folks are going crazy."
"Why are you here, Uncle Jack? I always heard things from Mama and the relatives about how you ran away and why you came to this place."
"Fair enough," said Jack. "But I could take care of myself."
"So can I," Cordelia said. "You'd be surprised." She hesitated. "You know what all's happened today?" The young woman didn't wait for Jack to shake his head. "I can't even tell you what all. But some of it is this: A slaver tried to kidnap me, I was rescued, I've met some really strange and some really fabulous people, I found the most fantastic man-FortunatoI almost got killed, and then..." She paused.
Jack shook his head. "And then what, for God's sake?" She leaned close to his face, looked him straight in the eyes, and said seriously, "Something incredible happened." Jack wanted to laugh, but didn't. He accepted her seriousness and said, "What's that, Cordelia?"
Even in the neon-lit dimness, he could see that she was blushing. "It was like when I started my periods," she finally said. "You know? You probably don't. Anyhow, it was when I was up there in this penthouse and this old guy was about to kill me? Something just changed. It's hard to describe."
"I think I know," said Jack.
She nodded soberly. "I think you do. It's why you left the parish all those years ago, isn't it?"
"I expect so. You-" It was his turn almost to stammer. "You changed, didn't you? Now you're not the same person you were."
Cordelia nodded vehemently. "I still don't know what it is I'm becoming. All I know is that when that Imp guy tried to grab me-he was going to help the old guy rip out my heart or something like that-there was this feeling inside like things were really tight and then..." She shrugged expressively. "I killed him. I killed him, Uncle Jack. What really happened was it felt like I could use something down deep in my brain I didn't know how to use before. I could do things to the men who were trying to hurt me. I could make them stop breathing, keep their hearts from beating-I don't know what all. Anyhow, it was enough. So I'm here." She put her arms around his neck again. "I'm really glad."
"You've got a way of understating things," Jack said, grinning. "Listen, are you ready to come home?"
"Home?" She sounded puzzled.
"My place. You can stay with me. We'll get things settled. Your folks are sweating toad spit."
She drew back. "I'm not going back, Uncle Jack. Not never."
"You've got to talk to your folks."
She shook her head. "And the next thing, you'll be putting me on a bus. I'll get off at the next stop. I'll run away. I swear it." She turned away from him.
"What's the matter, Cordelia?" He felt confused.
"If I go back, there's Uncle Jake. Granduncle Jake."
"Snake Jake?" Jack started to understand. "Did he--?"
"I can't go back," she said.
"Okay. You don't go back. But you've still got to talk with Robert and Elouette." To his amazement, she was crying. "No."
"Cordelia..."
She wiped away the tears. There was something hard now in the fragile features of her face, a toughness in her voice. "Uncle Jack, you've got to understand. Things have happened today. Maybe I'm going to be one of Fortunato's geishas, or serve drinks in a place like this, or go to Columbia University and be a nuclear scientist, or something. Anything. I don't know. I'm not who I was. I don't know what I am-who I am now. I'm going to find out."
"I can help you," he said quietly.
"Can you?" She was staring at him hard. "Do you know who you are, really?"
Jack didn't say anything.
"Yeah." She moved her head slowly. "I love you very much, Uncle Jack. I think we're very much alike. But I'm willing to find out who I am. I've got to." She hesitated. "I don't think you admit much to yourself or to the folks around you." It was as if she were looking inside him, shining a searchlight around inside his head and his mind. He was uncomfortable with both the uncompromising glare and the shadows.
"Hey!" The shout came from Ackroyd, ducking his head past the front door. "You gotta see this! All of you." He retreated back outside.
Cordelia and Jack looked at each other. The young woman joined the others heading for the door. Jack hesitated, then followed.
Outside, the night retreated. Dawn was breaking over the East River. Ackroyd stood out