No Angel (3 page)

Read No Angel Online

Authors: Helen Keeble

Tags: #Young Adult, #Fantasy, #Humour

BOOK: No Angel
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Michaela finally looked at me, a spark of something—possibly interest, but more probably concern that whatever I had might be contagious—kindling in her eyes. They were so dark that the pupil and iris merged together. “You seem to know a lot about me.” Her exotic accent was pure, liquid sex. “For someone who just arrived.”

Trying to look cool was probably a lost cause at this point, but I deployed my charming smile anyway. “I know more about you than anyone else in this school does.”

One perfect eyebrow raised. “Oh?”

“Yes.” I leaned in closer, holding her challenging gaze. “For a start, I know the truth about the Circle of Trust.”

The response was better than I could have dreamed. Michaela stared at me as if seeing into my very soul. She was so close now that I could feel the heat of her skin, could see her pulse leaping in the hollow of her throat—

“So let’s hear from the male perspective. If you would tell us your thoughts, Raffi?”

What few coherent thoughts I had at that moment were mainly about the view down Michaela’s top, but I didn’t think that was the sort of male perspective Ms. Wormwood meant. Dragging myself back into the everyday world, I tried to remember what the teacher had been wittering on about. Something about the summer reading assignment? What
was
the summer reading assignment? I hadn’t even read the back cover when I’d thrown it in my bag this morning. I glanced down now in search of inspiration and discovered I’d taken out my biology textbook. No help there.

Ms. Wormwood’s look of friendly expectation was starting to slide into the wary expression of a teacher who senses imminent bullshit. “Well,” I said, stalling for time. “I thought it was very interesting.” I snuck a peek at the cover of Michaela’s book, catching a glimpse of a winged and gratuitously shirtless angel tumbling in flames out of a dark sky. No doubt it was some sort of girly romance, all forbidden love and sparkly boyfriends.

“I found it very inspirational,” I said, deciding that I might as well go for broke. Michaela, still searching my face intently, drew in a sharp breath; encouraged, I plowed on. “I really identified with, uh, him.” I gestured at the angel guy.

Ms. Wormwood did not look like she was buying this. “Could you be more specific?”

Not really
. “Well, his struggle totally resonated with me,” I improvised wildly. “And the way that he decided to go for what he wanted, despite everything trying to stop him.”

Ms. Wormwood’s eyebrows shot up. “Interesting. So you would call him the hero of the piece?”

“Absolutely,” I said, hoping I sounded confident. “That sort of tenacity is definitely heroic.”

Ms. Wormwood beamed at me, as a little murmur ran around the classroom. “Very good, Raffi. I do like a student who rejects dogma and draws her—his—own conclusions. Why don’t you read us the famous quote summing up his argument? Lines two fifty-eight to two sixty-three.”

I cast Michaela a sideways glance, to see if she was rapt with admiration at my sensitive nature yet—and was met with a narrow-eyed glare that suggested that if I asked to share her book I was likely to get walloped over the head with it. Recoiling, I hastily fumbled my own copy out of my bag, trying to work out what I’d done wrong. Had I come across as too nerdy? Too pretentious? What?

Finding the right page, I squinted at the text. Oh, great. Poetry.

 

“Here at last

We shall be free;

the Almighty hath not built

Here for his envy, will not drive us hence:

Here we may reign secure, and in my choice

To reign is worth ambition though in Hell:

Better to reign in Hell, than serve in Heaven.”

 

. . . Huh?

“Excellent, pet,” Ms. Wormwood said as I blinked at the page. “Now, who can tell me what Satan means by his speech to the fallen angels here?”

Satan? What the hell kind of romance was this? I checked the back cover as half a dozen hands shot into the air.
Paradise Lost
, it said.
By John Milton
. Apparently, it was all about the war between God and the Devil.

Who I’d just held up as a paragon of manly virtue.

Whoops.

No wonder Michaela had glared at me. She’d now let her hair swing down like a curtain between us, hiding her face. I stifled the urge to groan and thump my head on the desk. This day just kept getting worse and worse.

Busy kicking myself, I barely noticed Michaela whisper something Italian-sounding under her breath. Then her fingers brushed my thigh.

Ms. Wormwood broke off midsentence. “Is there something wrong, Raffi?”

