now, Miz Yolanda, cause I kept them from breaking up your house.' "
"I didn't know you wasn't inside," said Mack.
"So you were saving my life."
"Take that girl inside, Yo Yo."
But Sherita didn't go. She turned to face Mack. Now that the crowd was dispersed, she didn't feel so ashamed. "Officer that saved me said it was Ceese Tucker told him to come save me. And Ceese told me it was you saw what I was getting into," she said.
"I know you didn't choose to do it," said Mack.
"Thank you, Mack," she said. "And for what it's worth, I never thought you was crazy."
Behind her, Yo Yo waggled her eyebrows. But Mack didn't laugh. "Thank you, Sherita. Now you go on inside with Yolanda."
It was near three A.M. before Yo Yo got Sherita back to her folks and extricated herself from tears and hugs and thanks. And not long after that, Mack joined her, along with Ceese and Grand Harrison down Cloverdale, between the Snipe and Chandress houses.
"What's he doing here?" asked Ceese. Yolanda was just as suspicious.
Mack smiled. "He was my ride?"
"You walk everywhere, Mack," said Ceese.
"He helped me dig out Miz Ophelia," said Mack. "He knows what he saw. He knows you got powers, but he believes you're not a witch. There's no reason to leave him out now. And we need all the friends we can get."
"If I can," said Mack. "I'll hold on to him and Ceese and get them inside."
"And what about me?" asked Yo Yo.
"You don't need my help."
"You ever seen me inside there?" she asked.
"No."
"Then how do you know I don't need your help?"
"Puck - Mr. Christmas - he gets in and out just fine."
"That's cause it suits my husband's purposes to let him. But me? I don't think so."
"If he's watching everything you do," said Ceese, "then how can you expect to fight him and win?"
"He's not watching," said Yo Yo. "He just made this place so it locks down hard if I come up."
"So what makes you think Mack can get you in?"
"Cause he's such a lucky boy," said Yo Yo.
"That's why I'm so rich," said Mack. "Come on, let's see if we can all go at once, holding on to each other. If we can't, I'll take you one at a time."
Chapter 19
COUNCIL OF WAR Puck was waiting for them inside the house. The living room was furnished exactly like Yo Yo's living room. In fact, it was her furniture, right down to having Sherita's blanket tossed on the couch.
"Puck," said Yo Yo, "just keep your hands off my stuff."
"I never know what's going to show up here," said Puck. "The boy comes in bringing you - so your stuff appears. Bingo! Presto! Abracadabra!"
"Bite me," said Yo Yo.
"You always offer, but you're all talk."
"I know what he does to his servants who, uh, bite you."
"We got a situation," said Ceese, "and we got to figure out what to do."
"You?" said Puck. "You don't have a situation, my lady and I have a situation."
"This shit tonight didn't happen to you, it happened to people in our neighborhood, and we're going to do something about it," said Ceese.
"Ceese, he knows that," said Mack.
Puck grinned cheesily.
"Asshole," muttered Ceese.
"Bad language exacerbates the situation," said Puck. "I know they taught you that in cop nursery.
Always stay calm."
"What in the world is going on with you people?" said Grand Harrison. "Tonight I was just minding my own business, and then I get my tools and my SUV borrowed, I dig up a grave, open a coffin, and take my next-door neighbor out. Then I get brought down here into a house that doesn't exist and listen to a bunch of fools argue about nothing. You know what I want? I want to know how you all going to keep this stuff from happening again."
"What stuff?" asked Puck.
"Wishes," said Mack.
"Mack's dreams," said Ceese.
"He's cut loose a big one tonight, Pudding," said Yo Yo.
"That means he's got himself a pony to ride," said Puck - again talking as if Yo Yo were the only person in the room.
"Yes," said Yo Yo.
"A pony?" asked Ceese.
"Some human he can work through. Kind of like the way my lady and I using these two bodies."
Grand didn't like hearing that. "You telling me that you - that these bodies are possessed?"
"Leased," said Puck. "With option."
"This old coot," said Puck, "be eating out of dumpsters and licking sweet roll wrappers and walking around talking to his dead dog named God, cause he figured