“You going to eat that salad?” Dee asked.
“It’s cute how you stopped kissing for food.” I laughed, pushing my tray toward her. “Hey, Adam.”
His cheeks were flushed. “Hey, Katy.”
“Sorry. I worked up an appetite.” Dee grinned.
“And I lost mine,” Carissa muttered.
Blake never arrived at the cafeteria, but Daemon had. He’d taken his seat beside Andrew and Ash. Against my will, I watched him. Daemon glanced up, holding a smoothie. He smirked.
Bastard.
I shifted my gaze to Dee. “How can you eat that? I swear the edges of the lettuce are brown. It’s gross.”
Adam laughed. “Dee can eat anything.”
“So can you.” She offered him the tomato on her fork. “Want some?”
“Okay.” I sat back. “If you feed him, I’m going to have to find a new table.”
“I second that,” Carissa added.
Dee rolled her eyes but relented. “I like to share. What’s wrong with that?” Then she looked at me, her expression hopeful. “I’m glad you’re eating with us…alone today.”
Uncomfortable, I nodded and focused on pulling apart my lasagna. I hated layered food, unless those layers involved chocolate and peanut butter.
Lunch and the afternoon classes finally ended, and I swung by the post office to pick up the mail before Blake came over.
As I was placing the junk and packages on the backseat, I caught sight of one of the black Expeditions parked at the edge of the parking lot, as if they’d pulled over abruptly and left the engine running.
It could be any Expedition, I told myself as I closed the door, but a shiver danced down my spine and all the tiny hairs rose on my arms. Maybe I’d developed some kind of wicked sixth sense along with my alien mojo?
Going to the driver’s side, I kept an eye on the Expedition. Smoke plumed out of the muffler, choking the air.
Suddenly, the passenger door jerked open and I saw two people. Brian Vaughn, the DOD officer who owned the creepiest laugh ever, was leaning over the passenger, grabbing for the door. His mouth was a thin, angry slash as he groped for the door with one hand while his arm braced a girl against the seat.
Squinting, I took another look at the girl when I should’ve been climbing into my car and getting the hell out of there. The last thing I needed was for Vaughn to catch me peeping at him, but…I knew this girl.
I’d seen her face on a flyer, taped on the glass windows of FOOLAND. Her brown hair was pulled back tightly from her pale, elfin face. Her eyes weren’t dancing with laughter when she turned to the door, watching Vaughn pull it shut, closing her in…closing me out.
Her eyes were empty.
But it was her.
It was Bethany.
Chapter 22
Bethany—Dawson’s girlfriend—was alive. And she was with the DOD. It sounded insane, and I went through every stage of denial as I made my way home, but it was her. That face had been burned into my memory. I paced the house until Blake showed up, stunned by what this could mean.
He took one look at me and frowned. “You look like you’ve seen a ghost.”
“I think I have.” My hands opened and closed at my sides. “I think I saw Bethany today with this guy from the DOD.”
Blake frowned. “Who’s Bethany?”
It felt wrong telling Blake about this, but I needed to tell someone. “Bethany was Dawson’s girlfriend. And Dawson was Daemon and Dee’s brother. They were supposedly attacked by an Arum and killed, but their bodies were taken away by the DOD before Daemon or Dee could see them.”
Understanding dawned in his eyes. “Man, I was curious. Every Luxen comes in threes.”
I nodded. “But if it’s really her—and I’m pretty sure it’s her—what does that mean?”
Blake sat on the arm of the recliner, turning the TV remote over and over above his hands…without touching it. “How close were Dawson and Bethany?”
Then it hit me. It all seemed so clear. The walls tilted a little as panic punched a hole in my chest. “Oh my God, Dawson had healed Bethany. That’s what everyone thinks. That she got hurt somehow and he healed her. And he could’ve changed—mutated—her, right?”
Blake nodded. “Oh, man…”
“And I bet Bethany is a nickname for Elizabeth and… And what did that girl look like—the one who told you about the DOD named Liz?”
His brows rose. “She had brown hair, a little darker than yours. Kind of sharp features, but really pretty.”
It all started to click together. “This is insane. How would the DOD have known about her? She and Dawson disappeared just a couple of days after whatever happened between them, unless…unless someone who suspected that Bethany had been healed told the DOD.” My stomach tumbled over as I pulled my hair back into a messy twist. “Who would do that? One of the Luxen?”
“I don’t know. I wouldn’t put it past the DOD to have Luxen who are the eyes and ears for them,” he said, rubbing his brow. “Man, that sucks.”
Suck didn’t even cover it. That meant someone close to the Blacks had most likely betrayed them in the worst way. Anger whipped through me. I turned just as the curtains billowed out as if a rush of air had entered the room. A small cyclone of books and magazines moved through the living room, spinning and spinning.
“Whoa, simmer down, Storm.”
I blinked and the cyclone fell apart. Sighing, I picked up the books and magazines now scattered around the room. My pulse thrummed in my ears as my mind raced through what I’d discovered. “If the DOD has Beth, then what did they do with Dawson? Do you think he’s still alive?”