“I’M GOING TO make you a deal,” Vikous said.
Calliope flinched at the words. The morning light shone through the frost-crusted glass of the front windshield, burning at her gritty eyes as she sat in the driver’s seat and waited for the gas to finish pumping. They had spent what was left of the night in a (different) cheap motel in (different) double-bed rooms. Calliope’s night hadn’t been either long or restful, and she still felt edgy and tense. She glared at Vikous’s puzzled look. “What?”
He continued staring at her, then shook his head and let his gaze drop. “Nothing . . . you just . . . nothing.” He cleared his throat. “So . . . I have a deal to make with you.”
“I don’t like deals much right now.”
“You’ll probably like this one.”
“What is it?”
Vikous pulled back his hood, revealing the pasty skin of his face in the morning light in order to make eye-to-shiny-black-eye contact. “Give us about five hours of driving and we can crash in a decent place for the rest of the day and night.”
Calliope automatically opened her mouth to protest, then paused and conceded, “That . . . actually sounds pretty good.”
Vikous nodded. “I know someone who can help us out a little.”
“We won’t be making ourselves late or something?”
Vikous laid a hand on his chest. “Trust the guide.”
Calliope jerked her head in agreement. “Okay, we can—” She cut herself off and peered at Vikous. “Wait, what’s the other part?”
Vikous blinked, his eyes wide, which in no way lent him an air of innocence. “Whaddaya mean?”
“ ‘Deal’ means I have to do something in return.”
“You won’t mind. It’s easy.”
Calliope’s bloodshot eyes did not suggest trust.
“It’s something we need to do anyway; I just want you to get some rest, all right?” Vikous started to pull his hood back up, but paused halfway. “All right? Trust the guide?”
The pump handle release thumped from outside the cab and the electronic display began to beep faintly. Calliope looked over her shoulder at the pump, then back to Vikous.
“Fine.” She pushed open the door and swung out of the seat. “As long as I can sleep for a while.”
“You and Mr. White both work in the same detective agency, Ms. Jenkins?”
Calliope is sitting in a chair in Lauren’s office again, the glare through the office window turning both men into silhouettes. Only Special Agent Walker’s eyes stand out—shining like lozenges of silver.
“Yes.”
“I see. Do you know the nature of this case?”
“Josh handled this one from the beginning. I only knew he was flying out of town, not where, and I knew when he thought he’d get back. I can check the office for records but I think he had all of them with him when he left.”
“You’re familiar with the area Mr. White was found in.”
“Yes.”
“Was Mr. White?”
“ . . . not really.”
“Had he been in the region before?”
“When he was a kid, with his younger brother, yeah. Then once, later.”
Don’t ask don’t ask don’t ask don’t—
“What was the nature of that later visit?”
. . .
“Miss Jenkins?”
“He . . . I took him there.”
“For a case?”
“No. It was personal.”
“You took him to meet your family.”
“Yes.”
“Did they like him?”
“No.”
“Did they like you?”
Walker is smiling now, and his teeth glitter out of the darkness of the office.
“What?”
“Does your family like you? They don’t, do they, Miss Jenkins?”
“No. Yes.”
“Which is it?”
“They don’t like . . . some things. Didn’t. Don’t. I don’t know.”
“Are they going to like your new boyfriend? The clown?”
“He’s not my boyfriend, he’s—”
“Will they like him?”
“They don’t know him.”
“But you do. You’ve known the clown a long time, haven’t you?”
“No.”
“Haven’t you?”
She is standing at the very top of the blocky jungle gym. It’s her favorite place to stand because she can see so much of the playground and everyone can see her. She’s standing at the very top, on the little block of bars that sits on top of a larger block.
Joshua is at the other end of the playground, playing Red Rover with the other ki—
That’s not right; Josh can’t be here. We didn’t know each other.
—she’s singing. It’s her favorite thing to do and she likes it very much. It makes her feel good and strong and warm. She can see Joshua is climbing up the jungle gym to her. He’s shouting something at her, but Calliope just sings louder so that she doesn’t have to hear it. Josh keeps climbing, keeps getting closer, and finally Calliope can hear him shouting to stop, to stop singing, to let someone else on top of the jungle gym.
Calliope gets mad. She wants to keep singing. It’s the only thing she
has
wants to do. She reaches out with her foot and shoves and Josh falls back away from her.