From flat on the floor, I managed to make a strangled sort of noise, shaking my head. Aware of all the eyes staring at me, I quickly picked up my overturned chair and reseated myself. Burying my face in my book, I waited until all the girls had turned back to Ms. Wormwood. Then I cautiously peered over the pages at Michaela.

Her face was still hidden, but somehow she knew I was looking. “And now,” she murmured in a low, throaty voice that made every syllable sound like an invitation to a dirty weekend, “
I
know everything about
you
.” Her knees bumped mine under the desk as she turned toward me. “Do you know what I’m going to do?”

I maintained my smoldering, mysterious silence, mainly because my brain had utterly fused.

Michaela pushed back her hair. Her bloodred lips curved upward, slowly.

“I’m going,” she whispered, her black eyes burning with passion, “to kill you.”

Chapter 4

T
hat evening found me lying on my bed, flipping through stacks of old school yearbooks I’d borrowed from the library, searching for my mum. She’d always been secretive about her life before meeting my dad—“I was a different person back then” was all she’d ever said—but I knew her maiden name and the approximate dates she had to have been here. So far, though, the only mention of a “Foxglove” I’d found was an English teacher who’d apparently been at the school then. Given that the article was about her retiring due to completing twenty years’ service, that couldn’t possibly be my mum, although I did wonder if she was a relative. My mum had been completely estranged from her family, but she’d let slip once—while trying to persuade me of the importance of doing my homework—that I had generations of teachers in my unknown maternal background. “The family business,” she’d called it and then changed the subject quickly.

With a sigh, I gave up on my research and tossed the yearbook aside. I stretched out on my rock-hard mattress, staring up at the beamed ceiling. “Michaela,” I said aloud, rolling the syllables over my tongue. Michaela Dante.

I knew that girls pretended to be disinterested when they actually were panting for you, but when it came to playing hard to get, “I’m going to kill you” was Olympic level. On the other hand, Michaela
had
made a point of sitting next to me in every lesson that afternoon. That had to mean she was interested, right?

A soft, hesitant knock on the door derailed my train of thought. I swung my legs off the bed and reached for the doorknob, a relieved grin spreading across my face. With Michaela’s glowering presence at my back all day, every other girl had treated me as if I was surrounded by an invisible force field. I’d spent all afternoon grimly trying to ignore the whispers and stares, feeling an awful lot like a zoo exhibit. At least
someone
was willing to come and say hello.

By the time I realized that my late-night visitor was almost certainly Krystal, it was too late to hide. My expression frozen somewhere between welcome and horror, I peered cautiously around the half-open door.

“Hi!” said the apparently empty corridor.

I looked down. A blonde girl who couldn’t be older than twelve beamed up at me over the top of a fistful of large, vibrant flowers.

“Uh . . . hi?” I said.

“HiRaffimynameisClairewelcometoSaintMary’swe-loveyoubye!” the girl said all in one breath and thrust her bouquet into my hand. A second later, she was gone.

“Okay,” I said, blinking. Random. Closing the door again, I jammed the flowers into my water glass and set them on the windowsill, where they added a cheerful splash of color to the otherwise grim decor. You’d think that as the only guy here, I would have been given one of the best rooms in the place, but as it was I’d been housed in a pigsty. Literally. The plaque on the front of the building said
BOYS’ DORMITORY (OLD PIGGERY)
. Thanks, Headmistress
.

Still, even if my room was small, at least I had it to myself. In fact, I had the entire building to myself, though the other half dozen rooms were locked. I gazed out the window at the distant lights of the main school complex, just visible through the tangled woods. Nice and private. Far away from all the teachers. That could come in handy.

Another tap at the door interrupted my thoughts. Wondering if HiRaffimynameisClaire had mustered the courage for another hit-and-run sentence, I opened it again.

Same bouquet. Same expression. Different girl.

“HelloRaffimynameisLouisewelcometotheschool-you’rereallyfitbye!”

I was left with yet more flowers and a deepening expression of bemusement. With a shrug, I added the latest tribute to my impromptu vase. I had to admit, the way the girls had decided to greet me was pretty cute.

By the tenth knock on my door in thirty minutes, it was getting a lot less cute.

“Look,” I snapped, wrenching the door open yet again and glaring down at the latest admirer, “this is all very flattering, but you guys are starting to pi—”

I stopped. I was yelling at a very short, chubby, plain-faced girl clutching a wilting dandelion and looking utterly petrified.

Way to go, Raf.

