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"I miss you, too, sweetheart."
"Grandma, the reason I called is kinda weird, but you're just going to have to trust me."
"Of course I trust you," she replied without hesitation. She's so different than my mom that sometimes I wonder how they could be related.
"Okay, later today you're planning on coming into Tulsa to do some shopping, right?" There was a brief pause, and then she laughed. "I guess it's going to be hard to keep birthday surprises from my vampyre grand daughter."
"I need you to promise me something, Grandma. Promise that you won't go anywhere today. Don't get in your car. Don't drive anywhere. Just stay home and relax."
"What's this about, Zoey?" I hesitated, not sure how to tell her. Then with her lifelong ability to understand me, she said softly, "Remember, you can tell me anything, Zoeybird. I'll believe you." I hadn't realized that I'd been holding my breath until that in stant. On my let out breath I said, "The bridge on I-40 that goes over the Arkansas River by Webber's Falls is going to collapse. You were supposed to be on it, and you would have died." I said the last part softly, almost whispering. "Oh! Oh, my! I'd better sit down."
"Grandma, are you okay?"
"I suppose I am now, but I wouldn't be if you hadn't warned me, which is why I'm feeling light-headed." She must have picked up a magazine or something because I could hear her fanning herself. "How did you find out about this? Are you having vi sions?"
"No, not me. It's Aphrodite."
"The girl who used to be leader of the Dark Daughters? I didn't think you two were friends." I snorted. "We're not. Definitely not. But I found her having a vision and she told me what she saw."
"And you trust this girl?"
"No way, but I do trust her power, and I saw her, Grandma. It was like she was there, with you. It was awful. She saw you crash, and those little kids die ..." I had to stop and breathe. The truth had suddenly caught up with me: my grandma could have died today. "Wait, there were more people in the crash?"
"Yeah, when the bridge collapses a bunch of cars go into the river."
"But what about the other people?"
"I'm going to take care of that, too. You just stay home."
"Shouldn't I go to the bridge and try to stop them?"
"No! Stay away from there. I'll make sure no one gets hurt--I promise. But I have to know that you're safe," I said. "Okay, sweetheart. I believe you. You don't have to worry about me. I'll be safe and sound at home. You take care of what ever you need to do, and if you need me, call. Anytime."
"Thanks, Grandma. I love you."
"I love you, too, u-we-tsi a-ge-hu-tsa." After I hung up I spent a little while just sitting there, willing myself to stop shaking, but only a little while. A plan was already brewing in my head, and I didn't have time to freak out. I needed to get busy.
Chapter Ten
"So why can't we tell Neferet about this mess? All she'd have to do is make a few calls, like she did last month when Aphrodite had a vision about that plane going down at the Denver airport," Damien said, careful to keep his voice low. I'd hurried back to the dorm, huddled my group together, and given them the short ver sion of Aphrodite's vision. "She made me promise I wouldn't go to Neferet. The two of them are having some kind of weird fight."
"It's about time Neferet started seeing her as the bitch she is," Stevie Rae said. "Hateful cow," Shaunee said. "Hag from hell," Erin agreed. "Yeah, well, what she is doesn't really matter. It's her visions and the people who are in danger of dying that matter," I said. "I heard that her visions aren't really believable anymore be cause Nyx has withdrawn her favor from Aphrodite," Damien said. "Maybe that's why she made you promise not to go to Nef eret, because this is all something she made up and she wants you to freak out and do something that will either embarrass you and make you look bad, or get you in trouble."
"I'd think that too if I hadn't watched her having the vision. She wasn't faking it, I'm sure of that."
"But is she telling you the whole truth?" Stevie Rae asked. I thought about that for a second. Aphrodite had already ad mitted to me that she could withhold parts of her visions from Neferet. What made me think she wasn't doing that with me, too? Then I remembered the whiteness of her face, the way she had gripped my hand, and the fear in her voice as she joined my grandma in her death. I shivered. "She was telling me the truth," I said. "You guys will just have to trust that my intuition is right." I looked at my four friends. None of them were happy about this, but I knew that each of them trusted me and that I could count on them. "So, here's the deal, I've already called my grandma. She won't be on that bridge, but a bunch of other people will. We need to figure out a way to save those other people."