Having a dorm was like having a small studio apartment, Sadie decided, but like. Cramped.
The room was narrow, but long, obviously designed to have two dorm beds crowded into it. Sadie only had the one, jacked high off the ground with a dresser crammed underneath for her clothes. There was room for storage, but not by a lot. A desk and standing wardrobe shared the opposite wall, and as far as furnishings, that was… it.
The far wall was taken up by an enormous window, through which Sadie was enjoying the symphony of a thunderstorm as she decided on how to add to her new bedroom. She’d already conjured a cozy black futon where the other dorm bed should have been, and a small fridge to keep snacks and drinks in. Her decorations littered the walls and desk, shades of black and gray and red that reminded her of her apartment in Hell. Somehow, it was starting to feel homey.
The bathroom was another thing entirely. That, Sadie supposed, was the benefit of new luxury dorms; sharing a Jack-and-Jill with the dorm beside her. She’d already put out a black turntable with her soap and a few kitschy cups full of her toothbrush, makeup brushes, and q-tips, and had set up her toiletries and makeup in the little cabinet beneath her sink.
She was just setting up the little stack of plastic drawers, humming absently to herself, when the opposite door opened.
The girl standing in the door yelped at the sight of her. Sadie just smiled up at her, taking her in; she was tall and skinny, almost scrawny, but her style was impeccable, a button down men’s shirt over light wash skinny jeans and gray converse. Her blonde hair flitted around her shoulders, her green eyes a little too big for her angular face, her cheekbones high and proud, her front teeth and incisors a little longer than the rest of her teeth.
Pretty, Sadie thought, and waved. “Hi!” The other girl waved awkwardly back, so Sadie continued, “I’m Sadie, your suitemate.”
“Hey,” the other girl said, clutching her chest and panting a little. “Scottie Langford.” She blew out a breath, like she was having trouble keeping it all in. “Sorry for screaming. You startled me.”
“My bad,” Sadie laughed, brushing off her jeans and scrambling to her feet to hold out a hand. “It’s nice to meet you.”
“Yeah,” Scottie said, shaking her hand. Her grip was firm and sure, her hand completely engulfing Sadie’s. “You too. Uh…” she glanced down toward Sadie’s project, eyes lingering. “You’re way ahead of us with the—” she waved halfheartedly at Sadie’s bathroom cabinet— “unpacking, and stuff.”
“Moved in this morning,” Sadie lied. She tilted her head to see into the other dorm, but it was just the standard issue desk and wardrobe in her line of sight. “You need any help?”
“Oh! Uh…” Scottie glanced over her shoulder. “Ash! You want help from our suitemate?”
“Sure,” came the somewhat strained reply. “Maybe she can help with this god damn curtain rod, seeing as you’re so scared of heights you won’t even stand on your toes.”
“Hey!”
Sadie just laughed. “I’ve got you,” she said, and swept past Scottie as she stepped back to let Sadie through.
Ash was a little shorter, more of an hourglass figure in her jeans and camisole, and fighting two battles simultaneously— one with the aforementioned curtain rod, which was visibly too long for her to hold up straight even with the help of her short stepladder; the other with the mass of reddish-gold curls that hung halfway down her back, untied and wild. The arms and half of her cheek Sadie could make out were a constellation of light freckles.
Pretty, Sadie thought again, finding herself smiling. “Hope you don’t mind me climbing on your desk,” she said, and promptly calmbored up onto the desk wedged into the corner under their window. She snatched up the drooping end of the curtain rod and tucked it into the command hook opposite Ash. Now that she could see Ash’s face, Sadie could see her strong nose, her plush cheeks, her rose petal lips, her nose piercing. More freckles, too.
So, she had pretty roommates. Nice.
“You’re a saint,” Ash said, and Sadie had to bite her tongue til she tasted blood to keep from cackling.
“First time I’ve been called that,” she admitted dryly. Ash laughed, the noise crackly like she didn’t use it very often. “I’m Sadie. Nice to meet you.”
“Ashlynn— or Ash,” Ash said, coming down from the step ladder. “I’m not picky. What’re you in for?”
Sadie didn’t bother getting down off the desk, dropping cross-legged right onto it. Neither of the girls seemed to mind, and neither said anything to deter her. “Child psych major, music and opera double minor.”
“Oh, ouch,” Scottie said, grimacing. “I thought your criminal justice major was rough,” she said to Ash.
“Criminal justice is easy,” Ash scoffed. She regarded a box on her bed, scowled, and tore it open.
“Not as easy as field hockey.”
A lot clicked into place for Sadie as she watched them interact. Scottie’s sport major explained why she was built the way she was, athletic and lithe, with that firm handshake. Ash, though, had sharp hazel eyes that Sadie imagined cataloged everything she saw and kept it safe in her memory. In all the ways her build was soft and feminine, her eyes were like cameras scanning over Sadie, over Scottie, over the room. Sadie would have loved to get in her head for a bit.
They were also incredibly familiar with each other. There was none of the awkwardness or tension between Ash and Scottie that Sadie could feel them exuding when they spoke to her.
