“You wouldn’t get salmon.” She stroked a hand down his back. “Wait here.” Kith and Teemo glanced around as she approached the barricade and then returned to staring down the stairs into the lower level. As far as Claire could tell, it looked like the lower level of the West Gardner’s Mall. No eldritch mists. No skulking shadows. No shambling hulks of darkside muscle.
Nothing out of the ordinary.
That wasn’t good.
“Any sign of Diana and Kris?”
“Nada.” Teemo scratched in through the ripped armpit of his now sleeveless Spider-man T-shirt—looking less like the semimythical creature he was becoming and more like the fifteen-year-old he’d been. “There was some crap-ass music playing, but it stopped a while ago. Don’t worry about your blood, Keeper, Kris’ll keep her safe. She’s one sneaky bi…Ow!” He shot a pained glance over his shoulder at Kith. “I wasn’t gonna say bitch!” he protested. “I was gonna say…uh…”
Kith raised a remarkably sardonic eyebrow.
“Never mind what I was gonna say. I wasn’t talkin’ to you nohow.” He turned his back on the other elf with such exaggerated indignation, he reminded Claire of Austin. “Kris’ll keep your sister safe,” he repeated. “Arthur already said that if we see any shit happening, we should let you know.”
“Thank you.” She didn’t recognize the elf on guard at the hexagonal opening until she got close enough to see the features under the lime-green hair. “Daniel?”
“Hey, Keeper.”
She’d only walked down to the end of the small corridor, been outside for a minute, two at the most. Three on the absolute outside. How had he had time to…? “What did you do to your hair?”
He pulled a strand forward, looked at it, looked at her like she was asking a trick question. “Uh, dyed it. Wicked look, right?”
The second hand on her watch zipped around from the eight to the two, then slowed.
She hated time distortions.
“Right. It’s very…green.” And
“The roof?”
Claire leaned back and pointed up. “There’s got to be an access. There’s parking and there’s handrails.”
“Okay.” Daniel squinted into the gray light currently substituting for actual sky. “I never seen any stairs, but there’s an elevator down by the security office. I seen the sign on food court runs.”
“Where’s the security office?”
Leaning over the Lucite barrier, he pointed down the left side of the lower level. “It’s not too far past the bottom of the stairs ’cept you go along the other hall.”
“It’s on the darkside?”
“Arthur says it’s sort of territory we both claim, but yeah.”
“Do you know if it works?”
“The security office?”
“The elevator.”
“No friggin’ idea, Keeper.”
“Okay…” This was very bad. “They could come through the skylight. You’ll have to watch up as well as down.”
“Through the skylight?” Daniel repeated, glancing up again.
“Yes.”
“That kinda sucks.”
“Yes. It does.” Pivoting on one heel, Claire headed for the department store and nearly tripped over Sam.
“I’ve been thinking.”
“Good. Think and walk; I have to warn Arthur.”
“That’s what I’ve been thinking about. Assassinating the Immortal King makes sense—cut the head off the snake and the snake dies.”
“What do snakes have to do with anything?”
“Sorry, angel leftover. We…they…use snake analogies a lot. You know,
She pulled her skirt free. “Another leftover angel thing?”
“No, I’ve been watching
Claire looked back at Teemo and Kith on the barricade. At Daniel. Were there more shadows on the upper concourse than there had been?
It was definitely too quiet.
“You’re right,” she said. And started to run.
Sam jumped down and raced after her. “At the risk of sounding last millennia; duh.”
* * *
Sunlight streamed down through the skylight into the food court, bright enough to wash away the light spilling from the bulbs over each table. Bright enough to wash away the shadows.
Kris frowned. “There’s never been sunlight before.”
“It’s probably coming through from the real world. This end of the mall’s almost totally matched up. We haven’t got much time.”
“Is this the sort of stuff you and your sister need to know?”