The School for Good and Evil
Hester’s mouth opened in horror as Tedros pinned her red handkerchief to the ground. The knives clinked limply to dirt and the demon parts vanished. Then Hester vanished too, eyes shocked wide.
Tedros collapsed on his back. Heaving for breath, he squinted into the pink sky. The sun was coming.
“Sophie,” he croaked.
He took a deep breath.
“SOPHIE!”
Agatha’s leaves drooped in relief. Then she saw Sophie’s shrub pruning its leaves.
“What are yo—Go, you fool!”
“Agatha, I don’t have clothes.”
“At least call to him so he know—” Agatha stopped.
On the ground, a demon arm hadn’t fully vanished. It was flickering in midair, willing itself to stay.
Then it slunk over the grass and picked a knife off the ground.
“Sophie—Sophie, go—”
“Sun will be up any minute—”
“Sophie, go!”
Sophie’s shrub swiveled and saw the knife rise over Tedros’ shoulder. She gasped and hid her eyes—
The blade plunged. Tedros saw it hit his heart too late.
A shield suddenly smashed the arm down. With a screech, the demon limb shriveled and disappeared.
Dazed, Tedros stared at the shallow wound in his chest muscle, the bloody knife on his sternum. He looked up at Agatha, covering her body with his shield.
“Still haven’t figured out the clothes bit,” she mumbled.
Tedros leapt to his feet in shock. “But . . . you’re not even in . . . what are you . . .”
He saw a shrub quivering behind her. Tedros stabbed his glowing gold fingertip—“Corpadora volvera!” Sophie fell forward and hid her body behind a shrub—
“Agatha, I need clothes! Teddy, could you turn around?”
Tedros shook his head. “But the library—that book . . . You did cheat!”
“Teddy, we had to. . . . Agatha, help!”
Agatha pointed her seared, glowing finger at Sophie to wrap her in vines but Tedros stayed her hand.
“You said you’d fight with me!” he cried, eyes locked on Sophie behind the shrub. “You said you’d have my back!”
“I knew you’d be fine—Agatha, please—”
“You lied!” he said, voice breaking. “Everything you said was a lie! You were using me!”
“That’s not true, Tedros! No princess would risk her own life! Even your truest love—”
Tedros glowered, red hot. “Then why did she?”
Sophie followed the prince’s eyes to Agatha, raw with burns.
Agatha saw Sophie’s eyes slowly widen, as if discovering a knife stabbed into her back. But just as Agatha tried to defend herself, sunlight exploded into the glen and washed her body in gold.
Wolves howled at the gates. Sounds of children and footsteps thundered through the Forest.
“They did it!”
“They won!”
“Sophie and Tedros won!”
Bodies burst into the glen. Panicked, Agatha lit up her finger and her dove flew away just as students flooded into view—
“Ever and Never!” shouted one.
“Witch and prince!” shouted another.
“All hail Sophie and Ted—”
The Forest went quiet.
From a tree, Agatha looked down at the unchosen Evers and Nevers surge in, then the fallen competitors, healed and cleaned by magic—all frozen as they took in the scene.
Sophie cowering behind a bush. Tedros glaring down at her, eyes on fire.
And they knew there would never be peace.
Evers and Nevers shifted apart, enemies eternal.
Neither side could hear the laughter from the tower, half shadowed, lording over them all.
22
Nemesis Dreams
“Have you seen my pajamas?” Hort whimpered outside Sophie’s door. “The ones with frogs?”
Swaddled in his tattered bedsheets, Sophie stared at a window she’d sealed dark with a black blanket.
“My father made them for me,” Hort sniffled. “I can’t sleep without them.”
But Sophie just gazed at the blackened window, as if there was something in the darkness only she could see.
Hort brought up barley gruel, boiled eggs, browning vegetables from the Supper Hall, but she didn’t answer his knocks. For days, Sophie just lay still as a corpse, waiting for her prince to come. Soon her eyes dulled. She didn’t know what day it was. She didn’t know if it was morning or night. She didn’t know if she was asleep or awake.
