Kaldar rose and held out his hand. Callahan got up, shook it, and Kaldar slipped the packet into his fingers. Callahan palmed it with practiced ease and let go. The whole thing took a second at most.
“Half a petal in hot water,” Kaldar murmured. “Any more, and you’ll regret it.”
“Don’t school an expert,” Callahan told him.
Kaldar headed for the door, nodding at Bethany and Leem in passing. There was no need to exchange threats and promise to return in case he was lied to. Callahan had been around long enough to know the score.
“THIS wasn’t one of my better ideas,” George murmured.
“Yes, but it’s fun.” Jack strode down the street. The sun shone bright, and he squinted at it. Kaldar’s scent floated on the breeze, spiced with the deep, resin-saturated aroma of eucalyptus. “When was the last time you’ve had fun, George?” He stretched “George” out the way Adrianglian blueblood girls did.
George looked sour. “I’m too busy making sure that you don’t kill anybody or get killed to have fun.”
“Blah-blah-blah.”
Around them, tan, white, and pale brown stucco buildings lined the street. They passed a gas station, followed by a furniture store, and some sort of restaurant emanating a smoky, charred-meat smell that made him drool, and now they marched along a low stone wall, behind which houses rose, each with a small square of a yard.
Jack stopped. Kaldar’s scent lingered at the curb and vanished, replaced by the bitter stink of gasoline, rubber, and a foul burned smell. He shook his head, trying to clear his nose.
“What’s the matter with you?” George asked.
“The fumes. All that time in the Weird with no cars made my nose extrasensitive. He got into a car here.”
“Which way did it go?”
Jack puzzled over the faint marks of rubber on the pavement. “Right.”
George surveyed the intersection up ahead. “That would’ve put him into the right-turn lane. Come on.”
“Why are we following him?” Jack trotted down the street. When he first mentioned that he wanted to go to the Broken, he’d expected George to shoot him down, but his brother jumped on the chance. At first they had to follow Kaldar to get to the boundary, which made sense. The crossing had been harder than he remembered. The magic squeezed him and ground, not wanting to let go, but, finally, he won and made it through into the Broken. Then they followed Kaldar’s scent so they wouldn’t get lost, which made sense, too. But the trail led them deeper and deeper into the city, and now Kaldar had gotten into a car. They were still wearing the Weird’s clothes: he wore a dark brown shirt, George wore a white shirt with loose wide sleeves, and they both sported brown practice leggings that passed for sweatpants in the Weird.
“I’m fourteen,” George said. “You’re twelve. Gaston is only five years older than me.”
“Yeah?”
“Gaston gets to run around with William and do cool shit.”
Jack gave him a sideways glance. “Do cool what?”
“Do cool shit.”
Jack peered at George.
“What?”
“Waiting to see if your face will crack after saying ‘shit,’ Cursed Prince.”
“Whatever.” George waved his hand.
Jack turned the corner. Ahead, a long street rolled into the distance, bordered on the right by a tall, dense hedge. The scent of the car continued up the street. Jack followed it.
“The point is, Gaston fights the Hand, he gets weapons, and he hasn’t spent a day stuffed into a boarding school,” George said.
“You like school.”
George stopped and gave him an icy look. “I don’t.”
Jack turned on the ball of his foot to face George. “You rule that damn school.” While he could do no right.
“I know the rules, and I follow them. It doesn’t mean I like it. I can’t just punch everyone who calls me Edge Trash, because both of us can’t screw up all the time. The more you throw your fists around, the less freedom I have to make mistakes.”
Oh, really? “Exactly how is it my fault?”
“We’re the two brothers from the Edge. When the bluebloods look at us, they lump us together. If we both screw up, then they’ll completely despise us.”
“And this way they just despise me.” Jack stopped. A short side street sliced through the hedge. Through the break, he could see a parking lot. Whatever Kaldar drove, he had taken it in there. Why steal a car to drive it only a mile?
Jack turned into the parking lot. George followed. Rows of cars greeted them. To the left, five older boys loitered on the edge of the lot.
“Yes, please, do feel sorry for yourself.” George rolled his eyes. “Oh, poor Jack. Oh, he just doesn’t understand.”
Jack growled.
“When he grabs a guy by his hair and smashes his face into the wall, he is just reacting to being bullied. He is sensitive.”
Jack spun and launched a quick jab, aiming for George’s stomach. George blocked and danced aside.
“And then he runs and hides in his room, and his poor sister has to go and take his plate to him because he is brooding there . . .”
Jack snapped a quick hook. George dodged, and the blow whistled past his chin.
“. . . Crying into his pillow . . .”
Jack veered left, right, rocking on the balls of his feet, and sank a quick powerful punch. George saw it, but too late. All he could do was turn in to it, and Jack connected with his brother’s shoulder. Ha! Landed one. And then the heel of George’s left hand slammed into his nose. Jack staggered back. Ow.
“That’s right, solve all your problems with violence.”