stronger and warmer. âYou never could, you know. Always in motion.â
âDamn straight. Basic principles of physics. Objects at rest tend to stay at rest. Things in motion require less effort to overcome resistance.â
âI love your mind.â
âIs that all?â I arched my eyebrows back at him, and his eyes sparked bronze.
He smiled, and then the smile slowly faded. âWe canât do this.â
Damn. The warmth inside me, barely felt, began to fade. âWhy not?â
âBecause itâs dangerous. You begin to trust me; I begin to think you can trust me. Thatâs a very bad idea.â He stood up. âI shouldnât have come here.â
âThen why did you?â I demanded, out of patience. âDammit, donât come here and lookâlook all perfectly hot and good enough to lickâdonât just show up and tell me that I canât trust you, because I do trust you, I always have, even when I didnât have any reason to do it! Donât do this to us! It hurts!â
My vehemence shook him. He honestly didnât expect that outburstâI could see it in the way he drew back inside himself, watching me. The bronze glints died in his eyes, forced back. He looked like a man. A tired, vulnerable, sorrowful man. âI want to help,â he said.
âWell, pony up, cowboy! Nowâs the time!â
âAll right.â He closed his eyes, as if he couldnât stand to look at me while he said it. âYou canât cut the Djinn off from the Mother. Oh, thereâs a way, but if you do, you only guarantee your own destruction. The Earth would go mad. It wouldnât just be humanity being wiped away, it would be every living thing in the world. She would justâreset the game and start over. What you have to do is becomeâ¦Jonathan. Become the conduit for humanity, to her .â
Finally, we were getting somewhere. âAnd how exactly do I do that?â He opened his mouth, then shut it again. No answer. âDavid, half an answer is worse than none. Tell me.â
âI hate putting you at risk like this.â
âDammit, how could I be more at risk? I sawââ I stopped, because I intuitively knew I shouldnât tell David about the dream. At best, heâd dismiss it. At worst, it would raise false hopes that Jonathan wasâ¦somewhere out there. âIâm a Warden, and Iâm on the front lines already. At least give me the tools to get the job done.â
His head jerked up, and he fixed on me with such intensity that I flinched, a little. âIâm not sure it wonât kill you.â
âWell,â I said after a shaky second of a pause, âthatâs a âbeen there, done thatâ situation, and anyway itâs not your choice to make, is it?â
And that was a long second of pause, from both of us. Precarious and painful.
âNo,â he finally admitted, and squeezed his eyes closed as he thought about it. âAll right. I canât tell you how to do itâIâm not even sure how Jonathan did it, in the first place. But I can tell you where .â He made a visible decision and opened his eyes. They were glowing now, Djinn-bronze flecked with ruddy amber. âYouâve been there once already. Seacasket.â
âSeacasket?â I tried to rememberâ¦and then I did, with a chilling rush of pain and panic.
Once upon a time, I had been a Djinn, and I had been sent to Seacasket by my master (if you could call a punk like Kevin a master, which was a stretch) to destroy the town. In fire.
David had stopped me that time. And somehow, Kevinâs stepmonster Yvette had known that he would. It had been the trap she set for him, to get him back in her power.
âSeacasketâs special,â I said. âYvette knew.â
He nodded. âItâs aâthin space in the aetheric. One of two or three places in this country where a human
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