reminded me that there were mountains up there somewhere in the dark.
‘It seems so weird to be in a neighborhood I’ve never seen and be on the way to Mom’s house,’ Micah said.
‘I guess that would be weird,’ Juliet said as she turned into a cul-de-sac of larger houses.
‘My own fault for not staying in touch,’ Micah said.
Nathaniel and I hugged and snuggled him from both sides. ‘You did what you had to do,’ I said.
‘You were protecting them from the crazy,’ Nicky said.
‘Thanks,’ Micah said with a smile.
Juliet might have asked what crazy Nicky was referring to as she parked in a driveway, but the door to the house opened, and Micah’s mom was framed in the light like an ad for some heartwarming movie. I felt him tense beside me, but not in a bad way. Nathaniel reached for the door on his side.
Nicky said, ‘Wait, and let the others get into position.’
‘No one is waiting to jump you at Aunt Bea’s house,’ Juliet said.
‘Probably not,’ Nicky said, ‘but it doesn’t hurt to be cautious.’
‘Bodyguards are supposed to be paranoid. We sort of pay them for exactly that,’ I said.
‘I wouldn’t have believed you needed them until I saw what Bertie and Jamie did; that was so awful of them.’
Nicky unbuckled his seat belt. ‘No one get out until someone has your door.’
‘Me, too?’ Juliet asked.
‘No, you aren’t our job,’ he said.
‘I’m glad,’ she said, and reached for her door.
He touched her shoulder. ‘Not yet.’
‘You said I could get out.’
‘I said you didn’t have to wait for a guard to have your door, but I don’t want you opening your door yet.’
‘Why not?’
‘You’ll illuminate the inside of the car and make a target of everyone in here.’
Juliet’s shoulders slumped, and you could almost feel her rethinking the world from a much scarier and more dangerous perspective. She turned in the darkened car and looked at Micah. ‘Is this how you have to live all the time?’
‘It’s a precaution,’ he said.
‘Is this why you didn’t want to come home? You thought you’d endanger everyone?’
‘Partly, but now I have enough people to make the bad guys hesitate. They’ll see Nicky and the others and know that I’m not unprotected. They’ll know that if they harm my family, it won’t be without repercussions.’ Micah’s voice was very calm as he said it, so reasonable. I liked that about him, that he was as ruthlessly practical as I was.
‘Do you mean …’ Juliet said, but Dev was at my door, Ares was at Nathaniel’s, and I could almost feel Bram near the back of the truck. I’d noticed that sometimes with Micah physically close to me I could sense the other wereleopards in our group. They opened our doors; we got out and started walking toward the opened door. Micah’s mother had already walked down the steps and was partway to us. I wasn’t surprised that Bea Morgan was an impatient woman, not after seeing the fight at the hospital. People with tempers are rarely patient. I should know.
We entered the new-to-us house in a circle of bodyguards, with Micah’s mother reaching out to lead him inside. We let him go forward to meet her. Ares stayed at his side. Nathaniel and I held hands, with Dev and Nicky on either side of us. Bram brought up the rear, looking back into the darkness. It probably wasn’t the welcome home Micah had planned, but if we could pull off some kind of miracle for his dad, it wasn’t half bad.
18
We’d had time to see the great room – living room/dining room with the kitchen off to one side, with just half-walls and bar stools around two sides – when a young woman stepped in through the open doorway of a distant hallway. Her curly, dark auburn hair fell around her shoulders. She was maybe five foot four, slender, and dainty except for one part. She had breasts the way Micah had more manly attributes, as if nature had decided to make up for their looking so delicate. But at least Micah could hide his under clothes; Beth, and this had to be Beth, would have more trouble hiding hers.
She walked across the room, face already starting to crumble into tears. Micah went to meet her halfway. She half-fell against him, wrapping her arms around his neck, and started to sob. He held her, patting her back, trying to soothe her.
I heard her saying, ‘I knew you’d come. Jerry said you wouldn’t, but