Molly pointed at one of the oak doors. "In there. There are two dressers and a closet. Nothing fancy, but I'm pretty sure it will all fit you."

I blinked several times. "Um. What?"

She snorted and rolled her eyes. "Harry . . . duh. I knew you were alive. That meant you'd be coming back. Lea told me to keep it to myself, so I got a place ready for you." She took a quick step back into the kitchen, opened a drawer, and came back with a small brass key. "Here, this will get you past the locks, and past the svartalves' wards and past my defenses."

I took the key, frowning. "Um . . ."

"I'm not asking you to shack up with me, Harry," Molly said, her tone dry. "It's just . . . until you get back on your feet. Or . . . or just as long as you're in town and need a place to stay."

"Did you think I couldn't take care of it myself?"

"Of course not," Molly said. "But . . . you know. I guess I think that maybe you shouldn't have to?" She looked up at me uncertainly. "You were there when I needed you. I figured it was my turn now."

I looked away before I got all emotional. The kid had gotten this place together, made some kind of alliance with a very suspicious and cautious supernatural nation, furnished a room for me, and picked me up a wardrobe? In just a few weeks? When she'd been living in rags on the street all the time for the better part of a year before that?

"I'm impressed, grasshopper," I said. "Seriously."

"This isn't the impressive part," she said. "But I don't think we have time to get into that right now, given what you've got going."

"Let's survive Halloween," I said, "and then maybe we can sit and have a nice talk. Molly, you shouldn't have done this for me."

"Ego much?" she asked, the ghost of her old, irreverent self lurking in her eyes. "I got this place for me, Harry. I lived my whole life in one home. Living on the street wasn't . . . wasn't a good place for me to put myself back together. I needed someplace . . . someplace . . ." She frowned.

"Yours?" I suggested.

"Stable," she said. "Quiet. And mine. Not that you aren't welcome here. While you need it."

"I suppose you didn't get those clothes for my sake, either."

"Maybe I started dating basketball teams," Molly said, her eyes actually sparkling for a moment. "You don't know."

"Sure I do," I said.

She started putting the kit away. "Think of the clothes as . . . as a birthday present." She looked up at me for a second and gave me a hesitant smile. "It's really good to see you, Harry. Happy birthday."

"Thanks," I said. "I'd give you a hug, but I'd bleach and bloodstain your clothes at the same time."

"Rain check," Molly said. "I'm, uh . . . Working up to hugs might take a while." She took a deep breath. "Harry, I know you've got your hands full already, but there's something you need to know."

I frowned. "Yeah?"

"Yeah." She rubbed her arms with her hands as though cold. "I've kind of been visiting your island."

In the middle of the southern reaches of Lake Michigan lies an island that doesn't appear on any charts, maps, or satellite images. It's a nexus point of ley lines of dark energy, and it doesn't like company. It encourages people who come near it to get lost and wander away. Planes fly over the thing all the time, but no one sees it. A few years back, I'd bound myself to the island, and the world-class genius loci that watched over it. I'd named it Demonreach, and knew relatively little about it, beyond that it was an ally.

When I'd been shot and plunged into the dark waters of Lake Michigan, it had taken Mab and Demonreach both to preserve my life. I'd woken up from a coma in a cavern beneath the island's surface with plants growing into my freaking veins like some kind of organic IV line. It was a seriously weird kind of place.

"How did you get there?" I asked.

"In a boat. Duh."

I gave her a look. "You know what I mean."

She smiled, the expression a little sad. "After you've had someone like the Corpsetaker pound your mind into pomegranate seeds, a psychic No Trespassing sign seems kinda slow-pitch."

"Heh," I said. "Point. But it's a dangerous place, Molly."

"And it's getting worse," she said.

I shifted my weight uneasily. "Define 'worse.'"

"Energy is building up there. Like . . . like steam in a boiler. I know I'm still new at this-but I've talked with Lea about it and she agrees."

God, she was dragging this out, making me wonder what she knew. I hate that. "Agrees with what?"

"Um," Molly said, looking down. "Harry. I think that within the next few days, the island is going to explode. And I think that when it does, it will take about half the Midwest with it."

Chapter Fourteen

"Of course it is," I said. I looked around and grabbed the first-aid kit, then started stomping toward the indicated guest bedroom. "I swear, this stupid town. Why does every hideous supernatural thing that happens happen here? I'm gone for a few months and augh. Be right back. Grrssll frrrsl rassle mrrrfl."

There was a light switch in the bedroom and it worked. The lightbulb stayed on and everything. I scowled up at it suspiciously. Normally when I'm in a snit like this, lightbulbs don't survive eye contact, much less my Yosemite Sam impersonation. Evidently, the svartalves had worked out a fix for technological grumpy-wizard syndrome.

And the room . . . well.

It reminded me of home.

My apartment had been tiny. You could have fit it into Molly's main room half a dozen times, easy. My old place was almost the same size as her guest bedroom. She'd furnished it with secondhand furniture, like my place had been. There was a small fireplace, with a couple of easy chairs and a comfortable-looking couch. There were scuffed-up old bookshelves, cheap and sturdy, lining the walls, and they contained what was probably meant to be the beginning of a replacement for my old paperback fiction library. Over toward where my bedroom used to be was a bed, though it was a full rather than a twin. A counter stood where my kitchen counter had been, more or less, and there was a small fridge and what looked like an electric griddle on it.

I looked around. It wasn't home, but . . . it was in the right zip code. And it was maybe the single sweetest thing anyone had ever done for me.

For just a second, I remembered the scent of my old apartment, wood smoke and pine cleaner and a little bit of musty dampness that was inevitable in a basement, and if I squinted my eyes up really tight, I could almost pretend I was there again. That I was home.




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