Shadowhunter Academy, 2008
The afternoon sunlight was streaming warm through the arrow-slit windows of their classroom, painting the gray stone walls yellow. The elites and the dregs alike were sleepy from a long morning of training with Scarsbury, and Catarina Loss was giving them a history lesson. History applied to both the elites and the dregs, so they could all learn of the glory of the Shadowhunters and aspire to be a part of that glory. In this class, Simon thought, none of them seemed that different from each otherânot that they were all united in aspiring to glory, but they were all equally glazed with boredom.
Until Marisol answered a question correctly, and Jon Cartwright kicked the back of her chair.
âAwesome,â Simon hissed behind his book. âThatâs really cool behavior. Congratulations, Jon. Every time a mundie answers a question wrong, you say itâs because they canât rise to the level of Shadowhunters. And every time one of us answers a question right, you punish them. I have to admire your consistency.â
George Lovelace leaned back in his chair and grinned, feeding Simon his next line. âI donât see how thatâs consistent, Si.â
âWell, heâs consistently a jackass,â Simon explained.
âI can think of a few other words for him,â George remarked. âBut some of them cannot be used around ladies, and some of them are Gaelic and cannot be understood by you mad foreigners.â
Jon looked upset. Possibly he was upset that their chairs were too far away to kick.
âI just think she shouldnât speak out of turn,â he said.
âItâs true that if you mundies listened to us Shadowhunters ,â said Julie, âyou might learn something.â
âIf you Shadowhunters ever listened,â said Sunil, a mundie boy who lived down the (slimy) hall from George and Simon, âyou might learn a few things yourself.â
Voices were rising. Catarina was beginning to look very annoyed. Simon gestured to Marisol and Jon to be quiet, but they both ignored him. Simon felt the same way as when he and Clary had set a fire in his kitchen by trying to toast grapes and create raisins when they were six: amazed and appalled that things had gone wrong so fast.
Then he realized that was a new memory. He grinned at the thought of Clary with exploded grape in her red hair, and let the classroom situation escalate.
âIâll teach you some lessons down in the training grounds,â Jon snapped. âI could challenge you to a duel. Watch your mouth.â
âThatâs not a bad idea,â remarked Marisol.
âOh, hey now,â said Beatriz. âDuels with fourteen-year-olds are a bad idea.â
Everyone looked with scorn upon Beatriz, the voice of reason.
Marisol sniffed. âNot a duel. A challenge. If the elites beat us in a challenge, then they get to speak out first in class for a week. If we beat them, then they hold their tongues.â
âIâll do it, and youâll be sorry you ever suggested it, mundie. Whatâs the challenge?â Jon asked. âStaff, sword, bow, dagger work, a horse race, a boxing match? Iâm ready!â
Marisol smiled sweetly. âBaseball.â
Cue mass puzzlement and panicked looks among the Shadowhunters.
âIâm not ready,â George whispered. âIâm not American and I donât play baseball. Is it like cricket, Si? Or more like hurling?â
âYou have a sport called hurling in Scotland?â Simon whispered back. âWhat do you hurl? Potatoes? Small children? Weird.â
âIâll explain later,â said George.
âIâll explain baseball,â said Marisol with a glint in her eye.
Simon had the feeling Marisol was going to be a terrifying, tiny expert on baseball, the same way she was at fencing. He also had the feeling the elite stream was in for a surprise.
âAnd I will explain how a
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