The Secret Hour - By Scott Westerfeld Page 0,1

midwestern, crisper than Rex's Oklahoma drawl.

"No, that was the eight-fifteen bell," he explained. "The late bell's at eight-twenty. Where're you headed?"

"Room T-29." She held a schedule card tightly in one hand.

He pointed back at the doorway. "That's in the temps. Outside on the right. Those trailers you saw on the way in."

She looked outside with a frown. "Okay," she said hesitantly, like she'd never had class in a trailer before. "Well, I better get going."

He nodded. As she walked away, Rex pulled off his glasses again, and again she jumped into clarity as the rest of the world became a blur.

Rex finally allowed himself to believe it and smiled. Another one, and from somewhere beyond Bixby, Oklahoma. Maybe this year was going to be different.

Rex saw the new girl a few more times before lunch.

She was already making friends. In a small school like Bixby, there was something exciting about a new student - people wanted to find out about her. Already the popular kids were staking a claim to her, gossiping about what they'd learned about her, trading on her friendship.

Rex knew that the rules of popularity wouldn't allow him near her again, but he hovered nearby, listening, using his invisibility. Not really invisible, of course, but just as good. In his black shirt and jeans, with his dyed-black hair, he could disappear into shadows and corners. There weren't that many students like Timmy Hudson at Bixby High. Most people were happy to ignore Rex and his friends.

It didn't take Rex long to find out a few things about Jessica Day.

In the lunchroom he found Melissa and Dess in the usual place.

He sat across from Melissa, giving her space. As always, her sleeves were pulled down, almost covering her hands against any accidental touch, and she wore headphones, the hiss of metal power chords audible from them like an insistent whisper. Melissa didn't like crowds; any sizable number of regular people drove her crazy. Even a full classroom tested her limits. Without headphones she found the bickering, striving chaos of the lunchroom unbearable.

Dess ate nothing, didn't even push her food around, just folded her hands and peered at the ceiling through dark sunglasses.

"Here again for another year," Dess said. "How much does this suck?"

Rex reflexively started to agree but paused. All summer he had dreaded another year of awful lunches, hiding from the blazing skylights here in the dimmest corner. But for once he was actually excited to be in the Bixby High lunchroom.

The new girl was only a few tables away, surrounded by new friends.

"Maybe, maybe not," he said. "See that girl?"

"Mmm," Dess answered, her face still raised to the ceiling, probably counting the tiles up there.

"She's new. Her name is Jessica Day," Rex said. "She's from Chicago."

"And I'm interested in this why?" Dess asked.

"She just moved here a few days ago. Sophomore."

"Still bored."

"She's not boring."

Dess sighed and lowered her head to peer through her sunglasses at the new girl. She snorted. "First day at Bixby and she's already right in the middle of the daylight crowd. Nothing interesting about that. She's exactly the same as the other hundred and eighty-seven people in here."

Rex shook his head, starting to disagree, but stopped. If he was going to say it out loud, he had to be right. As he had a dozen times that day, he lifted his thick glasses an inch, looking at Jessica Day with just his eyes. The cafeteria dissolved into a bright, churning blur, but even from this distance she stood out sharp and clear.

It was after noon, and her Focus hadn't faded. It was permanent. There was only one explanation.

He took a deep breath. "She's one of us."

Dess looked at him, finally allowing an expression of interest to cross her face. Melissa felt the change between her friends and looked up blankly. Listening, but not with her ears.

"Her? One of us?" Dess said. "No way. She could run for mayor of Normal, Oklahoma."

"Listen to me, Dess," Rex insisted. "She's got the Focus."

Dess squinted, as if trying to see what only Rex could. "Maybe she got touched last night or something like that."

"No. It's too strong. She's one of us."

Dess looked back up at the ceiling, her expression sliding again into totally bored with the ease of long practice. But Rex knew he'd gotten her attention.

"All right," she relented. "If she's a sophomore, maybe she's in one of my classes. I'll check her out."

Melissa nodded too, bobbing her head to the whispered music.
Chapter 2
2

2:38 P.M.

DESS

When