The Unexpected Enlightenment of Rachel Griffin (Books of Unexpected Enlightenment Book 1) (22 page)

Read The Unexpected Enlightenment of Rachel Griffin (Books of Unexpected Enlightenment Book 1) Online

Authors: L. Jagi Lamplighter

Tags: #fantasy, #Teen & Young Adult, #Fantasy & Scary Stories, #Children's eBooks, #Science Fiction, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Sword & Sorcery, #Fantasy & Magic, #Children's Books

BOOK: The Unexpected Enlightenment of Rachel Griffin (Books of Unexpected Enlightenment Book 1)
4.88Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Pulling out her fountain pen, she practiced writing Rachel Chanson in her notebook, surrounded by little hearts. The P.E. instructor was so very handsome, and she knew from her mother that he was not married. He had such keen blue eyes that seemed to look right through her. Then she tried out Rachel Darling, which made her both blush and giggle—until she remembered how John had snickered at her in the breakfast line. Then she blushed for a different reason. Rachel MacDannan? While she had not picked out a particular MacDannan, Ian had two older brothers in Dare Hall who were quite entertaining. After that, she wrote Rachel Valiant—Evil Rumor Monger #1 was cute in his own way, and there was something about him that made her feel all secret and wonderful. Rachel Dread? Or would it be Lady Rachel Von Dread? No. He was evil. She crossed that out.

She surrounded the remaining names with flowers and stars and tiny, smiling hearts. Maybe, upon reflection, she liked boys more than she had thought she did.

Finally, she gave up and wandered back to her favorite hallway. Something about practicing magic brought a sense of calmness. Or maybe it merely kept her troubles at bay. Also, it was very satisfying to see herself improve. She could now whistle and blast the huge book all the way to the far wall, some forty feet away.

She left at one point to use the loo. When she returned, she found Gaius Valiant waiting for her. Or at least, she thought he had been waiting. Maybe he had not, because he looked surprised when she arrived.

Giving her a big smile, he drawled, “So, how’s the practice going? And, I must ask, why aren’t you at the YSL meeting? I thought everyone was invited, except those of us from Drake Hall.”

Rachel’s initial delight turned into sadness. “Nobody invited me. We were all going to go—my friends and I. But people came and fetched them, and nobody told me where to go. Apparently, it’s only for people who are really good at magic…who don’t have to practice as much as I do. Or maybe it’s only for very cute people.”

“Well, I think you have already disproved your second theory.” Gaius casually waved his hand towards her. “As to the first, I don’t think that is the case. I think, perhaps, your friends overlooked you. It is a new school year and such. I am pretty sure that there are people in the YSL who are not very skillful. I could be wrong, though, as I have never been to a meeting. You could ask Miss Fisher or Miss Debussy. They are in the club.”

Rachel blinked. She had already disproved her second theory?

Had he just called her
very cute
?

Gaius continued, “And if they are too snooty to have you, you can join the Knights of Walpurgis. We’re mostly thaumaturges from Drake, but there are a few from the other Arts in the mix: some conjurers, some canticlers, some alchemists. You’d be the first from Dare.”

“The Knights of Walpurgis?” she asked. “I’ve never heard of them.”

Gaius leaned back against the wall. “They’re an old group. Been around for years, though not as old as the YSL. The Knights meet on Thursday nights. Tomorrow is our first meeting for the new school year. Would you like to come?”

“I’ll have to think about it.” Rachel frowned doubtfully. She was not unwilling, but the YSL was famous. She had wanted to be a member as long as she could remember. She had never heard of this other group. “Can you tell me more about them?”

“The Knights are dedicated to the practice of magic. Mostly for self defense, but we also share new spells we’ve learned or discovered. And we work to increase our skills. It’s a rather elite group. I was surprised when they asked me to join. But I can invite someone, and I know the Griffins are a rather well-known and respected family. You should come.”

Rachel’s eyes sparkled. “Should I come in disguise the first time? Hidden under a robe or something, so they don’t know I’m from Dare?” She laughed. “Okay, I’ll come.”

“Great!” Gaius’s face lit up. He looked extremely pleased. “I’ll come collect you after supper tomorrow. We hold our meetings in the gym. We try to schedule our meetings so they don’t interfere with other clubs, like the YSL or the crazy enchanter boys from Dare Hall who are obsessed with hunting vampires. I am sure that we’ll have a wonderful time.”

“Okay. I’ll look forward to it. Now, um…I guess I should get back to practicing.”

“Would you like to practice on an animate person?”

Rachel’s eyes glittered with delight. “Sure!”

