Part 12 (1/2)
Then his mouth tightened, his eyes hardened, and he turned away.
Other times I knew that everything had.
There were so many things about Jimmy I no longer understood, so many years we'd been apart, years when I thought he'd been gallivanting around the world boinking his way through the Sports Ill.u.s.trated Super-model Club. He probably had been. But in between boink-a-thons he'd been killing demons. A lot of them.
”You weren't aware she had the power of the sun?” Jimmy's voice contained not even the slightest tingle of warmth.
”No,” Ruthie said softly. ”Could be a power she inherited from her mother.”
”A phoenix was a symbol of the sun G.o.d in Egypt,” Jimmy murmured. ”So I'd say that was possible. Ever see her mom do what she just did?”
”She's right here,” I said.
Everyone ignored me.
”No,” Ruthie repeated. ”Though that doesn't mean she couldn't.”
”Sawyer?”
”No.”
”You're sure?”
Ruthie's dark, bland gaze met Jimmy's. Ruthie was always sure.
”What about her father?”
”Not a clue who he is.”
”Is that not a clue, not a clue?” I put in. ”Or not a clue but you secretly have a clue.”
”What?” Jimmy asked.
”She said she didn't know who my mother was, either, but surprise! She did.”
”I still think you slept with something else and absorbed another power,” Summer muttered.
”I still think I should ram a steel rod down your throat and bury you with rowan so you never rise.” I shrugged. ”But we can't always get what we want.”
”Girls,” Ruthie said. ”Enough.”
Summer and I shut up, satisfying our craving for physical violence by glaring at each other.
”Why are you here?” Jimmy asked again.
”Ruthie said you needed help.”
Jimmy scowled at Luther. ”I could have handled this.”
”Yeah, you were doing a great job,” I muttered, and earned a glare from Sanducci that matched the equally vicious one I was still getting from the fairy.
A bright flash of light drew his gaze past me, and he paled despite the olive tone of his skin. ”What the f.u.c.k?”
I spun. Lord only knew what could make Sanducci pale like that.
Faith-once again a chubby baby-had her face pressed to the window. Her gray eyes shone luminescent with unshed tears as she pounded against the gla.s.s. Her naked chest hitched as she drew in a breath that would no doubt break every ear drum in the vicinity.
Once again she'd developed human skills in far too short a time to be human. A few days ago I'd had to support her neck like a just-born infant. Now she stood on her own two feet, albeit leaning against the car door, and pounded the gla.s.s hard enough to make it rattle. If this kept up, she'd be sneaking joints and dating inappropriate young men by next Tuesday.
Something shot past me-a flare of motion too fast to distinguish an ident.i.ty. I figured it was Luther, with Ruthie manning the controls. Instead, Summer materialized next to the car.
She tugged once on the door, then zapped it with make-me dust, which, from what I'd seen of it so far, worked just as well on things as people. Next time she touched the handle, the door swung open, and she swept Faith into her arms.
The baby hugged her as if they were long-lost relatives. I wanted to stalk over there and yank the child away, but I refrained.
Summer rounded on me, lips pulled back from her teeth, face furious. ”You can't leave a baby in the car like a dog! You shouldn't even leave a dog in the car if it's over seventy degrees, let alone ninety in the sun like it is now.”
”The sun wasn't out until I brought it out,” I said mildly. ”And she wasn't a baby when I left.”
That put a stop to Summer's tirade.
She frowned, leaned back, stared into the child's face, then glanced at me, Jimmy, and Ruthie-Luther in turn. ”You'd better explain that.”
Luther took a breath to answer, and I shook my head then crossed to the car. Summer inched out of my way as I pa.s.sed. Smart move, though I wouldn't have shoved her when she had the baby in her arms.
Faith gurgled and cooed. I glanced at her with a smile-believing for an instant that she was gurgling and cooing at me-but instead she patted Summer's face and babbled to her like they were BFFs.
”I thought fairies stole babies,” I muttered as I leaned inside and grabbed Faith's blanket.
”That's goblins.”
Backing out, I nearly b.u.mped my head when I straightened too quickly. ”Goblins,” I repeated.
”Little people. Mischievous to the point of evil. Their laugh curdles milk. They hide small objects from humans.”
”Like babies?”
Summer lifted one shoulder and went back to playing goo-goo with Faith.
”If goblins were stealing babies, wouldn't there be a lot more talk about missing tots?”
”Who says there isn't?” Summer asked.
True.
”Except goblins only take babies when they have one to give.” Summer crossed her eyes and scrunched up her face. Faith giggled, the sound pure joy, and I couldn't help but smile before glancing at Jimmy.