Vampire Academy: The Complete Collection: 1/6 (55 page)

BOOK: Vampire Academy: The Complete Collection: 1/6
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“Sorry,” I said. I hadn’t meant to let her know I knew about the sex thing, not until she told me herself.
She eyed me. “How much do you know?”
“Um, not much,” I lied. I’d finished brushing my hair but began playing with the brush’s handle in order to avoid her eyes.
“I have
got
to learn to keep you out of my mind,” she muttered.
“Only way I can ‘talk’ to you lately.” Another slipup.
“What’s that supposed to mean?” she demanded.
“Nothing . . . I . . .” She was giving me a sharp look. “I . . . I don’t know. I just feel like we don’t talk as much anymore.”
“Takes two to fix that,” she said, voice kind again.
“You’re right,” I said, not pointing out that two could fix that only if one wasn’t always with her boyfriend. True, I was guilty in my own way of locking things up—but I
had
wanted to talk to her a number of times lately. The timing just never seemed to be right—not even now. “You know, I never thought you’d be first. Or I guess I never thought I’d be a senior and still be a virgin.”
“Yeah,” she said dryly. “Me either.”
“Hey! What’s
that
supposed to mean?”
She grinned, then caught sight of her watch. Her smile fell. “Ugh. I’ve got to go to Priscilla’s banquet. Christian was supposed to go with me, but he’s off being an idiot. . . .” Her eyes focused hopefully on me.
“What? No. Please, Liss. You know how I hate those formal royal things.”
“Oh, come on,” she begged. “Christian flaked out. You can’t throw me to the wolves. And didn’t you just say we needed to talk more?” I groaned. “Besides, when you’re my guardian, you’ll have to do these things all the time.”
“I know,” I said darkly. “I thought I could maybe enjoy my last six months of freedom.”
But in the end, she conned me into going with her, as we’d both known she would.
We didn’t have much time, and I had to do a rush shower, blow-dry, and makeup job. I’d brought Tasha’s dress on a whim, and while I still wanted her to suffer horribly for being attracted to Dimitri, I was grateful for her present now. I pulled on the silken material, happy to see the shade of red was just as killer on me as I’d imagined. It was a long, Asian-style dress with flowers embroidered into the silk. The high neck and long hem covered a lot of skin, but the material clung to me and looked sexy in a different kind of way than showing a lot of skin did. My black eye was practically nonexistent by now.
Lissa, as always, looked amazing. She wore a deep purple dress by Johnna Raski, a well-known Moroi designer. It was sleeveless and made of satin. The tiny amethyst-like crystals set into the straps sparkled against her pale skin. She wore her hair up in a loose, artfully styled bun.
When we reached the banquet room, we drew a few eyes. I don’t think the royals had expected the Dragomir princess to bring her dhampir friend to this highly anticipated, invitation-only dinner. But hey, Lissa’s invite had said “and guest.” She and I took our places at one of the tables with some royals whose names I promptly forgot. They were happy to ignore me, and I was happy to be ignored.
Besides, it wasn’t like there weren’t plenty of other distractions. This room was done all in silver and blue. Midnight blue silk cloths covered the tables, so shiny and smooth that I was terrified to eat on them. Sconces of beeswax candles hung all over the walls, and a fireplace decorated with stained glass crackled away in one corner. The effect was a spectacular panorama of color and light, dizzying to the eye. In the corner, a slim Moroi woman played soft cello music, her face dreamy as she focused on the song. The clinking of crystal wineglasses complemented the strings’ low, sweet notes.
Dinner was equally amazing. The food was elaborate, but I recognized everything on my plate (china, of course) and liked all of it. No foie gras here. Salmon in a sauce of shiitake mushrooms. A salad with pears and goat cheese. Delicate almond-stuffed pastries for dessert. My only complaint was that the portions were small. The food seemed more like it was there to simply decorate the plates, and I swear, I finished it in ten bites. Moroi might still need food along with their blood, but they didn’t need as much as a human—or, say, a growing dhamphir girl—needed.
Still, the food alone could have justified me coming along on this venture, I decided. Except, when the meal ended, Lissa told me we couldn’t leave.
