Angels Twice Descending

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Book: Read Angels Twice Descending for Free Online
Authors: Cassandra Clare
deliberation, their most Simon-like and George-like outfits. Which meant, for George, jeans and a rugby shirt; for Simon, a faded tee that he’d had made back when the band was called Guinea Pig Death Posse. (This, fortunately, had been lying on the floor for a week, so was rat crap free.) Then, without much talking, they started packing up their belongings. The Academy wasn’t much for big celebrations—probably a good thing, Simon mused, since at the last all-school party, one of the first-years had misfired his flaming crossbow and accidentally set the roof on fire. There would be no graduation ceremony, no mugging for cameras with proud parents, no yearbook signings or tossing of mortarboard caps. Just the Ascension ritual, whatever that meant, and that would be it. The end of the Academy; the beginning of the rest of their lives.
    â€œIt’s not like we’ll never see each other again,” George said suddenly, in a tone that suggested he’d been worrying about exactly that.
    Simon was going back to New York, and George was going to the London Institute, where, they said, a Lovelace was always welcome. But what was an ocean of distance when you could Portal? Or at least e-mail?
    â€œOf course not,” Simon said.
    â€œBut it won’t be the same,” George pointed out.
    â€œNo, I guess it won’t.”
    George busied himself with neatly tucking his socks into a suitcase compartment, which Simon found alarming, since it was the first time in two years George had done anything neatly. “You’re my best friend, you know,” George said without looking up. Then, quickly, as if to forestall argument, “Don’t worry, I know I’m not your best friend, Si. You’ve got Clary. And Isabelle. And your bandmate mate. I get it. I just thought you should know.”
    On some level, Simon had already known this. He’d never bothered to think much about it—he didn’t think much about George, period, because that was the beauty of George. Simon never had to think about him, to puzzle out what he would do or how he would react. He was just steady, dependable George, always there, always full of cheer and eager to spread it around. Now Simon did think about him, about how well George knew him, and vice versa—not just in the big ways: their dead-of-night fears about washing out of the Academy, Simon’s hapless pining for Isabelle, George’s even more hapless, if more halfhearted, pining for most girls who crossed his path. They knew each other in the little ways—that George was allergic to cashews, that Simon was allergic to Latin homework, that George had a paralyzing fear of large birds—and somehow, that seemed to matter even more. Over the past two years, they’d developed a roommate shorthand, almost a silent language. Not exactly like a parabatai , Simon thought, and not exactly like a best friend. But not something less than . Not something he ever wanted to leave behind for good.
    â€œYou’re right, George. I do have more than enough best friends.”
    George’s face fell, so slightly that only someone who knew him as well as Simon would have noticed.
    â€œBut there’s something else I’ve never had,” Simon added. “At least until now.”
    â€œWhat’s that?”
    â€œA brother.” The word felt right. Not someone you chose—someone the fates assigned you, someone who, under any other circumstances, might never have given you a second look, nor you him. Someone you would die for and kill for without a second thought, because he was family. Judging from George’s radiant smile, the word sounded right to him, too.
    â€œAre we going to have to hug now or something?” George said.
    â€œI think that may be inescapable.”
    *    *    *
    The Council Hall was intimidatingly beautiful, morning light streaming in through a window in its high domed

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