lap. I should have worn something else. I was going to look like a slob in jeans.

Jenks was on my shoulder, rapping my hoop earring in time with the calypso beat on the cabbie's radio. It was way past annoying, and though I knew it would likely only encourage him, I murmured, 'Stop it.'

My neck went cold as he lifted off to land on my knee. 'Relax, Rache,' he said, standing with his legs spread wide for balance and his wings a blur. 'This is a cakewalk. How many people? Five, counting her parents? And Quen will be there, so it's not like you're alone. It's the wedding you're going to have to worry about.'

I took a deep breath, cracking the window to set my hair drifting. Looking down, I picked at the engineered hole in my knee. 'Maybe I should have worn a dress suit.'

'It's a wedding rehearsal, for Tink's panties!' Jenks burst out. 'Don't you watch the soaps? The richer you are, the more you dress down. Trent will probably be in a swimsuit.'

My eyebrows rose, picturing his trim physique wrapped in spandex. Mmmm

Wings stilling, Jenks adopted a bored expression. 'You look great. Now, if you had worn that little thang you picked out…'

I shifted my knee, and he took to the air. We were only a block away, and early.

'Excuse me,' I said, leaning forward and into the cabbie's enthusiastic rendition of Madonna's 'Material Girl.' I'd never heard it done calypso before. 'Could you circle the block?'

He met my gaze through the rearview mirror, and, though clearly thinking I was crazy, lunched into the left- turn lane and waited for the light. I rolled the window down all the way, and Jenks landed on the sill. 'Why don't you check it out?' I said softly.

'Already ahead of you, babe,' he said, reaching to see that his red bandanna was in place. 'By the time you get around the block, I'll have met the locals and get the sitch.'

'Babe?' I said tartly, but he had darted out and was among the gargoyles. I rolled up the window before the street breeze could make a mess of the intricate French braid his kids had put my hair in. I didn't let them go at my hair very often. Their work was fantastic, but they chatted like fifteen-year-olds at a concert—all at once and a hundred decibels louder than necessary.

The light changed, and the driver made the turn carefully, probably thinking I was a tourist getting an eyeful. The sharp-cornered, tidily mortared stones rose up as high as perhaps an eight-story building, to look massive and permanent compared to the low shops that surrounded it. The cathedral sat tight to the curb on two sides, shading the street. There were shade-loving plants tucked into the moist shelter of the flying buttresses. Expansive stained-glass windows were everywhere, shadowed and dull from the outside.

I squinted as I took it all in, surprised at the lack of welcome that I found in my church. It was like visiting your great-aunt who disapproved of dogs, loud music, and cookies before dinner; she was still family, but you had to be on your best behavior and you never felt at ease.

After a quick scan of the side of the cathedral, I dug in my bag for my cell phone and tried to call Ivy again. Still no answer. Kisten wasn't answering either, and there had been no response when I called Piscary's earlier today. I'd be worried, but that it wasn't unusual. They didn't open until five, and no one manned the phone when they were closed.

The back of the cathedral was narrow walled garden and cracked parking lot. At the corner I set my phone to vibrate and tucked it into my front jeans pocket, where I would know if it rang. More parking was on the third side, empty but for a dusty late-model black Saturn in the shade and a basketball court, the hoop bolted onto a light pole at NBA regulation height. Across the way was another, much taller one. Mixing species on the court wasn't a good idea.

I braced myself when the cabbie pulled up, running his left wheel over the low curb of the one-way street. Shoving the car into park, he started messing with a clipboard. 'You want me to wait?' he asked, glancing at the dingy storefront across the street.

I dug a twenty out of my purse and handed it to him. 'No. There's going to be a dinner afterward, and I'll bum a ride from someone. Can I have a receipt?'

At that, he looked at me over his paperwork, his deeply tanned face showing surprise. 'You know someone who's getting married here?'

Jenks was hovering impatiently outside, but I hesitated, beaming. 'Yes. I'm in the Kalamack wedding.'

'You kidding me?' His brown eyes widened to show that the whites were almost yellow. The faint scent of musk tickled my nose. He was a Were. Most cabbies were. I had no idea why. 'Hey.' He fumbled for a card, handing it to me along with my blank receipt. 'I have my limo license. If they need anyone, I'm available.'

I took it, admiring his moxie. 'You bet. Thanks for the ride.'

'Anytime,' he said as I got out. He leaned out after me through the window. 'I've got access to a car and everything. This is only my day job until I finish getting my pilot's license.'

Smiling, I nodded and turned to the multiple doors. Pilot's license? That's a new one.

The cab merged into the light traffic, and Jenks dropped down from wherever he had been. 'I leave you alone for five minutes,' he complained, 'and you get hit on.'

'He just wanted a job,' I said, admiring the four strands of sculptured vines arching over the twin set of wooden doors. Absolutely-gorgeous

'That's what I'm saying,' he grumbled. 'Why are we here this early anyway?'

'Because it's a demon.' I eyed the gargoyles and wished I could talk to them, but trying to wake a gargoyle before the sun was down was like trying to talk to a pet rock. There were a lot of them, though, so the cathedral was probably secure. I winced at the potted flowers on the sidewalk, wondering if I could get them moved. It would be too easy for fairy assassins to hide in them. Bringing my attention to Jenks, I added, 'And as much as I'd like to see Trent taken down by a past jealous lover or a disgruntled demon, I want my forty thousand for babysitting.'

He bobbed his head before landing on my shoulder. 'Speak of the devil…'

I followed his attention to the street. Crap, they were early, too, and now, doubly glad for having gotten here when I had, I tucked in my new shirt and waited as two shiny cars approached, looking out of place among the flatbed trucks and salt-rusted Fords.

I had to jerk myself up and onto the shallow steps when the first one pulled out of traffic and up entirely onto the wide sidewalk. A gray Jaguar was behind it, also parking on the walk.

'You've got to be crapping in my daisies,' Jenks said from my earring, and I took my sunglasses off to get a better look.

Ellasbeth was in the first car in the front seat, and while she collected herself, the uniformed driver opened the door for a pair of older people in the back. Mr. and Mrs. Withon, I assumed, since they were tall and elegant, darkly tanned and having the 'trendy' look of the West Coast. They were in their sixties, I'd guess, but well- preserved sixties. Hell, they were elves—they could be three hundred for all I knew. Although they were dressed in casual slacks and tops, one could still tell that their shoes cost more than most people's car payments. They stood and smiled in the sun as if looking into the past and seeing the land without the buildings, cars, or urban apathy.

Ellasbeth stoically waited for the driver to open her door. Swooping out, she tugged the short jacket covering her white shirt straight and draped a matching purse over her shoulder. Sandals clicking, she rounded the back of the car, her ankles bare below trim capri pants. She was in hues of peach and cream, her yellow hair back in a braid similar to mine with green ribbons woven in. With red lips and shades firmly in place, she never looked at the church, clearly not pleased to be here.

Seeing her class, I was embarrassingly thankful that Jenks and Ceri had stepped in and bought me a clue.

Putting on my happy face, I came down the steps.

'Isn't this such a sweet little church, Mother?' the tall woman said, twining her arm in her mom's and gesturing at the basilica. 'Trenton was right. This is the perfect place for an understated wedding.'

'Understated?' Jenks muttered from my earring. 'It's a friggin' cathedral.'

'Hush,' I said, liking her parents for some reason. They looked content together, and I found myself wanting to keep them that way, so when I woke at night alone, I'd know that somewhere there was someone who had found love and made it last. No wonder Ellasbeth was ticked at being asked to marry someone she didn't love when she had grownup seeing her parents' contentment. I'd be mad, too.

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