“Not really,” I hedged.
He looked sideways at me. “So you don’t like him?”
Dammit, I couldn’t lie. “I want to not like him, but….” I played with the hem of my dress.
He nodded, shifting gears. “But you do.”
I couldn’t bear to look at his face as a frown pulled at my lips. “Yeah. It’s complicated.”
“That’s cool. I can do friends. I mean, I wanted more, but…”
My heart pinched. This was not the way to start a date. “I’m so sorry. You’re such a nice guy.”
“Ouch. Nice guy.” He feigned a painful look.
I laughed. “Hey, nothing wrong with being the nice guy.”
He chuckled. “But the dark broody asshole always gets the girl.”
Yeah, I guess that’s true in this case. “We’re still going to have an awesome night,” I declared.
He gave me an easygoing smile, looking sideways at me. “Yes we are, because I’m an amazing dancer.”
I held my hands out. “Whoa. That’s a bold statement. I’m going to need some proof.”
He nodded. “You just wait. They don’t call me Footloose Fred for nothing.”
I laughed again. Fred was funny and always lighthearted; there wasn’t a serious cloud over every conversation like there was with Lincoln. Why couldn’t I like him? Maybe in time I could… My mom always said the best relationships came from friendships.
Before I knew it, we were pulling up to the Beverly Hills hotel. He rolled up to the valet and then whipped his phone out. “Selfie for my dad? Proof there was a hot girl in his car with me?” He held it up, the camera facing us.
With a grin, I leaned in and kissed his cheek. He’d already declared we were friends, so I figured it was harmless.
After snapping the pic, he smiled. “Thanks. He’ll get a kick out of that.”
My door opened suddenly, and Lincoln was there, glaring down at me. “Let’s get inside. This area isn’t secure.”
“My date can get my door, Lincoln,” I snapped.
“Your date’s too busy ogling at you,” he just short of growled.
Lincoln Grey is jealous.
“You don’t get to do that. You don’t get to play hot and cold. Nope.” I gave him a death glare.
Mofo better not mess with me like that.
Fred cleared his throat near the big double doors, and I blasted past my ‘security detail,’ leaving Lincoln with his jaw tight and fire in his eyes.
Shea, Luke, Angela, Chloe and everyone else arrived shortly after us. The winter ball was like an amazing catered wedding, except with no ceremony. It was a fundraiser for helping underprivileged families transfer from outside the war zones to inside the safety of Angel City. I guessed the tickets were pricey—Fred had paid for both of us.
They were also having a silent auction. Shea and I bid on bestie pedicures. I doubted we’d get it, since our highest bid was twenty-five dollars and the retail amount was sixty, but a girl had to dream.
Lincoln was watching me like a hawk all night. Anywhere I went, his eyes moved. It was unnerving, to say the least. Darren, Blake and Noah were a little more relaxed. Noah took breaks to dance with Shea, as Darren pigged out at the chocolate fountain. A man after my own heart. Blake, whom I’d dubbed the sweet one, was standing near Lincoln, and doing whatever he said. The sides of the large ballroom were sprinkled with Fallen Army guards.
Shea took a sip of her water, and then pointed to a fellow student—Ryce, a super-hot Centaur. It was weird to call him hot since he was half animal, but his upper half had it going on.
“If I slept with him, would that be considered bestiality?” she asked the table.
“Eww, Shea! Is this the shit you think about on a daily basis?” I asked her, shivering from the mental images.
She nodded seriously.
Fred chuckled. “The Centaurs stick together when mating, for obvious reasons.”
Shea seemed sad about that, sitting back in her chair.
“Let’s dance!” I declared, and grabbed Fred’s hand. I wasn’t going to sit there and talk about Shea’s weird thoughts anymore. Plus, I looked three months pregnant after eating so much amazing food. It would be good to burn some of that off.
Fred laughed, and followed me to the dance floor. We danced for an hour, and he was indeed good. He popped, locked, moonwalked and all of that, and not in the cheesy way. Michael Jackson was totally his spirit animal.
“Damn, boy. You’ve got moves!” I gushed.
He grinned. “My mom always wanted a daughter but got three sons instead. So she put me in hip-hop lessons when I was three.”
I nodded, impressed. “You should do that professionally or something,” I shouted over the music.
“Maybe in another life.” He added with a shrug.
Yeah, pursuing our artistic passions wasn’t really at the top of the agenda for any of us right now.
“I gotta pee. Be right back,” I told him.
Fred nodded, doing circles around Shea, who was pulling off a very impressive Beyoncé number. For as long as I’d known Shea, we had loved dancing. It was our thing, our stress reliever, and we danced without a care of who was watching.
“Where are you going?” Lincoln’s deep voice called behind me. I stopped in my quest for the restroom and threw a death glare over my shoulder. I’d forgotten he was there.
“I’m going to the bathroom. Is that okay?” I crossed my arms over my chest.
He nodded, placing one hand on his sword. “Lead the way.”
I rolled my eyes. “You’re not coming. I’ll be fine.”
Lincoln simply stared at me and stood there, waiting for me to start walking again.
‘He has no idea what we’re capable of,’ Sera said from inside my boot. She sounded as offended as I felt.
‘I know. He thinks I’m a baby.’
When I didn’t budge, Lincoln sighed, gripped my arm lightly, and pulled me to the edge of the room. I could now clearly see a sign that said ‘Bathroom’ hung overhead, and at the end of the long hallway were two doors.
“Listen, I know you think I’m being overly cautious, but trust me. I have it on very good intel that there could be an attack at this party. That’s why I’m so jumpy,” he murmured.
My whole body went rigid. “An attack? Why didn’t you say something earlier? Call off the event.” Now, it made sense that there were so many Fallen Army stationed at the doors.
He sighed, running a hand through his hair. “Raphael doesn’t trust my intel, said it wasn’t enough for him to call off an event that brings in thousands for charity, so we compromised by beefing up security.”
I rubbed my arms, itching to pull out my dagger. I had to pee really bad, but I wanted to know more. “Why would they attack a charity event?” I realized the second it left my mouth that it was a na?ve and stupid question.
“They’ll always try to take out Fallen Academy students. Less people to serve in the army that destroys them,” he explained.
I rubbed my arms again, doing the pee dance. “Sometimes I forget we’re at war.”
Lincoln looked haunted. “I’ll never forget.” I squirmed again. “Go pee, woman!” he shouted, pointing down the hall.
“Now I’m scared,” I told him, eyeing the dark hallway. He’d just told me there was probably going to be an attack. A bathroom stall, or a dark hallway was the best place to jump someone.
He chuckled, his blue eyes twinkling. “I’ll watch your back. Go.”
Why is he so gorgeous? Why does he kiss so good? Why am I staring at his lips?
Not wanting Lincoln to think I was a total wuss, I took off down the hall, my eyes darting all over the place as I sniffed for sulfur, vinegar, or any weird demon smell. Coming up with nothing, I opened the bathroom door, and peeked my head inside.
“Hello?” No response. “Demon-friendly girl coming in,” I said nervously.
I bent down and checked under the stalls, a sigh of relief escaping when I saw I was alone. I peed quickly and then washed my hands, but when I was reaching for a paper towel, I heard a muffled scream.
My eyes widened, and I reached for Sera. Maybe I was just in a jumpy mood and the scream was a shout of joy, but now that I was focused, it sounded like the music had stopped.
More screams.