Darkangel by Christine Pope (most read books txt) š
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Without stopping to think, I turned around. A dark figure stood in front of the door to the shop. It was about the size and shape of a tall man, although I couldnāt see any details. Not like any ghost Iād met so far in Jerome ā they all tended to look to me the same way they must have in their previous lives. And then I felt it, a wave of cold, of malice, as it waited there, seeming to watch me, though it had no eyes.
Still, Iād been talking to ghosts since I was a child, and although this apparition looked like none Iād ever seen before, I thought I should at least attempt to make contact. āWho are you?ā I asked, making sure my voice was calm, steady.
Nothing. It stood there, the air around it feeling twenty degrees colder than it should have. I was surprised that frost didnāt start forming on the shop window behind it.
Fine. Iād try another tack. I stared at it, trying to look more or less where its eyes should be. āWhat do you want?ā
For a few seconds it did not respond. Then one shadowy arm lifted, and it was as if a finger pointed directly at me. The reply came in a whisper, soft and chilling as the rustle of leaves in a graveyard.
You.
I didnāt stop to think. Instinct took over, and I was bolting toward the back of the shop, running down the corridor, until I reached the back door and flung it open, then slammed it behind me. Yes, I know ā some way for the next prima of the McAllisters to act. But Iād never seen or heard of anything like that before, and had no idea of how to fight it or dispel it. The smartest thing seemed to be to put some distance between it and myself.
Once I was outside, I felt a little bit better, and retained enough presence of mind to lock the door before I hurried down the smaller, less-traveled street that backed up to our building, then cut back up to Main. Although most of the stores closed at six, there were still a good number of people out and around, either on their way back to their cars or heading for an early dinner. As soon as I had people around me, some of the cold and dread seemed to leave me, although my hands were still shaking.
No thought now of getting a pizza to go and taking it back to the apartment over the store. I knew I should probably high-tail it down to Tobiasās place and get my aunt, tell her what had just happened, but I hated to bother her, especially after the run-in weād had this morning. Besides, I was supposed to be the next prima ā shouldnāt I be trying to figure these things out on my own? Aunt Rachel would find out soon enough; she might be spending the evening with Tobias, but she wouldnāt stay over for the night. She never left me alone, not for that long.
So I continued walking up toward Grapes. I still needed to eat, one way or another, and better to do it in a familiar place surrounded by other people.
As Iād feared, the restaurant was crowded, but a group was just being seated outside as another party was leaving their table, and so I was able to snag that one. Normally I wouldāve just sat at the bar and not kept a whole table to myself, but I wanted to snug in against the wall and feel something solid at my back. And apparently Linda, who was tending the bar and also doing traffic control, saw something in my face, because she didnāt even suggest that I not take that table.
āRough day, huh?ā asked Tina, the server who came up to check on me.
I knew her, of course, just like I knew everyone in Jerome, but she felt a little closer than some because sheād babysat me from time to time back when I was in elementary school. Neither she nor Linda were part of the clan, although as long-time residents, they knew about the McAllisters. Like Sydney, though, they could be trusted to keep our secrets. A quiet vetting process went on in our town every time a house or apartment became available. We made sure that no one moved in whom we couldnāt trust. It was a quiet spell, but an effective one, the charm that brought sympathetic souls to us.
āRough day,ā I echoed. āYeah, you could say that. A glass of the Plungerhead, please?ā I hadnāt bothered to look at the menu; I could probably recite it by heart at this point.
āGot it. Know what you want to eat?ā
I shook my head. āNot yet. Pizza, yes, but I havenāt decided which one.ā
She shot me a reassuring smile, then said, āIāll get that wine for you right away.ā
Goddess knew what was on my face right then, but I didnāt much care. It just felt good to be there, surrounded by familiar smells and friendly faces. About half the crowd was made up of tourists, but everyone seemed to be having a good time, so the energy was goodā¦a far cry from what had been emanating from that entity back at the shop.
Another shiver, and I clenched my hands on the tabletop. No ghost like any Iād ever seen, but maybe the ghosts themselves would have some input. Normally I wouldnāt bother Maisie on a Saturday night, since she didnāt like crowds. In this case, though, I didnāt think I had much of a choice. I would have to try coaxing her out, see if sheād heard anything.
Felt anything.
I crossed my arms and wished Iād brought a jacket. Not much chance of that happening when I was bolting from the store like a frightened hare. Anyway, the chill moving through me right now didnāt have much to do with the air temperature, although I knew it would get cold outside damn quick once the sun was down. That walk over to rustle up Maisie would not be a comfortable oneā¦and it would only be colder when I walked down to Tobiasās house.
But I wasnāt completely unprepared. Aunt Rachel had taught me a long time ago to always carry a scarf or wrap of some kind in my purse, so I reached in and pulled out the same pashmina Iād worn the night before. The bright emerald green wasnāt the best match with the pale blue top I wore, but I wasnāt trying to impress anybody.
I heard the door to the restaurant open, but I didnāt bother to look up. No, I stared down at the chipped polish on my nails and vaguely wondered when Iād have the time to take it off, and then tried to figure out why I even cared. I had much bigger things to worry about at the moment.
Someone approached my booth and sat down without so much as a by-your-leave in the seat opposite me. I looked up, frowning, a frown that only deepened when I saw who it was. Adam McAllister, my third-or-fourth cousin, someone I really didnāt feel like dealing with at the moment.
āHey, Ange,ā he said. āWord on the street is that youāve been looking for love in all the wrong places.ā
I blinked at him. āWhat?ā
āI heard about your little āincidentā at Main Stage last night.ā
Damn. Iād almost forgotten about my scuffle with Perry in the parking lot the night before. āHow the hell did you find out about that?ā
āAliciaās working dispatch for the Cottonwood P.D., remember?ā
Oh, right. Adamās big sister had gotten a job as a dispatcher for the police department about six months ago. It was a little out of character for a McAllister, since we tended to be artsy types who stuck around Jerome, but she wasnāt a very strong witch. On the other hand, she was a hell of a gossip. Working as a dispatcher was probably her dream job, since she got to hear everybodyās business firsthand.
And obviously sheād heard all about my business last night. Sigh.
āIt was just a misunderstanding,ā I said, and hoped Tina would come by with my wine soon.
āMustāve been some misunderstanding, with him ending up in the hospital.ā
At least one wish was granted, because Tina did appear with my zinfandel, which she set down in front of me before sending a quizzical glance in Adamās direction. Naturally Iād said nothing about someone joining meā¦because I had no idea somebody would.
āA Corona for me,ā Adam said, and I had to keep myself from rolling my eyes. Typically tone-deaf of him to order a beer in a restaurant called āGrapes.ā
Maybe it wouldāve been polite to wait until he had his beer before I drank any of my wine, but the hell with that. It wasnāt as if Iād invited him to sit down or anything. So I picked up the little carafe Tina had brought me and poured about a third of it into my wine glass, then took a good swallow. Much better.
āIs there a point to all this, Adam?ā
āI just donāt know why youād bother to pick up some civilian down in Cottonwood when youāve got me right here.ā
I really did not need this right now. āI wasnāt āpicking upā anyone. Heās a friend of the guy Sydney was with. Thatās all.ā
āāAllā doesnāt
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