Too far. Right out over the edge of the big block and down to the ground. He lands funny and when Calliope looks down, she can see a big sharp white thing poking out of his arm, and the skin curls back on both sides of the white thing like sheets of old paper.
That must be a bone, Calliope thinks, but she keeps singing—keeps singing and doesn’t come down until a teacher pulls her right off the jungle gym and carries her back into the school.
Across the playground, outside the fence, Calliope sees a man watching her be carried away, and it makes her feel bad. He looks familiar, so very familiar. Calliope is sure she would know who he was if his hood wasn’t up. She can still see his shiny eyes, though—shining out of the hood, the same way Walker’s shine in the dim of Lauren’s office.
So familiar.
“You see, Miss Jenkins? You’ve known the clown a long time.”
“No.”
“Haven’t you?”
“No. That wasn’t me. That didn’t happen to me.”
“It happened.”
“But it wasn’t me. Someone told me about that happening. The pushing, the falling . . . all of that.”
“Really?”
“It was . . .” She frowns. She can almost remember. “It wasn’t me.”
Calliope jerked awake.
“Calliope?” A knock on the door. “Calliope?”
She looked around the room, wide-eyed and trying to make sense of the strange, nonmotel surroundings.
“Calliope?”
“Yeah.” Her mouth tasted like something evil had died inside it. “Yeah, I’m up.”
“I thought we could go do this thing in a little bit.”
Calliope blinked, still groggy. “What thing?” she called back.
“The deal, remember the deal?” Vikous sounded as though he was at least trying to be patient.
“Right,” she said to herself, then called, louder, “Right. Give me a few.” She sat up on the edge of a twin bed Vikous’s friend had made up for her.
So familiar . . . The thought clung to the back of her mind, but Calliope couldn’t remember why.
“You, ehh, you sleep all right? You get, ehh, a good, ahh, nap?”
Calliope smiled across the small table at their host. He was only a few inches taller than Faegos, but when it came to the man Vikous had introduced as Gerschon, all similarities to the vicious old man from the diner ended there. Their host moved around the room like a duck that had swallowed a bowling ball. His dark olive complexion was leathery, and his body sprouted tufts of wiry gray hair from any number of unlikely places. When he spoke in his worn and crackling voice, he paused frequently, struggling to think of the correct word and waving one or both of his hands around in random patterns, as if the perfect phrase were a mosquito he could swat out of the air and quickly pop into his mouth.
“I slept very well, thank you.” Calliope smiled and lied with equal ease. “I’m glad that Vikous knew someone nearby who was so caring and helpful.”
“Oh, heh heh, you are . . . ehh, kind, I think.” The older man chuckled, obviously pleased, and reached back for a steaming pot on the stove, lifting it by its bare wire handle and carrying it over to the table. “I, ahh, make the coffee? You?” He raised the pot by way of an offer.
Calliope smiled and meant it this time. “Yes, please.”
He chuckled. “You kids and your coffee, eh? Always go go go.” He poured. The powerful scent washed over Calliope as she raised the cup.
“It smells strong.” She took a careful drink and grimaced, though she tried not to. “It is strong.” She smiled at his concerned look. “It’s all right. I like it strong.”
Gerschon smiled. “Ahh, tha’s good. Vikous wanted you . . . ehh, bright-eyed for the . . . ehh, visit my club, no?”
Calliope took another sip from the cup. “I guess so.”
Gerschon nodded, his thoughts obviously elsewhere. “He, ahh, Vikous”—his thick accent turned the name into Vee-koosh—“he is a good—” Gerschon said some word Calliope couldn’t quite understand. “You are lucky, ehh, I think.”
Calliope shook her head. “I’m sorry, I don’t know that word. Gregory? Gree-gor-ie? Is that his name? Another nickname for him?”
Gerschon waved his hand as though to brush aside a fly. “Oh, not ‘Gregory’ . . . Is . . . is old word, I use.” He paused for a second. “Is also wrong word, made by people who did not understand . . . eh . . . things. But is almost not too wrong. Means . . .” He frowned, staring into the middle distance, as though trying to read the word he wanted from the wall behind Calliope.
“A guide?” she suggested.
He turned back to her and smiled broadly. “Ahh, guide. Is . . .” He tapped the table soundly with one hairy knuckle. “Is . . . close enough, I think.” He glanced at the clock. “And . . . I think we have to get going.” Gerschon turned back to her, peering at her face. “Lemme as’ you something.” He leaned in. “You are . . . ehh, okay with this? The club?”
