Crimson Frost (14 page)

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Authors: Jennifer Estep

Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Fantasy & Magic

BOOK: Crimson Frost
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“No, Gwendolyn,” he said in a resigned tone. “It’s my fault. I should have known better than to leave you alone in the library. Things always seem to get . . . broken whenever I do that.”
Well, that was one way of putting it. At least he wasn’t yelling at me—
Nickamedes straightened up to his full height. “I’m glad you are all okay, but Reapers or not, my library is once again in a state of total disarray . . .”
The librarian’s voice got a little louder and a little sharper with every word, but I just stood there and listened to his lecture in silence. I figured I owed Nickamedes that much for wrecking the library for the second time in less than a year.
Chapter 14
Nickamedes lectured me for a good five minutes before he finally calmed down enough to call Metis, Ajax, Raven, and Linus.
I knew he had to tell Linus what had happened, but it wouldn’t do anything to raise the other man’s low opinion of me—especially since Logan had been involved. Linus thought I was a bad influence on the Spartan, and part of me was starting to wonder if he was right. I was a Champion, which meant I was a target for the Reapers. That was bad enough, but the fact that I was Nike’s Champion pretty much made me number one on the Reapers’ kill list. As long as Logan was with me, he would always be in danger—and so would my friends.
I loved Logan, and I loved my friends, but sometimes I couldn’t help but wonder if they would all be better off without me. Carson had almost died at the Crius Coliseum a few weeks ago, and it was only a matter of time before someone else got hurt—or worse. But I also knew I couldn’t be a Champion without them. I just couldn’t. They were my rocks, my friends, my family now. Without their love and support, I would have been dead long ago. But I didn’t know what I could do to protect my friends, other than kill Loki. Something I still had no clue how to do.
Those were the dark, guilty thoughts that swirled through my mind as my friends and I sat at the study tables in the back of the library. I’d already grabbed my bag from underneath the counter, wiped the blood off Vic, and put him back into his leather scabbard. I didn’t know what, if anything, the Protectorate knew about the talking sword, but I had a feeling it would be better if he was out of sight. Besides, Vic was happy to take a nap now that the fight was over.
“It was a good night’s work,” Vic said in a satisfied voice before letting out a loud yawn. “Would have been even better if we’d gotten the last Reaper, but you’re coming along nicely, Gwen. Next time, we’ll get them all . . .”
His eye drifted shut, and he was snoring a minute later.
I’d just slid Vic into my messenger bag when Metis, Ajax, and Raven arrived, along with men and women wearing black coveralls and pushing metal gurneys. For the first time, I noticed that the men and women all had the same emblem stitched into their collars in white thread—the hand-and-scales symbol. It must be some sort of Protectorate mark because the same symbol was also stamped onto the black body bags the workers had brought with them.
I sat next to Logan and watched Ajax, Nickamedes, and Raven oversee the workers, who cleaned up the mess and loaded the Reapers’ bodies onto the gurneys to roll over to the math-science building, where the academy morgue was. The bodies were quickly removed, but my gaze lingered on all the blood still on the floor. I shivered. Once again, I couldn’t help but think that could have been our blood splattered everywhere—my friends’ blood, my blood. The thought made me sick.
Professor Metis came over to the table and laid a hand on my arm. “Are you okay, Gwen?”
I nodded. “I’m fine.”
And I was—physically anyway. I’d only gotten a few bumps and bruises during the fight, along with some cuts from smashing the artifact case that had held the Ruslan swords. In fact, we’d all come through the battle more or less okay. Oliver had a deep gash on his left bicep, Alexei had a nasty cut that slashed across his right cheek, and Logan had several scrapes and bruises on his hands and arms, but Metis and Daphne used their magic to heal us all.
Once that was done, Alexei grabbed a rag from one of the workers and started cleaning the blood off the swords. Oliver and Logan clustered around him, examining the weapons, with Daphne chiming in that they weren’t nearly as cool as her bow was. While my friends talked, I sat still and silent and watched the bodies being loaded up, with Metis standing by my side.
“Is it wrong that I’m sort of getting used to this?” I finally asked.