“We have to mingle,” she whispered.
Mingle?
Lissa laughed at my discomfort. “You’re the social one.”
It was true. In most circumstances, I was the one who put myself out there and wasn’t afraid to talk to people. Lissa tended to be shyer. Only, with this group, the tables were turned. This was her element, not mine, and it amazed me to see just how well she could interact with royal high society now. She was perfect, polished and polite. Everyone was eager to talk to her, and she always seemed to know the right thing to say. She wasn’t using compulsion, exactly, but she definitely put out an air that drew others to her. I think it might have been an unconscious effect of spirit. Even with the meds, her magical and natural charisma came through. Whereas intense social interactions had once been forced and stressful for her, she now conducted them with ease. I was proud of her. Most of the conversation stayed pretty light: fashion, royal love lives, etc. No one seemed to want to spoil the atmosphere with ugly Strigoi talk.
So I clung to her side for the rest of the night. I tried to tell myself it was just practice for the future, when I’d follow her around like a quiet shadow anyway. The truth was, I just felt too uncomfortable with this group and knew my usual snarky defense mechanisms really weren’t useful here. Plus, I was painfully aware that I was the only dhampir dinner guest. There were other dhampirs, yes, but they were in formal guardian mode, hovering on the periphery of the room.
As Lissa worked the crowd, we drifted over to a small group of Moroi whose voices were growing louder. One of them I recognized. He was the guy from the fight that I’d helped break up, only this time he wore a striking black tuxedo instead of a swimsuit. He glanced up at our approach, blatantly checked us out, but apparently didn’t remember me. Ignoring us, he continued on with his argument. Not surprisingly, Moroi protection was the topic. He was the one who’d been in favor of Moroi going on the offensive against the Strigoi.
“What part of ‘suicide’ don’t you understand?” asked one of the men standing nearby. He had silvery hair and a bushy mustache. He wore a tux too, but the younger guy looked better in one. “Moroi training as soldiers will be the end of our race.”
“It’s not suicide,” exclaimed the young guy. “It’s the right thing to do. We have to start looking out for ourselves. Learning to fight and use our magic is our greatest asset, other than the guardians.”
“Yes, but with the guardians, we don’t need other assets,” said Silver Hair. “You’ve been listening to non-royals. They don’t have any guardians of their own, so of course they’re scared. But that’s no reason to drag
us
down and put
our
lives at risk.”
“Then don’t,” said Lissa suddenly. Her voice was soft, but everyone in the little group stopped and looked at her. “When you talk about Moroi learning how to fight, you make it sound like an all-or-nothing matter. It’s not. If you don’t want to fight, then you shouldn’t have to. I completely understand. ” The man looked slightly mollified. “But, that’s because you
can
rely on your guardians. A lot of Moroi can’t. And if they want to learn self-defense, there’s no reason why they shouldn’t do it on their own.”
The younger guy grinned triumphantly at his adversary. “There, you see?”
“It’s not that easy,” countered Silver Hair. “If it was just a matter of you crazy people wanting to get yourselves killed, then fine. Go do it. But where are you going to learn all these so-called fighting skills?”
“We’ll figure the magic out on our own. Guardians will teach us actual physical fighting.”
“Yes, see? I knew that was where this was going. Even if the rest of us don’t take part in your suicide mission, you still want to strip us of our guardians to train up your pretend army.”
The young guy scowled at the word
pretend
, and I wondered if more fists would fly. “You owe it to us.”
“No, they don’t,” said Lissa.
Intrigued gazes turned her way again. This time, it was Silver Hair who regarded her triumphantly. The younger guy’s features flushed with anger.
“Guardians are the best battle resources we have.”
“They are,” she agreed, “but that doesn’t give you the right to take them away from their duty.” Silver Hair practically glowed.
“Then how are we supposed to learn?” demanded the other guy.
“The same way guardians do,” Lissa informed him. “If you want to learn to fight, go to the academies. Form classes and start at the beginning, the same way the novices do. That way, you won’t be taking guardians away from active protection. It’s a safe environment, and the guardians there specialize in teaching students anyway.” She paused thoughtfully. “You could even start making defense part of the standard curriculum for Moroi students already there.”
