Beka pulled out a ham and cheese sandwich and put it on a plate, placing Chewie’s raw beef on another piece of hand-thrown pottery from one of her craft fair friends and setting it on the floor in front of him. She hoped it would divert him from the current topic under discussion, but no such luck.
“I can’t believe that after all these years without so much as a date, you actually have two guys interested in you,” Chewie said with his mouth full.
“Hey!” Beka said. “I had a date six months ago with that guy Herman set me up with.” Herman was the dwarf that owned the land the bus was currently parked on.
“That wasn’t a guy,” Chewie argued. “It was a half-tame fire elemental. You barely made it through dinner without him setting your hair on fire.” He shook his shaggy head. “I don’t understand why you can’t date within your own species once in a while.”
Beka set her sandwich down, her appetite vanishing almost as fast as Chewie’s dinner. “Right. Because most Humans are perfectly comfortable dating legendary witches who can change them into toads at the wave of a hand. Not to mention the insane responsibilities that come with the job, aging slower than Humans, and not being able to have children. Sure. Most guys are lining up to get a piece of that.”
Chewie just stared at her with big brown eyes. “This Marcus seems tougher than most Humans,” he said. “Maybe you are underestimating his ability to cope with the truth.”
“Ha,” Beka said. “I think you are overestimating his interest in me, outside of being a source of income for his father. He already thinks I’m a crazy, flaky hippie. Can you imagine what he’d say if I tried to tell him I’m a Baba Yaga?”
Depressed by the very thought of it, she sat down on the floor next to Chewie and put her sandwich on his plate. He breathed flames at it for a minute to melt the cheese the way he liked it, then swallowed the entire crispy, gooey mess in a single bite. The aroma of toasted bread and hot ham filled the bus; it should have made Beka hungry, but instead her stomach just churned and roiled like the sea during a summer squall.
“Well, you might have a point,” Chewie said, “but I still like him better than that stuck-up Selkie prince. Something about that guy puts my scales on edge.”
Beka’s mouth dropped open. “What do you have against Kesh?” she asked. “You’ve never even met him.”
Chewie gazed intently at his empty plate, not meeting her eyes. “I may have followed you down to the beach the other night. And, you know, overheard a little bit of your conversation.” He gave the plate a halfhearted lick and then ate it, too, making crunching noises that almost distracted Beka from what he’d just admitted.
“You spied on me?” she said, not believing her ears. “Don’t you trust me either?”
“Oh, be serious, Beka,” the dragon growled. “It’s not you I don’t trust; it’s that seal in man’s clothing. There’s something just not right about him. What kind of Selkie woos a Baba Yaga and doesn’t come to formally introduce himself to her Chudo-Yudo?”
Beka could feel her face turning as red as the ocean at sunset. “He’s not wooing me, Chewie. We’re just hanging out together. He’s a prince, for one thing.”
“And you’re a Baba Yaga. That trumps even a prince, you silly witch.” Chewie snorted, spewing bits of pottery crumbs over the polished wooden floor. “And he is so wooing you.”
“Well, I’m not interested, even if he is,” Beka said firmly. She wasn’t, was she? Yes, he was incredibly handsome and sweet and thoughtful. A girl would have to be crazy not to be flattered by his attentions. And she had always been more comfortable with magical creatures than with Humans, no matter that she’d been born one. So why wasn’t she interested?
Chewie seemed to see into her heart, the way he so often did. Such was the relationship between a Baba and her Chudo-Yudo. For better or worse.
“You like the sailor,” he said. “Even though he is Human. Even though you think he doesn’t like you.” He gave her a lick with his rough tongue; his version of a huge hug. Only wetter. “Good.”
No, Beka thought bleakly. Not good at all.
* * *
THE OCEAN WAS blue the next morning when Beka walked down to the waves, a vivid blue-green that made the sky seem pale and shy in comparison. Exuberant whitecaps raced into shore as if beckoning her to play, and there were already two or three surfers out amid the azure curls, racing each other to the crest of the biggest wave.
Beka would have been out sooner herself, but she’d waited a little longer than usual to see if Marcus would show up. He didn’t.