ceiling. It reminded Simon of pictures heâd seen of the Pantheon, but this place felt more ancient than even ancient Rome. This felt timeless.
The Academy students huddled together in small clumps, all of them looking too nervous and distracted to do much more than comment blandly on the weather. (Which, as always in Idris, was perfect.) Marisol gave Simon a bright smile and a sharp nod when she saw him enter the chamber, as if to say, I never doubted you . . . almost.
Simon and George were the last to arrive, and shortly after they did, everyone took their places for the ceremony. The seven mundanes were arranged in alphabetical order in the front of the chamber. There were meant to be ten of them, but apparently Sunil wasnât the only one whoâd reconsidered at the last moment. Leilana Jay, a very tall, very pale girl from Memphis, and Boris Kashkoff, an Eastern European with ropy muscles and ruddy cheeks, had both slipped away sometime in the night. No one spoke of them, not the teachers, not the students. It was like they never existed, Simon thoughtâand then imagined Sunil, Leilana, and Boris out there in the world somewhere, living alone with their knowledge of the Shadow World, aware of evil but without the will or ability to fight it.
Thereâs more than one way to fight evil in this world, Simon thought, and it was Claryâs voice in his head, and it was Isabelleâs, and his motherâs, and his own. Donât do this because you think you have to. Do it because you want to.
Only if you want to.
The Academyâs Shadowhunter studentsâSimon never thought of them as the âelitesâ anymore, just as he no longer thought of himself and the other mundanes as the âdregsââsat in the first two rows of the audience. The students werenât two tiers anymore; they were one body. One unit. Even Jon Cartwright looked proud of, and a little nervous for, the mundanes at the front of the chamberâand when Simon caught him locking eyes with Marisol and pressing two fingers to his lips and then his chest, it seemed almost right. (Or, at least, not a total crime against nature, which was a start.) There were no family members in the audienceâthose mundanes with living relatives (and there were depressingly few of them) had, of course, already severed ties. Georgeâs parents, who were Shadowhunters by blood if not by choice, could have attended, but heâd asked them not to. âJust in case I explode, mate,â heâd confided to Simon. âDonât get me wrong, the Lovelaces are hardy folk, but I donât think theyâd enjoy a faceful of liquefied George.â
Nonetheless, the room was almost full. This was the first class of Academy mundanes to Ascend in decades, and more than a few Shadowhunters had wanted to see it for themselves. Most of them were strangers to Simon, but not all. Crowded in behind the rows of students were Clary, Jace, and Isabelle, and Magnus and Alecâwho had made a surprise return from Bali for the occasionâtag-teaming their squirming blue baby. All of themâeven the babyâwere intensely fixed on Simon, as if they could get him through the Ascension with sheer force of will.
This, Simon realized, was what Ascending meant. This was what being a Shadowhunter meant. Not just risking his life, not just carving runes and fighting demons and occasionally saving the world. Not just joining the Clave and agreeing to follow its draconian rules. It meant joining his friends . It meant being a part of something bigger than himself, something as wonderful as it was terrifying. Yes, his life was much less safe than it had been two years agoâbut it was also much more full. Like the Council Hall, it was crowded with all the people he loved, people who loved him.
You might almost call them a family.
*Â Â Â Â *Â Â Â Â *
And then it began.
One by one the mundanes were summoned