“Awww!” Olivia gushed. She took over reading. “ ‘These remarkable young women have something to teach us all,’ ” she intoned, “ ‘about what is possible between humans and vampires. For when there is no fear, there can be love— despite all differences.’ ” On the verge of tears, Olivia looked up again and saw that her sister’s eyes were filling up, too.
There was only one paragraph left, but Olivia couldn’t go on. Sophia gently took the magazine from her hands.
“‘In a matter of weeks,’ ” Sophia read carefully, “‘Ivy will move to Europe with her father. Having only just found each other, she and her twin shall be torn asunder yet again. But now, even distance is not enough to keep them apart’ ”—Sophia paused dramatically—“‘for they are twins for eternity.’ ”
Olivia and her sister gave each other a huge hug.
“I’m going to miss you so much,” Olivia whispered.
“I can’t wait to make my father read this.” Ivy sniffled defiantly. “Georgia sent me a full set of photos, as a souvenir to hang in my new room.”
“And Kong sent me a full set of photos for my portfolio,” Sophia added.
“So I can keep this copy?” asked Olivia.
“No,” Sophia said abruptly, taking the magazine back. She reached into her bag and pulled out a much thinner issue. “This one’s for you. Special delivery from Georgia Huntingdon.”
“What’s the difference?” Olivia asked.
“No references to you know what,” Sophia answered. Olivia flipped it open, and saw that the only article inside was the one about her and her sister—and even there, lots of text had been deleted.
Olivia frowned. “Can’t I have a regular one? I promise I won’t show anyone.”
Ivy shook her head. “Yours is better.”
“There’s a reason we call our periodicals the ‘black papers,’ ” Sophia explained. “They’re printed on special paper with special ink, so the moment they’re exposed to sunlight, the pages turn completely black. And even if they never see the light of day, they blacken in a week anyway.”
At least the final spread of Olivia and her sister in the mirror remained intact. They’d only changed one line so it simply said, “These remarkable young women have something to teach us all about what is possible.”
I’ll treasure this for as long as I live, Olivia thought happily.
The issues of Vamp concealed again, Olivia followed Ivy and Sophia out of the bathroom. They were hurrying to first-period class when Olivia saw two sixth-grade girls charging toward them, arm in arm. One was dressed all in pink and the other was totally clad in black, but in every other way, their outfits were identical.
The one in pink cried out in excitement when she spotted Ivy and Olivia. “Me and my best friend, Marta, planned our outfits,” she said, her braces glinting as she spoke, “so we could be twin opposites, just like you! I’m Olivia.”
“And I’m Ivy!” her black-clad friend squealed.
Olivia didn’t even get a chance to respond before her sister dragged her away down the hall.
“And people think I’m a bloodsucker,” Ivy said, clearly weirded out by their cultish look-alikes.
“Well, I think it’s fun,” Olivia said proudly. Sophia just shook her head in disbelief.
Suddenly Olivia heard a familiar voice calling her name. She spun around to see Camilla chasing them down the hall, waving a newspaper in the air above her blond curls.
“Have you two seen this?” Camilla cried, thrusting the newspaper at them.
“What?” Olivia and Ivy asked at the same time.
“You made the front page of the Gazette!” Camilla announced. “They reprinted Toby’s article from the Scribe word for word!”
Camilla handed them each a copy of the local newspaper—and sure enough, there were the matching pictures of Ivy and Olivia that had appeared in the school paper the previous week.
“I almost tackled my dad for it when I saw it this morning over the breakfast table,” Camilla panted.
“Where’d you get the second copy?” Ivy asked.
Camilla blushed. “I begged my next door neighbor for it, in case you both needed one.”
“Thanks,” said Ivy, sounding genuinely touched.
“You’re the best, Camilla,” Olivia said with a grin, gazing down at the front page of the Gazette. “Who would have thought,” she marveled, “that so many people would be interested in our story?”
“Not me,” Ivy groaned.
Later, at lunch, Olivia and Ivy were sitting with Brendan, Sophia, and Camilla, surrounded by a mob of people holding out newspapers and begging for autographs. Ivy looked like she wanted to crawl under the table.
Suddenly Charlotte Brown pushed in front of everyone else—except she didn’t want an autograph. “I don’t see what all the fuss is about,” she huffed. “I mean, it’s just the Gazette. It’s not like Teen Style or anything.”
Ivy rolled her eyes, and Olivia just smiled to herself as she signed a seventh-grade jock’s newspaper, thinking, Oh yeah? You should see our glamour shots in Vamp!
Then Toby Decker came up, carrying a tray with two towering ice cream sundaes that he’d made at the dessert bar. He looked so excited— after all, it was his story the Gazette had reprinted. “You two gave me the biggest scoop of my life!” he exclaimed, setting a sundae down in front of each of them. “The least I could do is give you yours!”
“Thanks, Toby,” Olivia and Ivy said.
Both their mouths were full of ice cream when Sophia snapped a picture. “Who knows what publication this might end up in?” she said excitedly.
Ivy was glad to walk into the library with Olivia after school, to research their biological parents on the regular Internet. At least in here, she thought, people will have to shut their boxes about us for a second.
It was like the whole school had gone batty. It was strange enough when the Scribe came out, but now it seemed like everyone was idolizing them. Vera had come up to Ivy and Olivia at the beginning of science, and Ivy had expected a fight. Instead, Vera just smiled sheepishly, apologized for the way she’d been acting, and asked for their autographs like everyone else.
Fame is like blood, Ivy thought. Everybody wants a sip.