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Blue Lily, Lily Blue

Blue scowled at his shoes and then at his face. Although everything about him had been cultivated to impress, she found him less impressive than she might have a few months before. “Hola.”

“Howdy,” he replied, with a cheery smile full of unsurprisingly straight teeth. “I’m here for a probing of my future. I expect the timing is still good?”

“You expect right, sailor. Come in.”

In the reading room, Calla had been joined by Persephone. They sat on one side of the table like a jury. The man stood across from them, idly drumming his fingers on a chair back.

“Sit,” intoned Calla.

“Any old chair,” Persephone added mildly.

“Not any old chair,” Calla said. She pointed. “That one.”

He sat opposite, his bright eyes all over the room as he did, his body dynamic. He looked like a person who got things done. Blue couldn’t decide if he was handsome or if his demeanor was fooling her into believing him so.

He asked, “Well, how does this work? Do I pay you up front or do you decide how much it is after you see how complicated my future is?”

“Any old time,” Persephone said.

“No,” Calla said. “Now. Fifty.”

He parted with the bills without malice. “Could I get a receipt? Business expense. That is a fantastic portrait of Steve Martin over there, by the way. Behold how its eyes follow you around the room.”

“Blue, would you get the receipt?” Persephone asked.

Blue, lingering by the door, went for a business card to write the amount on. When she returned, Persephone was saying to Calla, “Oh, we will have to use just yours. I don’t have mine.”

“Don’t have yours!” Calla replied incredulously. “What happened to them?”

“Coca-Cola shirt has them.”

With a mighty snort, Calla retrieved her tarot cards and instructed the man on how to shuffle them. She finished, “Then you pass them back to me, facedown, and I’ll draw them.”

He began.

“As you shuffle them, you should be thinking about what you’d like to know,” Persephone added in her small voice. “That will focus the reading quite a bit.”

“Good, good,” he replied, shuffling the cards more aggressively. He glanced up at Blue. Then, without warning, he flipped the deck so that the cards were faceup. He fanned them out, eyes darting over the selection.

This was not how Calla had instructed him.

Something in Blue’s nerves tingled a warning.

“So, if the question is ‘How can I make this happen?’ ” — he plucked a card free and set it on the table — “that’s a good start, right?”

There was dead silence.

The card was the three of swords. It depicted a bloody heart stabbed with the aforementioned three swords. Gore dripped down the blades. Maura called it “the heartbreak card.”

Blue needed no psychic perception to feel the threat oozing from it.

The psychics stared at the man. With a cool curl in her stomach, Blue realized that they hadn’t seen this coming.

Calla growled, “What’s your game?”

He kept smiling his cheery, congenial smile. “Here’s the question: Is there another one of you? One that looks more like that one?” He pointed at Blue, whose stomach turned over unpleasantly once more.

Mom.

“Go to hell,” Calla burst out.

He nodded. “That’s what I thought. You expecting her anytime soon? I’d love to have a chat with her in particular.”

“Hell,” Persephone said. “I actually agree in this case. Insofar as going there is concerned.”

What does this man want with Mom?

Blue frantically memorized everything about him so that she could describe him later.

The man stood, sweeping up the three of swords. “You know what? I’m keeping this. Thanks for the info.”

As he turned to go, Calla started after him, but Persephone put a single finger on Calla’s arm, stopping her.

“No,” Persephone said softly. The front door closed. “That one’s not to be touched.”

9

Adam was reading and re-reading his first-quarter schedule when Ronan hurled himself into the desk beside him.

They were the only two in the navy-carpeted classroom; Adam had arrived very early to Borden House. It seemed wrong that the first day of school should carry the same emotional weight as the anxious afternoon in the cave of ravens, but there was no denying that the gleeful and anticipatory jitter in his veins now was as pronounced as those breathless minutes when birds sang around them.

One more year, and he had done it.

The first day was the easiest, of course. Before it had really all begun: the homework and the sports, the school-wide dinners and the college counseling, the exams and the extra credit. Before Adam’s night job and studying until three A.M. conspired to destroy him.

He read his schedule again. It bristled with classes and extracurriculars. It looked impossible. Aglionby was a hard school: harder for Adam, though, because he had to be the best.

Last year, Barrington Whelk had stood at the front of this room and taught them Latin. Now he was dead. Adam knew that he had seen Whelk die, but he couldn’t seem to remember what the event had actually looked like — though he could, if he tried hard enough, imagine what it should have looked like.

Adam closed his eyes for a moment. In the quiet of the empty classroom, he could hear the rustling of leaves against yet more leaves.

“I can’t take it,” Ronan said.

Adam opened his eyes. “Take what?”

Take sitting, apparently. Ronan went to the whiteboard and began to write. He had furious handwriting.

“Malory. He’s always complaining about his h*ps or his eyes or the government or — oh, and that dog. It’s not like he’s blind or crippled or anything.”

“Why couldn’t he have something normal like a raven?”

Ronan ignored this. “And he got up three times in the night to piss. I think he has a tumor.”

Adam said, “You don’t sleep anyway.”

“Not anymore.” Ronan’s dry-erase marker squeaked in protest as he jabbed down Latin words. Although Ronan wasn’t smiling and Adam didn’t know some of the vocabulary, Adam was certain it was a dirty joke. For a moment, he watched Ronan and tried to imagine that he was a teacher instead of a Ronan. It was impossible. Adam couldn’t decide if it was how he’d shoved up his sleeves or the apocalyptic way he had tied his tie.

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