A.k.a. Goddess. Evelyn Vaughn

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but otherwise regained quick control. “Don’t worry,” he said thickly, licking his lips and swallowing heavily. “I’m well aware this was just a momentary lapse.”

      That didn’t make the reality of it any easier to bear.

      “You don’t have to work for your family,” I pleaded. But I took a step toward the ringing phone as I said it. Talk about your divided loyalties! “No matter what they expect. The money can’t be that good….”

      He stared at me. Then, surprisingly, he laughed—if a little harshly—and ducked forward to kiss my cheek. “Someday you’ll realize just how painfully naive you are, Mag. I hope to God I’m there when it happens.”

      Oh? “So that you can come to my rescue?” I asked. “Or so that you can say you told me so?”

      His eyes crinkled, just a bit—and he let himself out. “Lock up,” he called over his shoulder.

      The phone screamed yet again as the door shut behind him, then rolled over to the machine. I snatched the handset up, interrupting my own recorded voice. “Yes!”

      “So sorry,” said Lil, her British accent adding to her sarcastic edge. “Is the need to save the world for womankind getting in the way of your date with Satan?”

      “Don’t call him that.” Maybe I should be beyond defending him. I’m not. “We don’t know anything for sure.”

      Lil’s voice gentled. “We know enough, Maggi.”

      And she was right. In the end, it no longer mattered what I felt for Lex Stuart or what he felt for me.

      I was still one of an ancient line of women charged with the protection of sacred, secret chalices. Chalices that could, if legend was to be believed, heal the world—male and female. Holy Grails, every one of them.

      And Lex came from a family rumored to be bent on destroying them.

      It’s my first week in kindergarten. I already hate Alex Stuart. He thinks he’s better than all the other kids.

      When he won’t let Freddy Morgan use the yellow paint, Freddy cries. Freddy’s a wimp, but it makes me mad anyway.

      “You’re suppose to share,” I tell Alex.

      He looks surprised. “Only losers share.”

      At five, I’m pretty simple. “Give Freddy your paint. He needs to make his sun yellow.”

      Alex says, “You can’t tell me what to do. You’re just a girl.”

      So I hit him, right across the face. After a moment of clear surprise, he hits me back. The class gasps—hasn’t he heard that boys aren’t supposed to hit girls?

      My cheek hurts, but I’m glad. I want to win fair. I shove him to the ground, and then we’re rolling across butcher paper and through fingerpaints, pummeling uselessly at each other—and laughing. It’s fun! We’re purple and green and very, very yellow. But we’re still hitting each other between grins.

      Then our teacher pulls us apart. Alex’s dad uses the incident as an excuse to send Alex to private school.

      I don’t see him again for seven years.

      Chapter 2

      “L isten,” Lil said. “This is bigger than your twisted love/hate thing with Lex Stuart. Aunt Bridge is in the hospital.”

      “What?” Our great-aunt Brigitte was a historical sociologist in Paris. Even more than our mothers and our late grandmother, Aunt Bridge had convinced Lil and me of the truth in the Grail Keeper legends. “Is it her heart?”

      “No, she was attacked in her office. Someone beat her pretty badly.”

      My mouth opened, but no sound came out. I wanted to sit, but most of my furniture was gutted or broken. So I sank back against the wall and slid down it, my gym shorts riding up, until I sat on the carpet, picturing Bridge’s face. She was in her eighties! What kind of sick person would hurt an old woman?

      “This is connected to her work, isn’t it?”

      “She isn’t conscious yet, but the Paris police say that her laptop’s gone, and some of her papers. You’ve been working with her, Mag. What was she writing about this time?”

      “She’s calling it The Faerie Goddess in Early Gaul.”

      “The fairy Melusine?” Lil and I had grown up on that story. Just imagine The Little Mermaid with bat wings and a traitorous husband.

      “If she’s right, the goddess Melusine.” But I was staring at the destruction around me with increased concern. “Uh, Lil? Don’t freak, but someone just broke into my place, too.”

      “What?” Even without the phone, I might’ve heard Lil’s shout all the way from England. “Are you all right?”

      “Yes, but I haven’t looked at my files yet. The computer was on, and I always turn it off when I leave.”

      Lil said, “You’d better check, Mag.”

      I did. But I took Lex’s advice and locked the door first.

      Sure enough, my latest backups were missing.

      “I’ve got to go to my office,” I said, grim, when I picked up the phone. “On campus.”

      “Why not just call security?”

      “And say what? My aunt at the Sorbonne was robbed, so I’m worried about Connecticut? We’re between semesters. They only have a skeleton staff. I’ll go myself. Then I’ll go to Paris.”

      “Be careful, Maggi,” Lil pleaded. “I hate when you do this stuff alone.”

      But, picking up the business card Officer Sofie Douglas had left on my desk, I suspected I might not have to.

      Beside her home number she’d doodled a simple O.

      Secret societies are a bitch.

      It doesn’t help that the scattering of women called Grail Keepers aren’t organized enough to actually be an organization. Most still don’t even know there are others out there. We have few written records, no official roll of members, no regular meetings and no inner sanctum.

      That’s by design.

      Our information comes from word-of-mouth, mother to child; from truths hidden in superstitions, fairy stories and nursery rhymes. It’s only been in the last few years that Lil and I, spurred on by our grand-mère’s dying wish, started using the Internet to find and coordinate some of the diverse women who make up our roster.

      Or who would, if we kept a roster, which we don’t.

      Even before that, though, Grail Keepers had an ancient technique for recognizing each other. It’s similar to how early Christians used to self-identify, back when their beliefs could get them fed to the lions—one person would draw an arch in the dust, and

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