Somewhere in this grim fog the first dream came.
Streaks of black and white, then she tasted blood. She gazed up into a storm of boiling red rain. She tried to hide, but she was strapped to a white stone table by violet thorns, her body tattooed in a strange script she’d seen before but couldn’t remember where. Three old hags appeared beside her, chanting and tracing the script on her skin with crooked fingers. Faster and faster the hags chanted until a steel knife, long and thin as a knitting needle, appeared in the air over her body. She tried to wrest free, but it was too late. The knife fell with vengeance, pain flooded her stomach, and something inside her was born. A pure white seed, then a milky mass, bigger, bigger, until she saw what it was. . . . A face . . . a face too blurry to see. . . .
“Kill me now,” said the voice.
Sophie jolted awake.
Agatha sat on the edge of her bed, wrapped in Hort’s stained sheets.
“I mean, I don’t even want to know what’s on these.”
Sophie didn’t look at her.
“Come on. You can borrow my nose clips for Yuba’s class.” Agatha stood, lit by a small tear in the window. “Day three of ‘Know Your Animal Dung!’”
Strained silence ticked by.
Agatha slumped to the bed. “What should I have done, Sophie? I couldn’t let him die.”
“It’s not right,” Sophie said, almost to herself. “You and me . . . it’s not right.”
Agatha scooted closer. “I only want the best for you—”
“No,” said Sophie so sharply Agatha lurched back.
“I just wanted to get us home!”
“We’re not going home. You’ve seen to that.”
“You think I wanted this?” Agatha said, exasperated.
“Why are you here?”
“Because I wanted to see how you were. I was worried about you!”
“No. Why are you here,” Sophie said, looking at the window. “In my school. In my fairy tale.”
“Because I tried to save you, Sophie! I tried to save you from the curse!”
“Then why do you keep cursing me and my prince?”
Agatha scowled. “That’s not my fault.”
“I think it’s because deep down you don’t want me to find love, Agatha,” Sophie said, voice calm.
“What? Of cour—”
“I think you want me for yourself.”
Agatha’s whole body went rigid. “That’s—” She swallowed. “That’s stupid.”
“The School Master was right,” Sophie said, still not looking at her. “A princess can’t be friends with a witch.”
“But we are friends,” Agatha sputtered. “You’re the only friend I’ve ever had!”
“You know why a princess can’t be friends with a witch, Agatha?” Slowly Sophie turned to face her. “Because a witch never has her own fairy tale. A witch has to ruin one to be happy.”
Agatha fought back tears. “But I’m not—I’m not a witch—”
“THEN GET YOUR OWN LIFE!” Sophie screamed.
She watched the dove flee through the rip in the black window, then crawled back under her sheets until all the light was gone.
That night, Sophie had her second dream. She was running through woods, hungrier than she’d ever been—until she found a deer with a human face, the same milky, blurred face she glimpsed the night before. She looked closer to see whose it was, but the deer’s face was now a mirror and in it, she could
see her reflection. But it wasn’t hers.
It was the Beast’s.
Sophie woke in icy sweat, blood burning through her veins.
Outside Room 34, Hort huddled in his underpants, reading The Gift of Loneliness by candlelight.
The door cracked open behind him. “What is everyone saying about me?”
Hort stiffened as if he’d heard a ghost. He turned, eyes wide.
“I want to know,” said Sophie.
She followed him into the dark hall, joints cracking. She couldn’t remember the last time she stood up.
“I don’t see anything,” she said, searching for the glint of his chest’s swan crest. “Where are you?”
“Over here.”
A torch ignited, swathing Hort in firelight. She staggered back.
Every inch of the black wall behind him was covered in posters, banners, graffiti—CONGRATULATIONS, CAPTAIN! TRIAL TRIUMPHANT! READER TO THE RESCUE!—accompanied by depraved cartoons of Evers suffering miserable deaths. Beneath the wall, carnivorous green bouquets littered the floor, carrying handwritten messages between the blooms’ sharp teeth:
Wish I had your moves!
