Vampire Academy: The Complete Collection: 1/6

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Authors: Richelle Mead
tell? Look, go grab the window seat. You can have it today and hang out for a while. If you’re not still afraid of me.”
    She hesitated, studying him. He looked dark and surly, lips curled in a sort of I’m-such-a-rebel smirk. But he didn’t look too dangerous. He didn’t look Strigoi. Gingerly, she sat back down in the window seat, unconsciously rubbing her arms against the cold.
    Christian watched her, and a moment later, the air warmed up considerably.
    Lissa met Christian’s eyes and smiled, surprised she’d never noticed how icy blue they were before. “You specialized in fire?”
    He nodded and pulled up a broken chair. “Now we have luxury accommodations.”
    I snapped out of the vision.
    “Rose? Rose?”
    Blinking, I focused on Dimitri’s face. He was leaning toward me, his hands gripping my shoulders. I’d stopped walking; we stood in the middle of the quad separating the upper school buildings.
    “Are you all right?”
    “I . . . yeah. I was . . . I was with Lissa. . . .” I put a hand to my forehead. I’d never had such a long or clear experience like that. “I was in her head.”
    “Her . . . head?”
    “Yeah. It’s part of the bond.” I didn’t really feel like elaborating.
    “Is she all right?”
    “Yeah, she’s . . .” I hesitated. Was she all right? Christian Ozera had just invited her to hang out with him. Not good. There was “coasting through the middle,” and then there was turning to the dark side. But the feelings humming through our bond were no longer scared or upset. She was almost content, though still a little nervous. “She’s not in danger,” I finally said. I hoped.
    “Can you keep going?”
    The hard, stoic warrior I’d met earlier was gone—just for a moment—and he actually looked concerned. Truly concerned. Feeling his eyes on me like that made something flutter inside of me—which was stupid, of course. I had no reason to get all goofy, just because the man was too good-looking for his own good. After all, he was an antisocial god, according to Mason. One who was supposedly going to leave me in all sorts of pain.
    “Yeah. I’m fine.”
    I went into the gym’s dressing room and changed into the workout clothes someone had finally thought to give me after a day of practicing in jeans and a T-shirt. Gross. Lissa hanging out with Christian troubled me, but I shoved that thought away for later as my muscles informed me they did not want to go through any more exercise today.
    So I suggested to Dimitri that maybe he should let me off this time.
    He laughed, and I was pretty sure it was at me and not with me.
    “Why is that funny?”
    “Oh,” he said, his smile dropping. “You were serious.”
    “Of course I was! Look, I’ve technically been awake for two days. Why do we have to start this training now? Let me go to bed,” I whined. “It’s just one hour.”
    He crossed his arms and looked down at me. His earlier concern was gone. He was all business now. Tough love. “How do you feel right now? After the training you’ve done so far?”
    “I hurt like hell.”
    “You’ll feel worse tomorrow.”
    “So?”
    “So, better to jump in now while you still feel . . . not as bad.”
    “What kind of logic is that?” I retorted.
    But I didn’t argue anymore as he led me into the weight room. He showed me the weights and reps he wanted me to do, then sprawled in a corner with a battered Western novel. Some god.
    When I finished, he stood beside me and demonstrated a few cool-down stretches.
    “How’d you end up as Lissa’s guardian?” I asked. “You weren’t here a few years ago. Were you even trained at this school?”
    He didn’t answer right away. I got the feeling he didn’t talk about himself very often. “No. I attended the one in Siberia.”
    “Whoa. That’s got to be the only place worse than Montana.”
    A glint of something—maybe amusement—sparked in his eyes, but he didn’t acknowledge the joke. “After I graduated, I was a

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