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"Inhuman" excerpt
From the On the Prowl anthology
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Chapter 1
Kai
Tallman Michalski stood at her kitchen sink looking out the window. In
daytime she would have seen mesquite, tumbleweed, and the pale
grasses of winter stretched across land as flat as her frying pan. But
it was after eight o’clock at night in late January, and
her apartment complex perched at the very edge of town. Beyond
the reach of the parking area’s lights, across the wide road
that ran along the back of the complex, darkness waited.
Lightning
stitched from one black-hung pocket of sky to the next. Eight
seconds later, thunder rumbled like a giant’s empty belly.
Her
own belly tightened.
“Where’s
your plastic wrap?”
She
twitched all over like a nervous horse.
“Chill,” Jackie
said. “It’s just me.”
Kai
turned away from the window to see her friend standing in a tiny
kitchen aglow with color. Ghostly patterns swam through the
air, some soft as a soap bubble, some so vibrant they seemed almost
solid.
She
clenched her fist, digging her fingernails into her palm. Pain
was a quick way to focus—handy, too, since it was always
available. The colors faded to a transparent overlay, barely
visible. “Sorry. I phased out watching the storm
rolling in on us. Listen, y’all don’t have to
clean up.”
Jackie
rolled her eyes. The transparent sea around her was
olive shaded with royal blue. Small, discrete shapes swam
in her colors like agitated minnows. “Plastic wrap,” she
repeated. She jiggled the platter she held, still half-full
of broccoli, carrots, and bell pepper.
As
usual, the vegetables had gone largely unappreciated. Kai
always put them out—she liked them, even if no one else did. “In
the bottom drawer by the stove. But there isn’t much
mess, and the storm—”
“Now,
Kai.” A chunky blond zipped through the arch between
the kitchen and the living area, her hands full of glasses. The
colors swimming around her were as quick and lively as her hands
as she plunked glasses in the dishwasher. Ginger was twenty
years older than Kai and Jackie, but she didn’t move like
it. “That storm will bother you a lot more than it does us. You
need to learn to accept help gracefully, like Jackie does.”
Kai’s
smile stretched across her face, slow and amused. “Jackie
does almost everything gracefully. Then she opens her mouth.”
“Hey.” Jackie’s
eyebrows lifted above eyes almost the same warm mocha as her skin. “You
think I can’t chew on my foot gracefully?”
Ginger
patted the taller woman on the arm. “We love you anyway,
sweetie. So,” she said, ripping off a paper towel and
turning on the water to dampen it. “Y’all are
going to the rally tomorrow, right?”
“Count
me out.” Jackie’s colors looked upset, the shapes
breaking up and reforming. “If what Kai said about
those two people who were killed is true—”
“It
is,” Kai said quietly, opening the refrigerator to put away
three unopened Cokes and two cans of Dr. Pepper. “You
won’t read about it in the paper, but they were both Gifted.”
“So
we’re supposed to band together and march in public, demanding
our rights?” Jackie snorted. “Might as
well hang a sign around my neck: Gifted here. Come
get me. Even if the psycho who whacked those two people
doesn’t come after me, other nulls might. Like my boss. Or
the idiots in Reverend Barclay’s congregation. Bet
they’d be thrilled to know exactly who to hate.”
“We’ve
got to do something.” Ginger was uncharacteristically
serious. “We can’t let them march us off a cliff
without speaking up.”
“Not everyone has your nerve,” Kai said. “But
I suppose I’ll go. If you . . . ” Her voice
trailed off.
Jackie’s
colors were too jumpy, too dark. She was a deeply reluctant
medium who did her best not to contact the dead, but sometimes
they pushed their way in. “Hey.” Kai put
a hand on Jackie’s shoulder. “What’s wrong? Is
one of the dearly departed giving you a hard time?”
“No. It’s
nothing. Here.” Jackie thrust the wrapped veggies
at her.
Deliberate
lies were snot green. Something was wrong, but Jackie didn’t
want to talk about it, so she lied.
Kai
didn’t call her on it. She accepted the platter and
found room for it in the refrigerator. People lied in so
many ways, for so many reasons. Most lies weren’t malicious. People
dodged the truth to spare someone’s feelings, to avoid long
explanations, to get what they wanted, to fit in, to avoid the
consequences of their actions.
Kai
knew that good people lied, sometimes for good reasons. She
just wished they’d stop. Which, of course, made her
quite the hypocrite. She might only lie about one thing,
but it was a whopper.
