didn’t want to give him any reason to be upset with me. Getting soda all over his books would do it, even if it wasn’t my fault. Oh, I knew he wouldn’t be mad at me, given the circumstances, but a ruined book was still a ruined book. My day had already sucked. There was no need to make his as bad as mine had been.
But that didn’t mean I was going down without a fight.
I knew better than to draw Vic out of my bag. If I did that, the guys would pull out their own weapons, and things would be even worse than they had been in the dining hall. So instead, I reached into my messenger bag, my fingers clutching around my own soda, the one I’d grabbed during lunch and hadn’t drunk yet. If I was getting soaked, then so was the guy coming at me.
The guy reached the bottom of the library steps. He grinned at his friends, then turned and headed in my direction—
A low growl ripped through the air.
The guy stopped. His head snapped left, then right, as he tried to figure out where the sound had come from. After a second, he shrugged it off as just his imagination and started up the steps again.
Once more, a low growl sounded.
The guy took a step back, suddenly uncertain. The growl kept going and going, like a rumbling train getting a little louder and a little closer with each passing second. His friends also looked around, confused by what was happening. I was the only one who noticed that the eyes of the gryphon statue had narrowed to slits and that its angry gaze was fixed on the guy in front of me.
The guy looked at me, and I casually crossed my arms across my chest and leaned against the statue. He stared at me, and I glared right back at him.
“She’s not worth it,” he finally muttered to his friends. “Let’s get out of here. I’m freezing my ass off.”
Grumbling, the guys headed the opposite direction across the quad. I stood in my tough-girl pose until they were out of sight, then I sighed and slumped against the gryphon.
“Thank you for that,” I whispered.
The side of the gryphon’s mouth curled up, almost like it was smiling. I patted it on the head, then turned to go inside the library.
Alexei, who’d been hanging back through all of this, finally stepped forward. He gave me a strange look, as if he couldn’t believe that I was talking to a statue, but at this point, I didn’t care what he thought of me.
“You can stand out here in the cold if you want, but I’m going inside the library where it’s warm,” I said, walking away.
I reached the doors that led inside the library and looked over my shoulder. Alexei was following me, although he was striding up the exact center of the steps, giving the gryphon statues suspicious looks and as wide a berth as he possibly could. For the first time today, a smile pulled up my lips.
Maybe there was something to be said for creepy statues after all.
Chapter 9
I went inside the building, walked down a hallway, and stepped through the open double doors into the main space of the Library of Antiquities.
With its seven stories, the library was the largest building on campus, and it simply had the biggest and best of everything—the widest balconies, the tallest towers, the most lifelike statues. And it was just as impressive inside as it was on the outside. The main room was shaped like an enormous dome that let folks on the first floor gaze up at each one of the library’s many levels. Supposedly, the curved ceiling featured amazing frescoes, images of great mythological battles, embellished with layers of gold, silver, and sparkling jewels. But I’d never been up to the top level to look for myself, and all I could see from the ground floor were shadows. Maybe it was better that way, since the statues of the gods were already staring at me.
The second floor of the library featured a balcony that boasted white marble statues of all the gods and goddesses from all the cultures of the world. Egyptian deities like Ra and Anubis. Norse gods
Harry Harrison
Jenna Rhodes
Steve Martini
Christy Hayes
R.L. Stine
Mel Sherratt
Shannon Myers
Richard Hine
Jake Logan
Lesley Livingston