“Good,” Miranda said, “because I love the house. I love you guys, too.” She looked directly at Claire when she said it, and Claire hugged her, hard. The girl felt cool and bony, but very real.
“Be safe,” she said. “Come back soon. I’ll call Jenna to let her know you’re on your way.”
Eve hugged the girl, too. Shane didn’t, but Miranda was shy around him, and always had been. She just nodded, and he nodded back in that laconic tough- guy way, and then she was just . . . gone.
Dissolved into the air.
Unsettling, no matter how many times they’d seen it happen.
Claire picked up the house phone— it still worked, even though she didn’t imagine any of them had bothered with bills for a while now— and dialed Jenna’s cell, which they’d scrawled on the wall next to the phone in grease marker. It was a messy version of a contact list, but it worked in a pinch. She filled the other woman in when she picked up, and Jenna seemed happy to help out.
She hung up the phone and turned to the other two. “Well?”
she asked. “What now?”
“Land mines in the flower beds?” Shane asked. “Also, we could replace that picket fence with razor wire. Maybe electrified.”
“Be serious.”
“Why do you think I’m not?”
Claire rolled her eyes and looked at Eve. “How about you?”
“What’s the easiest way to bring down a house like this?” Eve asked. It was a surprisingly practical question— and a chilling one when Claire thought more about it.
“Fire,” she said. It had been tried before. The Glass House was old wood, and however alive it had become, however self- aware, it couldn’t control how flammable it was. Not for long, anyway. The old wooden structure, the bones of it, was its weakest link. “If they don’t want to have a whole construction crew out here to demo the place, they’ll just set it on fire. Arson.”
Eve nodded. “We can spray fire retardant on the house. Don’t know where we’d get it, though.”
“Rad has some,” Shane said, in a much more serious tone than before. When they looked at him, he shrugged. “Dude likes to set himself on fire. He’s training to be a stuntman since he gave up his mixed martial arts dreams.”
“I knew that guy was insane,” Eve said. “Okay, then, we hijack Rad’s stash. What else do we need?”
“Fire extinguishers,” Claire said. “That should help with the whole arson risk. I’m not sure how we defend against a bulldozer, though, if they decide to knock the whole house down.” She held up a finger as Shane opened his mouth. “Do not say flamethrowers, or anything to do with dy***ite.” He closed it without speaking.
“We need to know what exactly they’re planning to do,” Eve said, and took in a deep breath. “I’ll go.”
“How do you plan on finding anything out there? With the power of your awesomeness?” Shane asked. “I’m not making light of your awesomeness. But it lacks the stopping power of, say, a .357.”
“Not all of us need weapons,” Eve said. “Some of us have charm.”
It was the way she said it that made Claire’s skin go tight and prickly, and she leveled a stare at her best friend. “No,” she said.
“You’re not even.”
“Not even what?”
“Going to run off with some crazy plan to— what? Make Fal- lon tell you what he’s going to do with the Glass House?”
“Why not? He thinks I’m a hysterical little girl. He treats me like I’m a china doll,” Eve said. She’d taken one of the sharpened chopsticks out of her hair and was restlessly scraping the wood of the table with it. Half of her sloppy hairdo came down. “You think I can’t charm it out of him, and make him let Michael go at the same time?”
“I think you’ll get yourself killed,” Shane said quietly. “Or worse.”
“What’s worse?”
“Don’t know,” he said. “But these guys are the worst kind of bastards— the smooth kind. The ones who seem like they’re nice and polite and kind and doing it all for the right reasons. The ones who make you feel like the villain for not going along with it. And I don’t know what Fallon’s really capable of doing. Do you?”
He was right, and it was sobering. Eve frowned, but she didn’t argue. She just yanked the other chopstick out of her hair, twisted it back into shape, and stabbed the sticks through it again to hold it up. Mostly. The frown stayed, and from the flinty look in her eyes, the subject was closed. She wouldn’t debate it, but she also wasn’t going to change her mind.
Claire sighed. “Much as I love listening to you two snipe at each other all day, we have actual problems to solve. I’m going to get fire extinguishers, and when I get back, Shane, you can go get the fire retardant stuff from Rad. Eve—” She hesitated, then shook her head. “Whatever you plan to do, I know we can’t stop you. But be careful. We’re one 911 text away, and don’t you hesitate to yell for help if it starts looking the least bit weird.”
“I know,” Eve said. She lifted the backpack to her shoulder. “I will.”
Shane couldn’t resist the dig. “I thought you said not all of us needed weapons.”
“I don’t need them,” Eve said. “But I’m not crazy, either. Banzai, bitches.”
She slammed the door behind her, and Claire sucked in a deep breath as she locked eyes with Shane.
“Guess there’s no chance of going back to bed,” he said. “Be- cause being in bed this morning? That was real y nice.” It sounded plaintive. She absolutely agreed with that.
She went to him and kissed him— and it felt sweet and warm- verging- on- hot, and even a little desperate. “Later,” she promised him. “I’ll go get the fire extinguishers. It shouldn’t take too long, so please try not to get into any trouble until I get back.”
“There are times when I wish you were slightly less practical, do you know that?”
“God,” she sighed. “Me, too.”
Splitting off from Shane and Eve felt weird. Eve had taken the hearse, which left Claire suddenly worried about how she was go- ing to haul a buttload of fire extinguishers back from Morgan- ville’s local knockoff version of a Home Depot. But then Shane, at the last minute, dashed off and came back with a set of car keys and a note. “Here,” he said. “Go see Rad. He’s got my time- share car at his lot. Tell him I’ll be by later for the other stuff, so he can get it all together.”
“You’re sure he’ll actually give me your car?”
“Don’t let him bullshit you into thinking I owe him money. I don’t. The agreement is I get the car when I want it, and he drives it when I don’t. It’s how I worked off all the extra stuff he put into it. But be careful. It’s a whole lot of car, little lady.”
“Funny,” she said, in a tone that indicated it was not, and kissed him quickly on her way out the door.
She jogged part of the way, just to enjoy the exercise, and the strange fact that people were out on their lawns, waving hello, smiling and cheerful. Morganville had always been exciting, but she couldn’t say it had always been friendly, and this made an unexpectedly nice change. When she stopped, out of breath, she ended up talking to the postal worker delivering mail, and a couple of passing strangers.
Just like a normal town. Which was so not normal.
I’m going to ruin it, she thought, and that horrible feeling swept through her again, that awful knowledge that even if what she was doing felt right, it might be very wrong. But she couldn’t just . . . do nothing.
Maybe there was no right side, but she knew one thing: letting the Daylighters win had to be the worse of two bad choices.
Rad’s motorcycle shop also doubled as a mechanic’s shop. The bikes he sold were generally tricked out and customized, though he had a few consumer base models for variety, and in the back he had a line of cars in various stages of disrepair, and a few that he kept under dust covers.
One of those, Claire knew, was Shane’s. His time- share, as he liked to call it. She recognized the shape under the canvas cover.