Ravan
You’re the ultimate Thief of Hearts!
Mona
Tedros deserved it!
Your friend, Arachne
Sophie looked dazed. “I don’t understand—”
“Tedros said you used him to win the Trial!” Hort said. “Lady Lesso named it the ‘Sophie Trap’—said you even fooled her! Teachers are saying you’re the best Captain Evil has ever had. Look!”
Sophie followed his eyes to a row of eel-green boxes amid the bouquets, wrapped with red ribbons.
She opened the first to find a parchment card:
HOPE YOU REMEMBER HOW TO USE IT. PROFESSOR MANLEY
Beneath it was a black snakeskin cape.
In the boxes that followed, Castor gifted her a dead quail, Lady Lesso left an ice-carved flower, and Sader enclosed her Trial cloak, asking if she might kindly donate it to the Exhibition of Evil.
“What a genius trick,” Hort fawned, trying on the cape. “Hide as a plant, wait until Tedros and Hester are left, then charge in and take out Hester while Tedros is wounded. But why didn’t you finish Tedros off? Everyone’s asking, but he won’t say anything. I said it’s ’cause the sun came up.”
Hort saw Sophie’s expression and his smile vanished.
“It was a trick, wasn’t it?”
Sophie’s eyes filled with tears. She started to shake her head—
But there was something else on the wall in front of her.
A black rose, note speared through thorns, dripping with ink.
Sophie took it into her hands.
Cheater. Liar. Snake.
You’re right where you belong.
All hail the witch.
“Sophie? Who’s it from?”
Heart throbbing, Sophie smelled the bitter black thorns laced with a scent she knew so well.
So this was her reward for Love.
She crushed the rose, spitting Tedros’ words with blood.
“This will make you feel better.”
In Room 66, Anadil scooped murky yellow broth from her cauldron into a bowl, dripping on the floor. Immediately her rats converged, eight inches bigger now, biting, clawing each other to get first licks.
“Your talent’s coming along,” Hester croaked.
Anadil sat on the edge of Hester’s bed with the bowl. “Just a few sips.”
Hester managed only one, then fell back.
“I shouldn’t have tried it,” she wheezed. “She’s too good. She’s twice the witch I am—”
“Shhhh, don’t strain.”
“But she loves him,” said Dot, curled in her bed.
“She thinks she does,” Hester said. “Just like we all once did.”
Dot’s eyes bulged.
“Please, Dot. You think she’s the only Never who dabbled in love?”
“Hester, enough,” Anadil pressed.
“No, let’s have the truth,” Hester said, struggling to sit up. “All of us have felt shameful stirrings. All of us have felt weakness.”
“But those feelings are wrong,” said Anadil. “No matter how strong they are.”
“That’s why this one’s special,” Hester said wryly. “She almost convinced us they were right.”
The room lapsed to silence.
“So what happens to her now?” asked Dot.
Hester sighed. “The same thing that happened to all of us.”
This time their silence was broken by distant clacks in slow, menacing rhythm. The three girls craned to the door as the clacks swelled towards them, cruel and clean like whip cracks. They grew louder, sharper, impaling the hall, then ebbed past their room to silence.
Dot farted in relief.
The door slammed open and the girls screamed—Dot bellyflopped off the bed—
A draft blew the hanging dresses past the torch over the door, casting flints of light on a shadow’s face.
The hair gleamed, spiked and slicked, black as smeared eye sockets and lips. Ghost-white skin glowed against black nail polish, black cape, and black leather.
Sophie stepped into the room, high black boots stabbing the floor.
Hester grinned back at her.
“Welcome home.”
From the floor, Dot peeped nervously between them. “But where will we find a new bed?”
Three pairs of eyes found hers.
She didn’t even get time to collect her snacks. In the dark, dank hall, Dot pounded on the iron door in banishing silence. But it was no use.
Three witches made a coven and she had been replaced.
The Evers didn’t celebrate when Tedros received his Captain’s badge. How could they, when Sophie had made a fool of him? “Evil had returned!” the Nevers gloated. “Evil had a Queen!”