She gave me a grim smile. “I don’t know about wrong, but sad—definitely sad.”
We watched the workers a few more minutes before Metis jerked her head. “You said that the Reaper took some artifacts. Show me where and which ones.”
I led her into the stacks and showed her the smashed display case, the fallen books, and the broken glass. Logan followed us, and so did Alexei. Apparently, he was back to guarding me now that the fight was over.
Metis studied the mess for a minute before she turned to me. “Gwen?”
She was asking the same thing Oliver had—if I would use my magic to see if I could get any vibes off anything. I nodded, crouched down on my knees, and wrapped my hand around a broken piece of wood.
My psychometry kicked in, and the image of the Reaper slamming a sword into the case and splintering the wood filled my mind, along with the
crash-crash-crash
of breaking glass. I concentrated, touching other pieces of wood and glass, but all the memories were the same. After a minute, I got to my feet.
“Anything?” Metis asked.
I shook my head. “Nothing important, just like with the bodies I touched earlier. All I saw was the Reaper ripping into the case.”
Metis picked up the ID card and read it, just as I had earlier. Then, she looked at the empty case. “I don’t understand,” she murmured. “Why would the Reapers take something like this? Why go to all the trouble when there are so many much more valuable things in here?”
“I know, right?” I said. “The box and the jewelry are beautiful, but it doesn’t seem to me that they have any real power at all.”
“Or maybe this is all just a clever ruse to throw the Protectorate off your trail,” a low voice cut in.
I turned to see Linus striding down the aisle, followed by Inari and Sergei. Agrona was with them as well, trailing along behind the others. The Protectorate members stopped, forming a single row across the aisle. I sighed. Here we went again.
Linus fixed me with a cold look. “Once more, it seems you’re right in the middle of a Reaper attack, Miss Frost. That’s a nasty habit of yours. Care to tell me what happened?”
I looked at Metis, who nodded. I drew in a breath and told him everything—seeing the Reapers sneaking up on Alexei and Oliver, warning them of the attack, the battle, then chasing after the Reaper, realizing that the evil warrior was stealing artifacts, and finally how the Reaper had escaped.
When I finished, Linus focused his frosty glare on Alexei.
“You were not supposed to let Miss Frost out of your sight,” he barked at the younger man. “So why is it that she was in the stacks alone, supposedly shelving books?”
A flush spread across Alexei’s cheeks, and he opened his mouth, but I cut him off.
“Because I had work to do and I was tired of him watching me like a freaking hawk, so I told him I was going to the bathroom and gave him the slip,” I lied. “He was probably asking Oliver where I was when the Reapers attacked.”
Alexei’s brows drew together in surprise, but Linus’s face got even frostier than before.
“You were chosen for this assignment because you are one of the most promising young warriors in the Pantheon,” Linus snapped. “Yet you didn’t even make it through the day without being outsmarted by this girl.”
Maybe I’d been hanging around Vic too long, but I couldn’t help but speak up. “Well, I am rather clever that way,” I said in a snide voice.
A vein started to pulse in Linus’s temple, and I could almost hear him grind his teeth together.
“Even the most dedicated warriors can have a momentary lapse,” Inari said. “It happens to the best of us.”
“Give my boy a break,” Sergei chimed in, his voice much louder and more defensive than Inari’s. “Everything worked out okay in the end, didn’t it?”
Linus turned his glare to the other man. “If by
okay
you mean Reapers somehow breaking into the Library of Antiquities without raising any sort of alarm, attacking students, and stealing artifacts, then yes. I suppose everything worked out
okay
.”
Sergei let out a huff of air, but he didn’t say anything else. Inari put a hand on his shoulder, silently signaling his friend to take it easy. Agrona stood next to them, still quiet, although her beautiful features were pinched together in thought, and she kept toying with her necklace, rubbing the gold chain between her fingers.
Linus swung his gaze back to me. “Or perhaps this was part of your plan all along to deflect suspicion from yourself, Miss Frost. Steal away from Alexei and then raise the supposed alarm about Reapers attacking. Maybe the reason they didn’t raise any alarms was because you let them into the library. Maybe the reason the last Reaper got away with the artifacts was because that was your plan all along.”
