eyes,â Jax says, landing on the roof first and picking up the boots. I dismount from Macho and change my shoes, lacing up my boots quickly. Ahhh. Thatâs so much better. I stick the uniform ones in the satchel on Machoâs side. âSo where do you want to fly to next?â Jax asks. âAny chance you want to see the woods?â
âI thought we werenât allowed near them.â
âWeâre notâtechnicallyâbut we can fly close enough,â Jax says casually. âMight be your only chance to see a giant up close.â I donât say anything. âUnless youâre too scared to go. I wouldnât blame you. My roommate, Ollie, says when he was playing rugby out in the fields the other day, he saw smoke coming from the woods.â He shrugs.
I touch Macho. I donât want him getting eaten. He neighs softly. âThen maybe we should avoid that area. Not that Iâm scared.â
Jax gives me a look. âLiar! I can tell youâre lying because when you do, your nose scrunches up like a little rat.â
âIâm not scared!â I insist and jump on Macho again. âI just donât see the need to get detention. Itâs not like weâre going to see anything wicked going on in a flyby over the woods anyway.â
Macho startles me by taking off at top speed.
âSlow down,â I say as clouds blur by and the wind feels as cold as snow. âSlow down!â Macho ignores me and keeps racing. I can hear Jax behind us yelling, but between the wind and the low cloud cover, I canât see or hear him. What am I going to do? My heart is racing. Visions of falling off pop into my mind. I hold on as he climbs higher above the clouds, where itâs so bright that I have to squint. Just when I think Macho has lost his mind, he dives and I actually scream at the speed weâre going. When he slows down, I realize weâre high above some dark green treetops. Weâre at the edge of the Hollow Woods.
âThank you for stopping, but why would you bring me somewhere you could get eaten?â I wait for my heartbeat to slow down.
âIf you wanted to race, you could have just said so,â Jax scolds me when he finally catches up. âYou could have been killed. You need toââ
âTalk to my Pegasus,â I say. âI did. He wouldnât listen.â
âPegasi always listen,â Jax says as if he doesnât believe me.
âWell, mine didnât andâhey, is that Headmistress Flora?â I point to a tiny figure in a robe that is walking quickly to the edge of the supposedly dangerous and spooky woods. The black-and-white-speckled hair and prim clothes definitely remind me of the woman I met yesterday. âWhat would she being doing out here?â
âThat canât be her.â Jax frowns. âShe never leaves her office.â
âOh, itâs her all right,â I say as she looks aroundâbut not upâand then slips in between the trees. I feel my heart speed up like itâs a drum.
Gotcha .
If my headmistress is keeping secrets, Iâm going to find out what they are. Maybe dirt on her is my early ticket to freedom.
CHAPTER 8
Sweet Dreams
As soon as the key turns in my dorm-room door, my eyes fly open. Mother says I have the hearing of a bat.
I lie motionless as the door opens and Kayla tiptoes inside, choosing not to turn on the light and wake me up. Then she bangs into a coatrack.
â Ouch! Ouch! â Kayla yells at the top of her lungs. â Yowza! â
I turn on the oil lamp at the side of my bed and see Kayla hopping around on one foot. Sheâs still wearing our navy uniform, even though school has been over for hours. I am surprised she doesnât change out of them as soon as classes are over. I do. Her wings shoot out, and soon sheâs fluttering up and down, holding her aching toe.
âYou okay?â I ask.
She holds her breath, then
Frank Zafiro, Colin Conway