Dead Heat (Alpha and Omega) - Patricia Briggs Page 0,28
agree to wait until you are at least your brother’s age”—he tipped his head at Max—“before you go looking for trouble. Otherwise your Ánáli Hastiin will follow you to protect you. The evil things are even more afraid of him than they are of me.”
She slid around Max and caught up Hosteen’s hand. “Okay. I don’t want to hunt bad things today, anyway.”
“Let’s go pack,” Hosteen said to her. “You and I and Michael, hmm?”
“Yes,” she said. “Max is coming, too.”
It wasn’t quite a question.
“Max is coming, too,” Hosteen agreed, without looking away from his granddaughter. “And so are your mom and dad.”
“So Max should come with us to pack,” she said with more authority.
“I can pack on my own, squirt,” Max told her.
“So can I,” she told him as she followed Hosteen and Michael into the house. “I am just helping Michael.”
“I don’t need help,” Anna could hear Michael complain.
Max let the door close behind them, took a deep breath, and then headed in.
“I wonder what made her say chindi before her mother got angry,” said Charles thoughtfully.
CHAPTER
4
Anna drove with Charles and Max in the truck. Charles rode in the middle, which wasn’t comfortable for him; his long legs didn’t fit easily anywhere. But better, she thought, than forcing poor Max to squish between virtual strangers. Charles could have driven, of course, but he had just shaken his head when she’d suggested it. At a guess, Changing Chelsea had left him pretty raw. He wouldn’t say it, though, in front of Max.
Hosteen had packed the two youngest children, Kage, and Chelsea, pale but freshly showered, in the BMW. Anna followed them through the streets of Scottsdale.
“Mom looked okay,” said Max, not looking at Charles.
“It varies from person to person,” Anna said. “But I suspect she’s got about two hours before she sleeps like the dead for a good long while. She’ll wake up for a couple of hours and sleep the rest of the day for two or three days. Then she should be mostly back to normal.”
Charles grunted assent, and that unfriendly sound shut Max down completely. Rather than start more awkwardness, Anna chose to keep quiet, and they drove to the ranch in silence.
Maggie was waiting for them at the door with a tiny woman who was more or less Anna’s age. She had Navajo features and skin tone but honey-blond hair. Maggie followed Hosteen and Kage into the house, but the other woman waited for them.
“Ernestine,” said Max with relief and uncomplicated affection. He trotted over to her and gave her a hug.
“How’s the hoops?” she asked, returning the hug.
“Okay,” he said. “Is there food?”
“Isn’t there always?” she said. “Go on into the kitchen and help yourself.”
After he’d retreated, she greeted Anna and Charles. “How are you? You must be the Cornicks. Charles, I doubt you remember me, but I met you once when I was about Mackie’s age. I’m Maggie’s great-niece Ernestine. I’m usually only here from six to four every day, but today I’ll be here all day, all night, and all tomorrow. They’ve called me in as the heavy reinforcements.” She grinned and opened her arms to showcase all hundred pounds of her. Then she stepped forward, and from the high ground of two steps up she leaned forward and kissed Charles on the cheek.
“Chelsea is my friend,” she said when she was done. Her cheeks were a little red, but she spoke with dignity. “Hosteen would have let her die, so I know who to thank.”
Charles didn’t say anything, so Anna smiled. “Always glad to be of service.”
They retreated to their room. Charles heaved a sigh of relief as soon as the door closed behind them.
“Tough day at the office, sweetheart?” Anna asked.
“Better than it could have been,” he told her. “Nobody died. Any day with no deaths is a good day. I need to call Da and let him know what’s happened.”
When Anna came back from the bathroom, where she’d scrubbed off some blood she hadn’t realized she was wearing, he’d already put his phone away.
“That was a short call,” she said.
“He didn’t answer,” Charles told her. “So I left a message for him to call me back. If you’re done, I’m going to shower.”
He had more blood on him than she did. Not on his clothes, which had returned clean, as usual, when he’d changed back. And he’d washed his hands and face at Kage’s house. But there were rusty stains just under his collar.