When I nodded, still a little shaken, he walked to the corner of the hallway, looked both ways and came back.

I had absolutely no idea what was going on.

“What are you still doing out here at this hour?” he asked me searchingly.

His brown eyes literally pierced me. Then they began to glow dark red. I staggered back, startled.

“What the...”

Adrian turned away from me and looked into the corridor. When he looked back at me, his eyes were back to normal.

It could well be that my subconscious was playing tricks on me again, perhaps because I was so excited. Or he wasreallyon drugs.

He came closer.

“You still haven’t answered my question.”

He sounded impatient, almost demanding.

I swallowed, thinking about Bay, who was still in there, but I couldn’t tell Adrian about that. We had a mission and the guy would snitch on us, no doubt about it.

“I wanted to take pictures.”

He looked down at me.

“Without your camera?”

“I have my cell phone...” I said quickly.

He eyed me as if he didn’t want to believe me. Then, to my relief, he moved back a little and looked around the corridor again, almost as if he was afraid of being caught. Just what for?

When I remembered his threat from the last encounter, I was overcome with fear and stumbled backwards toward the window. He seemed to notice, because he turned back to me.

“Larissa,” he murmured as he grabbed my arm. “Even though you seem to be bursting with boldness...” His grip loosened, and his hand traveled further up, over my shoulders. “...especially after what you said yesterday…” His finger traveled along my collarbone, and up my throat. I swallowed again and realized that my breathing had become shallow. “You better watch out for me.” He looked me in the eyes again, firm, convinced byhis own words. His expression was made of steel. “But, at this moment, I’m the least of your problems.”

What did he mean by that?

A howl could be heard, this time a little closer than before.

Adrian listened carefully.

Clack.

He wheeled around, but there was nothing there.

He quickly turned back to me and grabbed my arm, only to lead me out of the side corridor and back into the main corridor where I was supposed to keep an eye out for Bayla. He kept pulling me toward one of the wide spiral staircases that led us down to the first floor and out of the main building.

“Wait,” I pressed out in tension, because I wasn’t ready to leave Bay behind. “Where are you taking me?”

“Away from here,” he said, looking around in several directions and then pulling me past the wall, toward the way I always came from in the morning.

“Why?” I asked, a little out of breath because he was walking so fast.

We were already in the overgrown colonnade that led to the new off-campus houses.

I wanted to stop again, to say something, but I didn’t know what to say without endangering Bay or the mission.

Adrian looked at me thoughtfully for a moment, his dark hair all tousled from the wind. I recognized a blue line on his jaw. Was that paint?