Settling myself into the leather seats, I put an elbow on the open window and stared at nothing. “Swell,” I whispered to no one. My life sucks.
TWENTY-NINE
My eyes fluttered open when Glenn eased to a stop at a stoplight. Blinking, I realized I was almost home, and I sat up from my slouch. The day had gotten warm, and apparently I’d nodded off. Clearly, being knocked out for eight hours wasn’t the same as sleep. Embarrassed, I glanced at Glenn, flushing when he smiled at me, his teeth a startling white against his dark skin.
“Please tell me I wasn’t snoring,” I muttered, never imagining I would have fallen asleep. I had only closed my eyes to gather my thoughts. Or maybe to escape from everything.
“You snore cute,” he said, giving his unused ashtray a tap. “You two are funny.”
Jenks rose from it in a puff of gold glitters. “I’m awake!” he exclaimed, tugging his clothes straight and looking charmingly wide-eyed as he arranged his shock of blond hair. He, at least, had an excuse, seeing as he was usually asleep this time of day.
The clock on the dash said it was a shade after two. After leaving David’s, Glenn had first taken me to the FIB to make an official statement before the I.S. could choose the most inopportune time to get one from me. From there we went to pick Jenks up at the I.S. and physically drop off a copy of my paperwork, all nice and legal. We fitted the morgue in there, too, which had left me depressed. I was sure Glenn had more to do than cart us around, but since I didn’t have a valid license, I appreciated it.
David was still in custody. Jenks had overheard his interrogation, and apparently Brett had met with David yesterday to talk about Brett joining our pack. It was supposed to have been a surprise, which had me in tears when I found out. That’s why Trent had targeted him. Trent was slime, and I cursed myself for letting some of the good things he did—like admit he spent the morning with me, for instance—cloud the fact that he was a murderer and drug lord. He only did something decent if it might be of some use to him, such as giving himself an alibi for seven to seven-thirty. Ceri had it right. The man was a demon in all but species.
Under some made-up point of law, the I.S. was detaining David without any formal charges. It was illegal, but someone in the basement had probably realized that the focus was out, seeing as a loner was turning human women into Weres. David was knee-deep in it. It would only be a matter of time before I joined him. Maybe if he was in I.S. custody, Trent couldn’t kill him. Maybe.
I’m sorry, David. I never expected this to happen.
The cool shade of my street fell over me, and I gathered my bag onto my lap, feeling for the heavy outlines of the focus. Squinting, I realized there was a black van parked in front of the church—and someone was tacking a note on my door.
“Jenks. Look at that,” I whispered, and he followed my gaze.
Glenn eased to a stop several car lengths back, and when I cracked the window, Jenks darted out, saying, “I’ll see what it is.”
The man with the hammer caught sight of us, and with a worrisome quickness he hustled down the stairs and into his vehicle.
“You want me to stay?” Glenn asked, shoving the car into park. He had a pencil in his grip and was writing down the plate number as the black van drove away.
The dust spilling from Jenks as he hovered before the note shifted from gold to red. “I don’t know,” I murmured. Getting out, I stomped up the stairs.
“Evicted!” Jenks said, his face white when he spun in the air. “Rachel, Piscary evicted us. He evicted us!”
My stomach going light, I ripped the paper from the nail. “No freaking way,” I said, skimming the official document. It was blurry from being the second copy, but clear enough. We had thirty days to vacate. They were going to tear the church down now that it wasn’t sanctified, but the impetus behind it was Piscary.
Glenn leaned out the window. “Everything okay?”
“Rache,” Jenks exclaimed, clearly terrified. “I can’t move my family. Matalina isn’t well! They’re going to bulldoze the garden!”
“Jenks!” I said, hands upraised though I couldn’t touch him. “It’s going to be okay. I promise. We’ll work something out. Matalina will be fine!”
Jenks stared at me, his eyes wide. “I…I,” he stammered, then with a little moan, he darted up and around to the back of the church.
My hands fell to my sides. I felt so helpless.
“Rachel?” Glenn called from the street, and I turned.
“We’ve been evicted,” I said, moving the paper in explanation. “Thirty days.” Anger trickled into me.