“Do you know the Word of Ending?” Gaius pulled off his robe and stood before her in a dark gray tee-shirt and sweat pants. He looked rather good that way. Not wanting to be caught staring, she averted her eyes. “It stops the effects of many cantrips and a bunch of other things, some hexes and jinxes. It’s best to know how to undo effects which may be caused in practice. Like, if you wanted to cast the paralyzing hex that I hear my dorm-mates used on you. In fact, why don’t we try that?”

Rachel’s face scrunched up. She eyed him hesitantly. “Is there something else that the Word of Ending is useful for that doesn’t require me to hex someone? What if I messed up the ending part, and you got stuck that way? That would be really embarrassing.”

He shrugged. “Well, I’d rather just be stuck here, in an out of the way place, until it wore off, than have you unable to turn me back from being a duck. Or unable to get the broccoli to stop growing from my ears. And you should practice the paralyzing hex anyway. It’s an enchantment, and it’s very useful.”

“Well…um…” She whistled the notes she had heard Cydney play the night before. Nothing happened.

Gaius smiled encouragingly. “You have to concentrate. Hold firmly in mind what you wish to accomplish.”

“Okay! Okay!” She shut her eyes tightly, as if bracing for a blow, and tried it again. She caught a whiff of pine. When she eventually opened her eyes, he was standing before her, straight as an arrow, with his arms at his sides.

“Oh!” Rachel clapped her hands to her face.

She stood there as if petrified herself. Finally, she started to raise her hand to perform the Word of Ending. Then, she paused and giggled a bit. A mischievous expression crept over her face. Walking forward, she stood on tiptoe and gave the frozen young man a very little kiss.

Running back, she formed a fist with a single finger up, and moved it horizontally in front of her, shouting, “
Obé!
” imitating the hand gesture motion and voice tone Magdalene had used when setting her free.

Then, she turned bright red, because, of course, now he could move and speak.

“Shall we do it again?” she cried.

Before he could answer, she whistled the same notes. Blue sparkles swirled around him, sweeping his hair upward. He froze again.

She freed him and froze him fifteen times in a row, until the whole hallway smelled of evergreen. Finally, she left him unfrozen. Surely, by now, enough time had passed that he would have forgotten the kiss.

He picked up his robe and crossed to where she stood. “One more time is appropriate I think.”

He leaned in and kissed her.

A shiver of energy rippled though her body and out her hair. She felt like a puffed-up cat on an All Hallows Eve decoration. She blushed from scalp to sole, but she felt tremendously happy.

Gaius smiled, but it was not the big, super confident smile he usually gave her. It was a bit toothier, and his cheeks, too, were sort of red.

“Well, distractions aside,” he said, “I will come by your table to get you tomorrow after dinner. I should get back to my room and actually study a bit.”

He turned and walked away at a slightly faster pace than a stroll.

Chapter Sixteen:
Wraiths in the Dark

When Rachel returned to her room, the dorm was still empty. She lay on her back, aglow with delight, and recalled over and over again her memory of Gaius’s kiss. It was her first kiss. She wondered, though, which one counted as the first, hers to him while he was paralyzed? Or his to her?

Or had she not had a proper first kiss yet, because they had not kissed each other?

Contemplating these important questions, she reviewed the rest of her eventful day: her letter from her father, her conversation with Gaius in the morning, the reappearance of the princess and her intriguing adventures, Zoë’s extraordinary power to walk through dreams, the first day of her new job as Mr. Chanson’s assistant—showing off her flying and watching the new stude…

Rachel sat up straight. It had happened again. She had remembered something that had not been visible to her eyes. Just before Mylene Price turned pale and left the broom lesson for the infirmary, a black shadow had appeared. The shadow had been shaped roughly like a person but taller. It appeared next to Miss Price and sank one of its arms wrist deep into the girl’s chest.

Rachel shuddered and thought back farther. She recalled seeing Mylene in the infirmary the night before and a couple of times in the dining hall. Each time, when Rachel checked her memory, the shadow was with Mylene. In the dining hall, it just looked as if Mylene’s own shadow was dark and misshapen. In the infirmary, it had sunk half inside her sleeping body.

Overhead, the will-o-wisps, which had been sleeping in their nighthoods, rushed together and formed a glowing ball of light. Her roommates came in, laughing and talking.

“…keep working on the new spell they taught us tonight,” the princess’s voice, speaking outside the door, was followed by the princess herself gliding into the room. “I am disappointed in how inadequate my spellcasting is compared to the older students.”

