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Authors: Shelby Bach

BOOK: Of Enemies and Endings
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“Any questions?” Chase asked when I was done.

The students shook their heads. They picked up every combination almost as quickly as I did, and they didn't even have the muscle memory advantage.

“Good,” Chase said. “Thanks, Rory.” Normally, I would smile and wave before I went to join Hansel, but I couldn't muster the energy. If Chase noticed, he didn't let on. “The rest of you, time to practice.” The twenty fighters lined up. Kenneth was first. He ducked into a roll before the first ice griffin tried to strike.

Now I had to get ready for the second round of students.

I put my sword away and rolled another rack of staffs out of the weapons closet. Hansel was picking out the dummies he wanted to use. He always did this before Gretel came in for her sword class, and Gretel often complained that he always took the good ones. “Once a bratty little brother,
always
a bratty little brother,” she'd muttered back in April. Chase and I had exchanged a look, and then we'd laughed for five minutes straight. That felt like a long time ago, now.

“Hansel, I forgot to tell you,” I said, stopping beside him. “Priya wants to try the spear.”

He snorted. “Of course she does. Getting her Tale has made her even cockier.”

Priya was the new Little Red Riding Hood. The Tale had begun while she and Kelly were visiting Priya's grandmother in Seattle for a sleepover. I'd played the part of the heroic woodsman who comes and slays the wolf, like the Snow Queen knew I would. That had been how I ended up on the roof fighting Ripper and a hundred other creatures. Before I got there, though, Priya had taken out a bunch of wolves on her own.

It had given her star status. Hansel disapproved. “I'll talk to her about the spear thing,” he said, very ominously.

“I already did,” I said, instantly nervous. “I told her it was a great idea, but not the right time. Is that okay?” On top of the rest of my morning, the last thing I needed was to get in trouble for overstepping my boundaries as Hansel's assistant.

He smiled. “Probably better than I would have done.” Oh. I'd overreacted. I'd gotten so used to being in trouble with Hansel over the years that I kept forgetting he had asked for
my
help. “I heard about this morning. Are you all right to teach for today?”

His kindness threw me too. Weirdly, it made me feel
less
okay, more shaky, and I tried to stave off the emotion swelling within me. “I have to. My other option is to go see my mother and listen to her yell at me about the fight.”

Hansel looked up from the row of Fey dummies he was moving into position. “The Director wants all newcomers to attend the first weapon class after their arrival. It's mandatory.”

I'd forgotten. The training courts weren't the escape I'd hoped it had been.

“Rory!”

I turned. My mother strode toward me, her smile cheerful but her gaze steely. She was about to say something I wouldn't like, especially not in front of the younger staff students walking in behind her.

“There you are.” Mom pretended she didn't notice heads turning. Some of the other students had recognized the famous actress in their midst. You'd think they would be used to celebrities. Dad and Brie had been living here for months.

“Are you
in
this class?” I couldn't keep the horror out of my voice.

“No, I just wanted to ask you something—” Mom started.

“Ms. Wright, you're going to be having class with Gretel,” Hansel said, pointing to his sister. Gretel had just clunked in, and now she stood at the front of her class, taking attendance. “You're welcome to talk with Rory, but I have to warn you: All latecomers are welcomed with gingerbread jacks.”

That was
definitely
a rescue.

Mom hesitated but then made her way over to Gretel's class. She was always a stickler about following the rules in public. Even here, she worried that people would say she thought Hollywood stars deserved special treatment.

“I
am
in your class,” Amy said, walking up to me with her arms crossed over her chest. She clearly didn't want to be there.

Man, this was shaping up to be an especially challenging day.

It would be almost as uncomfortable having Amy in the staff class as having Mom. “You don't want to try archery?” I whispered. That was where Brie was.

“Rory, I'm nearsighted,” Amy said in the exact same tone she used to remind me that I'd promised to clean my room.

“Let me show you where the staffs are.” Hansel led her away. He was still running interference, and I was grateful. “Rory, check if we're missing anyone.”

I glanced around the room. We were all here.

Half of my students had gathered in rows in front of me, facing the witch and dragon dummies along the wall; they were young Characters, too small to be good sword fighters. The other half included some high school Characters who had goofed off instead of paying attention during their first year of weapons classes, adult Characters who had attended EAS before the Director made classes mandatory, and parents who had never been Characters but had kids who were.

In other words, the most inexperienced fighters. The most unlikely ones.

But their unlikeliness was an advantage. Our enemies would underestimate them. During a battle, my students would be placed as a final line of defense at some key point on the field. We were training them to hold off a bigger and stronger force until offensive squads could come—like Chase's sword fighters or the archers training outside.

Two students stood in the front, as close as they could get to me without actually standing on my toes. They were ridiculously excited to see me, considering I'd seen them the afternoon before.

“Rory, you were in a fight this morning, weren't you?” cried Kelly. I was glad to see her so eager. She'd been a little subdued since she'd gotten her second Tale. “The Feather Bird” was gruesome, but she and Puss had put Priya and her grandmother back together again. “What was it this time? Dragons?”

“No way. She would smell more like sulfur,” said Priya, right beside her. “I'd say . . . ice griffins! No, trolls!”

They loved to guess what I'd been fighting. I didn't understand where they got their guts. They were going into sixth grade. When I was their age, I would have never been brave enough to ask random questions of someone going into
ninth
grade.

“Witches,” I said, a little bit surprised that they had to ask. I mean, Ben's grade
had
just carried unconscious green-skinned prisoners through the courtyard.