From down the corridor, I heard a small, muffled snigger. Glancing up, I caught a glimpse of a couple of young girls quickly ducking out of sight around the corner.

Uh-huh.

I stared hard in the direction of the unseen onlookers for a second, then returned my attention to the girl, who was edging away as if preparing to bolt. “No, wait.” She froze like a deer in headlights. “What’s your name?”

“L-lydie,” the girl whispered at the floor. Her knuckles were white on her tattered dandelion.

“Hi, Lydie. Is that for me?”

Lydie looked at her pathetic flower, then hid it behind her back, her face going red. “I’m sorry.” Her barely audible words overflowed like the tears brimming in her big blue eyes. “I picked nicer ones, like the others told me to, but then they didn’t let me keep any of the good ones. They said I still had to come, and this was all I could find.”

“Thanks,” I said warmly, plucking the flower from her fist. Lydie stared up at me, mouth and eyes round, as I tucked it into my buttonhole. I crooked a smile at her. “Yellow’s my favorite color, you know.”

I got the tiniest, shyest, briefest of smiles in return, before her nerve broke and she was off like a rabbit down the corridor. Well, at least now she hopefully wouldn’t grow up thinking that all guys were total bastards.

The warm glow of a good deed well done was cut short by yet another knock at the door. Bloody hell.

“Your future boyfriends can thank me for not giving you all complexes,” I muttered under my breath, shoehorning a smile back onto my face. I swung open the door—and discovered I was doing my best Prince Charming impression at the Headmistress.

“Chrysanthemums, Mr. Angelos.” For one horrific moment, I thought that she too was about to offer me a love token, but her hands were empty. Despite the late hour, she still wore her neat black skirt suit, but she’d now accessorized it with a long raincoat and a peeved expression. “What do you know about them?”

When my dad had said that they’d make me work here, I hadn’t thought that meant late-night pop botany quizzes. “Uh . . . they’re a flower?”

“Yes, Mr. Angelos.” The steel-capped toe of her shoe tapped dangerously. “A flower that provides delightful late autumn color in the garden.
My
garden.”

Oh.

And also:
Uh-oh.

“Except,” the Headmistress continued, as my stomach sank in anticipation, “that my prize specimens now appear to instead be providing autumn color to
your
window. Since I find it difficult to believe that you have taken up flower arranging, I suggest you tell me who gave them to you.”

“Um.” Lydie’s tiny, terrified face floated up in my mind.
Damn
. “Actually, I did pick them. I didn’t know they were yours. Sorry.”

“Really.” The Headmistress’s eyes narrowed as she studied me. “Why are you wearing a dandelion?”

“I . . .” My brain stalled. “. . . decided to do a bit of weeding? While I was there? Like, uh, I thought maybe students helped out with the gardening. You know, school pride.”

The Headmistress was silent for a long moment, while I sweated my entire body weight. “How very civic of you,” she said at last, totally deadpan. “I commend your enthusiasm, Mr. Angelos. Perhaps a bit overzealous, but I shall overlook it on this occasion.” She turned away, and I started breathing again.

“On one condition,” the Headmistress added, just as I’d nearly shut the door. “I look forward to seeing your map of my flower beds, with the locations of all chrysanthemums clearly marked, on my desk first thing tomorrow morning, Mr. Angelos. Should this fail to materialize, I shall instead expect
you
to materialize in my office for a detention.” She fixed me with a look that said she knew I was serving up bullshit, and she wasn’t digging in. “I trust it will not come to that.”

“You bet,” I promised fervently. I retreated into my room, closing the door and collapsing against it with a long sigh. Great. Now I had to sneak out and draw the Headmistress’s garden, wherever the hell that was, or get a detention. Was there anything
else
that could go wrong on my first day?

A scatter of gravel hit my window.

I groaned, hiding my head in my arms in the hopes it might all go away. Gravel pattered against the glass again, followed by the louder
clink
of a thrown pebble. Before my would-be visitor escalated to half bricks, I jerked the window open.
“What?”

“It’s me!” Krystal whispered from the bushes. “I wanted to ask how things were going. Can I come in?”

I thumped my forehead against the window frame. “Krystal, I am having a
really
bad night.”

“Yeah, I imagine it must be pretty tough for you down here. I mean, it’s tough enough for
me
, and I’ve had a whole lifetime to get used to it.” Krystal’s flashlight lit her face from below, half-illuminating her sympathetic expression. “Is there anything I can do to help?”

