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Author's note: you might want to save this for an evening when you have a good long while to read leisurely. I hope that if and when you join me, we'll share an excellent journey ... but we aren't going to get there quickly
;)
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PROLOGUE
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When I snapped at Cora, it was obvious that I was way too stressed. As in: unbelievably, unmanage-ably, un-live-ably stressed.
Presumably we all were. But I'd just taken it out on the kindest person I knew. Nobody should've been rude to Cora, let alone someone who, if I'm being
totally
honest with you, had a fair bit of a crush on her.
And why, exactly, had I snapped? Well, we'd been studying in the Divinorium library - which sounds like most of our days here, which we spend memorizing spells in the library, uncorking vials in the chemistry lab to experience new sensations, or nervously darting between buildings - and I'd been sitting at a large mahogany table with Cora.
And Cora had been tapping her pencil.
Yup, dear reader, that was all. After a few minutes spent pressing the eraser absentmindedly against her glossy lower lip (which looked sexy enough that I'd already felt distracted), Cora had begun tapping her pencil against the wood.
Tlick. Tlick. Tlick.
At which point I'd hissed, "If you're hoping to hide from monsters by disguising as a metronome, maybe the library isn't the best place to practice."
Obviously I knew that I was being awful, even as I spoke. It wasn't funny! Nor even remotely clever.
But Cora must've been feeling sufficiently on edge that my snarky comment got to her. She stood up without a word, grabbed her things, and rushed off toward the exit. So, I swore under my breath, scooped my own scrolls and such, and chased after her. We probably both looked like overwrought contrails of cape and lace as we bustled across the room.
"Cora, wait," I called out, at which point not only had I been rude to Cora, but also,
I
was the person being most disruptive in the library, probably drawing irate glares from our classmates.
But, whatever. I could deal later with anybody else who was cross with me. Apologizing to Cora felt more urgent.
Seriously, even if I
didn't
have a crush on her, I'd want to make things right with Cora. She was always looking out for others - I bet several of us wouldn't have survived even our first
week
at the Divinorium except that Cora noticed when people weren't where she expected them to be and would quickly gather the rest of us to rescue them - and always so optimistic that we'd get through our training here together.
And
she's beautiful. I mean, not just by Divinorium standards (my own eyes would surely look dark from the lack of sleep even if I didn't whip out my gothiest "Black Like Your Soul" eyeliner most mornings): Cora would seem beautiful anywhere, with her bright blue eyes, sandy blonde hair, and cherubic cheeks. And she's so often smiling, accentuating her plush pink lips and slightly dimpled chin. Faint constellations of freckles arc over her button nose each time she crinkles those little eyes.
I bet that at least half our classmates had either subtly or not-so-subtly hinted at hooking up with Cora and her boyfriend Rick (also attractive: conventionally handsome in that clean-cut, strong-jawed, unabashedly confident way of ex-high-school-basketball players). And every single time it happened, I bet, the two of them had probably turned to smile adoringly at each other before Cora gently, kindly, lovingly let the person down.
At least, that's how it had gone when the person not-so-subtly propositioning them was me.
But I wasn't the only person who'd felt drawn to them - the two of them had made close friendships right away, Cora with Yvonne, and Rick with Trevor (who was also an ex-athlete, football ... although the thing that
really
cemented Rick and Trevor's friendship was that they were both huge fans of Broadway musicals. The two of them would often encourage each other to do push-ups in a hallway, or chin-ups from a door frame, and they'd sometimes even go outside jogging in the chilly morning air. Which would have been
fine
, except that then they'd return, sweaty and puffing, still singing a show tune in harmony together, which would inevitably remind me how little energy I had left over for anything other than studying and fearing for my life).
And when Cora and Rick strolled through the hallways together, or slipped into each other's rooms at night (which they always tried to do surreptitiously, although I have no idea why - whenever they had sex, Cora would get
very loud
), I can't have been the only one who watched them wistfully, jealous of their relationship.
Cora and Rick had apparently dated for the entirety of their junior and senior years of college; they'd been planning to get married after graduation and join the Peace Corps together. Right up until they realized that they both needed to come
here
to study instead.
Still, think about it: how great would it feel to arrive at the Divinorium
with
someone? To know that there was a person nearby whom you could trust absolutely, someone who'd give up everything in order to keep you safe. A person whom you'd keep safe in turn, maybe listening to them snore softly at night while you took care of all the warding and vigilance and occasional monster quelling that the rest of us shouldered daily.
