seventeen years old she’d almost died.
She’d gone to one of those indoor rock-climbing gyms (because her best friend had called to tell her that the football player she had a crush on was home from college that weekend and he and his friends were supposed to be there) and taken a horrible fall, breaking multiple bones and splitting her skull.
She’d missed the best parts of her senior year in high school, recuperating at home with her head shaved from where they’d inserted a metal plate to piece her skull back together, listening to other people’s stories of proms and parties and graduations.
And the guy she’d been so crazy about hadn’t even been at the climbing gym that day.
She’d learned a few things from the experience. One: the whole “best laid plans of mice and men” adage was absolutely true—she’d not gotten to rally her football team to the State finals the
only
year they’d made it in the past seven; she’d not gotten to wear the scrumptious pink prom dress that still hung in her closet; she’d not tossed her cap; she’d not attended a single senior party. And two: Sometimes when things got bad, a sense of humor was a person’s only saving grace. You could either laugh or you could cry, and crying not only made you feel worse, it made you look worse too.
It occurred to her as she stood there, staring at the thing in the mirror that couldn’t possibly be in the mirror, in a room where a recent attempt on her life had been made—said room’s previous occupant having been murdered recently himself—that events of the past few days certainly qualified as bad, even by conservative standards.
She started to giggle.
She couldn’t help it.
The sex-god’s dark eyes narrowed and he scowled. “‘Tis no laughing matter. Get in here and close that door.
Now.
There is much of which we must speak and time is of the veriest essence.”
She giggled harder, one hand to her mouth, the other clutching the doorjamb.
Time is of the veriest essence.
Who talked like that?
“For the love of Christ, wench, summon me out,” he said, sounding exasperated. “Someone needs to shake you.”
“Oh, I don’t think so,” she managed between giggles. Giggles that were starting to sound just a tiny bit hysterical. “And I am not a wench,” she informed him loftily. And giggled.
He growled softly. “Woman, you summoned me out the other eve and I did you no harm. Will you not trust me again?”
She snickered. “I thought I was sound asleep and dreaming the other night. It had nothing to do with trust.”
“I killed the man who was trying to kill you. Is that not reason enough to trust me?”
She stopped laughing. There it was. He was the one who’d snapped the blond man’s neck and left him lying dead on the commons. Though a part of her brain knew it had to have been him—whether such events had transpired in a delusional world or The Real One—his remark drew her gaze to his hands. Big hands. Neck-snapping hands.
After a moment’s hesitation, she stepped warily into the office. Another pause, then she slowly closed the door behind her.
The giggles were gone. A thousand questions were not.
Jamming her hands into the front pockets of her jeans, she stared at the mirror.
She closed her eyes. Squeezed them shut hard. Opened them. Tried it twice more for good measure.
He was still there.
Oh, shit.
“I could have told you that wouldn’t work,” he said dryly.
“Am I crazy?” she whispered.
“Nay, you’re not daft. I am here. This is indeed happening. And if you wish to survive, you must credit what I tell you.”
“People can’t be inside mirrors. It’s not possible.”
“Tell that to the mirror.” He thumped his fists against the inside of the glass for emphasis.
“Funny. But not convincing.” Oh, that was weird, seeing him pound on the mirror from the inside!
“You must resolve your own mind on the matter. Best do so before another comes to kill you.”
His blasé
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