I started to shake my head, and then stopped as a thought struck me. “Actually, yeah. Do you know where the Headmistress’s house is?”

“Of course.” Krystal jumped back as I slithered out the window. “What, you want to go there now?”

“It’s a long story.” I disentangled myself from an over-amorous bush and stepped free of the shrubbery. “Let’s just say I have a mission, and it’s a matter of life and death that I complete it before the morning.”

Krystal nodded, as if this was a perfectly reasonable explanation for wanting to spend the night lurking around teachers’ houses. Then again, given that this was the girl who wore a pentagram charm the size of a discus around her neck, I could probably just have told her that the fairies wanted me to do it.

She led the way through the woods to an isolated house that looked like something straight out of a horror movie. “This is it,” Krystal whispered, pointing at the glowering, ivy-covered structure. I had to admit, it did match my impression of the Headmistress. All it needed was to be surrounded by gravestones. As it was, the immaculately tended flower beds seemed kind of out of keeping. “Now what?”

“Now we search for chrysanthemums.”

Krystal shot me a narrow-eyed look. “Is this one of those ‘moving in mysterious ways’ things that you can’t explain?”

“Uh, yeah. You poke around the front, and I’ll cover the back.” Not giving her a chance to argue, I headed around the house.

A flash of white snagged my peripheral vision, and I had a momentary conviction that a giant albino spider was about to eat my face before I realized it was another pentagram symbol chalked on the stone wall. This one was smaller than the one on the chapel door, but still eye-wateringly weird. The white lines seemed to glow in the moonlight.

What
was
it with this school and pentagrams? I dragged my sleeve across the chalk lines, smearing them, and immediately felt a little better. I took a deep breath, commanding my racing heart to calm down. I was a rational person. So it was dark. So the house was creepy. I was perfectly safe. Nothing was going to leap out at me.

“Get thee behind me, Satan!”

I very nearly died, and not just from shock. Only some primal reflex made me leap aside, so that the shining silver blade skewered the air rather than my heart. My dad’s much-hated self-defense lessons—which he’d viewed as essential preparation for an all-boys’ boarding school life—kicked in. I grabbed my attacker’s wrist, digging my thumb in until she dropped the sword, then twisted her arm behind her back to immobilize her.

Wait a second. Her?

Long, blonde hair tangled across my face as my captive struggled.
“Faith?”

“Raffi?” To my relief, she stopped trying to stomp my toes into mush. “What are you doing here?”

“Not expecting to get assaulted, that’s what!” I was suddenly very aware of her lithe body pressed against mine. I let her go in a hurry. “What are
you
doing?”

“Raf?” Krystal’s voice sounded faintly from the other side of the house. “Was that you? Are you okay?”

“Fine!” I called back. “Small misunderstanding. Keep looking, okay?” I turned back to Faith. “Seriously, what the hell?”

“I’m sorry, I didn’t know it was you!” Faith brushed her hair back behind her ears, still breathing hard. She pointed at the smudged pentagram. “I was looking for whoever did that.”

“With a sword?”

Faith’s gaze slid away from mine evasively. “It’s for . . . protection. Anyway, you need to go.” She looked nervously around the garden, as if expecting the bushes to erupt with zombies at any moment. “It’s not safe.”

“No kidding.” Death threats and attempted stabbings, all in my first day. I hadn’t realized an all-girls’ school would be
this
crazy. “I don’t want to be here. Your mother kind of made me.” I briefly explained my predicament, grateful when she didn’t laugh. “I don’t suppose you’ve got a map of her garden, do you?”

“Actually, yes. She keeps the designs on her computer. She takes her gardening seriously.” Faith’s eyes were still skipping from shadow to shadow. “You really need to go now.”

“I can’t, not without those plans. Look, can you go print me out a copy?” Faith looked dubious, so I added, “You
did
try to stab me through the heart, you know.”

“All right,” Faith said reluctantly. She took a step toward the house, then hesitated. “It’ll take me a while though. Maybe you should come in.”

“Are you
nuts
?” The mere thought of the Headmistress catching me with her daughter, alone, in her house, at night . . . I resisted the urge to cup my hands protectively over my groin. “I’ll wait here.” Scooping up the sword, I handed it back to her. “Hurry, okay?”

Faith bit her lip. Then, to my surprise, she thrust the hilt into my hand. “To keep you safe,” she called over her shoulder as she hurried away.

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