outside, the large flakes kissing the leaded windowpanes. The waxy mistletoe and the candlelit
 
 wreaths that--if she squinted her eyes just so--looked like explosions of gold.
 
 But the curtains... well, those she had to remember down to the last filigreed stitch so she could
 
 report back to her mother about them. They were exquisite, all burgundy velvet with shimmering
 
 gold-thread fleurs-de-lis. Her mother, a New Orleans native, loved fleurs-de-lis. When Ariana was
 
 nine, her mother had given her a gorgeous gold fleur-de-lis necklace for Christmas. That had been
 
 Ariana's favorite Christmas. The last happy one she could remember. The last one before her
 
 father started taking those extended business
 
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 trips. Before her mother started to fade away. Ariana had never taken the antique necklace off, as
 
 if it could somehow tie her to those happier times.
 
 "Whoops, sorry!" A drunk junior in a rumpled Betsey Johnson dress knocked into Ariana on the
 
 way to the bathroom, giggling and slurring and groping with her acne-scarred date.
 
 With a blink, Ariana returned to her body, and the sounds of the ballroom rushed her ears at full
 
 volume. The band was playing "All I Want for Christmas," and a girl let out a shrill shriek as her
 
 boyfriend lifted her off her feet and spun her around. Ariana sighed and pushed away from the
 
 cool comfort of the column, giving her teeth a quick flick with her tongue to clear away any
 
 wayward lip gloss as she wove her way through the crowd.
 
 As she slowly approached her table, Ariana took a mental picture of her friends. The Billings Girls.
 
 She loved to watch them from afar, study their mannerisms, note their tics and gestures and
 
 habits. More than anything, she loved when she caught them doing something gross or stupid
 
 when they thought no one was watching. Like picking their teeth, or adjusting their boobs in their
 
 dresses, or checking out cute-but-dorky Drake boys from across the room. She liked to make
 
 mental lists of their imperfections. It made her feel less imperfect herself.
 
 Of course, finding imperfections among the Billings Girls was never easy. It took a practiced eye.
 
 They were, after all, Easton royalty. Which meant that Ariana was Easton royalty. She had been
 
 ever since September, when she'd taken her place as a junior member of Easton's most elite dorm.
 
 Now the Billings Girls, the ones her mother
 
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 had always talked about as if they were characters in a fairy tale, were her dorm mates. Her