Under Attack

I sunk my key into my lock and pushed open the front door. ChaCha came vaulting toward me in a series of yips and barks. She took one whiff of my smoke-scented jeans and backed away, then snuggled back into her bed and began licking her toes.

 

“Behold the unconditional love of man’s best friend.”

 

“Can I get you something?” Alex asked, helping me out of my jacket. “A cup of tea, something to eat?”

 

“Stop fussing over me, Alex. I’m fine.”

 

He tucked a lock of hair behind my ear and I shivered at his gentle, warm touch. “Don’t take this the wrong way, but you don’t look fine.”

 

I glanced down at my soot-streaked blue smock, at my red plastic trainee name tag that had melted to a warbling glob. There were scratches and bruises on my forearms that I didn’t remember getting, and the knee of my jeans was torn wide open, brown-red blood staining the denim.

 

I smiled. “Geez, the one time I could really use my People’s Pants discount, the place burns down.”

 

Alex stepped back. “Why don’t you go take a shower and I’ll make us something to eat.” He went to the kitchen and pulled open the fridge, then frowned over his shoulder at me. “Okay, which do you prefer—two tablespoons of cottage cheese, half a blood bag, or a moldy lemon?”

 

My stomach lurched. “Your choice.”

 

Alex poked the mushy lemon. “Maybe I’ll order out.”

 

I peeled off my smoke-stained clothes and dumped the whole mess—smock and all—into the bathroom wastebasket. I ran a shower as hot as I could stand it and worked hard to scrub the day—soot, death threats, and all—from my skin and hair. When I stepped out of the shower the bathroom was choked with a breath-stealing haze of steam. I slunk into my robe and glanced at the steamed-up mirror from the corner of my eye, half expecting to see my grandmother’s disappointed face, half glad when the only reflection staring back at me was my own.

 

“Sophie Lawson!”

 

I stopped dead, my hand hovering over the shiny doorknob. My grandmother’s face was stretched over it. Her brows were drawn, her wrinkled lips puckered. “Oh, my sweet girl, are you okay? I heard about the fire.”

 

I ran my hands through my damp hair, winding it into a weak bun. “I’m fine, Gram. We all got out okay.” I sank back. “How did you hear about it?”

 

I watched Grandma’s hand—her nails manicured an improbable tangerine—squeeze her chest. “Never mind. I was just so worried about you. What happened?”

 

“Where have you been? I’ve been trying to get a hold of you for days. Isn’t there some sort of heavenly paging system?”

 

“Sophie, the fire. Tell me what happened.”

 

I thought of the swirling stacks of polyester smoke, of Lorraine, Kale, and Avery hunching under the counter— of Adam’s clear, cut-glass eyes and his dagger. I bit my lip. “Grandma, what do you know about Nephilim?”

 

Grandma’s eyes widened, milky and blue in the doorknob reflection. “Sophie, what is this about?”

 

“It’s about the goon gang that tried to barbeque me and my friends this afternoon. They weren’t normal, Gram. They weren’t people.”

 

“Well, Sophie, you know how rare it is we run into actual ‘people’ in the city. Are you sure they weren’t—”

 

I crossed my arms. “They weren’t Underworld, either.”

 

Grandma tapped her nail against her lip.

 

“What do you know about me?”

 

Grandma’s eyebrows rose. “About you, darling? What are you talking—?”

 

“Please, Grandma.”

 

The reflection in the doorknob wobbled and started to fade. I crouched down. “Grandma! Grandma! Geez!”

 

I flung open the bathroom door and Alex stood in front of me, grinning. “Something you want to tell me?”

 

I crossed my arms. “I don’t know. I just spent the last twenty minutes talking to a doorknob.”

 

Alex held up a bulging plastic takeout bag. “Me, too. But I think they got the order right.”

 

Alex and I were halfway through our dinner when he leaned back on the couch, wiping his hands on a napkin.

 

“Are you planning on actually eating anything, or just pushing it around into fun patterns?”

 

I rested my plate on the coffee table and sighed heavily. “I’m sorry, Alex. I guess I’m just not that hungry. I can’t stop thinking about ... everything. With all the stuff that has happened, I feel more lost than ever. I don’t have a single answer.”

 

“Well, at least you know that you’re the Vessel,” Alex tried helpfully.

 

I shrugged. “Another question. Why? And how? And, what am I supposed to do about it? And, two weeks ago I barely knew who my father was. Now I know he’s Satan. And I still don’t know him, know him.”

 

“Maybe that’s a good thing.”

 

“Do you think—if my dad is ... him—that he could have had something to do with my mother’s death?”

 

Alex swallowed. “It wouldn’t be the first time he was involved with someone’s death. That could explain why your grandmother is so against you searching for him.”