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"Cam told me," Pe
"That is weird," Luce agreed.
"No," Pe
"Well, he is nice." Luce pulled her goggles off her head.
"To you," Pe
"I wore it once," Luce said. Which was true. Five nights before, after the second time Daniel left her stranded at the lake, alone with his path lit up in the forest. She hadn't been able to shake the image of it and hadn't been able to sleep. So she'd tried on the necklace. She'd fallen asleep clutching it near her collarbone, and woken up with it hot in her hand.
Pe
"My point is," Luce said finally, "I'm not so superficial that all I'm looking for is a guy who buys me things."
"Not so superficial, eh?" Pe
Luce had to crack up at Pe
"He gets that you deserve to be ignored?" Pe
Luce had never told Pe
Pe
"You found the book?"
"Not exactly," Pe
"Thanks," Luce said, hoisting herself out with Pe
"Whatever," Pe
* * *
Mostly dry and back in her school uniform, Luce followed Pe
Luce took her first look at where Miss Sophia's desk had sat, now a charred, nearly perfect circle on the old tile floor in the library's center. Everything in a fifteen-foot radius had been removed. Everything beyond that was strangely undamaged.
The librarian wasn't at her station, but a folding card table had been set up for her next to the burned spot. The table was depressingly bare, save for a new lamp, a pencil jar, and a gray pad of sticky notes.
Luce and Pe
They pulled two chairs up to one computer terminal, and Pe
A red error box popped up on the screen.
Pe
"What?" Luce asked.
"After four, you need special permission to access the Web."
"That's why this place is always so empty at night."
Pe
"There's Miss Sophia," Luce said, flagging down the librarian, who was crossing the aisle in a black fitted blouse and bright green cropped pants. Her shimmery earrings dusted her shoulders, and she had a pencil poked into the side of her hair. "Over here," Luce whispered loudly.
Miss Sophia squinted at them. Her bifocals had slipped down her nose, and with a stack of books under each arm, she didn't have a free hand to push them up. "Who's that?" she called, walking over.
"Oh, Lucinda. Pe
"We were wondering if you could give us the password to use the computer," Luce asked, pointing at the error message on the screen.
"You're not doing social networking, are you? Those sites are the devil's work."
"No, no, this is serious research," Pe
Miss Sophia leaned over the girls to unlock the computer. Fingers flying, she typed in the longest password Luce had ever seen. "You have twenty minutes," she said flatly, walking away.
"That should be enough," Pe
Luce sensed someone standing behind her and turned around to see that Miss Sophia had returned. Luce jumped. "I'm sorry," she said. "I don't know why you scared me."
"No, I'm the one who's sorry," Miss Sophia said. Her smile practically made her eyes disappear. "It's just been so hard recently, since the fire. But there's no reason for me to take my sorrow out on two of my most promising students."
Neither Luce nor Pe
"I've been trying to keep busy, but…" Miss Sophia trailed off.
Pe
"I can help!" Miss Sophia tugged over a third chair. "I see you're looking into the Watchers," she said, reading over their shoulders. "The Grigoris were a very influential clan. And I just happen to know of a papal database. Let me see what I can pull up."
Luce nearly choked on the pencil she'd been chewing. "I'm sorry, did you say Grigoris?"
"Oh yes, historians have traced them back to the Middle Ages. They were…" She paused, searching for the words. "A sort of research cluster, to put it in modern layperson's terms. They specialized in a certain type of fallen-angel folklore."
She reached between the girls again and Luce marveled as her fingers raced across the keyboard. The search engine struggled to keep up, pulling up article after article, primary source after primary source, all on the Grigoris. Daniel's family name was everywhere, filling up the screen. Luce felt a bit light-headed.
The image from her dream came back to her: unfurling wings, her body heating up until she smoldered into ash.
"There are different kinds of angels to specialize in?" Pe
"Oh, sure—it's a wide body of literature," Miss Sophia said while she typed. "There are those who became demons. And those who threw in with God. And there are even ones who consorted with mortal women." At last her fingers were still. "Very dangerous habit."
Pe
Miss Sophia tapped her mauve lips. "Quite possible. I wondered that myself, but it is hardly our place to be digging into another student's business, wouldn't you agree?" Her pale face pinched into a frown as she looked down at her watch. "Well, I hope I've given you enough to get started on your project. I won't hog any more of your time." She pointed at a clock on the computer screen. "You've only got nine minutes left."