guzzling coffee and brainstorming names for the band. ( Dead Sneaker Rat, Simon mused out of habit. Or maybe Rodent Funeral. )
Of course, that was back when heâd assumed high school would lead to college, which would lead to rock stardom . . . or at least a moderately cool job at a moderately cool record label. Before he knew there was such a thing as demons, before he knew there was a race of superpowered, angel-blooded warriors eternally pledged to battle themâand definitely before heâd volunteered himself up to be one of them.
So instead of Java Jones, he was in the Academyâs student lounge, squinting through candlelight, sneezing from two centuriesâ worth of dust, and dodging the intimidating glares of noble Shadowhunters past whose portraits lined the room, their expressions seeming to say, How could you possibly imagine you could be one of us ? Instead of Eric, Matt, and Kirk, who heâd known since kindergarten, he was with friends heâd met only a couple of years before, one of whom nurtured an intense affection for rats and another who shared his name with them. Instead of speculating about their futures in rock and roll, they were readying themselves for a life battling multidimensional evils. Assuming, that is, they survived graduation.
Which wasnât exactly a safe assumption to make.
âWhat do you think it will be like?â Marisol Garza asked now, nestled beneath Jon Cartwrightâs beefy arm and looking like she was almost happy to be there. âThe ceremony, I mean. What do you think weâll have to do?â
Jon, like Julie Beauvale and Beatriz Mendoza, descended from a long line of Shadowhunters. For them, tomorrow was just another day, his official farewell to student life. Time to stop training and start battling.
But for George, Marisol, Simon, Sunil Sadasivan, and a handful of other mundane students, tomorrow loomed as the day they Ascended.
No one was quite sure what it meant: Ascension . Much less what it entailed. Theyâd been told very little: That they would drink from the Mortal Cup. That they would, like the first of the warrior race, Jonathan Shadowhunter, sip the blood of an angel. That they would, if they were lucky, be transformed on the spot into real, full-blooded Shadowhunters. That they would say good-bye to their mundane lives forever and pledge themselves to a fearless life of service to humanity.
Or if they were very unlucky, they would die an immediate and presumably gruesome death.
It didnât exactly make for a festive evening.
âIâm just wondering whatâs in the Cup,â Simon said. âYou donât think itâs actual blood, do you?â
âIsnât that your specialty, Lewis?â Jon sneered.
George sighed wistfully. âThe last time Jon makes a stupid vampire joke.â
âI wouldnât count on it,â Simon muttered.
Marisol whacked Jonâs shoulder. âShut up, idiot,â she said. But she said it rather too lovingly for Simonâs taste.
âI bet itâs water,â Beatriz said, always the peacemaker. âWater that youâre supposed to pretend is blood, or that the Cup turns into blood, or something like that.â
âIt doesnât matter whatâs in the Cup,â Julie said in her best obnoxiously knowing way, even though she clearly didnât know any better than the rest of them. âThe Cupâs magic. You could probably drink ketchup out of it and it would still work.â
âI hope itâs coffee, then,â Simon said with a wistful sigh of his own. The Academy was a caffeine-free zone. âI would be a much better Shadowhunter if I got to Ascend well-caffeinated.â
âSunil said he heard that itâs water from Lake Lyn,â Beatriz said skeptically. Simon hoped she was right to be skeptical; his last encounter with Lake Lynâs water had been unsettling, to say the least. And given that