I was stil kind of flustered when I practical y ran into Lara Casnoff in the main hal way. She was wearing another dark suit and was somehow holding on to a sheaf of papers, a cel phone, and a steaming mug of coffee that smel ed so good my mouth started watering. "Oh, Sophie, you're awake,"she said with a bright smile. "Here"-she handed me the coffee-"I was just bringing this up to you."
"Oh, wow, that's real y nice of you,"I replied, mental y adding Lara to my list of People Who Are Awesome. At Hex Hal , we were practical y blasted out of bed in the morning by an alarm that was somewhere between a foghorn and the baying of hel hounds. People bringing you coffee in bed was a way nicer way to wake up.
"Also, your father wanted me to tel you that he's been cal ed away on business today, but he should be back later this evening."
"Oh. Um...okay, thanks."
"He hated to miss your first day,"she said, frowning slightly.
I couldn't hold back a sarcastic laugh. "Wel , Dad's missed a lot of my first days, so I'm pretty used to it."
I think Lara was going to rush in to defend Dad, but before she could, I asked, "So in which of the nine thousand kitchens could I maybe find some cereal? I skipped dinner last night."
Immediately, Lara was al business again. "Oh, of course. Breakfast is being served in the east dining room."
She gave me directions that included three right turns, another flight of stairs, and a "conservatory,"whatever that was. When I stared at her blankly, she waved her hand and said, "I'l just show you myself."
"Thanks,"I said, trailing behind her. "Maybe by the end of the summer I'l actual y get the layout of this place down."
Lara laughed. "I've been coming to Thorne Abbey for decades, and I stil get turned around."
"Wow,"I said as we proceeded down a long hal way lined with pictures. I did a double take as I passed them. There were portraits of werewolves in eighteenth-century costumes, their silvery fur poking out from underneath knee breeches, and one image showed a family of witches from what looked like the 1600s-lots of lacy ruffs around their necks-al of them levitating underneath a tree, silvery sparks of magic dancing around them.
Then what Lara had said sunk in. "Decades? So you've known my dad since you were kids?"
She nodded. "Indeed. Your grandmother gifted Thorne Abbey to the Council before...before she passed away. Anastasia and I spent many summers here with our father."She paused and gave me a fleeting smile. "Something we have in common, Sophie. My father was also head of the Council."
"Wait, what?"
"Alexei Casnoff. You've never heard of him?"
Al I could do was shake my head, so Lara continued. "Casnoffs ruled the Council for nearly two hundred years. However, my father made the decision very early on to pass his title to your father, due to his powers."
I took that in. "But the title is hereditary. So if your dad hadn't done that, you would have been the head?"
She gave an elegant shrug, like it was a subject that didn't even warrant discussion. "Anastasia, actual y. She's the eldest. But we both agreed with Father's decision, and Anastasia felt she could be of the most use at Hecate anyway."She smiled at me and squeezed my arm a little. "Neither of us have ever regretted it. James has done an excel ent job as the head, and I'm sure you'l do just as wel ."
I tried to smile back at her, but I think it came across more as a grimace.
"So...if you and Mrs. Casnoff are sisters, and your dad was a Casnoff, why is she a Mrs.?"I asked. "Makes it sound like she married into the family."
"Anastasia was married,"Lara said, gesturing for me to walk down another corridor. "But we've always kept the name Casnoff. Her husband even took it."
I want to know more about that, but by then we'd reached the dining room. I fol owed Lara inside.
I wondered if there were any rooms in al of Thorne Abbey that wouldn't leave me gawking in wonder at the doorway. The east dining room was probably three times the size of the dining hal at Hecate. Like every other room I'd seen at Thorne, there didn't seem to be a square inch of wal that wasn't covered in paintings or gilt. Even the chairs were upholstered in gold brocade.
A long table that could have seated whole armies dominated the room, so I guessed this is where most meals at Thorne were served. But Cal was the only person there now. He glanced up as we came in and gave a tiny nod. "Morning."
Lara practical y beamed at him. "Mr. Cal ahan! So nice to see you this morning. How are you enjoying Thorne Abbey?"
Cal took a long sip of orange juice before replying. "It's great."
I don't think it was possible for Cal to sound less enthusiastic, but either Lara didn't pick up on it, or she didn't care, because she sounded awful y perky as she said, "Wel , I'm sure the two of you are welcoming the chance to spend some time together."
Cal and I both stared at her. I tried to wil her to stop talking, but apparently that power wasn't in my repertoire. Lara flashed us a conspiratorial grin.
"Nothing makes me happier than seeing an arrangement that's a real love match."
Al the awkwardness that had vanished between me and Cal yesterday seemed to swoop back into the room with an audible whoosh.
I dared a quick look in his direction, but Cal, as usual, was doing his whole Stoic Man thing. His expression didn't even waver. But then I noticed his hand tightening around his glass.
Chapter 6
"Cal and I aren't...we don't...there's not any, um, love,"I final y said. "We're friends."