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The Tiny Curse: Werewolf High Book 2(8)

By:Anita Oh


Then, finally, somebody stepped forward. I'd expected it to be one of  the T-son fan club or maybe Astor or one of the other polo guys, but it  wasn't. It was Fatima.

Even though we hadn't been on the best terms, I still felt it like a  slap in the face. I could understand her standing up for Hannah or being  jealous of my grades, but I'd thought underneath it all we were still  more or less friends, that we were cut from the same cloth. But I was  definitely not cut from backstabbing bully cloth.

Hannah was nowhere to be seen, but Fatima glanced back at the others as  she stepped forward, at Olivia and Charlotte and Stephanie Von Whatsit,  and I got it. Well, I didn't really get it, but I saw what she was  doing. She'd mentioned to me once before that she wanted to move up to  the Green House, that she wanted the power that came with status and  connections. She obviously saw this as her way in. Basically, I'd  thought she was Hermione but she was Wormtail. Man was I a sucker.

When she looked at me, her eyes were cold, and I wondered how I'd ever  counted her as a friend. There was no friendship in that look, no  compassion. She'd be completely ruthless in dealing with me if it meant  getting what she wanted.

"You've gone too far," she said, in a loud, clear voice that carried  across the courtyard. "I was one thing when you were just annoying and  making an idiot out of yourself, but you've really upset a lot of  people. You don't belong here. You bring down the entire tone of the  school and you need to leave now."

A few people gave little cheers. I could feel all of their eyes on me,  piercing me like ice picks. Bunch of jerks. They didn't even know me,  they didn't know a single thing about me, but they thought they could  dismiss me and treat me however they liked just because I was poor,  because I wasn't one of them. That wasn't right. It wasn't fair. But  what could I do? There was nothing I could do, nothing I could say that  would change how any of them thought. I was completely helpless in this  situation, I had no way of fighting back.

It made me so mad that tears sprang to my eyes. I tried to blink them  away in case anyone got the wrong idea and thought that I cared what  they thought. I didn't care one bit. I just hated the unfairness of it  all. I tried to be a good person. I did my homework and tried to be nice  to people, even when I thought they were jerks. I hadn't done anything  wrong. I didn't deserve this.

"You have to be kidding me. Are you actually crying right now?" Fatima  rolled her eyes. "That's not going to get you out of this."

Charlotte stepped up beside Fatima, shaking her head at me. "Girls like you are the worst. You don't know your place."

The circle began to close in, and for the first time I really started to  worry. Angry mobs were no joke when you were in the middle of one. They  were going to lynch me for real and there was not one thing I could do  about it. Man, what even was the point of having werewolf buddies if  they never jumped in to rescue you at times like this. Sure, I'd been  learning to fight but I was only one skinny girl. It would take a flame  thrower to get these losers to back off.

Although it was only lunchtime, the day was already growing dark.  Ominous clouds gathered over our heads, blocking the sun and lending to  the apocalyptic atmosphere I felt with everyone closing in on me.         

     



 

Somebody shoved me from behind and I stumbled forward, closer to the T-son brigade.

"You're ugly and poor. Why do people like you even exist in this world?" said Olivia.

"You should just die," said Charlotte.

Somebody grabbed me and that seemed to be the sign they were all waiting  for. They converged on me as if they were one entity, only it was  freakier than that time they were being controlled by magic because this  time they were doing it of their own free will, each and every one of  them.

Wow, I thought as they all started pulling at me, dragging me off my  feet, people really suck a lot. I didn't know what they were doing, if  they had some sort of master plan, but I didn't think it would end well  for me. I mean, if a bunch of super rich kids decide to gang up and kill  the poor scholarship kid, would anybody even do anything about it?  They'd just bury me in the woods and be like "What? Lucy who? I don't  know what you're talking about," and their parents would pay some people  off and it would be like I never existed. Oh man, that sucked so much.  Dumb rich kids and their dumb group murder.

I didn't have too much time to think on it though, as they dragged me  down the steps to the marble fountain. It was kind of painful and  horrific, with people scratching and grabbing and poking at me. My legs  scraped along the ground, and every time I tried to stand, somebody  kicked my feet out from under me. They pulled my hair and laughed at me.  It was basically Lord of the Flies and I was Piggy but I didn't even  have their stupid conch so I didn't know why they couldn't leave me  alone.