Calliope raised an eyebrow. “Well, it’s not a strip club or something, is it?”
Gerschon’s eyes opened wide. After a moment’s silence, he sat back in his chair, laughing and waving his hands back and forth. Calliope would have sworn he was blushing. “A, ehh, a strip club? With the . . . ahh, I . . . no.” He chuckled again. “No. No strip club, not for Gerschon. Not . . . ahh . . . anymore.”
Calliope smiled. “Then I guess I’m fine with it.”
Gerschon searched her face, then slapped his hands against the tabletop and pushed himself upright. “Oh-kay,” he said, and smiled. Calliope returned the smile and stood up, finishing the coffee in one bitter gulp. Gerschon had continued talking. “We . . . ahh, we get the coat . . . here you are. Would you like help wi— No, you got it. Ladies today get the coats . . . and Gerschon gets . . . ehh . . . my coat.” He chuckled to himself and moved to the door that led out the back of the kitchen and into the side yard of his small house. “And . . . we have the door, which . . . ehh, you will have to let Gerschon get, because I am old-fashioned . . . And out we go . . . going to the club.” He flipped off the kitchen lights and turned on the yard light for Calliope to see by. “And we will get to . . . ehh, hear you sing and . . . ehh, then we see what—”
“Excuse me.” Calliope turned fully around on the steps that led down from the door. “Hear me what?”
Gerschon’s club was essentially a small bar with a fair number of open tables, some booths along the back wall, no dance floor, and a small stage about the size of a bathroom stall. Calliope looked over the sparse collection of college-age kids, thirtysomethings, and lonely singles fingering their drinks and watching the crowd. The stage was set up with a TV on one side, two mikes, and a number of mismatched speakers. A soundboard and playback unit sat just to the side of the stage.
“This is a karaoke bar,” Calliope said.
“Only on . . . ehh, Saturdays,” Gerschon said as he eased past her and into the bar. “Excuse me, I must see to the business.” He smiled and roll-walked through the crowd, nodding to the bartender.
Calliope turned to Vikous, standing next to her with his hood raised. “This is a karaoke bar.”
“Only on Saturdays,” Vikous murmured.
Calliope glared. “You’re not funny. This”—she gestured to the bar—“isn’t funny.”
Vikous pushed his hood back and raised an eyebrow at Calliope. “I’m not trying to be funny.” He indicated the stage with his chin. “This is something that I—we—need to check.”
“This is crap.”
“Hey, what happened to trust the guide?”
Calliope snorted. “The last time—” She cut herself off abruptly.
Vikous gave her a puzzled look. “What?”
“Nothing.” She turned her attention back to the stage, moving out of the way of the entrance.
Vikous looked around. “It’s just like any other karaoke bar.” On the stage, a young man stepped up to the microphone and began a rendition of something that the screen next to him insisted was Jimmy Buffett.
“I’ve never been to a karaoke bar,” Calliope growled.
“No kidding?” He looked mildly surprised. “I figured . . .”
“You figured what?”
He nudged her in the direction of an open booth, moving through the tables with a dexterity that seemed impossible. “Well, you sang in a band, right?”
Calliope rolled her eyes. “I played drums first but yeah, what’s your point?” She dropped into a seat and glared across the table. “Do you know a lot of triple-A baseball players who do local coed softball on the weekends?”
Vikous’s eyebrows shot up. “Nice attitude.”
“You are hearing the sounds that guy is making right now, right?” The bar’s lone Saturday-night waitress stopped at their table.
“That’s Jerry,” she said, pulling out a pad. “You should have heard him do “Henry the Eighth” a few hours ago. He walked through the crowd.”
Calliope winced. “Oh god.”
“I recommend a painkiller,” the older woman murmured. “And the boss says it’s on the house, so go crazy.”
“Strychnine?” Calliope asked.
The waitress shook her head. “Only have a beer and wine license, honey. Sorry.”
“Beer then,” Calliope replied. “Whatever’s on tap.”
“Liquid bravery, on the way.” She gave Calliope a perfunctory smile and wove her way into the crowd without so much as a glance at Vikous.
Calliope closed her eyes, speaking only after several seconds had passed. “What, exactly, is the point of this? What am I supposed to do?” She glanced back at the stage where Jimmy Buffett had been replaced by a Foreigner ballad sung by a balding man in his midforties. “If it’s some sort of rite of passage in which I have to suffer through a gauntlet of pain, and you thought this would be easier than cutting off a finger, let me tell you: I can spare a finger.”