Astonished stares fell on her, mine included. It was such an elegant solution, and everyone else around us realized it. It gave no party 100 percent of its demands, but it met most in a way that didn’t really harm the other side. Pure genius. The other Moroi studied her with wonder and fascination.
Suddenly, everyone started talking at once, excited about the idea. They drew Lissa in, and soon there was a passionate conversation going on about her plan. I got shuffled to the edges and decided that was just fine. Then I retreated altogether and sought out a corner near a door.
Along the way, I passed a server with a tray of hors d’oeuvres. Still hungry, I eyed them suspiciously but saw nothing that looked like the foie gras from the other day. I gestured to one that looked like some sort of braised, rare meat.
“Is that goose liver?” I asked.
She shook her head. “Sweetbread.”
That didn’t sound bad. I reached for it.
“It’s pancreas,” said a voice behind me. I jerked back.
“What?” I squeaked. The waitress took my shock for rejection and moved on.
Adrian Ivashkov moved into my line of sight, looking immensely pleased with himself.
“Are you messing with me?” I asked. “‘Sweetbread’ is
pancreas
?” I don’t know why that shocked me so much. Moroi consumed blood. Why not internal organs? Still, I repressed a shudder.
Adrian shrugged. “It’s really good.”
I shook my head in disgust. “Oh, man. Rich people suck.”
His amusement continued. “What are you doing here, little dhampir? Are you following me around?”
“Of course not,” I scoffed. He was dressed to perfection, as always. “Especially not after all the trouble you’ve gotten us into.”
He flashed one of his tantalizing smiles, and despite how much he annoyed me, I again felt that overwhelming urge to be near him. What was up with that?
“I don’t know,” he teased. He looked perfectly sane now, exhibiting no trace of the weird behavior I’d witnessed in his room. And yeah, he looked
a lot
better in a tuxedo than any guy I’d seen in there so far. “As many times as we keep seeing each other? This is, what, the fifth time? It’s starting to look suspicious. Don’t worry, though. I won’t tell your boyfriend. Either of them.”
I opened my mouth to protest, then remembered he’d seen me with Dimitri earlier. I refused to blush. “I only have
one
boyfriend. Sort of. Maybe not anymore. And anyway, there’s nothing to tell. I don’t even like you.”
“No?” asked Adrian, still smiling. He leaned toward me, like he had a secret to share. “Then why are you wearing my perfume?”
This time, I did blush. I took a step back. “I’m not.”
He laughed. “Of course you are. I counted the boxes after you left. Besides, I can smell it on you. It’s nice. Sharp . . . but still sweet—just like I’m sure you are deep down inside. And you got it right, you know. Just enough to add an edge . . . but not enough to drown your own scent.” The way he said “scent” made it sound like a dirty word.
Royal Moroi might make me uncomfortable, but smartass guys hitting on me didn’t. I dealt with them on a regular basis. I shook off my shyness and remembered who I was.
“Hey,” I said, tossing my hair back. “I had every right to take one. You offered them. Your mistake is in assuming me taking one means anything. It doesn’t. Except that maybe you should be more careful with where you dump all that money of yours.”
“Ooh, Rose Hathaway is here to play, folks.” He paused and took a glass of what looked like champagne from a passing waiter. “You want one?”
“I don’t drink.”
“Right.” Adrian handed me a glass anyway, then shooed the waiter away and took a drink of the champagne. I had a feeling it wasn’t his first of the night. “So. Sounds like our Vasilisa put my dad in his place.”
“Your . . .” I glanced back at the group I’d just left. Silver Hair still stood there, gesticulating wildly. “That guy’s your dad?”
“That’s what my mom says.”
“You agree with him? About how Moroi fighting would be suicide?”
Adrian shrugged and took another sip. “I don’t really have an opinion on that.”
“That’s not possible. How can you not feel one way or another?”
“Dunno. Just not something I think about. I’ve got better things to do.”
“Like stalk me,” I suggested. “And Lissa.” I still wanted to know why she’d been in his room.
He smiled again. “I told you, you’re the one following me.”
“Yeah, yeah, I know. Five times—” I stopped. “Five times?”

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