented her. Her High Priestess was my mentor and, I had to admit to myself, I already felt connected to Nyx. With an effort, I stopped myself from touching the Mark on my forehead. Instead I grabbed a tray and moved behind Stevie Rae in line.
“Don’t worry,” she whispered to me. “The food’s real good. They don’t make you drink blood or eat raw meat or anything like that.”
Relieved, I unclenched my jaws. Most of the kids were already eating, so the line was short, and as Stevie Rae and I got up to the food I felt my mouth start to water. Spaghetti! I sniffed deeply: with garlic!
“That whole vampyres can’t stand garlic thing is total bullshit—pardon my French,” Stevie Rae was saying under her breath to me as we loaded up our plates.
“Okay, what about that whole vampyres have to drink blood thing?” I whispered back.