I looked at my chocolate cake and forced my jaw to unclench. I wasn’t going to agonize over the smut on my soul. I couldn’t and still live with myself. Ceri was coated with it, and she was a good person. Hell, the woman had almost cried over forgetting my birthday cake. I was going to have to handle demon magic the same way I did earth and ley line magic. If the stuff that went into the spell or curse didn’t hurt anyone, and the working of the spell/curse didn’t hurt anyone, and the result of the spell/curse didn’t harm anyone but me, then I was going to twist the stupid curse and call myself a good person. I didn’t give a damn what anyone else thought. Jenks would tell me if I was straying, wouldn’t he?
Fork in hand, I cut a bite, then put it back on the plate untasted. I met Ivy’s miserable expression, seeing the tears in her eyes. Kisten was dead. To sit here and eat my cake seemed so hypocritical. And trite. But I wanted something normal. I needed something to tell myself that I was going to live past this, that I had good friends—and since I didn’t drown my sorrows in beer, I’d do it in chocolate.
“You going to eat that, or cry over it?” Jenks said, flitting in from the piano.
“Shut up, Jenks,” I said tiredly, and he smirked, sending a glitter of sparkles to puddle on the table before the breeze from the upper transom window blew them into infinity.
“You shut up,” he said, spooning up a wad of my frosting with a pair of chopsticks. “Eat your cake. We made it for your damned birthday.”
Eyes warming from unshed tears, I jammed the fork into my mouth just so I wouldn’t have to say anything else. The sweet chocolate tasted like ashes on my tongue, and I forced it down, reaching for another bite like it was a chore. Across from me Ivy was doing the same thing. It was my birthday cake, and we were going to eat it.
In the rafters pixies played, safe in their garden and church until the two worlds collided. Kisten’s death would darken my coming months until I found a new pattern to my life, but there were good things to bal ance against the heartache. David seemed to be handling the curse—he seemed to like it, actually—and since he had a real pack, his boss would stop gunning for me. Al was tucked away in an ever-after prison, most likely. The Weres were off my case. Piscary was not only no longer my landlord but was dead. Really dead. Lee would step into the gambling and protection vacuum he’d left behind, and seeing as I had some part in freeing him, he probably would give up on his urge to knock me off. Having Lee back would pacify Trent, too, though it rankled me back to the Turn that he was out of jail. God! The man was like Teflon.
And Ivy? Ivy wasn’t going anywhere. We would figure this out eventually, and no one would die trying. No longer tied to Piscary, she was her own person. Together with Jenks, we three could do anything.
Right?