Vikous’s face was blank. “I want you to sing.”
“Why?” Calliope turned back to him.
“Because I think it might matter,” he said, his voice low and hard. “People are interested in you and it’s not all about your dead friend; it’s you. Do you know why?”
Calliope shook her head.
Vikous handed her a piece of paper. “Then you can sing. If I’m completely wrong, the worst thing that happens is Gerschon gives you free food and drinks, and you have to hear a pair of newlyweds sing ‘Endless Love.’ ”
Calliope frowned at Vikous, then glanced at the paper. “What’s this?”
Vikous turned back to the stage, where a girl in her twenties was leading the crowd through “My Guy.” “You have to write down the songs you want to do. I picked out ones I thought would—”
“No.” Calliope held up the paper so Vikous could see it and pointed. “ ‘Me and Bobby McGee’? ‘Mickey’? Are you cracked?”
“What’s wrong with—” Vikous cut himself off. “The song list is on the bar. Big book, can’t miss it.”
“Was there any Green Day?” Calliope asked.
“I didn’t—” Vikous began, his voice starting to rise, then he caught sight of Calliope’s expression. “Okay, now you’re just screwing around.”
“Were you joking about the newlyweds?”
Vikous snorted. “Count yourself lucky you slept as long as you did—saved you from the warm-up performances.”
The waitress dropped off a mug on her way to a large table. Calliope ignored it and looked around the club. “Okay.”
“Okay to what?”
“I guess I’ll go check out the song list.”
Vikous’s expression was neutral as he toyed with the plastic rapier sticking out of the cherry in his drink. “You could do that.”
Calliope stood. Vikous watched her go, his mood not at all helped by the woman starting “I Say a Little Prayer” on the stage.
It would normally have been about an hour before they got to Calliope’s first turn at the microphone, but Gerschon spoke to the young man running the soundboard and within twenty minutes she heard her name called. She moved through the crowd on heavy feet. There were no stage lights to speak of—half the people she’d seen so far hadn’t even gone up to the stage, simply standing at their tables as they sang. The closeness of the room made her unusually aware of the dozens of pairs of eyes watching her. It had been two years since she had performed, and every familiar element—the murmur of the crowd, the hiss of the open mic, even the simple act of stepping up onto the humble stage—dumped adrenaline into Calliope’s system.
She pulled the mic to her and looked over the nearest patrons. “Hi.” She tried to smile. The sound wasn’t set up so she could hear her voice as it came through the system; to Calliope it sounded as though the mic was off. In the back of the room, she could see Vikous, his hood still pulled up. At that moment she hated him, hated the bar, and hated herself for agreeing to do anything this ridiculous. The music began without warning or signal and Calliope started in surprise, glanced at the smaller video screen angled in her direction, and decided to get it over with.
With nothing to lose, Calliope sang.
At the end of the night, no one could remember the songs the girl from out of town had sung.
The first one, they were able to say, was angry. Or maybe she was, but one way or the other that was what they remembered. When she was done, everyone sat there for a second, long enough for her to make it halfway through the tables before they started clapping. They hadn’t waited all that long, but she had nearly run from the mic when she finished up. The applause had stopped her cold; they remembered that, too.
When they called her second song, someone had started clapping while she was still walking up to the stage.
That had made her smile. They recounted that and smiled to themselves when they talked about it, warmed by the remembered fondness.
That second song had been slow, slow and sad. Some of the women had cried; nearly, anyway. Everyone had clapped when she was done.
The third time, people started clapping when the sound guy called her name.
Her name? No one was quite sure. The little weird guy who ran the club said he didn’t know. People had stood up the third time; some had tried to dance—that, they remembered.
No one could say what happened after that. The girl stayed on the stage and sang for . . . well, till just about the end of the night, but she was gone afterward, before anyone could stop her, and she hadn’t come back.
People still talked about her every Saturday night when they got the song list and the microphones out.
They said she sang her soul, and their eyes were far away, remembering.
Calliope, Vikous, and Gerschon sat around Gerschon’s small kitchen table with steaming cups of coffee. Gerschon was smiling.
“I think”—he waved a hand through the air—“ehh, she is found something very strong, Vikous, yes?”
Vikous’s coat-button eyes were on Calliope, but he spoke to Gerschon. “That’s what it looks like.” He took a drink of coffee, grimaced, and set the cup carefully on the table. “What do you think?” he asked, directing the question to Calliope.
