cried. Clawed paws scraped over flagstones.
Smooth as a cat, Tye spun and launched himself forward to intercept. Lily scrambled to her feet as Tye wrestled the monkey-thing to the ground. The creature slashed at Tye. He yelled as its claws scraped his arm.
Squirming out of Tye's grasp, the creature ran on all four paws toward Lily. She backed off the path into the ivy. Vines snagged her ankles, and she kicked them free.
Tye scrambled after the monkey-thing and wrapped his arms around its hind legs. It kicked, claws raking Tye's shoulder. 'No!' Lily screamed. Reaching for a rock or a stick, she plunged her hand down into the ivy.
The vines slithered around her fingers as if they were snakes. She glanced down and screamed—the vines writhed like tentacles all around her.
The creature kicked hard, broke out of Tye's grip, and charged again at Lily.
'Stop!' she yelled.
Ivy vines uncoiled from Lily's ankles and shot out in front of her like striking cobras. They wrapped around the monkey-thing's torso and yanked the creature flat onto the ground. Tye pinned it down as the ivy encircled the thrashing creature, until the vines wrapped it so tightly that it lay cocooned.
Lily stumbled backward as black spots danced through her vision. Leaning over, she put her hands on her knees and squeezed her eyes shut.
Panting, Tye said, 'Knew there was something about you.'
She raised her head. He was kneeling on the monkey-thing's back. Blood dotted his arm. His sleeve had been shredded. The vines lay still now, wrapped tightly around the ... whatever it was. 'What the hell is that?' she asked. 'And what do you mean, 'something about' me?'
'It went for you, not me,' Tye said.
The creature fixed its hungry yellow eyes on Lily. Its face was disconcertingly human, except that its skin was as leathery and green as a reptile's. It licked its teeth, flecked red with her blood. She shuddered. If Tye hadn't been here ... She pulled out her cell phone. 'I'll call ...' Police? Animal control? What was it, a mutant monkey? She guessed she should call 911.
'No!' he barked.
She jumped and nearly dropped the phone, catching it before it plunged into the greenery. At the same moment, she realized that she was still standing on the vines that had been writhing like snakes a minute ago. She scurried to the center of the flagstones, a safe distance from the ivy. Absently, she noticed that the ringing in her ears was gone.
'You have no idea what this is, do you?' he said. He didn't wait for her to answer. 'No police. This ... creature ... it has to stay secret. Understand? The safety of a lot of people depends on it.' His golden eyes pleaded.
'But why? What is it?' Lily walked toward him to get a closer look.
'Keep back,' Tye said. 'You can't let it bite you again.'
'Is it rabid?' She twisted her neck, trying to see the bite marks on her shoulder. She touched them and winced as they stung.
'Dammit, Lily,' he said. 'Who are you calling?'
'My grandfather,' she said. The phone rang. 'Pick up, pick up, pick up ...,' she murmured. Voice mail answered. 'Grandpa, I need you,' she said. 'Call me back ASAP.'
'Richard Carter, right?' Tye asked.
'He's supposed to be at the Fiftieth Reunion tent,' she said. 'Where can I find it?' She wondered how he knew her grandfather's name.
Tye considered it for a moment, then nodded. 'All right, he could help. Fiftieth tent is on the other side of Nassau Hall and Alexander Hall, next to Blair Arch.' She blinked at him, and he pointed. 'Straight that way.'
'I'll be right back,' Lily promised. She turned and took off at a run.
He called after her, 'If you feel faint or weak or anything, go through the gate!' Or at least that was what she thought he said. She didn't stop to ask what he meant.
Lily ran across a campus road and in front of a building that looked like a half-shrunken cathedral. Straight ahead of her she saw a semicircle of Gothic dorms cordoned off by a newly erected wood fence. As Tye had said, there was an arch next to the fence, but the tip-off was the enormous sign that said C LASS OF 1960 in fat orange letters.
She stopped just inside the fence to catch her breath. She made a mental note to take up cross-country. Any one of the tanned long-legged runners from her high school could have sprinted that distance without panting like an overheated puppy. She hoped she'd been fast enough.
A man and a woman, both decked out in psychedelic zebra coats, sat at a registration desk. The woman flashed her teeth, white and perfect against her tanned and wrinkled skin, and said, 'May I help you?'
'Looking for my grandfather,' Lily said, panting. 'Richard Carter. Is he here?'
The woman consulted a list. Lily felt the seconds tick by as the woman squinted at the list, forming names on her lips as she read. Finally, she looked up. 'Carter with a
'Yes,' Lily said.
The woman elbowed the man next to her. 'Do you have
'Richard Carter,' Lily said. 'He checked in with my mother. You'd remember her. She has green hair.'
'Heavens!' the woman said. 'On purpose?'
The man smiled warmly. 'Oh, yes, Richard! Good man. Splendid to see him. We were in Greek Myths 101 together. Top of the class, he was.'
Yes, very nice, but ...
'Carter,' the woman repeated, and then recognition dawned on her face. 'Oh! The FitzRandolph Gate Tragedy.'
'The what?' Lily asked, and then she heard a familiar laugh boom across the tent. He was here! 'Never mind,' she said. She scanned the tent. Alumni milled around the lawn and under the tent. Kids played tag between the tent posts and around tables with folding chairs. Across a dance floor laid over the grass, she saw her grandfather. He was talking with someone she couldn't see.
'Grandpa!' she called.
At least twenty grandfathers in zebra-pelt jackets glanced over at Lily. She jogged across the tent, weaving between wheelchairs and partyers, toddlers and teenagers. Closer, she called again, 'Grandpa!'
Her grandfather turned. So did the man he was talking to—Mr. Mayfair. Lily faltered as Mr. Mayfair frowned at her. His forehead was creased into deep craters, and his lips were tightly pursed—disapproval was etched onto every feature.
Grandpa frowned at her. 'Lily, I told you—'
She showed him the bites on her shoulder. As she'd discovered in third grade when she'd broken one of Grandpa's antiques, blood made an excellent conversation stopper.
Gripping her arms, Grandpa spun her around and examined her shoulder. 'What happened?' he demanded. 'Are you all right?'
'Those look like bites,' Mr. Mayfair said with a note of concern.
'Lily, what bit you?' Grandpa sounded frantic. She frowned at him. Grandpa
Lily half wished that monkey-creature had been a hallucination. 'Well, it kind of looked like a wrinkled monkey, but it was green and hairless....'
Grandpa checked her pulse and peered into her eyes. 'Your breathing is fast, and your heart rate is up,' he said. 'Do you feel dizzy? Faint?'
Lily shook her head. 'I ran here. Just catching my breath.' She wondered why he didn't ask more about the