her eyes. “Nothing. I’ll just set up late. Can you confirm the appointment and let him know I’ll be there?”
“Yes. Fine.” She sounded like a deflating raft. “Ginny, we have to sell this place, even if we take a loss. This is like the Groundhog Day from hell. I’m not cut out for being surrounded by death and sad people. I swear I think it’s making me ill.”
“Okay, Larissa,” Ginny pushed through numb lips. “I’ll really sit down and consider it this week. I mean that. I don’t want you to be miserable.”
“Aren’t you miserable, too? Don’t you want to try something new? We could…I don’t know. We could try something new together, even? I’m not that bad, am I?” Her stepmother bit off a curse. “Listen to me rambling. I’m just stressed.”
“It’s fine.” Ginny pressed her lips together. “Bye, Larissa.”
The line was already dead.
Ginny let the phone drop to her lap, starting when she found Jonas standing at the end of the couch, watching her with concern.
“Did you hear all of that?” she asked.
Equations solving themselves behind his golden eyes. “Yes.”
She nodded, grateful when he didn’t press. “I have to go home.”
“I know.” It was clear he didn’t like it, too. “Tonight is important to you. Roksana will stay with you until I can…”
“Go outside?”
Jonas remained unmoving. But for the first time, the differences between them were a long-term problem. They weren’t just details that would no longer matter once her memory was erased. Jonas couldn’t go outside in the sunlight. They could never walk along the boardwalk together, or even lie in bed on a Sunday morning with light streaming in through the window.
When did she do those things anyway?
In a way, she already kept the hours of a vampire, sleeping through most of the day and working the night shift. Staying indoors during the day wouldn’t even be that big of an adjustment for her, but Jonas looked concerned nonetheless.
“It’s okay,” she said. “I’ll miss you until tonight, but it’s okay.”
“I’ll miss you, too. Mercilessly.” The vein in his temple ticked as he held out a hand. “Come have breakfast.”
It was definitely a new experience, eating breakfast while sitting on Jonas’s lap, his thumb brushing back and forth against the small of her back. She was thankful Roksana had some of the eggs, too, so she didn’t have to be the only one eating. Once they were finished and they all pitched in cleaning the dishes, her stomach started to jangle with nerves. Because she was leaving Jonas?
That’s what it felt like. As if they were going to be on opposite sides of the country, instead of opposite ends of Coney Island.
“I can hear your pulse beating fast, love,” he whispered in her ear. “It’s going to be all right.”
Ginny fanned her face. “Why do I feel like this?”
“I hate letting you go, too, but I don’t know if our reasons match.” He tucked her head beneath his chin. “Maybe you’re worried the pain will come back if you leave me. It won’t. Not before I see you again.”
“I’d be more worried about the pain coming back for you…but I don’t think that’s it.” She tried to find a way to put her anxiety into words. “Everything feels so fragile. Like this…us…could get taken away any minute.”
He kissed her forehead hard. “We’re the opposite of fragile, you and me.”
Still walking on pins and needles, Ginny nodded. Pull it together. They couldn’t be together twenty-four hours a day. They both had responsibilities. They were independent people. She had to work the funeral home and maintain her interests. He had the newbies to train. If she fell victim now to the impulse to never leave Jonas’s side, she’d never overcome it in the future.
“Why are you worried about letting me leave?”
“While we are not fragile, love…you are. You couldn’t withstand an accident or a long fall or—” He broke off with a rough exhale. “Roksana, please.”
“I’ll guard her with my life,” the slayer said where she waited at the door. “To the best of my ability. You know I will.”
“I know we have to worry about the High Order finding out about us now, but Seymour is gone. You took care of the immediate threat last night,” Ginny reminded him, pushing off his lap to her feet. “I’ll see you when the sun goes down.”
“I’ll be watching the clock,” he murmured, catching her hand and dusting his lips across her knuckles. “Bye, Ginny.” She was almost to the door