In Advanced Elemental Science, Mr. Stanton hadn’t bothered with a seating chart, which was unusual. Bryn sat next to Clint and Ivy. Jaxon sat a few seats away.
“Class, I need your full attention. I’m sure you heard that the guards found a disoriented student and escorted him to the Medics for treatment. It has been determined that someone drugged him and then siphoned off his Quintessence. While I have heard the term dragon-pire thrown around campus, there is no such thing. In the past there were cult members who attempted to feed off all the clans in order to obtain their breath weapons. Doing this supposedly made them more powerful overall and had the side effect of turning their eyes and hair silver which is why they were called Silvers. Given their level of mastery over Quintessence, they would then alter their hair and eye color to blend in with the general population.”
“Dragon-pire seems more accurate,” Clint said.
“It’s also more inflammatory. And it implies some undead villain from a movie who converts people into children of the night. I don’t know who coined the phrase, but whoever it was”—Mr. Stanton eyeballed Clint like he knew the truth—“should stop using the term.”
“Not to be disrespectful,” Jaxon said, “but what we call them doesn’t really matter. What matters is finding them and stopping them.”
“Agreed, and a lot of people are working toward that end. For now, keep in mind that the sole reason someone is doing this could be to cause friction between the Clans and the Hybrids. Don’t jump to any conclusions about who is behind this. And… It would be best if students didn’t travel anywhere alone.”
After their last class, Clint and Ivy went to Bryn’s dorm room to hang out and do homework, which meant that Bryn and Ivy did homework while Clint built card houses.
“Is it cheating if I push the first level of cards down into the carpet a bit?” Clint asked as he slid the card back and forth, embedding it in the carpet fiber.
“That’s how my dad always started,” Bryn said. She finished writing a five-paragraph essay and then set her pen down.
“Mr. Stanton was none too happy about the whole dragon-pire name,” Clint said. “And he seems to know I started it.”
“You do have that special skill set,” Bryn said. “Annoying people far and wide.”
“It’s a gift,” Clint said.
“In theory, any dragon could siphon Quintessence from another dragon,” Ivy said. “I can’t decide which would be better. The Silver cult reviving, or crazy dragons who want us to think the cult has revived to make us distrust hybrids.”
“If it’s just someone wanting to disturb the fragile peace,” Bryn said, “there are a lot of easier ways to do that.”
“Do you think someone could be doing it to create a distraction?” Ivy asked.
“Maybe,” Bryn said. “But why? What activity are they trying to keep hidden?”
“Who knows,” Clint said. “But they managed to shut down the campus for an entire day. If they were searching for something like more of those evil tyrant crowns or a secret doorway leading to a hidden treasure, they would have been able to explore the campus at will.”
“That’s an interesting idea,” Bryn said.
A knock sounded on her door. Since both her friends were present, she said, “Jaxon, is that you?”
“Yes,” he said.
She stood and opened the door. He was wearing a smirk which usually accompanied some mandate from his mother and her grandmother. She waved him into the room. “What joyous news are you here to share?”
“Apparently, we’re having a pre-holiday celebration at your grandparents’ house.”
“We? Who’s we?” Because she was okay with hanging around Jaxon and Lillith, but there was only so much time she could spend in Ferrin’s company.
“My family, including Asher, and your family, minus your father.”
It took her a moment to process what he’d said. “So my mother is supposed to mingle with your father?”
“I thought you’d be more upset that your dad wasn’t included,” Jaxon said.
Bryn laughed. “Inviting my father to spend time around your father would result in bloodshed, so that part doesn’t surprise me. And I knew my mom wouldn’t be invited to the Christmas ball, but I didn’t expect this. Whose idea was it?”
“It may have been my mother’s. I think she’s feeling overly maternal and wants to make sure that your mother has a chance to spend part of the holidays with you.”
“That’s sweet,” Ivy said.
“And a bit twisted,” Clint added.
Jaxon shoved his hands in his front pockets. “I have no answers. I’m just delivering the news.”
There was something he wasn’t telling her. “There’s more, isn’t there?”
“We’re supposed to exchange gifts,” Jaxon said.
“All of us?”
“No. You and I are supposed to show how we’re the perfect couple by exchanging the perfect gifts.”
“Says who?” Bryn asked.
“Does it matter? Each couple is supposed to exchange gifts.”
“Which means my mom will be left out of the loop, which is kind of bullshit.”
“That may be the point,” Jaxon said.
“So you’re inviting Bryn’s mom to a party so that she can be with Bryn during the holidays, but also so you can point out that she doesn’t fit with the group,” Clint said. “Or am I misreading the situation?”
“You’re reading it correctly,” Jaxon said.
“This sucks,” Bryn said. “If your mom was the one who was trying to make nice, who insisted on the gift exchange?”
“Take your pick…my father or either of your grandparents,” Jaxon said. “Honestly, I think you should suggest that your mom refuse the invitation. No good can come of this. You and my mother are the only ones who will be trying to make nice. Everyone else will be attempting to put your mother in her place.”
“Including you?” Bryn asked. Because they needed to straighten that shit out right away.
“You’ve made no secret about your feelings for my father,” Jaxon said. “While I won’t be openly rude to your mother, I have no desire to spend time with her.”
Well, crap. When he put it that way…
“You thought you had the moral high ground, didn’t you?” Jaxon raised an eyebrow.
“No comment.” Bryn cleared her throat. “Now that my parents are back in the picture, I will do my best to be grudgingly respectful toward your father, if you’ll do the same for my parents.”
“That’s not really equal,” Clint said. “Because you like his mom.”
Bryn laughed. “Clint is right.”
“That doesn’t change anything,” Jaxon said. “We’ll agree to be civil and moderately respectful. If I were you, I’d call your grandmother and try to cancel the gift exchange idea. Tell her we’d rather exchange gifts on our own or something like that.”
“Do we have to buy something for each other?” Bryn asked.
“It’s Christmas,” Jaxon said, like that explained everything.
“Can we just agree to give gifts to charities in each other’s names?” Bryn asked because that would make her life so much easier.
“What does the Blue half of your genes say to that question?” Jaxon asked. “What are the gifts truly for?”
Bryn groaned. “That’s right. I forgot. I’ll be buying you a gift to show everyone how much money I have and you actually liking the present is irrelevant.”
“Wrong,” Jaxon said. “You’re supposed to buy a gift the person will like that will also inspire jealousy in others because they can’t afford it.”
“Wow,” Ivy said. “That’s all sorts of screwed up.”
“It’s a game,” Jaxon said. “And Bryn needs to learn how to play it.”
Bryn stomped her feet like a toddler. “I don’t want to.”
“That was funny,” Jaxon said, pointing at her obviously fake performance. “But you still have to do it.”
“Ugh,” Bryn said. “Any other happy news you’d like to share?”
“No. That’s all the joy and light I have to shed on your life this evening,” he said. “I’ll let myself out.”
Bryn watched as he left. Then she turned to her friends. “What in the hell am I supposed to buy a Westgate for Christmas?”
“A diamond studded jock strap?” Clint suggested.
“Ewww,” Bryn said. “Thank you for putting that bizarre image into my brain.”
Ivy laughed.
Chapter Twenty