where sheâd been eating for most of the past month. Alone.
âOkay, she is just weird,â Shaunee said.
âYeah, weird as in psycho bitch from hell,â Erin said.
âHer own friends wonât have anything to do with her,â I said.
âStop feeling sorry for her!â Stevie Rae said, sounding uncharacteristically pissed off. âSheâs trouble, canât you see that?â
âI didnât say she wasnât,â I said. âI just commented that even her friends have turned their backs on her.â
âDid we miss something?â Shaunee asked.
âWhatâs going on with you and Aphrodite?â Damien asked me.
I opened my mouth to tell them about what Iâd overheard earlier, and was silenced by Neferetâs smooth, âZoey, I hope you donât mind if I pull you away from your friends tonight.â
I looked slowly up at her, almost scared about what I might see. I mean, last time I heard her voice she had sounded incredibly hateful and cold. My eyes lifted to hers. They were moss green and beautiful and her kind smile was just starting to look worried.
âZoey? Is something wrong?â
âNo! Iâm sorry. My mind was wandering.â
âIâd like you to have dinner with me tonight.â
âOh, sure. Of course. No problem; Iâd like that.â I realized I was babbling, but there didnât seem to be anything I could do about it. I hoped it would eventually stop. Kinda like how you canât have diarrhea foreverâit eventually has to stop.
âGood.â She smiled at my four friends. âI need to borrow Zoey, but I will return her soon.â
The four of them gave her hero-worshiping grins and quick assurances that they were cool with whatever.
I know itâs ridiculous, but their easy release of me made me feel abandoned and insecure. But thatâs stupid. Neferet is my mentor, and High Priestess of Nyx. Sheâs one of the good guys.
So why was my stomach clenching as I followed her out of the dining hall?
I glanced over my shoulder at my group. They were already talking away. Damien was holding up his chopsticks, obviously giving the Twins another lesson in how to maneuver them. Stevie Rae was demonstrating for him. I felt eyes on me and looked from them to the wall of glass that separated the dining area and the courtyard. Sitting alone in the night, Aphrodite was watching me with an expression that might almost be pity.
CHAPTER SEVEN
The vampsâ dining hall wasnât a cafeteria. It was a very cool room that was directly above the studentsâ dining hall. It, too, had a wall of arched windows. Wrought-iron tables and chairs were set up on the balcony that overlooked the courtyard below. The rest of the room was tastefully and expensively decorated with a variety of different size tables and even a few booths made of dark cherry-wood. There were no trays here and no serve-yourself buffets. Linens, china, and crystal were set tastefully on the tables, and long, thin white tapers burned happily in crystal holders. There were a few professors eating in quiet couples or small groups. They nodded at Neferet respectfully and smiled quick welcomes to me before going back to their meals.
I tried to gawk at what they were eating without being too obvious, but all I saw was the same Vietnamese salad weâd been eating downstairs, and some fancy-looking spring rolls. There wasnât one sign of raw meat or anything that resembled blood (well, except for the red wine). And, of course, I really didnât need to bother about gawking. If theyâd been feasting on bloody whatever I would have smelled it. I was intimately familiar with the delicious scent of blood . . .
âWould the cool night bother you if we sat outside on the balcony?â Neferet asked.
âNo, I donât think so. I donât feel the cold like I used to.â I smiled brightly at her, reminding myself