Evil Librarian (28 page)

Read Evil Librarian Online

Authors: Michelle Knudsen

BOOK: Evil Librarian
12.82Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Probably not, actually.

The bell rings, and I make myself go inside. It will be fine. I’m sure it will be fine.

I take out a book and stare at it, not reading.

And then, after a few minutes, my fingers suddenly feel — odd.
More
odd. The throbbing intensifies, and I find myself staring at the wall. Through the wall. Toward — what? I want to get up. I want to get up and go out and walk down that hall.

It’s the librarian, I realize stupidly. He’s drawing the tagged demons to the place where he and Kingston are going to kill them. I can feel the pull of whatever he’s doing. It’s not quite compelling me to go. I can feel it, and it makes me want to move toward that place, but I can resist it. It’s like when you know there’s ice cream in the freezer and you really want it and you have to sit there reminding yourself about how you really,
really
want to fit into those pants you bought that are a little too tight and so should not eat the ice cream and you know this and so you can resist, but it’s hard and unpleasant. But you can still do it. Usually.

But what if I’m able to resist not because I’m human, but because of my roach thing? What if Ryan is also feeling the draw and can’t resist?

He won’t even know that he should. He’ll just feel like he wants to go there. It might not even occur to him to question why he wants to go.

I get up as slowly and casually as I can and take the bathroom pass from the front of the room. The teacher covering study hall doesn’t even look up from her papers. I walk slowly over to the door and open it and step through and close it behind me.

And then I run.

I let my pulsing fingers lead me down one hall and then another. I realize I was sort of assuming the destination would be the library, but instead I’m being drawn up another floor, to one of the science labs. I pass a couple of demons who are walking along, chatting, not really noticing where they’re headed. “Hey, no running in the halls!” one of them calls after me.

I keep running, obviously.

The throbbing in my fingers is getting even stronger. I can tell now that the place I’m being drawn to is the last lab at the far end of the hall. Partly this is because of the intensity of the throbbing, but it is also because Ryan is standing outside, his hand on the doorknob.

I manage a burst of extra speed and throw myself at him, tackling him to the ground almost in the way I used to fantasize about, except for the throbbing fingers and the close proximity of many demons masquerading as substitute teachers and other high-school staff. Also, I never thought about how much it would hurt when my knees and elbows slammed into the floor like that.

“Cyn! What —”

“Shh!” I roll off of him and let him get to a sitting position. But when he tries to stand, I yank him back down.

“Hey!”

“Hey, yourself. I don’t know where you think you’re going, but you need to just forget it.”

“But —” His forehead wrinkles up in confusion. “I have to, uh —”

“No, you don’t. There’s, um, something else going on here. Something not for you.”

He still looks confused. Understandably. And kind of annoyed.

“What’s going on, Cyn?”

I take a few final seconds to search frantically around in my brain for any ideas about how to not have to tell him. The two chatting demons open the door and go inside and close it behind them again. They pay no attention to us.

My brain fails completely to help me out. Stupid brain.

I take a deep breath and force myself to look Ryan in the eyes. “So, okay. Remember how we were talking about what we could do to stop all the extra demons from killing extra people and draining extra students and stuff?”

“I remember how I thought your idea was too dangerous,” Ryan says, dangerously.

“Yeah, well, I didn’t agree with you.”

“You went to Aaron? Without me?”

“Well, yes. But actually, he was completely unhelpful. As was what’s-her-name. Oh! Except that she said the final-battle thing is probably going to happen on opening night. After the show, of course.”

Ryan closes his eyes for a second and shakes his head, as if to clear away some of this nonsense I am tossing at him. “So, then what did you do?”

Yeah. This is the part I really didn’t want to get into.

“I made a deal with Mr. Gabriel.”

“You what?!”

“I know. I know! It seemed like a good idea at the time. And it
was
a good idea! I mean, it is, still, at this time, too. I think it’s going to work out, and at least we’ll only have two demons to deal with instead of more than thirty!”

He speaks slowly and quietly. “What was the deal, Cyn?”

I tell him the deal, leaving out the part about making Gabriel and Kingston promise never to hurt him but including how I must have accidentally tagged him when he squeezed my hand outside of study hall. “I’m sorry, I had meant not to touch you, not to touch anyone —”

“What, forever?”

“No! Just until after they were done with whatever they were going to do.”

“And what are they going to do, exactly?”

“I don’t know. Destroy the other demons and use the power released by the mass sacrificial killing to shore up the wards or whatever and stop other demons from coming through.”

The whole time we’ve been talking, there’s been a low rumble of voices coming from the other side of the wall. Just regular talking, like there was a science lab cocktail party going on, with friendly teacher chitchat and little groups of small-talkers and stuff, possibly drinking colorful alcoholic beverages out of glasses in the shapes of test tubes and beakers by the light of many artfully arranged Bunsen burners. I notice now that the sound of the voices has suddenly disappeared. Could it be over already? I guess I thought there’d be more, I don’t know,
ritual
to the ritual sacrifice. Like when Mr. Gabriel went all demony in the library that time with the blood and the shapes on the floor and everything. This was so quick and quiet.

Then, the screaming starts.

Ryan and I look at each other, wide-eyed, our argument temporarily forgotten.

There is more screaming, lots of it, and someone — some
thing,
remember, they’re demons, bad evil murderous treacherous demons — something throws itself against the door. I guess it’s possible it’s
been
thrown, but the hand-shaped silhouettes slapping desperately against the frosted glass of the window suggest self-throwing. There are other sounds, wet, horrible sounds, that I can’t quite identify. I do not try too hard to address this.

“Cyn,” Ryan says. “Are you sure they’re all demons?”

“Yes!” Of course they are. Right? I mean, they have to be. I saw the halos.