Although, with how dramatically Cora's face crumpled when I was rude, it seemed like she must have been near her limit, too. I mean, let's be honest: even if it was only
every other night
that either Rick or Cora needed to fend off monsters for each other, isn't that still pretty awful compared to any normal person's life? And in some ways, it might even feel worse to arrive here with a partner: you'd feel constantly worried about
their
safety, too, instead of just hunkering down and focusing on yourself.
Although, dear reader, I must say that all our lives got better after we learned to love everyone around us more.
But I'm getting ahead of myself - in that moment, all I knew was that I'd just been rude to someone I'd been crushing on.
"Cora, wait," I called out again as I hurried after her, only quieting my voice after I finally caught up. "Cora, I'm sorry. That was awful of me. I ..."
"No," she said, "you're right, I shouldn't have ..."
"Cora, no, it wasn't your fault. I'm just ..."
Cora looked uncomfortable talking to me - she was staring at the floor, letting a veil of blonde hair dangle over her face to shield herself from me. She probably wanted to leave, to just get out of the library and maybe find Rick or even spend some time alone. (Although that sort of
totally normal
emotional response can be dangerous at the Divinorium. It's not a good idea to even step outside a building until you've got your wits about you.)
"Look," Cora said, "can we do this later, because I ..."
I bent my knees a little, crouching down to catch her gaze; when her eyes met mine, her voice trailed off. I forced a little smile; Cora made an effort to smile back, but couldn't. Her eyes looked wet.
And, I know. Dear reader, obviously I know. Like, somebody tapping a pencil? Somebody being rude
for a moment?
These are such minor things!
But this school - everything we'd been through before arriving, and all the demands and terrors of our semester so far - was wrecking us.
And it's not like we were slouches. Under normal circumstances, my classmates and I could clearly
do
school. I mean, we'd all had other options besides attending the Divinorium. Good ones, too: Shane and Noah already held degrees from Yale and Stanford Law; Eddie had been midway through an MBA. Sebastian, Yvonne, and Ravi were at various stages along the trajectory from pre-med to medical school to residency. Quinn was studying experimental physics; Nicole had a grant to do historical research at the Bodlean.
I'd been planning on an M.D./Ph.D. For as long as I could remember, I'd wanted to be a doctor - to help people get better when they were sick. I know, right: I had such big dreams! And one of my college professors had told me that if you get accepted for an M.D./Ph.D., you can get your medical degree for free - that seemed crucial, since nobody would be helping me with money.
But none of that happened. Not for me, not for any of us.
Instead, we'd all matriculated here.
Which was a decision born of desperation. Like, made entirely in self-defense. Because what good would it do, the whole "wanting to be a doctor" thing, after I'd begun to notice monsters lurking within every shadow, their fanged mouths salivating over the inchoate power burgeoning inside me?
Okay, maybe I should just come out and say it: we had magic. Like, big-time: conjurations, levitation, manipulating time and space. That's why we were invited to study here.
And in the Divinorium enrollment materials - that shimmery roll of parchment I found on my nightstand one morning that explained in elegant cursive script that, although the school wasn't safe, and although no actual instructors could accompany us for our studies (apparently their power would lure so many additional monsters that we'd be better off training on our own), we'd be
safer
here - we were always referred to as "gifted."
As in, "You and your gifted fellows will study the theoretical underpinnings of magic and hone its practical applications."
As in, "You have come to our attention in light of your latent gifts."
But, dear reader, let me tell you: that was
never
the word we used among ourselves. When my classmates and I were whispering to each other in the Divinorium library, or exchanging snatches of conversation in the dormitory halls before we locked and warded our doors at night, we always called each other "haunted."
Like, "When did you first realize you were haunted?
The sensation of magic coming in actually feels a little bit like puberty, except that instead of waking up in the middle of the night all flustered and wet, you might wake up after having set your sheets
on fire
. Or maybe you'd have a night like I did, in February of my senior year of college, when a hookup yanked on his clothes and stormed out of my apartment at two a.m. because apparently I'd electrically shocked him awake several times. In my sleep!
I like to think that I'm pretty good in bed, but I guess I hadn't been good enough for him to put up with