The debate continued on the television:
“Okay, okay, let’s bring it back to the original—” The moderator attempted to steer the conversation but was interrupted by an irate Teri.
“If we’re going back to the original question: they can’t save everyone all the time, pure and simple,” Teri said.
“There’s just not enough for humanity. This vocal anti-Angel minority in this country is not useful and will solve nothing. We have to accept the Angels as they are, on their terms. Think of how many lives they’ve saved! To do otherwise is to give ammunition to hate groups like the Humanity Defense Front, whose stated goal is the extermination of Angels by any means possible!”
The third guest, a man with a buzz cut and a red tie, spoke up. “How do we know they’re not capable of saving everyone? And at what cost do we have them save us? And then we have to owe these creatures that just materialized from thin air over a hundred years ago? They know everything about us, but they still won’t bring humans into a Guardian training facility except for special staged press events.” An on-screen title identified him as former army colonel Davis A. Jessup. “What’s really going on over at the NAS? And why has the Council of Twelve all but disappeared from the public eye for the past eighty years?
Certainly all of these questions are important from a nation-al security standpoint too.” The colonel paused. “I think soon-to-be senator Ted Linden’s recent victory at the polls has shown that a large part of this country wants these answers. Now.”
Taking a pull from his glass, Sylvester continued peering up at the television.
“What should we think now that Angels are being killed? And scientists also have evidence that the Angels are actually aging faster than we thought,” Will stated. “Latest projections have the life spans of these so-called Born Immortals at four hundred to five hundred years. But the NAS maintains total immortality. If the aging is really happening, and these killings are really happening, apparently from within the community, what else are they hiding?”
Teri almost jumped out of her seat. “I’ve seen that report, Will, and I wouldn’t call it ‘evidence’ as much as total speculation! Anti-Angel elements are just trying for a power play in this country, but it’s not going to work. Whipping people into a false frenzy never lasts. It’s clear you’re just a mouthpiece for Linden and his party.”
Sylvester tilted his glass back and took the final gulp of whiskey, laying down the empty glass and a few bills on the bar.
“Thanks,” he said to the bartender, pulling on his jacket as he walked to the door. Stepping onto the dormant streets of Angel City, he took in a lungful of night air. The stars high above twinkled dimly in the sky through the light clouds and pollution.
As soon as the door closed, the bartender walked to the window and turned off the neon signs, also flipping the Open sign to Closed. After bolting the door, he walked back to the bar, under the rows of dusty old Angel photos on the wall. He picked up the remote. Will, Teri, and Colonel Jessup were now near screaming at each other on-screen. He pressed the red power button and the TV switched to blackness, leaving the bar in silence as he continued sweeping under the dusty, watchful eyes of glamorous Angels past.
CHAPTER TWENTY
Maddy stumbled down the stairs with her hair still wet, pulling her hoodie over a shirt she had to resurrect from the hamper. In the aftermath of the disaster that was last night, she had forgotten to set her alarm and was late for her morning shift at the diner. Her limbs throbbed with fatigue, and her head ached with the painful memories of the party, but at least, she told herself, that was over now. No more lying. No more sneaking around. She could go back to being just plain Maddy. Beyond that, she tried not to think about it. She tried not to think about Jacks.
She grabbed her backpack from where she had left it on the floor and dropped in her shiny new BlackBerry Miracle. She
Maddy’s world went white. A barrage of camera flashes lit up the porch as a dozen voices shouted at her simultaneously.
Maddy had paparazzi.
They crowded together on the lawn in front of the porch steps, shutters clicking automatically, firing away at her. Still more paparazzi were running across the street, pulling their cameras out of their bags and shooting as they ran, men with unkempt beards and unkind, sneering faces.
Maddy stood there with her wet hair and the slice of bread hanging limply from her mouth. Jacks’s world had followed her home and was now standing on her front lawn.
“We’re not dating!” Maddy shrieked. “I’m not dating anyone!” Maddy saw a few of the neighbors coming out of their homes to watch. A boy of about twelve took a picture with his phone. The humiliation was paralyzing. With her free hand Maddy groped for the doorknob and pulled the front door shut. She dropped the bread, grabbed a textbook out from her bag, and used it to cover her face.
She broke into a run as she crossed the street, leading them away from the diner. Maddy couldn’t risk working the morning shift today. They kept pace with her, backpedaling or dropping their cameras to their sides and running to catch up.
“Just leave me alone!” Maddy yelled, fighting back tears.
The last question sliced through the others like a blade. Maddy froze on the sidewalk. The book dropped from her face.
“W-what?” she stammered.
Jacks could be in danger? Maddy couldn’t even let herself process this. She might be mad at him, but the thought of something happening to him made her heart clench. And what was this about a serial killer? All she could do was duck her head and walk even faster. Finally, at the corner, they left her. She hazarded a glance over her shoulder as she gasped to catch her breath. They were inspecting their cameras now, reviewing what they’d got as they hurried to their cars. The pictures would probably be on the Internet within a few minutes.
She pulled her hood tight over her head and walked briskly down Angel Boulevard, not daring to look up. She could just imagine an Angel Tours bus slamming on its brakes and the tour guide announcing,