Which meant I'd been dumb, dumb, dumb to stick my neck out. But I couldn't leave him like that, defenseless and trapped, even if it meant risking myself. And that was so unlike what I would have done a few months ago, it unnerved me. I definitely did not want to talk about it.
I forced a shrug. “If they'd started tossing you around or something, somebody would have probably called the cops, and then we'd have to go through that whole is-he-crazy-or-not conversation, not to mention a hospital trip to get you fixed up.” I sighed. “And I don't have the time or patience for that today.”
He made a face. “Can you just let me say thank you?”
“There's nothing to thank me for,” I snapped, growing more and more uncomfortable with the conversation. I… I cared too much about him, and this should not have been happening. It was way too big of a risk for me, leaving myself open to that kind of vulnerability. “You could have done it yourself.
And short of that, what he probably should have done was find himself a new and fully functioning spirit guide to keep his ass out of a sling.
That was the real trouble. Before, at least, I'd been useful. He'd needed me, maybe even more than I'd needed him. And that was the way I liked it. If somebody needs you more than you need them, you're the one with the power, the control. But now… now he didn't need me at all. If anything, I was a burden, a problem to be solved. I was worse than useless, and that
But I couldn't make the words come out. Because that would mean I'd be alone. No, not just alone… I'd be without Will. And somehow that was even worse. I'd gotten used to him being here with me, and it was getting harder and harder to imagine my life — in any form — without him. Which was terrifying in an entirely different way. Just thinking about it made me flinch.
Will noticed, of course. “Do you need to go to the hospital?” he asked quietly.
“No.” I stared out the windshield, willing my eyes to stop burning with unshed tears.
He slid his hand across the seat, offering it to me. I looked at him, and he took his gaze off the road for a second to meet mine. My heart thumped triple-time in that moment, at the warmth in his eyes, the question that I wasn't ready to answer.
Hating myself for the weakness — because I knew, on some level, even this was for Lily, the person I looked like instead of the person I was — I took his hand, locking my palm tightly inside his. Holding his hand made me feel more securely tethered to the world, as if I wasn't going to float away and disappear like one of the balloons we used to release on the first day of Sunday school.
“So, why did he run?” I asked, shifting my attention to the side window and changing the topic, trying to pretend that this was not somehow more intimate than the kissing we'd done, that we weren't connected in this simple and yet powerful way that I felt in every cell of my borrowed body. “Malachi, I mean.”
“I don't know.” Was it me, or did Will sound a little unsorted himself?
“Better question: why did you chase him?” This time, I did look over at him.
He hesitated. “I think he recognized me.”
“Really? How?” I was pretty sure Will would have remembered and mentioned meeting Malachi before; dude cut a fairly distinct figure in that stupid cloak of his.
“I think maybe he put it together, connected me with my dad.”
Will did look a lot like his father in the pictures I'd seen, but…
I frowned. “We're talking years ago, though.
Will shrugged. “Maybe my dad was hunting down con artists for the Order or something.”
“None of the other fakes were scared of you,” I pointed out. In fact, based on the sheer amount of false-eyelash-batting that had gone on, I was pretty sure Madame Selena might have tried to keep him as her houseboy/love slave if I'd been paying less attention.
“That's exactly why we need to talk to him again.”
“Again?” I turned carefully in my seat to stare at him. “Did you miss the part where the guy is a fraud? Totally of no use to us?”
“Maybe he can tell us what my dad was doing, give us some direction on what to try next,” he argued.
I snorted. “Hello, straws, we are grasping at you.”
He glared at me.