“Waste of talent and time.” Calliope murmured to herself, the words hardly intelligible.
“Calliope?” Vikous said.
“Yeah?” Calliope looked up from her coffee cup and blinked, shaking her head. “Sorry. Umm, I guess it went all right.”
“All right?” Gerschon chuckled. “She makes joke, I think.” Vikous said nothing.
Calliope looked from one to the other, her expression bemused. “I don’t really remember . . .” Her voice was quiet. “It’s always kind of a blur.”
Vikous nodded, his garish face as close to serious as was possible. “How do you feel?”
“Great,” Calliope replied without thinking, then blinked. “I mean . . .” She looked up at Vikous, clearly confused. “Great. I’m not tired or anything. I need a shower, I guess, but otherwise . . .” Her gaze became unfocused, as though she was trying to recall something just at the edge of memory. “Great.”
Vikous looked at Gerschon, who smiled broadly and slapped him on the shoulder. “I think you have hit the nail on the first . . . ehh, swing, my friend.”
Vikous nodded to Gerschon in acknowledgment, but like Calliope his expression was distracted.
Calliope rolled her window down, raising her voice over the noise of the wind. “I still don’t know what we’re doing.”
Vikous glanced at her, sucking on his cigar hard enough to make his cheek bow inward as he held a flame to the tip. Moving it to the side of his mouth, he blew smoke out of his own partially opened window. “We’ve got to keep moving. We can think while you drive.”
“Burning tires,” Calliope said, her face twisted. “That smells exactly like burning tires. God, I hate that smell; always have.”
Vikous frowned at her, moving the cigar nearer the window. “Well, why’dja tell me I could start it up if you’re gonna go all martyr on me?”
“Because it still smells better than you,” Calliope said. “We were at Gerschon’s for over a day—you couldn’t have taken a shower and washed your clothes?”
“It’s a little more complicated than that.” Vikous took another draw from his cigar.
Calliope raised her eyebrows. “What?” She looked over his rumpled, stained clothing. “Please don’t tell me that you melt if you come in contact with water or something, because that would be really stupid.”
Vikous snorted. “Hardly.” He rubbed at the corner of his mouth with a gloved finger. “It just wouldn’t help, is all.”
“Then what would? Because I’m willing to try most anything.”
With a wordless sound, Vikous extinguished his cigar and tucked it somewhere within his clothing. “There, it’s out, roll the windows back up, please.”
“You didn’t have to—”
“If I’m going to die, I’d like it to not be hypothermia that takes me down.”
Calliope glanced at Vikous, then rolled up her window without comment. “There’s not much chance of that, is there?” she said after a few miles had passed.
“Of what?”
“Dying quietly,” Calliope said. Her voice was solemn, reflecting her morbid mood. “Not really one of the options.”
Vikous met her eyes in the rearview mirror, his expression blank. “Well, it’d be all right by me if dying didn’t come into it at all, but yeah, if it happens it won’t be quiet.” He glanced at her. “You definitely won’t go quiet, anyway,” he deadpanned. “I doubt you do anything quiet.” He chuckled. “Like that time when your parents let you sign up for that school play.”
“What?” She glanced at Vikous, her brow furrowed. “I don’t—”
“You were, what? About fourth grade or so? The counselor said you needed to participate in some school functions to help you socialize. You hadn’t been going to the town school for that long or something, right? Help build your confidence.”
“Something like that,” Calliope said, still frowning.
“Yeah, but confidence wasn’t the issue, was it? Absolutely no problem with stage fright for the Jenkins girl.” Vikous grinned and his mouth stretched back much too far, which Calliope never liked to see. “You got up in front of everyone and just took over. Your folks were so embarrassed.” Vikous shook his head. “Snow White’s Evil Stepmother tries to kill everyone and take over the world on opening night—just a skosh over the top.”
Calliope shook her head. “That isn’t what happened. I was trying to explain how she was just . . .” Her frown deepened. “I never told you about any of that. How do you—”
“I found out after I died,” Vikous said, his eyes tracking the snowflakes that were starting to come down.
Calliope’s heart thudded in her chest. “You . . . I didn’t think you knew that had happened.”
“What do you mean?” Joshua turned to look at her, scratching at a long, shiny scar on his forearm—the one from the jungle gym accident. “Good grief, Calli, I called you twice afterward. Pay attention.”
He grinned and his mouth stretched much too far back.
