“Highly doubtful. I think he was just upset that I stayed out all night, making everyone worry.”
His snort echoed through the cab. “Yeah, that’s why he spent hours looking for you.”
He had? Not for my benefit, surely, but for the team’s. “Plus—and please hear me when I say this—I’ve been serious every time I’ve told you I have no interest in you.”
His grin only widened. “You realize you’re just making yourself more attractive to me, right? First, do you really not understand how beautiful you are? Even to a guy like me. And second, there’s never been a female I couldn’t win over.”
Me? Beautiful? “Maybe you’ve gotten the women you’ve wanted in the past, but there’s always a first time for failure.”
He clutched at his heart, as if in pain.
I rolled my eyes. “Don’t pretend you like a challenge. I had you pegged at moment one, remember?”
His laughter proved to be infectious, and I reveled in the burst of hilarity with every fiber of my being. I wasn’t sure I’d have many more opportunities.
“A guy can change, you know.”
Change.
“Yeah. A guy can. So can a girl.” I cast my attention to the hills outside and ignored him for the rest of the drive.
* * *
Gavin followed me inside the mansion, citing, “I was told to see you home safely, and I’d be remiss in my duties if I failed to walk you to your bedroom door. Who knows? Maybe you’ll even try to kiss me goodbye.”
“Stay away from my bedroom, you dirty he-slut.”
He grabbed my hand and twirled me, as if we were dance partners. “I’m liking you more with every second that passes, Als. Maybe there’s some truth to the visions, after all. Seriously. Think about it.”
“Will you shut up about the you-knows? This isn’t a conversation safe zone.” I stalked to the staircase and found a note taped to the banister.
My office, Miss Bell. Now.
Guess I wouldn’t be reading the journal right away. I balled up the paper and threw it at Gavin. “You’re dismissed. Apparently I already have a date.” Mr. Holland must have called Mr. Ankh, and his other personality, Dr. Blood and Guts, must have jumped into action.
“Dismissed,” he said. “That’s another first.”
“You’re welcome.” I switched directions and trudged inside Mr. Ankh’s office.
“Shut the door,” he commanded from the desk.
I obeyed without protest or comment.
“Take a seat.”
Again, I obeyed, my nerves razed more with every second that passed.
He walked around the desk to claim the seat across from mine, then opened a black bag filled with needles, tubes, cotton balls and a ton of other paraphernalia I was sure I didn’t want to know about. There was another black bag in the far corner of the room, filled with vials of the antidote. He kept it there for emergencies.
“Try not to scream,” he muttered, reaching for the tourniquet.
“Sure. You try not to poke something you shouldn’t.”
“I’m a doctor. I know what I’m doing.”
“You’re a surgeon. You know how to cut and sew.”
He pursed his lips the same way Reeve did. “After a thousand years of medical school, as my daughter says, I think I can do a little more than cut and sew.”
He set the needle in place and pushed, and my vein rolled. My entire arm felt the sting, and I hissed in a breath.
“Sorry,” he muttered, trying again. And wouldn’t you know it, he missed a second time.
I could only bite my tongue and content myself with glaring at the top of his head.
“Sorry,” he muttered. Finally he succeeded.
A few minutes later, he was labeling the packed tubes. “I’ll have the results tomorrow.”
What would he find? I rubbed my hand over the second heartbeat and forced myself to breathe. “Thanks.”
My stomach growled, embarrassing me. I snuck into the kitchen and searched for my bagels. They weren’t where I’d left them, and they weren’t in the pantry. Someone must have eaten them. I gazed longingly at the boxed desserts and even the jars of vegetables, but still backed out without touching anything I shouldn’t and made my way to Nana’s room. I’d never thanked her for the journal. I knocked, waited.
“Your grandmother went to church,” a soft voice said from behind me.
I turned and saw one of the maids dusting a side table. “Thanks.”
Nana and I always went to church together. I hated that I’d missed. Especially since it probably seemed like I’d blown her off. Again. I hoped she wasn’t upset.
I trudged to my room. Avoiding the mirrors, I sat at my desk and thumbed through the journal. I expected to start by rereading what had already been decoded. Instead, I found that every word was once again hidden from my understanding. But...how could that be?
Frowning, I went through every page slowly, line by line, studying every symbol, every number. Nope. No miraculous unveiling.
Must simplify the to-do list: Learn how to kill the zombie inside me without the journal. Actually kill her.
Where to start? My sister? Maybe she’d learned something else about my situation. “Emma. If you can swing another visit, I’d love to see you.”
I had to wait longer than usual, but she did, eventually, arrive. “Hey there,” she said.
I smiled at her. “You came.”
“I told you. I’ll always come.” She stood beside the desk, fingering the ends of her skirt. “You look better.”
“Thank you.”
“So...whatcha doing?”
I lifted the book. “Apparently our great-great-great-grandfather wrote a journal about zombie slaying. Only he wrote it in some kind of code, and I can’t decipher it. So I started to wonder whether you’d learned anything new.”
“Not yet.” She rubbed her hands together. “But let me take a crack at the journal.”
Leaning over my shoulder, she scanned the pages and pouted with disappointment. “I was hoping to crack the code with my genius mind and rub it in your face forever, but I can read the words no problem.”
I stared down at the still-coded pages. “How?”
“I don’t know. I just can. Everything just looks normal to me.”
“Read something to me, then.”
“Okay...how about there?” She pointed. “The words are flashing at me.”