“I know a better route. I’ve been here for two days, checking things out as I waited for you.” He plunked me down but kept his grip on my collar so I couldn’t take off. “Now what’s this about Tori and her mom?”
“No time. Just—Liz. We need Liz.”
“Liz is alive?”
I hesitated, reminding myself how much he’d missed. “No. I mean…her ghost. I was right about her being dead. She’s been helping me, though, and we need her to scout the way.”
I broke from his grip and dashed to a break in the hedge. I slid sideways into it and peeked out. Liz stood in the middle of the road two blocks down. I gave a whistle that I thought was just fine, but Derek sighed, put his fingers in his mouth, and whistled loud enough to make my ears ring. I couldn’t tell whether it got Liz’s attention—he made me duck while he listened, in case it got anyone else’s attention. After a moment, he let me peek around the hedge.
“She’s coming,” I said.
Derek nodded. He scanned the yards around us, making sure all was clear.
“You wanted to lead,” I said. “So lead. She’ll catch up.”
He didn’t move. When I tried to walk away, he caught my sleeve.
“I gotta know what I’m walking into.”
“Two Edison Group guards discreetly patrolling the yard—”
“Edison Group?”
“And Tori’s mom, plus the guy who shot at you Saturday night. But of all of them, Tori’s mom is the one to watch.”
“Tori’s mom? Edison Group? What’s—?”
“Derek?”
“What?”
I looked up, meeting his gaze. “Do you trust me?”
I honestly had no idea what the answer would be, but he didn’t hesitate, just grunted, “Course.”
“Then, yes, I know you want details. But we don’t have time. Not if Simon’s back there and Tori’s mom’s on her way. She’s a witch, and she’s not afraid to use her spells. Good enough?”
He looked off across the yard. Maybe he did trust me, but for Derek, not having all the facts was like sticking a blindfold on him and telling him to follow.
“Stay behind me,” he said, and we took off.
Seventeen
LIZ SCOUTED THE WAY, running ahead and whistling us onward. Derek’s mouth stayed set in that way that let me know he wasn’t happy…which was pretty much his normal expression, so I ignored it.
The SUV had gone down a service road beside the factory. Along it were smaller industrial buildings, with more at the back, which is where we’d entered with the Edison Group yesterday and where Tori now waited. It was also where the SUV had headed.
We were still in the residential blocks to the north of the factory yard, now standing behind a minivan at the neighborhood’s edge. As we peered around it, we could see the SUV parked behind another vehicle. Tori’s mom, Mike, and the balding driver stood beside it, talking.
“Where’s Simon?” I whispered.
“On the other side of them. Tori?”
“I left her over there—” I pointed. “She went around back to watch the rear entrance. Hopefully, she’s lying low and staying put.”
“If it was you, yeah. Tori?” A derisive snort. I’d have basked more in the compliment if I didn’t know Derek considered Tori only slightly smarter than plankton.
“We can slip across this road and cut through the next yard,” I said. “Then we can circle—”
Derek caught my arm again as I started to move—at this rate, it was soon going to be as sore as my injured one.
“Dog,” he said, jerking his chin toward the fenced yard. “It was inside earlier.”
Expecting to see a Doberman slavering at the fence, I followed his gaze to a little puff of white fur, the kind of dog women stick in their purses. It wasn’t even barking, just staring at us, dancing in place.
“Oh, my God! It’s a killer Pomeranian.” I glanced up at Derek. “It’s a tough call, but I think you can take him.”
A glare. “That’s not—”
The wind changed and the dog went rigid. Derek swore, and pulled me backward. The dog gave one low, piercing whine. Then it went nuts, jumping and twisting and barking, a whirlwind of white fur battering itself against the fence.
Derek yanked me behind the minivan. We were out of the dog’s sight, but it continued yelping and snarling, the wire fence twanging with each hit.
“It smelled me,” Derek said. “The werewolf thing.”
“Do they always do that?”
He shook his head. “I used to just make them nervous. They’d steer clear, maybe bark a bit. Now?” He waved toward the racket. “I get this. We need to shut it up.”
“I’ll—Wait. Liz!”
She was already running over.
“Could you distract that dog?” I asked her. “I think he wants to play fetch.”
Her brow furrowed. Then she smiled. “Right. I can do that.”
“Play fetch?” Derek whispered as she took off. “What—?”
I motioned him to the end of the van and pointed. There, on the other side of the fence, a stick levitated, then shook. Liz was holding it, but Derek could see only the stick. The dog watched it fly, then spun back to the fence, barking and jumping again. Liz retrieved the stick, and tapped it on the dog’s back. Once she had his attention, she threw it. This time, he chased.
I looked up at Derek, who was staring at the dog.
“Remember Liz thought she had a poltergeist? Turned out she is the poltergeist. She’s a half-demon with the power of telekinesis.”
“Huh.” He turned to stare again, slowly shaking his head, as if wondering why he hadn’t figured that out. Probably because he didn’t know half-demons could be telekinetic, but for Derek, that wouldn’t be an excuse.
“Coast is clear!” Liz shouted. “And this pooch is getting bored!”
Derek and I got across the street. We headed for the service road on the other side, leading through the industrial buildings bordering the factory. Then Derek stopped.
“Tori,” he said.
I peered past him. “Where? I don’t see…” I noticed his face lifted to the breeze. “Not see, smell, right?”
He nodded and led me to where she was huddled behind a wall, peeking around the other side.
“It’s us,” I whispered.
She saw Derek and without so much as a hello, leaned to look behind him. “Where’s Simon?”
“He’s—”
“Is he okay? Why isn’t he here?” She glared up at Derek. “Where’d you leave him?”
“Passed out in an alley.” Derek frowned in thought. “Not sure where, though…”
“He’s kidding,” I said as Tori sputtered.
“We need to get moving.” Derek hooked a thumb at Tori while looking at me. “She’s your responsibility.”
“Excuse me?” Tori said.
Derek didn’t even glance her way. “Make sure she keeps up. And shuts up.”
As we headed out, Liz returned to say the Edison Group was in the factory yard, having slipped in the rear way again. We found the spot where Derek had left Simon, behind a building with faded For Sale signs on the boarded-up windows.
“Well, where is he?” Tori demanded.
“Huh. Must have broken his chain.”
“He means Simon’s a big boy and he’s free to move around.” I turned to Derek. “Can you track him?”
“Yeah.”
He dropped to a crouch. It was a long way from stooping to sniff the ground, but Tori still stared.
“Please tell me he isn’t doing what I think he’s doing,” she said.
Derek scowled—not at Tori but at me. “There’d better be a good explanation for this,” he said with a pointed look her way.
“Not really,” I murmured.
He took a deep breath and pushed to his feet. “Stay here.”
Tori waited until he was gone, then shuddered. “Okay, Derek always weirded me out, but that wolf man stuff is seriously creepy. Suits him, I suppose. A creepy power for a creepy guy.”
“I thought he looked better.”
She stared at me.
“What? He does. Probably because he’s starting his wolf changes and he’s not stressed out about being in Lyle House. That must help.”