Sunrise dawned warm and clear, and by the time the heat grew oppressive I was upstairs in my apartment, eating a small container of yogurt. Exhaustion was blurring my eyes, and I didn't care much about eating - hence the yogurt, which wasn't really eating, per se. All I wanted to do was take a shower and nap. Can't do anything until David comes back, I reasoned. Might as well rest up.
Instead, after my shower (which was every bit as wonderful as I'd anticipated) I ended up, phone book and phone next to me, parked in front of the Internet, obsessively researching so I could cross off items on my wedding checklist. I was puzzling over the catering problem - $18.95 per plate for a meal that was going to be served on plastic? Really? - when the phone rang. I picked it up immediately, thinking it would be a callback from the florist.
Instead, it was Cherise, and man, was she pissed. "You don't trust me," she said. "I can't believe you!"
"Where are you?" I asked in alarm, because I'd left strict instructions that Cherise could not be seen or heard from, under any circumstances, until this charade with Kevin and Rahel was over with. "Cher - "
"Oh, relax, this is a secured line. My buddies from the Wardens and Homeland Security all say so, plus my own personal Djinn bodyguard. So I'm being a good little convict," she said. "By the way, thanks for booking me at a nice hotel. Lewis said I could order room service any time I wanted, but no bonking the waiters, no matter how hot they are. Oh, I'm ordering movies, too, and you guys are paying. Even if I order porn."
If that was the worst of it, I'd gladly pony up the cost of pay-per-view. "You need anything? Clothes?"
"What's the point? Not going anywhere. I'm just lounging around in a T-shirt. It's like a pajama party, except I'm going to get really bored with painting my own toenails. So I'm going to call you and take it out on you." She paused for a second, and her tone grew more serious. "Is this really dangerous? You know, for Kevin?"
"Maybe." I couldn't be dishonest with her, not Cherise. "But he wanted to do it. In fact, he kind of insisted."
"He would. Rahel's doing me, though, right? So he's covered?" She made it a question, painfully eager for reassurance. I swallowed hard.
"He's covered," I said. "Rahel's smart, and she's strong. If anything goes wrong, she can get him out."
Not if she can't see the danger. But I'd fought that battle with David, and lost. All I could do was hope that Kevin, whom I'd properly prepared with all the information I had about the antimatter, would be able to recognize trouble coming and help her avoid it.
"These Sentinel people. Do you know who any of them are?"
"No," I said. "Well, one, but he's dead now."
"Then how do you know who you can trust?"
"I trust you," I said. "I trust Lewis. For this, I trust Kevin. I always trust David. But believe me, my trust circle's getting smaller all the time."
"Good. Maybe you won't get yourself hurt quite as often." I heard the TV come on in the background, and the bed creak. "Okay, I'm going to my happy place. Russell Crowe movie festival, baby. Sorry you can't be there, but if you decide to come over - "
"I'm not in New York," I said, "and even if I was, going to see you would blow our whole operation."
"I guess." She sighed. "Okay, Mr. Dreamypants is on. Call you later?"
"Yes," I said. "Hey, Cher?"
"Yeah?"
"Do you know any good caterers?"
Cherise's question about the Sentinels stayed with me the rest of the day, as I went about my so-called normal life. If anybody had turned up likely suspects for the Sentinels list, they weren't sharing it with me. No sign of David, and no messages from beyond. I got calls from various Wardens either congratulating me about the upcoming marriage, or fishing for gossip about the confrontation with Kevin. I answered honestly to both, so far as it went. I didn't try to hide my frustration with Kevin, but I told them it was Lewis's problem, not mine.
None of the phone calls had seemed overly strange, but my paranoia dials were all on high. I couldn't rule anyone out.
Hearing my doorbell ring only made my self-preservation alarms go off. I was boiling pasta. I took the precaution of turning off the burner - in case I died, no sense in burning the building down again - and went to look through the peephole.
It was David. Oh. I had told him to start acting like a human, hadn't I? I needed to get him his own key. I unbolted the door and swung it wide -
David lunged forward, grabbed me by the throat, and drove me back to the wall as he kicked the door shut. It was a real threat; his grip was bruising my neck, making parts of me panic in fear of imminent strangulation. I grabbed for his wrist, which was stupid, and tried to get a scream past his hand.
No good.
He smiled, and I recognized the expression. It wasn't David's, although he was wearing David's face. I croaked out, "Don't you fucking pretend to be him!" and David's body shrugged, and the Djinn morphed into his more usual form.
It was Ashan, leader of the Old Djinn. Venna's brother and boss, and the least likeable creature I'd ever met, including the ones who'd tried to kill me. Ashan was a cool, smooth, handsome bastard, all chilly grays and ice whites, and he didn't care for people at all. He liked me a good deal less than that. "I've come for a purpose," he said, "but I don't need to hear your prattle."
I made some incoherent noises, which got the point across that his grip on my throat was impairing my ability to curse, and he finally let up enough to allow breath in, profanity out. After the profanity, I got my pulse rate dialed back from Going to Die to Total Panic, and said, "What the hell are you talking about?"
"You brought this on yourself," Ashan said. He emphasized that by slamming me back against the wall with painful force. "I was content to let you live, but you, you push, you always push."
"Let go!" I snarled. He must have sensed I meant business, because although he didn't obey instantly, he finally released his grip and stepped back. Not far back, though, and the cold fury in his eyes stayed in place. "Where is David? What have you done to him?"
He slapped me. A solid man-slap, one that I was not prepared for; it burned and I felt a wave of total rage crest at the top of my head and flow down every nerve ending. Somehow, I held myself back, but my hands clutched into convulsive fists. "You will destroy him," Ashan said flatly. "I care nothing for you, but I do not want another war among the Djinn, and you will bring it on. It is best if you disappear from this world before you can rain destruction on all of us."
Word had gotten around fast, even on the outer reaches of the aetheric. I hadn't expected the Djinn to approve, but I hadn't expected this. "All because we're getting married?" Venna was right about one thing: The two of us engaging in a little sexual adventure hadn't bothered too many people. It was the wedding that was pissing them off.
"It is a vow," Ashan said. "And a vow is, for us, unbreakable. Do you understand? You will bind him to humanity, and he is the Conduit."