“Field hockey and criminal justice, huh?” Sadie watched them both face her, both midway through unearthing things from boxes on their beds. “How’d a jock and a nerd end up friends?”
Ash snorted, and Scottie blushed. “Bold of you to assume we’re not both nerds,” Ash said, sending Scottie a sly look.
“Yeah, we’re—” but Scottie cut off, fumbling something and sending her box careening to the ground. “Shit!”
Sadie leapt from the desk just in time to catch a picture frame mere inches from the floor, the only breakable thing she’d seen as it went down. “Got it!” She handed it back, still half crouched where she’d landed from the desk, and then began to gather the rest of the fallen hodgepodge.
“I’m pretty sure the only time I have any coordination is on the field,” Scottie lamented, accepting a handful of books from Sadie. “Thanks.”
Sadie hummed. “I was catastrophic as a teenager,” she admitted. “Never knew where my body started and ended. Backhanded a few people by accident more times than I can count.”
Scottie giggled, and even Ash huffed a laugh, organizing everything neatly on her own bed.
“What changed?” Scottie asked.
Sadie shrugged. In truth, she’d died, become a sex demon, and her movements had since been fluid in a way they hadn’t been during her first life. Where she’d been painfully unaware of her body before, she was hyperaware of it now, able to move it and change it and use it in ways she’d never been able to in life. “Grew into it, I guess. Took some dance classes and martial arts.” Not untrue, but certainly not the entire story.
Both girls seemed to take it in stride, though. “Martial arts will do that,” Ash said evenly, then promptly turned and tossed a book onto Scottie’s bed, perfectly avoiding Sadie’s waist. “That’s yours.”
“I was wondering where that went.”
Sadie snickered, leaning against Scottie’s bed with her arms crossed over her chest. “So, I take it you knew each other before today?”
“Oh, yeah,” Scottie said. Sadie got the feeling Scottie was the chatterbox between the two of them, and turned her face politely toward her. “We’ve been friends since, like, middle school. Did the same tee ball club or whatever it was, and then I think I hit her with a hockey stick in gym, and we’ve been inseparable ever since. Thick as thieves, or whatever the saying is.”
Sadie felt a sudden pang in her chest, and hoped her smile looked fond, and not— whatever she was feeling, now. “That’s so sweet. I’m not in touch with anyone from my high school, anymore.”
“Lame,” Scottie said. Ash just hummed, shooting Sadie a commiserating look. “Guess you’ll have to hang out with us, then.”
Sadie clasped her hand to her breastbone dramatically, with an overdone gasp for effect. “Oh, no! The horror! Becoming friends with people I have to live with for the next year!”
“Oh, I like you,” Ash said, tossing something toward her. Sadie caught it easily, realizing it was a candy bar as she turned it over.
Ah, she thought. The talker and the feeder. “Thanks.”
“You a freshman?” Ash asked. She tossed another book to Scottie’s bed.
“Transfer junior,” Sadie said automatically.
Scottie snorted. “Any reason you chose the most haunted college in the US to transfer to?”
Haunted? Oh, Sadie was going to have words the next time she saw Lucifer.
As if on cue, a deep, distant rumble of thunder purred through the silence.
“The vibes,” Sadie said casually, watching both girls’ reactions. Ash gave her a flat look, which transferred to Scottie in a second.
Scottie, who was grinning madly, like Sadie had just told her a piece of juicy gossip. “Please, please tell me you like cryptid lore,” she said, practically vibrating with poorly-concealed excitement.
“Oh god,” Sadie said on a breathy laugh. “Tell me we’ve got Bigfoot legends here.”
“Not another one,” Ash whispered, and Sadie burst out laughing, full on chest laughs that had her gripping herself around the middle, trying to stop the wheezing.
“It’s perfect ghost story weather, Ash,” Scottie snapped, but she was still grinning. She grabbed Ash by the arms, forcing the shorter girl to face her, and gave her an excited little shake. “Sadie here doesn’t know about Summerville’s cryptid scene!”
“Let her live in peace,” Ash begged, unfazed by Scottie’s manhandling.
Sadie felt her phone buzz in her pocket as she watched the girls play-argue. At a glance, she saw the name Nikita flash across her screen, and an overly excited (all caps) message: WHAT DOES LUCIFER MEAN BY “YOU WENT TO COLLEGE”?
Well. Good news sure traveled fast in Hell.
“Not to pun,” Sadie said, interrupting something Scottie was emphatically pleading with Ash about, “but I’ll need to take a rain check on the cryptid bonding.” She wiggled her phone by her shoulder. “Meeting my cousin for dinner before he heads back home.”
“Ah,” Ash said, disentangling herself from Scottie’s hands. “Helped you moved in and dipped, huh?”
Sadie snorted. Nikita would. “You got it. You ladies good here? Need anything?”
“I think we’re good.” Ash looked to Scottie, who nodded.
“We’ll catch up later,” Sadie promised, making her way back through the Jack-and-Jill. “I want to hear about Summerville’s cryptid scene.”
“Don’t encourage her!” Ash’s voice called, over Scottie’s gleeful cheers. Sadie just laughed to herself, shutting her own bathroom door before vanishing on the spot.