When we got to the fountain, they pulled me to my feet. I thought about  making a break for it. If I got to the gardens, I might be able to evade  them. But as soon as the thought crossed my mind, somebody grabbed me  by the hair and shoved my head into the fountain. Not long enough to  drown me or anything, but definitely long enough for me to swallow some  of that water and probably get E.coli. I struggled against them and they  let me go. I stood up, gasping for air. Water dripped all down my face,  in my hair and my eyes. I couldn't see anything but I sure could see  that I needed to get out of there before this went any further.

Despite my best efforts, my bag had been pulled off my back and dumped  into the fountain. Literally everything of value I had in this world was  in that bag, and I couldn't leave it there, but Astor and one of the  other polo guys stood between it and me. No way could I overpower them,  big meatheads that they were. I had to rely on my special Lucy-specific  skills to get out of this. I didn't know what those skills were, apart  from maybe eating. I couldn't eat my way out of this one though. The  only other thing I was good at was pushing on through the obstacles, and  that seemed appropriate to the situation. I let out a mighty roar and  launched myself at the polo jerks. They seemed a bit surprised and moved  out of my way.

A few of the girls yelled and grabbed for me and I leapt into the  fountain and grabbed my bag. I felt like I should've maybe stopped and  made some sassy comment to them like people did on TV, but I had no  words for the situation. Plus, they were already moving into action and I  had no time to waste. I splashed my way across the fountain and jumped  out the other side, vaulting a hedge in my haste to get away from them.

I could hear them closing in on me as I ran down the path, the thunder  of their footsteps and their jeering calls. I had been chased through  these school grounds by rabid werewolves  –  more than once  –  but that  wasn't half as scary as being chased by entitled rich kids. Their thirst  for my blood was palpable. If they caught me, I was done for.

My wet bag was heavy and dug into my side as I ran. My whole body hurt  from being dragged across the courtyard, but I didn't even think of  slowing down. I had to put some distance between them and me. Those polo  guys were fast though, and one of the smaller girls, I think she was a  professional tennis player. She was like a whippet, and I could feel her  nipping at my heels.

I turned down the path toward the Red House, feeling my heart grow a  little lighter as I pulled away from them, just slightly. I might make  it. I could lock myself in my room and wait things out. I'd explain  things to Hannah and the world would go back to normal. Maybe I wouldn't  end up in a shallow grave in the woods after all.

I ran smack bang into the fence.

Dammit, I had forgotten all about Tennyson Wilde's stupid garden  rebuilding scheme. Why did he even need a fence around it? Didn't he  realize what a massive inconvenience it was to every single person ever.

They were so close behind me, almost close enough to touch. I kicked at  the fence, wishing it was Tennyson Wilde, and  –  like magic, only less  creepy and annoying  –  a gate swung open right beside me. I flew through  it just as Polo Guy #2 reached out to grab me and bolted it fast behind  me.         

     



 

They rattled the fence, banged on it. It was high and sturdy-looking but  I thought it probably wouldn't take them long to break open that gate.  They seemed pretty determined. I didn't want to stick around until they  broke through.

Tennyson Wilde's mysterious garden was not actually a garden at all, I  realized as I looked around. It was a forest. A bamboo forest. The  bamboo stood just higher than my head if I was on tiptoes, and was  evenly spaced around 6 feet apart, except for where a stone path ran  through. Most of the bamboo was still just a single cane, but I noticed a  few shoots had already begun to spring up here and there. There was a  strong smell of compost, which I assumed came from fertilizer underneath  the bed of straw that lined the forest floor. Why ever would you build  something so potentially creepy in a place where creepy stuff kept on  happening? Didn't he know it was the perfect place for evil things to  lurk? Well, obviously he knew that, being an evil thing with a fondness  for lurking. That was obviously his whole reason for building it. It was  also a breeding ground for vermin, probably. And not really a fun place  to wander around when you had an angry mob after you. I jumped at every  little shadow, every noise. Rationally, I knew that angry mobs weren't  particularly stealthy, and yet I kept waiting for something to reach out  through the bamboo stalks and grab me. Seriously, the only thing that  would've been creepier was maybe a cornfield. On a par, probably.