We didn’t leap apart guiltily; in fact I rested my head on Jesse’s shoulder and smiled. Chance had no claim on me. I just asked, “Finished up in San Antonio, did you?”
Chance looked exhausted.
That almost provoked me. “I wasn’t in the mood to talk.”
As he came farther into the room, he took in the way Jesse was holding me, and his mouth tightened. “Why’d you leave me stranded?”
“Why did you dismiss me like a bad employee?” I countered.
Jesse frowned at Chance. “Yeah, she could’ve been seriously hurt today. You should’ve known better than to leave her unprotected.”
That might be pushing it, I thought. I doubted Chance could’ve done any better than I had, faced with that shade. Still, I didn’t mind the support.
“Shit, what happened?” He forgot his grievance as he knelt, peering into my face.
Before I could answer, Jesse did. “She was attacked, you ass.”
“It wasn’t supposed to work like that.” Chance dropped down in Chuch’s recliner opposite us.
I raised a brow. “What wasn’t?”
“In exchange for my”—Chance hesitated over the word—“help, Twila agreed to call the warlock out. He was supposed to come at us, we waited all evening.”
“I’ll just bet,” I said sourly. “Well, he answered the call and sent something after me. Thanks for that.”
“I’m sorry, Corine. I thought I was sending you to safety.”
“Yeah, well, we know how your ideas on that tend to work out.” The moment the words emerged, I regretted them.
Chance flinched but he didn’t argue because he couldn’t. “Now will you go back to Mexico City?”
“No!” Leaning forward, I pounded a fist on my knee. “At this point they’d just kill me there. We have to root out whoever snatched Min and take the fight to them. I’m sick and tired of running around like a rat in a maze. I want to blow their shit up.” I sat back, astonished at my own vehemence.
Ordinarily I wasn’t militant but I’d seen too much casual collateral damage to walk away now. I hadn’t known Maris, but Lenny Marlowe had been a kind, gentle soul. They’d exterminated him like a roach, and I wanted payback.
Beside me, Jesse hummed the Rocky theme song. I elbowed him and Butch raised his head with a warning look as if to offer,
“Well, we may be in a position to do that,” Chance said. “I found something for Twila and in exchange she gave me a name. Montoya.”
“The angel that knocked me out,” I began excitedly.
Jesse leaned over for a closer look at the lump on my head. “You didn’t mention anything about an angel —”
“Never mind that now. I fell down on a Montoya grave, and on the statue, there was a poem, something about a crescent moon. Damn.” Trying to remember hurt my head.
After thinking for a moment, Chance quoted, “‘The Crescent-moon, the Star of Love,/Glories of evening, as ye there are seen/With but a span of sky between—/Speak one of you, my doubts remove,/Which is the attendant Page and which the Queen?’ It’s Wordsworth.”
“That might be it. Anyway, I’m not sure if the poem matters. The symbol etched below it, though...” I pushed off the couch and found some scrap paper. “Looked like this, only inverted.” I drew the stylized U that Booke had seen on Chuch’s house, the Mixtec symbol for the moon.
“So our warlock is a Montoya,” Jesse surmised.
Chance nodded. “It looks that way.”
“Or he’s related to them? It may not be his last name anymore.” I turned to Saldana. “If we give you an address, could you get a warrant? I’m sure they’re doing something shady. Why else would they need a private landing strip?”
“Too thin for a warrant.” Jesse shook his head. “I need more than your gut instinct to do it by the book.”
Well, that rankled. No wonder I hated legal garbage. Most of it seemed designed to protect the guilty and persecute the innocent.
Chance asked, “You think Bucky could help?”
I glanced at my ex with grudging approval. “You know, that’s not a bad idea. He might be able to tell us what’s going on in there.”
“Bucky’s in bed with Jeannie by now,” Jesse said, glancing at his watch. “Since I have to work tomorrow, that’s where I need to be too.” He flashed me a slow grin as he stood. “Coming, Corine?”
Don’t ask me why I hesitated. There was no reason I shouldn’t go back to Jesse’s place with him. The idea tempted me.
“No.” I tempered the refusal with a return smile. “I need to be firing on all cylinders tomorrow and if I go with you, I won’t get any sleep.”
“That’s true.” Modesty did not factor as one of his virtues. He dropped a casual kiss on the end of my nose and saw himself out.
That left Chance and me looking at each other.
“So it’s like that now?” he asked. “There’s really no chance for us.”
“Are you kidding me?”
He honestly didn’t seem to know what I meant. “What?”
“You spent all day with another woman and you have the nerve—”
“Whoa, hold up. Just what do you think happened between us?”
I decided to back off. Nothing inspired more pity than a jealous ex. I might even manage to be happy for him someday, but there was no way I’d spell it out. Besides I didn’t want to know if he had the nerve to lie to me.
So I shrugged. “Whatever it was, I wasn’t allowed to be part of it.”
“It was private, Corine.” Chance sighed and looked at his hands.
Honestly, he looked tired and worn, not glowing with satisfaction. Although that may have been from riding the bus for a few hours after all the boinking. Served him right, though. At least he hadn’t been accosted in a graveyard.
“I just bet,” I muttered.
“Her heart,” he said somberly enough that I took a second look at his face.
Whatever that entailed, I suddenly felt sure it’d been bad. “You’re okay, though?”
“Mostly. It didn’t help that you ditched me. I had to scrounge my own ride back, and then I found you making out with Supercop. I understand why you were mad, though. Regardless of my intentions, I wasn’t there when you needed me.” He sighed. “I guess I was right to be worried about you.”
“How’d you get back?” I wanted to apologize for thinking the worst of him, but the words stuck in my throat.
“Caught a ride with some frat boys making a run to Boys Town. They dropped me off at Chuch’s door for beer money.” Chance stood, crossed the living room, and sat down beside me, his eyes on my bruised forehead. “Are you hurt anywhere else?”
Butch answered for me with two barks.
“Hey,” I managed. “I’m sorry I overreacted.”
Thank God he didn’t know why. Chance seemed to think I’d left because he sent me off alone, where the warlock targeted me. That was fine with me, better than the truth. I eyed the dog, hoping he wouldn’t rat me out.
“I’m just glad you’re okay,” he said quietly. “No thanks to me. Riding with the guys wasn’t a big deal.”
I didn’t want to talk about it anymore. “Does Chuch have a washer and dryer somewhere? I’m out of clean clothes.”
It was stupid late to be washing, but if I knew Chance at all, we’d be planning an assault tomorrow using all