came and went behind us on the road. Someone else was caught out in this weather too.
I didn’t know how Michael could see through this endless rain. I felt like my life was just like that. It was never going to end, and no matter what I did I couldn’t see what was coming for me until I was right on top of it: pain and troubles…and they would just keep on coming.
I twisted in my seat and glanced at Ellie and Kim. Kim was right behind me in the very seat that at one time had held me captive. Ellie sat behind Michael, fully absorbed with her phone. Should I try to start up some kind of conversation? Oh, what to talk about. How does it feel to be a full-blood angel? I had angelic blood, but I was like one sixteenth or one thirty-second…I wondered if she had more abilities, if she was stronger than I was.
There was an awkward silence pressing down on us and I could feel the tension it produced. Michael looked like he was a little preoccupied with speed, but I tried not to worry about that. Kim was uncharacteristically quiet. The only one who seemed not to notice any of it—or not to care—was Ellie.
I looked at her with interest, studying her. Her skin was smooth, much like mine. There were no blemishes; it had this kind of cleanness to it. Her hair was crazy bright blue, it was even bright in the dark. It was like a neon sign made of cotton candy.
Ellie looked up from her phone to catch me staring at her. I turned back to the front, blushing. Dang! What are we doing, anyway? What—we trust her just because she’s an angel? Or says she is?
Michael broke in, “So, Ellie…have you been here in the Portland area long?” He sounded like my Dad. Just yikes. Dad had that same exact tone when he wanted to break the silence and get me to talk when I didn’t feel like it.
Ellie shifted in her seat a little and chuckled. “Yeah, mate. I lived there back when it was just a wide spot in the river. Y’know, a one-horse town that ain’t big enough for the two of us.”
He laughed quietly, shaking his head.
“But you’re not really trying to start a conversation with me, are you?” Ellie was smarter than I gave her credit for, and direct.
“No, I—”
“It’s just really awkward…” I tried to interject.
Then Kim blurted out, “All I want to know is where we’re going!”
I turned and smiled at her. “Yeah, do we have a plan? A lead—anything?” I looked at Ellie. I had a weird gut feeling about her. What is it? Jealousy? Would she try something with Michael? She’s a pretty hardcore chick…. A threat, though?
Ellie opened her mouth to say something when Michael cursed loudly and swerved to the right, jerking the wheel, stomping the brakes. There was a bang and a thud on the driver’s side. Then everything came back to the left and I went right, slamming against the door, grunting as my lungs flattened and the seatbelt tensed against me.
“Hold on!” Michael cranked to the right, trying to steer into the skid. The SUV felt like it was going to turn over. I reached out and grabbed the handle on the dash. Kim screamed. I couldn’t turn around to see if she was okay. My body went rigid. I could see things flashing by the window in the darkness. The road was coming at us through my side window for a moment as Michael fought for control. The engine roared loudly at full throttle, scaring me. The wheels fought for traction and I could hear bits of gravel ricocheting off the wheel wells as the SUV fishtailed left and right, the back end dipping down low on the shoulder. Then we were back on the road, rocking side to side, coasting, stopping—I hoped.
I realized I was holding my breath and then I let out a deep sigh. “What the— ?” I was both confused and alert.
Michael slowly brought us to a full stop, looking out the windshield wide-eyed.
The car that had been following us was gone, the darkness growing more intense all around us.
One of our headlights remained, dim, casting a cockeyed eerie light through the rain across the double yellow lines on the road in front of us.
“We hit something! Big too, I think—” Michael was panting, trying to talk, his hands shaking,