âThe one I met in thereâ¦â I tipped my head at the selkieâs house.
Zee sighed. âI did not bring you here to risk your life. The debt you owe us is not so large.â
âIs she in trouble?â asked Uncle Mike.
âBringing a walker into the reservation might not have been as good an idea as you thought,â Zee said dryly. âBut I think matters are settledâunless we keep talking about it.â
Uncle Mikeâs face took on that pleasant blankness he used to conceal his thoughts.
Zee looked at me. âNo more, Mercy. This one time be content with not knowing.â
I wasnât, of course. But Zee had no intention of telling me more.
I started back to the truck and Zee cleared his throat very quietly. I looked at him, but he just stared back. Just as he had when he was teaching me to put together a car and Iâd forgotten a step. Forgotten a stepâ¦right.
I met Uncle Mikeâs gaze. âThis ends my debt to you and yours for killing the second vampire with your artifacts. Paid in full.â
He gave me a slow, sly smile that made me glad Zee had reminded me. âOf course.â
Â
According to my wristwatch, Iâd spent six hours at the reservation, assuming, of course, that a whole day hadnât passed by. Or a hundred years. Visions of Washington Irving aside, presumably if I had been there a whole dayâor longerâeither Uncle Mike or Zee would have told me. I must have spent more time staring at the ocean than Iâd thought.
At any rate, it was very late. There were no lights on at Kyleâs house when I arrived, so I decided not to knock. There was an empty spot in Kyleâs driveway, but Zeeâs truck was old and I worried about leaving oil stains on the pristine concrete (which was why my Rabbit was parked on the blacktop). So I pulled in and parked it on the street behind my car. I must have been tired, because it wasnât until Iâd already turned off the truck and gotten out that I realized any vehicle belonging to Zee would never drip anything.
I paused to pat the truckâs hood gently in apology when someone put his hand on my shoulder.
I grabbed the hand and rotated it into a nice wrist lock. Using that as a convenient handle, I spun him a few degrees to the outside, and locked his elbow with my other hand. A little more rotation, and his shoulder joint was also mine. He was ready to be pulverized.
âDamn it, Mercy, that is enough!â
Or apologized to.
I let Warren go and sucked in a deep breath. âNext time, say something.â I should have apologized, really. But I wouldnât have meant it. It was his own darn fault heâd surprised me.
He rubbed his shoulder ruefully and said, âI will.â I gave him a dirty look. I hadnât hurt himâeven if heâd been human, I wouldnât have done any real hurt.
He stopped faking and grinned. âOkay. Okay. I heard you drive up and wanted to make sure everything was all right.â
âAnd you couldnât resist sneaking up on me.â
He shook his head. âI wasnât sneaking. You need to be more alert. What was up?â
âNo demon-possessed vampires this time,â I told him. âJust a little sleuthing.â And a trip to the seashore.
A second-floor window opened, and Kyle stuck his head and shoulders out so he could look down at us. âIf you two are finished playing Cowboy and Indian out there, some of us would like to get their beauty sleep.â
I looked at Warren. âYou heard âum, Kemo Sabe. Me go to my little wigwam and get âum shut-eye.â
âHow come you always get to play the Indian?â whined Warren, deadpan.
ââCause sheâs the Indian, white boy,â said Kyle. He pushed the window up all the way and set a hip on the casement. He was wearing little more than most of the men in the movie weâd been watching, and it looked better on