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"Changing? What do you mean by that?" Damien asked.
"Her power is different than it used to be," Darius said.
I nodded. "It's like a switch has been thrown inside her, and it's let loose a different kind of power."
"A dark power," Aphrodite said. We all looked at her. "Her power isn't based on Neferet anymore. Sure, she's still using the gifts our Goddess gave her, but she's channeling energy from somewhere else, too. Couldn't you guys feel it in the hall outside the sickroom?"
There was a long silence, and then Damien spoke up. "I think we were too busy struggling against Kalona's attraction."
"And scared shitless," Erin said.
"Entirely," Shaunee agreed.
"Well, so now we know. Neferet is even more of a threat than she's ever been. They talked when they thought I was passed out. Neferet and Kalona are planning a new future, and it has something to do with taking over the Council," I said, wishing I could crawl into bed and pull the covers over my head.
"Oh b?"?my goddess! The High Council?" Aphrodite said.
"I don't know for sure, but that's what I'm afraid of. I'm also afraid her new power has given her special abilities." I paused. I didn't want to freak out the gang before I had my talk with Stevie Rae, but they did need to be warned, so I picked my words carefully. "I think Neferet can project her influence by moving through, or maybe manipulating, shadows."
"That's bad," Damien said.
"It means we have to be on guard," Erin said.
"Majorly on guard," Shaunee agreed.
Darius nodded. "Remember always: Neferet is our enemy, Kalona is our enemy, and most of the other fledglings are our enemies, too." His sharp gaze went from kid to kid. "What about the rest of the professors?" Darius asked them. "All of you attended classes today, didn't you? How were they acting?"
"Yeah, we went to class, weird as that was," Shaunee said.
"It was like attending Stepford High School," Erin said.
"It seems the professors are all enthralled with Kalona, too," Damien said. "Of course, I can't tell you that for sure. We weren't ever alone with the professors."
"Not alone? What do you mean?" I said.
"I mean those bird things are everywhere--coming and going from class, and even in class."
"Are you kidding?" A shiver of revulsion quavered though my body at the thought of those terrible mutations of nature moving freely among fledglings--like they belonged here!
"He's not kidding. They are everywhere. It's like Invasion of the f**king Body Snatchers," Aphrodite said. "The good guys look the same on the outside, but are screwed on the inside, and the Raven Mockers are the damn aliens."
"And the Sons of Erebus? Are they supporting this?" Darius asked.
"I haven't seen one warrior since Aristos escorted us onto campus," Damien said. "How about you guys?"
The Twins and Aphrodite shook their heads no.
"This is so not good," I said. I rubbed my forehead as a wave of exhaustion engulfed me. What were we going to do? Who were our friends? And how the hell were we going to get out of the House of Night and to what I could only hope would be safety?
Chapter Twenty-two
"Zoey? Are you okay?"
I looked up to meet Damien's soft brown eyes. Before I could answer him, Darius spoke up.
"She is not. Zoey must get sleep; she must rest to restore her strength."
"How's your nasty, ugly, gaping wound?" Erin asked.
"It doesn't look like you're bleeding through that charming hospital garb, so we assumed you were fixed right up," Shaunee said.
"I'm better, but I'm having an issue with getting my strength back. It's like I'm a cell phone with a messed-up charger."
"You must rest," Darius repeated. "Your wound was almost fatal. Recovery takes time."
"We don't have time!" I yelled in frustration. "We need to get the hell out of here and away from Kalona until we can figure out how we can beat him."
"Getting out of here isn't going to be as easy as it was last time," Damien said.
Aphrodite snorted. "As if that was easy!"
"It will be compared to what we're up against now," Damien continued. "Raven Mockers are everywhere. Last night they were attacking people randomly. It was mass confusion then, and that helped us slip away. Today they're well organized and stationed all over."