A Wolf After My Own Heart MaryJanice Davidson (children's ebooks online .txt) đ
- Author: MaryJanice Davidson
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Lila slowly turned and walked back to her nonbulance, like a girl in the 1950s trying to fix her posture by walking around with a book on her head. She tried not to think about the sharp, hooked beak that could have her ear off quicker than a straight razor. Or the talons that could slash through skin and muscle with next to no effort.
âIs there a plan besides âmake a distraction and then get the hell out of the wayâ?â
The bird screamed what Lila took to be âNo.â
âRight in my ear? That struck you as a good idea?â
She got another shriek for her pains.
* * *
Crashing through the huge windows of the Reflections Dance Academy was so easy she couldnât believe it. TV told the truth for a change! Truly a wondrous day.
She unbuckled her seat belt (thank you, George Cayley!) and hopped out of her nonbulance, fully prepared toâwell, she didnât know what she was prepared to do, that depended on what was happening, and what was happening was that Garsea and Berne and Oz were whaling the fuck out of three men sheâd never seen before. One of them was punching Berne and yelling about how his shirt was ruined, and Berne was acting like he couldnât even feel the hits, like he was being assaulted by a jar of marshmallow fluff. Uptight marshmallow fluff. Like he was waiting for the other guy to just knock it off already, so he could really go to work.
She heard gunfire and instinctively flinched, saw that Annetteâs guy had gotten one off but missed her, tried to step back to get a better shot (not a great close-up weaponâŠthatâs why God made knives), only to have the raptor swoop in and rake her talons across his face, blinding him in a slash and a flurry of feathers. Lila hadnât known men could shriek so high.
And then there were people everywhere, pouring in from where sheâd driven through the front of the building like theyâd been waiting for a signalâwas she the signal?âand more coming from behindâthe back entrance?âand she had no idea what to do because she could no longer see Oz, much less rescue him, and that was the point, that he was in trouble and needed her, except maybe he didnât, so this was now a piss-poor place to be and she had just decided to take cover in her nonbulance when a man in a turtleneck spotted her and just went crazy, spotted her and started toward her and screamed at her
âWho brought a fucking Stable into this?â
and then his gun was coming up but so was hers and she shot him and then she threw up.
Chapter 55
âLila!â Oz stopped rearranging Mockâs facial bone structure and ran to her. He didnât spare a glance at Turtleneck, who was on his back and clutching his chest and being the least aggravating heâd been all day. âWhat the hell are you doing here, Jesus, are you okay?â
She was leaning against her nonbulance, wiped her mouth, and took a couple of shaky steps forward. He caught her, steadied her, hugged her. She pulled back to look at him and heâd never seen a sweeter sight, not ever.
âI never shot anybody before. Just targets and pop cans and mailboxes I was mad at.â
âYou did it like a champ.â
âAny other week,â she said tearfully, âthis would have seemed super weird.â
âWhat are you doing here? For all you knew, you were driving right into danger!â He heard himself and rephrased. âYou did drive right into danger.â
She blinked, surprised by his tone. âWell, yeah. I mean, I assumed I was in danger. And acted accordingly.â
âWhat?â
âSure. Thatâs my default. You havenât noticed this? House fires, gun-toting racists, shopping on Black FridayâŠalways in danger means always prepared.â
âHow the hell did you evenâ Nadia.â
âYeah. After I shot Harry Harrissââ
âWhat?â
ââshe called and I suggested she use my help.â
(Nadia later relayed Lilaâs exact words with no small amount of glee: âFaulkner, let me help or Iâll make a fucking nuisance of myself the likes of which youâve never seen. Also I didnât send you all of the footage of Garseaâs B&E. You missed the part with the sprinklers. If you want it, you know what you must do.â)
âI fucking love you.â
She sniffled into his shoulder. âYou donât know me. But we can fix that. We just need to go on at least fifteen more not-dates. Sixteen, if you donât count Meritage. No,â she said as he put a finger under her chin, tipped her head up so he could look into the lovely eyes she hid behind plain glass frames because she was weird and sneaky. âDonât you dare try to kiss me. I just threw up.â
âLater,â he promised.
âAgreed. Who are all these people?â
âReinforcements.â
âAnd whoâd I shoot?â
âSomeone whoâs fine with killing every Stable he sees.â
âAnd whoâs that?â
âJudge Gomph.â He understood her astonishment. The judge was in his early sixties, went about three hundred pounds, and was well over six feet tall. He was standing clear of the skirmishes, observing like a benevolent/merciless god (depending on whose side you were on), and it was impossible not to look at him, even in the midst of the mess.
Gomph had dark brown skin and small, bright brown eyes. His wide, kind face was creased with wrinkles; his hands were catcherâs mitts. Nadia had once observed that he was so broad, he looked like someone had thrown a judgeâs robe over a mahogany table. Like most juvie judges, he was overworked, underpaid, adored cubs, and ate too much fast food. When Annette had stumbled onto the Sindicate, his first concern had been Caro and Devâs safety, then Annetteâs, and heâd backed everything she didâeven the stuff he didnât find out about until later.
Judge Gomph was the reason Annette hadnât been arrested for manslaughter, never mind tried. Even now, Oz wasnât sure how far his influence reached; he was simply grateful for it, given that heâd done some manslaughtering himself when he
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