Since you all wanted to read it, here you go!!
The acceptance letter was a mistake β if not, a cruel joke. Gravenmoore Institute only chose Legacies, those with names worth remembering.
It didnβt choose Ordinary girls.
It didnβt choose girls like me.
The envelope was black, sealed in wax the color of dried blood, and my name was written in a hand that looked disturbingly like my own.
My hands trembled as I peeled it open and pulled out the letter. It was written in the same mirroring calligraphy, signed with the Instituteβs signature at the bottom.
Miss Seraphina Beauregard,
The words seemed to rearranged themselves as I read, ink gliding like liquid across the page.
A pulse flickered beneath the letters β faint, like a heartbeat.
And, at long lastβ¦you have been invited.
βNo,β I whispered, shaking my head as my eyes raced ahead.
Gravenmoore Institute extends to you its most singular distinction; admission into its sacred halls, where the extraordinary are refined, the monstrous are perfected, and the unseen are finally given form.
You are expected at the stroke of midnight on the first frost.
βFirst frost?β I breathed. βThatβs weeks awayββ
The line beneath it twisted.
The lamp on my bedside table flickered violently, fluorescent light stretching thin and tall as if reaching for something unseen.
βThis isnβt funny,β I snapped, though my voice wavered. βI donβt know whoββ
The next line appeared as I spoke, ink bleeding into existence.
The temperature in the room dropped sharply. My pulse roared in my ears.
I spun around, as if expecting someone to be standing there.
But when I looked back down at the letter, my hands shaking nowβ
There was one final line waiting for me:
They have already taken notice.
Do try not to disappoint them, Nightshade.
The words hit me like a curse.
I didnβt know what it meant.
But something deep inside me did β and it was afraid.
A knock sounded at the door. I jumped β then saw it was my mother.
Her gaze was crystalline β pale as frost β sharp as a blade. I stiffened beneath it, my expression smooth as the surface of polished marble but tight at the edges, holding back my hidden apprehension.
She stepped forward. That single movement held all the power in the room.
I fought the urge to step back.
I inclined my chin, lips pressed into a thin line.
When I didnβt answer, her tone sharpened. βI asked you a question, Seraphina.β
βYes, Mother?β I responded, my voice deceptively soft.
βI said, who are you talking to?β She demanded, arms tightening over her chest, pressing into the material of her dress.
She heard, but she didnβt know β for now.
βNo one,β I replied, tilting my head. βI was talking to myself.β
My mother huffed. βAlways in your head,β she muttered. Then her gaze dropped to the envelope and letter sitting in my hand.
βWhat is that?β She pointed a manicured finger at both items.
It was too late to hide them. I hugged them to my chest with one hand, taking a fraction of a step backward. βItβs nothing β just junk mailββ
My mother wasnβt buying it. In one fluid motion, she lashed out and snatched it, not caring that her nail had scratched the side of my hand, a light, angry red line drawn across the pale skin.
I bit back a hiss of pain, brushing it off on the side of my skirt, but my hand continued to sting.
She brought the letter up to her face, her eyes scanning the page. My stomach clenched, and I mentally counted down the seconds until she reached the bottom β and all hell broke loose.
I didnβt have time to react.
She seized my chin, whipping my head forward so fast a wave of vertigo crashed over me as my momentum crashed. I rapidly blinked to clear the black dots swimming in my vision.
It still hadnβt fully cleared as she spoke, her voice cutting like daggers. βIs this some kind of joke?! What the hell do you think youβre doing?β
Her hand connected with my face, snapping my head to the side. βFaking a letter from Gravenmoore?β She growled. βHave you lost your mind?!β
My blood boiled, a twinge of recklessness shooting through me. I spoke before I could think. βI didnβt fake it!β
Her fingers wrapped around my hair, tugging hard at the roots. I cried out, tears pricking at my scalp. βYou ungrateful bitch!β She snarled, yanking me forward. βCome with me.β
I was helpless, stumbling over my feet as she dragged me from my bedroom to the living room, gripping my platinum blonde tresses like a leash.
She cut me off as she suddenly let go, shoving me into the sofa. I looked up, rubbing the sting from my scalp, catching my breath.
