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“Kayli knows,” Marc said quietly, staring at the corner of the elevator. It was moving too slow for his liking. Every moment was a stall until he could get to her.

The others didn’t respond. They didn’t have to. Suddenly Marc sensed it from them. They liked her too. Kevin was wrong. She fit with them. Marc’s guts told him that. He’d tried to deny it for years when he first ran into the group, but he never got rid of that feeling of how easily he fit in with his friends now, and the bond they now shared thanks to the Academy. Kayli had slipped into their group and fell in so naturally, it was like himself all over again.

No, Kevin was wrong.

Kayli belonged with them.

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BONUS:

Turn the page for exclusive sneak peeks at the next books in

The Scarab Beetle Series

&

The Ghost Bird Series

The Academy

The Scarab Beetle Series

Liar

Book Two

Coming Summer 2014

Written by C. L. Stone

Published by

Arcato Publishing

MISSING

Wil was missing.

The hotel room was silent. I sat on one of the beds, glaring down at my father, Jack, who was passed out on the opposite one.

The prostitute he had brought home had left after awkward apologies and a good luck wish at finding my brother.

"Kayli," Corey said to me through the cell phone I held to my ear. I could imagine him at the computer in the apartment, typing away. Hovering over the keyboard, his sun-kissed hair messed up in the same way I’d seen it earlier that day. “Are you sure he’s not with a friend?”

I hesitated. A few days ago, I got mixed up in a group of Academy boys who needed my help. In return, I was promised a lot of things, including assistance in helping Wil with getting into a college in a hurry and getting out of the godforsaken dump of a hotel we currently lived in. When I got back, Wil’s clothes, school books, most of his things were gone. I’d been so worried about getting back to him and letting him know where I was while I was temporarily missing, and the whole time he hadn’t been home. I wanted to believe Corey and think maybe he was at a friend’s house.

But I knew that wasn’t true. I could feel it. Like a piece of me was missing that couldn’t be replaced until I found him. He was gone. Someone may as well have chopped off my hand. “I know,” I said as coolly as I could, remembering this wasn’t Corey’s fault. “I’m telling you, he’s been missing for,” I counted off on my fingers, “what is it? Three days? Four? Ever since Marc first picked me up.”

“The school record shows he’s been to class all last week.”

I sucked in a heavy breath and held it, sitting up on the bed. I stared hard at the silent television, as if that held answers that my brain wasn’t able to put together in my panicked state. “He has?”

“Yeah,” he said. “He’s been going every day. He’s probably spending the night at a friend’s house.”

I stood up, and stumbled forward a step as I wasn’t sure what direction to start pacing first, and Marc’s clunky boots on my feet were hard to navigate. I glanced at the two notes sitting unfolded on top of the kitchenette counter next to an uneaten doughnut. All had been left for Wil and none had been picked up, so I knew he hadn’t been by. He’d never spent the night at someone else’s house before. “I should ... I don’t know. What am I doing standing here?” I asked, even though I already knew the answer. I was waiting because I didn’t know what to do next. I didn’t have a car so I couldn’t run off to find Wil, even if I wanted to. I didn’t know where to start now. I needed another pair of eyes. I needed Academy boys.

There was a hard pounding knock at the door; I felt the vibrations resonating through the floor. “Kayli!” Raven shouted.

I ran for the door. “Raven’s here,” I told Corey.

“Let me hang up on you and check in with Axel. He was heading out to the school district so he could check out any classmates who might have seen Wil. Don’t worry. We’ll find him.” He said goodbye and hung up.

I unlocked the door and got shoved back as it was pushed open from the other side. Raven towered in the doorway. He wore the same black T-shirt and sweatpants I’d seen him wearing a few hours earlier. He hadn’t bothered to change. Somehow that made me feel better. He took this as seriously as I felt.

His shoulders rolled back. His arms seemed to swell, making the tribal and rose tattoos on his forearms shift. His eyes darkened when he saw me and realized what a mess I was. “Tell me,” he said, the Russian accent thickening. “What happened?”

I stepped back from the door to let him in. “Where’s Marc?” I asked.

“He’s downstairs asking questions.” He lumbered forward, his eyes going all over the place, from the tiny hotel kitchenette, to where my father was with his bare ass hanging out, still passed out from whatever drunken stupor he’d been in from the night before. He nodded at Jack’s direction. “Did you ask him?”

“I can’t get a coherent sentence out of him,” I said, avoiding looking at Jack. The more I did, the angrier I got. I wanted to feel sorry for him, but it was getting harder and harder to drum up any sympathy. He lost his wife, my mother, years ago. Since then he fell apart and drank his way through life. After all the crap he gave me during the times I tried to drag Wil with me to get away from him and his abuse, he chose now to not give a damn.

Raven went to the bed and leaned over, checking my father’s pulse at his neck. He split Jack’s eyelids open and checked his pupils. He released him, and wiped his fingers across his shirt as if to clean them. “We need to wake him. Make some coffee.”

“He won’t drink coffee.”

“Make some water,” he said. He bent over, grabbing Jack’s arm. He shoved it over his own shoulders and started to haul him up. “Open the bathroom door.”

I ran to the bathroom, opening it up and then dove in to push aside the shower curtain. Raven dragged him into the stall and dropped him on his butt onto the tile. I averted my eyes; I could see with my peripheral vision enough of what was going on, but avoided looking at Jack naked.

Raven leaned in and turned the cold water faucet on full blast.

It took a moment, but Jack started sputtering and opening his eyes, crying out. He rolled back and forth against the wall, trying to use it to haul himself back out of the unrelenting spray. His grimy face streaked as the water washed some of him clean. “Turn it off!” he howled.

“Get up,” Raven said. He positioned himself in front of Jack, for which I was grateful. I’d seen enough. Raven crossed his arms over his chest, standing out of striking distance if Jack decided to attack him, but still looming. “Where’s Wil?”

Jack coughed, long and hard and thickly enough that I thought he was trying to vomit. He reached up, turning off the water. He managed to twist the faucet until it was only dribbling and then scooted himself out of range. He rotated and peered up at Raven. “Who are you?”

“Kayli’s looking for Wil,” Raven said. “When’s the last time saw him?”

“Hell if I know.” He cringed and then looked around Raven and spotted me behind him. “Who is this, Kayli?”

I clenched my hands into fists. He wasn’t listening at all. “Jack, Wil’s missing. I can’t find him.”

“Well, shit, tell me about it,” he said. He wiped water away from his face. “Get me a pair of pants, will you?”

I picked up a dirty pair of cotton pants he’d left in a corner of the

bathroom and tossed them at him. I turned, looking at the wall. “You haven’t seen him at all?”

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