Kyle looked at me as if I could produce some kind of miracle to make this all work out perfectly. Like the medicine I’d provided, some kind of magic. But I knew that I was out of magic, out of happy endings—for the soul half of the equation, at least.
I stared back hopelessly at Kyle. “It’s just the Bears, the Flowers, and the Dolphins,” I told him. “I won’t send her to the Fire Planet.”
The small woman shuddered at the name.
“Don’t worry, Sunny. You’ll like the Dolphins. They’ll be nice. Of course they’ll be nice.”
She sobbed harder.
I sighed and moved on.
“Sunny, I need to ask you about Jodi.”
Kyle stiffened beside me.
“What about her?” Sunny mumbled.
“Is she… is she in there with you? Can you hear her?”
Sunny sniffed and looked up at me. “I don’t understand what you mean.”
“Does she ever talk to you? Are you ever aware of her thoughts?”
“My… body’s? Her thoughts? She doesn’t have any. I’m here now.”
I nodded slowly.
“Is that bad?” Kyle whispered.
“I don’t know enough about it to tell. It’s probably not good, though.”
Kyle’s eyes tightened.
“How long have you been here, Sunny?”
She frowned, thinking. “How long is it, Kyle? Five years? Six? You disappeared before I came home.”
“Six,” he said.
“And how old are you?” I asked her.
“I’m twenty-seven.”
That surprised me—she was such a little thing, so young looking. I couldn’t believe she was six years older than Melanie.
“Why does that matter?” Kyle asked.
“I’m not sure. It just seems like the more time someone spent as a human before they became a soul, the better chance they might have at… making a recovery. The greater the percentage of their life they spent human, the more memories they have, the more connections, the more years being called by the right name… I don’t know.”
“Is twenty-one years enough?” he asked, his voice desperate.
“I guess we’ll find out.”
“It’s not fair!” Sunny wailed. “Why do you get to stay? Why can’t I stay, if you can?”
I had to swallow hard. “That wouldn’t be fair, would it? But I don’t get to stay, Sunny. I have to go, too. And soon. Maybe we’ll leave together.” Perhaps she’d be happier if she thought I was going to the Dolphins with her. By the time she knew otherwise, Sunny would have a different host with different emotions and no tie to this human beside me. Maybe. Anyway, it would be too late. “I have to go, Sunny, just like you. I have to give my body back, too.”
And then, flat and hard from right behind us, Ian’s voice broke the quiet like the crack of a whip.
“What?”
CHAPTER 56
Welded
Ian glared down at the three of us with such fury that Sunny shivered in terror. It was an odd thing—as if Kyle and Ian had switched faces. Except Ian’s face was still perfect, unbroken. Beautiful, even though it was enraged.
“Ian?” Kyle asked, bewildered. “What’s the problem?”
Ian spoke from between his locked teeth. “Wanda,” he growled, and held his hand out. It looked as if he was having a hard time keeping that hand open, not clenching it into a fist.
Uh-oh, Mel thought.
Misery swept through me. I didn’t want to say goodbye to Ian, and now I would have to. Of course I had to. I would be wrong to sneak out in the night like a thief and leave all my goodbyes to Melanie.
Ian, tired of waiting, grabbed my arm and hauled me up from the floor. When Sunny seemed like she was coming along, too, still joined to my side, Ian shook me until she fell off.
“What is with you?” Kyle demanded.
Ian hauled his knee back and smashed his foot hard into Kyle’s face.
“Ian!” I protested.
Sunny threw herself in front of Kyle—who was holding his hand to his nose and struggling to get to his feet—and tried to shield him with her tiny body. This knocked him off balance, back to the floor, and he groaned.
“C’mon,” Ian snarled, dragging me away from them without a backward glance.
“Ian —”
He wrenched me roughly along, making it impossible for me to speak. That was fine. I had no idea what to say.
I saw everyone’s startled face flash by in a blur. I was worried he was going to upset the unnamed woman. She wasn’t used to anger and violence.
And then we jerked to a stop. Jared was blocking the exit.
“Have you lost your mind, Ian?” he asked, shocked and outraged. “What are you doing to her?”
“Did you know about this?” Ian shouted back, shoving me toward Jared and shaking me at him. Behind us, a whimper. He was scaring them.
“You’re going to hurt her!”
“Do you know what she’s planning?” Ian roared.
Jared stared at Ian, his face suddenly closed off. He didn’t answer.
That was answer enough for Ian.
Ian’s fist struck Jared so fast that I missed the blow—I just felt the lurch in his body and saw Jared reel back into the dark hall.
“Ian, stop,” I begged.
“You stop,” he growled back at me.
He yanked me through the arch into the tunnel, then pulled me north. I had to almost run to keep up with his longer stride.