since she was such a tiny little thing. Her feet kicked uselessly for the floor, but they each hoisted her with an arm under hers, and out she went.
'Jo, dammit, don't do this! Let me help! I want to help!' she yelled. I didn't move. Didn't reply. 'Hey, you jerk, watch the shirt, that's designer—'
And then she was gone, and it was just me and a room full of Wardens, and it wasn't the time to be picking any fights. Besides, I wasn't fool enough to believe anybody else would jump in on my side.
'You really going to lock me up?' I asked Paul. He gave me a stare worthy of his mafioso relatives. 'I could take down a bunch of you, you know,' I said. 'On my worst day, I could still take at least three of you if I had to. And no offense, but this isn't shaping up to be
'Yeah, go on, you're making me
'Started to a couple of months ago,' I said, and shrugged. 'So. You want to fight, or work together to help people survive this? Because I'm not going to play the traditional who's-on-top and who-can-smooch-the-most-ass game anymore. I'm not letting you stick me in some cell and pretend like this is all my fault and it'll all go away if we hold a tribunal and assign some blame. And most of all, I'm not going to sit back and let people die.'
'You'll do what we ask you to do,' said Marion, and rolled out from behind the table. Rolled, because she was in a wheelchair. I made a sound of distress, because I didn't realize how badly she'd been hurt—worse than Paul. There was something terribly misshapen about her legs. Marion was middle-aged, but she looked older than that now; lines grooved around her eyes and at the corners of her mouth, lines of pain. Even her normally glossy black hair looked dull and tangled, but I supposed that personal grooming probably wasn't on anyone's top ten to-do list at the moment. 'This isn't the moment for personal heroics, and you know it. The Wardens need to pull together. That means someone has to lead, and the rest of us have to follow. Including you.'
'Following's never been her strong suit,' Paul said morosely. 'In case you haven't noticed. And she can probably kick your ass, too, these days.'
'Paul,' Marion said with strained patience, 'perhaps we should stop discussing whose asses would be hypothetically kicked, and talk about what we're going to do to stop the bloodshed.'
'Somebody needs to contact the Ma'at,' I said. 'I'm not their favorite person ever, but at least I know some names. How's that for cooperation?'
'Hand them over to Marion,' Paul said. 'You're done here until we can check you out and find out who these people are. Marion?'
Marion, always practical, reached into her plaid-blanketed lap, and pulled out a pad of paper and a pen. I recited the ones I could remember. Charles Spencer Ashworth. Myron Lazlo. Told the Wardens about their lair in the lap of the Sphinx out in Las Vegas.
She exchanged a look with Paul, and he shrugged. 'Check it out,' he said. 'You, Jo. You're going to spend a little time contemplating how bad an idea it was to keep that from me.'
'Oh, come
'Sorry,' Marion said, and pulled something else out from under that plaid lap blanket. An automatic pistol. It looked like one of the same police-issue models that Janet and Nathan had been sporting. 'But he's right. First, we establish contact with the Ma'at, and then we decide what to do with you. Don't worry. It probably won't take all that long, and you look as if you could use the rest.'
I felt a cold chill at how close she'd probably come to putting a bullet in me, just on general principles. I'd been shot in the back before, in this very building, as it happened. Not an experience I was looking to repeat, especially since David wasn't likely to show up again to help me out.
I slowly put up my hands.
She shook her head. 'I'm not going to shoot you,' she said, and put the gun back in her lap, though on top of the blanket. 'For one thing, the recoil is murder on a broken arm.'
'Glad your priorities are straight.'
'Up,' she said. 'I'll show you someplace you can wait in comfort.'
I looked over my shoulder when I reached the splintered doorway, and saw something that I'd never really seen before in a group of Wardens: fear. And they were right to be afraid. In all the history of the Wardens, stretching through the ages, nobody had ever faced what we were facing: a planet that was about to wake up and kill us, and Djinn who were going to be more than happy to help.
I wondered if this was how the dinosaurs had felt, watching that bright meteor streak toward the ground.
Chapter Two
I spent some time in lockup lying on a clean hospital bed, humming popular songs, and trying to imagine what the new Wardens seal should look like. I was currently going with a shiny circular motif, with the new motto of
Bored with mental graphic design, I got up and wandered around, taking stock. The infirmary was mysteriously intact. Crisp, clean, no sign of struggles. Maybe it had been empty. Djinn wouldn't have wasted time vandalizing; they'd been out for blood, and they were nothing if not focused on the mission.
Which would have been removing any humans who might pose a genuine threat to them later. I wondered if it had been David's bunch, acting under the red-eyed influence of the Earth. Or if it had been Ashan's little merry band, coming after Wardens just on general principles.
Either one would have been horrific, in these close quarters. I didn't want to imagine it, but the images kept springing up when I closed my eyes.
Eventually, not even fevered imagination could hold off exhaustion, and I surrendered to a need to be horizontal. I pulled a waffle-weave cotton blanket up over my aching body and wished—again—for a shower. I was too tired even to take off my shoes, much less undress, although these clothes needed to be burned, not just laundered. I stank to high heaven, and was ruining a perfectly good bed, but as soon as I closed my eyes, all those concerns slid away like oil off Teflon.
I was asleep so fast, I had no time to realize it was happening, falling into a soft-edged darkness that wrapped warm around me, falling without fear and without limit…
… and then, without any sense of transition, I was sitting in a nice, comfortable living room with a fire roaring in the hearth. Curled up like a cat on a soft cotton-covered sofa, my head against the pillowed armrest, covered with the same blanket I'd been using in the infirmary.
'Hey, kid,' said a low voice. I blinked and focused across the room.
'Jonathan?' I asked, and slowly sat up. 'Am I—? Aren't you—?'
'Dead?' the mack daddy of the Djinn supplied, and popped the tops on two brown, label-free bottles of beer. He held one up, and it floated toward me. Heavier than I expected. I nearly fumbled the bottle when I grabbed it out of the air. Cold. It felt heavy and real.
'Aren't you? Dead?' I asked.
'Yeah, well. Kinda.'
I blinked again and sipped the beer. Seemed like the thing to do. Jonathan looked exactly the same as he had last time I'd seen him: human, tall and lean and whipcord-strong. Tanned. He was wearing khaki pants and a loose off-white T-shirt, not tucked in, and his booted feet were crossed at the ankles. He sipped his beer, unsmiling.
I put my bottle down on the polished wooden coffee table after shoving aside issues of magazines in languages that I didn't recognize to make room for it. 'You're dead,' I repeated. 'So why are you in my dream?'
He raised the bill of his olive drab ball cap with one finger. 'Good question. Morbid, isn't it?'
'What?'
'Dreaming about dead people. Creepy. You ever see a therapist about that?'
'I'm not—' Even in dreams, I couldn't win an argument with him. Even when he was dead. 'What are you doing here?'