Aurelia stood a few feet from the sofa, gaze flitting between me, the bruise on my cheek, and our mother. Her eyes held a rich, dark green depth, softened by pale highlights and the faintest cool undertone β the same shade as our fatherβs. In her hand, she held a black envelope, identical to the one Iβd received, slipped through my window by an unseen hand.
Her brow furrowed. βWhy is she here?β
My motherβs expression softened, just a little and only for her. Between the two of us, Aurelia had taken her favor, her heart of ice thawing into something warmer. Despite my fire, Iβd never achieved the same warmth.
Maybe it was the living specter of my fatherβs features on Aureliaβs face, from the long slope of her nose to the thick, dark hair that framed her face.
The death had hit Mom harder than she wanted to admit.
Sheβd never been soft. But Dadβs death had forged her into something sharper, more cruel. Whatever affinity she had for Aurelia paled in comparison for the love she held for my father β and when she died, her love followed him to the grave. Its ghost had returned, a vengeful thing that sat in my motherβs heart and festered.
Through my sisterβs visage, she could vicariously remember her late husband.
But Iβ¦I was her grotesque mirror that she couldnβt get rid of β same blonde hair, but my eyes were hotter, glowing like amber with a flame trapped inside. I was her rage and grief personified, reflecting in every breath I took β and she hated it. Hated looking at me, and seeing her own vileness echoing back at her.
Even now, she didnβt look at me, her gaze fixed upon Aurelia. βShe is here because of her own selfishness and jealousy.β
My temper flared. βThatβs not true, I didnβt knowββ
βSilence!β My mother hissed, her glare demanding submission. βYou donβt get to play the victim here. Not after what youβve done.β
βI didnβt do anythingββ
Her hand slapped my cheek again. βEnough,β she snarled, nails digging into my cheeks hard enough to draw blood. βApologize to your sister.β
I sputtered. βApologizeββ
She spun me, shoving me to face Aurelia, whose green eyes stared at me, wide with confusion and innocence.
βApologize,β she repeated, βfor lying to me, for faking a letter from Gravenmoore.β
Aureliaβs eyes grew to the size of saucers. βShe got a letter from Gravenmoore, too?β
βDonβt be ridiculous, Aurelia,β our mother snapped. βOf course they didnβt; sheβs lying. Sheβs an Ordinary β what school would want someone like her?β
The words stung β not from their sharpness, but the truth beneath them. To be Ordinary was to be null β magic-less, hollow.
In our world, there was no place for someone like that.
Yet Gravenmoore had invited me. A girl from the same group of people they scorned. An outsider.
My motherβs grip tightened on my neck, shaking it again. βApologize.β
I ground my teeth, lowering my gaze to the ground. βI am sorry, Aurelia,β I gritted out.
Her voice was soft β too soft, too gentle β as she replied. βI forgive you.β
My mother released her death grip on my neck as Aurelia accepted my apology. βThere,β she said, her voice saccharine. βThat wasnβt so hard, was it?β
I said nothing, jaw clenched, fists balled tight. My nails dug crescents into my palms until they bled.
The pain was a welcome distraction from the rage.
Aurelia was the one to break the silence. βMom?β she asked.
βYes?β My mother replied, her voice softer now. The dichotomy β switching from a hellion to this gentle creature in the space of a word β gave me whiplash.
βIf Seraphina lied about her letter,β she said slowly, like each word held weight, βhow come it has the signature?β
My mother froze, my acceptance letter scrunched in her fist. βWhat?β
She snatched Aureliaβs letter, holding it next to mine for comparison. For a few seconds that stretched too long, she said nothing, staring at the parchment.
Then she exhaled, not as steady as before. βIt is a mistake. Ordinaries do not get chosen by Gravenmoore.β
Her eyes lifted, meeting mine for the first time since sheβd barged into my bedroom. βYou. Pack your things.β
βI know what I said,β she snapped, βand I stand by it. I will not allow this mistake to perpetuate yourβ¦your delusions of grandeur.β
It wasnβt a yes β but it wasnβt a no, either.