around her palms. âYouâre going to be safe in hereâbut you canât leave, okay? Iâll be back in a minute or two.â
âNo, naatin . I forbid it.â
She met Naniâs gaze in the mirror. The same dark eyesâthe same features, but for Saviâs wild, spiky hair and slightly lighter skin. âThereâs no one else.â
âYes, thereâs no one else. You are the last, Savitri. I canât lose you, too.â
âYou wonât,â Savi said, her voice thick. âI promise you wonât.â
Naniâs braid fell over her shoulder with the force of her headshake. Savi tucked it back. âYouâll make me cry. You are too impetuous, too unsettled.â
âI know.â She bent and kissed her grandmotherâs forehead, then turned.
âSavitri! Make a promise you can keep.â Nani gripped her forearm. âPromise you will let me find a husband for you, so that you marry this year. Let me know you are in a good position before I die. Make an old woman happy for once.â
She hesitated only for a moment. âWill you stay here if I promise?â
âYes, naatin .â
A short laugh escaped her, and she closed her eyes. âAlright, Nani. Weâll find a suitable boy.â
Michael didnât come.
Despite everything, Savi had waited another two minutes, leaning back against the lavatory door and pasting a smile on her face as if nothing was wrong, as if her grandmother wasnât locked inside a toilet and surrounded by magic made from symbols Lilith had learned from Lucifer.
Savi had been rescued by a Guardian once before; perhaps that one time was all her karma allowed. Perhaps every bit of good had been used up when sheâd been nine years old and Hugh had thrown himself in front of her, attempting to shield her from a pair of bullets.
Even then, velocity had almost triumphed over virtueâone lead slug had passed a millimeter from her spine, the other an inch above her heart. Small distances in a small body, but had Hugh not been there, had his flesh not changed the bulletsâ speed and trajectory, she wouldnât have survived; the gunman had aimed for her head.
Her parents and her brother had not been so fortunate.
The flight attendant gave her a sympathetic smile. Yes, theyâve been in India. Oh! Their poor intestines. The grandmother will be in there for some time. And there goes the younger, stretching her legs as she tries to settle her stomach .
At least thatâs what Savi hoped she thought. Surely she wasnât thinking of breaking strain, force per square inch, friction, James Bond villains, and magical venom. But it was hard to determine; maybe those things did occupy the mind of a woman who spent most of her time thirty-five thousand feet in the air between Britain and America, surrounded by a thin shell of aluminum.
But the flight attendant probably didnât think about the venom. Savi didnât think about it much, eitherâshe knew that Lilith had to cut into venom sacs beneath her hellhoundâs tongue to collect it, and that Sir Pup was awake when it happened.
It wasnât an operation that Savi liked to consider, and she was grateful sheâd never seen it.
Down the portside aisle, past the sleeping businessmen and-women, to the coach class. Two blue seats near the windows, four in the center. The nosferatu was in the second row; she didnât look at it as she made her slow circuit, crossing to starboard behind the last line of seats in the cabin. Most of the passengers slept.
Michael? Selah? Now would be really, really good . The nosferatuâs arm hung over its armrest, its fingers flexing. In anticipation? How had it afforded the flight? Where had it obtained identification? Had it simply slipped in with its inhuman speed? Was there a body in the cargo holdâor in the airportâbelonging to the person who was supposed to have been in seat 29B?
She