Trent glared at me as he wiped his mouth with that ribbon, then let it fall. "You're not my keeper," he said, his green eyes vivid, reminding me of the elf who had almost killed me, lulled me to my death.
"Right now I am!" I shouted, getting in his face. "Deal with it!"
"Rachel, will you shut up!" Jenks exclaimed. "We have a bigger problem."
I suddenly realized Trent had gone white faced, and like both Jenks and Ivy, was now staring at the river. Turning, I felt my mouth drop open.
"Oh," I said, the sound of the approaching sirens taking on new meaning. I didn't think I needed to worry about having left the scene of an accident. The cops, both the I.S. and the FIB, had something bigger to worry about.
The arch was not there anymore. Sort of. The legs were mostly there, but the rest of it was in house-size chunks between the shattered posts.
My stomach clenched, and I looked at the bunker, realizing what had happened. "This wasn't my fault," I said softly, but my voice was quavering as if I didn't believe it.
"Maybe we should get out of here," Jenks suggested.
"Good idea," Ivy said. "Forget the rental. They have tracking charms built into the framework, and no one is going to be looking for you now."
Nodding, I grabbed Trent's sleeve and tugged him into motion. "They've probably got a tracking charm on my mom's by now, too."
"I can find any bug," Jenks said, then flew up when Trent shuffled to his wheeled suitcase and limped silently beside me. We came out from the sunken sidewalk together and joined the walking wounded, heading against the wash of help flowing into the park from the surrounding city. For once, our dusty and bloody appearance was unremarked upon. We were walking, and there were lots of people who weren't.
No way did a single support beam falling cause this. It had been the two elves and that magic that I'd pushed back into them. This was not my fault, and as I remembered the children playing on the grass, I vowed that the Withons were going to pay. With interest.
Chapter Seven
The faint smell of cinnamon, blood, and wine drifted forward from the backseat despite the fact that all the windows were down. My elbow was propped up on the sill, and my hair was a tangled mess. Jenks was on the rearview mirror, his wings flat against his back to keep them from being torn to tatters. Ivy was driving. We were an hour out of St. Louis, and no one was happy. I would have asked Ivy if she'd mind if I rolled mine up, but her grip on the wheel was tight and her eyes were halfway to black, slowly edging into hunger.
My chest hurt, and I wrapped my arm around my middle, staring out at the whole-lot-of-nothing we were passing through. The sun shifted as we took a slow turn. From the back where Trent sulked, a new burst of blood and cinnamon grew as the warmth found him. Ivy swallowed hard. That we hadn't stopped to give him a chance to change his clothes told me she was scared.
I exchanged a worried look with Jenks. Trent had tried to clean up, but there was only so much that bottled water and fast-food napkins could do. Dried blood cracked and flaked from the absorbent black cloth he'd tied around his bicep. It looked like a shoe-polishing rag, and I was sure he'd gotten it from his suitcase, thrown into the backseat before we tore out of St. Louis. At least his face was clean. Even his ears where the blood had dripped down. He had been bleeding from his ears! What had they tried to do to him?
I shifted, my foot scraping against the fast-food bag half full of candy wrappers, coffee cups, and water bottles. The scent of fries mixed with that of dried blood somehow reminding me of my prom. I'd be hungry, except my stomach was knotting over the news coming out of St. Louis.
"Experts claim that an adhesive that dissolves in salt water is to blame," the woman on the radio said, her voice a mix of urgent drama and calm journalism. "This salt-water-dissolving adhesive is routinely used in major road construction in no-frost zones outside the coastlines, and it's thought that the salt used to de-ice the nearby sidewalks soaked into the soil, eating away at the foundation over the years until today's disastrous toll."
Salt-dissolving adhesive, I thought darkly. That was Inderland speak for a magic misfire. No need to scare the humans. Despite all the integration we'd achieved, the equality that we managed, there were still secrets, still hidden ugliness.
Jenks's wings hummed from the rearview mirror. "Anyone mind if I change the station?" he asked. "They're just repeating themselves now."
His tone was heavy, and I looked at Ivy. She was the one who'd turned it on. From the back, Trent sighed, finishing off a bottle of flavored water enhanced with B vitamins and complex amino acids or something, capping it and tossing it to the front for me to jam in with the rest of the trash. Ivy clicked off the radio, her motions just shy of vampiric speed.
I squinted out the window in the new silence as I shoved the bottle in the trash, not really seeing the gently rolling grasslands. They looked hot under the lengthening afternoon sun, and I wished I had my sunglasses to cut the glare. I'd put on Trent's, but he'd probably want them back, and I didn't know what to think of him anymore. The third assassin hadn't been at the car when we'd stumbled back to it. Neither Trent, Ivy, or Jenks had asked what happened, and I wasn't about to admit, especially to Trent, that I'd almost died. I hadn't known elven magic could be so insidiously deadly, and a new wariness, or respect maybe, had me quietly thinking.
Depressed, I hoisted my shoulder bag with its early-warning amulet higher onto my lap, the ley-line amulet glowing briefly when it fell into my aura's influence. Thanks to them, Jenks had looked for and found the explosive charm stuck to the car before it blew, and then the bug they'd put on it in case we found the bomb. Ivy had been ticked. Trent, impressed. It was the bug that had prompted Ivy to take 44 southwest instead of jumping on 70, ticking off Trent, whose ultimate destination was Seattle. I wasn't going to Seattle. I was going to San Francisco. The deal was the West Coast in two days, not Seattle.
I turned to look at the man, wondering if he could sing. "How's your shoulder?" I asked. He'd missed a smear of blood just under his hairline, and I forced my attention from it. I could see it in peekaboo snatches when the wind hit him just right.
Trent's sour expression shifted to one of irritation. "Better," he said, the word clipped. "I don't think I'm bleeding through my pores anymore."
From the corner of my eye, I saw Ivy tighten her grip on the wheel, her French-manicured nails catching the light. Jenks hummed his wings in worry, and I took an uneasy breath. "Sorry," I said shortly, wondering if I should ask Ivy to stop.