Chapter 156: A Pack to Save Lucas
I had never seen my sister as upset as she was, and to be honest I thought she was going to kill Zia before I jumped in to pull her off the poor girl. Perhaps Zia was a wicked pain in the ass and deserved every bit of what she got but I wouldn’t let Cassie be the one to pull that trigger. I wouldn’t let her live with the guilt.
The problem was I hadn’t anticipated the way things end- ed, and as Cassie said she thought Inanna, the head of stu- dents, had something to do with what was wrong with Lucas. I didn’t want to believe it.
“Cassie, you can’t be serious.” I scoffed, shaking my head. Her eyes darted around the room before she gave me a sharp glare and nodded with her head for us to follow her. I wasn’t sure where we were going, but when we stepped outside into the cool afternoon air with no one around us, she let go of a sigh and turned to face us.
“Okay, now that we are away from prying ears, I think Inanna has something to do with what’s wrong with Lucas.”
Glancing at Silas, he seemed just as skeptical as I was. He crossed his arms over his chest and opened and closed his mouth as if trying to formulate words to make sense of all of this. “Cassie, we can’t jump to conclusions like that.”
“Yeah, Cassie,” Trixie drawled as if not believing her, “Silas has a point…”
Cassie groaned, rolling her eyes as she shook her head. “Look, I know it sounds crazy, but I’m telling you… something is definitely going on with that woman.”
“Cassie, that’s just how she is,” Silas replied quickly trying to make my sister see reason. He did have a point. Even when I met her in her office when I first started that was how she came off… as someone a bit odd but who cared.
Frustration grew within my sister’s eyes as she looked at each of us before glancing at Sansa as if searching for at least one of us that would believe her. However, even Sansa seemed skeptical, and I wouldn’t doubt her for feeling that way. Cassie was my sister, and at times I was even skeptical of how she acted.
“I can’t believe you guys don’t believe me-”
“It’s not that I don‘ t,” Silas quickly interjected as he stepped toward Cassie, “we just have no proof, and you can’t go around throwing accusations out like it’s the most obvious thing without having proof to back your claim.”
Proof. That was something that was going to be virtually impossible to get, and even if we did have it, who would we turn it in to? Inanna was the head of the school.
“We can get it,” she said with an excited smile, “we can get proof.”
Tilting my head, I gave out a frustrated groan. “We can’t just assume people to be evil and go on a witch hunt for proof because you have a feeling about something, Cassie.”
As much as I wanted to believe in my sister, I just couldn’t. I couldn’t come to grips with the fact that Inanna, someone who was well–known and respected in this school, would have something to do with changing students for her own personal gain. She was technically a celestial and specialized in educa-tion.
That didn’t exactly speak highly of her being a criminal mastermind.
“Why is it you always have to be negative about every- thing?” she asked me with a disgusted look. “Can’t you just jump on board the ship again?”
“Cassie, you know what I mean.”
The more and more she stared at me with a determination in her eyes I had seen so many times growing up, I knew damn well she wasn’t going to let this go. If we didn’t help her, then she would be fine. She would continue with the pursuit of her idea.
“It’s okay, Pollux. You don’t have to come.” She sighed, shoulders sagging as she turned and walked through the courtyard toward our building. She was on a mission for sure, and I was curious to find out what she had planned.
Cassie.
I couldn’t believe they didn’t believe me. No matter what they said, I knew what I saw. The connection between Inanna and Lucas wasn’t like a normal teacher–student relationship. She was controlling him, making him dark… and I would fix that.
Making my way across the courtyard, the calls of my friends rushing after me could be heard clearly through the softly blowing wind. Part of me wanted to stop and see what they wanted, but the other part of me was just too eager to continue.
“Cassie, stop for a moment,” Pollux said harshly as he grabbed my arm, stopping me in my tracks. “Look, I don’t know what’s gotten into you, but you need to chill. You’re worrying people, including myself.”
“No, Pollux. You may not want to believe it, but I’m not ly- ing. Something is wrong, and he isn’t acting the way he is be- cause he wants to. It’s like his judgment is clouded.”
Running his hands through his hair, he scoffed again. “You’re delusional, Cassie. Lucas rejected you, and you need to let him go. You can’t force someone to be with you and think it’s because someone else is clouding their mind.”
His words hurt, and after he spoke, Trixie quickly smacked his arm and glared at him. “What the hell is wrong with you?”
“I have never seen you so determined before, Cassie,” Pol- lux whispered as he glanced over his shoulders to look at them, “they are both worried about you.”
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