“So
how’s Nathan?’ Ginger asked, whisking herself back into the living
room, paper towel in hand.
The question
wasn’t the non sequitur it seemed. Kai had told everyone who showed
up tonight about the two victims being Gifted; she wanted her friends to be
wary. She hadn’t told them how she knew, but they would assume
the information came from Nathan.
As,
of course, it had.
“More
to the point,” Jackie added, “where’s Nathan? How
come he didn’t show? He always comes to your parties.”
Gayle
laughed. “Comes? He’s usually here anyway.”
“He
had to work tonight.” Kai looked around. The
kitchen was spotless, so she headed for the living area. “Besides,
this wasn’t my usual sort of get-together. Ginger,
there isn’t a thing left to clean in here.”
“I
guess you’d know his schedule.” Ginger tossed
her a grin as she wiped down the coffee table, a garage-sale find
Kai had painted turquoise and coral and black. “Though
I can’t believe y’all are still paying for two apartments
when you spend most of your time in just one.”
Jackie’s
dark, angular face broke out in a smile. “So you and
Nathan aren’t just friends! I didn’t see how
you could be. I mean, the guy is seriously hot in a tall,
dark and uncommunicative sort of way, and you’re hetero,
right? And the two of you look good together, like bookends. You’re
both so buff and bony.”
Ginger
hooted. “Jackie’s mouth strikes again!”
Jackie
grimaced. “I didn’t mean—”
“No,
of course you didn’t.” Kai smiled. “But
Nathan and I aren’t lovers. We spend a lot of time
together because we’re friends, and because he’s teaching
me self defense. He—”
“And
you’re teaching him computers,” Ginger broke in. “And
you run together. And eat dinner together half the time.”
Kai
looked at Jackie. “Ginger likes to think she’s
matchmaking with these little comments she makes. It’s
annoying, but I haven’t been able to hint her into stopping.”
“Hint!” Ginger
laughed. “If I ever learn how to say things as
bluntly as you do without people wanting to slap me—”
“It’s
that Buddha smile,” Jackie said. “She smiles
like that and you can’t get mad.”
“I
think I’m blushing,” Kai said.
“Really?” Ginger
made a point of pressing her hand to Kai’s cheek. “Nope. Not
a hint of heat.”
Kai
looped an arm around Ginger’s shoulders and hugged. “Okay,
not blushing, but I feel like I should be. Now, that gully
washer is nearly here, so you two need to be on your way. I
don’t want to worry about you getting home safely.”
Ginger
returned the hug. “We’ll be fine. But you’ll
do better if we aren’t around when it hits, won’t you?”
“What?” Jackie
frowned, looking from one of them to the other. “I’m
missing something here.”
“You
know Kai’s Gift has a hitch in its gallop?”
“Well,
yeah, but erratic empathy isn’t such a bad deal. Who
wants to feel everything everyone else feels all the time?”
“So
true. Problem is, it goes wonky when there’s a storm. Sometimes
she gets nothing. Sometimes every feeling for a mile around
washes right in on her.”
Jackie
looked appalled.
“Not
to worry.” Kai patted Jackie’s arm reassuringly. “Someone
gave me a recipe for a tea that helps. It’s got a little
magical boost that helps me shut things down. But I’ll
sleep after drinking it, and I can’t do that until--”
“Until
your guests are gone,” Jackie finished for her. “Got
it.” She retrieved her coat from the couch and handed
Ginger her jacket. “Come on, Ginger. I can’t
leave until you do, remember? I rode here with you.”
Ginger
just grinned. “Would that friend who gave you the tea
be Nathan, by any chance?”
“If
I’d wanted you to know who it was, I would have used his
or her name. Go home, Ginger.”
“Because
I’ve wondered if Nathan was Wiccan. That’s not
a big deal in some parts of the country, but here in the Bible
Belt it can be. Especially now. With Nathan being a
deputy, it could mean trouble if he were known to be a witch. So
I thought that might be his big secret. He’d have to
be a solo practitioner, since he’s not part of my coven,
but—”
“Home.” Kai
grabbed Ginger’s purse from the couch and held it out.
A
few minutes later, Kai shut the door behind her friends. She
breathed a sigh of relief. She loved Ginger dearly, but her
friend’s inquisitiveness could be a trial, and Nathan’s
secrets weren’t hers to disclose.
Not
that she knew many of his secrets, but she knew the biggie. Part
of it, anyway. Nathan wasn’t Wiccan or Gifted because
those were human labels. And Nathan wasn’t human.

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