Troy must see me staring at her because he says, “I hear Stella’s your stepsister.” He takes and swallows a bite of vegetable lasagna.
“Sorry.”
What, did they have a school-wide briefing about me? It seems like everyone knows who I am, where I came from, and how I got here. Right now, about half the cafeteria is looking at me while trying not to look like they’re looking. I’m like a celebrity, but not in a good way.
Don’t they have better things to talk about? “Am I the school’s only gossip?” I ask.
“Pretty much,” Nicole says.
I shrug. Great. “Then trust me,” I say to Troy. “Stella is the least of my challenges.”
“Yeah, I guess it would be hard to get dropped into this world.”
His eyes-a really pretty green with bright gold flecks in the center-are warm with sympathy. “Don’t worry… you’ll get through.”
He’s sweet, which may be why I confess, “It might be easier if I had found out about this whole ‘the gods are real’ thing before the yacht docked on Serfopoula.”
Troy’s jaw drops. “They didn’t tell you?”
“What,” Nicole says, rolling her eyes, “like you’re surprised? You know how Petrolas is about security.”
“I know, but-” He shakes his head, like he can’t believe it.
Join the club. “Let’s just say this has been a summer of shocks.”
“What
“Pretty much that the school was founded by Plato, moved here ages ago, and protected by the Greek gods. Oh, and that all the students are related to them.”
She snorts, clearly not impressed with how little I know. “Leave it to Petrolas to give you the history without any real, useful info.”
“Like what?” I ask, trying not to sound nervous.
I’m not sure I want to know how much more I need to know.
“Any use of powers that breaks school rules,” Troy says, “like cheating or skipping class or altering a teacher’s memory, is forbidden and earns serious detention time.”
“No one wants a Petrolas detention,” Nicole says, sounding grim.
“They make the Labors of Hercules look like kindergarten homework.”
“You should know,” Troy teases. “You’ve done more detention than anyone else in our year.”
“Are you volunteering to take my place next time, Travatas?”
Troy turns white. “N-no, I mean, I was only-”
Nicole throws a roll at him.
I laugh because this reminds me so much of the sparring matches between Nola and Cesca. For a second I feel like I’m back in L.A. with my best friends. Until Nicole says, “And whatever you do, don’t go into the last stall of the girls’ bathroom on the second floor.”
“Why,” I ask, afraid of the answer, “does it open a portal to a parallel universe, or something?”
“No,” Nicole says with a laugh. “It backs up all the time and makes the Physics room smell like a sewer.”
Troy hands me a roll and I toss it at Nicole.
“Don’t worry,” he says when we all get done laughing. “Nic and I will teach you the ropes. You’ll be a world- class social navigator before we’re done.”
“We’ll at least make sure you don’t run your ship up on the rocks,” she adds. “Lunch is the perfect chance to see all the little gorgons in action. Where should we start?”
The pair of them look around the dining hall, searching out examples for my education.
“How about with you?” I suggest. “What, um, gods are you related to?”
Nicole points at Troy. “Travatas is around fifty generations removed from Asklepios.”
“Who’s Askilopus?” I ask.
“Asklepios,” Troy corrects. “The god of healing.”
“That’s neat,” I say.
“Right.” Troy rolls his eyes. “I’m just dying to follow in that millennium-long line of doctors and nurses.”
Talk about pressure. I guess maybe that’s not so great, after all.
Turning back to Nicole, who is looking around the room again, I ask, “What about you-”
“That’s the Athena table,” she announces. “They’re all brainiacs, like Tyrovolas.”
Troy leans closer and whispers, “Nerds.”
Like I couldn’t tell. As if the thick glasses and pocket protectors weren’t clues enough, they’re huddled around the table and bickering over trading cards. The cards flash and sparkle with every movement. I have a feeling these aren’t your typical Pokemon.
“Those girls.” Troy nudges me, pointing to a bunch of blondes standing near the door. “They’re the cheerleaders.”
Where does this guy think I’m from? Siberia? Southern California is the cheerleader capital of the world-well, second maybe to Texas-and I have no problem identifying them. The blue and white uniforms are a dead giveaway. Even in street clothes, the matching hair ribbons mark them as the cheer squad.
But, Troy is cute and I don’t want to make any enemies on the first day-Stella is already enemy enough-so I just ask, “Whose are they?”
Troy frowns, confused, but Nicole understands.
“Aphrodite’s.” She does not hide the disgust in her voice, rolling her eyes as she adds, “You’d think she was the patron goddess of athletics instead of love, for all they throw her name around.”
“Athletics,” Troy explains, “fall under the patronage of Ares.”
Looking up, I follow the direction of his gaze to a table in the center of the room. While I’m watching, the cheerleaders approach the table and fill some of the empty seats.
One, the blondest of them all, walks up behind a boy. His back is to me, so all I can see is his black curly hair. He stands up to embrace Blondie, settling his mouth over hers and smoothing his hand over her butt.
Holy crap!
Next to me, Troy says, “Looks like Griffin and Adara are on-again at the moment.”
“Who?” I ask absently.
“Griffin Blake and Adara Spencer. They get back together every summer,” Nicole says. “Never lasts more than a week into school.”
Griffin Blake. The name rolls through my mind like gentle thunder. He is a god-okay, bad choice of words, but even with his face hidden behind the cheerleader he is the most beautiful specimen of boyhood I have ever seen.
After a brief fantasy about his luscious hair, I take in the rest of him, starting with his height-all six-foot-plus of him. (Wait, do they use feet and inches in Greece? Maybe I should say all two meters of him.) Tall and broad- shouldered, but with the lean, sleek athletic build of a runner. Which instantly appeals to me, of course.
There’s something vaguely familiar about him.
His coal black hair curls over the white collar of the navy and sky blue striped rugby shirt he wears. Lifting his head from kissing Blondie, he turns to laugh at something someone at the table says.
It’s him! The guy from the beach.
Those full and soft lips spread into the most beautiful, open smile I have ever seen. So much more than that half smile he had given me that morning. And I know, absolutely 100 percent know, that one day I want him to smile at me that way.
Then I see a girl at the table-one of the lesser blondes-pointing a finger in my gawking direction. Griffin’s gaze turns on me, sees me openly staring at him, and erupts into laughter.
Winning that smile is going to be much harder than I thought.
“Absolutely not.”
“What?” I turn back to Nicole to find her glaring at me.
“Trust me,” she says with her customary bitterness. “You want nothing to do with Griffin Blake.”
“Why not?”
“Because Nic and Gri-” Troy begins.