Mercy Thompson 01-05 - THE MERCY THOMPSON COLLECTION
conversation? No strings and I donât intend us to end up in bed. Just a conversation. You, me, and Maloryâs Le Morte dâArthur .â He gave me a twisted smile. âAs an added bonus, one of the things Iâve taken a lot of classes in is cooking.â
Another evening of arguing about Arthurian writers of the Middle Ages sounded like a lot of fun. I opened my mouth to accept but stopped without speaking the words. It might be fun, but it wasnât a good idea.
âHow about seven thirty,â he was saying. âI know itâs late, but I have a class until six and Iâd like to have dinner ready when you come.â
He stood up and shut my door, giving it a pat before he strolled back to his house.
Had I just accepted a date with him?
Dazed, I started the Rabbit and headed for the highway home. I thought of all the things I should have said. Iâd call him as soon as I got home and could look up his number. Iâd tell him thanks but no thanks.
My refusal would hurt his feelingsâbut going might hurt him more: Adam would not like me having dinner with Tim. Not at all.
Iâd just passed the exit for the Columbia Center Mall when I realized that Aiden Fideal was behind me. Heâd pulled out of Timâs house at the same time as Iâand about three other people. Iâd only noticed him because he was driving the Porsche, a 911 wide-body like the ones Iâd always lusted afterâthough I preferred black or red (clichéd as that was) to bright yellow. Someone around town drove a purple one that was just mouthwatering.
A Buick passed me and my headlights caught his bumper sticker: Some people are like Slinkies. They arenât really good for anything, but they still bring a smile to my face when I push them down a flight of stairs .
It made me laugh and broke the odd worry that seeing the Porsche just behind me had caused. Fideal probably lived in Kennewick and was just driving home.
But it wasnât long before the nagging feeling that I was being hunted came back to settle on the nerves in the back of my neck. He was still behind me.
Fideal was a faeâbut Dr. Altman was the faeâs hit man and she knew they couldnât attack me without retaliation. There was no reason for me to be nervous.
Calling Adam for help would be overkill. If Zee hadnât been in jail and if weâd been on speaking terms, Iâd have called him, though. He wouldnât overreact like Adam might.
I could call Uncle Mikeâassuming he didnât share Zeeâs reaction and that he would take my phone call.
Uncle Mike might know if I was being stupid to let Fideal panic me unnecessarily. I took out my phone and flipped it open, but there was no welcoming light. The screen on the phone was blank. I must have forgotten to charge it.
I risked a speeding ticket and took the Rabbit up a notch. The speed limit was fifty-five here, and the police patrolled this stretch of highway often, so most of the traffic was actually traveling only sixty or thereabouts. I did a little weaving and breathed a sigh of relief when Fidealâs distinctive headlights slipped out of sight behind a minivan.
The highway dropped me off on Canal Street, and I slowed to city speeds. This must be my night to be stupid, I thought.
First, Iâd accepted an invitation to eat with Timâor at least I hadnât refusedâand then Iâd panicked when I saw Fidealâs car. Dumb.
I knew better than to accept an offer to dinner from Tim. No matter how good the conversation might be, it wasnât worth dealing with Adam about it. I should just have said no right then. Now it was going to be harder.
Oddly enough, it wasnât the thought of Adamâs temper that dismayed meâknowing he was going to be angry if I did something usually just encouraged me to do it. I provoked him on a regular basis if I could. There was something about that man when he was all angry and dangerous that got my blood up. Sometimes my survival instincts are not what they should be.
If I went to Timâs house for a dinner for twoâand whatever Tim had said, dinner alone with a man was a dateâAdam would be hurt. Angry was fine, but I didnât want Adam hurt, ever.
The Washington Street light was red. I stopped next to a semi. His big diesel shook the Rabbit as we waited for a flood of nonexistent traffic. I passed him as we started up again and glanced in my
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