“But you can’t expect to be as good as the older students. They have been here for years,” said Kitten, holding her tiny lion around the middle. She plopped him on her bed. Calm and dignified, he turned three times and curled up into a ball.

“That is no excuse,” the princess replied primly, placing her bag on the vanity that, the day before, her brothers had carried out from the house in her purse.

Kitten bounced on her bunk. The lion opened one golden eye. Kitten cried, “That was such great fun, Rachel. You should have come.”

“No one invited me,” said Rachel softly.

Astrid and Kitten looked stricken. Nastasia clapped her hand to her forehead, horrified. “Rachel, I must apologize. I had intended to take you with me. Ivan was so busy asking questions, I forgot. A princess should never go back on her word. I will make it up to you.”

“It’s okay. I got invited somewhere for tomorrow night.” Rachel stood up in her white lacy nightgown. “Listen, I have discovered something important. There’s a girl in the infirmary who has a wraith eating her. I think she’s there now. Or she was earlier. We have to go save her!”

The princess straightened. “We must help this poor unfortunate soul! Let us…” Glancing out the window at the darkness, she frowned in disappointment. “We cannot go out. It is after curfew. A special exception was made for returning from the YSL.”

“But…she’s in trouble.”

The princess looked compassionate but stern. “We cannot break a rule. Rules are what hold life together. Without them, there is only chaos.”

“But…she’s being eaten by a wraith!” Rachel insisted.

“Did this just start?”

“No,” Rachel admitted reluctantly. “It’s been going on for some days. Maybe longer.”

“We shall tell someone first thing in the morning,” Nastasia assured her gently.

“Hang on! Why don’t we go speak to the college resident,” suggested Kitten. “Her name is Yolanda Debussy. She’s a junior who lives in the tower. She is also student delegate for our dorm, representing the girls’ side of Dare Hall on the student council. Oh, and she’s president of the YSL this year.”

“That is an excellent idea,” said Nastasia, nodding approvingly.

Yolanda Debussy. Gaius had mentioned her as a YSL member Rachel might approach.

“Where does she live?” Rachel asked.

“In the main tower on our side. College upperclassmen normally live on the lower floors. They get the privilege of not having to climb as many beastly stairs. The college resident lives up here, though, so she can be close to us freshmen,” Kitten explained. “Shall I go get her? Let her know it’s all gone pear-shaped for this girl in the infirmary?”

“It’s okay. I’ll do it myself,” said Rachel.

Rachel ran out of the room. She ran up the tower stairs and knocked on the door at the top. A tall slender young woman came to the door in her nightgown. She was rubbing her wet, pale orangey hair with a towel.

“Yes?”

“Are you Miss Debussy?” Rachel asked politely.

“I am.” She nodded graciously. “Can I help you?”

“There is a wraith eating Mylene Price!”

“Excuse me.” Yolanda stepped into the hallway, her face filled with concern. She looked back and forth as if expecting to see the events Rachel described. “Wha…where? Miss Price isn’t in our dorm. What makes you think she is being eaten by a wraith?”

“I saw the wraith. It had its arm inside her.”

“When did you see this?”

“A couple of times. Yesterday. Today. I only just put together what I saw.”

“And you saw this, and no one else did?”

Rachel nodded.

“How?”

Rachel opened her mouth and closed it, unwilling to tell a stranger about her memory.

Yolanda Debussy ran a hand through her short, wet, coppery hair. “Miss…Griffin, right? Laurel and Sandra’s little sister? Listen. It is late. If this is not urgent, why don’t we discuss it in the morning, okay? If you are still worried tomorrow, tell me, and I’ll help you find a tutor.”

“But…”

“Good night, Miss Griffin.” Miss Debussy closed her door.

Rachel clomped back down the staircase. She paused on her floor. Should she go back to bed? After all, Miss Price may have been wraith chow for years. Was one more night going to make a big difference?

Rachel recalled how the young woman’s face had shone with joy as she tried her broom for the first time and how pale she had turned when the wraith attacked her. With calm determination, Rachel stomped down the stairs. It was dark outside, though the stars twinkled brightly. Rachel headed for the commons. The gravel of the pathway crunched loudly under her feet. Ahead, she saw Mr. Fisher speaking with Mr. Tuck and another tutor. She ran up to them.

Other books

The Orpheus Trail by Maureen Duffy
When All The Girls Have Gone by Jayne Ann Krentz
Illywhacker by Peter Carey
Falling into Place by Zhang,Amy
To Be a Friend Is Fatal by Kirk W. Johnson
Joanna Fulford by His Lady of Castlemora