Bliss was one of the lucky few. She found she could switch from girl to smoke and back again, and then tried out other forms—a white horse, a black crow, a spider monkey— before settling into the shape of a golden lioness.
But Schuyler simply stood in the middle of the room, getting more and more frustrated with each failed attempt. “Maybe it’s because I’m half human,” she sighed when yet another try at forcing her matter to change into a different configuration resulted in her simply falling onto the floor, still herself.
“Hey, what’s wrong with being human?” Oliver asked, watching with fascination as Mimi Force transformed herself into a phoenix, a column of fire, and a red serpent in the space of three seconds. “Wow—she’s good.”
“Show-off,” Bliss hissed. “Don’t worry about her. And stop laughing, Ollie. You’re distracting Schuyler!” Bliss tried not to be too smug about her success, but it was satisfying to know that Schuyler wasn’t great at everything.
“Look, here’s what you do. You’re supposed to visualize your goal. You have to be the fog. Think like fog. Let your mind go blank. Can you feel it—a wispiness—it starts in the edge of your skin, and then . . .”
Schuyler obediently closed her eyes. “Okay, I’m thinking fog. Golden Gate. San Francisco. Little cat feet. I don’t know . . . it’s not happening.”
“Sshhhh,” Bliss admonished. She could already feel the transformation begin, could feel all her senses shift, could feel her very being disappear into a soft gray cloud. She was having fun imagining how she could use this new talent, when she had another vision. It hit her with a bang. The starkness of the image was like a punch in the gut.
Dylan.
If he’d looked merely disheveled before, he was worse now. His clothing was in tatters, his shirt ripped to shreds, his jeans torn, and his hair wild. He looked like he hadn’t eaten or slept in weeks. He was standing in front of the school gates, shaking the bars and raving like a madman.
“What’s wrong?” Schuyler asked immediately when Bliss stumbled.
“Dylan. He’s here.”
That was all she needed to say.
The three of them ran out of the Committee meeting, ignoring the curious faces of the other members, leaving the library, and running down the stairs. Their vampire speed meant Schuyler and Bliss arrived at the gates ahead of Oliver, who was gasping as he tried to keep up with them.
Duchesne was located on a quiet corner of Ninety-sixth Street, on Prep School Row. Since it was mid-afternoon, the streets were practically deserted, save for a nanny or two pushing a stroller toward the park.
The boy who stood in the middle of the sidewalk violently shaking the gates looked like a prophet from a bygone age, a throwback to a time of preachers and pontificators, when ragged men warned about the End Of The World. There was almost no sign of the teenage boy who had wanted to grow up to play guitar like Jimi Hendrix and had been the instigator of countless pranks.
“ABOMINATION!” he thundered when he saw them.
“It’s my fault,” Bliss cried, already close to tears at the sight of Dylan. “I know I promised I was going to tell the Conclave about him, but I couldn’t. And I didn’t check up on him . . . I left him and I ignored him . . . I wanted him to just go away. It’s all my fault.”
“No, it’s mine,” Schuyler said. “I was going to tell Lawrence, but—”
“It’s all our fault,” Oliver said firmly. “We should have done something about him, but we didn’t. Look, we’ve got to get him out of here. People are going to start asking questions,” he said as an elderly woman walking a poodle crossed the street and shot a puzzled look in their direction. “We don’t want the police involved.”
Dylan suddenly lunged toward them, clawing through the bars and gargling in a language they didn’t understand.
Schuyler just barely ducked his reach. “We’ve got to get to him before he uses the glom on us again.”
Bliss immediately transformed into the golden lioness. She was a sight to behold—a stalking, ruthless creature. She leaped over the gate and padded up to Dylan, who raged at her. “Devil spawn! TRAITOR!” he hissed.
Bliss cornered him against the iron bars and bared her teeth. She reared back on her hind legs and shoved him with her giant golden paws. Dylan cringed and whimpered, cowering with his hands over his head.
“She’s got him!” Oliver yelled, motioning to Schuyler to move toward Bliss’s right flank.
Schuyler ran to Bliss’s side. She looked Dylan in the eyes. Saw the rage, anger, and confusion there. She wavered. This was no monster. This was a wounded animal.
But Oliver had no qualms. “SCHUYLER! DO IT! NOW!”
“Dormi!” she ordered, and waved her hand in front of Dylan’s face.
Dylan slumped and fell to the ground. Bliss turned back into herself and knelt by his side.
“He’ll sleep until he is commanded to wake up,” Schuyler told them.