Great. As if I hadn’t had enough trauma in the past few days to last a lifetime.
“Look, this will be a lot easier on you if you talk to us now, rather than force us to run without your side of the story—”
“Run it,” I said. “Somehow, I can’t see you guys having a lot of credibility left once everybody asks you what brand of crack you were smoking. Now, leave us alone.”
They dropped back, mainly because we’d reached the car and were already getting in. I was sure the videographer had a great shot of me getting into the car, looking pissed off; the only thing missing from a humiliating fleeing-the-cameras exposé was me shoving the cameraman or giving him the finger. Not that I wasn’t tempted.
Once we were inside the car, I tried calming, deep breaths. It didn’t really work, but it made me feel as if at least I was making an effort. David wasted no time, exerting a pulse of power to dry out our clothes, hair, and shoes, not to mention the seats, even as he locked the doors in case they decided to try one more time. I hastily got the car in drive and pulled away into traffic, leaving the reporters behind.
I distinctly saw a high five behind me in their van.
“That,” I said, “was not the plan.”
“What, the tornado? Or the reporters?”
“Both. Either. Not the plan.” I chewed my lip; too late to worry about my lipstick at this point. My carefully applied makeup, not to mention my hairdo, was long gone. “Right. Enough making like a target for the day. Let’s give the Sentinels some time to chew over their options while we go home and . . .”
“And?”
“Do whatever comes naturally.”
“I can think of a few things that aren’t quite that natural. Are they off the table?”
“Depends.” My heart rate was slowly declining from the triple digits, but I still felt jittery. Too many shocks, too close together. “I think I’ll have to ask for a massage first. I’m a bundle of nerves right now.”
He put his hand atop mine on the gear shift, and a slow warm pulse moved through my body, steadying me. “I would like that,” he said. “And if you want to take the phone off the hook and turn off that damn cell phone . . .”
“We’d have Lewis and a bunch of paratroopers storming the apartment,” I said. “Being out of contact, not really an option right now. You know, since we’re bait.”
He sighed. “Yes. Bait.” Beat. “I’m sorry about the dress. You seemed very happy.”
“Yes.” I bit my lip, unreasonably distressed, and was glad he sent another pulse of energy through my nerves to counteract my ridiculously out-of-proportion reactions. “It was gorgeous. Well, I’m sure I’ll find another one.” Maybe.
“We can look tomorrow.”
I couldn’t help it; I laughed. He’d said it in all seriousness, as if our little outing hadn’t netted a significant and near-fatal attack. As if that was just par for the course, an everyday hazard of going to the store.
“Yes,” I said, when I was able to speak around the chuckles. “Oh, absolutely. Shopping tomorrow. But maybe we should try to pick someplace easier on bystanders. ”
He nodded soberly. “Internet.”
“Internet.”
“I hear there’s pornography on the Internet.”
“Filthy pervert.”
His eyebrows quirked, then settled into a severe line. “I take exception. I’m quite clean, actually.”
“Too bad. I like a scruffy man.”
“I can be scruffy.” His tone changed. “Pull over.”
“What?”
“Pull over now.”
Oh. Not part of the banter, then. I looked in the rearview mirror but saw nothing out of the ordinary. Still, David wasn’t exactly one to overreact. I took the next left and found a shopping center parking space, right between a nail salon and a Spanish-language video rental store. “What is it?”
“We’re being followed,” David said.
“I didn’t see—”
“By a Djinn.” He was already opening his door. “Stay here.”
“David! No, you can’t—” I was having flashbacks to the horrible scene in my apartment, David on his knees and helpless at the hands of his fellow Djinn. I didn’t trust any of them now, certainly not any of them who felt compelled to follow us in secret.
“I have to.” No point in arguing, because I’d be arguing with the rain; he was already gone, and even though I hurriedly scrambled out after, I saw no trace of him.
And then I did, in the deep shadows at the side of the building. David was in conversation with a very tall man—Djinn—with hair too long to stand up in the nearly pompadour style he was wearing. Thin, intense, and entirely unfamiliar to me. He was wearing retro clothes, circa the mid-1950s, but he didn’t seem at all Father Knows Best to me; he radiated an unfocused kind of don’t-mess-with-me menace.
The Djinn’s gaze fixed on me, and I saw his eyes flare into a bright crimson. He bent his head and said something else to David, and blew apart into mist and was gone.
David came back in no particular hurry, hands in his pants pockets, lost in thought.
We both got back into the car at the same time, and I dried us off, a flick of power that felt satisfyingly productive for a change. He hardly noticed.
“Who was that?” I asked. David stirred, glanced at me, and looked surprised.
“Roy,” he said.
“Who’s Roy?”
“One of mine,” he said. “You don’t need to have him over for drinks. He’s not polite company. In fact, I’d rather you never met him. But he’s very useful for some things.”
“Such as?”
“Such as keeping an eye on Kevin and Rahel.” He cocked an eyebrow at my expression. “You didn’t seriously think I would let them do this without some kind of backup plan?”
Oh. Actually, I’d thought Rahel was the backup plan, but I could see his point. “So what did Roy have to say?”
“Kevin was taken from his apartment a half hour ago, along with Rahel disguised as Cherise. It was efficient. He fought, but he was contained with a minimum of effort.”
If you knew Kevin, this was ominously impressive. “Sentinels?”
“I can’t think of anyone else with the strength and the motivation,” David said. “The thing is, they did this while they were hitting us. Which implies—”
“A whole lot of organization,” I finished. “Not to mention power to burn.”
We looked at each other for a long moment, and I finally started up the car again. “It’s too late to change our minds, isn’t it?”
“I’m afraid so. The game’s in motion now, and we have to follow the play. I dispatched Roy to follow at a safe distance; he should report back when Kevin and Cherise reach a final destination. I don’t think they’ll be taken far.”
“Meanwhile?”
He reached out and traced his thumb over my lips. “Meanwhile, we should find a place to stay that’s far from innocent bystanders, and be prepared for another attack. Any ideas?”
“Yep.” I put the Mustang in gear and pulled out of the parking lot, merging with the rain and traffic. “But you’re not going to like it.”
I’d been right, and wrong. David wasn’t wild about the beach house—which belonged to the Wardens, and was normally used to host visiting dignitaries— because it was long on ocean views and short on actual security. He also wasn’t crazy about staying in a location where most of the Wardens would guess we’d go, but I wanted to continue to provide some kind of attractive target for the Sentinels. Anything to give Kevin time.
At least here, the beach was private, we were nowhere close to neighbors, and if the Sentinels decided to lower the boom on us, they’d do a minimum of collateral damage.
The rain stopped about the time I pulled up in the private drive, opened the massive metal gates with a pulse of Fire Warden power, and drove inside. The entrance was heavily landscaped, mainly with palms and leafy bushes to conceal the grounds from prying eyes. It looked like the sort of place a midlevel, once-all-powerful Hollywood player would stay to get away from it all.