Which I was able to do because of whatever Mr. Gabriel did to my eyes. What if it just made me see them randomly?

No. That’s dumb. I can’t start questioning that now. Gabriel and Kingston both had the halos, and so did the security guards, and I know they’re all demons . . . and all the rest I tagged were new, strangers, and they had the
halos,
dammit, and they were, they have to be . . .

The screaming is still going on. There is now a streak of what I think is blood across the window. The hands and whomever they belonged to are gone.

In that moment I know I’m going to open that door. I need to see — something. Something to reassure me that they are, in fact, all demons. I have no idea what that would be.

I stand up and move slowly toward the door. I expect Ryan to try to stop me, but there must be a part of him still responding to the tagging, because he just comes silently along with me.

Slowly, I turn the knob and open the door a tiny crack.

Something huge and dark and screaming comes flying at the opening, and in the single frozen moment before I am able to slam it shut again I am satisfied that nothing in that room is human. The door shudders violently as the thing smashes against it, but somehow the door stays closed. Gabriel and Kingston must have done something to it, secured the room somehow, so no one — no
thing
 — could get out.

Ryan and I back a few steps away, still staring at the shifting shadow shapes that can just be seen through the thick frosty glass.

“Yup. I’m sure. All demons.”

“Okay.” He’s silent a moment, then adds, “But, you know, not okay. Not really, Cyn. Jesus. How could you just go and do that, without even talking to me?”

“I tried talking to you! You were too afraid to try anything!”

He glares at me, surprised and hurt, and I instantly regret those words.

“I’m sorry,” I try. “That’s not what I meant. I just meant that you didn’t seem to like anything I came up with —”

“You only came up with the one stupid plan!”

“And I was afraid that if I told you about
this
stupid plan, you’d try to talk me out of this one, too. Probably because you’d be right, that it was stupid and too dangerous. But I couldn’t just sit back and do nothing. If we do nothing,
everyone
is going to die.” I take a breath, realizing that I’m angry at him again. “And besides, it worked! I saw a chance, and I took it, and it worked. So don’t go criticizing me for having stupid plans. At least I tried
something
!”

He’s quiet for a minute more, and I’m not sure what that means or what he’s thinking, and we stand there looking at each other in the otherwise empty hallway, hearing only the muffled crashes and screams and other sounds from the sealed lab room. They are beginning to taper off.

“All right,” he says finally, and I don’t know whether that means
all right I understand
or
all right but I kind of hate you
or just
all right I’m done talking about this right now.
I don’t ask. “You’re done here now?” he continues.

“I think so.” My fingers aren’t throbbing anymore. And the deal was only that I had to do the tagging; I would never have even come here if it weren’t for having accidentally involved Ryan. “Yes.”

“So let’s just get out of here, and we can talk more later.”

That sounds like an excellent idea.

But we are still standing there when we hear the door swing open.

We spin around and I register two things. One: the noises have all stopped, and two: a woman has just stepped inside that room. I catch just the trailing edge of her skirt as she goes in. She leaves the door open behind her, and I can see bits and pieces of — things — scattered around the floor and the walls. And a little hanging from the ceiling, too.

“Well,” a female voice says into the silence. “I guess it’s a good thing I like to be fashionably late.”

“Dammit, Cynthia,” Mr. Gabriel’s voice calls from inside. “You missed one.”

Apparently he knows I’m out here. I step toward the door, Ryan right beside me. We lean in.

Gabriel and Kingston, looking human again, are standing at the far end of the room. I can’t see the woman’s face, because she’s turned toward them and away from me, but I can see the red halo glowing over her head.

“I just got here,” she says. “I must have missed your invitation. I just felt something interesting going on and thought I would come investigate.”

“But we closed the gate,” Kingston says. “The wards —”

“Yes,” she says. “I think I got through right at the last possible second. Really, it appears my timing was stunningly perfect. As usual.”

Mr. Gabriel and Principal Kingston both appear to be temporarily speechless. They just stand there glowering at her.

“Well,” I say. “We’ll just be going. You guys look like you’ve got some catching up to do. And, uh, cleaning up.” I am trying very hard not to look at anything other than the three demons who are still standing upright and alive.

The woman turns around, finally. I am not really all that surprised to see it is Aaron’s demoness. She
had
mentioned that she’d wanted to see the show.

“Yes, run along,” she says. “I’m sure we’ll see you around.” She winks at me.

We run along.

The bell rings as we make our way back down the hall. We stop by Ryan’s eighth-period classroom, then study hall, to respectively retrieve our belongings. We are quiet the entire time. We are nearly to the auditorium when Ryan asks, “Did you know? That she was coming?”

“No,” I say truthfully. “Although I can’t say I’m surprised.”

He nods sort of to himself, without looking at me.

“Ryan —” I touch his arm. He stops, but still doesn’t look at me. “I’m sorry I didn’t tell you what I was doing. Please don’t be mad at me.”

“I thought we were in this thing together, Cyn,” he says.

“We are! We totally are! I just — I thought I was doing the right thing. I’m sorry.”

Now he looks at me. “How could you think that going to Aaron
by yourself
and then going to Mr. Gabriel
by yourself
and making a
secret deal with him
was possibly the right thing?”

“Because you didn’t want to come with me to Aaron’s, and if I’d told you I was going alone, you would have come anyway, and I didn’t want to make you do that! And yes, I was pretty sure you would hate the idea of making a deal with Mr. Gabriel, and so I didn’t tell you that, either.”

Other books

Young Lord of Khadora by Richard S. Tuttle
The Killing Game by Nancy Bush
A Cold Christmas by Charlene Weir
Girls Like Us by Rachel Lloyd
Afterbirth by Belinda Frisch