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Page 23
Page 23
“So what’s the deal with the bison?” Kowalski asked.
“Could be an isolated incident. Or it could be the first volley in Cel-Romano’s war against the Others.”
“But I thought Cel-Romano was preparing to wage war in their part of the world.”
Monty looked out the side window. “Maybe that’s what we’re supposed to think.”
• • •
Vlad set a small bowl on the sorting room table and smiled at Meg. “I brought you some strawberries.”
She reached for a berry but didn’t take it. “You’re not giving up your share of the berries, are you?”
“No, I bought a quart of the berries that are for sale in the Market Square and decided to share them with you.”
“Oh. Well, thank you.”
He waited until she’d eaten a berry before broaching the real reason he was there. “Meg? What upset you this morning?”
He watched her throat work as she swallowed. Throats, with the blood in them so easily accessed by a kiss, always drew his attention. But with Meg, it was like looking at a delicate piece of art that could be admired but not touched because the cassandra sangue were Namid’s creation, both wondrous and terrible, and their blood was not drunk by the Sanguinati.
“I had a bad dream. Then I woke up. I guess I was loud about waking up.”
“You screamed and threw yourself on top of Simon.” With windows open to cool the apartments, her scream woke everyone in the Green Complex. But Meg tended to scream when she saw a mouse, so they all wouldn’t have come rushing into her apartment if Simon hadn’t yelped like he was also in trouble. To the rest of them, that yelp meant physical trouble. In a way that had been true, since Meg had been clinging to Simon while he’d been trying to get out from under her without hurting her. At least, he’d put on a good show of trying to get out from under her when the rest of them came rushing into the room. “What did you dream about?”
Color blazed in her cheeks. “I don’t remember.”
Vlad studied her, wishing he could believe there had been some erotic element in the dream that she didn’t want to reveal, but that wasn’t the reason for the blush. Meg had just lied to him.
“Why is a bad dream so important?” she asked.
“It wouldn’t be if someone else had the dream. But you’re a cassandra sangue.”
“I didn’t make a cut, and my skin didn’t split because of weather or anything, so it wasn’t prophecy; it was just a dream.”
He nodded as if she’d convinced him, but he presented the one thought that troubled him, the thought that had brought him to the Liaison’s Office. “It’s just odd, don’t you think, that three significant things happened at the same time of day? You had a bad dream, something compelled Hope to make a drawing that frightened her, and bison in Joe’s territory were killed. All at daybreak.”
“But daybreak in the Northeast Region is two hours ahead of daybreak where Hope lives.”
“Two hours ahead of daybreak in Joe’s territory as well. But you don’t remember your dream, so we don’t know if you had some kind of vision about the bison.”
The sorting room filled with an awkward silence until a truck pulled into the delivery area.
“I have to get that,” Meg said.
“And I have to get to work.” He walked out the back door of the Liaison’s Office, then stopped. He didn’t want to go to Howling Good Reads yet, didn’t want to talk to Simon.
Meg had lied to him about not remembering the dream. It wasn’t that he’d thought she couldn’t lie. She was human after all. But he’d never thought she would lie to any of the terra indigene who had befriended her.
Was their friendship less valued now that there were more humans around? Or was he making too much out of things that weren’t important?
Too agitated to work, he headed for the Market Square to sit and think.
• • •
The moment the deliveryman walked out the front door, Meg rushed to the back room and peeked out the door to make sure no one was around. Then she opened the door all the way and leaned against the doorjamb.
She had lied to Vlad—and had lied to Simon and Henry and Tess earlier that morning when they asked her if she remembered the dream. She remembered enough. More than enough.
She’d dreamed about making a cut, had dreamed so vividly she could still feel the razor slicing her skin. Prior to the cut, she had run her hands down her arms, down her legs. But the buzz hadn’t been in her arms or legs; it hadn’t been on her back or her belly. In the end, she laid the razor along the right side of her jaw and pressed the blade against skin. Then her dreamself had endured the agony that came before a cassandra sangue began speaking prophecy, had continued to endure the agony by staying silent. And that dreamself had seen something so terrible that Meg had flung herself on Simon to protect him, to save him.
She had bled in a dream and seen prophecy. Something bad was going to happen to the Wolves. Unfortunately, she hadn’t seen the prophecy, so she couldn’t tell anyone what was coming, couldn’t give a warning.
Were any of the other cassandra sangue who were living outside the compounds having similar experiences of seeing visions without making an actual cut? Hope was making drawings that, until that morning, had been a different way to reach the visions without cutting. What about Jean, who was living with a Simple Life family on Great Island? Was she sensing things now without cutting?