That got
everyone's
attention.

“Witches!” Kelly and Priya said together.

“Has anybody fought witches yet?” Priya asked Kelly.

“Aladdin,” replied Kelly. “But he got captured. Jack had to go rescue him.”

Their excitement made me want to warn them exactly how deadly witches could be, but it made me want to change the subject, too. They would learn about the dangers soon enough. “We're all here,” I told Hansel.

Amy had taken a spot in the far back, on the opposite side from where I was standing.

“That's enough,” said Hansel, and our students fell silent. He scared them nearly as much as he'd freaked me out when I was younger. “It's time for class. Are you ready, Priya?”

Priya stepped up, her jaw set. She tossed her long dark hair back. She had definitely gotten cockier since her Tale. “Ready for anything you can throw at me.”

She reminded me of Chase when she said stuff like that. She'd never been able to handle what I'd sprung on her. It had started during my very first class. She had seen me come in with Hansel and refused to learn from anyone she could defeat by kicking them in the shins.

But she hadn't beaten me in the Snow Queen's prisons. I'd just been trying to restrain her. Hansel could have told her that the Director had ordered him to send anyone who refused classes to a dungeon cell, to give them a taste of what the Snow Queen had in store for them if they were captured.

But he hadn't. He'd just looked at me, waiting to see how I'd deal with it.

So I'd said that if she could beat one of the dummies, then she could leave class.

She took me up on it. The evil Fey dummy disarmed her in less than a second. Since that embarrassing defeat, she'd worked
hard
in class. She was now one of the best students.

Okay, maybe she reminded me a little of myself, too.

“As long as you're ready,” I said. I gestured to one of the wolf dummies at the edge of the room. It sprang forward and, in two bounds, reached Priya. It jumped and knocked the girl to the ground. She shrieked and threw up her arms.

Amy shot me a shocked look, obviously wondering what kind of classroom this was. She took a step forward like she would help.

Then Priya laughed, and the rest of the class laughed with her. “No fair. It attacked from behind.”

“That will happen in a battle,” Hansel said.

“Okay, class,” I said, “who would like to tell Priya what she could have done to counter the attack?”

A dozen hands went up. I pointed at Kelly, who'd been a fraction ahead of everyone else. “She could have dodged. You don't need a weapon for that.”

“That
might
work,” Hansel said. “The Snow Queen's wolves change direction slower than a human does, but not as slowly as a troll or a dragon. How would you counter a wolf's charge if you had a staff?”

Kelly had an answer for this one too. “Thrust the end at its chest. That should halt the wolf in its tracks
and
knock the wind out of it.”

“Excellent, Kelly,” I said, and she beamed.

“Not good enough,” said Hansel, who still didn't believe in positive reinforcement. “You need to neutralize a wolf opponent while it's struggling for air. How?”

A boy to my left spoke up. He was one of the youngest warriors, only eight, but he made up for it in enthusiasm. “Hit it on the head—to knock it out! And then on the legs—to make sure it can't stand!”

Hansel grunted, but he didn't correct Melvin, which meant it was the answer he'd wanted. I grabbed my staff, the same one I'd used to teach Lena, and waited for Hansel to gesture the dummy forward.

But apparently, he wasn't done making the class nervous. “You lot aren't taking this seriously enough.” His voice boomed out across the training court. “You think a villain will give you time to laugh if he sees you down? You've never seen their speed. I'm sure you've heard of Iron Hans, an ancient Character with metal skin. He's the Snow Queen's deadliest warrior. When he last entered a battle, he cut down fifty Characters in twelve minutes.”

Melvin and most of the younger students looked decidedly uneasy. Kelly and Priya—the only ones in the class who
had
faced villains—were as ashen as they'd been during their Tale, and I couldn't stand seeing them that way. “No one has seen him in years,” I whispered to them.

It was a lie. Actually, I'd fought him once, years ago, and Chase had made him swear a Binding Oath to become our secret ally. Iron Hans had actually helped us on more than one quest since then.

Across the room, Chase caught my eye and grinned. The icy knot in my chest began to thaw. We'd been through so much together, the two of us, and as Hansel gestured for the metal dummies to move forward, my anger drained away.

The bell rang two and a half hours later. Our students racked their staffs. Hansel had ordered me never to tell the whole class that they'd done well, but they had.

Priya and Kelly left, chatting like they always did. I ignored it until Priya asked, “Which one do you think is better? Rory or Chase?”

Oh geez. I felt my cheeks burn.

“That's not even a question,” Kenneth said, walking out behind them and obviously eavesdropping. “
Chase
. He taught Rory everything she knows.”

I couldn't argue with that.

Priya shot Kenneth a withering stare, which was pretty impressive, considering she was five grades below him. “I don't believe you. I think Rory could beat Chase, if she really wanted to.”

I'd never even gotten
close
to beating Chase in our sparring sessions. Before I could say anything, Chase piped up. “A duel! Awesome! Let's schedule one. Maybe Sunday.”

Priya and Kelly actually cheered.

I turned to Hansel, fully expecting him to put a stop to this, but he nodded. “It would make a good lesson.”

My jaw actually dropped open. I didn't look forward to Chase kicking my butt in front of all our students, but I was outranked.

“We're going to go tell everyone!” Kelly said.

“So you can't change your mind,” Priya added, and then they ran out. Half of EAS would know about it by the time lunch ended.

“You weren't super helpful,” I told Hansel accusingly.

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