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Third Grave Dead Ahead

Page 100

   


I took a deep breath, clamped my teeth together, and focused through my bedroom doorway on the man sitting on my snack bar just as I had been earlier. He was wearing the same shirt from several days before, loosely fitted jeans, and work boots. With one leg up, an arm resting on the knee, he sat studying me, his silvery eyes taking me in, and he seemed almost disturbed by what he saw.
“Is it my new look?” I asked him when he said nothing.
“You weren’t kidding,” he said. “You’re bright, like a beacon, shimmering and warm. You’re like the flame that draws the moth.”
A lump swelled in my chest as he spoke. I had taken everything from him. He had so much more to do, so much life left to live. “I’m so sorry, Garrett,” I said, unable to stop the sting of my eyes. This crying bit was becoming a tad ridiculous, but I couldn’t stop it. Any more than I could stop the rains from heaven.
I covered my eyes with a hand and tried to get a grip on my emotions.
“Charles, how on earth is this your fault? I was doing my job.”
“And your job was me.” I looked back at him. “I did this. I got you killed.”
“You didn’t get me killed. And I should have ducked.”
A small chuckle escaped. Oddly enough, there’d been two people in that room who could’ve avoided a gunshot wound by ducking. Garrett was not one of them. “You should have called for backup. I figured the military would have prepared you better.”
“They should’ve prepared me better for the likes of you.” His turned away from me. “I have to tell you, now that I can actually see Mr. Wong, he freaks me out even more.”
“And I love knowing that more than you can possibly imagine. It’s too bad you have to go through eternity needing a shave.”
He smiled. “Actually, I don’t. But it is too bad you have to go through life with those chicken drumsticks.” He gestured toward my legs.
I gasped, seriously appalled. “I beg your pardon. These are great legs.” I tried to lift my good one, but doing so hurt the bad one. Maybe it was jealous of the attention its sibling was getting. “These legs are legendary. Just ask the chess team from high school. And whatever you do, do not let the words chess team fool you.”
Then a realization dawned, and I fixed an astonished gaze on Garrett.
“I was indirectly responsible for your death. You’re my guardian. The one Sister Mary Elizabeth told me about. This is fantastic. I so didn’t want a dog killer as a guardian, or a big fat liar.”
He let a lazy smile slide across his face. “I’m not your guardian.”
“Are you sure?”
“Pretty darned.”
“Damn it. How many people am I going to be indirectly responsible for killing this week?”
“I don’t know, but I’m not one of them.”
My phone chose that moment to ring and I chose that moment to ignore it. It was Cookie’s ringtone. She’d understand.
“You might want to get that,” Garrett said.
After casting him a look of suspicion, I reached over and grabbed the phone off my nightstand. How could such a simple act be so painful? “That really hurt,” I said into the phone.
“Charley, Charley, oh, my god.”
“I’ve heard that from men in the past, but I had no idea you felt that way about me.”
“He’s back. They brought him back.”
“Oh, good. I was worried. Who are we talking about?”
“I’m at the hospital. Garrett. The resuscitated him. He died on the table, but they brought him back and no one told us. They’ve been in surgery.”
I bolted upright, steeled myself against the pain as I eased back down, then glanced over at Garrett. He was grinning. “But, he’s here.”
“Exactly, he’s here. He’s not gone. Oh, my gosh, the doctor’s coming. I’ll call you right back.”
I closed my phone and stared wide-eyed at Garrett.
His grin widened.
“I don’t— How are you—? How is this—?”
He pointed up and shrugged. “They said it wasn’t my time.”
“They? You mean—?” I stopped to catch my breath, unable to believe it. Things hadn’t really been going my way lately. Surely there was a catch. No. This was a good thing. I couldn’t question it. My eyes landed on him. “Wait, if you’re alive, how are you here?”
“This is your world, Charles, I just live in it.”
“Would you come in here so we don’t have to yell across my apartment?”
“First, your apartment is the size of one of those balls that hamsters roll around in.”
“Is not.”
“Second, I can’t. Your guardian takes her job very seriously.”
“What? Where?” I glanced around. “He’s a she?”
After trying unsuccessfully to sit up again, I managed to scoot a couple of inches and brace myself against the headboard, when a low rumble filled the room. A coolness settled in the air, causing my breath to fog, and I scanned the room from corner to corner but saw nothing. I held out my hand, palm up, in an invitation to whoever was suddenly haunting me, and a loud, guttural bark exploded beside me, shook the walls, and echoed around the room. My bed dipped as Artemis jumped on.
“Artemis!” I said, pulling her into a hug. She wanted to play but seemed to sense my inability to do so. She lay beside me and nudged me with her nose, her stubby tail wagging a mile a minute.