The interstate was clogged, and it was easier to simply settle in behind a truck in the far right lane and make slow and steady progress than to try to maintain the posted limit by weaving in and out of traffic.
My radio was on, but it was all news and none of it good. The misfired charm at Trentâs facility wasnât the only one this morning, and so far down on the drama scale that it hadnât even been noticed, pushed out by the cooking class in intensive care for massive burns and the sudden collapse of a girder slamming through the roof of a coffeehouse and injuring three. The entire east side of the 71 corridor was a mess, making me think my sand-trap crater had been part of something bigger. Misfires werenât that common, usually clustered by the batch and never linked only by space and time.
Jenks was silent, a worried green dust hazing him as he rested on the rearview mirror. But when the story changed to a cleaning crew found dead, the apparent cause being brain damage from a sudden lack of fat in their bodies, I turned it off in horror.
Jenksâs heels thumped the glass. âThatâs nasty.â
I nodded, anxious now to get home and turn on the news. But even as I tried not to think about how painful it would be to die from a sudden lack of brain tissue, my mind shifted. Was I really seeing what I thought I was in Trent, or was I simply projecting what I wanted? I mean, the man had everything but the freedom to be what he wanted. Why would he want . . . me? And yet there it was, refusing to go away.
Elbow on the open window as we crept forward, I twisted a curl around a finger. Even the press could tell there was something between us, but it wasnât as if I could tell them it was the sharing of dangerous, well-kept secrets, not the familiarity of knowing if he wore boxers or briefs. I knew Trent had issues with what everyone expected him to be. I knew his days stretched long, especially now that Ceri was gone and Quen and the girls were splitting their time between Trent and Ellasbeth. But there were better ways to fill his calendar than to court political calamity by asking me to work securityâme being good at it aside. We were going to have to talk about it and do the smart thing. For once, I was going to do the smart thing. So why does my gut hurt?
âRache!â Jenks yelled from the rearview mirror, and my attention jerked from the truck in front of me.
âWhat!â I shouted back, startled. I wasnât anywhere near to hitting it.
Pixy dust, green and sour, sifted from him to vanish in the breeze. âFor the fairy-farting third time, will you shift the air currents in this thing? The wind is tearing my wings to shreds.â
Warming, I glanced at the dust leaking from the cut in his wing. âSorry.â Rolling my window halfway up, I cracked the two back windows. Jenks resettled himself, his dust shifting to a more content yellow.
âThanks. Where were you?â he asked.
âAh,â I hedged. âMy closet,â I lied. âI donât know what to wear tonight.â Tonight. That would be a good time to bring it up. Trent would have three months to think about it.
Jenks eyed me in distrust as a kid in a black convertible wove in and out of traffic, working his way up car length by car length. âUh-huh,â he said. âTrentâs girls are coming back tomorrow, right?â
The pixy knew when I lied. Apparently my aura shifted. âYes,â I said, trying for flippant. âI can use the time off. Trent is more social than a fourteen-year-old living-vampire girl.â And he could text just as fast, Iâd found.
Jenksâs wings blurred. âNo money for three months . . .â
My grip on the wheel tightened, and I took the on-ramp for the bridge. âIâve got your rent, pixy. Relax.â
âTinkâs little pink rosebuds!â Jenks suddenly exploded, his wings blurring to