“My plan?” I said, my voice as cold and angry as his. “My plan was just to stay alive and help my friends do the same. Nothing else. Despite what you think, I’m not some criminal Reaper mastermind. I’m trying to stop them.”
Linus snorted. “Oh, I doubt that, given the evidence we’ve collected.”
His words made my stomach twist with worry, but I forced myself to stay calm and not let any of my fear show. Logan stepped closer to me and took my hand in his. As soon as his fingers touched mine, his warm concern washed over me, sweeping away everything else. I flashed him a grateful smile.
Linus’s gaze lingered on our linked hands a moment before he sighed. “All right. Let’s round up the others and go over it all again. You too, Logan. I want to hear what you saw as well. Come with me.”
Linus whirled around, his gray cloak billowing out around him as he strode down the aisle. Sergei, Alexei, and Metis followed him. Logan looked at me, a question in his eyes.
“It’s okay,” I said. “Go ahead.”
Logan nodded and hurried after the others, leaving me standing alone with Agrona in front of the smashed case. She fiddled with her gold necklace another moment, before finally sighing and letting it slip through her fingers.
“I’m sorry about my husband,” she said in a soft voice. “He’s under a lot of pressure now that Loki is free. Plus, he and Logan have a . . . difficult relationship. They always have.”
She smiled, and I was struck again by just how very beautiful she was. I wondered what she saw in a man like Linus, who seemed so judgmental and cold to everyone around him.
“But he really does love Logan,” Agrona added. “I was resting when Linus got the call about the attack, but he dropped everything to come over here. I barely caught up with him before he left.”
I nodded. Maybe Linus really did care about Logan, but I thought he had a strange way of showing it—or rather not showing it. Or maybe I just didn’t like him because of all the hurtful things he’d said about my mom—and me too.
Agrona gave me another sad smile and went to join the others.
I looked at the smashed remains of the artifact case, wondering once again why the Reaper would take a keepsake box instead of something more powerful, something that could be used to hurt another person. I crouched down among the glittering glass. My gaze landed on something sticking out from under the bookshelf, and I realized it was the velvet stand that the box had been sitting on. I remembered seeing the Reaper touch the stand, although the warrior had been wearing gloves at the time. Still, maybe I could use my psychometry to see why the Reaper had wanted the box so badly. I leaned forward and stretched out my hand toward the stand—
Something moved off to my left. My eyes darted that way, and I realized that Inari was watching me from the shadows farther down the aisle. I’d thought he’d left with the others but apparently not. I hadn’t even heard him creep up behind me. There were a couple of Ninja students at Mythos, so I knew that stealth was one of the skills they prided themselves on—being able to slip behind enemy lines undetected and kill Reapers before they even knew what hit them. Daphne had also told me that Ninjas had some sort of power, some sort of magic mumbo jumbo, that let them get into any building, no matter how heavily it was guarded. The ability was something like invisibility, but instead of actually fading into nothingness, Ninjas somehow blended into the shadows and background so that other people just sort of looked past them without really seeing them.
Just like the attack in the library tonight.
I flashed back to the way the Reapers had moved so quietly through the stacks, especially the leader. Despite being trained warriors, neither Oliver nor Alexei had noticed the Reapers creeping closer and closer to them. Then again, the two guys had been having a pretty intense argument at the time. Still, I couldn’t help but notice that Inari had the same slender build as the leader had.
I didn’t believe in coincidences—not anymore. And having Reapers of Chaos attack the Library of Antiquities the day after the Protectorate showed up was just a little too convenient. Vivian Holler had seemed like the quietest, nicest, shyest girl at Mythos, but she’d turned out to be Loki’s Champion. So it wouldn’t be too much of a stretch to think that one of the Protectorate members was really a Reaper in disguise.
I dropped my hand to my side. If Inari was a Reaper, I didn’t want to give him any clue that I suspected him—or that I thought I could get a vibe off anything here. Instead, I used a piece of wood to slide the velvet stand farther under the bookshelf. I’d come back later and touch the stand and the shelves around it and see what my psychometry revealed to me.

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