Imaginary Numbers (InCryptid #9) - Seanan McGuire Page 0,47

hurt myself. Pushing my telepathy too far had consequences, and while I wasn’t going to pretend to be sorry I’d made it possible for Artie to wake up, I’d only just come back from five years lost in my own head. I didn’t want to go back there.

I closed my eyes. One, I thought desperately. Two, three, five, seven, eleven, thirteen . . .

Prime numbers are some of the most soothing things in the universe. They’re always the same, perfect, calming constants that don’t change, don’t vary, no matter how much everything else gets twisted in on itself. I could feel Elsie’s hands on my shoulders, keeping me from falling over. She had them positioned so that she wasn’t touching my skin. That showed good sense on her part, even if it stung a little. I wasn’t rude enough to surge in and take over her mind just because she touched me.

Then again, there had been times when I wouldn’t have been able to help it. Maybe she was being even more sensible than I’d thought.

Hands grasped my upper arms. “Sarah, you need to hang on,” said Artie, distressingly close and even more distressingly urgent. Uncle Kevin said something in the background. I couldn’t understand him. I hoped whatever it was wasn’t important enough to be a problem.

Artie tightened his grip. “Whatever you’re doing, keep doing it,” he said. “You just came back. You can’t go away again. I won’t let you.”

Nice how you think your opinion matters, I thought.

He barked sudden, unsteady laughter. “Yeah, well, your stalker trashed my car, so I think I get to give a couple of orders. Hang on. Just, whatever you have to do, hang on.”

I wanted to laugh. There wasn’t enough air in the room. I don’t think I can.

“I know you can,” said Artie, and took his hands off my arms, and pressed them to either side of my face.

Thoughts and feelings flooded my mind, all flavored with that unmistakable emotional stamp that shouted “Artie.” I laughed unsteadily, and the thoughts melted into memories. Artie, looking at a computer screen, waiting for the alert to pop up that would tell him I was online. Artie at the comic book store, picking up the contents of my subscription box to make sure I wouldn’t miss anything. Artie, phone in his hand, wondering whether he had the nerve to call me again when he knew I probably wouldn’t pick up, because I never picked up anymore.

I gasped a little, almost taking a step backward, out of his grasp. He tightened his hold, keeping me exactly where I was.

“No,” he said. “You don’t get to leave again.”

This wasn’t—the last time I’d been hurt, Mom had done her best to keep anyone from touching me, so I could have the space I needed to heal. She’d isolated me, and maybe she’d been doing the right thing at the time and maybe she hadn’t, because it wasn’t like there was a manual for this stuff. Even the cryptid doctors I’d met didn’t necessarily know how to treat injuries in cuckoos. They normally didn’t get the opportunity. This wasn’t what we’d done last time. Maybe that wasn’t a bad thing.

I wasn’t sure my family could handle losing me for another five years.

“Your name is Sarah Zellaby,” said Artie firmly. “You’re a part of this family. You’re my best friend. You’re a cuckoo, and I know you don’t like that about yourself, I know you’d be human if you could, but I’m so glad you’re not, Sarah, I’m so glad, because you wouldn’t be the same person if you were something else, and I lo—I like the person you are.”

“Even now, he can’t say it?” Elsie sounded more like a little annoyed. “Congrats, Artie. You’ve found the most unquestionably stupid telepath in the entire world. There should be some sort of an award. Oh, wait, maybe there is. She puts up with you.”

“Stop it,” he snapped.

“No, you stop. I’ve been listening to you whine for five years. I’m tired of it.”

The memories I was pulling through Artie’s hands were getting more fragmentary, moving backward through time to when we’d been much younger, still innocently convinced that by the time we were adults, the world would somehow mysteriously have changed for the better. We’d believed we would be the first generation of cryptids to walk in the open, moving among the humans like we belonged there. Like this was our planet, too.

The memories flickered faster and faster, like I was

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