the building looking to expand,â I finished. âI feel an urge to shop.â
âAs an attentive boyfriend and your caring alpha, I fully support you in it.â
Every time he said he was my boyfriend, I had to fight the need to go, âWheeeee! He said he was my boyfriend!â
We got out of the car and walked toward Eyang Idaâs salon. Walking next to him always made me notice how large he was. He loomed above me, almost a foot taller than I was. He was walking next to me, wasnât he? How did that even happen?
âJim, why are you here?â I asked.
âDo you want me to be somewhere else?â he asked.
âNo!â Poor half-blind Dali, sounding so desperate. âI meant that you have the Pack to run and here you are with me. Youâre almost never with me.â Okay, now Iâd gone from desperate to pathetic.
âI know,â he said. âBut you are Pack. This is Pack business. The rest of the Pack will hold on for one weekend. They know where to find me.â
âI donât believe you.â
We were almost to the door.
Jim stopped. I looked at his face. His eyes were warm and I stopped with my foot up in the air. His eyes were never warm. Merciless, guarded, hard, yes, but not warm. Not like this.
âI want to know what you do,â he said quietly. âI want to hang out with you and spend time with you. I like us being together.â
I almost melted right there. And then guilt mugged me. Iâve been avoiding the Keep. I couldâve gone and spent time with him. He was busy and probably miserable and Iâve been selfish and worrying about who would think what. That wasnât me.
I reached over, ducked under his arm, rubbed my head against him, and smiled. He squeezed me to him, the tips of his fingers lightly sliding over my skin. Oh my gods, he did the cat thing. It made me want to pull his clothes off just so I could touch more of him.
We stopped by the door and sniffed in unison.
Hmm, letâs see, Eyang Ida, car fumes, a half dozen scents of soaps and shampoos, five different people scents, all about a day oldâmustâve been her customers . . . Nothing fresh except Iluhâs scent deposited a few hours ago. She mustâve came to the salon to check on Eyang Ida.
âYou think she couldâve done it?â Jim asked.
âIluh?â I turned it over in my head. âNo. I think she loves her grandmother. But also Iluh doesnât have strong ties to the community. Jenglots donât exactly slither around in the street. They are unique to Indonesia. She might have known of them but not where to get them or who could summon them.â
âDo you know who could summon them?â he asked.
âAnd that right there is the thing.â I frowned at him. âMost people from Bali do a little bit of magic. Every time you make an offering, you do magic. Itâs not uncommon for people to occasionally sacrifice things. But jenglots are tied to black magic. A typical witch doctor might make a jenglot like a voodoo doll, and then feed it magic and blood and hope it would come to life and do his bidding. Or they might buy an aborted fetus, embalm it, and make a tuyul out of it.â
Jim blinked.
âItâs a thing,â I told him. âBut anyway, I would know. I am the chosen of Barong. Iâm the White Tiger, a force for good, and I guard the balance. When a black magician does something like create a jenglot or unleash a tuyul, it creates an imbalance and I correct it. It would be the same if I tried to use my power for something unnatural, like stave off a normal illness in my relative. I could save them for a time, but a chosen of Rangda, the Demon Queen, would appear and undowhat I had done. The balance must be maintained. Right now there is no champion of Rangda in the community. He went to live with his daughter in Orlando, because he is elderly and she is worried about his
Jennifer LaBrecque, Leslie Kelly