Calliope screamed.
The sound of it shocked her awake.
“You, ehh, you sleep all right? You get, ehh, a good, ahh, nap?”
Calliope stared across the table at Gerschon. His ears, still hairy, ended in tufted points that waved in unison with the movements of his bushy eyebrows. She was surprised she hadn’t noticed that before, or the points of his canines dragging at his lower lip. His leathery skin shone in the kitchen light, the fur-smooth hair along his jowls and arms a mix of salt and copper.
“I had a weird—” Calliope cut herself off and forced a smile. “I slept very well, thank you.”
“Oh, heh heh, you are . . . ehh, lying, I think.” He chuckled, his eyes slitted and sly, and reached back for a steaming pot on the stove, lifting it by its bare wire handle and swinging it over to the table. “I, ahh, made coffee. You?” He raised the pot, leering at her over the brim.
Calliope kept her smile locked in place. “Sure.”
He chuckled as he poured, shaking his head. Steam rose from her cup, but no smell. “Is good, you drink. He wanted you . . . bright-eyed for the . . . ehh, visit.”
“I guess so.” Calliope felt her forehead crease, but took a sip, tasting nothing but hot, slightly metallic water. “He’s a good guide.”
“Guide?” Gerschon made a mock-confused face—the kind adults use when a child gives the wrong answer to an obvious question. “You use the wrong word, ahh, I think.” He tilted his head and waggled his free hand back and forth. “Is close in sounding, but . . . guide? No . . . is goad, what Walker is.”
“Walker?” Calliope cut in. “What—”
“Sounding same, meaning different.” He paused for a second. “And . . . ehh . . . wrong, anyway. Is what he was. What Walker is now, ehh, I think there is no—”
“Gerschon likes to talk.” The narrow-faced special agent stepped past Calliope and walked around to stand behind the old man. Gerschon hung his head, his expression ashamed, the small horns on his forehead—something else Calliope hadn’t noticed before—pointing nearly at the floor. “Sometimes he talks too much.” Walker patted him on the shoulder, then wiped his hand on his coat as he looked up at Calliope. “I only mind when it’s to the wrong people.”
Calliope’s eyes narrowed. “Like you?”
Walker’s pin-bright eyes met hers, but he spoke to Gerschon. “Miss Jenkins and I need to have a talk.” His face was blank. “Give us a minute.”
Gerschon started to stand, but caught Calliope’s gaze. He hesitated. “You are . . . ehh, okay with this? This talk?”
Calliope looked up at Walker, her face deliberately calm—the kind of bored look she knew irritated most people—then back to Gerschon. “It’s fine,” she said. “I’m dreaming, right?” She leaned back in the chair and folded her arms. “It’s not like he can do anything.”
Gerschon opened his mouth to say something, but his eyes slid sideways—to Walker—and he nodded. “Oh-kay,” he said, the word a rough whisper. He shuffled out of the room, his small hooves dragging on the linoleum as though his legs were in shackles. Calliope watched him go, watched his tiny cloven feet, then turned back to Walker, eyebrows raised in silent challenge.
“Right.” Walker sniffed, the nostrils of his hatchet-blade nose flaring. “Let’s talk.”
“Whatever,” Calliope replied, her voice thick with boredom. “But I don’t see the point. I know this is fake.” She gestured around the kitchen. “We left Gerschon’s place almost a day ago.”
“Oh, I know. Sorry about that.” Walker’s face—except for his eyes—took on a look of apology. “It’s the best I could manage, since I was never able to find that bloated stain you got White’s message from.” He leaned on the table, stretching across the open space toward Calliope. “Help me make it more accurate.”
“H—” Calliope cleared her throat. “How?”
Walker smiled, the too-sharp angles of his face pulling up into harsh V’s. “If you’re not at Gerschon’s, where are you?”
The lights in the room went out, and the darkness filled with whispering voices.
Calliope jerked upright, heart thumping, fumbling through the darkness for a light switch. A blocky red alarm clock LED near her grasping hands showed 1:43. Next to the clock, she found a lamp, then the switch at its base.
A motel room. Dark windows. No one else in the room.
Calliope got out of the bed and padded to the window. Pulling aside the curtains, she could see that the snow that had kept them off the roads for the last twelve hours had stopped falling. In the reflection from the darkened window, she could make out the room behind her clearly.
Still no one else here. Her gaze came back to her own face. Except me.
In the reflection from the window, her dark eyes looked like black plastic.