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Chapter no 12

Crave by Tracy Wolff

โ€ŒIn the Library, No One Canโ€Œ

Hear You Scream

Once I get outside the room, I start to run, desperate to put as much space between Jaxon and myself as I can manage. I have no idea where Iโ€™m running, and I donโ€™t think it would matter even if I did. Not when I donโ€™t have a clue where anything is in this place.

I take a left at the end of the hallway, operating on pure instinct. On my complete desperation to be anywhere but at that party.

I have no idea what I did to make Jaxon so mad, have no idea why he blows so hot and cold with me. Iโ€™ve run into him four times since I got to this frozen hellhole, and each time has been a different experience. Douchey the first time, blank the second, intense the third, and furious the fourth. His moods change more quickly than my BFFโ€™s Insta feed.

I get to another dead end, and this time I take a right. Seconds later, I come upon a staircase, this one as plain and un-fantastic as the main one is grand and ornate. I race down one flight and then another and another to the second floor. Once there, I take another right and donโ€™t stop until I run out of hallway.

Iโ€™m also out of breath and a little queasy, thanks to the altitude sickness that I just canโ€™t seem to shake. I stop a

minute and let myself breathe. As I do, the embarrassment finally recedes enough that my rational mind can take over.

Suddenly, I feel like a total moron for freaking out and an even bigger one for running away from Jaxon, who performed the very scary act of biting into a strawberry while looking at me.

Deep inside, I know itโ€™s more than that. Itโ€™s the look on his face, the indolence of his body language, the very obviousย fuck youย in his eyes as he stared directly at me. But still, fleeing the way I did seems absurd now.

Not absurd enough to make me go back to that ridiculously uncomfortable party, but more than absurd enough to make me embarrassed by my actions.

As I straighten and try to figure out what Iโ€™m going to doโ€” heading back to my dorm room for more Advil and then some sleep is pretty much top of the listโ€”I realize Iโ€™m standing in front of the schoolโ€™s library. And since Iโ€™ve never met a library I didnโ€™t like, I canโ€™t resist opening the door and walking inside.

The moment I do, I get hit with the oddest feeling. Dread pools in my stomach, and everything inside tells me to turn around, to go back the way I came. Itโ€™s the strangest feeling Iโ€™ve ever had in my life, and for a second I think about giving in to it. But Iโ€™ve already done more than enough running for the day, so I ignore the pressure in my lungs and the uneasy churning in my stomach and keep walking forward until Iโ€™m standing in front of the checkout desk.

Once there, I take a few minutes to just stand and look around the library. It only takes a second for the feeling of dread to dissipate and for absolute wonder to take its place.

Because whoever runs this library is my kind of people. Part of it is the sheer number of booksโ€”tens of thousands of them at least, lined up in bookcase after bookcase. But there are other things, too.

Gargoyles perched on random bookshelves, looking down as if guarding the books.

A few dozen shimmering crystals, interspersed with sparkling ribbons, hanging from the ceiling in what appears to be randomly spaced intervals.

All the roomโ€™s open spaces have been turned into study alcoves, filled with beanbags and overstuffed chairs and even a few well-worn leather couches where thereโ€™s room for them.

But the piรจce de rรฉsistance, the thing that has me dying to meet the librarian, is the stickers plastered everywhere. On the walls, on the bookshelves, on the desks and chairs and computers. Everywhere. Big stickers, little stickers, funny stickers, encouraging stickers, brand-name stickers, emoji stickers, sarcastic stickersโ€ฆ The list goes on and on, and thereโ€™s a part of me that wants to wander the library until I read or look at every single one.

But there are too many for one tourโ€”too many for a dozen tours, if Iโ€™m honestโ€”so I decide to start this one by checking out the stickers I run across when following the gargoyles.

Because after seeing the rest of the library, I donโ€™t believe for one second that the statues are randomly placed. Which means I desperately want to know what the librarian wants to show me.

The first gargoyleโ€”a fierce-looking thing with bat wings and a furious snarlโ€”stands guard over a shelf of horror

novels. The bookshelf itself is decorated with Ghostbusters stickers, and I canโ€™t help but laugh as I trace the spines of everyone from John Webster to Mary Shelley, from Edgar Allan Poe to Joe Hill. The fact that thereโ€™s a special homage to Victor Hugo only makes it better, especially the tongue- in-cheek placement of three copies ofย The Hunchback of Notre-Dameย right in the gargoyleโ€™s line of sight.

The second gargoyleโ€”a squat fellow resting on his haunches on a pile of skullsโ€”presides over a bookcase filled with textbooks on human anatomy.

The fantasy bookshelf, complete with beautifully covered books about dragons and witches, is home to the third gargoyle statue, who has really fantastical wings and big claws curling around the miniature book sheโ€™s reading. Unlike the others, both of whom look ferocious, this girl looks mischievous, like she knows sheโ€™s going to get in trouble for being up way past her bedtime, but she just canโ€™t put the story down.

I decide instantly that sheโ€™s my favorite and pick out a book from her shelf to read tonight in case I canโ€™t sleep. Then nearly laugh out loud as I trace my finger around the edges of a sticker that reads, โ€œIโ€™m not a damsel in distress; Iโ€™m a dragon in a dress.โ€

I continue wandering from statue to statue, from a small shelf on Gothic architecture to a whole bookcase devoted to ghost stories. On and on it goes, and the longer Iโ€™m in here, the more convinced I am that the head librarian here is the coolest person everโ€”and has fantastic taste in books.

I make it to the end of the trail and turn the corner around the last bookshelf in search of the final gargoyle, only to find

him pointing straight toward a half-open door. Thereโ€™s a huge sign on it that reads students must have permission to access this room, andโ€”of courseโ€”that only makes me more curious. Especially since the light is on and thereโ€™s some weird kind of music playing.

I try to place it, but as I get closer, I realize itโ€™s not so much music as it is chanting in a language I donโ€™t recognize and certainly canโ€™t understand. Instantly, my curiosity turns to excitement.

When I was researching Alaska, I learned that there are twenty different languages spoken here by the stateโ€™s native peoples, and I canโ€™t help but wonder if thatโ€™s what Iโ€™m hearing. I hope soโ€”Iโ€™ve totally been wanting a chance to listen to one of the native languages spoken. Especially since so many of them are threatened, including a couple that have less than four thousand speakers in the entire world. That these native languages are dying out is one of the saddest things Iโ€™ve ever heard.

Maybe if Iโ€™m lucky, I can kill two birds with one stone here.

I can meet the very cool librarian responsible for this libraryย andย get a lesson from her (because the voice is definitely female) on one of the native languages. Even one of those options makes for a much better night than standing around being stared at at a party that was supposedly thrown to welcome me.

But when I step up to the door, ready to introduce myself, I find that the person doing the chanting isnโ€™t the librarian at all. Sheโ€™s a girl about my age, with long, silky dark hair and one of the most beautiful faces Iโ€™ve ever seen. Maybeย theย most beautiful.

Sheโ€™s holding a book open and reading from it, which explains the chanting I heard. I want to ask what language it is, since I canโ€™t see the cover, but the way her head jerks up as I step through the threshold makes the words catch in my throat.

Whoever she is, she looks intenseโ€”her cheeks flushed, her mouth wide open as she utters the distinctive sounds of the language. She halts abruptly, her eyes swirling with what appears to be a fierce, burning anger.

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