Then the Evers remembered they had something the Nevers didn’t. Something that proved them superior.
A Ball.
And the Queen wasn’t invited.
The first snow littered the Clearing in lumpy brittles of ice, pelting Nevers’ pails with loud pings. As they tried to grasp moldy cheese with frozen fingers, they looked daggers at Evergirls scrabbling about, too busy to worry about weather. With the Ball two weeks away, the girls needed to make every possible arrangement, since boys still refused to propose before the Circus. Reena, for instance, expected Chaddick to ask her, so she had dyed her mother’s old school gown to match his gray eyes. But if Chaddick asked Ava instead (she had caught him ogling Snow White’s portrait, so he might like paler girls), then Nicholas might ask her, in which case she’d trade for Giselle’s white gown to balance his tanned skin. And if Nicholas didn’t ask her . . .
“Mother says Goodness is making people feel wanted even when you don’t want them at all,” she sighed to Beatrix, who looked bored. With Sophie out of the picture, Beatrix knew Tedros was her date. Not that he had confirmed this. The prince had been ignoring everyone since the Trial, sullen as a Never. Now Beatrix felt his mood infect her as she watched him shoot arrows into the tree he and Sophie used to sit beneath.
Tedros ripped more holes in its heart, but there was no satisfaction. After a few days of teasing, his mates had tried to cheer him up. Who cared if he shared his spoils with a Nevergirl! Who cared if she puttered with him along the way! He’d still won a brutal Trial and outlasted them all. But Tedros saw only shame in it, for he was no better than his father now. A slave to his heart’s mistakes.
Still, he hadn’t told anyone about Agatha. He knew she was surprised by this because she winced every time he spoke in class, as if expecting him to expose her any moment. But where a week ago, he would have loved to see her punished, now he felt confused. Why had she risked her life to save him? Had she been telling the truth about that gargoyle? Could that witch actually be . . . Good?
He thought of her tramping through halls with leery bug eyes—
A
cockroach. That’s what Beatrix said.
So Agatha was there all along, helping Sophie to the top of the ranks? She must have been hidden in Sophie’s dress or in her hair, whispering answers and casting spells. . . . But how had she made him pick Sophie in the pumpkin challenge?
Tedros felt sick.
A goblin picked from two . . . A princess whose coffin knocked him out . . . A roach hidden on a pumpkin . . .
He had never picked Sophie.
He picked Agatha every time.
Tedros whipped around in horror, looking for her, but he didn’t see Agatha anywhere in the Clearing. He had to stay away from that girl. He had to tell her to stay away from him. He had to stop all of this—
A hunk of sleet smacked his cheek. Blinded by water, Tedros saw shadows gliding towards him, wiped his eyes—and dropped his bow.
Sophie, Anadil, and Hester slunk in step with matching black hair, black makeup, and black-hearted scowls. With a shared hiss, they sent Evergirls bolting, leaving only Tedros and spooked Everboys fanned out behind him. Anadil and Hester dropped behind Sophie, who stepped up to face her prince.
From the sky, ice fell between them in jagged slivers.
“You think I faked it,” Sophie said, flaying him with her green eyes. “You think I never loved you.”
Tedros tried to quell his thumping heart. Somehow she was more beautiful than ever.
“You can’t cheat your way to love, Sophie,” he said. “My heart never wanted you.”
“Oh, I’ve seen who your heart picks,” Sophie smirked, mimicking Agatha’s buggy gape and trademark scowl.
Tedros reddened. “I can explain that—”
“Let me guess. Your heart is blind.”
“No, it just says anyone but you.”
Sophie chuckled. In a flash, she lunged and Tedros drew his sword, as did all his mates behind him.
Sophie smiled weakly. “Look what’s happened, Tedros. You’re scared of your true love.”
“Go back to your side!” the prince yelled.
“I waited for you,” Sophie said, voice breaking. “I thought you’d come for me.”
“What? Why would I come for you?”
Sophie gazed at him. “Because you made me a promise,” she breathed.