waiting for me, slouched in one of the lobby chairs. The sense of déjà vu was so strong I was actually disoriented for a moment, as I flashed back to my earliest days as a reaper—a rookie so green I couldn’t even pul off the disembodied voice trick without my entire body flashing in and out of sight like a not-so-special effect.
“Glad you could make it,” Levi said, sliding out of the chair to stand less than shoulder high on me.
“Yeah, it was tough to make time between the compulsive thumb twiddling and the lure of bingo night at Colonial Manor, but I managed to fit you in.”
His forehead furrowed. “Glad I rank as a priority.”
“You rank as accessory to the crime that is my eternal hereafter. So, why am I here? This isn’t my beat.”
“It is now.” He reached into his pocket and pulled out a folded sheet of paper, and that sense of déjà vu became a startling certainty. “We inherited a rookie from another district, and he’ll be taking over the nursing home circuit.
Which means you’re getting a promotion.”
I huffed in amusement. “From adult diapers to bedpans? Move over, Elvis, I’m the afterlife of the party!”
“If you don’t think you can handle it, you can go back to rotating between rest homes…” Levi threatened, copper brows raised in challenge.
“Gimme that.” I snatched the paper and unfolded it to find a list of four names, times, and room numbers. Roughly the same workload I’d had on my old circuit, but these reapings would all take place in the same building.
Obviously consistency was a privilege of rank.
“Don’t make me regret this,” Levi warned, frowning up at me through a dead child’s eyes. “Most reapers spend nearly a decade in the rest home circuit before moving up.”
“If I weren’t already dead, I’d be alive with joy,” I said, and dimly I realized that Levi was responding. But I couldn’t concentrate on what he was saying because my ears were suddenly full of something else. Music. A beautiful, eerie singing faintly echoing from beyond a closed set of doors. If I didn’t know better, I’d swear…
But then it was gone, and Levi was staring up me, his pouty child’s mouth pursed in a frown I found really hard to take seriously.
“What’d you say?” I asked, fighting the urge to scruff his curls. He didn’t like that. At all .
“I said, you’re a smartass, Hudson.”
I grinned. “I recognize no other kind of ass.” I glanced at the list one more time, then started walking backward away from him. “Now if you’l excuse me, Death waits for no man. Except me.” I shrugged, stil grinning. “It waits for you too, obviously, but ‘Death waits for no kid’ just doesn’t have quite the same ring.”
Levi rolled his eyes, then blinked out of the waiting room, leaving me to my first non-geriatric reaping, scheduled in a mere five minutes, in Triage E.
I walked through the double doors, unseen and unheard, and made my way past a nurse’s station and the first few rooms, most of which were blocked from view by curtains on steel tracks. But the third room was open.
In it, a girl lay strapped to a stretcher, arching fiercely against the restraints, throwing long brown hair with every violent toss of her head. She moaned incoherently, but something in that sound drew me closer, until I found myself in the doorway, listening, picking out low, eerie notes in the last sounds she produced before her voice gave out. She twisted toward the door then, and her medicated gaze met mine, pain and panic swirling in sluggish shades of blue in her irises.
Holy shit. A female bean sidhe . I’d never even seen one, other than my mom.
She went still then, her limbs lax, and for just a second, we watched each other as she blinked slowly and I was unable to blink at all.
Then a nurse walked through me and into the room, and the spel —whatever it was—was broken. And only after I’d walked away did I realize that she shouldn’t have been
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